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                  <text>Monday, October 25,

www .mydailysentin~l.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 86 •

2004

Marshall blasts
It's decision time for Tressel this week Buffalo, 48-14
~-

Ohio state Football Notebook

BY

RUSTY

MILLER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS - Jim Tre"cl. who will
alread~ be preoccupied with preparations for Penn State. rnu;t mak~ several
huge personnel decisions in th e next I'~\\
days.
The suspension of Lydcll Ross. the
pecking order at tailback with or without
Ross and th e hrewing controversy at
quarterback will take up the Ohio State
coach's time thi s week.
Ross was suspended from the team for
Saturday\ J0-7 win aga in q Ind iana fur
allegedly handing nut a f;ll,e currenL·!
used at a local strip dub in the h&lt;1urs
shortly after the Buckeyes lust at lu\\a a
week earlier.
With Ross out of the lineup. Ohi o Swte
went to true freshman Tony Pittman .
who responded with 144 yards and a
touchdown on 20 can·ies. The Bu c ~e ycs
had 282 rushing yards. almost as many
as they had in their fou r pre\ ious games
(287) with Ross as their lead bed.
"The more Antonio plays. the better
he's going to be." said Tres,cl - ll'ord.'
that mi ght just end up being the epitaph
to the remainder of Ross' col kg~ ,·arccr.
Tressel also mu't tack le the que,t ion
of who will start at quarterhack ;tgai nst
the Nittan y Lions on Satu rda).
Troy Smith. who ne ver got on the tield
in three of the last four games. qat1 ed in
place of the injured Ju sti n Zwid and
showed Hashes nf brilliance . Smith completed 12 of 24 passes for 161 y;trds and
touchdowns of 59 'itrds tn Ted Ginn Jr.
and 5 yards to Santt1nio Hulrnes. He did"n' t have a turnove r. And \\' hen Ind iana's
infrequent rush got to him . he sc· r:tmblcd
away for 58 yards on I I carries.
"Troy was juiced up toda) ... Holmes
said. "Maybe he was a little too juiced

and that's why he overthrew some pass- other direction .
•
cs."
One play after a video review disalln other words. just like Pittman lowed an Ohio State fumble, Troy Smith
maybe Smith will only get better with threw a pass under heavy pressure to the
more playing time .
ri ght sideline toward Ted Ginn Jr., a forZwick sustained a partially separated mer teammate at Cleveland's Glenville
right shoulder on his throwing arm at High School.
Iowa and would not have been able to
Indiana cornerback Buster Larkins
play in Saturday's game. Tressel hasn't stepped inside Ginn; leaped and got a
hidden the fact that Zwick is his hand on the pass. He had nothing but
favorite.
upen grass in front of him for 50 yards.
A'ked if Smith had done enough to
But the ball rotated in the air and landke~p Zwick on the sideline. Tresse l said ed in Ginn's hands. The freshman broke
he hadn't given it much thought. The four tackles while cutting to the middle
dec ision. he said , would be based on and back to the comer to complete a 59Zwick's health and how things shake out yard touchdown play.
in practice this week.
"It happens ," Indiana linebacker Cleo
"I'll have to see that day-to-day,'' Harbison said. "You just have to eliminate the breakaway plays.' We missed a
Tressel said.
• BUSY MAN: Maurice Hall estab- lot of tackles."
li shed an Ohio State record with his
Hoosiers safety Heran-Daze Jones
62 nd career kickoff return in the second added, "Ginn made a good play by
quarter.
keeping his eyes on the ball. Then he
The sen ior gained 25 yards on the had blocking in front of him."
ret urn to su rpass Carlos Snow for sec• QUICK-HITTERS: Ohio State
ond place with I ,393 yards. Ken- Yon kicker Mike Nugent needs 35 points to
Rambo hulds the record with 1,410 pass Pete Johnson's 348 points and
yards in 61 tries.
bec&lt;&gt;me Ohio State 's leadi ng career
All Hall cou ld talk about after the scorer.... With his third catch of the
game was the Buckeyes· win .
game, Courtney Roby passed Thomas
"Today reall y helped us,'' he said. Lewis (1984-87) to become Indiana 's
"Now I beli eve we're back on track and leader in career pass receiving yardage
I think we wi ll be better. "
· with 2.382 ... . The Buckeyes had not
• HOMECOMING KING: During a scored on their opening drive all year
prega me· ceremony, junior linebacker until Ginn pulled in Smith's tipped pass.
Chihundu Nnake was named Ohio .. .Fullback Dionte Johnson, offensive
State's humecoming king. Nnake is a tackle Steve Rehring, linebacker Chad
wa lk-on from Missouri Ci ty, Texas, who Hoobler each played for the first time
has neve r playeu a down for the for Ohio State, making it 12 true freshBuckeyes. He wore his No. 96 uniform men who have played for the Buckeyes
The H0 o Sl·er S hOS t
\\ ·llt.l"&lt; ·loc·kt·no_ arms. wt.th the hlJmecom- tht·s• season
•
•
...
ing queen and singing the alma mater.
Minnesota o n Saturday.... Game time
• PLAY OF THE DAY: One fli ck of for Ohio State's home game against
th~ finger and Ohio State's 30-7 win Penn State on Saturday is again 12:10
m·er Indiana might ha ve just tilted the p.m.

BY JOHN RABY

Associated Press

HUNTINGTON - Stan Hill
rebounded from a poor performance with one of his better
games to keep Marshall unbeaten in the Mid-American
Conference.
Hill threw four touchdown
passes and Josh Davis had 12
catches for 132 yards to lead the
Thundering Herd to a 48-14
victory over Buffalo on
Saturday night.
"We were just clicking," Hill
said. "This week we finally put
a game together."
Hill, Marshall's career leader
in completion percentage, felt
little pressure from Buffalo's
defense. He threw TD passes to
four different receivers and
went 19-of-26 for a season-hi gh
269 yards.
"It is as good of a performance I have seen a~ any quarterback lately,'' said Buffalo
coach Jim Hofuer. "He was
almost flawless."
Hill and Davis talked all
week about hooking up to rejuvenate Marshall, whose offense
ranks last in the conference and
sputtered a week ago in a 27- 17
win at Kent State.
The Thundering Herd (4-3, 40) compiled 478 yards against
Buffalo.
Davis ti ed a personal best for
catches. He moved within eight
of the conference career mark
of 272 set last year by former
teammate Darius Watts.
"The coaches said they were
going to get me the ball a lot

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST

NO

RAIN
CHECKS

.

1

early," Davis said. "I told Stan
to be patient because I have to
be pattent. I get double teamed
a lot."
Hill, plagued this season by
bruised ribs. a sore throwing
thumb and elbow ·tendinitis,
completed seven of his first
nine passes, all to Davis.
"Tonight was the first night
Stan has played within the
offense," said Marshall coach
Bob Pruett. "On top of that.it is
the first time he has been
healthy this season."
Davis said he was shocked to
see Buffalo in a man-to-man ·
defense. He had I0 catches for
115 yards in the first half alone,
including a 21-yard TD catch
for a 28-7 halftime lead.
Freshman
Ahmad
Bradshaw's 40-yard punt return
set up Hill's 5-yard TD pass to
Brad Bates early in the third
quaner.
Marshall's
Ivan
Clark
blocked two punts. One of them
was recovered in the end zone
by teammate Dennis Thornton
fur a 42,7 lead.
Buffalo ( 1-7, 1-5) is 0-24 in
MAC road games since joining
the conference in 1999 and
went 0-6 overall agai nst
Marshall . which leaves for
Conference USA next season.
The only offansive highlights
for Buffalo were Dave
Dawson's 83-yard TD run in
the first quarter and P.J.
Piskorik's 61 -y;u·d scoring pa~s
to Matt Knueven in the founh.
"I was disappointed in the
two big plays we gave them.
But they give scholarships,
too," Pruett said.

. .

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Council says ODOT to vacuum sewers on Main Street

SPORTS
• Monday Night Bengals.
SeePageB1

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A few road
problems on Lincoln Hill.
vacuuming sewers on Main
Street and debris on Butternut
Avenue were all on the age nda for Monday night 's meeting of Pomeroy village counci l.
James Kitchen of Lincoln
Hill brought several issues to
council's atte ntion, including

a dip in the road near his
home, a need for a stop bar
painted on the road and hi s
desire tu have th e street
cleaned frum Central School
up.
.
Kitchen contenued the dip in the road sti II
persists even after the rece nt
paving on Lin co ln Hill.
Mayor John Musser said the
village could possibly build
up around the dip to correct
tb e problem.
Kitchen also requested that

council pai m a stop har acro&gt;S
the road ncar his horne
because drivers often ignore a
nearby stop sign. Co uncil
agreed to pai nt the stop bars.
Co un cil
also
infor med
Kitchen that the road cleanup
was already under way and
should happen soo n.
During "open di"ussion:·
Councilman George Wright
asked when the new water
treatment plant is du e to be
finished. Mu sser replied that

the plant will be fini,hed on
Nov. 7 and go online later in
the week .
Jack Krautter represented
th e street department and
in for med co un cil th at the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation will be in town
on Thursday with specia l
sewer vacuums that will dean
the sewers on Main Street.
including 'ewe" at Court and
Lynn streets.
Krautter also told Wright

that the salt trud ";ts ~etting
ready lm \1 itttcr anJ 11 as currentl y ha\ ing the clu tch
repaired in \1arictta ...
Krauttcr ' also · notified
council th at the street department' . , main fucu ... right now
i ~ repairing roaU -. before winter.
Both Councilwomen Ruth
Spaun and Mary McAng u'
said the) had recei,ed wm-

Piease see Sewers, AS

Middleport
to refinance
payroll loan
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BR EED@MYDA!L'I' SE~T!" EL. CO M

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

49clb.

AK S~eel picket, A6

~

Page AS
• Charles Norman lhle
• Margie Peck
• Terry Boyce

Chicken
Leg Quarters
Fresh Deli

Toogood
to be true? Red Sox
halfway home, B6

·-

• Time out for tips.
See Page A2
• O'Bieness relocates
services to Castrop
Center. See Page A3
• Collisions between
vehicles, deer up nearly
5 percent in 2003.
See Page A6

Fairgrounds get spruced up on Make a Difference Day
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Wall s were
painted in several buildings.
lighting fixtures replaced.
new fixtures install ed in
restrooms. and so me plantings done on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds as a pan of the

WEATHER

Gal.

MIDDLEPORT
- The
Vi II age of M iJdlep11rt wi II
rell natKe a loan from Peoples
Bank . N.A .. made to meet
payroll for the street and
pol ice departments in 2003.
At their meeting on Oct. II .
co un cil voted l&lt;l app ly
$21.500 from the sale of modular classroom unit&gt; on the
Middl eport High School property to the unpaid loan balance
of $53.000 borrowed last vear
from Peoples Bank to help
make payroll expenses.
Meetin g Monday e\·ening.
counci I entered in to a loan
agreement with the bank to
make intere,t-onl) payments
Above: Beautification of the fairgro~nds for anothe r year. The \ill age
Left: Josh Parlier was one of several youhg people who turned out was one of several projects carried out in has been making interest paythe Historical Society's Make a ments fo r the past year, but
to help paint the interior of the
Difference Day project. Here Patty
senior fair bu tlding done as a part Grossnickle, left , and Joyce Davis, plant the principal reduction will'
signi ficantl y reduce the
of the Make a Difference Day
azaleas at the 1828 restored tog cabin on monthl y payment. Finance
the grounds.
project of the Historical Society.
Committee C hairman and
Council Pr.esident Stephen
Houchin' said l&lt;bt night.
Prior to the 521.500 payment. the 'illage·, mon thly
Meigs Co unt y Hi sturi cal Ohio Hill Country Heritage one rema ining barrack. the installment pam1en t was
Society's Make a Difference Area and su111e luc&lt;tl match- historic spring house and the S I -ln. hut the nc\1 pa) ment
has not )et heen Jc term meu.
·
Day project.
ing fumb.
I X29 lng cabin located on the Mayor Sand) l;umare lli sa id.
The work was carried out
Another fa cet of the project grou nds.
Saturday by members of the pet1ain s to sec urin g an Ohio
Margaret Parker. president.
Othcr' husiness
hi storic al group join ~ d by Hi storical Society marker rec- announced at the annual
Pa\'mg of sc1c ral \'i ll age
Meigs County Fair Board ognizing the hi story of the mee ting held mid-afternoon streets, includin ~ North Second
members. and other volun- fairgrounds. the grandstand.
during th e work session th at Avenue. Vine - Street. Pearl
teers. It was .financed through the 1930s Civil Conservation
Street. Art Lewis Boul c\'ard
a $2,000 mini-grant from ihe Corps enc ampment and the Please see Difference, AS
and a number of alleys will
begi n with milling wol'k on
Tue,d&lt;J\.
l annC~re ll i
said
\1onda; ..\1ill ing and paving
II"Ork 11 iII l1e~ in ;It H ud,on
Street &lt;Jnd co~llmuc to Mill
Street as the 11 ork ~et s under
\\'a). nlc paving project will be
funded throu~h Issue II State
Capital lmpn;,,·mcnt Funds.
Council also:
• Apprmc'd transfer, for
L·nn~ulting ft•c, for Floyd
Bnn\ ne .~ "'"IIL'J;tlc ... and &lt;.1 village audit.
• AcL·eptcd the rl' ... ign:.:~tion~
of Kath) h &lt;~ns. a part-time
cook and L'Ustod ian. and
Fi"al Offi~cr Je-anette Beers.
• Eliminat~d the \'illage\
cha rge for hrush pic~-up and
dispo,al .
• Appmved pavmcnt ,,f
bills in the amount of

Fear itself: Most people can get along just fine without a flu shot
BY JOSEPH B.
VERRENGIA
AP SCIENCE WRITER

Dlitatto on Page A6

INDEX

Maxwell House
Regular Coffee

.s

99
3901.

• 2 S EcrJONS -

Calendars
Community
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A3
A2

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

DENVER - Public health
officials say · Americans
should roll up their sleeves
for a dose of rcali ty: For most
of us. getting a flu shot is not
a life-or-death matter.
The tlu vaccine wi ll not
necessaril y prevent you from
experienci ng the flu' s mi serable symptoms, like fexer,
hacking cough,,~runny nose
and "hit-by-a-truck " body
ac hes.. Studies show the shot
generally works well, but its
effectiveness can range from
52 to 90 percent depending
on the strai n of virus and a

S2~.~5 .l99 .

• Ex.c u"J
Ru~er

person's age.

If yo u are elderly or chronically ill , the vacci ne can help
jump-start your body 's weak-

Please see Shot. AS

Councilman

\1anle\ ·.., ab . . cncc.

Present.

(AP Photo)

Dozens of people wait in li ne at the Bossier Parish Health Unit to receive flu. vacc rnattons
Monday in Shreveport. La.

, -- - - - -- - - - - - --·-·

-----

i'n addittnn to
l annar~lli
and H&lt;ntchins.
were cnu th'il members Kathv
Scc,tt. Bnb Rnhinson. Lauric
Reed and Je ff Pc·ckham .

-

Together we can change your body.
And your life.
700 East Main .Street
POMEROY, OHIO

ToLL
FREE (866) 821 -4541
.
'

Prices Good October 26 thru October 28 Only.

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'

·WWW.CCWL.INFO
•

�-COMMUNfl'Y

The Daily Sentinel
OPV announces
new doctor

Hospital was honored for its
work in saving lives through
organ and tissue donation by
• the
federally-designated
POINT PLEASANT
Lifeline of Ohio Or~an
Dr. T .tmoth y p. Me tzger, sr.. Procurement and Donatton
DO, a family practitioner, organization at an "Evening
with the Stars" ceremony,
w h 0
r e c e n t 1y
held September 25 in
Columbus.
joined the
me d i c a 1
Lifeline of Ohio (LOOP)
staff
at
is an independent, non-profit
p 1e as ant
organization whose purpose
v a 1 1e y
is to promote and coordinate
H o spit a 1,
the donation of hum all organs
will soon
and tissues for transplantabe seeing
"''~··
tion. Lifeline serves 40 counpatients at
ties in central and southeastT
h
e
em Ohio, and Wood County,
Middleport Dr. Timothy P. W.Va. Lifeline provides serClinic, 788 Metzger. Sr.
vices to 64 hospitals through
N 0 r t h
its transplant coordinators.
Second St .. in Middleport.
Two award~ were presentIn his announcement Mario ed to Camden-Clark. Each
Liberatore. chairman of the award was introduced by a
board of trustees, said that local individual whose life
temporarily Metzger is located has been touched by donaat The Mason 'Clinic in lion. Among the presenters
Mason, \Y.Va. with Dr. Robert were transplant recipients.
Tayengco, M.D. New patients donor family members. and
are currently being accepted. transplant candidates.
Beth Parks, R.N .. CCMH
Appointments can be made by
·calling, (304) 773-5195.
LOOP Liaison. received the
Office hours for Dr. Lifeline ORION Award
Metzger are Mondays (9 a.m. which recognizes the dcdicato 5 p.m. ), Tues days (II a.m .. tion and-innovation of a hosto 7 p.m.). Wednesdays (9 pita! liaison in promoting
a.m. to 5 p.m.). Thursdays (9 donation.
a.m. to 7 p.m. ) and Fridays
Camden-Clark was pre(! I a.m. to 5 p.m.)
sented the STAR (Service,
· "We welcome Dr. Metzger Teamwork, Attitude, Respect)
:to the dedicated team of physi- Award for its outstanding
:cians at Pleasant Valley work within the Lifeline of
Hospital. He will be a worthy Ohio service area. Accepting
addition to our organization by this award for the ICU/CCU
providing family practice to units were Patti Blanchard,
.our patients." said Liberatore. Department
Head
for
· Metzger received his medical Specialty Care Services, and
:degree in 1999 from the John Dennis, Clinical Staff
:University of Health Sciences Educator.
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine (Kansa~ City. Mo.).
In 2000 he completed his
.internship at the University of
:North
Texas/Osteopathic
Medical Center (Fort Worth,
'Texas) and in 2002 concluded
ATHENS If you ' re
his family practice residency
to
sell
your
products
looking
program at the Via Christi
Riverside Medical Center in international markets ,
(Wichita, Kan. ) Metzger also "Going Global 2004,"a conpossesses a bachelor of science ference sponsored by the
Trade
degree in secondary education International
Assistance
Center
(ITAC)
m
and English trom Texas Tech
Ohio
University's
Voinovich
University (Lubbock. Texas),
Prior to coming to Pleasant Center, will help you reach
Valley Hospital. · Metzger your goal.
"Going Global is based on
worked in the emergency
idea that a company doesthe
room at the Covenant
Medical Center (Levelland, n't have to be an industry
Texas). He also served as a giant to export," said Quentin
volunteer on two work mis- Derryberry, a cou nselor for
sions to Haiti in 1986 and ITAC and an organizer of the
1987 and as an English conference. According to
teacher and missionary in Derryberry, more than 65
China from August, 1988 to percent of international trade
ts conducted by companies
May, 1989.
His professiona:f organiza- with fewer than 20 employtions include the American ees.
Business
professionals
Osteopathic Association and
the American College of from across the state and
Osteopathic
Family beyond will attend the
Wednesday
conference.
Physicians. ·
Going
Global
will
help Ohio
He and his wife, Cheryl, u
homemaker, have three chil- busin~ss 9wners dtscover
dren, T.J., 9, Prest()n, 7 und ways 10 whtch they cu~ c,ross
U.S. bo~ders a~d benelttlrom
Sharulin, 3,
trade wtth forc:tgn murke!s.
Representatives
!rom
Jordan. Chile. Toronto and
V11ncouver will speak about
free trade and how to be SUC•
cessful. despite a lagging
economy. by exporting prodPARKERSBURG, W.Va. ucts and services, Their sesCamden-Clark Memorial sions will be packeq with

Going global
conference
·set at OU

Camden-Clark
Receives
LOOP Awards

practical tips and critical
Information about what it
takes to begin exporting. ..
The day-long conference
begins with a continental
breakfast at 8:30 a.m .. after
which business owners will
attend a series of sessions on
international
marketing
resources in the United States
and specifically in Ohio .
Other sessions include topics
such as free trade in Jordan
and Chile. Canada's role in
NAFTA. and export financing by Keybank and the
Small
Business
Administration (SBA). Going
Global will wrap up at 4 p.m .
with a question and answer
session.
A registration fee of $25
includes lunch and guides to
exporting. For more information call 597-1889.
-

Rotary offers
reduced cost
blood screening

PARKERSBURG - On
Saturday the Rotary Club of
Parkersburg. W.Va. will otler a
complete blood screening to
area residents at a fraction of
the usual cost as part of a fund
raising event for Rotary.
The screening will take place
at
the
Camden
Clark
Memorial Hospital Medical
Office Building, 705 Garfield
Ave., from 6:30 a.m. to 9:30
a.m.
All area residents are eligible to participate. No
appointment is necessary and
no physician order is
required.
For a cost of $25.. the
screening includes calcium,
phosphorus, blood sugar. kidney function , total cholesterol, total protein, heart and
liver func tion, uric acid, red
and white blood count,
hemoglobin, and plittelet
count.
For an additional $5. participants will receive a thy roid function test; and for an
additional $15 a prostate
screening .
Participants are encouraged to not eat. and drink
anything but water for 12
hours prior to testing. Results
will be sem to the participant's regular physician for
interpretation: for those who
do not have a regular physidan, there will be an opportunity at the screening to
select one.
Health care professionals
from the Diabetes Wellness
Center will be available to
answer questions and provide
education on the detection
and management of diabetes ..
Proceeds from this blood
screening fund raising event
will be directed to the Rotary
Club
of
Parkersburg
Community Service Fund.
For more information, cull
(3()4) 424-2294.
_

•

~ ··

•

2004

Time out for tips
In today's hectic society,
we hear that we should
"stop and smell the roses."
Caught up in the busyness
of our lives, we may · need
to be reminded of simple
ways to enjoy life.
Cindy
Shuster,
OSU
Extension Educator in Perry
County, has come up with
some advice on how to
"get ahead of the rat race.''
Using the word "simpli"
fy" she listed "s" for slow
down , Hi" for imagine
doing less, "m" for make
time for loved ones, "p"
n.ractice patience. "I" Jcrn
to gently say, "no", "i"
increase your quiet time,
"f' follow your heart; "y"
yield to life, yield to
peace, and yield to joy.
How can we accomplish
this? Here are some tips
you may want to try to
simplify your life.
Avoid the early morning
rush. Prepare for the day
ahead by getting things
ready the night before.
Set goals that are realistic, not ones that are unattainable. Schedule enough
time to get things done.
Master the art of delegating
responsibilities to others.
Allow time in your daily,
weekly or monthly calendar
to "catch up."
Live below your means.
Resist the inclination to
buy everything you want.
Only buy what you really
need, even though you may
be able to afford more .
See if you can Jive and
enjoy
yourself
without
spending any extra money.
Find creative ways to see
how you can save 'money.
Limit time watching television. Time in front of the

Becky
Nesbitt

..

TV is time taken away
from family commumcations and actJvtttes. In
addition . set aside a time
and place where you can
go by yourself to think or
do what you want to do.
This simple ac tivit y can
really get you rejuvenated .
H&lt;!ve a positive outlook.
Don't let things get you
down .
L earn to say, "N o " . to
things that demand your
time, energy and thoughts:
things that are not high
priority in your life . We
put too much emphasis on
being "Superhuman. "
Plan for fun: Allow yourself to have "play breaks. "
A five-minute break can
make a l]i g difference in
how
invigorated
and
relaxed you may feel.
Be a little impulsive .
Don't be restricted by your
tlaily routine. Change il
occasional'ly to revitalize
yourself.
Li sten to what your body
tells you. If you ' re a uight
owl, schedu le tasks thai
require a lot of attention
during that time period .
Make sure you . rest when
you need it. .
Take · the time lo ornani1e
your home. work space antl
hobby area. The Je s, thing&gt;
are duttered. the , niorc
calm and peaceful your da\
wi ll be.
~

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•• •••

·en

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•••

Send ·us a
photo of
your
favorite
pet and

a:

!

Holzer
observes
•
phySICal therapy
h
mont
GALLIPOLIS -

Tuesday, October 26,

Medical Center and Holzer
Medical Center-Jackson is
observing National Physical
Therapy Month.
The observance which
takes place each October is a
nationwide event that seeks
to give the public first-hand
knowledge about the benefits
of physical therapy.
This year's theme is "Get
Fit for Life." The American
Physical Therapy Association
is a national professional
organization
representing
more than 64,00() members.
Its goal is to foster advancements in physical therapy
education,
practice
and
research.
at
Holzer
Featured
Medical Center - Jackson is
a state-of-the-art therapy
department that offers physical, speech and occupational
therapies; outpatient and
inpatient therapy; as well as
aquatic pool therapy.
Holzer Medical Center's
Therapy Services Department
in Gallipolis offers physical,
occupational. massage and
speech therapy; outpatient
and inpatient therapies, in
addition to home health therapies.
"I have had the privilege to
work with the physical therapists in the Holzer Health
System for more· than five
years, said Ron Saunders
RRT, director of therapy services at Holzer Medical
Center. He described them
as a "very caring group of
allied health professionals,
focused on the patient's treatment program and the
progress at each treatment
session."
"Our hospitals have great'·
physical therapy teams and
wonderful communities to
provide therapy services for,"
stated Sheila Shoemaker, PT,
Therapy Services Department
Manager at Holzer Medical
Center - Jackson.
"Our
depa,rtments enhance our services with current technology
and individual therapy treatment in order to provide the
best possible health care.'' ·

t.:

··· they
might

be--~~~~· !:
voted into our
;f.
I
2oos
\

la:

Holzer

-

HMC names top
enlployee for October
GALLIPOLIS - Corena
Holzapfel,
of
the
Human
Resources
Department
at Holzer
Medical
Center,
·was named
t
h
e
October
Co rena
2 0 0 4 Holzapfel
employee of
·the month.
Born tn Steubenville,
Holzapfel is a graduate of
Stonehill College in Easton,
Mass., where she received
a bachelor:s degree in
.human services administra:rion and a certification in
gerontology.
After her schooling. she
was a patient representative
at Norwood Hospital in
Norwood, Mass. She then
became the community liaison at Newton Wellsley
Hospital in Well sley, Mass ..
before returning to Ohio.

PageA2

:e.J

•·

Pet Calendar.!

•••

Before JOtnmg the staff transform her home into a
at HMC, Holzapfel was a bed and breakfast for week- 9.• ·
Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004 ·
~,.
manager in the human end guests.
resources department at
Holzapfel . also enjoys
McBee Systems in Athens. staying at bed and breakShe joined Holzer Health fasts, snow . shoeing, jigsaw
Systems in August 2001 in puzzles, and is also l,earnthe human resources depart- ing to play the piano.
ment at HMC-Jackson, and When asked what she likes
in March 2003,. transferred best about working at
N~~~ ~t-p~t:
~· -·~
to the human resources Holzer Medical Center,
department at HMC 111 Holzapfel said the "atmosGallipolis.
phcre of friendly people ·~
I
Holzapfel resides outside and working together as
of Wellston with her hus- one .''
---...!!0_ _
~·
band. Andy. and their
As employee of the
"four-legged kids," consist- month. Holzapfel received a
I
I
ing of five dogs and six $ I00 U.S. Savings Bond. a
~
kittens, that include a kit- reserved parking space desI
ten, "Ms. Maggie," who ignated in her name. a
Please send or bring·this entry form along with your photo to ~:
was found ·outside the complimentary meal in the :~
administrative oftices at the hospital cafeteria, her pichospital.
ture display'ed on the ~~
In
her spare
time. employee of the month • • 1
Holzapfel enjoys walking. wall near the employee .
"Pet Calendar''
"Pet calendar"
"Pet Calendar''
While in New England. she entrance. and her name
825 Third Avenue
200 Main St.
111 Court St. · 1'
participated in competitive engraved on the 2004
,walking events, traveling employee uf the month :!Gallipolis, OH 45631 pt Pleasant,
25550 Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~·
throughout
the
United plaque . al'o di splayed on
•···----···-···································--~
States and Bermuda . She the Employee of the Month
•• ••
• ;,.•. &amp;...... .\ :..-•.....&amp; .\ &amp;......
1..\
•••
also is currently working to · Wall.

•••

1.
·•a:•••
·1:

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

t

t)otnt tlleasant
l\egtster

C:

_____
._______

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.

,

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.

Wednesday, Oct. 27
ATHENS
- Finance
Committee of Athens/Meigs
Educational Service Center,
10 a.m., at 507 Richland
Ave., Athens, Conference
Room 109, to discuss current budget and general
business matters.

Church services
Tuesday, Oct. 26
MIDDLEPORT
Revival services all week, 7
p.m. at the Middleport First
Bapti st Church. Speaker
Tuesday, Joe Rife of World
Christian Outreach with
music
by
Jody
Rife;
Wednesday, Us Hayman.
Common Ground, with Rief
Herman and The Joy FM
Quartet; Thursday, Rob
Barber,
Bethel
Worshp
Center, choir and drama
team; ·
Friday,
David
Wiseman. Mt. Union Baptist'

:,

•

Meigs • 992-2155

Other events

Birthdays

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Ma,ters , 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Ruth Riffle . Donna
Byer to pre,ent program.
TUPPERS PLAI :"JS
Tuppers Plain' VFW 9053 7
p.m. at the hall.
·

Concerts
and plays
Friday, Oct. 29
LONG BOTTOM - The
Passion of the Chri't v.ill be
shown at 7 p.m. at the Faith
Full Gospel Church .
Sundav, Oct. 31
CARPENTER - One Hean
v.ill JES(:nt concen ar the · Mt
Union Baptist church near
Caq:enter. 6:30 p.m Refreshment'
to follow in Fellowilip Hall. Call
Ddvid WL'ielnan for nue information at 742-2'ili8.

'

ATHENS Last week gist in O'Bieness' Radiology
O'Bleness
Memorial and
, Medical
Imaging
"I'm
very
Hospital's . mammography Department.
and bone density screening proud of thi s addition. It's a
services were relocated to 'very comprehensive patient
the new Castrop Center, sit- education piece on women's
uated directly to the west of issues."
the current hospital facility.
The first tloor of the
Previously these screen- Castrop Center currently
ings were conducted in the houses
the
O'Bleness
radiology department in Memorial
Hospital
O'Bleness.
Rehabilitation CenJer, Eye
Appointments for mam- Physicians and Surgeons of
mography or bone density Athen s Inc. In the near
screenings at O'Bleness will future, a laboratorv, retail
be
conducted
in
the pharmacy, and radiation
Radiology and Medical therapy services for patients
Imaging Department located with cancer will he ah;o he
on the first tloor at 140 available on the first tloor.
Castrop Center.
Plans call for offices on
"The hospital's mammog- the second and third tloors
raphy and bone density ser- of the Castrop Center for
vices were relocated to pro- physicians spec iali'zing in
vide a more private setting medical oncology, general
and timely access for our surgery, obstetrics/gynecolopatients," said John Murrey, gy, pathology, neurology,
D.O., chief of radiology at internal medicine, dermatoiO'Bleness.
"The
new ogy, otolaryngology. orthodepartment
in
Castrop pedics, dentistry, and podiaCenter creates much needed try, as well as an American
expansion of services. In Cancer Society patient navithe near future, one of the gator working with patients
hospital's magnetic res.o- with· cancer.
nance imaging systems will
The relocation and addibe moved to the Castrop tion a! diagnostic imaging
Center as well as adding X- · services will provide privai-ay, CAT scan and ultra- cy and convenience to
sound services."
patients at the Castrop
Radiology Associates Center who are having
will continue to provide surgery or who are referred
interpretation services at the by their physician for testcurrent hospital facility in ing.
the radiology department as
Appointments are availwell
as at the
new able
at
O'Bleness'
O'Bleness Radiology find Radiology and Medical
ltnaging Imaging Department in the
Medical
Department in the Castrop Castrop Center Monday
Center.
through Friday, 8 a.m. until
The radiology department 4 p.m.
For more information
at O'Bieness will maintain
MRI, X-ray, CAT scan, about imaging services at
nuclear medicine and ultra- the
center,
contact
sound services. The vacated O'Bieness' Radiology and
space allows for additional Medical
Im aging
e4uipment and services to Department at (740) 566also be added in the radio!- 4540 or (740) 566-7107.
ogy department.
"The department in the
Castrop Center also has a
new
Mammography
Education Area Room for
women's health patient education,"
said
Ramona
MacGregor, senior technolo-

Thursday, October 28
. Riverfront Pork

"HaUoween
B(oc.((

Church, singers First Bapti&gt;t
Monday, Nov. 1
Eric Chambers, Lawrence
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
Eblin. and Tom and Jean r Center for Comprehensive
Schoonover.
Weight Loss Support Group,
6:30 p.m.. Holzer Medical
Wednesday, Oct. 27center
Education
and
POMEROY - Enterprise Conference Center Rooms
United Methodist Church 1\.B. In fo rmation at 446will ho st a community 5825.
prayer meeting, 7 p.m .
Wednesday.
The
Oasi s
Saturday, 0cl. 30
Christian Fellowship praise
POMEROY
- The
Band will play. Prayer meet- Meig' County Democrati c
ings to be held on last Party will hav e a Meet
Wednesday of each month. the Candidates tail ga te
party from I to 3 p.m. on
Saturday at the Pomeroy
Parking Lot. A costum e
contest
will be judged
Tuesday, Oct. 26
and fre e refr eshme nts
POMEROY
Childhood immunization 9 pr ovided.
19 II a.m and I to 3 p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs
CoJ.J.nty
Health
Department. Take child's
Tuesday, Nov. 2
shot records and medical
MIDDLEPORT
if
available. Manley Christy will observe
cards
Children must be accom- his 95th birthday Tuesday.
panied by a parent/legal Cards may be sent to him
40
Custer
St. ,
guardian.
Donation at
accepted.
Middleport. Ohio 45760.

2004

O'Bieness relocates services to Castrop Center

October Event

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
'

L

..••: ..... , ..... ,..... ..... , .. ... ..
·~

VINCENT - A children's costume parade will be held
Saturday at the Bankfront Barn in Vincent and everyone wearing a costume will get a special gift from the Sweetapple
Farm.
On Sunday there wll be a 4"H Endowment Fund fund-raiser. The event costs $5 per person and will be open from 5 p.m.
lll1til 9:30 p.m. Guests will be served hot dogs, drinks and
smores. There also will be a barn dance with the popular duo,
Steve and Bev Pottmeyer. and a corn maze to be explored.
The corn maze is open weekends from dark to 10 p.m.
Adults must accompany groups. and the last group enters the
maze at 9:30. Call ,740-678-7447, or visit www.sweetapplefarm.cum for more details.

••

Daily Sentinel ••

wv

~

Kids party at Vincent

Keeping
Meigs .
informed

-:,·

··~
• Phone:

®alhpohs 1!Batl,
\lrrtbune

DEAR ABBY: For 35 years
have been married to the
most manipulative, cunning,
cr iti cal man ever born.
"Homer" gets what he wants
hy using '7 helpful hint s,"
Dear
offerin g "advice" and telling
Abby
me "what 's best." ami sometimes even getting blue in the
face and crying . He is very
good at it. never quite overplaying hi' hand . He wears call (800) 424-8867, or search
me down until I finally give online
at:
in.
joinseniorservice.org.
By using thi s tc chni4ue.
As 10 your not having
Homer has rnadc .'ure that we enough money to live on your
live where he wants to live, own, volunteers are somevacation where .he wants to times hired for full-time posigo. drive the car he likes, and tions _ and that would rnean
have even decorated our your economic situation
home in his preferred Golors. could change for the better.
During the first years of our Pl ease consider volunteering ;
marriage. I gave in because I ' because it could serve a dual
lo ved him. Later, I did it to purpose and save your sanity.
avoid an argument. Now I do
DEAR ABBY: You often
it out of habit. !loathe Homer advise people to seek counfor making me a doormat, and se.Jing from psychotherapists.
I loathe myself for allowing it You are ''right on" with that
to happen.
advice, but please also tell
Homer will be retiring after them nut to give up if the therthc first of the year with a api st they find doesn 't work
very nice annuity. which I feel for them.
I Ita ve earned. too. I have a" 1am 60 years old and on my
small pcn,ion. but it's lou fourth therapist. 1 finally
small to live on my own. I found someone who is helptlon't know if I · can bear ing me, and I feel great. I didHomer's company 2417. but n't give up and all my hard
can I really start ag&lt;lin at 65'' work is paying off.
I spent most uf my life
Everyone calb u' the "perfeel couple:· but I am mi&gt;er- wishing I were dead. It will
&lt;tbk and he is driving me take time to work through the
closer to the door. I have often feelings that took years to cuithought of just packing up tivate . My "temporary" prob&lt;tnd leavin~. Can you help'' -- lem lasted more than 50
SAD II\ THE SOUTH
years. If I can get better, anyDEAR SAD: Since you .. one can.
know you can't bear your
The money I'm paying my
hu sband 's co mpany 2417. therapi st (none of which is
consitler some alternatives. covered by insurance) is
One 'olution might be to vol- cheap at twice the price. I
unteer your time to a v.orthy finally 'ee a light at the end of
cause. According to AARP. the tunnel and I am at peace .
research ha&gt; proven that regu- - FEELING BETTER IN
lar volunteering prolongs life THE U.S.A.
expectancy and improves a
DEAR FEELING BETperson's physical and psycho- TER: Congratulations on
logical well-being. In your your progress. I'm pleased
case, it is e"ential.
you finally found a therapist
The
National
Senior who is meeting your needs.
Service Corps specializes in Sometimes finding that "perplacing older volunteers in feet fit" can be a process of
volunteer assignments in their trial and error, and I comcommunit ies. Three national mend you for not giving up.
Dear Abby is written by
programs under the NSSC
umbrella are the Foster Abigail Van Buren, also
Grandparent Program, the known as Jeanne Phillips,
Senior Companion Program, and was founded by her
and the Retired and Senior mother, Pauline Phillips.
Volunteer Program- a "one- Write
Dear Abby
at
stop shopping" for senior vol- www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
unteers. To lind out what's Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
available in your community, 90069.

;f.

Your Name: _____________
~' Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

. Tuesday, October 26,

Wife in 'perfect' couple is Community Calendar
ready to pack up and le.ave Public meetings

•••••

........................... -- ...

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Par+v"

6:00pm - 8:00pm

Ramona MacGregor, senior techno logist in O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital Radiology and Medical Imaging Depa rtme nt
in the Castrop Center, stands beside one of the two mam·
mography units relocated to the center this week.
Appointments for mammography and bone density screenings
will be conducted in the Radiology and Medical Imaging
Department located on the first floor at 140 Castrop Center.

Jeff Thornton
Meigs County
Commissioner

I am a life-long resident of Meigs County with
I 7 years experience in local Gover11ment. I was raised
on a farm, taught by my grandparents, aum and uncle.
and mom how to work hard, be dedicated. and ~
respon,ible . Knowjng God at an early age brought me
my faith, loyalty, honesty, a sense of service
I started getting involved in community service while
in church by working as a church trustee and when
teaching a summer Bible School class fo r the youth .
While working with the youth we did a lot of outreach
programs to help the people in the Racine area. I soon
found out that to help more people I.needed to get on
the inside and ;n,·olve myself with local government.
I started my political career by getting elected as a
Racine Village Councilman. then was electe&lt;! to the
Board of Directors of the Meie,
Countv. Chamber of
'
Commerce (4 yea r~ ).. elected twice as \1ayor of the
Village of Racine. where I. fir.,t worked on grants and
received close to one-million dollars to help the
citizens of Racine . I also worked as Meigs County
Coordinator for State Representative Mary Abel
!,2 years). antl Stale RepresentaliY e Mark Malc!ne
(2 years) . As c:oordinator I worked a, a liai ,on
between the State RepresentatiYes. and the penpk of
Meigs County. working with \'arious group' 'uch a'
the Veterans, Senior CitiLen&gt;. Fire Department'.
Town&gt;hip ptTiciah. Farmers. etc . Wh ile tra\ding
throughout the Cc&gt;uJlt\ . I r,,und out .i u&gt;l how much the
peopl e reallv needed the help and that mme pmgra1m
(v. ith more nwnc~·) need tn. be in place to help the'e
groups. That·, whci1 I fiN decided to run fo r Count~
Con:mi issioner.
·
As ynur Cnmmi,.,;&lt;lner I ani dedicated lc&gt; Mei gs
County. I care ubout you! and work hard In make the
County a better plac·e to Ji,·c. I have never forgotten
that you. the men and women of Meig s Cou111y. arc m: .
hossc,. I'm proud nf my r-ecord ,;nee be.:oming \OUr
Commi"ioncr In the next couple of day' I will tdl
vou more infc&gt;rmaiion of what I ha\T do.n e '"
Connm"iont•r and 111~ rlan for the future. Thank: Oll .
More to come on Wedne,day. Thursday. and Fnday.
~

--Jeff Thomto!l

�•

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freelahd
· Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich .
General Manager-News Editor

Congress slla/1 make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religio11, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or ab~idging the freedom
of speech,, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ·of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
'

VIEW.

.READER'S

Lies

.'

U11odunit?
Dear /iditor:

Martha Stewart lied and is serving a fi ve- month sentence
for it. No one was killed.
· Someone lied to the President. his cabinet and the members
of the House and Senate. As a result. we have 8,000 killed and
wounded in Iraq . What would be a JUSt punishment for this
horrendous deed'' Where is the public outrage? Is there any
effort to find those responsible and punish them 0 Who are
they'.' Iraqi exiles hoping to get back in power? Neighbors
who were afraid of them ?
They must have been very convincing talkers to fool everyone. I think they should be exposed. hunted down and punished for what they did
We've heard a lot about our "smart bombs," but are they•
smart enough to tell the difference between an "insurgent"
and a woman or child ''
Henry E. Bahr

Long Bottom

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesda). Oct. 26. the 300th day of 2004. There are
66 days left in the year
Today's Htghlight in Ht story:
On Oct. 26. 1881 , the "Gunfight at the OK Corral" took
place in Tombstone . Ariz .. as Wyatt Earp. his two brothers and
"Doc" Holliday confronted Ike Clanton's gang. Three members of Clanton's gang "ere killed: Earp's brothers were
wounded.
On this date: In 1774. the F1rst Continental Congress
adjourned 111 Philadelphia.
In 1825. the Ene Canal opened 111 upstate New York, connecting Lake Erie and the Hudson Rt ver.
In 1942. the U.S. shtp Hornet was sunk in the Battle of
Santa Cruz Islands during Wnrlll War II.
In 1957, the Sovtet Union announced that defense minister
Marshal Georgi Zhukov had been relieved of his duties.
In 1958. Pan American A1rways llew its first Boeing 707
jetliner from New York to Paris in eight hours and 41 minutes.
In 1967. the Shah of lwn crowned himself and his queen
after 26 years on the Peacock Throne.
In 1972. national sec uri ty adviser Henry Kissinger declared,
"Peace is at hand" in Vietnam.
In 1977. the experimental space shuttle Enterprise glided to
a bumpy but successful landing at Edwards Air Force Base in
California.
In 1979. South Korean President Park Chung-hee was shot
to death by the head of the Korean Central Intelligence
Agency. Ktm Jae-kyu . •.
In 1984, "Baby Fae." a newborn with a severe heart defect,
was given the heart of a baboon in an experimental transplant
in Loma Linda. California. (Baby Fae lived 21 days with the
animal heart.)
Five years ago: The Centers for Di sease Control and
Prevention released a stud y which said the number of
Americans considered obc'e soared from about one in eight in
1991 to nearly one in five in 1998. The New York Yankees
beat the Atlanta Braves. 6-5. to take a three-games-to-none
lead 111 the World Serie,.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern 1n all stories 1s to be
accurate. If you know of an error m a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922~ 56 .

Our main number Is
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _; _ _ _ j

Obituaries

Tuesday, October 26,2004

Charles Nonnan lhle

Voters prefer President Bush, but only narrowly
President Bush goes into
the last week of the campaign with a narrowing lead
over Sen. John Kerry. DMass., and weak job
approval, but he scores well
on character as well as ter, rorism and Iraq , which voters say are their top concerns.
Those are the conclusions
I draw from the avalanche of
polls released over the past
week. Kerry's hope has to be
that. at the end of the day.
voters think that jobs and
health care are more important than foreign policy and
are fed up with Bush's performance across the board.
The ReaJClearPolitics .com
average of nine · national
polls taken Oct. 17-24 gave
Bush a 48.7 percent to 45.8
percent lead over Kerry,
with Ralph Nader coming in
at 1.4 percent. In a two-way
race, Bush led by 3.2 points.
Bush led Kerry in all but
one of the latest surveys, The
Associated Press/lpsos poll,
which showed Kerry ahead
by 3 points.
The bad news for Bush lay
in the polling trend, his job
approval numbers, the right
track-wrong track figure and
the University of Michigan
Consumer
Confidence
Index, all of which have a
history of forecasting winners and losers.
Bush's Monday lead of 2.9
percent was down from 3.8
percent two weeks ago. The
Washington Post/ABC daily
track showed Bush's lead
dropping from 5 points to I
point at the end of last week.
When an incumbent president goes into an election
wtth a Michigan index
below 90. he's in trouble .
Last week, it was 87.5.
Presidents are also in trouble when the right-track
number is below 40 in late
October. Last week, the

Morton

Kondarcke

NBC poll put it at 39.
Weekend polling pushed
Bush's overall job approval
back up to 50.1 percent. but
last week it was at 48.8.
The "JA" number traditionally approximates a president's share of the popular
vote.
Historically. though. we
are in never-never land. At
this point, among the presidents who've lost, Gerald
Ford dropped from a 47 percent approval rating to 44 in
Gallup polls in the week
before the election. Jimmy
Carter was at 37 percent, and
George H. W. Bush was at 33
percent.
Among the recent presidents who've won, Ronald
Reagan had a 58 percent
approval rating and Bill
Clinton, 54 percent - well
above the 50 percent mark.
For just-under or just-over.
there's no precedent.
It ought to be of some
comfort to Bush - but not a
lot - that in the three cases
when incumbents lost, lateOctober polls showed them
already trailing their challengers. Carter was beating
Ford 49-44 in 1976. Bill
Clinton was ahead of Bush's
father m 1992 b) 44-35.
In 1980. Carter led Reagan
going into their only debate.
45-42, on Oct. 29. The
debate ·flipped the race and
Reagan went into the last
d&lt;lys of the campaign leading 46-43. 'He ultimately
won in a !ands!tde, 5 1-41.
All the polls show that
voters are not very happy

with Bush's performance
across the board. The
NBC/Wall Street Journal
poll showed his approval on
the economy at only 45 percent; on foreign policy generally, at 48 percent; and on
the war on terrorism at a
bare 50 percent.
The Pew Research Center
poll showed that only 37
percent of voters approve of
Bush's handling oft he war in
Iraq and that only 46 percent
now believe that using force
there was the right thing to
do. a drop of 7 points since
September.
Such results could produce
a victory for Kerry if his
aides' theory of the· race is
correct - that when an
incumbent is running for
another term , the election
becomes a referendum on
hi s performance.
The Bush campaign has
always viewed this election
differently - as a choice
between two candidates. 'fhe
poll s give Bush lots of reasons to think he'll win.
On practically every comparison of the two candidates on issues and character. the polls show that Bush
comes out ahead or reasonably close to Kerry.
And, in most of the polls.
terrorism and Iraq are listed
at the top of the plj!Jlic's
agenda. giving Bush a major
advantage.
When Fox News askeo
voters to choose which issue
was more important to them,
national security or the
natton '&gt; economy. they
chose security. 46 to 39.
Similarly.
in
The
Washington Post poll. 27
percent said that the economy was their most important
issue. compared to a combined 45 per.:ent for terrorism and Iraq.
And on most of the issues.
the poll~ show that the pub-

lie prefers Bush over Kerry.
In the httest bipartisan
Battlegro~nd Survey. Bush
led Kerry on Iraq by 52-41.
On terrorism. 56-35. On creating jobs. Kerry led by 5140, but on "keeping America
prosperous," he was ahead
by just 1- point. All polls
show Kerry with a solid lead
on health care.
What seems crucial to me
is whom the voters basically
trust. And on this. Bush virtually sweeps. In the NBC,
poll, 44 percent or voters
have confidence in Kerry as
commander in chief. Fortyeight percent do not. In
Bush's case, 51 percent do,
29 percent don't. .
In responding to a terronst
attack, 'oters break 46-47 on
confidence in Kerry. 65-2lJ
for Bush.
On character questions.
Bush beats Kerry 57-19 on
"being consistent and standing up for his beliefs": 4~-3~
on "having the strong leadership yualities needed to be
president" : and 43-29 on
"having high personal standards that set the pruper
moral tone for the country."
The NBC poll showed that
voters thmk Kerry is more
mtelligent. -16-24. hut Kerry
beats Bush by only 39-38 on
"being
compassionate
enough to understand average people." And the two arc
virtually tied on "heing a
world leader in de,1iing with
other countries."
Other polls confirm that
voters carry these rmprcs~
sions in their heads. And.
when voters are asked who
they think wtll actually win
the ele.:tion. the y tcnLI tu "'Y
"Bush." If I haLl to pred1ct
now. I'd say Bush. too. Bm I
don't have to.
(Morton Konclrack e i.1
execu/ll'e ediJor of' Roll (a//.
1i1e ne~t ·spafJ&lt;'r of Clflltnl
Hill. I

.

The actual body count in Daifur, Sudan
During the presidential
debates, I heard only on~
reference to the horrifying
genocide in Darfur, in the
west of Sudan. It came in a
Nat
question from Jim Lehrer in
Hentoff
the first debate. Both candidates expressed concern and
quickly moved on to issues
that might secure them more
-~
votes in this country.
the history, politics and body
However, on Oct. l 0, in county of the genocide in
"The Killing in Sudan," Darfur. In an Oct. 8 syntheCBS's "60 Minutes" partial- sis of reliable statistical
ly redeemed Dan Rather's reports, Reeves wrote that
use of fake sources concern- "this present analysis of total
ing George W. Bush's ser- mortality related to the
vice in the National Guard Darfur conflict concludes
on "60 Minutes II."
that the most appropriate figIn a vividly penetrating ure for deaths from violence.
account. Scott Pelley and his disease, a!ld malnutrition colleagues brought to mil- from February 2003 to the
lions of Americans the reali- present
approaches
ty of the mass murders and 300,000.
"Of these, over 200,000
rapes of black Africans
being continually committed have died from the effects of
by the National Islamic violence; over 80,000 have
in died from disease and mal Front
government
Khartoum in alliance with its nutrition ."
barbaric Arab allies, the
Reeves emphasizes that
Janjaweed.
the "highly distressed and
But there was one underre- weakened displaced popula·
searehed statement in the tion that is not receiving ·half
program. Like nearly every the necessary food aid. or
other report in the media I've criti ca l non-food items
seen on Darfur, Pelley said (clean water sources. shelter,
"there are at least 50,000 sanitary
facilities).
dead." This is like The New Moreover. as the deadly misYork Times and other news- match between humanitariah
papers automatically cou- need and humanitarian
pling the term "unsubstanti - capacity continues to grow
ated charges" when referring . in 'the coming months, the
to the Swift Boat Veterans global Crude Mortality Rate
for Truth. The statement is (CMR) will begin to surge."
not wholly accurate. Some
The Smith Coll.ege profesof the Swift Boat charges are sor
quote s · William
valid, and the death toll in Garvelink. deputy assistant
Darfur is much larger than admintstrator of the U.S.
50,000.
Agency for Internation al
Eric Ree ves. a professor Developmen\
(USAID):
at
Smith College in "The cris is in Darfur has not
Massachusetts has. in the yet peaked. We have not yet
pa't six years. become the seen the worst. "
most authoritative 'ource for
And USAID head Andrew

Natsios told England's The
Observer on Oct. 3 that "we
estimme nght now. if we get
relief in we'll lose a third of
a million people and. if we
don't. the death rates could
be dramati cally higher.
approaching a million people."
The 1994 genocide in
Rwanda was 800.000. U.N.
Secretary -General
Kofi
Annan and other world
leaders pledged that such
genocide would never happen again. But Annan and
hi s U.N. cohorts are letting
this one continue to happen
On
"60
Mmutes,"
Samantha Power, author of
the invaluable "A Problem
from Hell : America and the
Age of Genocide," ' said the
future Darfur body count
"won't look .like Rwanda. If
a millton people die in
Darfur. we'll all sigh and say,
'Isn't it a shame we couldn't
get medicine to those poor.
sick, Darfurians'!' As if they
were poor and sick to begin
with ... When we know
there are between a million
,and 2 million who can yet be
saved. what is our excuse for
watching th1s happen in slow .
motion'!"
The Rwanda ge nocide
happened in less than 90
· days. Are the United States,
and the world, waiting . for
the numbers of dead in
Darfur to go beyond those in
Rwanda 0
The one journalist who
has done the most to bring
the · suffering in Darfur
home to American readers
Is N1chola' Kristof of The
New Y01 k Times, who has
written a se ri es of dispatches from the killmg f1elds·. In
a col umn on Oct. II.

Kristof wrote: "President
Bush is already in the forefront of the world leaders
who have addressed the
slaughter in Darfur. and he
has don e far more than
President Clinton did during the Rwandan genocide.
But there 1s so mu.:h mnre
the United States can still
d0. ..
Kri stof cites: "a no flight zone, an arm s
embargo, an asset freeze
on businesses uwneLI by
Sudan's ruling party. and
greater teamwork with
African and Islam ic countries to exert more presSLire on Sudan. " He then
directly addresses the
president - but thi s e4ually applies to John Kerry if
he is the nex t preside nt :
"You pride yourself on
your willingness to "and
up to evil - so why do
you remain so passive in
the face of sLICh e' il 0 "
On Oct. 18, the tragedy in
Darfur deepened when four
.African nallons - led by
Nigeria - rejected "all foreign intervention in J)arfur"
in "this purely African yuestion." They will accept
humanitarian aid, but nothing more. And they support
the Sudan government.
This remain s total swte
terrorism by the government
of Sudan. We hrou ght down
Saddam Hu sse in . Is Sudan's
pre sident Omar ai-Basher
invulnerable?
.( Nal Hentojf i.1 a 11(1/imw/ly renowned aurhorin· "" I he
First Aml'lldment and 1h e
Bill of R1~'' '·'· and author of'
.~e reru/ hunk.\,
iHclud!ll g
"The !1i11 " " th•· Bill of
Rit:hls wnl 1he Gatl!cmlJi
Re.\ i \'lance,, . ( Se1 ·en Stone.\
Pre.)' \', 2003 ).

•

RACINE - Charles Norman lhle, 63, of Morning Star
Racme, pa~scd away on Monday, Oct. 25, 2004, at his
res1dence. tollowmg an extended illness.
He was born on April 18. 1941 , in Raci ne, son of the late
Cl~rk · and Mtldred Heilman lhle . He was a graduate of The
Oh1o State Um vers1ty, was a life-long farmer, and attended
Mornmg Star Umted Methodist Church.
His wife, Donna Frecker !hie, survives. Also surviving are
three daughters and sons-m-law: Lois and Jeff Knadler of
Little Hocking. Melissa ~nd Todd Lucas of Athens and Kathy
and Mark Brown of Huntmgton, W.Va.; two sons and a daughter-tn-law, Dav1d Ihle of Corvalis. Ore .• and Paul ;md Rayan
Young lhle ol Col~mbus; three granddren: Neil, Ryan and
Amy. Kay Lucas of Athens: and a sister and brother-in-law.
Phylhs and Jack Relyea, Rochester Hills Mich .
Services will be held a'. 2 p.m. on Thu~sday, Oct. :ZS, 2004,
at Ewmg Funeral Home 111 Pomeroy with John Gilmore and
Dewayne Stutler officiating. Burial will follow at Gilmore
Cemetery.
Friends may C&lt;111 from 4 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home.
·
Memorial , contributions ma~ be made to Morning Star
United Methodist Church, Racme.
Ro~d.

Margie Peck
CHES HIRE - rviargte Rea Frye Peck, 71, Cheshire, passed
away on Oct. 22. 2004, at The Ohio State University Hospital
in Columbus.
She was born on July 6. 1933, in Logan County, W.Va.,
daughter of the late Willard and Mary Adkins Frye. She was a
homemaker.
Besides her par~nts, she was preceded in death by her husband. Randall Peck. in 1995; two sisters, Rosie and Dorothy :
andtwo brothers. Ora and James.
Surviving are her sons, Pete Peck and Gregory Peck, both of
Cheshtre : two dau ghters, Debbie (Budro) Baisden of Logan.
W.Va. and Deana (Delmar) Larkins of Middleport; two brothers. Otis tPam) Frye of Toledo and William (Donna) Frye of
Cheshire; a sister, Jean (Jack) Corns of Darrin, W.Va.: 10
granlichildren. II great grandchildren and several nieces and
·
nephews.
Services will he held at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2004,
at F1sher Funeral Home in Middleport with burial following at
Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call from 2 to 4 p.m. and
7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home, and may send
on!tne condolences to www.tisherfuneralhomes.com.

Terry Boyce
REEDSVILLE - Terry Boyce. 55, Reedsville, passed
away on Oct. 22. 2004, at St. ' Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg. W.Va.
He was born May 14. 194lJ. tn Circleville, son of Wilbur C.
Boyce and the late Betty Morris Boyce." He was employed as
a truck driver.
Besides hi ' mother. he was preceded in death by his sister.
Cathy Boyce. and several aunts and uncles.
Surviving. bestdes his father. arc his w1fe. Margaret Knight
Boyce of ReedsVille: four sons: Tom (Robin) Lawson of
.PortlanLI. Albert Law,on. Jr., Parkersburg, Robert Law.son,
Sr.. Columbus. and Christopher Boyce. Norfolk. Va.: a daugh·
ter. Jackie Ginn, Norfolk: live gran(lchildren: two sisters.
Belrnlia Hoyce and fri end. Melinda, of Columbus. and Candy
and family. Waverly: a sp~&lt;lal brother-m-l aw and sister-inlaw. Buu and Jane Sisco of Gallipolis: and a special caregiver
Angel From Above.
Services were held at 8 p.m. on Monday. Oct. 25. 2004. at
Fisher Funeral Home in Middkport with Rev. Lawrence Bush
officiating. Burial will follow at the family's convenience.
Calling hours were 6 to 8 p.m. on Monday.
Friends may send online condolences to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Shot
trom Page A1
ened defenses und perhaps
prevent the worst from hap·
pening.
But the millions of people
who are younger and healthier do not really need it _
espectally during a vaccine
shortage. public health officials say.
"Right now the entire
country runs on fear and we
don't need to live like that,"
said Catharipe A. Kopac , a
Georgetown
University
gerontolo gy researcher. "We
somehow thtnk we sho uld be
d1sease-free all the time. If
yo u' re leading a healt~y life
and yo u get sick with the tlu.
you're probably goi ng to get
throu gh it."
For years. most people
ignored the gove rnm ent s
vacc ination campatgn. in part
because of perststent' myths
that the shot hurts (not much:
the needle is small) and it
makes yo u stck (no, the conventional vaccine is · made
frnm dead virus ).
As re&lt;cntly as last year, 4
m1ilion dose' of vaccine went
um"ed, even thou gh an
alarming early strain of
mlluenta
emerged
and
gained attention because sev eral children died from it.
particularly in Colorado.
Two-thirds of Americans
age 65 and older were vacci-

The Daily Sentinel • Page A.;

www.mydailysentinel.com

nated in 2002. But only 28
percent of people with chronic illness and 30 percent of
''children 6 months to 23
months old got their shots.
Health cure workers were nol
much better ut 38 percent.
Nevertheless, the sudden
vaccine shortage this fall is
igniting a "scarcity mentality" similar to runs on banks
during stock market crashes
and convenience stores when
hurricanes brew offshore.
Millions who never bothered to get vaccinated before
suddenly are hounding their
doctors , workplace nurses
and supermarket clinics.
Americans are crossing borders and proffering their
exposed .arms; in Seattle.
people are paying $1 OS to
ride a high-speed ferry for a
shot at the dock in Victoria.
Briti sh Columbia.
What is behind this feverish behavior? Researchers
say it is not so much the tlu
itse lf as a more generalized
sense of fee Iing unprotected.
"Not being able to get the
shot takes away your control
over your health," said David
Ropeik. director of risk communication at the Harvard
School of Public Health .
''That sense of being out of
control is scary.' '
Many
providers
are
rationing precious vials for
their nced1est patients. For
the rest of us, their advice is
more motherly: Wash your
hands rrequently, and if you

Ohto fest1vals and events
COLUMBUS (AP)
Here is a list of current and
upcoming Ohio festivals and
events:
Through Nov. 4
Mrs .
Claus'
Closet,
Wagner's
Country
Inn.
Center Ridge Rd., Westlake.
Through Nov. 7
Outside the Line : SelfTaught Artists - Exhibition.
Dairy Barn, Dairy Lane .
Athens.
Through Nov. 21
Whimsy
Show,
W.
Columbus St., Nelsonville.
Through Nov. 27
Lancaster
Art
Guild
Autumn Open. Fairfield
County District Library, 3rd
Floor Gallery. N. Broad St.,
Lancaster.

Through Dec. 6 (Saturdays)
Bluegra~s and Old lime
Countty Music Jam. River's Edge
Activities Center, state Route 7,
four miles south of Sardis.
Through Dec. 24
Christmas at the Cabin.
Cave Rd., Bainbridge.
Through Dec. 31
"Moments
in
Time"
Pnotography Ext1ibit, Ohio
Historical Society, Columbus.
Monet to Matisse: The
Triumph of Impressioni sm
and the Avant Garde,
Columbus Museum of Art, E.
Broad St., Columbus.
Through Jan. 2
Retrospective : Nancy Crow
&amp; Dorothy Gill Barnes Artists.
JohnsonHumerickhouse Museum, N.

Highway Patrol

Whitewoman St., Co~hocton .
Force&gt; of Nature - The
DARWIN - Marjorie F.
Exhibit, Cincinnati Museum Stanley, 75, Apartment A-1.
Center, Westem Ave., Cincinnati. 2070 Ohio 124. Syracuse, was
Family Album : The James cited for failure to yield at a
Rutkowski Collection of stop sign by the Gallia-Meigs
American
Photographs. Post of the State Highway
Columbus Museum of Art, E. Patrol following a two-car acciBroad St., Columbus.
dent Sunday at the intersection
Through Jan. 9
of U.S. 33 and Ohio 681.
Football: The Exhibit,
Troopers sa1d Stanley was
Boonshoft
Museum, we&gt;tbound on 681 at 6:05
DeWeese Pkwy., Dayton.
p.m. when she .failed to stop
Through jan. 16
for the "op sign at the interLee Friedlander At seclton. entered 33 and collidWork : Exhibit , Columbus ed with a northbound car driMuseum of Art. E. Broad St.. ven by Darrell G. Jenkins Ill,
Columbus.
20. 34957 Ohio 7. Pomeroy.
Georgia 0' Keeffe and New
Damage to Jenkins' car
Mexico - A Sense of Place: was disabling. while funcExhibit, Columbus Museum of tional damage was listed to
Stanley's vehicle.
Art, E. Broad St. , Columbus.

Local Briefs
Refreshments
with candy

Advisory issued Fair board
in Tuppers Plains elects officers

Democrats plan
tailgate party

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
United Methodist Church will
be serving free cookies. hot
chocolate and cider to uick-ortreaterg and their families from 7
to 8 p.m. Everyone ts welcome.

POMEROY - The annual
REEDS VILLE- Tuppers
Water election of members to the
Plain s-C hester
District ha s planned an Meigs County Agncultural
interruption of water service Society will be held Monday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on in the Coonhunters Building
Rock Springs
Tuesday for Ohio · 681 on the
between Rye Road and Eden Fairgrounds.
Debbie Watson. secretary,
Ridge Road and including
reports the polls will be open
Eden Ridge Road.
When service is restored, a from 5to9p.m.Onlythose who
boil advisory will be in effect hold a membership ticket to the
until further notice. The out- Society qualify to cast votes.
There are five open posiage is necessary to relocate a
tions
on the fair board to be
section on the main water
filled
from
a slate of 12 candiline .
dates .
Incumbents seeking another term are Karen Werry, Jim
Watson , David Burt. We s
Karr and Brenda Johnson .
Others
filing for a slot are
POMEROY- Disaster
Windon,
Keith
unemployment
assis - Wendy
Woods,
Jim
Parker,
Steve
tance is available to help
people who are out of Swatzel, Ronald Hensley,
work as a direct result of Tom Pullins and John Collins.
New officers for the fair
tlte Sept. 18 flooding and
board
will be elected at a spewho do not otherwise
cial
meeting
to be held in late
qualify for unemployment benefits , including November.
self-employed agricultural and hourly workers .
se lf-e mployed business
people
and
busines s
owners unable to provide
from Page A1
services. Applications
are available by calling
the Ohio Department of plamts about old cars and
Job and Family Services debris on Butternut Avenue.
Councilman Jim Sisson
at (877) 644-6562 from
7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., once again addressed the
problem of speeding on
Monday through Friday.
Nov. I is the application Condor Street and recommended village police patrol
deadline.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Democratic Party will
have a Meet the Candidates
tailgate party from I to 3 p.m.
on Saturday at the Pomeroy
Parking Lot. A costume contest v..ill be judged and free
refreshments provided.

Wolf Pen set
trick or treat
POMEROY - Trick or
treat in the Wolf Pen community will be held from 6 to 7
p.m. Thursday. Participants
giving out treats are asked to
turn on their porch lights.

Portland sets
trick or treat
PORTLAND - Portland
will have trick or treat from 6
to 7 p.m. Thursday.

Peoples Bank
sets health fair
MIDDLEPORT
People s
Bank
in
Middleport will h.ave a
nealth fair from 10 a.m.
unttl 2 p.m. on Friday.
Blood pressure, cholesterol,
body fat and blood sugar
screenings will be offered,
refreshments will be served
and a free blood pressure kit
will be givin away.
Information is available by
calling the bank at 992-6661.
do get sick, stay home and
drink hot so~p.
In the United States, the
flu's average annual death
toll i~~o 36,000. Rarely do the
victims die from the virus
itself. Rather, it weakens
their immune systems so
that a bacterial infection _
often pneumonia _ delivers
the fatal blow. In virulent
years, pre-existing conditions like heart disease can
raise the
death
toll.
Hospitalizations
have
almost quadrupled over the
past two decades , to
200,000 ·annually as physicians recognized the additional danger flu poses.
Only two pharmaceutical companies make flu
vaccine for the U.S. market. The vaccme shortage
erupted Oct. 5 when regulators shut Chi ron Corp.'s
labs
in
Liverpool.
England,
cutting
the
expected U.S. supply by
48 million doses, or nearly
half.
"This is our btggest nightmare come true ," said
Noreen Nicol, chief clinical
officer at the National Jewi sh
Medical and Research Center
in Denver. which received
only about half of the 2.000

Flood help for
out of work

Sewers

f

doses of tlu vaccine it
ordered.
Still,
infectious-disease
experts suy flu should no
longer be u catastrophic illness
among
otherwise
healthy people, ut least not in
the way it wus in 1918 when
it killed 40 million people
worldwide.
For one thing, there are
still about 61 mi Ilion vials
of vaccine in the U.S.
pipeline. That is roughly
equal to the nation's entire
supply in 2000. With proper
distribution, that is enough
to protect the 42.8 million
Americans who really need
anti-viral protection, said
University of Rochester
infectious disease specialist
John Treanor.
Also. this year's dominant
strain appears to be similar to
last year's. Mor~ than onethird of Americans were
either vaccinated or exposed
to it naturallv. and some doctors believe ihere ought to be
at least some carry-over
Immunity.
And unlike 1918 . .nnw
there are at least four antiviral medications that can
relieve the flu's worst effects
tf taken w1thin 48 hours of
the onset of symptoms.

Difference
from Page A1
approval for the marker has
been received und should be
here in another month.
Recognition was given
to Robin Parker. Angie
Parker and the Rev.
William
Middleswarth ,
who were presented with
certificates of appreciation for their work at the
museum . Special tribute s
were gtven by Werry to
Margaret Parker and her
family for their dedicat1on
to the preservation of hi storic artifacts and their
work
in keeping the
museum open.
A time of reminiscing

8

~

LOWERY

Meigs County Recorder
Hard Working, Long Term Commlttment
'

Pd. For By C•ndldd

I

Asst. Pastor Joe Rife
World Christ
Outreach

Pwd political Ad~ th~J Condtd~

passed

and tramferreLI $10.000 from
the geneml to street fund. Bills
were also paid .
All council members were
present
except
for
Councilman Jackie Welker.
Council will next meet on
Nov. 8 at 7 p.m.
allowed members to reflect
on earlier fuirs before the
time of buildings on the fair·
grounds when cuttle were
shown under t~nts und picnics held under trees.
Newspaper clippings and
uwurds pertaining to her
years in 4-H were displayed
by Mary Grace Cowdery.
Parker reported that the
museum annex to be built on
adjacent ground will get
under construction this week.
The contrac t went to
Homecreek Contractors.
Because of an increase of
visrtor'. 11 was noted the
hours at the museum have
been expanJ~d to 10 a.m. to
4:30p.m . fiw days a week.

TUESDAY

Common Ground

WEDNESDAY

{'astor Rob Barber
Bethel Worship Ctr

THURSDAY

'

Pastor Da,·od
Wiseman

FRIDAY

Mt. Union Baptist

.

~· :a..

- -·:;a..

..

-------·------------~----~----------------------------~--------~

•¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥•

unanimou~l}

.

Preqclun~

~ Sucn-s.&lt;~[ully

TOM

23.04 was

Sunda)· through Frida)· :slight!)· at7 pm
( '\ DiiTer~:n1 Pa~lur Each '\t~ht 1 )li!L'IIIg

.

obtaining st\eral thouS»nd dollars in ~rani mnne~ IH
purt'hase law rnfnrceml'nt l'l.luipm~nl.
~ Working with state and local offidals 10 nh'tain grant mnnt'~ to
con~.truct a jail facilit~ lo stop !!pending money outsid~ Mei~s Cvunt~
and hellrr utilize tax dollan.
'l] WorkinJ,t with q11 • Plannin~ ( ' ummittL't' In ~1'1 that ~~"ih'm in plat't' 10
enhllm.:..,t•mrr~l'm:~ IT!!-JJOU!&lt;ot ol 1:1\l t'llfMn·nlt'nt. fin· and E:\IS for a
st~rrr 1\lt•igs Count~· .
I}] Working with comrnunit~· organi1.a1ions IO\\UTd U\'l'Tall rommunlr~
improvement
.
• Commilmttnl and Exptriell•'t&gt; nr wt1rk /tlr Mt:i~' CouriiJ' ·~ dll:.tfl\. •

the
,, area to deter speeders.
In other busine'&lt;. Resolution

October 24th- 29th

Pastor
Les Hayman

ELEC'

POMEROY - Residents
are remi nued that item' for
winter storage mside buildings on the Rock Springs
Fatrgrounds or outsilie but
inside the lenced 111 area will
be recei, ed from 9 am . to
noon on Saturday. Location of
storage will be on a· first-come
first -served basts, sard Debbie
Watson. secre tary of the
Me1gs County Agncultural
Society.

REVIVAL

.
·~~~~~~~~~~···················A••
ELECT

Winter storage
space open

REVIVAL"
T "PASTORS'
Middleport First Baptist
211 S. 6th Avenue
'f'

~e~· G'f'b£

r

Local Briefs

· Jody Rife
World Cl1risl.
Outreach
R1ef Hennan
&amp; JOY FM
Quartet
Belhel
Worship
S1ngcrs
Fn&lt;.l 13dptist
S1ngers

·c

I

I

�Th~

OHIO

Daily Sentinel

AK STEEL PICKET

(AP Photo/Middletown Journal. Pat Auckerman)

Greg Swartz. an AK Steel employee. stands the picket line at the main entrance to the
Middletown Works facility in Midd letown. Monday. Local AEIF union members held the informational picket AK Steel one day before the company released its third quarter earn1ngs report.

Collisions between vehicles, deer
·up nearly 5 percent in 2003
COLUMBUS (AP)
Collisions involving deer
increased 4.7 percent las t
year in Ohio. for total insured
losses of about $63.5 million
for 2003. the Ohio Insurance
Institute reported Monday.
The 3 1.729 collisions
included seven deaths and
989 injuries. up from fiv e
fatalities and 89R injuries
from 30,306 crashes in 2002
The institute coll aborated
with the Department of .
Natural Resources and Stale

Highway Patrol on the report .
The numhers are high in
pan because Ohio typically is
among the states with the
most registered ,·chicles. with
12 million lust war. licensed
drivers and niilcs driven .
Ohio has about 700.000 deer.
up.slig lllly from la st year.
The top fi ve coumies lor
deer-vehicle
l'OIIisions
haven' t changed since 200 1:
Hamilton.
Richland,
Muskingum. Summit and
Knox . The wunties "11h the

fewest collisions lust year
were Monroe. Champaign,
Pike. Hocking and Putnam.
Most
accidents
occur
between
October
and
Dc ce niber during breedi ng
season. and more than half
take place between 5 p.m .
and midnigbl. Damage averages about $2.000 per claim .
the institute said. and a deer
accident should not increase
an insured driver ' s future
premiums.

Neighbors haunted by screams
of 7 children killed in fire
TOLEDO (AP) The
mother of six children ki lied
in a fire told family mem·
bers that she was standing
just outside her open front
door when she noticed
smoke coming from upstairs
and tried to run back and
save them.
The smoke. though. wa~ too
much and she had to tum back
and run to a neighbOr's apart·
ment for help. the woman's
mother. Ora · Ragland, sa1d
Monday. a da)' after the lire
killed seven chtldren.
At least three neighbors
went up the staircase. trying
to reach the six siblings and
a cousin who were trapped
in two upstairs bedroom s
and screaming for help.
All seven, ages 6 months
to 7 years. died from smoke

PageA6
Tuesday, October 26,2004

Tuesday, October 26
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Temperatures will drop
frll m 52 early this morning to
51 by 7:00am then rise back
up to M late morning. Skies
will be sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 MPH winds
from the southeast turning
from the northeast as the
morning progresses.
Aftemoo/1 (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 67 with today's
high of 69 occurring around
3:00pm. Skies will be mostly
sunny with 5 MPH winds
frnm the northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
Temperatures will linger at
55. Skies wi ll range from
partly doudy to doudy with
5 MPH winds from the north ·
cast turning from the east as
the eveninn progresses.
Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
It should be a cloudy
overnight. There might be a
bit of rain around the area.
Temperatures will hover at 52
with todav's low of 51 occur·
ring around 6:00am. Winds
will be 5 MPH from th,e east.
Wednesday, October 27
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon~

34.90
AEP- 32.32
AKZO 37.38
ASHLAND INC. -

Local youth to
compete in
PP&amp;K in Cincy

It will be a cloudy morning.

You will see light rain. The
rainfall is expected to begin
near 8:00am. The rain should
reach 0.05 inches by this
morning. Temperatures will
remain arf1lund 52. Winds will
be 5 MPfl from the east.

Aftemooll ( 1-6 p.m.)
It will remain cloudy. Light
rain is forecasted. The rain
fall should reach 0.08 inches
by
thi s
afternoon.
Temperatures wi II stay near
57. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the cast.

80.65

GENERAL ELECTRIC -

32.90
GKNLY- 4

HARLEY DAVIDSON
AT&amp;T- 16.10
BLI - 11.96
56.20
BDB EVANS 23.25
KMART 90.28
KROGER 14.85
BDRGWARNER 43.28
'LTD.
23.67
CHAMPION 3.52
II
CHARMING SHOPS 7.35 NSC - 32.92
OAK HILL FINANCIAL CiTY HoLDING 33.30
CoL- 35.28
36.91
DG -18.43
OVB- 31.25
BBT- 39.92
DuPoNT 42.18
FEDERAL MOGUL .16
PEOPLES 26.96
. PEPSICO 48.23
USB- 27.75

PREMIER 9.30
ROCKWELL 40.45
ROCKY BooTS 19.45

53.04
SBC 24.99
SEARS 31.65
WAL·MART 52.30
WENDY'S 32.02
WORTHINGTON 19.75
RD SHEU. -

DAILY STOCK REPORTS ARE
THE

4

P.M. CLOSING QUOTES

OF THE PREVIOUS DAY'S
TRANSACTIONS, PROVIDED BY
SMITH PARTNERS AT ADVEST
INC. OF GAU.IPOLIS •

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

whether two smoke detectors
were working, firefighters did
not hear them when arriving.
Metzger said.
The victims were five sisters - Tanija Sanders. 7
months: Talia Sanders. 1:
Terri Sanders, 6: Brionna
McCullough
2:
Teairia
McCullouoh, 7 - their broth·
er. Brian McCullou~h. 5. and
a girl cousin. Quanlsha Kirk.
7. family members said.
Six were found in an
before. investigators
c:111 upstai" bedroom and a baby
determine the cause. which was fmmd in a crib in anoth·
started in one of the rear er room.
Two funeral homes in
bedrooms on the second
tloor. said Deputy Fire Chief Toledo have offered to donate
Roben Mctz~er.
their serv ices to the tamily
Tesh were' planned to see tmd the city will give lhem
if electric btN~ board heaters cemeterv plots tor all of the
contributed to the fire. children. said Mayor Jack
Although it\ not known Ford.

inhalation. the Lucas County
coroner ruled Monday.
Investigators would not
say w·hether they have
determined if the chi ldren's
mother. Melinda Ragland.
was at home when the fire
started. Ora Ragland insisted
that this was not a "home
alone" case.
"My daughter really loved
those chi ldren." she said.
"Nobody can deny that."
It will be at least two clavs

YOUR

CHOICE

PGW&amp;LL•S PGGD FAIR

TY HALL

WEDNESDAY, OOOBER 27th
Festivities begin a:t~7:~o!o~~-

ALL ARE WELCOME
AND ENCOURAGED
TO ATTEND!

PROI\I£K
Roc~rr Rediner

DRE.Uii'HI'ER OR I'IIU~G
ROCKER RECU.\ER

YOUR

Don't
Forget Your
Costume!

Rocksprings
REHABILITATION CENTER
36759 Rocksprings Road • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(740) 992-6606

fir59·9~

1699''

HOT DOG SALE

Southern
reserves tie
Hannan
ASHTON, WVa. - In &lt;I
cold, rain dampened junior
varsity football tilt. the
Southern Tornadoes and
Hannan Wildcats battled to a
6-6 tie,
Southern's Codv Patterson
scored the lone" Southern
touchdown and led the
Tornado rushing with 44
yards on 12 carries. Overall.
the Southern team amassed
82 yards on the ground with
28 carries.
Anthony Shamblin had a
12 -39-yard night. while
Wesley Riffle and Ryan
Chapman also had several
carnes.
Southern was 1-8 passing
for 18 yards. a pass from
Ryan Chapman to R.J. Leach.
The first half was a defensive battle on the boggy field,
but Hannan went ahead 6-o
in the third quarter.
Southern fought back to tie
the score in the fourth quarter
on Patterson 's touchdown as
the game ended at 6-6.

Cavs top Celtics
in ·columbus

REHABILITATION

INVITEJ YOU TO OUR

POMEROY
Ryan
Chapman of Syracuse will
get the opportunity to partici·
pate in the Cincinnati
Bengals team Punt Pass and
in
Kick
competition
Cincinnati on Nov. 7.
Chapman won the 14-15
year-old age group at the
local competition sponsored
by the Marauder Sideliners
Club at Bob Roberts Field in
September.
He then competed in sec·
tiona)
competition
at
Gallipolis the following
week, where he earned hi s
way to Cincinnati by not only
winning but also having a
high enough total on his three
events to qualify for the trip
to Cincinnati.
Ryan received three tickets
to the Benga\s versus Dallas
Cowboys game and wi II be
on the field competing before
the game with the chance to
advance.
Ryan is the son of CT and
Tammy Chapman.

CHQICE
810.00 DOWN/810.00 MONTH
0'/i llftREST*

COLUMBUS (AP) - Jeff
Mcinnis hit two 3-pointers in a
late I0-0 run to lead the
Cleveland Cavaliers to a 95-88
presea,on win over lhe Boston
Celtics on Monday night.
The game included sniping
between Boston's Paul Pierce
and the Cavaliers· LeBron
James after a s(litting incident
late in the third quarter.
Drew Gooden, acquired
from Orlando in an offseason
trade, had 25 points, James
scored 21, Zydrunas llgauskas
had 13 betore fouling out and
Mcinnis added 12 for the
Cavaliers, now 5-1 in the pre·
season. Mcinnis, picked up in a
trade with Portland midway
through last season, hit the only
3-pointers he took in the game.
Pierce and Gary Payton each
scored 14 points and Mark
Blount had 13 for the Celtics,
1-6 in exhibition games.
With the ..score tied at 83,
Mcinnis hit a 3-pointer from
the right wing to give the
Cavaliers the lead for good
with 3:28 remaining. He later
added another 3-pointer from
almost the same spot, with
Gooden and James each hitting
baskets inside during the run.
Late in the third quarter,
Pierce spit at the Cleveland
bench after yelling at the
Cavaliers substitutes to sit
down .
Pierce had beaten James on a
crossover dribble and then hit a
fallaway
before
James
answered with a long jumper.
, James then stole the ball from
Pierce and dunked.
Pierce then confronted the
Cleveland bench, leaving the
. game soon after to a chorus of
boos from the crowd of 8, 795
at Ohio· State's Value City
Arena. Both he and James were
assessed technicals for jawing
at each other.
·

2004

Southern girls advance to district tourney
,BY ScoTT WOLFE

GANNm -

54.96

BCS standings, Page 82
Florida fires Zook, Page 86

Tuesday, October 26,

_Locai
__
st_oc_ks_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
ACI -

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Sports correspondent
THE PLAINS - Calling it a dramatic"-'come-from-behind win would
be a profound understatement.
Down two games to nothing.
Southern defied the odds Saturday
with
an energizing Sectional
Championship
win
over the
Waterford Wildcats at Athens High
School. After dropping the tirst two
games 20-25 and 28-30, Southern

came back to win the last three 26-24.
25-9. and 15-7. ·
Southern (9-12) will play the winner of the Portsmouth Notre DameLucasville Valley winner from the
Huntington High School Sectional
coming 7:30 p.m., Thursday at
Wellston High School.
"I am re ally, really proud of this
team ," said an elated Coach Roma
Sayre. "I've waited all year long to
see this team play with that determination. They didn't quit. Everyone did
their part. and played to their paten-

tial. Things j ust sort of fell into place
from there."
Although Southern played well the
first two game&gt;. Waterford played just
a little bit better. Baley Drayer led the
Wildcats with 13 points in the tl"t
two games. which 'oaw Waterford
scoring spread out among Lauren
Greene. Hope King. Robin Arnold.
Hannah Cunningham. and Tiffany
Wallace. For Southern. Jordan
Neig\er and Whitney Riflle allowed
the Tornadoes to keep pace with
Riffle scoring eleven straight in a

tight 2R-30 loss.
Sayre added. "They were all good.
close games. Our ~Lirl s started slow.
but really started comin~ to life in the
third game. Each

BCS

Sooners
and Utes
move up
in BCS

BY JOE KAY

Associated Press

Please see Beogals, Bl

of uur ga me

Please see Southern, Bl

Monday Night Bengals
CINCINNATI - Chad
got the best of Champ,
turning the Cincinnati
Bengals into an unexp~ct·
ed prime-time success.
Chad Johnson left cornerback Cbamp Bailey
face-down in his tracks on
a 50-yard touchdown
catch that got the Bengals
revved for a 23-10 victory
over the Denver Broncos
in their long-awaited
ret urn to "Monday Night
Football."
The Bengals (2-4) hadtl't played on the Monday
night stage for 12 years,
the longest such exile in
the league: A crowd of
65,806 - the biggest ever
to see a Bengals game in
Cincinnati - was hoping
just to avoid embarrassment.
A chatty receiver gave
them so much more.
A week after one of th e
most
embarrassing
moments of his career.
John son excelled in a
matchup of Pro Bowl
receiver vs. Pro Bowl cornerback.
With Bailey locked on
him man-to-man, Johnson
made one easy catch and a
bunch of acrobatic ones
that positioned Cincinnati
for the upset.
Denver (5·2) had won its
last four games with the
NFL's best •.unning game
and a Jefense that ranks
among the leaders in every
category. The Broncos
couldn't get nearly enough
out of either.
John son did the most
damage, catching seven
passes for 149 yards. He
had two 50-yard catches
against Bailey in the first
half alone. getti ng the
downtrodden Bengals to
believe they could pull it
off.
A week earlier. Johnson
had sent Pepto-Bismol to
the Cleveland Browns'
defensive backs. only to
have the worst game of hi s
career - three drops in a
34- 17 drubbing.
Rudi Johnson also had a
breakout game. running
for 119 yards and a 36yard touchdown that put

~~~~rec t

excelled when it hliJ to. We had 'ori1e
ni ce j)asses and sc\ crtil serves that
'oOrt of picked u' up. As v.e gained
some momentum. c\ Cl') nne did their
joh ...
Waterford'.., higgc..,l mi ... take wa..; the
inahi lity to put Southern ""ay in the

Bv RALPH D. Russo
Associated Press
Oklahoma and Utah moved
into premium posit ions in the
Bowl Championship Series
standings l\1onda y.
The Sooners are in second
place, jumping ahead of
Miami after the BCS stand·
ings debuted last "eek with
Oklahoma .surprising ly in
third.
Ca lifornia
Southern
remain' in fir st place with a
grade of .'!8-U Oklahoma's
grade is .'1:1~5 and Miami is
now third at .lJ2:11J.
Th e top two teams in the
fin a\ BCS 'ta11dingo, \\111
meet in th e Oran ge Bowl on
Jan. 4.
Utah is now sixth. a position that would guw·antee the
Ute &gt; a spot in &lt;me of the other
three big-mone y bowls if
they can \wid on to it.
"I think it's great."' Utes
coach Urban Me\·er said .
He found nui about his
team's small but important
jump from se1·enth tu ' ixth
from his wife . who left him a
phone mes~ag e.
.. Her comml'nt on thi:-. mes-

&gt;age - I didn 't ~et tn ta lk to
her - wa s 'He1" 1uu're No.
6. :Make sure ',)u · &gt;tay there.
That's reallv great coaching."' he said·. ..
glad she's
cleared that up.
"
"Honest I}. if we were eight

r·m

or nine.

it·~. l~t"~

go. Let's go

play...
A top.,;, fin ish in the BCS
\tanding:-. guarant~t:~ a spot in
either the Orange. Fiesta.
Rose or Su!!oll" htm Is. each
with paynuh"nfmc rSI.J mil ·
lion To

L'\Cil

hl' con" idered

ftlr a BCS bid. a tup-12 tlnish
i' rcLJ u1n.· J .
l 1tah 1" tn'irH!

l\) hecome
th e first tcain ;,, play in a
BCS \!a me fn)m a ~\H lference

nut,iJc the ,j\ league' -

Atlantic C&lt;'.i't Confe rence.
Bi \.! Ea't. Bit! Tcn. Bi~ 12.
Pa~·- 1 0.
Southe t1stern
Cincinnati Bengals' Rudy Johnson. fron t. gets pulled down by De.nver Broncos' AI Wilson in
the f irst half in Cincinnati Monday. (AP I

Rick Hendrick grieves, and a
.racing community joins him
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press
Rick Hendrick has spent 20 year&gt; as a
NASCA R team owner and is one of the big
players in the &gt;port. Yet for all his success .
he has never lost the wide smi le and easv
manner that make h.irn welcome wherever
he goes . .
''Rick is one of those guys who is every·
body 's friend," said Terry Labonte. who has
driven for Hendrick .since 1994. "He can't
walk 20 feet in the garag&lt;' without someone
wanting to shake his hand or have a con·
versation."
·
Now. Hendrick is grieving like never
before. A plane crash killed all \0 people
aboard. including four family members.
The plane. owned by Hendrick
Motorsports. · crashed Sunday in fog en

route to a NASCAR race in Martin sv ille .
Va. The deaJ incl uded He.ndrick's son,
Ricky ; brother John: and John's twin
daughters. Jennifer and Kimberly.
Also killed were Joe jackson . an ~x.:cu­
tive wuh DuPont : Jell Turner. general man·
uger of Hendrick Mo torsp&lt;l rts: Rand~
Dorton. the team's chief engine builder:
Scott Lathrain. a pilot for NASCAR driver
Tony Stewart: and pilots Richard Tracy and
Elizabeth Morrison.
Dale Earnhardt Jr .. whose father was
killed in a 2001 crash during the Daytona
500. said this latest tragedy hit the racing
community " like a hammer to the chest."
Hendrick. 55. owner of one of the
nation's bigge st network' of auto dealerships. already had a charnpion,hlp drag
boat tea m when he established his

Please see Hendrick. Bl

Please see BC5, Bl

Dark cloud over auto racing
One of auto racings· most successful teams suffered a devastating
setback fol lowing a plane crash Sunday en route.. to a NASCAR race
in Martinsville. Va . All 10 people aboard were killed . includ ing the
son. brother and two n1eces of Hendnck Motorsports· team owner
RICk Hendrick.
1984·2004
Team Slats
Year
21
Flrst season 1964
Career wins
128
Career starts 1.913
Career poles
123

2004 Hendricks Motorsports drivers
I Rank 1n parentheses)
TOP
CRIVERS
POINTS WINS 10

EARNINGS

JeH Gordon 121

5.919

5

22

55 .759.820

J1mm1e Johnson (4)

5.808

6

19

4.796 .770

Terry Labonle [241

·Bnan V1ckers (26)

3.233

0

6

3 407.140

3.057

0

3

2.i41 .900

,career highlights
_.,. Both J1mmie Johnson and JeH
Gordon hn&lt;shed NASCAR Top 10
series championsh ip 2003

., Won four oonseculrVe
series crowns, 1995-98
_.,. Gordon's four
season total1s

secood·besl ot al l t1me

.Johnson
SOURCE NASCAR

AP

�•

Tuesday, October 26, 2oo4

~"-

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

BCS Standings Ust
AP
Rk
1
2
4

1 Southern Cal

2. Ol&lt;lahoma
3 Mtamt

4 Auburn
5 Flonda St
6. U1ah

3

5
9
6
7
10
8
11
12
18
16
120
13
14
15
120
19
17
22
23
33
24

7. Wtsconsln

8 Californ1a
9 Georgta
10 Texas
~

1 Tennessee

12
13
14
15

Mtchtgan
Botse 51
Texas A&amp;M
Anzona St

16 Vugmta
17 lOUISVIlle

18 West Vtrgtnta
19 Oklahoma St
20 LSU
21 Purdue
22 V~rgtnta Tech
23. Iowa
24 UTEP
25 Minnesota

Pts
1610
1567
1441
1486
1286
1103
1265
1234
1039
1125
1006
985
552
639
425
765
728
686
425
461
553
289
191
5
93

Hendrick
from Page 81
NASCAR operation in 1984
wtth Geoffrey Bodme as hts
:first dnver. The fledgli ng
;team won three races that
·season and has added 125
·more wins, mcluding Jtmmie
Johnson's vtctory Sunday at
Martmsville.
That first team had fewer
than 20 full-time employees
.and a small shop. The
:Hendrick Motorsports emptre
.of 2004 has 460 workers at its
·North Carolma compound,
which mcludes several race
shops. butldmgs for the
engme department, a fabrication department, a paint shop
and a museum and team store.
"As you look back at
NASCAR 100 years from
now, people are certamly
going to thmk of Rtck as one
of the great car owners," team
owner Rtchard Chtldress satd.
"''ve always sa1d he has class
and integnty and he's always
been one of my favonte people."
Hendrick's team released a
statement Monday on behalf
of the family, thanking everyone for the "outpounng of
support."
Hendrick IS credited with
startmg the trend of multtcar
teams, and he employs
Johnson,
Jeff
Gordon,
Labonte and Bnan Vtckers as
his Nextel Cup dnvers. The
team won an unprecedented
four consecutive Cup championships from 1995-98.

Pet
991
964
887
914
779

679
778
759
639

692
619
606
340
393
262

471
448
422
262 •
284
340
178

118
003
057

USA!ESPN
Rk Pts
1
1513
1469
2
1380
3
4
1358
1218
5
1001
10
1152
6
1066
8
1127
7
1032
9
12
864
11
970
15
638
17
503
21
346
14
660
582
16
13
738
415
20
18
477
19
457
22

24
39
23

338

89
3

176

Pet
992
963

905
890
799
656
755
699
739
677
567
636
418
330
227
433

382
484
272
313
300
222
058
002
11 5

Jay Frye. general manager
of MB2-MBV Motorspons,
worked at the Hendnck shop
in the early 1990s. Hts team
now leases engine s from
Hendnck
"Copying ts the highest
form of flattery you can give
to anybody, and everythmg
we do, we 17, to emulate what
do, '
he
said.
they
"Everything they do IS
extremely
professiOnal.
extremely first-class, and the
btggest thmg about everything he does and they do ts
it's all about the people."
Hendrick • has had good
times off the track. He was a
techmcal advtser for the Tom
Cruise movie "Days of
Thunder" and was one of the
four original owners of the
Charlotte Hornets.
There have been less happy
limes,
however
Ttm
Rtchmond, who drove for
Hendrick in the '80s, had hts
career cut short by AIDS,
which eventually took hts
hfe.
In 1996, Hendrtck was
dtagnosed with a rare form of
leukemia. He underwent
chemotherapy and a bone
marrow transplant, turning
over the operatiOn of his team
to ht s brother until 1999,
when the disease went into
remissiOn.
.
Dunng
that
penod,
Hendrick pleaded guilty to
mat! fraud mvolvmg the payment of $20,000 to a Honda
executive. He was fmed
$250,000 but av01ded Jail
lime because ol hts leukemia.
He was later pardoned by
President Chnton.

Computer
Rk Pts
2
97
4
87
1
98
3
89
7
75
5
83
11 62
14 47
112 48
112 48
10 66
11 5 46
9
69
8
71
6
77
18 35
17 36
22 14
t15 46
19 24
23 12
NR 0
120 21
t20 21
NR 1

Pet
970
870
980
890
750
830
620
470
480
480
660
460
690
710
770
350
360
140
460
240
120
000
210
210
010

BCS
Avg Pv
9984 1
9325 3
9239 2
8983 4
7759

7217
7180
6428
6195
6163
6152
5674
4827
4777

4195
4179
3965
3487
3312
2788
2533
1332
1286
0717
0609

5
7

6
8
10
11
9
13
14
16
18
15
17
20
21
19
12
25
nr
nr
nr

··t don ' t know what ! would
have done wtthout John during that time," Hendnck said
alter resummg leadership of
the team. '·He gave me so
much support and stepped in,
and everythmg JUSt kept on
goi ng like clockwork."
The loss of hts son and
brother closely follows the
death of Hendnck's father,
"Papa Joe" Hendrick, who
dted of lung cancer July 14.
He was his son's mentor and
constant comramon.
"! can't tel you how much
I 111iss him," Hendrick said
recently. "He taught me so
ffi\ICh of what I know about
life and business."
Hts brother has remamed
an mtegral part of the team as
president. Hendrick, however, made tt clear ht s plans for
the orgamzal!on revolved
around his son, who dectded
after an InJUry durmg a Busch
Senes race at Las Vegas to
gtve up· dnving and concentrate on being a team owner.
"'When he realized that he
wasn't phystcally able to do
tht s, he showed a lot of character by making a tough
choice," Hendnck satd at the
ume.
Tony George, president of
the
lndtanapohs
Motor
Speedway, satd "Urnes of
refl ect ion for me m the near
future wtll be full of prayer
for Rick Hendnck, his family
and hts enllre organization "
Dnver John Andreltl added:
" It affects all of us ~n motorsports when good people wtth
great talents are taken away
from you. We are all family m
thts garage "

Southern closer at 15-14.
1Wo serves by Hope Kmg
put Waterford up 17-14. but
freshman Whttney Rtfne. one
from Page 81
of three Riffleis tn the
Southern ltne-up. hammered
thtrd game. What the out five serves to gtve the
Wtldcats did do, besides drop Lady ' Does a breath ot new
the thtrd encounter, was hfe and the lead, 19-17.
awaken a sleepmg gtant Southern never tratled again,
Southern came to hfe and but was gt ven a test of nerves
squeezed the life from the when Drayer ued the score at
'Cats in a dommatmg three 24-24 Southern's Ktser put
game fimsh
the game to rest with two
In the ptvotal third game, stratght serves and the 26-24
JUntor standout Knstuna Southern wtn
Withams had some servtce''The passers passed well.
savmg dtgs that protected the the front line spiked well. and
volley and put pOints on the the setters set well."" s,ud
board tor the Tornadoes. Coach Sayre " I can 't ptck out
Southern led 6-5 alter tour any one player for our sucserves, but the affair was cess It was JUst great team
close to the fimsh Tted at l 0- work. Our servmg was very
10, the game saw Waterford oood and we de tended well at
take a 14- JOlead
the net At this pomt 111 the
At thts point , Watertord match. we h.td to be strong."
held the final nail for the cotWtlliams, Jenny Warner.
fin, but a dtg by Wtlliams Netgler and Ashley Robte all
secured the Southern serve contributed wtth good tront
Senior Brooke Kiser tallied a lme play, while Ktser. Roush.
pomt from the servtce !me for Bethany Rttfle, Ntkki Rtltlc
a 14-ll tally, then afte r a and Whitne~ Rt ffle each were
Greene score for Waterford credtted w11h great passmg
Southern's Ashley Roush and setting Bethany Rtffle
scored three straight to pull and semor Ktser had several

Southern

Ben gals
from Page 81
the Bengals up 20-10 late in the third quarter.
It was only the second time all season that an
opponent scored so many pomts on Denver's
defense.
.
Only the Bengals' inabthty to score from
close range prevented it from bemg even
more lopsided. They got inside the 20-yard
line five Urnes, but had to settle for three fteld
goals by Shayne Graham, includmg a careerbest 53-yarder

BCS
from Page 81
Conference that have
automatic berths.
The Utes (7-0) are one of
seven Divtsion 1-A teams
wtth perfect records. They
West
beat
Mountain
Conference nval UNLV 6328 on Saturday.
Boise State, the other
unbeaten from a mtd-maJor
conference, moved up a spot
from last week to 13.th.
The BCS ts usmg a new

key saves and were integra1 1n
settmg up the SHS front row
Wtlharns proved to be ~
double-edged sword tn the
tourth game, when she stan~d
the game wtth an exclamauon
potnl and five stratght scrv 1ng
potnts. Southern edged to a
15-7
advantage , beiGre
Wilhams once agam went to
the servtce lme where ,he
scored ten straight potntl to
tmtsh the game, 25-9
Southern
In the dectsive linale. the
match !led at 2 game to 2
Ashley Roush broke open a
close 4-3 game as Southern
tought from a delicit to lc.td
9-4 In Roush 's stnn g nl
seven potnts. the semor h.unmcred an ace th.tt f01 ccd "
Waterford ume out Rou1h
came b.tck wtth another ponu
before .1 stde-out !!·" e
Waterford the serve
Whllney
Rtltle
put
Southern up 12-5 .tnd
Bethany Rtflle secured the
Southern wm with an dee 111
the stt ing of three stratght
serves Southern won the
game 15-7, and as a re,ult
clatmed
the
Sectional
Championshtp .•

Twtce, they got mside the l 0 but c.tme
away empty- Rudt Johnson was stopped on
fourth-and-! and Bailey Intercepted Car1on
Palmer's pass to Chad Johnson.
The Bengals had been exiled from the
Monday mght hneup since 1992 because ol
thetr history of los mg. Cmcmnatt hasn "t had a
wtnmng record smce 1990, the league'
longest current streak of futtltty.
Instead , the Broncos did the bumblmg
Reuben Droughn s ran for 110 yards but Jumbled and couldn"t convert cnttcal thtrJ
downs Jake Plummer threw two Interceptions that set up tte ld goals and was sacked
three ttmes. matchmg the Broncos' total for
the first stx games.

formula that rehes more on the computers from ftfth to
The Associated Press Top 25 fou rth.
Mtamt h.ts the top comput
and ESPN/USA Today coaches poll than ever belore The er rankmg.! ust ahead ot USC.
Sooners have been No 2 m which IS 1\o l In both polh
both polls all season but by a [,u ge margm The
tratled close behmd Mtamt Humcanes are No 4 m the
last week in the BCS stand- AP medt,t poll and No 3 111
mgs because of thetr relatt ve- the coache' poll
"There\ a lot ot footb.1ll
ly weak computer rankm g
A compilation of six com- lett We do not have a lot nl
puters are used to determine control over 11. other than
one-thtrd of a team's BCS wtnnmg. and "e feel the BCS
grade, wtth a team's htghest tormul.1 wt ll take c.Jre ttl
and lowest computer ranktngs llselt:· Mtamt coach La1 11
Coket satd ··we wtll contmuc
thrown out.
Okl ahoma beat Kansas 41 - to play .t' hard as we c.tn Itt
10 last Saturday. whtch wtn our games. and that s .til
helped tmprove tts ranking in we can re,tlly do··

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Puhllc Notices In Ne'!Nspapers.
Y n u r HIMht. tu Kno'IN. l&gt;cllvcrcd RIR:ht. to Vour Door.

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
Mortgage Electronic
Registration
Systems, Inc. solely
as

nominee

for

Lender c/o Select
PorHollo Servicing,
Inc. end U.S. Bank
National AS8oclatlon,
as Trustee of CSFB
ABS Trull Series
2001·HE11 c/o Select
Portfolio Servicing,
Inc.
Pleintlll,
VS

Pamela G. Bentz aka
Pamela L. Bentz aka

Pamela Bentz, el al
Defendants.
Case NO. 04-CV-089
Judge Fred W Cnow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Jane
Doe,
unknown spouse of

M.D Russell on
March 7, 194t, James
Doe,

unknown

spouse of Cora Belle
S. Russell on March
7, 1941 , Julie Doe,
unknown spouse of

Edward A. Stark on
March 7, 1941, Jamie

Doe,

unknown

spouse or "argarat
Stark

on March 7,

I941 , and Jennl Doe,
unknown spouse of

William Stark on
March 7, 1941 ,whoaa
1111 known addre11
are ADDRESSUN·
KNOWN and 111 of
whole reeldenceo are
unknown and cannot
by IIIIOnable dill•

genet bt 11car·
l1lned, will taka
notice that on tht
18th dey ol July, 2004,
Mortg1g1 l!lectronlo
lhgletretlon
lylltma, lno. eottly
11 nomtnM lor
Linder o/o ltltot
l'ortfollo larvlolng,
Ina. ANII U.l. lanlc
National Alloolatlon,
II TrUIIM of C.,l
All Trull ltrltt
IGOI•HII I o/o ltlaot
l'ortfollo larvlalng,
Ina.
llled
lfe
Comp111n1 In the
Common 111111 Court
I

of Meigs county, Ohio
in case No. 4 V 089,

on the docket of the
Court, and the oblect
and demand for rollef
of which pleading Is
to foreclose the lien
of plaintiff's mortgage recorded upon
the
lollowtng
deacrlbed roal estate
to wit:
Pnoperty Address:
124 Mulberry Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769

November, 004, at •he
regular places of vot-

Ing therein, the ques·
lion of levying a
renewal tax outside
of the ten-mill constl·
tutlonal limitation for
the benefit of the
Maigs Local School
District lor the pur·
pose of permanent

ell! of Olive Township
for the purpose of
Fire protection Said
tax being:
A renewal of a tax of
1.5 mills at e rate not
exceeding 1 5 mills
lor each one dollar of

each one dollar of

valuation,

which

amounts to five cents

(SO 05, for aach one
hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (5,
years The Polls for

said Election will
open at 6.30 a.m. and

valuation,
which
amounts to fifteen

remain . open

until

said Election will
open at 6:30 a.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of the Board
of Elec11ons, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N.lhle
Chalrperaon
Rita D. Smith

cents ($0.15) lor each .7:30 o'clock P.M. of
one hundred dollars said day.
Director
rate of fifty-five hun- of valuation, for five By order of 1he Board Dated Sept 5, 2004
dredths (O 55) mill for (5) years.The Polls lor of Elections, of Meigs (10, 5,12,19, 26
each
one
dollar
aald Election will County, Ohio
and being more par· ($1 .00) of tax valua- open at6.30 a.m. and John N.lhle
ltcutarly described In tion, which amounts remain open until Chairperson
plaintiff's mortgage to live and one-half 7:30 o'clock PM. of Rita D. Smith
recorded In Mortgage cents (SO 055) lor said day.
Director
Book
Official each one hundred By order of the Board Dated Sept 5, 2004
Records Volume 139, dollars ($100.00, of
of Elections, of Meigs (10, 5,12,19, 26
page 769, of this tax valuation, for a County, Ohto
Coun1y Recorder's period of live (5) John N. lhle
Office.
years, commencing
Chairperson
Public Notice
All of the above wl1h tax year 2004, Rita D. Smith
named defendants collection year 2005.
Director
NOTICE OF ELECare
requIred
to The polls will be open
Dated Sept 5, 2004
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
answer within twenty- from 6:30a.m. to 7·30
(tO, 5, 12, 19, 26
EXCESS OF TliE TEN
eight (28) dayo alter p.m. on said date.
MILL LIMITATION
last publication dale By order of the Board
Revised Code, elecDec. 7, 2004, which
of elections of the
Public Notice
tions 3501 .11 (G,,
shall be published Coun1y of Meigs,
5705.19, 5705.25
once a week for s1a:
Ohio
NOTICE OF ELEC·
Notice Is hereby
consecutive weeks,
Rita . Smtih
TION ON TAX LEVY IN gtven that tn pur·
or they might be Director
EXCESS OF THE TEN suance
of
a
dented a hearing In . (10) 5, 12, 19, 26
MILL LIMITATION
Resolution of the
this caae.
Revised Code, elec- Board of Township
Jennifer K. Ross,
ltons 3501.11 (G), Trustees of the
Public Notice
Attorney
570519, 5705.25
Township of Sutton,
LERNER, SAMPSON
Notice Is hereby Racme, Ohio, passed
lo ROlHFUSS
NOTICE OF ELEC- given that m pur- on the 2nd day of
Attorneyo for Plaintiff TION ON TAX LEVY IN suance
of
a August, 2004, there
P.O. Box 5480
EXCESS OF THE TEN Resolution of the wtll be submitted to a
Cincinnati, OH 45201 · MILL LIMITATION
Board of Township vote of the people of
Revised Code, elec- Trustees
of the satd subdivision at a
5480
(513) 241·3100
11ons 3501 .1 1 (G), Township of Salem, General Election to
attyemall Olsrlaw.co 5705.19, 5705.25
Langsville,
Ohio, ba held In the
m
Notice Is hereby paosed on the 101h Townahlp of Sutton,
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26, (11) given tha1 In pur- day of Augull, 2004, Ohio, at the regular
2,8
auence
ol
1 !hare wilt be oubml1· place1
of voting
Raoolullon of tha ted to 1 vote of the therein, on the 2nd
Board of Townlhlp people or Bald eubdl· day of November,
Public Notice
TruetHt of the vlelon et e Otnar1t 2004, the quaotlon ol
Townehlp of Olivo, l!ltctlan to be held In levying 1 tu, In
Ohio, the Townehlp of IXCtll Ol the ten mill
NOTICI! OF I!LI!C· Rttdavllla,
TJON
PIIIICI on tha llh dey litem, Ohio, 11 the llmHatton, lor the ben·
Notlot It hereby of Auguat, 2004, thtrt regulor Pilote of vot• ell!
ol
Iutton
given thtl purtutnt will be tubmtttad to 1 Ina therein, on the Townahlp lor thl pur·
to I riiOIUIIOn ldOpt• VOte Ol lht peopll ol 2nd day ol November. poll ol Matntelntng
td by tht IOird of aatd aubdlvlaton at a 2004, the qutetlon of and operating oamt·
ldUOIIIon of lhl General llaotlon to levying 1 IIX, In tarltl laid tax being:
Mlllll 1.oa11 lohool 111 hlld In the IXOIII ol thl ten mill Araplaoament ol tax
llllfrlat, County of Townatllp of Oliva, llmltetlon, for the ben· of a.l mill at a rate not
Mllflt, Ohio, on the Ohio, 11 the regular tilt
of
leltm IXOtldlng 1 mill lor
1IIIII dey of Auautt, pl1o11 ol voting Townthlp lor tht pur· 11oh one dollar of
IGG4, lfitrt Will Ill thartln, on the lnd poll ol Metntalntng VIIUitiOn1
WhiOh
aullmlllld to lht qual• dey of November end operetlng otmt• 1mount1 to fiVI 01nt1
lftld IIIOttrl of 11ld 1004, the qutttlon ol !trill. llld IIX llel"li (IO.GI) lor IIOh on1
IOhOOI dlltrlot II lhl lavylng 1 11x, In A rarlloamen1 ol 111 hundrld dOIIIrl Of
tllttlon to be htld on ex0111 of the ten mill of a. millet e rete not VIIUIIIon, for fiVI (1,
the lnd dly ol llmllltlon, lor tht btn· exotldlng o.a mill lor y11ra. Thl Polll lor
Improvements at

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brandall@hsc wvu edu) or
D•d anyone who attended Manlyn Smith (304)342
the Franc•s E Shautter s 4275 All rephes w•ll be held
Auc110n on 9-11-04 lind an 1n the stnctest conftdence
•nstruct10n book and/acces Thanks very much for you r
sor1es tor a Montgomery mterest 1n shar1ng your
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

FOUND

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name of MaJIC fam1ly pet
m1ssmg smce Oct
15
L•ncoln H•ll area Reward
call (740)992 ·~95

I lHtNK
I'M~~~

YARDSAu.:

0
0

D

•
••

Money to Loan ............................................ 220

Motorcyctu a 4 Whtlltrt ......................... 740
Mualcat tnotrumente ............................... 170

Plumbing &amp; H1attng ................................... 820
Proflntonal Bervlcu................................ 230
Radio, TV 'CB Rtp11r .......................... ..... 180
Rill Eatata Wanted ........... ......................... 380
Schoole tnllructlon ................................... 150
Baed, Pl1nt&amp; Fartlllzer ............... ............. 110
Slluatlont Wanted ... ............. ,.................. 120
Spa co for Rant ....... .............................. 480
Sporting Goode.
............. 520
SUV'I lor Sale. ......... .. ......
........... 720
Truckllor Sate.. ....... ... . . .. ............. 715
Upholltery ...... . ...... . ........
. 870
Van1 For Sale.. . .......... ....... . ....... ......730
Wanted to Buy .. .... .. . ..................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Far&lt;TI Suppllel ...... ..... 820
Wan1ed To Do............ ... ... .............. 180
Wanted to Rent ...... .......................~ .. 470
Yard Sale· Galllpotlt........ . ...... . ....... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ..................•. 074
Yard Sale·Pt. Pleasant. . ....
. ... . .... 078

/0

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110

HELP \VANT1ID

1

,

lh:t.l' WAl'{)}])

CUST SVC REP
NEEDEDI

Limited
hme
ONLY
(740)446 3358 First 5to caU
rBC91VeS a Qllt

$$$Great PaytSS$

Up to $9 25/hr wrth
quat1l1ed e~~:perrencell
E~~:ceuent pay and benefits

Manager needed lor mobile
home park m Shade, send
Call Nowl
Required
resume to Counlr:~ Park
1·877-463·5247 atk tor
1-eoo-913-2823 ext. #1
Inc PO 1033, Logan Oh
ext 2659
4313B
Desk clerk needed Please
apply at ,y Budget
Inn Mason
County
Action Prrvata owned Beau~ Salon
stylist to
wo rk
Jackson Pike Galltpoll&amp; No Group Inc will be taking needs
Tuesday
a
and
Mondays,
phone calls plea&amp;e
applications for a Part-time
Wednesday 15 Will pay 60%
Cook
1
Helper
Must
be
Dom1no a now hiring sate
nnt polite and and wtll buy all suppl111
all
poelt1ona clean
dtl vert
Clientele preferred Send
dependable
Muat have
Pomeroy
Pt
Gattlpolla
rtaumt to C ~ Bcx !5!515 PO
Pfeannt &amp; Eleanor call experience cooking for large
Box
459 Clolllpollo OH
atore ( 304)67~·5858 tor groupe ot people Apply by
4!631
Wedntaday
October
27,
ap pliCBIIOnl
~004 by 3 oo p m at tho
Orttn Acrll
Pereonnet Department 101
P!'IYOIOLOG!!iT
Rtglontl Center, Inc
Sec:ond
Strllt
Point
M11 en lmml'dlttt
~lea11nt, WV • 8 1m to 4 We are a wtll r11pected
opening tor 1'1'11tment
p m No telephone call a national prac11ca dealing
lnetruotor
AlA
with ger tatrtca We art In
Job Requlrtmtn tl
nttd ol a 11cennd payeholo·
Nur1ing Aulatant Cl11111
High ScMal diploma or
glal who Ia ln ttruttd tn
beginn ing Novembtr 1
OED equivalent
worklr"!Q part !lmt Wt offtr a
Fl.lll·!lme poaltlona avJitable 2004 thru No-vtmbtr 18 ,
good ttarttng n tary and tnt
WorKing wi th MR/00 adultl 2004 II you enJOY elderly
ability to partletpat• In our
people and want to btoomt
In Varied nttlnga
•01
K
Call ~aychologlat
1 member ot our htllth cart
Bind r11um1 or
Tranaltlont 11 877-?.)i-2031
team
pleeae
atop
by
lnt.,llt lttttr to ·
cr ta• r11ume to 877·734·
Roclclprlnga Rehabil itation
Orun Ar::r. . Reglontl
Center
11
36761i 2030
Center, Inc.
Rotd
Rockaprlnga
Attfiltlon Per~~onntl
Trealment
Pomeroy Ohio 45759 tnd till Rtlldtntla l
PO. Box 240
Facility tor boy now l"llrlng
out
an
application
for
the
LOIIQO, WV 25537
Clsaaea Edendtcare Health Youth Workat position Call
FIX 304-782·2882
Services Inc la an ltQUII between 9 OOam-4 OOpm
Email
opportunity employer that (7401379·9063
gercOdlrtcwty com

Personal Computer

EOE.

•

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES
!0 DOWN $0 DOWN

who want to earn fTloney
v.h1te losmg werght show1ng
others how
1}40 )441-1982

IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTCIES

FREE SAMPLES

WELCOME•

CASH OUT1 HOME

www famousnutflllon com

J.Q

ii

$14 52 $2092/hr Now h r
lnQ For appl icat ions &amp; !roe
government )ot:J Into ee l
Amem;arr Assoc ot LabOr
1 913 5'J9 804:2 :24 .hrs
emp serv

HOME LOANS'

Chrld
Care
Operung
Flexible
Sh1lts
Ltnked
accepted (30A)675 8883

r,;l

POSTAL JOBS

FREE " APPROVED

CALL TODAY

lnfoCrs1on
Management Overbrook
Aehab1htat1on
Corp IS currently accepting Center rs now acceptmg
applicatLOns at our down- resumes tor the pos1110n of
town Gallipolis locatron D1rector of Sacral Servrces
I \II'! It\ \II' I
Qualrf•ed applican ts should Candidate must possess
"'I R\ It I ""
be stable hrghly motivated strong verbal and wntten
:;;;;;;;.;;;..._ _ _...., mdNtduats wrth good com commun1cal1on
skills
110
MediCare and
HELP WANTED
mun1cat1on sk1tls We offer a Med1card
•
full benefits package mctud· MDS knowledge LSW With
rng medrcat overage 401 K experrence 1n long term care
$$$HUGE WEEKLY
week ly bonuses and vaca preferred but not requ1red
INCOMES$$
liOn every SIX months No Ouat1fred candidates please
Cha rla Brown·
Processmg our ma1l from
previous expenence players contact
hOme
IS necessary
We are the McGUire Admln•sl rator at
Page
Streel
Genutne opportunrty
professiOnal d1fference 1n 333
FREE supplies FT!PT
telese rvtces and need great Middleport Oh 45760 EOE
100"/o SatisfactiOn
team players to JOin us I
&amp;
EMT s
Guaranteed
Interested
candidates Paramedrcs
needed Apply at 1354
Call 1(702)933·4666
please call 1 877-463-6247
Jackson P1ke GallipoliS
(24 hours)
ext 2458 or apply online
www jn lc&gt;CiSiO n com
Computer
Part· T1me
An Excellent way to earn
Technrc1ans
needed
m
money The New Avon
Local company seekrng a Galllpohs area Must have
Call Manlyn 304 8B2 ~645
dr1ver w1th a Class B CDL
reliable transportation Pay
w1th HAZMAT to haul
based on expenenced Must
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
propane and bulk luels tor have knowledge 1n all oper
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
hOme heat1ng 011 Two years
at1ng systems 8r hardware
675·1429
exper rence IS preferred
contrgurat1ons Appl1ca r.ts
Benel1ts rnclude health den- must be outgomg have a
ta l and l1fe 1nsurance 401K good personalrty Please
plan and pa1d vacat1on
subm11 resume to CLA so~
Work From Home
lnteresled
candidates
572 c!o Galhpolrs Dat ly
800·210·4689
should send their resume to Tnbune
PO Box 469
$500 $1 500/Month
UEI Attn Terry PO Box Gal11pohs OH 45631
Pan t1me
334 Gallipotrs OH 45631
$2 000·$8 OOOlMon lh
Positions available now!
Full t1me
Make 50 % sell1ng Avon

EOE

Al'TENTl0\'11!
GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOMEI

UNITED SECU RITY
MORTGAGE
1-800 370-4965

lAJO.T •Nil

Work from home
Fla•lble Hours!'

3BR 2BA 5 129 acres
Green Townshrp close to
school Pnced to sell More
1nfo ~740)446-7377

Locally

0

WVF

www

1110

lll\l'\\ \1.1
Install F1n1sh Pamt1ng
Carpententry Bathrooms
Resrdent1al Commercial

Htl.P WANTIJ)

INSURED
The

Syracuse
Ractne
Reg1onat Sewer D1str1ct w11!
have a tob openmg available
1n January 20051or the pos1
liOn of ma1ntenance laborer
JOb COnSIStS Of aSSIStrng
Superrntendent wtlh da1ty
actrvrlies general cleanrng
and maintenance ot equ1p
ment App l ~eatrons may be
p1cked up at the D1strrct
offtce at 5th and Mam
Streets 111 Racme at the
Mun1crpal BU1Id1ng Please
attach salary reqUirement
wtlh
applicatiOn
Applicatrons Will be accept
ed until Thursday November
11 2004

MB

NOTHING TO SMALL
Flat Pnces
Steve (740)388·8731

5~63

www.orvb.com
Home L1stmgs
lis! your home by ca lhng
17401446·3620
Vrew photos/1n!o onl1ne
Bedrrom Bnck Home 2
Bath 3 Car Br1ck
Unattached Garage 2
tory outbuild•ng Code
2704 or call (740 )446
566
Bedroom 1 1/2 ~ath
Fut! Basement
Middleport OH Code
17 or call (740 )992·
743
Bedroom 3 Bath
Located m Gallipolis over
ookmg 1he Oh1o Arver
ver 3000 sq 1t on 3 94
cres Code 825 or call
(740)441 0323

(Ohro Loans Only)
By Ow&lt;1e r US 35 n Mason
County 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Bed rooms)
Large Sun
Room 12x32
all new
Carpet Full Basement 112
acre lot S38 500 (304)675
2933

MOBil I HO\IIli
FUKS\U
14X'70 Mob1~ home 3 bed
2 balh all applrances some
turnrture $6800 (740)245·
9040

Charm1ng 3 bedroom 1 1989 newly remodeled trail
bath Located m Rodney er $8 995 00 3 oedroom ,
Housecleanrng $10 DO per V1llage Depos1t reqUired
112 bath (740)992·0640
he (740 )446 3385
Call ~7 40 )446·3128
1997 28x52 Doublew1de
Wanted to do Clean ot11ces
(converted to real estate) 3
I have references &amp; expen
bedroom 2 bath eat m
ence (740)256 1227
kitchen Barn shed carport
5+ acres Adamsville Road
W1tl haul Sand S. Gravel
Pr1 vate settmg S7i 000 f1rm
Reasonably
Pnced
(740)245 51 5i
(304)675·8635
All rea l estate ad11ert1srng

BliSL'iF~

10

Ot,UI(IlJ!\lTI

Absolute Goldmme '
60
vend1ng machtnes I excel·
lenttocatrons all for $10 995
Wanted L1ve 1n Care G1ver
(600)234 6982
for
Elderly
Lady
Housekeepmg
Cook1ng
requrred call (304)675 5578
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
or ~304 )675 2178

"'

Wanted
Drnrng
Room
Server
Mus1 be outgo1ng
servrce onented A sm rlrng
tace IS a must No exper1·
ence necessary Will tra1n
the right candrdate Apply 1n
person at Hol1day Inn ot
Gat11polis
Wanted
Expenenced salesperson
needed lor grow1ng compa·
ny Salesperson w1ll be
e.'olpectect to ma1nte1n current
customer sales and retatron
ShipS
Salesperson w1!1 be requtred
to establish new customers
m the tri-state area
Full time position
Good company t:Jenef1ts and
Commtaalon pay bas8CI on
11111 Vtlld drlvtr'a lletnaed
and tranaportatlon required
Stnd r11umt to CLA 9o.'ol
54 B.
P0
Box
Clalllpolla, Ohio 45831

"'

ou do bus1ness ~\lth peo
le you know and NOT t
end mor ey through th
a1l unt1l you have mvest1
ated the otlerrn

PRon....'itONAt
SER\ !Clli
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /S$1?
No Fee Unless We W1n l
1 BB8 582 3345
Rl \I 1'-11\11

HoM~
FOR S&lt;\1£

Sctt(KH&gt;~

Th1s newspaper Will not
knowmgt~ accept
advertisements for reel
estate WhiCh IS In
VIolation of th~ lew Our
readers are hereby
1nformed that all
dwellings advertised 1n
this newspaper are
a~ all able on sn equa l
opportunity bues

2000 &amp; 2001 Doublew1de
both 3 bedroom 2 oath Call
(740)709·1 166
For sale or rent 2 bed•oom
mobile hOmes startrng at
$270 per month Call 740
992-2167
Make 2 payments move 1n 4
years on note (304 )736
3409
New Oakwood mega store
teatur1ng
Homes
by
Oakwooo
Flee twood 8
Giles One stop shoppmg
only at Oakwocxl Homes of
Barbou·s,llle WV (304)736
3409

SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stoc~ models at old orrces
2005 models arrtv~ng Now
Coles
Mobile
Hom es
15266 U S 50 East Athens
Oh o 45701 (740)592 1972
Home For Sale
You Get Your
Hand burl! tog home 6 years Where
Moneys
Worm·
old Prrvate w1th 10 acres
Stunmng vtewl 3 Br 1 112
Lars &amp;
bath Open loftl
ACRFAGE
Financing tvellabte with

r

2 acres on Ingalls Roed
(740)3BB-01B4
0% Down Payment and _ _:._:.__--:--::-:= $15 000 740.245.()133
lrom
$10 000r
lrnancmg IV8111b11 with Homes
For rent Mobile Home lot 1n
approved credit
A11erage Forctoaure VA Hud Ior I11 I
1
BOO
749
8106
p
1709
countrv
P riva te environ
" •
•
•
r
crtellt qua 'Illes you II own
ment
PI'IOne (7&lt;l0 )446
payment naa ktpt you from Houae 3 Btdroom 1 t /2 38Q7
buying thl a 11 your cnance Bath Htat Pump, new

d

In "

=:._______

•e;

IN.IRUCilON

m thrs newspaper IS
BUbJect to the Federal
Farr Housmg Act of 1968
whr&lt;:h mat-:es 1t 1llegal to
advertase any
preference, hmrlallon or
dracrrmmat1on based on
race color reh g10n seJt
tam1hal status or natrona!
orl gln or any rntent1on to
make any such
preference, hm1tat1on or
d1scnmrnatron

NO DOWN PAYMENTIII

to own your own nome It
you Mave a down payment
but would llkt to oonaervt 11
we offtr tow down p1ymtnt
program• t ito Great lnttr·
Wanttd
Mtdlcai Olllot 111 rattal Local company
Aulatant with tKptrltnce lOr Morlgagt
Lcca10r1
pl"rya1ctan olllce A uniQI.JI ~7 40 ) DQ2·7321
poaltiM requum g knowl·
edQIJ or ( ~'"lP WI and dill 2 badroom houat J)omtroy
enl r; rl ~ll 1{.;0 and CPT $18 000 00 La11 lor ca1h
cod1ng All ' al'l e tranaportl· Mty take trtdl tor motor
tlcn neeaeo No wotkenda home or truck ( 740)DQ~.
or
hollda.ya
requ1r1d ~308
B•ntllt l avalleble Salary
2 Story 3 Bedroom, 1 Blll'l
negotiable with exptrrlnct
A lltMII:Jit amployer Ma tt Full Baaamen\ 1200 Main
St Pt Plenant WV celt
reaum e to Bo• 568 clo
Tim (304) 67H0!2 oe
GaUipoUa Dall y Trtbunt PO
(304)593· 191~
Box 469 Gallipotla OH
45631
3 bedroom older home on 1

encourage&amp;
workplace - - - - - - - dlver&amp;lty M/F DN
Rto Grande McDonald&amp; now Gtlllpot tt Carter College
(Careers Close To Home)
hlrmg all sh ift
Propane truck dri-ver need·
Call
Today 1740·446-4367
ed for Rutland Bottled
, 800 214 0452
Rulland
Ohio Must have TELEMARKETERS NEED
w- gallpol•tcareerCQi legll com
resume
CDL license and ED No Experience OK S7·
Acoed llad \la mbar Acered•tln g
HAZMAT Come to the store 9 Per Hbur Easy Work 1· COur'\Ctl lor lnoepanOart Col •g•••
888 974·JOBS
and pick uo application
1M SCtooole t(7 4B

o...

STAFFED BY US
VETERANS

Or1ver Needs Work Class A
CDL All Enjo r~;; ernents Call
1740)367 7699

comtcs com

Ho~u.~

FUR SAl f

Seeking 39 People

0

L,_..;,FL,;o,;EAiioliMtiiliARKEiiiiii·t....

DATA ENTRY

ML'iCH t.•NEOUS

H1gh
School
Jun1ors
Senrors and Pnor Serv1ce
you can !111 vacant poSitions
rn the West V1rgrn1a Army
Nat1onal Guard It you are
between the ages oi 17-35
or have pnor mrhtary servICe you wont want to pass
thrs up For Opporluml\es m
your area call
304 675
5637

PliUlAt. t:: D

AUCTION
Free k1ttens 8 weeks old RIVERSIDE
tra1ned BARN AI 7 South 5 miles
mdoor
lltter
wormed 3 tabby 2 white 1 below the Dam EVERY
Have you had a recent expeSATURDAY
@
6pm
nence of help seekmg for a orange (740)367 7574
740 256 6989
concern about your emo Free Kittens- white or gray
tiOna I or menta. I health w1th 1n longharred or short hatred
WAN!l-D
the last year.., If so there 15 (740)992·7285
IUBUY
a research team from WVU
that IS very mlerested m Part Lab &amp; Coltte blonde Absolute Top Dollar US
learnmg more about what male 2 yrs old To good S1 tver and Gold C01ns
11s like these days to seek home only Call (740)446· Proofsets Gold Rrngs US
help for emot1onat or mental 2886 Leave message
Currency M T S Co1n Shop
health (.;Qrtcerns and we Small prano needs repaired tSt
Second
Avenue
would very much l1ke to near
and tun1ng Call (740)446· Gallipolis 740·446·2842
your story Whether your
1542
expenence was post1t1ve
Junk cars with or Without
negat1ve a m1xed bag or
motors (740)388·001 1
completely neutral wed st1ll
FOLJNil
Old mrlk bottles !rom Gallra
love to hear 11om you l1 you
Co Dames Call [740)446·
are Willing to meet wtth a
Lost
around
N1bert17._1_4_w_&lt;lh--'-pe_,c_es_----c__
member of th1s research
Ad/Popular Rrdge area team to descnbe what vour 11 12
year
old
blue Wanted 2/3 Bedroom house
·ecent expenence at help· Doberman famrty pet very w1garage Tuppers Pla1ns or
seek1ny was l1ke please fnendly no cottar
S250 Chester area Preapproved
contact e1ther Betsy Randall reward (740)367 7673
l1nanc1ng (740)949-2194

10

170

lwnght@tc net

t._....:.;,--........

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1. 00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid"

ed art1fiC1BI apro~ 3 It long
Call (740)446 17t4

Peraon111 ........,.......................................... ·001!1
Petafor Sele .......................................... 580

'

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

r

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

AUt""TION AND

Loll a Acreage .......... ............................. 350
Mltcttlaneou1 ............................................. 170
Mtecellentcut Mtrchandlaa ......................540
Mobtlt Home Repair ............ ..................... 810
Mobile Homea for Rent ....................... 420
Mobllt Hom11 for Bale ............................. 320

•

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Loet 1nd Found ........................................... 060

~un'ba!' t!tfmt5 ·~entintl

Address

CLASSIFIED

4x4's For Sale ................. . ... ................ 725
Announcement
............. 030
Anltques .................... ............................... 530
Apartments for Rent
........... 440
Auction and Flea Markel ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessortes ........... ..
.... 760
Au1o Repair .
.. .. . ....... . .......... 770
Autos for Sale .......................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale... . ... ... . ...... 750
Building Supplies. . . . .................. 550
Bus mess and Butldtngs ................... .. . 340
Bus mess Opportuntty .
...... .. 21 o
Business Tratning. . ............................... 140
Campers &amp;Motor Homes . .... ... ....... 790
Camptng Equipment .. . ..... ........... 780
Cards of Thanks............. ......... ...... .. . 010
Chtld/Eiderly Care .. . ..
...... t90
Electrtcai/Relngerallon ...................... 840
Equipment lor Rent.... . ........•....... ..... 480
Excavattng ...... . ..
.... ....830
Farm EqUipment .... . ....................... 610
Farms for Rent. .... ....................... 430
Farms for Sale... . .....
...... ... 330
For Lease
..... .,...............490
For Sale ..... ..
... . . ... . .. ... 585
For Sale or Trade...
................590
Fruits &amp;Vegetables ........ ........... ....... 580
Furntshed Rooms.. ......... . ... .... . .... 450
General Hauling . . ... . ....... ............. 850
Giveaway.. ....... ............. . ....
040
Happy Ads . .. ... .. . .
............... 050
Hay &amp; Grain . . . ...... .......... . ........ .640
Help Wanted.................. ...... .. ..... .... 110
Home Improvements ................................810
Homes for Sale ........................................ 310
Household Goods ..................................... 510
Houses for Rent. ....................................... 410
tn Memoriam.................. .......... ............. .020
Insurance .... ................... ..........................130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ..... ................. 880
LIVIIIOCk. ....... ......... . ........ ................... ,830

If so, you qualify for a

The Daily Sentinel

tErihune - Sentinel - l\e

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Are you 65
or older?

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

Carptl. Wlndowl &amp; Root R1v1r front tot tor 111e 1n
Rlvl! Vltw 12 Smith St No EiJrtka Aeroaa from tockl
Monty Down to quatl fymg CtiiJ740)44t-1113S
auytr $o42'&amp;/mont1'1 wny Rent
R1111r property 1 e7 acr11
(304)S? 15 •27 4;
i32 lett shore ti nt 10 m1111
Hoult tn t&lt;tnaugl Old aauth of Gal1+pot1s SR 7
Farm111 ,_d Galhpolll Oh Buildi ng ptmm IVt !lable
S•O 000 2 tra1lert Krodel (7 40)2!6 · B8~3
Park
on
Neal
Ad
587!5/montl"'
1nveatment
RJ.:AL E.\TAll
Both
tra llert
$36 000
WANTI'J)
(7 ,0) 4 41 5725

Large 3Br on 1/2 acre Lol
M11on naxt to VFW n11dl Want to buy 1 3 bedroom 2
work 530.000 (304)882· bttr. Mmt Garaga b..l
ment 3· 10 acre1 11 dtalr·
2107
ablt All Cllh CIOII In 2
Ntwly remolded Home weeka Meigs Oa ll11 or
lOC8IIC tn Hartford 2or 1 Atl"ltna County (740)992·
tlllh compu ter room 111 6300
•ere Gilley R1dge Ad hall electric , htat pump centra l
way betwea n Pomeroy &amp; ole 140 000 eall 1 304 1 86~·
Alhens, atklnQ S79 000 2762 call day or evenrng
(740)591 7221 ERA Martin

&amp; Assc

Hot.~

HlH R EJ\T

3 bedroom tun basement
garage appro.'ol 1 acre ol
land 5 mtles from town on
SR 1 C Five Point&amp; call
740 4 16 0768 or 304 882
2299

•

�•

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 26, 2004
ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B~

www.mydallysentlnel.com

FOR RENT
0% Down Payment ancl
financing available with
approved credit
Average
credit qualifies you II down
payment has kept you from
buying, lh•s IS your chance
to own your own home II

ACROSS
2 bedroom apt 2nd tloor,
458 Second Ave. K•tchen
appliances furnished . Water
sewer &amp; trash paKI by land·
lord $285 month plus secur1ty
depOSit
$200
References required Call

yoi.J have a crown payment (740)446-2581 .

but would like to conserve It,
we oHer low down payment
programs also Great •merest rates! Local company.
Mortgage
Locators
(740)992-7321 .

2 bedroom apt

1

2 story, 2 bedroom . 1.5 bath. Applications being taken for

~ery clean
bedroom in
country sett1ng yet close to
town . Washer, dryer. stove,
fndge included. Water and
garbage Included. Total etectric with AC. Tenant pay alectr1c . $300 deposit, $375 per
2br
house
for
rent. month. No pets. No smok$350/month, water and ing. 74 0... 446 _2205 or 740 _
trash paid. no pets. Deposit
446·9585 ask for Virginia.
and reference required.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
(740)388-1100
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
3 Bedroom-large yard. 1 car PRICES AT JACKSON
garage-no pets, 7 miles I rom ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Rio.
10
m1les
town. Dnve from 344 to $4 42 .
{740)379·2540.
·
c
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. al 1
E
3-4
Bedroom
House. 740-446-2568.
qual
Gallipolis. D3ad End St. Houslng Opportunity.
$450/month , $250/deposit. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
~tove &amp; Frig. (740)446·3761·
or (304)675-4107
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apar tm ents.
4 bedroom house tor rent. and/or small houses FOR
Portland area. totally remod· RENT. Call (740)441·1111
eled, $500 per
mo .. for application &amp; information

s

(740)843-5546
4br, in Syracuse, OH
$600/month, $600/deposlt,&amp;
~br in-Syracuse $4751month
k-tud Approved both no Pets
(304)675·5332
Available Nov 1.· 2BA, 1.5
bath, central air, gas heat.
$450 month + deposit.
(740)446-1079.

2

baths. w/
Condo 3 bdrm
easement View of river.
cntrl
AJC
$700
mo.
Gallipolis Ferry. (740)4463481 ·

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675·7388. For sale.
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refngerators, gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wnnger washers. Will do
repa 1rs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

r

Buy

or

German Rott's·6 Female left.
Riverine $200 Parent~ on premises

sen
12

~~~~~~s2 4 ~ _ :C,;:r~~- ~:~~

cl3::0:_:4::_19::3::_7·_:2::31:_:0:___ __
_
_
Russ
Moore,
German Shepherds tor sale.
992 2526
Pups, and Adults. Training
uo~w~ne~r·~~---------, Breeding (304)937-2310
IF
MJSCELLANI&lt;:OUS
www.tristatek-9.com

rL.-------.,1
MERcHANDISE

I

Nice 2 bedroom mob1le
home. No pets. (740)446·
2003

APAKI'MF.NTS

FOR RENT
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lurnished and un1urnlshed, secunty depos1t
required , no pets, 740-9922218.
One bedroom apartment. .
no pets, 1n Pomeroy.
!740)992-5858

--

r,r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
r,O

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

875-2457

¥A K Q

•
•

t97652

t KJ 8

Restocking l.a te Model So t.age

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

and Af"IRr ,\larket . 1-hrls

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

See Brent or Brian Wh&lt;~ley
M·Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

2

r

Appliance

Warehouse

Block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande. OH
Call740-245-5t21 .

r

~ PJrrs

~-·--FO-RiiSiiiALE:iili-_.1

AKC Beagle puppies $125,
can see at 1473 Hannan
Trace Rd., Patriot, or call
(740)379-9063. No Sunday
Gooo Used Appliances. Sales.
Recon ditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers, AKC Black fernie Lab pupDryers.
Ranges,
and pies. Shots, wormed &amp; dew
Refr igerators. Some start at claws
removed.
$200.
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 (740)441·01 30.
Vine St. , (740)446-739 6
AKC Black Lab. puppies
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark Male &amp; Females. must go
Chapel Road, Por1er, Ohio. $150 each (304}n3-51 03
(740)446·7444 1-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy AKC Boston Terrier pups
financ1ng , 90 days same as 7wk., wormed, &amp; shots. 3
cash . Visa/ Master Card. female S198.00. (740)3888743
Drive- a· tittle save alot.

[10

1-.-------.,1
$500' H • '
Ch
'
.
onua s,
evy s.
Jeep's,
Eel.
Police
Impounds! Cars lrom $500
for listings B00-391-5227
EXT 3901
1960 Corvair. Runs good,
good body, needs interior
work. (740)446·7910.
1985 Ford T-Bird, V-6, 2dr,
good body &amp; inter. $600
080 (304)576-3080

Hwy. 160 N.

2000 Z24 Chevy Cavalier.
48,000 miles, Auio. Runs &amp;
Looks
Great
$5,000
(304)675-5828
2002 Buick Century- Special
Edition. Color· light sanddrilt
metallic, mileage- just under
53.000 miles, interior· cloth
seats,
loaded- concert
sound system II , exception·
ally clean car. (740)446·
0925.

MAW!!

PAW!!

}

No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Mason.
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

1995 Chevy Astro Van. 3
seater. lronVrear NC $4,700
080. Call (740)446-1714.

THE BORN LOSER
.-t.\IER SEE 11-\£
1'\01/(E. "jii,\.J~ '7

...'{(1\f-\ 1IT ~II.Kt:.\&gt;

1""1 I ~C~t&gt; I/IE SO
M.UG\, ['LL 1'\E.I/E:R
t.~t.N SW II-\ IN. II.
fOOL !&gt;-(,ji,\N.I

1-\E. ~ MUCJl.,
N.t.IJEJ&lt;. SWif'&lt;\ IN
Tl-'.£ OCE~ 1&gt;,(,1\,11'\ I

1·740·843·5382

95 Ford Aerostar XLT.
44,000 miles. one owner,
el!icellent condition. S6.000
OBO, call (740)985·3571

M20 t-.:a:-.t Main St .

Pnmcroy

•

hcside Larry·:- rl-u it Shmd

Wananty Rl'pair •

4 WHEH.ERS

See ·
·Rocky "RJ"
HC:~PP

Lawn Tra~o:tur &amp; Pu~h
Mowers. Chain Saws.
Chain SharpcncJ
&amp; Parts

2000 Honda Foreman.
450es, yellow, winch, new
tires. lock in/out. 4:o:4, great
condition. $3,200 (740)2459099

:'-Jcv. General Standhv
Gcnl.!rating. Sy~tems and

Rui-Air Air Cmnprcssors
Open K:.W-6:110 M·l·:

2002 Honda 400 E:o:., good
condition. $3.500 080. Call
(740)256·1526. 740·645·
0446.
-------2003
Custom
Harley
Davidson Sportster. 3.000
miles.
$7,000
Call
(740)645-3331 .

Self-Storage ·

CA~II'ERS &amp;
MoroR HoMI·:s

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1984 24' Jamboree motor
home. 41.000 miles. self
conlained, excellent condi·
tion
Call
512 _000 _
(
_
7401245 5127
' - - -- - - - - 1997 Prowler, 24ft., Sleeps
6, Mmt Condition. $6000 .

"IT"~ .

A S HO'itT LIST ,

AC.TUALL"(.

THERE

I

MEAN,

ARE~'T

t1.a...N'f

COSTUMES THA,T WOULD
BE APPROPRIATE FOR
YOU

li:;,UT

H

AN'("-1./A.. Y,

.... E 60 ..

Heaters .

1/MJ'R~
High 8l Dry

99 Harley Fat Boy, 9,000
miles. new t1res . lots of
chrome_ Asking $15,000
080. (740)446-9954 .

BIG NATE

IMPORTS
Athens

Sa1. 8:30-2:110 992-1033
Pid -up anJ Jdiwry ~en~~- ~
~ow ~r:...,· icing Kr:ro;,c~

740·992·5232

BISSELL

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

29670 Bashan Road

BUILDERS InC.

• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

Racine, Ohio
45771
7 4(1..949·2217

-Sizes 5'x1 0'
.to 10'x30' :
Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

PEANUTS

.. JUST SO I CAN GO
TO SOME" ""'"' ·"""•"=

AS SOON AS I WALK
IN T~E DOOR. M'&lt;

'nleV'VE ALREA[)!( PIICKEDI
OUT I=OR ME ...

M~ER

WILL SA'(
~ I-lAVE YOU DONE
YOIIIl. ~OMEWORK?"

1114/ 1 mo pd

(304)675-17~4 .

2001 GMC Sonoma Quad

Sl In]( I S
Cab. Short Bed. lo~s ol -:'1::"'--~-----,
e~~:tras, 88,000 Hwy mrles. r. 10
Ho~I.E
one
owner.
$10.500
(304)895-3710 after 6 pm
IMPROVI-:.\11-NTS

r

4x4
FORSAu:

1998 GMC Jimmy SLS,
great condition, pwr seat,
windows. locks, sunroof,
new transmission , 106K
miles,
asking
$7 ,000.
(740)446-8910.

Dean Hill

SUNSHINE CLUB

New&amp; Used

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

l · 11-0.JGI.fT
HE PRO~SEDlO

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1/0WAT?D l.

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fllrnished. Established 1975.
I
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4461
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproof1ng.

WRITESEL

I-llS

GIRLFRIEJVD

I

1·800·822·0417

*HOOFING
.d0ME
MAIIITEIANCE
' dEIMlESS

GOnER
'

*free lltlmltll*

848·1405

GARFIELD
HMMM, Jtl5T

Ll KE: 0171 E ...

Advertise
in this
space
· for
$~0 per
month
Barnhart
Builders
30 )'tars upertence

•Ne"· Homes

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• 1
Remodeling

•Complete KemodellnK
•H~tpl11n•mcnt Windows

• Eltctrlctll Plumbing

Free Estimates
740-667-6080

'

1"HE: t..IGHT'5 ON,
BUT NOBOIN'5 HOME

GRIZZWELLS

• Lo)t Homes
• Po.sl Frame

•Runrs
Lnmrnt.•rcial anrl
Resident itt I

Pass

Your chances are up lo about61 percent.

'I'Wny'• Enpn

411 MaroRCYCLEs/

Pass

Victor Hugo, In his powerful "les
Miserables," wrote, "Despot$ play their
part in the works of thinkers. Fettered
words are terrible words. The writer doubles and lrebles the power ot his writing
when a ruler Imposes silence on the people."
Since I am not a despot, you may discuss
this deal among yourselves. look at the
Norlh and South cards without doing the
Big Brother til of beholding the hidden
hands. You open and close the auction
with four spades. West cashes the top
three hearts, then shifts to a low diamond .
How would you continue?
In principle, a four-level opening promises
an eighl·card suit and, especially at
adverse vulnerability, is within two tricks
of the contract. However, with seven solid,
it would be cautious to begin with only
three spades (especially in these days ol
the less disciplined pre-empt).
At first glance, it appears that you must
guess whether to finesse the diamond
queen or the club queen. Each Is in theo ry a 50-50 shot. However, allhough you
cannot double or treble those odds, you
can improve them by a few percentage
points.
Win trick lour with dummy's diamond ace,
ruff a diamond high, draw two rounds of
trumps ending with dummy's 10, and ruff
another diamond. Did the king .appear?
Here, il did. So, you. draw the missing
trump, cross to the club ace, and discard
your second club on the diamond queen.
But if the diamond king is still lurking, you
have the cl ub finesse on the back burner.

EVER'THIN' I KNOW 'BOUT
KEEPIN' MY MOUTH SHUT
I L'ARNED FROM HER

FROM MY

~----,

2003 Tracker. 4x4. 3,000
1991 Pontiac Grand AM , miles. All electric, alum.
Good Condition, 4 cyl, wheel. Will sell below book
$5001080 [304)675-2822
value. (740)338-8432.
1996
Cadillac
Deville,
93 BMW 325i. CustCJm
89,000 miles. excellent concover. new tires &amp; extra
dilion $6,000. long Burner
wheels, Priced to sell under
S500.
wood
burner
$3.500.
blue
book.
(740)379-9405
(740)446-9555.
1998 Oldsmobile ~cutlass'"
93 Pontiac Firebird, excel·
OLS, V6, Auto, PS. PB. NC
lent condition. (740)742·
Pwr Seats. Winclows, Dr
7004
locks, Tilt, Cruise, AM I FM
Stereo. Tape and CD 99 Voltswagon Beetle. Red,
Leather Interior. Alum. 5 speed. CD changer.
Keyless entry. 62,000 miles, $6,500 080.
Wheels.
Excellent Condition inside (740)256-1618 01 [740)256and out 101 ,000 miles 6200.
$4,000 (304)882-2796
Ford 87 Mustang , 2.3. 5
2000 Dodge Dakota Ex. Cab Speed, wrecked, $500 OBO
$5495;
99
Mercury call (304)675-6872
Mountaineer $5295; 97 Jeep
TRUCKS
Gr. Cherokee $4195; 2000
FOR
SALE
Ford Ranger $3695 ; 96
Dodge Ex Cab $4595: 2000
Dodge Caravan $3195; 98 1972ChevyTowTruck, 1 1/2
Dodge Caravan $2895; ton, excellent working condi2000 Dodge Stratus $2595; tion. wench works of1 PTO.
2001 Gr. AM $4500; 98 Gr. everything
new.
over
AM $2195; 97 Chev. S-10 $13,000.00 invested . will
Blazer $4500; 96 Dodge take
$8 ,500.00
080
Dakota 4x4 $3500: 99 Pont. (740)992-0622
Sunllre $2195; 95 Ford F250
wflift gate $3100: 96 Dodge 1988 Chevy 510 · Good
work van $895; 94 Jeep Condition, Camper Top,
Wrangler 4x4 sharp $3195: Auto Transmission , Power
96 Geo Tracker $1395; 99 Steenng, Power Bra~es, Air
Escort ZX2 5 sp. $2795: 98 Cond Call (304)675-3579
Monte Carlo $2495
1992 Chevy S-10, V-6 Auto,
Low Miles S2.000 OBO
B &amp;.. D Auto Sales
(304)593-1200

(740)446-6865.

I KNOW

COOI&lt;IN' I L 'ARNED

~nnette's

VANS

4•

F.asl
Pass

•NewG1ragt1

• Roofing I Guttlfl
• Vlnvt Siding &amp; P•lnttng
• Pttlo and Poreh
We do H all except

Decl"•

furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
· 22 Ytlrt LOCII Ex fltnct

~I

ROBERT
BISSEL.l ·
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
_. Garage5
• Complete
Remodeling

741-992·1671
' .
·Stop &amp; Compare

word
17 Begin
a hend
18 Juat right
20 Thin clouds
21 Tene1
23 Novelty
24 Notwastod
27 Garbage
bin outpul
29 Tennis
stroke
32 Papor 1oy
33 Pleasures
34 Search
engine find
35 Ecot bu·

track

56 Chirped
57 WhodunH

name
58
59
60
61

reau

36 Stun
37 Bad habil
38 Droopnosed flier

39 -'bove and
beyond

Vexation
Scala noles
Did balik
Beads
on graoa

DOWN
1 A famous
Henry
2 Wlnler

weather
3 Ax:iom
4 Has
a hunch
5 'Botch up
6 Fix, as an
election
7 Prefix
tor classic
8 Loosened
9 Oeep-dish

I D Show

36 QB -

14 Overhead
lrains
19 Slall nenl»
2D HosiiiHies
22 Golden
State desert
23 Vestibules
24 Hawaiian

· male
41 Calches
43 Sltarpened
44 ~s..,.,
45 Norwegian

Flulie

appracialion 37 Running

25
26
28
J 29

monarch

46
48
strings
49
Enjoys a
5D
fine brandy 52
Coup d'Snooze
53
"The Bridge
at San 54
Rey"

Arm bone
Dry 11 dual
Bait

Ragoul
Turner or
Koppel
Bitingly
funny

Seine
landmass

3D Fierce whale
31 Roquefort
hue

desserts

if not twofold

W8 hiVII PIRS IIIIICCIISDrle&amp;lor
mostlnndl. Llcatlld Olllt J bJDBSS
outsln Pomerov. Ohll

FoR SALE

Norlb

Increased chance,

J{ouse c&amp;aning Service
L,r.IO--~~~RllfOfliiSiiiALEiiiio-rJI riJ

Wesl

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

CHAINSAW
REPAIIS IN OCTOBER!

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

South

Opening lead: ¥ A

BARNEY

Tree Service

10 4 2
3
73

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

Let me do 1\ for youl

JONES'

Al!TOS

•
•
•

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1-800-822-0417

F~
.
...__,.., SAl"
6 .

•AKQJ985

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
•IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare
• Cancer • Accident

COME BY 6 SEE ME FOR
YOUR BEST DEAl ON A
NEW OR USED CAR
Ty Hill

MISWQII!jijlliM

Middleport .
North
4 th
Avenue.
bedroom, fur·
nished apartment. Deposit
and references. No Pets.
(740 )992 _0 165

=

K J 8

South

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
Box 189
Middleport
"'•- '•---; 45760

•

9 6 5 2

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Antiques

rL--·L-r..·r••.&lt;I;T()l;-·'·K-.,1

•

6 4 3
98 5 3

40 Genelhl

47 Gemetones

river

East

Puzzle

to PlY
51 -'clreu
12 Old barge
-Raines
canal
52 Double
13 Cleopatra's 55 Muddy
15 Feverish
16 Syllogism

• 7

r

:=:c::====-----

10 2
• J 76
t A Q 10 4
• A Q 10 4
West

EQuulMINJ'

.

•

Henderson, WV

42 inch Craftsman snow
L::;;::;:::::::;===:;;:::;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;~
blade with all attachments . .
FARM
II'
plus wheel weights &amp; 2 sets
of chains. Like new $\.25., L.-~;;0;1-.:;::llli'-.,1
en 2nd Ate
4·_ _
_P_ho_n_•_l_74
_0_J446
__
-9_4_8_
Middleport. Ohio
12 HP Graveley with Saukie
145N. Second Ave.
Country Flame wood burn- 40" mower 4' snow ptow.
Ope~ Daily_10:00. -5:00
in9
fireplace
insert. (740)446-7910
Su11 t'IJIJ 400
·
· -· · ·
Automatic control and tan
Closed Tues.
$400. (740)446-7692.
2001 John Deere 790, 4x4,
992-5 152
::__:_:::.:__::_~__:_::::___ _ 30 HP tractor with front end L.._--~;;;:_~---"U
Dell lap top computar like )Oader. 3 pt. hitch &amp; PTO,
~~~~=«100-=«100-=«~
new, 6 hrs. use, anti virus 460
hours .
$12,000.
software, case, $700, 1-740- (740)245·9044.
508·0060 after 5 740-992·
John Deere A 1948 2 stick
0958
- - - - - - - - - Puller, rebuilt, very competiFor sale
Fire Wood live, $3,750, (740)742-3020
(304)882-2S37

10-2~

Nort.b

Crossword

hunler
1 TV hookup 41 Haul into
4 S.Jtifr•ge
court
8 CheckoU1
42 Thll yacht
aeon
44 Teenaged

11 Promise

MYERS PAVING

Whaley's Auto
Parts

Galilee telescope, new
never used. $350. 1·740· S08-0060 after 5 740-992Angus
BullsTop
0958~
Par.lormance Lines_ 40 Years
Gray Couch &amp; Love Seat Artificial Insemination. State
Efticiency apt. lor rent
$150, Black Swivel TV Run Farm (740)286-5395.
$350/month includes water,
www.slaterunfarm.com
Stand $10, Green Glider
sewer &amp; trash . No pets.
Rooker $5 (304)882-3129
HAY&amp;
,17_4_0;_14_4_6_·4~3~13_._ _ __
GRAIN
JET
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
AEAAT10N
MOTORS
room apartments at Village
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In For Sale: 1200 lb. Round
Manor
and
RiverSide
Stock. Call Ron E'.'ans, 1- bales of m1xed hay. Call after
Apartments in Middleport
5:00PM (Z_40l698-8211
800-537-9528.
From $295-$444_ Call 740992-5064. Equal Housing - - - - - - - - Opportunities.
NEW AND USED STEEL

m Henderson. WV. PreTrailer tor rent $300 month. owned applicanes starting at
Middleport, OH on SA 7 $75 &amp; up all under warranty,
across from saw m1IL behind we do serv1ce work on all
KC Auto Sales. (740}446- Make and Models (304)6758172.
7999
Trailer lor Rent $400/month
plus deposit (304)576·2241

I \In I 'l 1'1'1 II "
,\ 11\I"'IIU"-

Phillip
Alder

' ,Jj'

Wooden chest-a-drawers, CKC Registered, 1 male
light brown, good condition, Jack Russell pup- 8 weeks
$50, (740)949'-2607
old· first shots· wormed- vet
checked. Ready to go, $175
~
ANnQUES
each. (740)379-2834 .

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Dri11eways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Huge Duplex. clean. 3 bedroom , 1 oath, dining, star- Modern 1 bedroom apt Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
age. No petslsmo~ing, $61 o. Phone 1740)446-0390.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Call Kelly (740)446-9961 .
One Dedroom garage apart- ThursdaY, . Saturday
&amp;
men!. kitchen lurnished. Sunday. (740)446-7300
Nice 1. 2, &amp; 3 bedroom .
Apartments/ retail space $400 . (740)992·3823
Pole Barn 30x50x10FT
also for rent. (740)992-3702 Pleasant Valley Apartment $6395. includes Painted
Metal , Plans. Instruction
Nice 2 BR house SA 160, 4 Are now taking Applications
Book. Slider, Free Delivery
for
2BR.
3BA
&amp;
4BA.,
mi. N. of Holzer. $400 mo. +
[937)559-8385
Applications
are
taken
sec. deposit, no pets.
Monday
thru
Friday.
from
(740)446-6865 or (740)379·
Rascal Scooter R230 39:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is Wheeled, New Batteries
2923.
Located at 1151 Evergreen $900 1304)675-1542
Rental in F'oint Pleasant Drive Point Pleasant. WV
$400/month (304)675·5540 Phone No is (304)675-5806
REAL ARMY
or (304)675-4024 ask for E.H.O
CAMOUFLAGE
Nancy. Homestead Realty
Sam SomerJille's, Since 1964,
Broker
Tara
Townhouse by Sandyville, WV PO, Satellites,
..;..__....________., Apartments, Very Spacious, TV Sales/Installation (31)4)273·
Moutu: HOMES
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA. 1 5655
FOR RENT
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Sears pull behind dump
Ad ull Poot &amp; Baby Pool,
cart, Amana 18 M. retngera2 bedroom tra11er for rent- PallO. Start $385/Mo. No tor. motJile home steps
Tuppers Plains. S300 per Pets, Lease Plus Security 30"x27". (740)388·8997.
month plus utiltles &amp; deposit. Deposit Required, Days:
740-446-3481: Evenings: Vent Free, 3-Piaque Gas
(740)667-3487
740-367-0502.
Heater. (propane or Natural)
2 bedroom, all electric. 4
Manual Control $143.9!1
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptmiles north of Holzer. $350
ing applications for waiting Vent Free, 5-Piaqua Gas
rnqnth + sec. deposit &amp; refHeater.
(Automatic
list for Hud-subsized. 1- br,
erences. (740)446-6865 or
Thermostats
Control)
(740)379-2923
apartment, call 675-6679 $239.95
EHO
aluminum Fiberated Paint
3Br. Trailer w!Washer &amp;
\IIIH 11\\HI'I
(Great lor Mobile Homes)
Dryer, Aefridg &amp; Stove
5-gal. Buckel $29.95
included Section 8 f'pproved
1510
HOI
J
SEHOW
Paint PIUs Hardware
1304)576-2934
675-4084
Goorx;
Beautiful Riverview ideal for
BuU.DING
1 or 2 people,"no pets, referStiPPuEs
ences. (740)441-0181 .
Clean 2BR mob1fe home.
next to town. (740)256·6574

AKC Golden Retriever pupp1es, both parents on pramises.
Ready 11-16-04,
$300, w11t hotel with deposit.
(740)256-1686
:____:__ _ _ _ _ __
AKC male Shih Tzu, 9
weeks, liver &amp; white, $350.
(740)441-1602 or (740)4418842 evenings.

C~ntenary

Road close to hospital, bath.
stove.
refrigerator,
washer/dryer
hookup,
$400/monrh.
security
deposit reqUired . reference
.2 bedroom house m required. no pets, call
Rutland, out ol water &amp; 2 (740)446-9442 after 5:00
bedroom hOuse 1n Pomeroy
2 bedroom, unfurnished
(740)992-7546
apartrnent. all utilities pa1d.
2 story Colonial 3 bc:lrm. 1 $500/mo nth . $500/deposit
b'ath. Gas heaL Cntrl AJC (7 40)446-1637 until 5pm,
$600 mo. {740 )446·3481 .
(740~446-4616 after 5pm

kitchen with stove &amp; rehiger·
·ator. 233 Second Ave
Convenient location. no
pets. $565 month plus reler·
ence &amp; deposit. (740)4464926.

NEA

BRIDGE

HOUSES

~tRE

tliD '1bU
65:iM
COOL _,.

1\.\1 ?'

G

AstroGraph
OJiJur 'lllrihd'l!r:

Wedneedey, Oct. 27, 2004
By Bernice Bede Oeol
In the year ahea~. you may find yourseH
involved in more partnership Situations
than usual. Many will work out just great,
but should one turn out to be a real hin·
drance instead of a help, know when to
call it quits .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO'.'. 22)- tt"s worth·
tess to try to blow someone out of the
water 1n order to win the race today. tt
you churn up the waters too much, you'll
end up battling waves coming !rom all
shores.
SAGITT_t.AtUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - tn
Situations where others are depending
on you today, take your obligation and
responsibility seriously. E~o;cuses won't
cut it and there will be a heavy price to
pay for letting them down.
,~APRICOAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - The
quicker you settle a disagreement 1ha1
might arise today between you and a
friend . the better. If it IS allowed to linger,
others could poke their noses In the matter and wreck the relationshi p.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Allhough some people with whom you
may have to deal today might not meas·
ure up to your e~o;pectat l ons, stri'.'e to be
self-reliant instead of dependent end
things wilt turn out OK .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - If you go
around wilh a chip on your shoulder
today. 9'Ain in defense ol something, you
are bound to run into somebody who will
be more than happy to knocK it off.
ARIES
(March 21 -April
19)
Occasionally we feel a need to lreat ourselves to something luxurious. and today
could be just such a day for you There's
nothing wrong with that so long as you
don't go overboard.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although
y·ou may think you are merely being kind.
associates wilt resent being oealt with In
a condescending manner today_For best
results in dealing with others, treat all as
equals.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - If for some
reason you feel someone at work has
wronged you. it's better to go off by your·
self instead of raising a ruckus. Or. at
leas!, wail until you'"e calmed down
before dealing with it.
CANCER (June 21-July 22~- A number
of people could cross your path today.
but try to spend as much time as you can
with associates you know well. Someone
you meal for the fir st time may have
tricks up his or her sleeve.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Goals and
ambitions witt not be fullilled today Simply
by hopmg Circumstances Will take care ol
themselves. Solid effort and creat1ve
thinking will be needed to reach the top.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - II your
viewpoint 18 rigidly fixed today, you'll cut
yourself oH from all thinking that would
continually keep you afloat. Evell in the
dictionary knowledge comes before auccesa
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Life doesn 't
owe you a free.ride tOday. no maner how
nice a perton yew are, 10 you'd be w11e
not to think It doel . EJtptetlng more than
you earn and deterw tnvttll needlen
dlupgolntment.

I

~

Dltl~'i

1\JAi!

SOUP TO NUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebt11V C1phar ~rams are cruter:l tmm quo1abons by lamotJs people oaS1
Each letter rn the CIOher S(lr'ds lor anoJher

a~

presel'l!

ToQay's clue: A equals H

OMDVBKO
EJGUPB

KMO

OM

PCRA

E0 B

" FMYUOURP

u

OAEO

VUH

OAMVEP

NMCYJ

MK B

BGBDW

N U0 A

E

u

Y MG B

0 A B V . ..

XBSSBOPMK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ·success without honor is an unseasoned dish; 11
will sa11sty your hunger. but 1t won't taste good"' - Coact-1 Joe Paterno
Ic) 2004 oy NEA. Inc 10-26

_~_;_~~_:_~t_l~l-~_©_ !~~~,:,.!;.-~l~~~;ti-;:'0:-:":;:=le•t•rs af
0 Rearrange
lour Krombled wcrdJ

the

be·

low to form four word1

I

E N T O_A R

I' I' I I

8 PR1NT
NUMBERED l!TlElS IN
THESE SQUARES

6

UNSCRAMBlE MOVE lETTERS
10 GET . ~NSWEI

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

H- l s~ o;

Yeoman ·Dunce· Whil fi- Proper- -HAPPEN to YOU
Our son had gotte,n h is feelings hurt. His grandpa told
him, "Pair', builds courage. You can 't learn to be brave if
you've had only good things HAPPEN to YOU."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
1HI~

I'\

FWFFY'

I!MHtf:A
GOOD-LOOKikJ' ~ CAH

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 26; 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Too good to be true? Red Sox halfway home
BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press
ST. LOUIS-Curt Schilling and the
pitchers are clicking. Little Mark
Bellhorn and the hitters are delivering.
Manager Terry Fmncona is making all
the right moves.
And despite a defense that can't
quite seem to catch the hall. the Boston
Red Sox are halfway to capturing
something that's slipped just out of
reach since 1\IH! - the World Series
trophy.
So with a 2-0 lead and Pedro
Martinez set to make his Series debut
against the St. Louis Cardinab on
Tuesday night, could it really be thi,
easy tor the Red Sox"!
Hah!
"We are not going to fall into the trap
after winning the fiN two."" reliever
Alan Embree said. '·You saw wllllt
happened with the Yankees ...
Besides, Boston fans rememher all
too well what happened the last time
the Red Sox reached the Series. After ,

winmng twice at Shea · Stadium in
_I'lX6. they lost to the New Yr&gt;rk Met'
111

seven game\.

Now on d~ck: a tantalizing treat lc1r
this oh-so-dose dub ... or a cmeltrick.
··\Ve'\,e gnl Lo win four gamL~, to be
the champs and we can't relax ."" left
fielder Manny Ramire7 said.
The Red Sox have already won six
in a mw in October. stming with the
'tirring comeback from a 3-0 delicit
against the New York Yankees in the
AL ch;unpiolhhip series.
Then. before the World Series
began. a curious l-ittle note appeared on
the Green Monster. In small leners.
someone haLl scribbled on Fenway
Park's lct\-ticld wall: "The Curse is
Over'""
The Cardinals will have plenty to

,ay about that. They're detennined to
force the Series back to Boston, perhaps for a Game 7 on Halloween night.
"Our fans are going to be crazy and
look to give us a boost," St. Louis manager Tony L1 Russa said after Sunday
nig.ht 's 6-2 loss.
The Cardinals are a perfect 6-0 at
Busch Stadium this postseason and
certainly looked a lor different than
they did in Boston.
The last time they were home, Jeff
Suppan outpitched Roger Clemens,
and St. l..AJuis beat Houston in Game 7
of the NL championship ·series.
Suppan will start Game 3 against
Martinez.
Suppan tinished last year with the
Red Sox. making their playoff roster
for the ALCS but not getting to pitch
against the Yankees. This season, he
settled in nicely and led the staff with
16 wins.
·we've been making good pitches
all year:· Cardinals catcher Mike
Matheny said. ''Overall, I think things
are just not going our way right now."
One big hit certainly would help.

especially by Scott Rolen.
Rolen c01merted for the go-ahead
home run that beat Clemens and the
Astros. Now, the All-Star third baseman is stuck in an 0-for-8 slump
against Boston. ,
Rolen popped up with the bases
loaded late in an 11-9 loss in the opener. He hit a line drive that almost
knoCked over third baseman Bill
Mueller - who later made three errors
-in the first inning Sunday night. He
then came up in the eighth with St.
l..AJuis down 6-1 and runners at the corners and only managed a sacrifice tly.
The Cardinals are still waiting for
Rolen, Larry Walker, Albert Pujols and
Jim Edmonds to contribute in the same
game, a~ they've done so often.
"I thought we had a bunch of terrific
at-bats," La Russa said.
Edgar Renteria kept fouling oil fastballs from Schilling leading off Gan1e
2 and wound up grounding out on the
12th pitch. Helped by Boston's second
straight four-error performance, .the
Cardinals got some opportunities but
went 0-tor-6 with runners in scoring

position.
While La Russa hopes to see a few
timely hits, Francona would like to see
a few more balls caught cleanly.
In setting a record for most errors in
the fii"St two games of a Series (eight),
the Red Sox have dropped a popup and
fly ball, skipped a throw into the
stands. botched grounders and overrun
a basehit.
"We made some errors. I didn't actually think we played a sloppy game,"
Francona said Sunday night. "Maybe
that sounds like I'm contradicting
myself."
'The field was horrendous," he said.
"It's almost snowing out there."
The forecast lor St. l..AJuis calls for
temperatures a lot warmer than they
were in Boston when Martinez takes
the mound. The three-time Cy Young
winner, who turned 33 on Monday,
finally gets to start in the World Series
after a 13-year carei!r.
"I expect Pedro to pitch his fanny
off,'" Francona said. "I think he's got
rest. I think he feels good about himself."

Lady 'Does set to battle

·

Assocrated Press

BY MARK LONG

Associated Press
GAINESVILLE. Fla .
Florida coach Ron Zook wa'
fired Mondav after two-plus
years ·and a "stack of embarrassments on and off the field.
a
growmg
satisfying
groundswell tor his ouster that
began the day he replaced
Steve Spurrier.
Zook will linish uut t!1e 'cason while athletic director
Jeremy Foley and school rresident Bernie Machen search
for another coach.
'"In the final analysis, it was
apparent to me that something's not working here ,""
Foley said. "I know that's kind
of nebulous. but it's the truth.
It's hard to put a finger on it
exactly, but it certainly just
didn't appear to be working as
we all envisioned."
The Gators are 20-13 under
Zook with four games left that's just 14losses fewer than
Spurrier had in 12 seasons.
Zook's latest debacle. a 3831 loss to Mississippi State.
sealed his fate and brought
jubilation among thos~ in
Gator Nation who turned
www.fireronzook. com into
their Internet home page. The
site posted this message
Monday: '"It's happening' It's
happening! Oh my God it "s
happening t"'
Spurrier's return would be
welcomed in Gainesville.
''I' II cross that bridge if it
comes to that." Spurrier told
the Orlando Sentinel. ""The
thing I've tried to do all this
year is not be linge rin g
around, acting like l"m waiting for another guy's job. I
don't believe that' s the right
way to do it. But now that he
doesn't have a job. I gue"
there will be some discus sion.
We 'II see what happens."
Faley planned to talk with
Spurrier soo n but said he
won't discuss the opening
with coaches with jobs until
after the season.
Oklahoma coach
Bob
Stoops and Utah coach Urban
Meyer also could be possi bilities . Stoops was Spurrier's
defensive coordjnator for three
seasons at Florida, and
Machen hired Meyer at Utah
following the 2002 season.
Machen and Foley decided
Sunday morning that Zook 's
tenure was over. They
infonmed the coach Monday
morning at Machen's home.
Zook agreed to coach the
remainder of the season -

something Foley was counting
on.
""I can't begin to tell you
how much I appreciate and
re,pect the'e players:· Zook
read lmm a statement. making
li1tle eye contact and pausing
several times to collect his
emotions. ""They work hard
and tl1cv do what we ask. I
take a lc1t of pride in the fact
that we leave this program in
very good shape. with a lot of
good young talent and good
people.
""The future of Gator football is very. ve ry bright.""
When Spurrier left for the
NFL. Foley shockingly l1ired
Zook - a close friend he
called ""The Zookcr"" - after
being turned down by Denver
Broncos
coach
Mike
Shanahan and Stoops.
Almost all the concern '
about Spurrier's former de fen- .
sive coordinator - that he
was in O\ cr his head. had
never been a head coach · and
wasn't composed enough tn
manage a game from the sideline ....::.. became reality.
""When the 'ituation stuns
going downhill. it's hard
sometimes to push it back up.""
Foley said. ··1 think the ;ituation !!Ot out of control. even

BEREA
Give the
Cleveland Browns credit for
one thing: They 've got the
heartbreaking. tca r-out-yourguh losses down to a science.
~ The Browns suffered yet
another painful defeat to add
to a legacy of them with
Sundav·s .1-1-3 1 overtime
crushe-r to the unbeaten
Philadelphia Eagles.
··rei rather QCt beat 50-0 and
have my teettl kicked in then
to lose like that."" tight end
Aaron Shea said . ""l"m not
going to lie. that one really
hurt.""
And one thut felt oh. so
familiar.
Of Cleveland's 55 games
under coach Butch bavi s
since 200 I, 28 have been
decided in the final minute .
The Browns are 11 -17 in
those nail-biters with seven
ending on the final play and
five of the losse:-. coming in
overtime.
It was apparent on Monday
th&lt;ll Davis - 24-31 since
replacing Chris Palmer - and
Sllllle of his players had still
not come to grips with matching one of the NFL"s best
team s for four quarters only to
l&lt;"e hy a 50-yard field goal in
OT
The eternally optimistic
Davi s. whu normally spends
the majority of his Monday

new:-. conferences accenluatfor hi!,,:·
Just weeks before the ing the positives. was unusuMissi,sippi State loss. reports a II y downcast.
surfaced that Zook had a heated eonfmntation with fraternity member' on campus. Zook
initiall y dow nrlayeu his role.
""'ing he went there to defuse
the ,ituation. hu t Folev later
adnuwlcdged that · Zook
veiled at 'tudent' and called
the bella\ ior ··unacceptable .""
Foley "'id the same thing
about tile muuntinl,' losses many nf them late collapses.
HlJi'iTINGTON. W.Va.
The (jatnr' blew lo"lmhqu~trt~r
kad...,
again...,t ( AP) - Marshall defensive
Tennc"ee and LSU th" sea- end Jonathan Goddard was
son. and did the 'ame against named the Mid -A merican
Miami . \1i"i"ippi ' and CnnfercnL·e East Divi,ion
Florida State la't vear. There defensive player of the
a/\0 '\\Cre tv.- o near"me ltdov.n~
week, while teammate Ivan
against Arkan~a~.
Clark .earned the division 's
There were other debacles, 'peci al teams honor.
too. including con~ec uti vc
Goddard had nine tackles.
Outback Bowl losses to including a sack, and forced
Michi gan and Iowa - games two fumble s in a 48-14 win
in v.hich Florida loo ked over Buffalo. It was his
unprepared at times.
fourth such honor this seaZook showed resiliency son.
through it all. He led the
Clark blocked two punts,
Gator~ to four straight .wins in
one of which was recovered2002 and fi.ve in a row last sea- by
teammate
Denni s
son - after it looked like they Thornton in the end zone
could finish with losing for a touchdown. Clark also
records. He also hal two big had two tackles on special
wins over rival Georg ia. the teams.
Gators' next opponent.

Marshall's
Goddard, Clark
earn MAC
weekly honors

"I don ' t like losing," he
said. '"It makes me sick."
Maybe some of the PeptoBismol that Bengals wide
receiver
Chad
Johnson
shipped a few weeks back is
still around.
Thi s was another tough one
for the Browns (3-4) to stomach. Their offense was balanced, amassing 394 total
yards, picking up 27 first
downs and converting 9-of-16
tbird downs.
They made big plays. They
pushed the powerful Eagles to
the limit. They still lost.
"I took this worse that any
other game I played here
since that Pittsburgh playoff
game (in 2002) just because
of the team that we were playing." · said running back
William Green. "They were
undefeated. a really good
team. and we came that close .
lt"s a tough one to swallow."
But maybe one to build on.
too.
The Browns arrived at their
bye week in reasonable shape
considering they've had an
early rash of injuries that siuelined several starters including rookie tight end
Kellen Winslow Jr. for the
season - and · torced them to
_,tart third- and four1h -string
wide receivers against the
Eagles.
Cleveland's offense has
been gaining momentum the
past few weeks as quarterback
Jeff Garcia gains mure confidence in a new system and
with new teammates.
Garcia tinished 21-of-32 for

229 yards, threw a TD pass
and ran for a score Sunday. He
looks much more comfortable
behind Cleveland's offensive
line, which is finally healthy
and played its best game of the
season against Philly.
"Hopefully. we can keep it
rolling," tackle Ryan Tucker
said. "Any loss is tough to
take , but eventually those
small losses will turn into
small wins. We have to keep
our heads up and keep grind.
tng. "
For the second straight
week, the Browns found a
workable balance for running
backs Green and Lee Suggs.
who were once worried about
getting the ball.
Suggs gained 78 yards on
15 carries and had a 13-yard
TD run. Green picked up 64
yards on 14 tries and scored
from II yards . It"s a 1-2
punch the Browns hope to
throw even more in coming
weeks.
"We can run the ball even
better than that." Green said.
"I think we can have games
when we both nm for I00
yards."
While Cleveland's offense
is improving. its llefense is
regressing.
The Browns gave up too
many big plays to Donovan
McNabb, Terrell Owens ·and
Co. - a trend that has hurt
Cleveland all season.
··we had a lot of mental
errors," said defensive end
Kenard Lang, who estimated
there were 20 to 30 gaffes.
But for all the good things

)11

( I ' \ 1-.... • \e li .-l.l·

,II,

\\\\\\ mHLilh"t'lllllwl.e·um

Middleport to consider cruiser _
advertising

SPORTS
• Red Sox a win away
from ending 'The Curse.'
See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

. BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT
-The
village of Middleport could
receive new police cruisers .
through a private company
for just $1 each but
those new cars could sport
fast food, retail or other
advertising decal s.
Police
Officer
Randy
Smith mei with Middleport
Village Council qn Monday

to encourage them to consider a program offered by
Government Acquisitions,
Inc ., a for-profit company
based in Charlottesville.
N.C. The company offers
on-cur advertising tu other
for-profit companies. and in
turn sells the cars to police
and
other
emergency
departme.nts for $1.
Smith said the cars are
brand-new vehicles secured
from auto manufacturers

specifically for the program.
and become the property of
the village. The advertisers
appearing on cruisers are
companies doing business
within I00 miles of the
community, and pay $5,000
for a three-year advertising
contract for decals on the
hood. trunk and roof of the
cruisers.
According
to
Smith.
Middleport
ha s
already
been accepted into the pro-

gram. He erKmr ragcU coun cil to discu" the program
with
Village
Slllicitnr
Ruberta Hill , and to consiucr rc,placing th e village·,
ag in g crui'e". which have
traditionall y been purcha,eu
through a sLate-pu r cha~ing
program . \.\ ith new car~
from
Government
Acqui,ition .,.

or

h~l\

without

g 'n ~rn rncnt

.

rat...,IIH.!

ing tn
fundi ng
Smith

. t;JXC.\ .

'aill. ·· it cou ld ,a,·c the 11 1lage "' mud1 as ~4.001) per
~ear

JLI .~o,t

on

car

mairlle-

nanl't'.

Counc·il l1lllk no action to
aprnn·e Smith·, propo., al.
but Jill recommend that
.. The program g i ve~ u~.o Mayor Sand) lannarelli di'the vehicles and eq uipment cu" the program with Hill
we need to serve th e com- and report back Ill council.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MY DAILYSE NTI NEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Cheryl
Crossan turned a hobby of
writing stories for her friends
into a career in publishing.
Two of her short stories
are being published in two
anthologies of short stories
called '"Emerging Voices,
Part I and II" on Dec. 5. Let's
Be Frank fLBF) Books located in Pittsburgh. Pa .. is publishing and marketing the
anthologies. LBF sells buoks
in all 50 states and in several
foreign courltries.
Crossan often writes stories fur her frienlls and decided to post one of them on the
Zoetrope Internet site that is
associated with Franci s Ford
Coppola.
Zoetrope encourages postings of original writing with
the stipulation that anyone
who posts also edit others
work to give feedback.
During this process Crossan
met another writer named
Michael Graves who enjoyed
her story and asked if she
would be interesting in
searching for a publishing
deal.
Crossan. Graves and other
writers visiting Zoetrope
banded together, edited each

INSIDE
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3
• Malva admits 2002
sniper kiHif!Q; gets life
without parole.
See Page A2

Please see Author. AS

Sandra Fultz Brown has returned to Middleport f:o,r. Columbus
and has opened Antiques on Second. a large r€tAII antique
sh&lt;;&gt;P in the forme : Bahr Clothie rs build1ng.

Antique shop opens in Middleport
BY BRIAN

J.

an ant1quc ,hor 111 the
Columbus .
,uhurh
of
Climom illc ,·;illl'd 01erbrook
Antiques.
LocoijeJ at 14'i 'iorth
Second A1·c .. the 'h''P is open
from I0 a.m. to ' 5 p.m ..
Monda)· til&lt;\&gt;Ligh Saturday.
&lt;md 12 to-+ p.m. on Sunday.
Th e 'h op i' c(n,eLl on

REED

BREED@MYDA!LYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT -A ne"
antique store has openeLI in
the Bahr Clothiers building in
downtown
Middleport .
Antiques on Second i' ov. ned
by Sandra Fultz Brown. who
has moved back to her hometown after living for year' in Tue:-.Uav. Bnl \\ n·, '011. SL'O tl.
and "Dan
Tl~o rna'
of
Columbus.
Before moving bad, to
'
Please see Antique, AS
Milldleport. Brown operated

Beth Sergent/photo

Local author Cheryl Crossan poses witti her dog, lzzy. who was
the inspiration for one of her characters in the short story
"Imagined Loneliness· which will be published on Dec. 5 by
LBF Books.

Paving begins

WEA'J'HER

Long lines for flu shots

INDEX
'
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Sports
Weather

A3
B2-4
Bs

A3

(Beth Sergent/photo)

A4

Hundreds of people v.aited outsrde the Me1gs Count~ Health
Department on Monday to rece1ve flu shots ava1lable fo r the
first t1me to the general publiC. By noon on Tuesda~ all but one
of the shots for the general public had been used . and only 10
remained for at-nsk res1dents. Personnel suggest a cal l be
made to the health department t992·6626) to determ1ne avail·
ab rlity of vaccrne before coming to the offtce.

(Brian J. Reed/photo)
Crews with Shelly Co. began milling North Second Avenue in Middleport on Tuesday. in prepa·
ration for paving later this week. Middleport"s main thoroughfare is just one of several streets
to tle paved. includ ing Pearl, Vine, and Ar\ Lewis Boulevard. Though some major streets are
included, this th ird paving project in three years is designed to improve allilys and secondary
streets in town, according to Mayor Sandy lannarell i.

B1
A6

.

EASY PIIEIT Pllr
·$10PEI
fiR

A Big, Fat Zero.

Fs

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

That•s how much you PfiY In dosing costs
when you ftnance a home equity line of credit
at Farmers Bank.

~

Your Bank(o:tJile...

There's no better time to consolidate your credit &amp; reduce your interest debtl

'IE STill FIIIIU.

mupity
ohtain

Persistence pays off for local author

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co•

$11

\\Ill'\ I ~ll\'\ . ()(lOBI I{.! -. :.!tH)_J

th

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE
PROPERTY NOTICE

Nancy Parker Grueser
Meigs County Auditor

en 1ne1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

to have emerged from the
tough loss, it was just that: A
tough loss.
"'I'm not happy." snapped
tackle Ross Verba. "What positives? Who cares? We didn't
win . There's no positives to
take .~way from this game. We
lost.

In compliance with provisions of Section
5721.03 of the Revised Code of the State of
Ohio, there will be published on November
12th and November 19, 2004, in this newspaper, a delinquent land list containing the
description of the property as it appears on the
tax list, the name of the person in whose name
the property is listed, the ~mount of taxes and
penalties due and·unpaid.
·
Each person charged with real property
taxes and penalties may pay the full amount
of taxes at the Meigs County Treasurer's
Office by 4:00 p.m. on November 5, 2004, to
avoid publication.
.
To avoid additional interest charged on
December 1st, a taxpayer may enter into a
written agreement with the County Treasurer
to pay one-fifth ( 115) of the delinquent taxes.

~·

at

Zook fired but
Browns aching after another loss
will finish season
with Gators
BY TOM WITHERS

new highway, As

Notre Dame, Bt

National Football League

College Football

Crash on

Portstnouth

'"''&lt;II,...., ..,..,

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