<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6648" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/6648?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T19:18:42+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="16980">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c9b3c5e2ca8af772e8a8cecabf77e049.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c4562daa0522815fbeedda48560b4fa6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="21871">
                  <text>Tuesday, October 7,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

..

2003

Arnold wins Ca1ifomia
recall election, A6

Marlins win
Game 1, Bt

Couch's ·big night saves Browns
.

'

(

Davis
said week before in home loss to Cincinnati.
BY TOM WITHERS
Couch proba- Not with their patchwork offensive line.
Associated Press
bly will start at ·· Not without a running game. Not withhome
this out Holcomb, who riddled the Steelers
BI;:REA - On the road, under the
Sunday against for 429 yards in January.
lights and before a skeptical national ·
0 a k 1a n d ·
And especially not in Pittsburgh,
television audience, lim Couch was
Holcomb,. who. where they had lost II of 12, most
reborn as an NR. starter.
has a hmrhne recently i,n the AFC playoffs in January.
Just in time. Couch might have saved
fracture m h1s
B
.th C h
.
ut WI . ouc 1eadmg the way,
the Browns' season, and maybe his right fibula, was Cleveland's No. 3
quarterback for the second straight Cleveland pulled off a 180-degree tumembattled career, too.
around.
•
Oozing confidence from the start, week Sunday.
From the outset, Couch was locked
"It's going to be my assumption that
Couch played his best all-around game
as a pro Sunday night, leading the lim Couch is probably going to be the in.
On his ftrst pass, Couch dropped
Browns to a stunning 33-13 win over quarterback again th1s week," Davis
said. "Until Kelly is 100 percent, there's back, spotted his target and hit wide
the Pittsburgh Steelers.
receiver Andre" Davis for a 23-yard
"Tim just wanted to prove to every- no real reason to make a change."
And
there
won't
be
if
Couch
plays
gain.
At that moment, Couch sensed it
one he could play," said wide receiver
like he did against the Steelers, rescuing was going to be a special night.
Kevin Johnsgn.
the
Browns (2-3) from the brink of hav"It just felt right," he said. "We got it
He did that, and then some.
rolling. That felt nice."
Couch, demoted to being Kelly ing their sea~on dissolve into disaster.
Go figure. Nobody could have seen
He was nearly flawless in the ftrSt
Holcomb's backup only to get his job
this
coming
from
Couch
or
Cleveland,
half,
going 16-of-17 for 169 yards and
back temporarily when Holcomb broke
his right leg, finished 20-of-25 for 208 which snapped a six-~ame losing streak two TDs. Couch's lone misfire was
yards and two touchdowns. He also ran to Pittsburgh and Davts' 0-5 start against when he smartly threw the ball away out
the Steelers.
of the end zone.
9 yards for a TO.
It was the Browns' most dominant
Criticized and booed by Browns fans
"Tim stepped up," running back
William Green said. "I can't say enough performance since returning to the for his indecisiveness the past four
about the way he played. He was a gen- league in 1999: It wasn't supposed to years, Couch made anotfr1Jeady P!ay
happen.
late in the first half to giv the Browns a
eral out there."
Not after the way they played the 23-10 lead.
On Monday, Browns coach Butch

Rolling right, Couch couldn't find an
open receiver. But instead of forcing a
throw, he tucked the ball and scampered
in untouched for Cleveland's first rushing score this sea~ori.
Once in the end zone, Couch punctuated the TO with a ferocious spike that
dug deep into Heinz Field and seemed
to release months of pent up frustration
for the former No. I overall draft pick.
"He showed great poise," Davis said.
"He was in total command. He made the
right checks, the right audibles. He
made very, very nice throws."
Couch needed the big game. If
Holcomb doesn ' t return soon, the
Browns need him more than ever. And
in ca~e the Browns decide not to keep
both quarterbacks next season, Couch
showed the rest of the NFL that he can
still win.
He al~ady had an idea of what TV
viewers thought of him.
"People probably think I'm a backup,
I'm a bust, the No. I pick, he 's sitting on
the bench," Couch said. "I knew it was
a national stage, a big audience, and I
wanted to come out and play well."
Couch did, and earned something as
good as a win. The chance to do it again.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)Mike Vanderjagt's 29yard field goal with 3:47
remaining in overtime
capped one of the greatest comebacks in NFL
hi story and gave the
Indianapolis Colts a 3835 victory over the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
on Monday night.
Peyton Manning rallied the Colts from a 3514 deficit with four minutes left in regulation ,
sending the game into
overtime on Ricky
Williams' 1-yard touchdown run with 35 seconds to play. Marvin
Harrison, who had two
touchdown catches. set
up the tying score with a
52-yard reception to the
Tampa Bay 5.
Harrison scored on
second-half receptions
of 37 and 28 yards, the
latter trimming Tampa
Bay 's lead to 35-28 with
2:29 remaining in regulation .
Indianapoli s
(5-0)
became the tirst team in
NFL history to win after
trailing by 21 or more
points with less than four
minutes to play in regulation.

Fax your
sports
news to:
446-3008

Histori.c marker celebrates Ponieroy's past·

SPORTS
• LeBron passes test. See
Page B1

0BITUARIFS
Page A5
• Card June Varian Lee, 54
• Gael Dudding, 79
• Donald Lee Alkire, 67
• James L. McHaffie
• Richard Lusher, Sr., 59
• Carriene Price, 66
• David R. Cline, 68
• Roy E. Greene, 68

WEATHER

National Hockey League

blame will fall on MacLean. After all, he put the
team together. He fired Dave King midway
through last season and took on the mantle of
COLUMBUS . _ The novelty of the coach, and now is also responsible for not only
Columbus Blue Jackets is wearing off.
the personnel but how it plays.
Heading into its fourth year, the franchise has
Nash carries much of the Blue Jackets' hopes.
proven to be viable in its market and has built a He put together a solid rookie year, totaling 17
solid fan base. About all that's left to ensure a goals and 22 assists in 74 games a year ago.
bright future is the most important item on any Almost everr mght he made a play or two that
team's checklist_ wins.
dazz!ed ,not J~St fans but oppon~nts. But often
The Blue Jackets set a team record with 29 '· he d1dn t fimsh off the play w1th a goal, frevictories a year ago while easing rookie sensa- quently drawmg enough attentiOn to get
tion Rick Nash into the lineup. Now Nash is knocked off the puck and taken out of the
bigger, smarter and stronger - and the Blue action.
Jackets had better be as well when they open the
"I feel a lot stronger out there and I feel my
new season Thursday-night in Atlanta.
strength will help me a lot," the 19-year-old said.
"We're a lot tougher team this year," Na~h
The franchise has moved forward in fits and
said. ".It's going to be a battle every night." · starts, opening up with 71 points before lapsing
After totaling 69 points_ a distant 23 behind to 54 and then last year approaching the success
Edmonton, the eighth and final playoff qualifier of their first season. Others have noticed the
in the Western Conference- the Blue Jackets upgrades in the roster for 2003-2004.
added speed and experience to a core of young
"They have some young kids that are going to
players to offset the loss of leading scorer Ray get better and better and that's part of the
Whitf)ey.
·
process," St. Louis coach Joel Quenneville said.
President, general manager and now full-time "They've added some speed and a little bit of
head coach Doug MacLean dipped into the skill to their lineup. You'll gradually see them
free"agent ranks to sign center Todd Marchant, get better."
·
winger Trevor Letowski and backup goaltender
MacLean hopes that the blend of youth and
Fred Brathwatte. Perhaps most Importantly, he veterans can override the failures on the road
picked up defenseman Darryl Sydor from and supply a solid work ethic throughout the
D~llas in exchange for Mike Sillil)ger and a season.
third-round draft pick.
"We changed the makeup of the team." he
"I feel good. I think we improved our team" said. "Klesla should be better. Nash will take a
MacLean said. "Of course; the proof is in the step. That's what it's all about."
pudding. I like our group; I think we're a Andrew Cassels (68 points), Espen Knutsen
tougher teQill to play against. Still, you've got to (w~o suffered through an injury-plagued year),
take it on the ice."
Wnght (19 goals), Geoff Sanderson (a club
Sydor gives Columbus someone it has sorely record 34 goals), David Vybomy (46 points)
lacked: a leader for the power play and a and defensemen Luke Richardson and Scott
defenseman whp can handle the puck.
Lachance are all proven commodities.
Marchant is among the quickest players in the
Rostislav Klesla, the team's ftrSt draft pick in
NHL, Letowski adds grit and attitude similar to 2000, showed signs of in the final month of last
teammate TYler Wright, and Brathwaite gives season of developing into a contributor on the
the Blue Jackets someone who can relieve blue line. The Blue Jackets' most recent frrst"
front-linerMarc Denis, wh6 set a leagu'e record round pick, right wing Nikolai Zherdev might
for minutes played.
add another young talent to the mix - if
The Blue Jackets were a respectable 20-14-5- MacLean can pry him away from his Russian
·
•
2 in the friendly confines of Nationwide Arena, Elite League team.
but a dismal 9-28-3-1 elsewhere.
Another one of those young guns, Denis, said ·
· "With the home record we had, we would he is optimistic.
. .
ruive been in the hunt," Letowski said. "We've
'There are a lot of good things we can look
just ~ot to, ~e! better on the road. You do that by forWard to," he said. "We'll definitely carry the
staymg withm the system and playing hard confidence and the swagger that comes with
e,very night."
winning a few games and performing well in
If the Blue Jackets get off to a rough start, the the preseason."

Oetallo on Page A2

BY RusTY MiLLER

Associated Press

LO'I'I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-8-7
f'lck 4 day: 1-7-1-1
Pick 3 night: 8-5-5
Pick 4 night: 8-Q-3-7
Buckeye 5: 5-17 -W:22-36

West VIrginia.
Dally 3: 4-9-3
Dally 4: Q-5-7-6
Cash 25: 1-9·13-14-18·22

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Ciassifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituaries
Sports .

B1-2, 6

Weather

A2

~

J.

MILES LAYTON

POMEROY Ohio's
Bicentennial Commission
recognized Pomeroy as one
of the Ohio River heritage
sites Tuesday at the Pomeroy
levee. The historic marker
was dedicated by a village
remembering its gloriou s
past, recognizing the present
and its belief in a future
filled with potential.
The cast-metal 4x4 · feet
marker wa
brought to
Pomeroy on the Chartanooga
Star which is visiting · J2 sites
on its 14-day journey. The
marker recognizes the spirit of
entrepreneurship and discovery that made Pomeroy one of
the most populated places in
Ohio in the 1800s. Margaret
Parker, Meigs County historian, said preservation echoes
an eternity for the future.
"It was a resilient people
that settled Pomeroy and the
same resilience is seen yet

Loan to
guarantee
Middleport
payroll
BY BRIAN

Mootly ounny, HI: 701, Ltw: 40s

Blue Jackets add to talent
base for fourth season

BY

jlayton@mydailysentinel.ocm

© 1003 Ohio Volley Publlshlng Co.

today, as the people of
Pomeroy strive to bring the
hustle and bustle of business
and visitors back to this beautiful town along the Ohio
River," she said. "We congratulate them for the preservation of the historic buildings and for keeping alive for
future generations the historic
founding of the town ."
Paul Reed, president of
Farmer's Bank, emceed the
event which brought politicians,
historians and the Meigs High
School band to the levee. He
quoted a line about Pomeroy
written by Clara Lochary which
captures the spirit of the people
·of Meigs County.
'"We l()()k to the future,"'
quoted Reed from a book
about Meigs County History
before he said, "How prolific
those five words were. It was
as if she was encouraging us to
be mindful that there are many
more chapters of Pomeroy history still to be written."
The inscription on the

marker highlighted the history of the village' s founder,
Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy, an
early landholder. and his
son-in -law, ·Valentine B.
Horton, both of whom were
influential in developing the
coal, salt and iron industries
of the region. It also includes
information on Horton who
pioneered the transportation
of coal by river. built the
world's first coal barges, and
in .1835, the first coal-fueled
towboat, "The Condor-"
"We would like to congratulate the people of Pomeroy
on this marker," said Mick
Davenport , Meigs Countv
Commissioner. ·
·
Pomeroy Mayor Victor
Young Ill who has lived in
Pomeroy all his life , 51
years, said he has seen the
village change, and remains
optimistic about its future
because of the people.
"The people are the
lifeblood of the village," he
said.

QU.EEN

Ohio:s Bicentennial Commission dedicated a historical mark·
er which recognizes ' Pomeroy as one of the Ohio River
Heritage sites. The marker which stands at the levee tells of
past industrialists who influenced the region with iron , coal
and salt. Pictured , left to right, are Mick Davenport, Meigs
Commissioner, John Musser. who coordinated the visit of the
Chatanooga Star and the dedication ceremony, Laura Galvi n.
Southeast Regional Coqrdinator for the Ohio Bicentennial
Commission. Chattanooga Star co-captains Mike Hoseman
and Pete Hoseman. Pomeroy Mayor Victor Young Ill , Margaret
Parker. president of the Meigs County Historical Society. and
Meigs County Commissioner J1m Sheets. (J. Miles Layton)

C~ ANDIDATES

J. REED

breedO "'Ydailysentinel.ocm
MIDDLEPORT - The
Village of Middleport will
rely on a bank loan to
make payroll in three village departments through
the end of the year.
Meeting in special session on Tuesday, council
passed an emergency resolution
authorizing
a
$70,000 line of credit
through Peoples Bank to
meet operatmg expenses
for the police department,
street department and
mayof's office. The loan
will require no collateral,
according to Village Fiscal
Officer Susie French.
Appropriations made for
those three general fund
departments have been
exhausted, according to
French, and without the
loan, the village will be
unable to meet payroll
expenses beginning with
that issued Oct 17.
Meanwhile, qne street
department employee has
been laid off, and anotheF
has transferred to the
sewer department, French
said. The village also
expects to issue a temporary layoff of the village
buiidmg inspector, who,
along with a custodian and
a secretary, are paid
through the mayor.'s
office.
The village has experienced increasing financial
difficulties this year, with
the loss of income tax payments from employees of
the Pomeroy Elementary
Middle
and • Meigs
Schools, and due to a
freeze in local government

Please see LOin, 15

Middleport
sets
'moonlight
madness'
promotion .
BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydaitysenti nel.ocm

Buckley said the farm
was very busy picking
green peppers before the
frost could harm them.
"We picked pep~rs like
crazy," Buckley smd.
The
next
morning.
Buckley said the frost
ignored the green peppers
and struck in other places.
Despite six weeks of rain
and an uncertain demand
. t!Jreatening any product a
Iarmer grows. Buckley said
it was a really good year.
Kneen said the pumpkin
crop was "hit or miss'' for
several farmers in Meigs
County. Buckley said their
. farm didn't produce many
pumpkins this year because
tt. is too risky. She said they
dtd sell the few pumpkins
they did have, but customer
demand is never certain

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport merchants wi II be
open late on Oi:t. 27 for their
annual "Moonlight Madness"
promotion . and plan' for that
e\ cnt and a holiday basket
bingo fundraiser were finalized
when
Middleport
Community Association met
on Tuesday morning.
President Tom Dooley
asked all merchants to
observe extended hours. from
6 to 9 p.m.. for the promotional event on Oct. 27. The
association will coordinate
gro up
advertising. and
Dooley said Pomeroy's merchants wi II be encouraged to
·join in the promotional event.
Advertising will also be
directed to the Point Pleasant.
W.Va. and Gallipolis markets, Dooley said.
Susan Baker of Ohio River
Bear Co. displayed a special
'' Bingo Santa'' bear to be
included in Longaberger baskets awarded in an upcoming
Bear Basket Bingo fundraiser
at
the
Feeney-Bennett
American Legion Hall on Nov.
13. Proceeds from the bingo
gan1e will help fund group
advertising during the holiday
season, as well as "big-ticket''
prizes to be awarded as part of
the annual "Shop Middleport''
promotion during the holiday
shopping season.
Last year, the association
awarded a big-screen television, DVD players. bicycles
and other large prizes
through weekly in-store
drawin~ .
designed
to
encourage local shopping.
The special bear will be

Please see Huvest. AS

Please see Madness. AS

Southern High School will have its homecoming match against Waterford High School Friday.
The homecoming queen candidates are left to right. back. Deana Pullins. Emily Hill, Stephanie
Bradford. Bethany Amberger and Amy Norman. Homecoming attendants are Jordan Neigler, a
JUnior, Chelsea Sm1th, a sophomore, and Jessica Lyons, a freshman. (J. Miles Layton)

Average harvest despite the odds
BY

J.

~ILES LAYTON

jlayton@mydailysentinel.ocm
POMEROY - · The harvest did not suffer too much
from a wet summer or an
early frost in Meigs County.
Hal
Kneen,
Meigs
County
Agricultural
Extension Agent, said the
early crops were affected
by tlie wet weather, but not
the late ones. When it rains,
puddles develop even with
proper drainage . This
chokes off the oXJ(gen suppI y to plants and '1:an have
an impact on their growth.
The rain also delayed early
planting.
"The wet weather affected the early settings," said
Kneen. "The planting started later than usuaL"
Kneen said prices have
been up because · yields

have been down. Last week
there. ,was an early frost
warmng that Kneen said
caused farmers to hurriedly
puli their crops in before
the near freezmg temperalure's at night and frost
could damage or destroy
theiJl. Kneen said it was an
average year for the famous
Ohfo River tomatoes and a
good year for green peppers.
. .
Chester and
Dottle
Buckle~ own a farm in
Reedsville. They grow
tomatoes, green peppers.
pumpkins, potatoes !ind
other ptoduce. Dottle srud It
was an excellent year for
tomatoes.
"We ~.ad a re~lly Rood
harvest, she sa1d. The
tomatoes that we had were
tops. We couldn't ask for
better. The rain must have
been good for them."

Emergency Nurses Week
is October 5 ., ·1.1
· En~ergency Nurses
is October 8 ·
'

Holz~r Medical Center salutes our "Amazing"
· Emergency Department nurses during
this
on.
~

--~------

-

Day

�\

OHIO .

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Oct. 9

CINCINNATI (AP) Patricia Copenhaver didn't
know what to do about her
I0-year-old daughter missing
school until both were
ordered to attend a truancy
court hearing at her daughter's school last year.
"I think it scared her when
the judge told her she and I
could be locked up if she
kept on missinb school," said
Cope nhaver, a 39-year-old
single mother who works a
night shift as a hospital
housekeeper.
This year, I !-year-old
Whitney is attending her
Cincinnati elementary school
regularly, and Copenhaver is
making sure her daughter
gets there .
"The judge told me I bad to
push her more to make the
school bus and get to school
on time," said Copenhaver.
"The court has helped both of
us be stronger."
Districts statewide are trying different methods to
make sure students are in
school, and efforts have led
to progress in districts' average altendance rates in 'recent
years , saic\ J .C. Benton ,
spokesman for the Ohio
Department of Education.
Average
attendance
statewide has increased slightly each year since 2000 when

.

.
I Tolodo _l_S!_~f!!:_:

I Monlflold !54·m· I •

• i Columbus

j 53·o m~

I

Mostly sunny, warm
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Highs in the lower 70s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday night...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers until midnight. Lows in the lower 50s
and highs near 70.
Columbus · day ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s
and highs in the upper 60s.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers from early
afternoon on. Lows in the mid
40s and highs in the mid 60s.

Today ... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Tonight ...Partly
cloudy.
Lows 50 to 55.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the lower
70s. Light and variable winds.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday night...A slight
chance
of
showers
early... Otherwi se
partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday... Partly cloudy with
a slight chance of showers.

Oct. 7, 2003

9,500

W Etrials

9,000

JUL

Pet.=
flom

High
9,654.61

o: +0.62

SEP

AUG
Low
9,536 .02

8.500

OCT

Record high: 11,722.98

Jan. 14, 2000

Oct. 7, 2003

2.000

Nasdaq

1,800

a:np:site .

Pct.=.

1,600

JUL

1,907.85

flomprw

High
1,907.68

: +0.76

SEP

AUG

1,400

OCT

Low

AtcOrd high: 5,048.62

1,676.59

March 10, 2000

Oct. 7,2003

1.050

St:arrl:u:d &amp;
'Etx:xr'' s 500

1,000

JUL

:n=.,

High
1,039.25

+0.47

SEP

AUG

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

Low

1,026.19

foP

c

Local Stocks
AEP-29.88
Arch Coal - 24.43
Ai&lt;m - 30.73
AmTEdY'SBC- 22.91
Ashland Inc.- 35.67

Fedenil Mogul - .22

BBT-37.11
BLI-16.39

Harleo; Davidson- 49.49

USB- 24.96

Kmart-25.20
Kroger- 19.00
Lld. - 16.35
NSC - 18.78

Wai-Mart - 58.90
Wert;;(s - 35.62
Worthington- 13.36

Bob E"""' - 28.38
8txrjNamer- 75.33
CharrjJion - 4.66

Charmng Shops- 6.10

City Hoking- 36.17
Col-25.81
.
. OG-2123
DuPont - 41.04

USB -24.96
Gannett - 8021
Geoor.ll Eledtic - 30.73
GKNLY-4.50

Rockwell- 27.75
. Rocky Boots-12.56
AD Shell- 45.60

Qak Hill Financoal - 30.05

S - 49.14
T -20.30

Dal~ stod&lt; reports ate the
4 p.m: closing quotes of the

ONE-40.4B

previous day's transac·

OVS-25.75

lions, pl'll'lided by Smntl ·
Partners at Adves1 tr&lt;:. of

Peoples- 27.93
Pepsico- 47 50

Galli~is.

The·/D aily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley
Published
every
afternoon,
Our main concern th all stories is to be Monday th rough Friday, 111 Court
accurate. II you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
S1ory. call the newsroom a&lt; (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
·
Association.
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111

Court

Street,

Pomeroy,

Ohio

45769.

News
Editor; Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Rtporter: J. Miles Lay1on, Ex1. 13

Advertising
Outllde ·s .loe: Dave Harris, Ext 15
CleuJCin:.: Judy ClaM&lt;, Ext 10 .

Circulation
Dlll11ct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene HoeHicll, Ext 12

!-mall:
newaOmydailysenlinel.com

---------EE HEARING TESTS

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month ............'9.95
One year ........... .'119.40
Dally .. : .............. ,50'

Senior Citizen
should

remit

In

advance direct 1o The Dally
Sentinel. No subscription by mall
permilled in areas where home

carrier service i~ available.

Mall Subscription
lnolcle Meigs Counly .
13Weeks .. ..... , .... .'30.15
26 Weeks .... ....... . .'60.00
52 Weeks ... ... .... , .' 118.80

Ralel Outside Meigs County

13 Weeks ......... . . ..' 50.05
26 Weeks . . . . . .
. . ' 100.10
www.mydailysentinel.com
62 Weeks .... , .
. . '200.20
., L....-_ _ __..__ _ _ _ _ _ ____j

-= .

•

delayed a few days because
an operating crew mistakenly
caused a valve to open in the
emergency cooling system
and dump about 1,000 galIons of water into a drain .
Another crew depressurizing
the reactor caused compuieroperated equipment to switch
into an emergency mode on
the last day of the test.
A high-ranking NRC official seeme~ to agree with the
utility's assessment, saying
he wasn ' t troubled by the
problems.
"I don't see this as unusual
for a r,lant that's been shut
down, ' said Sam Collins,
NRC deputy executive director of operations. "This wa,s a
good test. They found out a
lot about not only the handware but their performance."
The plant is about where it
should be in the repair and
restart process, Collins said.

The plant along Lake Erie
near Toledo has been shut
down since February 2002. A
month· later a leak was dis. covered that had allowed
boric · acid to eat nearly
through the 6-inch-thick steel
cap covering the plant's reactor vessel.
It was the most extensive
corrosion ever at a U.S.
nuclear reactor and led to a
nationwide review of all 69
similar plants.
The shutdown has cost the
Akron-based company more
than $500 million for repairs
and the purchase of power
from other sources.
FirstEnergy also is at the
center of the investigation
into the Aug. I 4 blackout that
affected 50 million people
and shut down more than 100
power plants.

People who fight their
birds arj!ue ·that the sport,
which 1s held before an
arena of cheering spectators
who often bet on the outcome, is part of an American
tradition that has existed
since the days of George
Washington. They say the
birds don't feel any pain during the fight.
However, many people consider the practice to be moralIy wrong, and cockfighting is
barred in every state except
Louisiana and New Mexico.
Voters in Oklahoma banned
the activity last year, but the
ballot measure is being chalIenged in court.
"They are trying to come
up with a way to justiff their
activity in the .face o massive public opposition," said
Karen Davis, head of
Virginia-based watchdog
group
United
Poultry
Concerns. "Cockfigltting is
not an agricultural practice.
It's a blood sport,"
Game fowl breeders say
raising the birds is just a
hobby for some.
·
Yet some of the birds
raised on his fiye-acre south- ·
west Ohio property, which
includes a bam and several
pens, have ended up in cockfighting pits.
•
"These chickens here can
fight," said Gary Hufflnan,

who has fought Hilsercop's
birds in Guam, where cockfighting is legal. "They're
swatting, clawing and it's
hard to get out of their way."
Don Pendue, a past president of UGBA and a member
of the West Virginia House
of Delegates from Prichard,
W.Va., said he raises a strain
of frost gray game fowl
because it was something he
and his father did together
while he was growing up.
The United Gamefowl
Breeders Association is run out
of an addition to the home of
board member Ray Johnson
and his wife, Sandy, the administrative director, in southern
Ohio's Vmron County.
Down the road, County
Route 55, up a dirt trail and
past a boarded-up house is a
field full of roosters leashed
to barrels with A-frame tin
roofs. Beyond the field, in a
cluster of trees, sits a cockfighting pit.
Sandy Johnson referred
questions -about the group to
Mathews. Breeders say suth
ptts are used to test the
~:gameness" of binds they are
consid~ring breeding.
But m 1991 , the Vinton
Cc;lUnty Sheriff's Depanment
nuded a cockfight · on the·
)ohnsons' property and cited
249 spectators, who were
fined $180 each.

COUPON

rateo

One month ........... .'8.95
One year . . .. , .. "....• .'96.70

Subscribers

been operating the plant in
two years. That's a long
time," Myers said.
Jack Grobe, chairman of the
NRC panel overseeing restart
plans, said plant managers
must improve procedures.
"It's not the operators; it's
the organization," Grobe said.
The panel has repeatedly
said it has no timetable for
restarting Davis-Besse.
FirstEnergy said repairs
should be done by midNovember, but the company
will keep improving procedures and operational tssues.
The NRC plans to continue
monthly meetings on the
company's progress into
December.
"It doesn't matter what
dates Firs!Energy puts up,"
Grobe said. "The plant won't
restart until we're convinced
it's safe."
Last week's test was

HARRISON (AP) - Bill organizations include groups
Hilsercop beams with pride who cultivate land, harvest
when he looks at his 30 game- ·crops or aquatic resources,
cock, leashed to barrels across or raise livestock. IRS
the green lawn behina his spokesman Anthony Burke
modest white frame home.
said the agency had received
"1 know the morn and dad the Humane Society's comof every bird I have on the plaint but couldn't say if it
place," he said.
was investigating.
He also knows that his
Larry Mathews, United
roosters, a breed he devel- Gamefowl's founder and
oped called Liberty Hatch, spokesman, said the group
tend to do particularly well doesn't see anything wrong
in
cockfighting
pits, with cockfighting in areas
although he no longer fights where it's legal but doesn't
them himself.
advocate breaking the law.
Animal right~ groups say
Besides' fighting, the birds
the bloody battles - illegal in can be used for show, sold as
all but two states - are the brood fowl to foreign breedonly reason game fowl are ers, slaughtered and sold as
raised. They are urgiQg the organic poultry or Cornish
federal government to revoke game hens, or harvested for
the tax-exempt status ~f the their feathers, which are
Ohio-based United Gamefowl used for fly fishing, hat
Breeders Assocmtton. ·
bands, feather capes and
The group, with about costume jewelry, he said.
15,000 members in 28 states,
"We've been audited by
has operated as a .govern- the IRS as recently. as last
ment-.sanctiOned agncultural year and came through with
orgamzat10n for 28 years.
flymg colors. We are what
"You cannot separate the we say we are," said
breedmg from the .fighting," Mathews, of Silverton, Ore.
s~id 'Xa~ne Pacelle, senior
In a cockfight, two roostvtce P.:¥.1dent of the Humane ers wear steel blades orl their
Society of the United States. legs, are often dru~ged and
"!he purpose of raising the placed in a pit. Dunng a typbtrds ts to fight them. There 1cal tournament, one-thind to
is no legitimate agricultural one-half of the .birds are
activity occurring."
killed. Many suffer broken
The Internal Revenue wings, punctured lungs and
Service says agricultural gouged eyes.

900

OCT

tion," she said. More than
800 students were taken
there last year.
In Cincinnati, Hamilton
County Juvenile Court magistrates hold truancy court
sessions in five elementary
schools with historically high
absence rates. The courts
have been operating in the
40,000-stuctent district for at
leas t . I0 years, and have
proven effective in many
cases, said Juvenile Court
Administrator Mark Reed.
"Holding the hearings in
elementary schools allows us
to get to families earlier so we
can try to remedy the problem without having to put
children and parents into the
formal court system." he said.
The magistrate can order
parents to attend parentin.g
classes or perform commumty service, fine them or even
jail them if the parents are
found to be contributing to
the delinquency of a minor,
Reed said.
But eincinnati Public
Schools spokeswoman Janet
Walsh said the main goal is
to solve the problem without
resorting to punishment.
"We don't want to throw
the· book at parents and disrupt the family setting even
further," she said.

.Group with cockfighting ties gets tax break

'"
1,039.25

campaign to improve attendance, and we have seen
some progress - just not
enough," said Moberley, noting that the district's atte ndance level last year was
86.7 percent.
Nick Bellas, attendance
officer in the Warren City
School District, said the
7,000-student district in
northeast Ohio also conducts
truancy sweeps and II(Orks
with ·families to try to
improve its 92 percent attendance rate.
"If they say something like
they don ' t have an alarm
clock, we' ll get them one,"
said Bellas. "We want the kids
and the parents to know that it
is necessary to be in school
and to develop a lifestyle that
promotes school."
The 37 ,000-student Toledo
Public Schools District
exceeded the state attendance
standard last year, improving
to 93.6 percent from 90.9
percent the previous year.
Adrienne Noel, director of
pupil placement, credited
much of the progress to a truant drop-off center developed
about three years ago.
"When police pick up truants, they take them to the
center, where a social worker
and other consultants work
with families to find a solu-

.

PORT CLINlDN (AP) Despite mistakes, a crucial reactor test at the shuttered DavisBesse nuclear plant didn't produce any surprises or inte01.1pt
plans .to restart the plant by the
end of fall, FirstEnergy Corp.
managers said.
The Akron-based utility
had hoped the weeklong test
of the reactor's cooling system would demonstrate the
plant was moving closer to
restart. But employee errors
during the test surprised federal regulators, who raised
more questions about the
plant's readiness.
Some problems were to be
expected, Lew Myers, head
ofFirs!Energy's nuclear'division, told a Nuclear
Commission
Regulatory
panel Tuesday in this Lake
Erie city I 0 miles from the
plant in Oak Harbor.
"Our operators haven' t

10,000

D:::wJcn:s

it was 93.9 percent, Benton
said. In 2002, the attendance
rate was 94.5 percent.
The state's attendance
standard is 93 percent, one of
22 factors used to grade districts on annual state-issued
report cards.
Schools also have a financial stake in curbing truancy,
since state aid to districts ts
based on enrollment calculated from once-yearly head
counts.
Benton said the increases
can be attributed in part to
districts being required in
200 I to create school safety
plans. Increasing attendance
is a safety goal for districts
because violent crimes happen Jess frequently on school
grounds, he said.
Jill Moberley, spokeswoman for Dayton Public
Sch'Oois, said the 20,000-student district has regular truancy sweeps in which police
track down truant students
and drop them off at school.
.The Dayton di strict also has
sent postcards to district residents, asking them to call a
hot line to report truants,
The district also requires
schools to have plans for
dealing with truant students
and providing attendance
incentives, she said.
"We have begun a citywide

Utility: Test errors shouldn't hinder restart.
plans
.

A DAY ON WALL STREET

9,654.61

Wednesday, October 8, 2003

School districts increase efforts against truancy

Ohio weather

IND.

Page.A2

I
Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by
1
.1~.e ™ HEARING AID ·cENTER 1
I
Dr. A. Jackson Balles Office
I
1 New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH 1
I FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2003 • 9:00. Noon I
Call Toll Free 1-800-634-52651or an lmmedlaie appointment.
I The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid'Specialist. I
I

I

740-992-5829

I
L

'--------------UMWA • UAW • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WALK·INS WELCOME
·

I

.I

be symptom-free within one
year. There are, on the other
hand, many for whom there is
no effective ·treatment.
Despite our best efforts, about.
20 percent of those who have
urticaria and/or angioneurotic
edema wi ll have repeated
' episodes for 20 years or more.
The doctor will ask abou[
the victim's family history. If
no blood relative has chronic
problems with hives or
angioneurotic edema, it's
unlikely that the hereditary
form is involved. This is
important becau se , there is
very specific treatment for
thi s form of the disorder, .
Si nce the most common
cause of urticaria and
angioneurotic edema is an
allergic reaction, it's important
to try to identify the culprit. It
this can be done, avoidance of
future exposure is the best
way to prevent new attacks.
Examples of common offenders include penicillin, aspirin,
ibuprofen (Motrin, Advil , etc.)
and "ACE inhibitor" blood
pressure
medications.
Common food or food additive ag'ents include artificial
food coloring, seafood,
chocolate, nuts, strawberries,
tomatoes and eggs.
There are several medications that work effectively to
decrease the severiiy and frequency of attacks. However,
for reasons not ye t clearly
understood. we can't use
allergy s h ot.~ to treat the
underlying allergic origin of
angioneuroti c edema as we
can with most other allergies.
Your doctor will prescribe
medication to help treat your
chro.nic angioneurotic edema.
Unfortunately. treatment is
the best we can offer since we
don't yet have any medications that can "cure" you of
this illness.
Family Medicine® is a
weekly column. To sub mit
questions, write to Martha A.
Simpson. D.O.. M.B.A ., Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopalhic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701 .
Medical information in this
column is provided as an
educational service only. It
does not replace the jt~dg­
ment of your personal physician, who should be relied on
to diagnose and recommend
lreatment for any m edical
conditions.- Past columns are
available online at wwwjhradio.orglfm:

DEAR ABBY: I am a 17:year-old high school junior
who is busy searching to find
the right college. l'.m m the top
10 percent of my class, active
ih extracurricular activities
and community services, and
have never given my parents
an ounce of trouble.
My problem is my mother
and I do not see eye-to-eye
when it comes to research in~
colleges. My family doesn t
have much money and cannot afford to send me to an
expensive university, which I
fully understand. However.
Mom gets mad when I
inquire about ANY school
out of our price range.
My reason for wanting to
survey all my options is to
seek as much information as
possible about financial aid.
work grants and scholarships.
Mother refuses to entertai n
the idea of co-signing a Joan.
She has come nght out and
said I'm wasting my time and
being delusional.
I thin k I am realistic . I

Parker observes
90th birthday
ALFRED - Ne llie Parker
celebrated her 90th birthday
with a party held in the old
Tuppers Plains school gymnasium .
Here for the observance
were her sons and their wives,
Eric and Jan of Californi a,
Edward and Debbie of
Arlington, Wash., her grandson, Randy Parker of
Chicag6, Ill. The only member of the immediate family

Dear
Abby

accept the fact that I won't
be going to an Ivy League
school. But I see no harm in
refusing to limit myself to
state-funded schools. Am I
on the right track, or is Mom
way ahead of me? - TIRED
OF BEING NAGGED IN
NEW YORK .
DEAR TIRED: You are
asking intelligent questions.
But ttie person you should be
asking ts your counselor at
school. From my perspective , knowledge is powe r.
There are many scholarships
available, and you are wise
to explore ~ II of your options

•
m1 ssmg was Tammi Parker
who is attending college.
The honoree 's daughter
and he r family Martha. J o~
and Will Poole and the visiting relatives hosted the party
in the gym which was decorated with mums of man y
colors. Cake and drink s were
served. Cards, gifts and flow~
ers were presented to Mrs.
Parker.
Attending the party were
Russell and Tina Parker, Gay
Ann Burke, Opal Hollon,
Opal
Wickham, Jani ce
Weber, Louise Mi chael,

Pastor Jane Beauie. B&lt;Jb and
Janice
Parker.
Sarah
Caldwell , Mildred Caldwell.
Gary and Sharon Michael.
Marlen e Donovan . Pa11y
Blake slee Circ le, Char les
Blakeslee. Roger and Lenora
Leifheit. Laura Mae Nice,
Thelma Biddle Hayes. Joan
May. Doris and Ben Ew ing.
Nancy Grueser, Nick Adams.
Rick , Debbie and Ayden
Barringer.
Pete and Osie Follrod ,
Thelma Henderson, Janet
Hoffman. Eleanor Dougla., ,
Ri chard
and
Florence

Spen&lt;:er. Samuel and Nellie
Michael. Howard and Wilma;
Parker. Berry Chevalier.:
Gary Reed. Ernie and
Maxine Whitehead . Nina
Roh11hon. Chri s and Shantel
Barringer. Joe. Martha and .
Will Poole. Su &gt;ie and Tom
Hysel l. Jared and K1111
Spencer. all local: Herb. Lori.
James and Sydney Mefford
of Kentuck y. Randy Park er.
Ch icago: Eric and Jan Parker
of Cali fornia. Edward and ·
Debbie Parker of Arlington.
Wash.: Man. Patty and Sarah·
Michael of Parkersburg.
·

lit

erson's

JACKSON - Ari~t ISO want to linger in the photogratri-state artists will be fupre- phy room and visit with five
sented at this year's Foothills artists working in their booths.
Connie Barrett of Hillsboro,
Art Festi val to -be held Oct. 17
to. 19 in the Lodge at Canter's Joan Arnold of Greenfield,
Cave 4-H Camp, 5 miles north Evelyn Pierson of Sabina,
of Jackson off Route 35.
Elaine Bal sley of -New
Organized by Southern Vienna, and Debbie Hook of
Hills Arts Council , the Martinsville, are offering
FestiVal will showcase nearly additional wares for side and a
600 works of art. Thanks to chaQce for the public to stop
Sands Hill Coal Company and and watch artists at work. _
OSCO Industries, there will
The 4-H Camp is nestled
be $ 1,2 10 in cash prizes deep into a hollow and offers
awarded. In addition to the the public lots of hiking trails.
visual arts, children can exer- After enjoying the artwork ,
cise their creativity with free visitors are ~elcome to strap
arts activities on Saturday and on their hiking boots and push
Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. in off into unspoiled . forested
a program sponsored by the hills and dales, With the festiNational City Bank. Oak Hill val timed to coincide with
Banks and the Ohio Arts peak fall foliage, Foothills
Cou ncil are sponsoring live offers the perfect excuse to
classical
music.
Sean hop into your car and enjoy
Ferguson will play acoustic . Mother Nature's OWl\ artwork
guitar . from 2 .to 4 p.m. on in brilliant reds and oranges.
The festival is open to the
Saturday and The Brighton
Trio will play chamber music public from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
on Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. on Friday, . Oct. 17 and
Other sponsors are Adena Saturday, Oct. I8. On Sunday,
Health System . Cotner &amp; Oct. 19, the festival is open
Cooley, CPA , and State Fanm from noon until5 p.m. There·is
Insurance, Dan Dailey, agent. nq admission charge. Canter's
The Festival offers work in Cave's staff is in charge of conoils, acrylics, pastels, draw- cessions. Parki ng is ample .
ing, prints, mixed media, pho- · the Lodge is handicapped
tography, watercolors, and a accessible. For more infonnabroad range of ,three dimen- ·tion, call Southern Hills at 740sional pursuits. Visitors will 286-6355.
_,

.

.

PROU .·10 BB APART OF.Yq~\~;
·I

~

1
i :,,

· ' 11re nauy 'Se~tiMl , r , ··
Subs~ribe rodqy • 99~r11 S5

www. myda(ljlsenqnel.cllTII
'

+

~'

. .

,•

••

·'

OPEN SEVEN DAYS AWEEK 11AM -7PM
•

•

••

I
.,

..

-·~

2003

- including the Ivy League . to help compensate disabled
DEAR ABBY: Plea;.e alert military retiree' who have
your reader;. to a program that given so much to thi' nation
ha~ been established to help
while protecting ou r freemilitary retiree&gt; who have ser- dom, . VICE ADM .
vice-connected disabilitie,. NORBERT R. RYAN JR .
Congress has authorized spe- USN(RETJ
cial compensation to help offDEAR
VICE
ADM .
set military retirement pay RYAN : I'm rlea,ed to help
that i&gt; forfeited in urder to
receive disability compen,a- 'pread the word . r m ;ure
tion from the Department of many retired veteran' will be
grateful for your lener.
Veterans Affair' (VA) .
Military retiree': To lind
This program began June I.
2003. It IS called Combat- out more about CRSC and
Related
Special how' and where to apply for
Compensation IC RSC 1. The the program. contact the
program i&gt;only for those who retiree affairs office at the .
have at least 20 year' of mili- nearest military in,tallation
tary service and who · have or gu to the Department of
combat- or operations-related Defeme Web 'ite at
disabilities. Thi' incl ude' any www.dmdc.osd .mil/cr;,c.
. disability that resulted in
Dmr Ahbl i.1 •rritten br
award of a Purple Heart, or
Abi~ail
y,,;, Buren. a/s~'.
conditions rated by the miliknown
as
Jeanne
PhilltjJS. and
tary or the VA as 60 percent to
u·m
founded
In
her 11w1her
I00 percent disabling. and
caused by combat or com- Pauline Pitt/lips. \\!rile Dear
bat/operations-related evenh. Abhr llf HWw.DearAbh1.com
Abby, I hope you'll publi- or ·P.O. Box 69440. Lm
cite this im portant program . An~e/es. CA 9(j()(j9.

Foothills Art Festival
to be held in Jackson

TWIN OAKS

I

Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
cbnveraatlon Is Invited to have a FREE hearing t..t to 11!8 11
this problem can be helped I Bring this coupon with you lor
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.

Edema is allergy
but shots won't help

~

1

Wednesday, October 8,

Teen's college search snags on Mom's low expectations

Family Medicine

. '"

34099 State Route 7
Pomeroy, Ohio

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Question: I have chronic
angioneuroti c edema. What
causes it, and what can be
done to treat it ?
Answer: It will help both
you and my ot her readers if l
first explain the difference
between
angioneurotic
edema and a related disorder
cal led urticaria. '
Both of these conditions
produce swelling of skin and
mucous membranes. Urticaria
is often referred to as "hives,"
a red, raised, itchy swelling of
the skin -- a "wheal" that usually lasts for a few hours.
Angioneurotic edema produces swelling of the skin,
but the swelling is in deeper
skin layers and usually lasts
for several day s instead of
hours. Angioneurotic edema
tl stwll y produces a diffuse.
painful swelling in the hands,
fe et and face , especiall y
around the li ps and eyes. The·
swe ll ing may occur in
mucous membranes -- the
skin-like ti ssue that lines the
mouth. th roat, bronchial tubes
and digesti ve tract. as well.
Both angione urotic edema
and urticaria are the result of
a disturbance to the circulation in the affected are.a of the
body. The very small blood
vessels in that area are dilaied
and leak · clear fluid into the
sk in in response to histamine
·rele&gt;1se. Leakage into the
deeper layers of the sk in
cause &gt; generalized swelling.
like a "fat lip," without the
appearance of hive.
Angioneurotic edema ca n
be the result of an inherited
enzy me deficiency, but it and
urticari a are most often produced by an allergic reaction .
Medications, foods, inhaled
allerge ns, insec t bite s and
stings, and substances that
contact the skin are the most
common offenders. In other
words, almost any substance
that can get in you or on you
has the potential to produce
th is type of reaction.
Acute
angioneurotic
edema, where the tissue in air
passages becomes swollen
and causes difficulty breathing, is a medical emergency,
and you should get to the
nearest ER quickly. With
chronic angioneurotic edema,
"watchful waiting" may be
the best approac h. Without
treatment, about one half of
those suffering from urticaria
alone and about one fourth of
those who have both urticaria
and angioneurotic edema will

PageA3

-·- ·-

..

v

-

•

�•

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
~The
'

''

&lt;

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

READER'S

VIEW

Cafeteria
Child humiliated'
Dear Editor:
This letter is to all parents and gmndparents of childr'en
atte1,1ding Meigs Local schools. and~n cerne d taxpayers who
want to be aware of how their tax m.o ¥ is being used.
In a country that prides itself on being ge nerous, we se nd
trillions of dollars every year to help foreign countries. The
incident that has me so outraged occurred on Sept. 30 at the
new con solidated elementary school. My granddaughter, who
is in tirst grade there , was humiliated and ridi culed by this
atrocious act. She was huniiliated by being allowed to go
through the lunch line, and get the food on her tray, only to
have it taken away once they punched in her number and
found she owed $4.80.
Out of their concern and kindness, .they gave her a peanut
butter satldwich and a carton of white milk. While taking
advantage of this generosity, she was ridiculed and laughed at
by other students.
When the cafeteria supervisor and superintendent were contacted, they responded rudely and inconsiderately. These are
the people who are supposed to be looking out for the welfare
of our cbildren. r want to know is this a local, county or state
policy that is enforced in thi s manner? How many children
were humiliated that day ? I heard there were others. If this is
allowed to continue, then as taxpayers and voters we need to
change the people making the policies.
I am thankful , howe ver, they didn ' t think of assassination so
they could keep their peanut butter sandwich and milk.
Steve Blackwell
Pomeroy

I' m stunned by recent polls
on the Californ ia recall election. Not that roughly six in
10 voters here in the Goldeh
State plan to throw Gray
Davis out of the Governor 's
Office, according to surveys
by CNN/USA Today/Gallup
arid The Los Angeles Times,
but that roughly four in I0
voters actually plan to cast
their ballots on the failed govemor 's behalf.
As a serv ice to the misguided Davis voters - many of
whom believe that the soonto-be-lame-duck governor is
the victim of the "vas t rightwing conspiracy" - let me
remind 'them of why His
Gray ness is viewed so unfavorably, and not just by ri ghtwingers, not just by
but
by
Republicans,
Californians of all p~litic a l
persuasions.
He has mi smanaged the
state's fi scal affairs. Davis
inherited a $12 billion buclget
surplus from his Republican
predecessor, Pete Wil son. He
has turned that surplus into a
staggering $38 billion deficit.
Governor Pass-the-Buck
says that the biggest deticit in
California history is not hi s
fault , that it is attributabl e to a
precipitous downturn in the
state's economy. But the fact
is, since Davis has run the
show in Sacramento, the state
go vernment has increased
spending by nearly 40 percent
- far in excess of intlation,
far outpacing growth in
California's population.
He· has overseen the deteri oration of the state's business
climate . Davis boasted last
year that "California is the
best place in the nation for
businesses to prosper." His
rosy assessment is not shared
by . the state's business community, as borne out by an
annual survey conducted by
the California Chamber of

"COZY~'

GIAHlER·

© 2003 by NEA, Inc.

,,

...., _____ -·

______. ______

· - · - - - -- - · - ; -

-

__ :

•

-•

nearly doub le their capacity.
Davis is dup licitous. The
governor's willingne-s to sacrifice pri nciple on the unholy:
altar of political expediency i ~·
exemplified by his tlip-llops .
on both driver 's licenses lor·
illegal [\liens and tl1e swte's
car tax.
.
Californi a's Democrati c-'
contro lled Legislature on two
prev ious occasions presented
Davis with bi lls that wou ld,
offer driver's licenses to nun- .
citizens, non-legal residents. ;
Davis vetoed the . measures.·
both times, citing a lack ol .
sufficient security preca utu&gt;ns ·.
(li ke criminal background
checks). Yet Davis signed the,
legislation this year despite:
the lack of the precaut ions he
demanded prev iously. tksp ile
the protests of Californ ia's
law enforcemen t community. '
Why'' To suck Li p to ·
California ·s Hispanic vot ers
in hope of holding onto l1 is '
job.
Then there's the state's :
ve hicle license fee. the hated '·
car tax, which is based on the
value of a car or truck. Earli er
thi s year, Davis p ro mi se d~
California residenh that h ~ '
would not raise the tax. Yet . .
the state budget he signed thi s·.
year . incl udes a $4 bi lli on:
increase in car taxes.
And the car tax didn ' t
increase by say 25 or 50 or .
even I00 percent. but hy a
whopping 300 percent That
truly has to be one of the
biggest tax hikes in state hi s-,
tory.
The Golden State has lost
much of tts lu ster since Gray'
Davis became go\'ernor. He
deserves what's coming to
him on Recall Day.
(Jos eph PNkins is a.
columnisr f o r Th e Sa n
Di ego
Uni on -Trih lln &lt;'.
and can h e rea c hed a 1
J ose ph . Pe rki n s@ U11 io n
Tri b. co m ).

Obituaries ·
Gael Dudding
MASON - Gael Dudding,
79, of Mason, W. Va. died
Wednesday, Oct. 8, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. Arrangements
will be announced by FoglesongThcker Funeral Home.

James L. McHaffie
RACINE James L.
McHaffie,
Racine,
died
Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2003 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant, W. Va. Arrangements
are under the direction of
Fisher Funeral Home and will
be announced when completed.

Carol Lee
COLUMBUS
-Carol
June Varian Lee, 54, of
Columbus, a former resident
of Clifton, W. Va., died Oct.
4, 2003 at Mt. Carmel
Hospital in Columbus.
·She was the daughter of the
late Charley and Eva Varian of
Clifton. Her husband, Harty
Lee, preceded her in death.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday night at the
Rughford Funeral Home in
Columbus with the Rev. James
Hood of the Amazing Grace
Baptist Church officiating.
Burial will be in Columbus.

She was preceded in death
by her husband, Carol Pierce,
her parents, Raymond and
Carne Elberfeld, brothers,
Raymond "Pete" James
Elberfeld, and an infant sister.
She will be sadly missed by
her loving son, Tonuny Price; a
nephew . Mike
_(Heidi)
Elberfeld; a great niece, Carrie,
and several other nieces,
nephews and extended family.
A funeral service was held
at II a.m . on Saturday, Oct. 4,
2003 at Schoedinger North
Chapel.
where
family
recetved friends from to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. on Friday and an
hour prior to the service. Rev.
Dick Ward officated at the
service and intemnent was at
Forest Lawn Memorial Park.
Memorial contributions
may be made to Hospice
Service of Licking County,
1984A Coffman Road,
Newark, Ohio 43055.

Donald Lee Alkire

STEWART - Donald Lee
Alkire, 67, of Stewart died
Tuesday, Oct.-7 , 2003 at his
residence,
He was born Dec. 14, 1936
in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of
the late L Russell and Verna
Kathryn Wiggens Allire. He
was a veteran of the U. S.
Army and worked for
Electric Motor Service in
Carriene Price
Athens until he retired March
29, 2002. He was also a
COLUMBUS - Carriene member of the Centennial
"Susie" Mae Price. 86, of Congregational Chur~h and
Columbus, formerly of attended other churches.
Pomeroy, passed away
He is survived by his wife,
Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2003 at Myrtle Alkire; a daughter and
Northview Nursing Home.
son-in-law, Christy and Todd
Susie was a devoted and Bradford of Guysville; a son
loving mother who was car- and daughter-in-law, Brian
ing and giving to all who and Sharon Alkire of Stewart;
knew her. She was a dedicat- four gmndchildren: Brann3n
ed
employee
for Lee and Justin Allen Alkire of
Scottenstein's, and retired Stewart and Evan Crary and
after 35 years of service.
Mikayla Lynn Bradford of

Absentees available

IS IT

POSSil?lE

POMEROY - Applications
for absentee ballots for the
Nov. 4 general election are now
availab1e from the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Applications can be mailed
upon request, by calling the
bOard office at 992-2697.
Those who wish to cast
absentee ballots may also do
so in person by visiting the
board office in the Meigs
County Annex,
behind
Holzer Meigs Clinic.
Applications for absentee
ballots must be received by
noon on Nov. I. The board
office will be open from 9
a.m. until noon on Nov. I to
receive last-minute applications. The last day to cast an
absentee ballot in the board
office is Nov. 3, according to
Board Director Rita Smitll.

TO BEA

lOVABLE

WINNER?

Counseling available

For sale: Purple prose
There was a hand-printed
sign posted on the bulletin
board at the grocery store.
"For Sale: Wedding dress
with all the accessories! Size
12, can be taken in.
Sleeveless, lace, open back
bodice with satin bottom.
Has · a long lacy train. Very
pretty. $700 OBO."
The words "For Sale" were
in black ink, capital letters,
the desc.ription of the dress in
roundish script in purple ink.
I wondered what happened
here. Did they get married
and now she needs the
money?
Did she become a size 14
· (canno. t be let out)? Was the
wedding called off? Did she
catch him with her best
fr.iend? And more than that,
what on Earth does OBO
mean? Think, man, think. Or
Best Offer? HTB. Has "~'o
•'
Be. Maybe that's why the
dd' , ff Sh
we 1ng s o .
e-talked in
code and it drove hi in crazy.
MHJGFUAL. Maybe he just
got fed up and left. ·
Sue does it to me all the
time. She' ll look up from
breakfast
called." and say, "Wayne
Who is. Wayne ?

.

Commerce and Cali forn ia
Business Roundtable ..
It found a higher level of
pessimism among the state's
business leaders than at any
other time in the survey's 12year history. That 's because
the burdens facing California
businesses cannot be attributed to the state's recent economic downturn . They are
endemic.
Cal ifornia businesses face
corporate income taxes,
workers' compensation insurance premiums and unemployment insurance taxes that
are among the highest in the
country. They pay the highest
electricity bills on the mainland (thanks to California's
recent electricity crisis) and
liability insurance premiums
that are among the nation's
highest (because California
leads the nation in frivolous
lawsuits). They also are facing a " paid" family leave
mandate, the nation 's first,
and a health mandate that will
fall heaviest on small businesses, which the governor is
expected to sign.
·
Adding it all up, the cost of
doing business in Gray Davis'
California is higher than in
almost any other state.
. He has sold the Governor' s
Office to special interests.
The "No on Recall" campaign
received a recent $100,000
donation from Joe and Gavin
Malocf, owners of the NBA's
Sacramento Kings.
The Davis camp takes

Mlmullen ·

would he call? What are you
talking about?
"Wayne from the auto
shop. You need a new inspectior\ sticker," she'll say slowly and deliberately, as if. she
were talking to someone who
was just learning the Ianguage.
I've met that Wayn
·. · e onee,
'''our years ago . ·wh y hadn 't 1
t'nstantly fr'gured th at one
out?.
At the bo(to m o f the weddt'ng dre ss
· fl ter
. were th ose
II'ttle pre cut stri'ps w'th
h
.1
er
,phone number on them.
Whoever first thought of that
was a genius. An unsung
g·ent'us who probabl y ne v~r
made ad'tme from comrng
· up
wt' th the
. best· bullet'n
r board
t'nventt'on st' nce the thumb tack. Instead of· making us ·
Why fumble around for a pen and

·--~-- ------------~....
- --

J"

..., , • • .! .. .

a piece of paper, all we have there'd be no reason to sell it. ·
to do IS
· rrp
· off the 1·ttl 1e ta b . I.was turning over the paswith the phone number on it srbtlrtres m my head _ is he
and take it home. Then you still paying for the ring? If
can pull it out of your pocket she's selling it fur $500 what
and say, "Who's number is did he pay for it? _ ~hen 1
this? Why did I tear it off? . noticed yet more purple ink
What was the guy se II'mg, on the bulletin board. A thi rd
again?" and ·throw it away.
tlier. tloated in amongst the
F
]
was nottces for cars and pick-up
or some reason
·
'f
'
won denng
r t he we· dd mg
trucks, mobil e homes and:
dress had ever been worn. It free · kittens, septic tank ·
seemed to me that if! were in cleaning and tree removal "
the market for a wedding used drum kits arid knitting·
dress that would be an impor- lessons. It satd , "For Sale:
tant consideration. I was Couch, Chair, Ottoman , End
thinking of tearing off the Table and Coffee Table. All
phone number to call and ask in really good 'shape. $900
when l saw another splash of OBO ."
· ·
,
1
th
d
d
b
1
M
'
purp e on e crow e u aybe they go.1 in a fi ght
1e t'm board. In the same over the fum
, iture. He (' ked ·11
happy, opumrsuc,
· · · ctrcu
· 1ar and she didn't. I know1 cou:·
han d was wntten
·
"For Sa1e: pies. th.at h.ave. split up over
Engagement R'mg, srze
·
7 , le s~.. l.tke ptckmg
· the color o"
'
one center stone, Wit· h sma 11 ' therr drapes. Maybe th 1's cou-·
'd
·
h
b
d
er st e stones set m t e an . pie had a big fight over th e~
$500 OBO."
ottoman . Their' big. round
Maybe they had broken it purple ottoman.
.
off J·ust J1n tt'me?· MaYbe they ,. (1'1m M II t/en· is Ihe author oj;·
had figured out that it would It Takes A Village ldiof.· A·
never wor k?. May be sli e Memoir of Life A.fter lire City·&gt;'
'.oun d someone e1se much (Sim on and Schuster, 2001 ). ·
bett er.? W.e II , that wou Jd be a He also collfributes regularly·
!'ttl
' tched . If s·he had· to E' llfertai~lm en/ Weekly.'
t e far-•e
found someone better . she wh ere he can be reached at
could still use the dress, jim_rnullen@ew.com)
'

1..,. .., . ....,.,1"·". I · ...... - ... ,• . ,,

1

'"·. '
'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydai1ysentinel.'c om

Local Briefs

Today is the Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2003. 281 st day of 2003
and the 15th day of autumn.
TODAY ' S HISTORY: On this day in 1871 , on a Sunday
evening, the Great Fire of Chicago began. By Tuesd.ay morn '
ing, after a heavy rain had fin &lt;lllY put out the Hames. at least
four square miles of Chicago had been destroyed and approx imately 250 people had died .
On this day in 1944, "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet"
was broadcast for the first time on the CBS radio netw.ork.
On this day in rtJ67, Che Guevara, a leftist Third World revolutionary, was captured in B.o livia and executed the following day.
~
TODAY 'S BIRTHDAYS: David Carradine ( 1936-), actor,
is 6 7; Jesse Jackson ( I 941-), politician and clergyman, is 62;
Chevy Chase ( 1943-). comedian and actor, is 60; Sigourney
Weaver (1949-), actress, is 54.
TODAY' S SPORTS: On this day in 1922. the New York
Giants won the first World Series by defeating the Yankees 53 in game five .
TODAY' S QUOTE: "George Bush has met more foreign
heads of state than I have . But a substantial number of them
were dead ." -- Jesse Jackson
TODAY ' S MOON : Between first quarter (Oct. 2) and full
moon (Oct. 10)

NOW WE.
KNOW WHAT
EXPEDIA
MEANT BY

Joseph
Perkins

umbrage at the suggestion
that there is any connection to
a bill the governor has on his
desk that would help pay for
the Maloofs' new arena price tag $300 million to $500
million - with taxpayer
financing.
,
Yet special interests in
Californ ia know that that's the
way business is done with the
buck-raking governor.
Indeed, afte r the Davis
administration inked a no-bid
contract with Oracle Corp., '
committing the state government to pay for $41 million
worth of · software it didn'J
need, the governor received a
$25,000 check from the company.
It was the same thing with
California's pipe trade union.
It gave the governor $260,000
after the Davi s-appointed
state building commi ssion
issued a ruling keeping plastic
water pipe from replacing
copper pipe in Cali forni a
homes. The union doesn' t
want plastic to be used
because it is cheaper and easier to install than tr'Jditional
copper.
So,
California
remains one of only two states
that continue to prohibit plastic pipe in homes.
·
Then there's Californi a
Correctional Peace Officers
Association, a public employees union, which has showered the governor with more
than $2 million 'in campaign
contributions. Davis denied
that the lout had anything to
do · with his proposal to shut
down at least five · of
California 's nine privately run
prisons.
Still, it is hard to see how
the state' s penal system benefits from shutting down the
private pri son s. Especially
considering
th at
California 's correctional
faciliti es are dangerou sly
overcrowded, operating at

Wednesday, October 8 , 2003

2003 .

.

POMEROY - .The Small
Business
Development
Center of Southeast Ohio
conducts regular office hours
at the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce, from 8:30a.m.
until noQil on Thursday and
by appointment.
. Tim Kresse, certified business advisor, provides free
counseling services to local
business owners and those
interested in stacting a business. Appointments are avail,

Madness
from PageA1
included in all prize baskets,
Baker said, and will not be
available for sale. The association has purchased over

Harvest
from PageA1

Joseph Seiber, Randy WiUiam
Han, Jr.; nieces, Debra Mae
Fitzpatrick, ·• Charlene M.
Kouns, C)'ndi M. Branscum,
and Chrisune E. Seiber.
Besides his father, he was preceded in death by paternal
grandparents, Reginal and Hilda
Luslir, and rnatema1 grandparents, Sim and Mary Meadows.
Services will be at II a m. on
Friday. Oct. 10, 2003 at Fisher
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial and graveside services
will be held at 2 J?.m· Friday at
Highland Memonal Gardens in
South Point, Ohio. Friends may
call Thursday, Oct. 9, 2003
from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral
home. Military rites will be
Richard E. Lusher Sr. conducted at the graveside.
Friends may send on-line
to www.fisher·
condolences
SALEM CENTER
funeralhomes.com.
Richard "Dick" E. Lusher, Sr.,
59, of Salem Center, went to
be with the Lord Monday, Oct. David R. Cline ·
6, 2003 at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis after a
WATERFORD -· David R.
courageous battle with cancer. Cline, 68, died on Oct. 6,
Born Oct. 18, 1943 in 2003 . at the home of his
lluntington,W. Va., he was the daughter, Kathy Thieman, in
son of Evelyn M. Lusher of Waterford.
Salem Center and the late Roy
He was born March 2, 1935
L. Lusher. He was a member in Racine, the son of the late
of the American Legion Post ·Russell and Ceva Beaver Cline.
476 at Wilkesville, V.F. W. Post
He worked at Interlake
9926 at Mason, W. Va., and the Steel and Globe for 32 years
Disabled American Veterans and retired in 1986. He gradMeigs Chapter 53.
uated from Southern High
He graduated from South School in Racine in I 953. He
Point High School in 1961 , attended Marietta College and
and worked many years as a served in the U.S. Army durconstruction iron worker. with ing the Korean Conflict and
Local 769 Ashland, Ky. He was stationed in Germany.
served in the United States
He was a member of the
Air Force 6th Strategic Waterford Church of the
Aerospace Wing in Vietnam . Narzarene. He was a lifetime
· Besides his mother, he is sur- member of the Disabled
vived by a son, Richard E. American
Veterans.
He
Lusher, Jr.; granddaughters. enjoyed playing golf at
Heaven Leighann Lusher and Arrowhead Pines golf course,
Destiny Starr Lusher, all of where he volunteered as a
Huntington, W. ya.; sisters, course ranger. He also enjoyed
Hilda Mae Eaddy, Beaver hunting, fishing and NASCAR.
Falls, Pa.; Sheni L. Han, Salem
He was married to Glorine
Center; nephews, Charles Barnhart Cline on July 15.
Guysville. He loved them all . . ·
He was fro m a family of
II , with four survivi ng brothers, Roy, Carl, John and
Terry; and four sisters, Betty
Coe ~ . Peggy Clark, Janet
Owens and Kathryn Church.
In addition to his parents,
he was preceded in death by a
brother, Roben, and a sister,
Marie Taylor.
Services will be held at I I
a.m., Friday, Oct. I0, 2003 at
White
Funeral
Home,
Coolville with Roger McCoy
officiating. Burial will be in
the Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home ThliP.lday. from 6-8 p.m.

1960. and she surv\ves him. and was the son of the late
He is survived by three George L. Greene, Sr., and
daughters: Kelly McAiarney Sibyl (Herdman) ~ne . He
and her husband, Greg, of . was the owner/operater of the
Bev~rly, Dorlr..- Lang and her
R &amp; R Market in Hartford and
husband, Damian "Moose" of was a member of the West
Waterford. and Kathy Theiman Virginia Sheriff Association
and husband Doug of and Bend Area CARE.
Waterford; eight grandchildren:
He is survived by his wife.
Chance McAlarney, Joshua Ruth E. Greene; four daughters
Thieman, Brandt Thieman. and three sons-in-law: Karen
David McAlarney, Blake and Martin Valenzuela of
McAlamey, Kay lee Lang, Amy - Har1ford, Mary DiAnn Keams
Lang and Rachel Lang.
ofLouisville, Ky., Christina and
He is survived by six broth- .Keith Barrett of Langsville, and
ers and sisters- in-law: John Kimberly and O!arles Keams,
Henry Cline and Ginn y of Jr., of Letart, W.Va; a son and
Leesburg, Aa, James Cline and daughter-in-law. Ralph Wayne
, Margaret of Beverly, Richard andTammy Greene of Hanford;
Cline and Paula of New brothers and sisters-in-law:
Lexington, Charles Cline and Kenneth and Nonna Greene of
Lois of Waterford, Carl Cline Hanford, George M. Greene, Jr.,
and . Betty of Mason, W.Va.. of Hartford, and Ralph and
and Carol Cline of Tuppers Donna Greene of Letart; a sister
Plains: a sister, Patricia Collins and brother-in-law. Delores and
of Long Bottom; and several Charles Rife of Rutland; sistersnieces and nephews.
!n-law: Rosa Greene of ·
He was preceded in death Hanford, Cheryl Sue Greene of
by his parents, Russell and New Haven, Colleen Greene of
Ceva Beaver Cline ; a son. Pomeroy, Ruby Greene of
David Russell Cline Jr.; an Hartford, Reba Roush of
inf~nt daughter; two sisters.
Hartford, Sally Josephson of
Mary Bumgardner and Grace Columbus, Melissa Gosnell of
Hol singer; and an infant Columbus, and Debra Baer of
brother and sister.
Columbus: a brother-in-law,
Service will be at I p.m. William
Rathburn
of
Friday, Oct. I 0 at the Columbus; his mother-in-law,
Waterford Church of the Vrrginia Rathburn of Columbus;
Nazare~e with the Re ~. Karl ·II grandchildren and nine great-·
Kesselnng . offtc rattng. grandchildren.
Internment wtll follow at the
Besides his parents, he was
Waterford Cemetery wnh preceded in death by three
military graveside services.
brothers: Donald Greene, James
Friends may call at the funer- R. Greene and Emesl I. Greene.
al home from 7 to 9 p.m. on
Services will be held at I
· Wednesday and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 9,
p.m. ThliP.lday at the McCurdy 2003 at the Foglesong-·
Funeral Home in Beverly.
Tucker Funeral Home in
Mason, W.Va. with the Rev.
Charles R. Keams Jr. and
Roy E. Greene
Re v. Huling Greene officiatHARTFORD, W.Va.
ing. Friends may call from 6
Roy E. "Gene" Greene, 68, to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at
died Oct. 7 2003 at his resi- the funeral home .
dence in Hartford, W.Va.
Burial will be at Broad Run
He was born May 21 , 1935 Cemetery, Letart.
-/j

Community calendar

,.

TODAY IN HISTORY

Moderately
. Confused

Wednesday, October 8 ,

VVhy Davis should be recalled

Daily.Sentinel
Diane

Page A4

able by calling 593-1797.
The Basis of a Successful
Start workshop is held monthl,Y
at the chamber office. It IS
designed to answer questions
about starting a business,
assessing goals and strengths,
registering a business name,
licensing, tax requirements,
types of ownership, planning
for a business, sources . of
financing, SBDC and other
resources, and other topics. The
workshop is free and open to all
prospective business owners.
The next workshop will be held
from 6 to 9 p.m on Oct 16.
Re · 'on is required by calling
5~. Registration is requested a week before the class date,
but is welcome ~ to the date of
the class if space IS available.

Hymn sing
LONG BOTIOM - A
hymn sing will be held at 7 p.m.
Friday at the Faith Full GOspel
Church at Long Bottom.

OESto meet
CHESTER - Pomeroy
Chapter of the Order of
Eastern Star will meet on
Oct. 20 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester hall for practice for ·
installation. All officers are
required to attend. The I OOth
annual
installation
for
Pomeroy Chapter will take
place on Oct. 22 at 7:30p.m.
It will be an open installation.
$3,000 in Longaberger baskets and other Longaberger
products, with an emphasis
on holiday products and pottery, Dooley said.
Tickets for the bingo game
are $20, and can be reserved in
advance by calling 992-4055.

Public meetings
Wednesday, Oct. 8
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Health will
meet at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department,
112 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.
RACINE - The Southern
Local School Board will have
a special meeting at 7 p.m. in
lhe media center at
Southern High School. The
purpose of the meeting is to
conduct personal evaluations of the superintendent
and treasurer, discuss negotiations and conduct other
business.
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m. al the township garage

Loan
from PageA1
revenue paid to villages by
the state.
French said yesterday the
village will probably not use
all of the $70,000 available
through the line of credit, but
will likely need approximately
$50,000 to make payroll
through the end of January,
2004, when a n~w cenification
is issued by the county auditor
and funds are appropriated
into departml;(ltal budgets.'
French said the police
department payroll averages
$7,000 v.er bi-weekly payroll, whtle the street department payroll averages· $800

on Joppa Road.

Clubs and
Organizations

Christmas gifts for veterans.
Hostesses will be Eileen
Buck, Mary Kay Yost, Mrs.
George Skinner and Mrs.
Mark Grueser.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Thelma Hayes of 48328
State Route 248, Long
Bottom, 45743 will observe
her 91 st birthday on Oct. 13.

and the mayor's office payroll amounts to ' even less
under current staffing.
The amount and terms of
repayment of the loan will not
be known until early next
year, when the Joan period
ends, French said, · although
all three departments which
will be funded through the
loan will be responsible for
repayment.
Councilman
Stephen
. Houchins, chaimnan of the
village's finance committee,
said iill departments, especially those now experiencing financial problems, will
be forced to adhere to strict
spending limits between
now and. year's end. He said
a strict "bare bones" budget
will be instituted for 2004

for all village departments.
A "no overtime" policy has
been in place for some time,
Houchins said, but now mu st
be strictly enforced.
French said all expenditures will now require her
approval. Purchase orders are
required for all purchases
made by village departments,
but many department heads
do not comply with this
requirement, French said.
"1 will not authorize payment of any overtime wa¥es,
and no compensatory time
will be issued for overtime
'worked," French said.
Two council members,
Roger Manley and Robert
Pooler, voted . against the
emergency measure, citing
their doubts that the village

can re-pay any amount borrowed without sacrificing in
other areas next year.
"I question what our soun::e of
repayment is going to be," Pooler
said after yesterday's meeting.'1f
we don't have this money now,
how can we O(Xllate nen year
with that much less"''
Manley, meanwhile, said
indiscriminate spending is
· partially to blame for the viilage's present financial condition, and said he believes
reckless spending is likely to
continue.
"It scares me to borrow
money when we haven't been
·. good stewards of the money
we had," Manley said. "I'm
afraid that any amount we •
borrow will also go to nonessential expenditures."

740-949 2210

Syracuse
740-992·8383
q

,.,

Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER - A genealo·
gy fair will be held at the old
restored courthouse in
Chester from 9 to 5 p.m. The
fair is co-sponsored by the
Chester-Shade Restoration
Association, Bedford-Lodi
Historical Group, and the
of
Chester Daughters
America.

Sunday, Oet. 12
RUTLAND Rutland
Church of Christ will celebrate its 174th anniversary
at a homecoming. Worship
and communion service will
begin at 10:30 a .m. There
will be carry, in dinner at
noon, an afternoon service
at 1 :30 p.m. with special
musi.c by Mercy River, a
from
gospel
quartet
Gainesville. Fla. Bob Werry

Racine

•

Other events

Thursday, Oct. 9
CHESTER- Shade River
Lodge 453, 8 p.m. at lhe hall .
Friday, Oct. 1 0
POMEROY
The
Widows Fellowship will meet
at noon at Gino's in Mason.
W. Va. for a luncheon.
Saturday, Oct. 11 .
POMEROY
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the Daughters of the
American Revolution will
meet at 10 a .m. at the
Pomeroy Library. Guest
speaker will be James Bailey
of Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053. Members are to take

some concern about insects
destroying crops, but careful
planning and constant vigilance from both the farmer
and Kneen prevented this.

when it comes to pumpkins.
Chrysanthemum crops were
good. Kneen said the fall
"mum•: crop sold well. Shirley
S!Obl!rt. ·who owns and oper1\leS the Stobart Greenhouse
and Farm in Racine with her
husband John, produced more.
than 12,000 mums this year.
She said demand for fresh
flowers has been high at the
Stobart Aowe)' Shop IQ~:ated '
along State Route 124.
Kneen said com crops from
a vatieiY of farms in the area
proved better than expected.
Earlier in Jhe year, there was

is the church's minisler.

Birthdays

�0

•

PageA6

.NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Scores and tltandlngs, Page B2
OHSAA foQtbell computar ratings, Page 86
Bengala change punters, Page 86

Wednesday, October 8, 2003 ·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Voters oust Gov. Davis; Arnold wins chance at state's challenges
LOS ANGELES (API Seething over taxes and red in\{,
voters dumped the unpopuhlr
Gov. Gray Davis and replaced
him with political novice
Arnold Schwarzenegger, · the
Hollywood action •star who now
faces the colossal ch.tllenge he
asked
for: jump-starting
California's flagging economy.
Davis, the Democrat who
was a bland, widely disliked
career public servant and
presided over California's
economy as it careened from
boom to bust, was recalled
Tuesday less than a year into
his second term. According to
early returns, nearly 54 percent
of voters called for his ouster.
Schwarzenegger, a moderate Republican with tons of
charisma but virtually no
political experience, was easily elected among candidates to'
replace Davis just two months
after shocking even his closest
aides when he declared his
candidacy on "The Tonight
Show With Jay Lena."
The action movie hero may
find that the hardest part is yet
to come. He will need to
quickly assemble an administration and work with a
Democrat-con trolled
Legislature to close a projected $8 billion .shortfall for next
fiscal year. Schwarzenegger
scheduled an afternoon press
conference Wednesday to discuss transition.
"We have tough choices
ahead," Schwarzenegger said
in declaring victory. ''The fmt
choice that we must make is
the one that will determine our
success. Shall we rebuild our
state together or shall we fight
amongst ourselves, create
even deeper divisions and fail
the people of California?
Well , let me tell you something - the answer is clear.
For the people to win, politics
as usual must lose."
Partial
returns
early
Wednesday showed the recall
favored by 3,944,412 voters or
53.9 percent, and opposed by
3,368,141 votersor46.1 percent.
Among the replacement
candidates, Schwarzenegger
was ahead with 3,370,476
votes, or 47.9 percent of the
vote; Democratic Lt. Gov.
Cruz
Bustamante
had
2,277,834 votes, or 32.4 percent; Republican state Sen.
· Tom
McClintock
had
930,684 votes, or 13.2 percent; and Green Party candidate Peter Camejo had
198,8 16 votes, or 2.8 percent.
"Tonight, the voters did
decide it's time for someone
else to serve, and I accept their
judgment," said Davis, who
became the first California
governor and the second in
the nation ever to be recalled.
"I'm calling on everyone ...
to put the chaos and division
of the recall behind us and do
what's right for this great state

of California," Davis said.
Barring a legal challenge,
Schwarzenegger will be sworn
in no later than Nov. 16 to
serve out the remainin~ three
years of Davis· term. Fmt the
vote must be certified, a
process that can take more
than a month. He would then
be up for re-election in 2006.
Schwarzenegger will need
to tum in a budget plan by
Jan. 10, giving him just a few
months to deliver on campaign-trail ·promises not to
raise taxes or cut education
· spending, which consumes
rou~hly
40 percent of
California's
budget.
Throughout the campaign,
Schwarzenegger refused to
say what he would cut, but
painful program slashing
undoubtedly looms.
He also promised to repeal
this year's tripling of the state
vehicle license fee, although he
has not said how he would make
up the $4 billion that would cost.
Schwarzenegger
must
work with Democrats, who
are a majority of both houses
in the Legislature and hold all
statewide offices except his
newly-won governorship.
He dismissed the problem on
the campaign trail, saying he
knew how to work with
Democrats because he's married to one - Kennedy relative Maria Shriver. In practice,
it's likely to be a thom1er issue.
Despite the rancorous
recall race, Bustamante and
other Democratic officeholders quickly pledged to put
partisanship behind them and
work with the new governor.
"As I see it. we campaign as
partisans but we govern as
Californians," said Bustamante,
who will remain in office until
his current term expires in
2006. "I know how to balance a
budget and I'm ready to roll up
my sleeves and get to work."
Democratic
Assembly
Speaker Herb Wesson of Los
Angeles released a statement
saying, "Californians do not
want gridlock. They want us
to act - without partisan
rancor - on the issues that
matter most to them. I ,will
work with the new governor
to make sure he keeps his
promise to women, to our
children and to our schools."
Schwarzenegger, 56. prevailed despite a flurry of negative publicity in the campaign's final days, surviving
allegations from 16 women
that he had groped or touched
them in unwanted sex ual
advances, and accusations
that as a yqung man he spoke
admi.ringly of Adolf Hitler.
He denied the Hitler claims,
which also were rebutted by
associates, and dismissed some
of the groping allegations as
lies while apologizing for
wrongdoing. "I have behaved
badly sometimes," he said.

By the time those charges
surfaced, the Schwarzenegger
juggernaut could not be
stopped, and voters' deSire to.
oust the deeply unpopular
Davis was too sharp to curb.
But the recall was more than
a message to Davis, said former Clinton White House chief
of staff Leon Panetta, who
called the result a warning shot
to all incumbent officeholders.
"It's a revolt of people who
are increasingly angry at the
crises that face them, and at
the failure of leadership,"
Panetta said. " If I were a
Republican, I wouldn't get too
cocky about what happened."
Exit polling showed that
many Hispanics and ·union
members - two key groups in
Davis' past electoral successes
- deserted him as he suffered
extraordinarily
low job
approval r&amp;tin~s amid widespread voter dtscontent about
the state's economy. according
to voter surveys conducted for
The Associated Press and
other news organizations by
Edison Media Research and
Mitofsky InternationaL
Re-elected last year with
less than 50 percent of the
vote, Davis fell victim to a
groundswell of grumbling in a
state that has struggled with its
perilous financial condition.
In the end, voters snapped
back against their leaders, like

they did in 1978 in capping
property taxes with Proposition
13 and more recently in voting
in term limits.
Schwarzenegger's improbable rise to political power
played out before a rapt international audience. He campaigned as an outsider, grabbing a broom at a weekend '
campaign rally to clean up
Sacramento and borrowing a
from
the
movie
line
"Network" to tell charged-up
supportt;rs that "We're mad
as hell and we're not going to
take it anymore!"
The campaign included a
parade of bit players among the
135 candi(lates, including
Hustler publisher Lany Ayn~
former child actor Gary
Coleman and a porn actress who
wanted to tax breast implanlli.
But to many Californians, it wa~
serious business.
"I'm horrified at the
thought that Schwarzenegger
can be our governor," said
Gretchen Purser, 25, of
Berkeley, who voted against
recall.
"I'm
sick
of Arnold Schwaminegger celebrates his victory in the California
Republicans trying to take gubernatorial recall election at his election night headquarters
in Los Angeles. Tuesday. (AP)
over the ·state."
Ed Troupe, 69, of Thousand
Oaks, voted yes for recall and
for Schwarzenegger. "As far
as I'm concerned," he said,
· "Gray Davis is one of the dirtiest politicians I've ever
encountere&lt;!."
To find out more about our homeowners
insura~ce- Call me ... Stop by... -it's your choice!

Station

I

·11 3 W. 2nd Street

is proud to announce that

992-5479

LISA SHEETS
has joined our staff.
Specializing in Perms, Cuts &amp; Colors.
Hours by appointment only.

ASHVILLE
Meigs
High School golfer Jeremy
Banks recently participated
in the Division II District
Tournament at Cooks Creek
Golf Club.
· It marked the
third consecutive appearance
by Banks at the
District level.
His round of 81
placed seventh
111 the field of
48 players. He
missed advancBanks
ing to the State
Tourney ' by only two shots
and missed a playoff by one
shot.
.
The tournament closed out
an outstanding high school
career and placed Banks in
the Meiogs golf record book
as one of its elite players of
all-time.
.

~

OH «J215-2220 H01 11100

.,

·- .

'.

Dave.got sma
He got rid of his satellite dish arid
got Charter

Digital;' plus

ing a 70 yard touchdown run
as the Meigs junior varsity baltled to an 8-8 tie with
Nelsonville. Meigs recovered
a Buckeye fumble in the end
zone with 0:13 left to halt a
potential game winning drive.
Michael Blaettnar passed for
37 yards for the Marauders
with Brad Ramsburg hauling
in two passes for 24 yards.
Brandon Kimes had one catch
for 13 yards while rushing for
20 yards on 6 attempts. Josh
Kimes intercepted a Buckeye
pass for the Marauder defense.

~ol ~lllfed votert

.101Q15%

!E 5to10'11o

.

3 FREE
months of service,
on

Hilll21'!1.

select cable N packages and high-speed Internet seNice.
·
Including modem rental

"'" '"'··-~
4,135

"'""""

li(lnll~

up to $320 value

Ollb.)llct•

1,:M:I,.t11

\

FREE installation.

and

Schwarzenegger

up to $135 value

wins, Davis out
G

ban~hlld llltl
l"rls SOOQ(1Cl torm

ov. Gray 01\111 was
lhun n y&amp;3r lni!J

Poll

•

.

2.0!!8.043 ..... 32.8"'
b8lor"Giflg 10 Ule v.tnner

........

~
No. doo'INC:ail DlrM V. . ....... o..ta -

-...
.ui.O "'SI.O...

~

CHICAGO .(AP) - Mike
Lowell sure wrecked this
Wrigley Field party in a
hurry.
With the old ballpark still
shaking after Sammy Sosa's
tremendous, tying homer
with two outs in the ninth
inning, Lowell led off the
lith with a pinch-hit home
run that sent the Florida
Marlins over the Chicago
Cubs 9-8 Tuesday night in
the NL championship series
opener.
.
In a game featuring seven
homers, four triples and six
doubles, Sosa's two-run shot
was clearly the most drama!ic. He finally delivered a big
postseason hit, and when the
ball landed beyond the leftfield wall, it turned
Waveland Avenue into
Bedlam Boulevard.
. Too bad for the Cubs, ·
Lowell's drive won it. He
had help, too - playoff star
Ivan Rodriguez homered
and drove in five runs for

Florida.
An All-Star third baseman, Lowell missed almost
all of the final four weeks
because of a broken left
hand, and has played sparingly in the postseason. He
was ready for his first pinchhitting appearance this year,
batting for winning pitcher
Ogueth Urbina and launching a drive over the centerfield wall off Mark Guthrie.
The sellout crowd of
39,567 started rocking early
as Moises Alou homered in
a four-run first. But the
Marlins, who posted three
comeback wins over San
Francisco in the opening
round, stormed back when
Rodriguez, rookie Miguel
Cabrera
and
Juan
Encarnacion homered in a
five-run third.
Braden Looper pitched the
lith for a save, giving the
Marlins a win and a nice

Please see Marlins, B&amp;

Florida Marlins' Mike Lowell and lvari Rodriguez celebrates thier 9-8 win over the Chicago Cubs
in Game 1 of the National League championship series Tuesday &lt;n Chicago. Lowell hit the
game-winning hit, a solo homer in the 11th inning. (AP)

Cleveland Cavaliers rookie guard LeBron James (23) dunks
during the first quarter against the Detroit Pistons . (AP)

,,
I'

ftet it

Davis I8CIIIIed
~bk"PGoo­

Grer Oavilln ollloe,

,,,.t

Propotltlon 54

--·--'
voted doWn

.

~,.. ~~

Be smart Hke Dave.

..

.

~

looll

YM011~5"1 1!3 36-~i.

.... .....

......... .oo

HurryI Otfer ends October 19, 20031

vo••"•••ts
..... n

rromwD;~ng

..www.charter.com/valuebook

~of . . popv!Mka'l
Ulllll 1101: wftMI 1ft MOO

I
1!0~

Rl\l»WWIICI~,_.oi ... COIII"'Iy
• tOp«on

I

40ptlll*l!

-

--- -·----------·-'-----------~-

.,

Election returns for California special recall·election

''

-

'

'

'

.call 1.soo.972.s7s7

Noon~&amp;! •tiU'A.

Vol. . ooawtllltr•W

•

f1r

_..,

ofp~Crdo,.,....,...,

•

tl

eledjoo .... ttw (lOIII

...

Please see LeBron. M

,,

"11'

In the oounlih that
II*&gt; 1\ed tUPflO'l..:l
him lnftleo2002

'

'
Ricky Dav is for an easy basket.
"That's a gift," said
Cava liers general manager
Jim Paxson. "That's Magic
(Johnson) and (Larry) B1rd
being able to recognize that."
Feeding
off
James'
un selfishness. the Cavaliers
outscored the Pistons 25-16 in
the period to open a 23-point
lead. Even Davis, who rarely
passes up any shot, was in the
giving mood and finished
with four assists.
. Detroit coach Larry Brown
already noticed a big difference in the Cavaliers with
James around.
"I don '·t ever remember
them passi ng the ball ," Brown
said:
James admitted to being
nervous before the game , and
the butterflies may have contributed to an off night from
the floor as he shot just 4-of12.
But his passing more than
made up for the misfires.
Midway through the tirst
quarter, James came off the

match the ridiculous expectaAssociated Press
tions being placed upon him.
but with eight points, seven
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. assis ts, three rebounds and
_ LeBron James showed he two blocked in 26 minutes.
can run with the big boys. He the 18-year-old convinced
more than 20.000 fan s, over
can make behind-the-back 100 credentialed media mempasses, ferociou s dunks and bers and the Pistons that he 's
monster rebounds against for real.
"His feel for the game is
them, too.
In his first NBA exhibition . unbelievable." said Pistons
game, James ran the show.
guard Richard Hamilton. '·He
Just as he has always done. k
h
h
Cleveland's rookie played nows ow to play t e game.
like a seasoned veteran even at 18."
Tuesday night, showcasing a
During an extended stretch
dazzling ran ge of skills while in the third quarter, James was
leading the Cavaliers to a the most active player on the
floor.
I 00-96 preseason win over
"He took over when he had
the Detroit Pistons.
to," Cavaliers coach Paul
"I ' m back to w1nmng
Silas said.
again," he said.
.
James opened the second
For one game - James' half by hitting an open
first · against a legitimate pro jumper, and then made two
team - the ceaseless hype gorgeous passes on the break
must be believed.
This wasn ' t a Summer that his teammates were
unable to convert into basLeague with a roster full of kets. .
retreads and rookies he was
Moments later, he took a
·
f
facing. These were the
Pistons, who had the Eastern cnsp cro.sscourt eed f~om
Conference's best record last Danus Mtles on the left s1de,
season.
but instead of catching it, he
James may never be able to made a no-look touch pass to
BY ToM WITHERS

01' • oola ·no· on the
ttl:iill. Wft llr&lt;:Jnvosl

1,. _ ... -~

Pleese see EIStem; M

LeBron passes test as Cavs win

... with c oupons worth thousands· of dollars In
diScounts on everything from hotels to restaurants.

11!1 _,,

ly 44 times . Alyssa Holter led the
way in serving points with 1I followed by Kass Lodwick .with eight.
Casey Smith added six.
"One of things we stress is. no matter what sport you play, you've got to
ha ve the fundamentals down."
explained Caldwell. "One of the fundamentals in volleyball is ~ing able
to serve the ball. I think anytime you
go 44 for 44, that is tremendous."
Caldwell also stresses sound passmg; hi ., team completed 80 of 99

Marlins win hitting
contest in gamE! one

The Charter Book
of Big Values!

"""" """'"'""'- '"'

2,117M7e &gt;'(Ifill ~7 . 5,.

Sl C rw.o~. B~IC'f'

II!III'RIIt

very hard and they
deserved a champiOllship."
"I know there was
·
a Jot of pressure on
them th1s year to
repeat, but they have
answered the call
every time."
Eastern improved
to 16-3 overall on
the season and 13- 2 Robertson
in TVC play.
The Lady Eagles were perfect from
the service stripe, serving successful-

When Dave $igned up, he also got

1 .............

~ofvotn

STEWART - A straight games
road victory over the Federal
Hocking Lady Lancers Tuesday
evening clinched the Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division championship for the Eastern Lady Eagles.
Eastern won 15-4 in game one and
15-12 in the second, as it repeated as
the conference champs.
Eastern coach Howie Caldwell
praised the effort of his team for its

dedication and hard
work throughout the
season.
"One of the things
we have always tried
to instill in our players is good things
hap~n to ~ood people, ' he smd. "I told
the girls after the
game that I'm a very
fortunate
person
Lodwick
because they are a
group of outstanding kjds. They
come to practice every day, work

high

11\e speelat e1ec11on.

Wlnltlltl

sports@mydailytribune.com

Andy McAngus rushed. for

DrMnt tM r.tel

L~ OlclS"-

BY BRAD SHERMAN

I 00 yards on 14 carries includ-

b~IIIJI.

...........

Lady Eagles repeat in TVC~ocking ·oivision

Meigs JVs battle
to tie with Bucks

Charter high-speed
internet service.

will ~ valid siQI\111111'1 Oflltlcl

.

HEMLOCK
The
Southern Lady Tornadoes
made the long trip to Miller
on Tuesday and came back
with an easy 15-2, 15-5 victory over the host Lady
Falcons.
win
improves
The
Southern to 12-4 overall and
I 0-4 in the Tri-Valley
Conference.
Southern coach Roma
Sayre said that she was
pleased with the performance
of her team, siting good passing and hustle as key.s to vict.,ry.
Kristiina Williams led the
way with nine points followed by seven from Deana
Pullins. Pullins also had a
game-high eight assists.
Katie Sayre had I 0 kills
and a block for the winners
while Emily Hill and
Williams added five and
three kills respectively.
The junior varsity also
picked up another wm over
Miller, 15-4, 15-6. Kasie
Sellers paced the Tornadoes
with 12 markers.
· Southern plays its final
home game of the 2003 campaign on Thursday against
federal Hocking .

Nationwldo"
lnsura11ce &amp;
Financial Services
Nolionwidt II G-l tbur

.

Southern wins
at Miller

Na110nwlde Mutulllnsurana. COmpany 1nd
Affiliated Companle&amp;, Home Office: Columbus,

740-992-0962

p•OC86B begen Iaiit tpr!"Q (11"1(1 coUw.!ed more lhflll
e milllorl signll!l.lres by Jul~ . N.IB;tu 891. 15(1 $IQ"'IItlll"M

Wli'fli' needed tu Qel lhe "'' 'II Q11 lh11

n
w

Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER

Pomeroy; OH • (Next to Teaford Re:.ilty )

CALIFORNIA S PE C IAl EL E CTIO N
n an o•trfiOl(llnary •PfiCI•I eloctlon, GO\I, GI'!Jy
Davia was rec:.tl l~ trom o"'ce ..,d ntplaoeo by
Nnoid ~ TI.Mlllly. Thll TUI ptlitu1

Banks narrowly
misses State
golf tourney

We Help You
Weather Every Storm.

,~.e Hair

(!4/t

Wednesday, October 8, 2003

'
C 2000 Chaner Communications, Charter Communloa!lond is a registered tradem&amp;i'k. Offer vi!Wd to "new" cuatom8f"B In residential, ~rvlcetlbla area a only. Customer must h•v• t.tn lntcUve for
a minimum of 90 days and has no,outatandlng obligation to Char1er Communications to be considered a •new· customer. Three Ira. monlha will ba credited for month• t , 4 M&lt;l7. Otrar llpplln
10 aelect packages. The Charter Book of Big Values will be rutlrlled within 8· t2 weeks. Chartftr Ia not responsible lor coupon h.rilitiment Additklnal char1191 mev apply for'nona'-ndard inltlllltlont
and l!lddltional ou llets. Offer 8pPiiea to OllEI digital receiver and remote and up to three TVs tor ·upended baale oullela. Sublcrlptlon to premium aervlca or Pay-Par-VIew r.QU!rtcllor aom. Pr.O- "
grammlng. Activation of programming may be aubjttet to credit approval and requires a valid Hrvlce addreu, toeial HCurfty number and/or major cr.c:lit card. Deposit ot p,-.p~Ymitnt mly
required . Nerwork ca rd may be required for high &amp;peed lntemet1natallatlor1 and additional che.rgea will apply. Frarrchl&amp;e faee , taxftS and other tees nyapply. Othat ra.trk:tlonlmay appl~. Not

PLEAsA1fTVALLEY ..
.. 1J26 HJiky IHIH. Pollll Pi

be

~--~
...,

.

~
~

~ '

.'

-----

.

PITAL

JW • J04..67S.4J«J
•

- ..

&gt; •.•. ---·

- -·------ - - - - - -

--

�•

Wednesday, Oct. B, 2003

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Pro Football
National Football League
AMERICAN

Eaat
Miami

&amp;fteto
New England
N.Y. Jets

Indianapolis
Tennessee
Houston

PF PA
81 48

, 11 73
109 107
45 77
PF PA
158 82

3 2 0 .600 119116
2 2 0 .500 69 113
4 0 200
North
WLTPct
2 2 0 .600
2 3 0 .400
2 3 0 .400
1 4 0 .200
W"t
WLTPC1
5 0 0 1.000
4 1 0 .800
2 3 0 .400

JackFonville

1

Baltimore
Cleveland
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati
Kansas City
Denver
Oakland
San Diego

100 130
PFPA
82 74
79 88
97 129
77 10ii
PFPA
151 81
14 1 73
108 131

0 5 0 .000 89

149

NATIONAL
East
WLTPct PF PA
3 1 0 .750 89 72
320 .600 115 112

Dallas
Washington
N.Y. Giants

220500 89 92

Philadelphia

Caroli na
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
New Orleans

Minnesota
Green Bay
Chicago
Detroit

WLTPct
3 1 0 .750
320600
3 2 0 .600
0 4 0 .000
South
W l T PC1
5 0 0 1.1)(X)

220 .500 60 86
South
WLT Pel PF PA
4 0 0 1.000 78 48
2 2 0 500 92 60
1 4 0 .200 97 139
1 4 0 200 87 138
North
WLT Pet PF PA
5 0 0 1.000 151 84
3 2 0 .600 142 92
1 3 0 .250 67 132
1 4 0 .200 94 122

Weat
W l T
-seattle
3 1 0
St Louts
220
San Francisco 2 3 0
Arizona
140

PC1
.750
.500
.400
.200

PF
102
100
116

PA
6a
84
99

64 154

Sundey'e Garnea
Chicago 24, Oakland 21
Dallas 24, Arizona 7
Miami 23, N.Y. Giants 10
Minnesota 39, Atlanta 26
Green Bay 35, Seattle 13
Kansas City 24, Denver 23
Buffalo 22, Cinclnnatl16, OT
Carolina 19, New Orleans 13
New England 38, Tennessee 30
Jacksonville 27, San Diego 21
San Francisco 24, Detroit 17
Philadelphia 27, Washington 25
Clevetand 33, Pittsburgh 13
Open: N.Y. Jets, St. Louis, Baltimore,
Houston
Mond1y'1 Game
Indianapolis 38, Tampa Bay 35, OT
Sunday, Ocl. 12
Houston at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at Datlas, 1 p m.
carolina at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Miami at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Chicago at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Wash1ngton, 1 p m.
Oakland at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at New England , 1 p.m.
Buffalo at NY. Jets, 4" 15 p.m.
Baltimore at Arizona, 4: 15p.m.
Pittsburgh at Denver. 4:15p.m.
San Francisco at Seattle, 8:30pm.
Open. Cincinnati, San Diego, Detroit.
Minnesota
Monday, Oct. 13
Atlanta at St. Louis, 9 p.m.

Pro Basketball
National Basketball
Asaoclatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlalon
Miami

W l

Pot

1

1.000

0

GB

PageB2

New Jersey

1

1 0

1.000
1.000

sary

Washington
New York
Orlando
Philadelphia
Boston
Central D1vision

0
0

I
I

000
.000

0
0

1
0

.000
.000

National League
(FOX)
Tuetdly, Oct. 1
Flonda 9, Chicago 8, 11 innings. Florida
leads series 1·0
Wednesday, Oct. 8
Flonda (Penny 14·1 0) at Chicago (Prior
18·6), 8'18 p m.
F~day, Oct. 10
Chicago (Wood 14· 11) at FIQrida
(Redman 14-9), 8 18 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 11
c;:h1cago (Clement 14·12) at Florida
(Willis 14-6), 8 p.m ..
Sunday, OCt. 12
Ch1cago at Florida, 4:35 p.m. , 11 necessary ·
·
Tuesday, Oct. 14
Florida at Chicago, 8:18 p.m., If necessary
Wednesday, OCI. 15
Florida at Chicago, 8:18 p.m.. if neces·
sary

Cleveland
DetrOit
Mllwaukee
Atlanta
C h~go

0

W L

Pet

1
0
0
0
0

1.000

0~
1
1
0

o

GB

.000
.000

.0()0
000

Indiana
0 0 .000
New Orleans
0 0 000
Toronto
0 0 000
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mtdwell Olvielon
Wl Pet
GB
Memphis
1 0 1.000
Utah
1 o 1.000
Dallas
1 1 .500
Houston
0 1 000
Denver
0 0 .000
Minnesota
0 0 .000
San Antonio
0 0 000
Pacific Division
W L Pet
GB
1 0 1.000
Portland
1 0 1.000
Sacramento
L.A. Clippers
0 1 000
PhoeniM
0 1 000
Golden State
0 0 000
0 0 000
L.A. Lakers
0 0 000
Sea«te
Monday's Games
Memphis 105, Milwaukee 94
Tuesday's Games
Washmgton 104, New York 86
Cleveland 100, Detroit 96
Dallas 99, Orla ndo 89
Mlaml86, Philadelphia 79, OT
Portland 104, Houston 80
New Jersey 101, Phoenix 79
Sacra mento 101, L.A. Clippers 82
Golden State vs. L.A. Lakers at Stan
Sheriff Center, Honolulu, 2 a.m.
Wednesday's Gamet
San Antonio vs Memphis at Bercy
Arena, Paris, 3 p.m.
Washington at Toronto, 7 p m
Cleveland vs . Atlanta at Asheville Civic
Center, Asheville, N.C., 7 p.m
Detroit vs. Boston at Mohegan Sun
Arena. Uncasville. Conn .• 7:30pm.
Chicago at Indiana, 8 p.m.
Orlando vs New Orleans at Pete
Mara111ch Assembly Center, Baton
Rouge, La., 8:30pm.
Houston at Seattle, 10 p.m.
Golden State vs. L.A . Lakers at Stan
Sheriff Center, Honolulu, Midnight
Thuraday'• Games
New Jersey vs. New York at Wachovia
Arena, Barre, Pa .. 7.30 p.m
Mmnesota
vs.
Milwaukee
at
Schottenstein Center, Columbus, Ohio,
30 p.m.
Phoen1x at Denver, 9 p.m
Sacramento vs Portland at McArth ur
Court, Eugene, Ore., 10 p.m.

a

College Footbal.l
Ohio Athletic Conte..,nce
Conference
WLPcl.
Cap1tal
3 o 1 000
Mount Union'
3 0 1 000
Baldwtn-Wallace2 1 667
John Carroll
2 1 .667
Muskingum
2 1 667
Otterbein
2 1 667
Heidelbe r~
1 2 .333
MarieHa
0 3 .000
Ohio Northern 0 3 .000
Wilmington
0 3 000

Overall
WLPcl
4 0 1.000
4 0 1.000

3 1 .750
3 t .750
3 1 .750

2 2 .500
1 3 .250
1 3 .250
o 4 .000
0 4 .000

North Coaat AthletiV ,
Conference
:
Conference Overall
W L Pet.
WL Pet.
Wooster
1 0 1.000 4 0
Wittenberg
I 0 1.000 4 0 l. OOO
Allegheny
I 0 1.000 I 3 .250
Oberlin
1 0 1.000 1 3 .250
0 0 .000
I 3 .250
Earlham
Wabash
01000
22500
Ohio Wesleyan 0100013 .250
0 I .000
0 4 000
Hiram
Oen1son
0 1000
04000

,ooo

Great Lakes Intercollegiate
Conference
Conference
WL Pet.
4 0 1.000
Grand Valley
Sagmaw Valley 4 0 1.000
Findlay
3 1 750
Indianapolis
2 2 .500
Ferris St.
2 2 .500
N. Michigan
2 2 .500
Northwood
2 2 .500
Hillsdale
2 2 .500
Wayne St.
13.250
Mercyhurst
13.250
Mich1gan Tech 14.200
Ashla nd
I 4 .200

Overall
WLPct.
5 0 1.000
5 0 1.000

4 1 .800
3 2 .600

3 2 600
2 3 400
2 3 .400
2 3 400
23400
23 400
14 200
I 5 . 167

Mid-States Football
Association

Baseball
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(lleot-ol-7)
American Laagua

(FOX}

Wednesday, Oct. 8
Boston (Wakefield 11· 7) at New York
(Musslna 17·8), 8·18 p.m.
Thu,.day, Oct. 9
Boston (Lowe 17·7) at New York (Petlltte
2H!), 8'18 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 11
New York (Clemens 17·9) at Boston
(Martinez 14·4), 4:18pm.
Sunday, Oct. 12
New York (Wells 15·7) at Boston {Burkett
12·9), 8'05 p.m.
Monday, Oct.13
New York at Boston, 8 :1 a p.m . if neces·
sary
Wednesday, Oct. 15
Boston at New York, 4:18 p.m.,· lf necessary
Thursday, Oct. 16
Boston at New York, 8:18p.m.. 11 neces-

Conference
W L Pet.
Mideast
Sa1nt Francis
1 0 1.000
Walsh
1 0 1.000
Quincy, Ill.
1 0 1.000
Geneva
0 I .000
Malone
0 1 .000
Taylor
0 1 .000
Urbana
0 0 .000
Mldweet ·
McKendree
1 0 1.000
Saint Xavier
1 0 1.000
0 Nazarene
1 0 1.000
William Penn
1 0 1.000
Trin Inter
0 1 .000
St. Ambrose
o .000
Saint Francis, 111. 0
.000
Iowa Wesleyan 0
.000

Overall
Wl PC1.
4 0 1.000
4

1.aoo

3 3 .500
2 2 .500

I 3 .250
1 4 .200
1 4 .200
4
3
2
1
3

0
2
2
3
2

1.000
.600
.500
.250
.600
2 2 500
1 3 .250
0 4 .000

Heartland Conference
Hanover
Mt. St. Joseph

Conlerence
W l Pet.
1 0 1.000
1 0 1.000

Overall
Wl Pet.
3 1 .750
3 1 750

Anderson
Bluffton
Defiance
Manchester
Franklin

1
0
0
0
0

~

0
I
I
1

1.000
.000
.000
.000
.000

3 2 .600

2 2 .500
1 4 .200
1 4 .200
04 .000 .

University Athletic
Association
Conference

: w L Pet.
Carnegie Mellon 0
Case Reserve 0
Chicago
0
Rochester
0
Washington, Mo. o

0 .000
0 .000
0 .000
0 · .000

o .000

Overall
WL Pet.
3 2 .600
3 1 .750
1 3 .250
1 3 .250
2 3 .400

Prep Football
AP Ohio High School Football Poll List
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a state
panel of sports writers and broadcasters
rates Oh1o high school football teams in
the fifth weekly Associated Press poll of
2003. by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost
record and total points (first-place votes in
parentheses);
·
DIVISION I
1, Cle. St. Ignatius (20) 7·0
299
2, Warren Harding (8) 7·0
295
3, ,Mentor (3) 7-0
264
4, Cin, Colerain (1) 7·0
203
5, Westerville S 7-0
153
6, N. Can. Hoover (1) 7-0
147
7, Lakewood St. Edward 6-1
~ 120
8,CinEider6 -1
111
9, Tol. Whitmer 7·0
45
10, Dublin Coffman 6· 1
44
Others receiving 12 or more pomts: 11 ,
Brunswick 23 . 12, Massillon Jackson 22.
13, Marion HBrding 21 14, Cin. Anderson
14
DIVISION II
1, Macedonia Nordonia ( 19)7-0
311
2, A110n Lake (7) 7-0
276
3, Cols. Brookhaven (1) 7·0
231
4, Whllehaii·Yearllng 7..0
191
5, Pickerington Central (2) 7-0
179
6, Sylvania Southview (2) 7·0
174
7, Trenton Edgewood (2) 7·0
169
8, Warren Howland 6·1
84
9, Maumee 6·1
62
10, Kings Mitis KinQS 6-1
39
Othe rs receiving 12 or more po1nts. 11,
Tiffin Columbian 15.
DIVISION Ill
1, Cle. Benedictine (25) 7·0
313
2. Germantown Valley View (1) 7-0 250
3, Dover (3) 7-0
233
4, Steubenville 7-0
205
5, Newark Li cking Valley (1) 7·0
175
6, Lisbon Bea11er (2) 7-0
160
7, Day. Chaminade·Julmnne (1) 6-1 137
8, Canal Fulton NW 7·0
44
9, Sunbury B1g Walnut 7-0
41
10. Mentor Lake Cath. 6- 1
30
Others receiving 12 or more points· 11,
Cola. Watterson 29. 12, Bellevue 27. 13,
St. Marys Memorla125 14, Chesterland W
Geauga 23. 15, Akr. Hoban 17. 16 (tie),
Gallipolis Gatl1a, Rayland Buckeye 14.
DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater (17) 7-0
305
2, Versailles (3) 7-0
276
3, Ironton (8) 7-0
264
4, Youngs. Mooney (3) 6·1
196
5, Clarksville Cttnton·Massle {1) 7·0 192
6, Upper Sandusky 7-o
149
7, Apple Creek Waynedale (1) 7·0 140
8, Coshocton 6-1
83
9, Bellaire 6·1
47
10, Delta 6·1
36
Others rec8iving 12 or more points; 11,
Hanoverton United 26. 12, W!cktiffe 16. 13,
Lima Bath 15. 14 {tie), Huron, Cuyahoga
Falls CVCA 12.
DIVISIONV
1, Marion Pleasant (21) 7·0
308
2, Smithville (6) 7 0
269
3 (tie), Sarahsville Shenandoah (4) 7-0
205
Syc8more Mohawk 7·0
205
5, Delphos St. John's 6-1
184
6, N.llma s. Range (I) 7·0
135
7, Gates Mills Gilmour (1) 7-0
105
a, Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 6-1
91
9, Amanda-Ctearcreek 7-o
90

Wednesday, October 8,
53

Code.
Noncy
Porker
GrueMr
Meigs County Auditor
(10) 8, 7, 8, 8, 10, 13,
14, 15, 18, 17
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia .hereby
on
given
that
s.turday, October 11,
2003, at 10: 00 a.m., e
public aole . will be
held II 211 Weal
Second'
Street,
Pom8t oy, Ohio, In the
perking lot of The
Farmera Bank and
lavlnga Company.
The Farmara Bonk
and
Sovlngo
Company Ia aelllng
llir - " In hand or
~

certified check the
following collateral:
1993 Chevrolet 510
1 GCEK14K2PZ22266
1
2002 Kawasaki ATV
JKBLFBA
I
02B
811941

1994
Dodge
Shadow
IBSAP64K7RN 108177
1999 Chevrolet S
14·
1GCCSI446XK
165463
1999
Pontiac
·s u n f l r e
IG2JB5245X7576555
The Farmers Bank
Savings
and
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
aate, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"as IB-where Is", with
no expreaaed or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further lnfor·
matlon, or for an
appointment .
lo
lnopecl
collateral ,
prior lo sale dale contact Diane Rector at
992·2136.
1018,9,10103

be
hald In the
Township Of Scipio

,Ohio, at the regular
places ol voting
therein, on the 4th
day ol November
2003 the question of
levying a tax , in
excess of the len mill
limitation, for the ben·
efll
ol
Scipio
Township for the purpose of Fire protection
2 Said tax betng :A
replacement of a tax
of 2 mills at a rate not
exceeding 2 m.llls for
each one dollar of val·
uatlon,
which
amounts Ia ($0.20)
for each one hundred
. dollars of valuation,
for five (5) years.
The Polls for said
Election will open at
6:30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock PM. of
said day. By order ol
the . Board
ol
Elecllona,
of Metga County, Ohio
John
N.
lhle,
Chalrperaon
Rita D. Smith, Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2003
1018,15,22,29/03

TO
Place
Your
Ad ...

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:

classifi&amp;d@illydallytrlbune.com

classified@ mydallysentinel.com

classified@ mydailyregister.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

r

\\\(It\( l\11.\l"i

ANNOIJNCF.MENTS

r
I

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Me1gs County, send leners
of interest to· The Da11y
Sen t1hel, PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769.

Several family Ilea market,
10/S· 10112. 3 miles east of
Free cats and kittens Bob E11ans at Perry·s Green
House Lots and Lots of
(740)992·6862
stulf. Don't miss this one.
Free k111ens to good home. 3 Also hot dog sale Saturday
black/White, 2 dark ca lico, 6 , 1th
weeks old , and litter trained
cat! 740·441-0:501
Three lam1ly yard sate Fn- - -- - - - - - Sat. 8-5. Graham St K1ds
Very cute kittens. 8 weeks ctothas and more.
old. 2 males, 1 female Call
740·441·0 145 u
between Tools, western books,,. f1sh·
ing gear, general house·
aam-Spm.
wares, much more. ThurSat. P1ne Street Storage.'
Losr ANJl

FOUND

t

GALLIPOLIS

Fall Cleaning Sale October
10. From M1ddleport Hill, go
2-famliy yard sale, Fn 10 &amp;
pasl rad10 station, turn on
Sat. 11. School desks, tools,
lirst road to left. 5th house ,
baby 1tems, ctolhing &amp; misc.
lots of items.
Cora Mitis Rd. &amp; Dewitt Dr
Garage sate- rain or shine.
554 Cheshire , lifi &amp; Sat Oct. Oct 9,1 0,11
36222 Allen
10·11, g.? Rain canceled.
St., Chester, truck cap, golf
Fnday only 8:30-5:00. Green equ1pment, lawn· eqUipment,
Terrace . Kids &amp; wome n wiCker headboard, lots of

•

clothes, winter coats, house- _~•_m_•_·- - - - - - hold &amp; mlsc Items.
Huge 5 Family Yard Sale:

cfalUpoU' JBaUp ttriiJune
Jtoint ,Jitafant 1\.ega•ttr
The Daily Sentinel
6Uubap Gttme•.·&amp;tntintl
• Once you have olgn.cl up for the Senior Dlacount, your renewal notice will

.

Garage Sale: Oct. 9,10,11
583
Georges,
Creek .
Antlgues, oUJ records, Avon
bottles, otd buttons, Jars,
glaas, oollec tables. misc.
Rain or Shinel

reflect vour dlacount.

:------------~------~-----·-················
Subscriber's Name
·
.
.
· ·
• • • '!' •
I

Garage Sale Friday Oct . 3,
2295 Graham SchOol Rd.
Gallipolis. Boys (0·6 m) &amp;
~I ris
(7·8)
clothing ,
men's/women's
clothing
Misc. Items and household

,

•

· :Address .,..-----------=-..,...---------~
' :City/State/Zip ...:......_ _..:.....__________-,-----'---~

:Phone;__~----------------------------------

I
1

:

II) to
Ohio Valley P.ubllahlng P.O. Box 489, Ollllpolla, OH·4583f

Mall or drop off thll coupon ·11ong with 1 copy of your photo

·--------·-···.········------------············-··

Oct 10 &amp; 11th. 9am. to Spm.
Court Street Rd., Racine.
Follow s1gns from Forest
Run , or Morning Star Ad.
Everything Including the
kitchen sink. Years of clutter
have to "o.
Multi·Yard sale October 1oth
&amp;1111'1 at Baahan &amp; Carmel
Ads. Yellow house on hill.
Winter clothes, book&amp;, lots
of mise

Garage Sale: Sat 9-5 house· Oct 11 , Harrisville, Ohio,
hold, crafts, toys, clothes, State Route 684 112 mile
misc. 9579 At 160
lrom 143, natural gaa
heaters, household Items,
Garage Sale: Thursday· clothing (boy's), etc.
Friday 9am-5pm, SatUrday
Bam-noon .
Winter October 10· 11 South 6th
clothes/coats, jeans, baby Avenue, Middleport. Toys,
items, pool table , eMerclse clothes
children-adult,
bikes, electronic stai r step- ki tchen table, coffee tabl es,
per, air hockey table, some baby changing tabla, and
furn iture, used oven, 2 truck tots more Proceed wm be
tires &amp; many misc. items. For for Christian B~ocker t 's
addhional lnlo phone 74Q- Autism Therapy.
441 · 1489 after 6 pm. South
oil At. 7 to Clipper Mills turn Saturday, OCtober 11 , 2003
right folio~ signs.
· 9.A.M.·3.P:M. A yard-'s ale
and bake sale will be held a1
Having 3 family yard sale. 89 the
Harrisonville
Cedar
St .
Tuesday, Presbyterian
Church
Wednesday, and Thursday Sponsored by; lend·A Hand
1Oam·5p[Tl,
Come one come all

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepai~

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Pubttshlng reurve1 the rtght to edtt, reject, or eancelany ad 11 any time. Error. must be reported on tht fire! d.ly o1 publication and
TrlbuM-S.ntlnei--Aegiller will be re 1pon1lble for no more th1n the coat of the IPIIC. occupied by thto enor end only thto lire! inMrtion. We shall not be li.tJle
any loea or expente th.t reat~lte from the publlc.tlon or oml~tlon of an 1dvertisement. Corr.c:tion wilt~ made In the fifll 1v1111ble edition. • Box number
ere lhli!'aye conlldentill. • Current rete tt~rd apptW1. • All rul estate edverti~~mentt 1r1 eubjec11o the Federal Fe ~r Houelng Act ol1968. • Th11 "'"'*~"'pe• l
accepts "only•help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not knowingly accept any advtrtlalng 1n vlolltiOf'l ol the law

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

(310

twrlghtOic.net

Assis ted 11ving and e•tra 3 bdrm . FR . Lg LA C stn
care lor your loved o.ne 1n my celltngs. WOOd beams. lire·
place. hardwood floors,
more 1nfo (740}441 ·172&lt;1

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367.
1·800-2 14·0452
www.gallipoltsearaercollege com
Reg #90·05·12748 .

YARDSALF~

Pr. J't.FA'iAr.T

building. has large den . new
carpet. Vinyl &amp; central a1r
Good locatiOn close to
school Also 1ncludes 2
apartments on back iol. cur·
rentl y rented S130 000 lor
All Types of loans. 3K- 200K all (304)675· 7833
any purpose. quick results.
By builder. new. 3 bedroom
good or bad credit 1-866bnck, 2 car garage Good
425-8210.
locat1on. $140.000. 740-446·
For Sale. Located 1n building 9966 call evenings.

Who want to LOSE Weight
We Pay You Cash lor the
pounds you LOSEt
Safe , Natural. No Drugs
800~201 -0832

#3 (Chapel) Mausoleum of

TO BUY
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Gold
Coms.
Silver.
Prootsets. Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency, M T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue , Gallipolis,
740·446·2842.

'I R\ It 1..,

An awesome job!, $6-$9 per
hour after trainmg! No experi ence neededl Fult/part
.... HELP WAN11ID
time, flexible scheduling,
convenient
Pomeroy
16 Day COL Training
Location, 20+ positions
TMC/Swift &amp; 30 Majo r available, call 9·9, M-F, 1·
Camera Need Entry Le11el 888·974-Jobs.
Onvers Grad's Rec Top
Pay/B'fits/Job Placement &amp;
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Be off wk'ends 1·866·602Sell. Shirley Spears, 3047035.
675·1429.

~~1ii1i:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

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

Busy salofl has great oppor·
tunity for expenenced stylist,
with manager's license to
take over excess clientele.
740-44 1-1880 or 740-2566336

Join Our
GROWING

In o ur Gallipolis ca!l centers
you wtll make calls for o rgan1zations you
believe 1n .and support .

Christian metal rock band
needs drummer Our influ·
ences Include Fugazy, Black
Sabbath, Alice Cooper, Pink
Floyd. Dio, Metallica. Black
Label
Soc1ety.
Staple,
Disciple, Tourniquet. Pillar.
and a whole bunch of other
rock band$. We are 1ook1ng
for someone who can
groove, 1f interested you can
call Joseph (740)441 · 1236

a

Overbrook Rehab Center 1S
looking for a part·t1me relief
cook, please come in and !ill
out and application at 333
Page Street. Middleport. Oh .
45750.

Part·Time · Tax Preparers
needed for busy lax of11ce.
Pomeroy location. We will
tram.
Computer
skills
required . Send resume to:
The De1ly Sentmel, PO 729CNA 's and HHA's needed to 13, POmeroy, Ohio 45769
provide In· Home Serv1ces to
the Elderly/D isabled in the Polnters/CaulkersiCieaners
Wayne. Cabell and Mason Exper1enced .
Columbus,
County Areas. Call Toll Free OH. Top wages 614-491·
1·8a8-453-4992
965a.
Domino's Now Hrring all
locations "Pt
Pleasant,
Gallipolis. &amp; Pomeroy. Sate
dr1vers. must be 18 Apply in
person at locai!Ons.
Full time help needed. Apply
between 10- 11 am, Mon.,
Thu rs ..
Sat.
McCiures
Restaurants. All locations.
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
740-446-3837; Middleport
740·992·5248;
Pomeroy
740·992·6292

We

call

ror the

nat1ons leach ng Cancer and Heart d1sease

research organizations and many other
non-p1-ofrt orgi.lr.tz;.ltlons such us
St Judes Hospital and the USGA
We also call lor Political organizations
loke the ~RA and the Republocan Party.

sa Per HDUr

' Full ltntfttl

Paid Vacation After Sl1 Months

No Exptrlenc:e Ner;tnory • Paid Trajnlnrl
for more 1nformat1~Jn call today

1.877, 1NFOCISION axt. 2602
www.lnfoclaion.com 1
Conveniently lor.ated at 2.. 2 Third Avenue
In down~ Gallipolis

iiiC::lt~f(&gt;Cision

By owner 3 bedroom 2 bath
r~varf ront w1th boat dock 1 5
acres
m
Galhpol1s
photos/1nformai10n on lme
www orvb com code 90303
or call 740-446·0531

Hope m the Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens, Galt1poi1S.
Oh 10 3 crypts m 11En lt4
Would hke to salt together.
but 'WOUld consider selling
on or two. for more 1nfo call
740·441 -0233 or 740-446· By Owner 3 Bedroom Ranch
3488
2 baths. 2 ca1 ga rage
Gallipolts photosl 1nforma110n
Wood stove and backboard on hne www orvb.cvm code
$25 Fold-up NGHS tennrs
1803 or call (740)367· 7039
table on rollers $10. 740366·8771
Completely ref1n1shed horne
Great location . 1n GallipOliS
Wwrm
Oh iO. 3 bedrooms 2 Jull
To Do
baths. Pnced to sale now
Phone 740-446·9539
GeOrges Portable Sawmill
don't haul your logs to the
mill just cal l 304-675-1957

AN/PI LPNJPT
PT AN &amp; LPN Desired ,
EnJoy Flexible Scheduling &amp;.
A Rewarding Career In A
Homelike
Atmosphere ,
Many Benefits, Competitive
Pay, Professional Applicants
May Apply Daily, Mon.-Sun.,
9·4pm, Raven swood Care
Cen te r, 1113 Washington
St .,
Ravenswood,
WV.
(304)273-9482,
(Across
Ritchie Bridge, Rt. 2 N., Last
Business On Right) Come
Join Our Team! You'll Be
Glad You Did I

HOUSECLEANING
Allailable day or evenin g
Ca ll 740·446-1756 Ask for
Deanna or 1ea11e a message
L1censed Oaycare! Baby Sit·
t1ng . watch kids all shtfls
take prtvate pay/slate pa1d
(740)843- 1094
------MB Handyman Servrce
Haulmg . pam!lng . power
washmg . dr1veway repa 1r
seal coaling, gutters, ch1m·
ney, plumbing. Jack ol all
trades 30yrs. exp. Senior
Discount Free Estimates
(304)8a2-2196. (304)377a266
--------Will pressure wash homes.
trailers. decks. metal buildmgs and guners Call (740)
446-01 51 ask for Ron or
leave a message

II''"' I

Help wanted caring for the
\I
elderly, Darst Group Home,
BI.JSININi
now paying minimum wage,
Sales-National Co. neechng
0PP0RruNrn.'
new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am·
auto related ealeslde11very
5pm, 3pm-1 1pm, 1 1pm·
persons to service local
7am, call 740· 992·5023.
I NOTICE!
market Truck, salary, bene·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
f1t1
Included.
Keystone
Manual lalha opera tor· must
1·800-820· lNG CO recommends that
be able to make own ae1 ups AutomoUve
you do business with people
&amp; able to read blUe prints, 3962.
you know, and NOT to send
need to have at teaet 1 yr.
money through the mall until
experience, send resume 1o: Wanted: Babysitter w/refer· you have tnvest1gated the
ence,
tor
4
year
old.
Hours
Imperial E16Ctrlc, Att: Mark
offering.
Venoy, 345 Sycamore St., 3·11 pm. 5-8 days s week.
Vinton
area
740-388-0875.
Middleport, Oh 45750
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vending machines with
Need 7 ladles to sell AIIOn. WANTED Billing Clerk for
excell~tnt locations all tor
Call 7 4o-446·3358
phyalclan office. Full or part
$10,995 (600)·234-6982
tlme. Must have reliable
Need to earn Maney? Leta •transportation and medical 1111!111""~-----'"'1
~SERVJaSL
ta lk the NEW A.von . Call office tMperlence-computer
Marilyn, 304·882-2845 to and typing 1kllts a must.
learn all the ways 11can work Benefit• available. , Fax
tor you.
rasume to 304-675·1800 or
TURNED DOWN ON
mall• to Box 585 Gallipolis
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Now Hlrtng. A leading Oai~ Tril&gt;une PO. ·Box 469
No'Fea Unless We Win!
provider to tncllvlduats with Gelllpollo OH , 45631 .
Hl88·582·3345
mental retardation and
I{
t \I I ' t \II
deyelopmental dlsabllltlta Is WANTED. LPN or Med~l
looking ,for direct care 1t1H In Office Assistant for phyol·
Gallipolil. No experience clan office. Full or Part lime. rL.iO-..:FOR;:;H;;Oiom&gt;ltiiSAu;:o:i;,._.l
•l
nece88ary. $6.35 · per hour Must have current license or
Paid training. If you would· certificate. reliable trans· ""'
like to join our team to help portatlon and medical office 2 Bedroom House in New
Individuals achieve' their experience-computer skills Haven. $24,000 (304)882fu llest potential.'· call 740· preferred. No weekends or 2890
446-8145 or apply m pei'SOrl hOlidays. Fax reSume 10 304at Middleton Estates. 820. 675·7800 or mall to Box 565 2 atory, 4 bedroom house.
Carla Drive, Gallipoli s, Oh. Gallipolis Dally Tnbune P.O. gas heat &amp; ate, 132
, Pomeroy:
An
Equal
Opportun ity Box 469 Galllgolls OH Bunernut,
(740)992-3650
Employer. FIM/DN,
ol5631.

rto

L._.-;_;;;;_:o:,;,:..,J

Team!

.J

~

~ ,2003 by NEA, Inc.

wWw.comlcs.cam

Outs1de Wood Burner, Water
type. (304)675·4004 or A lead1ng provi der of sup·
(304)674- 1315
port services to individuals
with MR/00 is looking lor a
Pawpaw fruit $1 to $2 per
pound, walnuts $10 per hun· Fult·time RN SuperviSOr to
work in Chesapeake and
dred pounds, (740)698·
Gallipolis.
Supervisory expe2124
rience required . Benefits
Table saw, call 740-44 1· inc luded. Contact Dorothy
0 182 after 5 30 or leave a Harper at 740-446-7148 ~
Equal
Opportumty
message
Emplpyer. F/M/DN.
I \ll'ltJ\\11 ' I

.J

110

r

HOMES
FUM SAu:

MeadowbrooK Dnve · 3br
2ba. rrdwood floors large
tam1ly room Pnvate. tenced
yard
and
back
garage.(304)675-1303
1304)675·1252

3 bedrooms. 2 bath Ranch
Remodeled k1tcnen 1'2 acre
level
lot Redu ced to NICe 3 bedroom Ranch at
$78,000. 740-446-4737
Spnng Va lley on Jackson
Pike 1 112 bath f1reptace
4 BEDROOM . 4 BATH basement 2 car garage On
HOUSE t Foreclosure only
1'2 acre plus Comoletely
$9,900. for hsllngs. 1-800·
pa1nted . new carpel Askmg
71 9-3001 Ext F144
1 08 900 tly appomlment
740-245-57
13 or 41 9·797·
Appro• 2400sQ. ft 3-5 bed2390
room , 2 bath. 1 car garage.

25 Serious People Wanted fenced back yard storage

3rd House on right South of
R&amp;L Truckmg on AT 2.
Womens plus size clothing.
Thurs &amp; Fri. 8:30-3.30

Growing Heating &amp; Cooling
company looking for Bllperi enced Installers with some
tech experience. Installation
e11perience a must. Good
pay. (740)441 -1236 il no
answer, leave message.

Uow:'

tHM SAL~:

Yard Sale: High-school
parking lot in Racine. Some
new stuff October 11, 9- ?I
Ra1n cancels.

r

male krtten Utter trained
1304)675·6118

Lost· Nikon Coolpix, at
3 Fam11y Yard sJle Oct 10.
French art colony, Sal. Oct.
965 Ash Street, M1ddleport
4. Call 740-446-0339 .
9:30 · 7 Lots of k1ds clothes
Lost:
Yellow
LHASA , ladles. linens, baby items,
Garfield Ave Old , sick. her mise
name Is Lhu d. 740-446Big Yard Sate · Fri-SAT
2125 or 740-446·2782.
October 10·11 9·00·5:00.
Antiques, clothes, turn1ture,
YARilSALE
glassware, Fenton, Kids
bOoks, Beames, much more.
37985 ST AT 7 log cabin 1·
YARil SALE·
2 m1les hom Chester

Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

p . m.

Sundays Paper

Yard sale. 10 Cottage Drive
at end of Beech St Electric
Range and dryer Large vanely

I

on your home delivered subscription!

Day.'s Paper

!~.~~~~~.li~~n-Column : 1:00

Oct. 9,10,11 . Clothes, and Yard Sale Wed, Jhur., Fn
1 female lab/shepard mix, 1 kmck knacks 9/10 mile out 500 Robinson Sl Rugs,
fem ale black long haired ol Evergreen, Hemlock Rd. large and XL work clothes,
mens 1eans, kmck nacks
Dachshund. To good home.
Pearl &amp; Lillian Sale! 6 miles galore
Call 740-446-0420.
South on SA 7 10/9-10/11 .
Glassware,
misc. 1tems.
W~l'mll
1- 12 week old black &amp; white

Yard sale 1611 Shoestring
Ridge, 9-4, Thu rsday-Friday.
Lost Large white lnsh Wolfe
L1ttle girl clothes, lots of
Hound . Answers to the mise
name Sugar.. She has a ..,,;..---.,.--...,
name tag with the address. r4
YARD S.UE·
74()-366·0416
~ i'oMERO\'iMioot.E.

lor Discount*

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Deya Prior To
Pub"llcatlon
Sun'd ay Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays

Thursday and Friday Oc1 910 Maurer reSidence Peach
Fork Rd. Co 19 Crafts. exer·
cise equipment, 1979 GMC
4·wheel dnve $1200.

Huge ya ;d sale at 1280
Eastern Ave. Big Den's Auto
Sales lot 1nctudes, old hard·
back books , refrigerator,
t1res/r1ms ,
motorcycles,
trash compacto rs, furniture,
other household items and
Fr 1day
&amp;
collectibles .
Saturday.

r
I

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In

~~~ 1efu\=y~ l

L&amp;L Scrap Metals wi ll be
closed Oct. 3 thru Oct. 13. Inside and Outside yard
sale. 648 4 th Aile , Oct
for inventory reduction .
9·10 ·1t 9am-Spm.
Say good bye to high phone
bills! New local phone serv- Moving sale. 138 Taylor Rd
•ce wllh FREE unlimited 3 mites out 775 1rom t 41 .
nat1on w1de long Distance extended throu gh the week.
.1-800-635- 2908
or
www FreedomMov1e com/1tp Oct. 10-11 9:00·4.00 Patio
aysyou Local Agents want- fu rniture. drapes, spreads.
diShes, olf1ce equ•pment
ed
many m1sc Items. 152 Oak
Dr Spnng Val ley.
GIVIAWAY

I

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prtce • Avoid Abbreviations
• lnc1ude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Dayi

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

Prep Soccer

If so, you qualify for a

levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, for the ben·
efll of Middleport
VIllage for the pur·
pose of Fire prolec·
lion
2 Said lax belng :A
renewal o( an existing
of 1 mill at a rate not
exceeding 1 mills for
each one dollar of val·
which
uatlon,
amounts to ($0.1O)
for each one hundred
dollars of valuation,
for five (5) years.
The Polls for oald
Election will open at
6:30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock PM. of
said d!'Y· By order of
the
Board
of
Elections,
of Meigs County, Ohio
John
N.
lhle,
Chairperson
Rita D. Smith, Director
Daied Sept. 5, 2003
10/8,15,22,29/03

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
E-mail us at:

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. ·to 5:00 p.m.

q

1\egi.Ster

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3C08
E-mail us at:
.

Off!ee 11o~~

Transactions

t

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE .TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Public Notice
Revleed
Code,
NOTICE OF ELEC· Sectlona 3501.11 (G),
TION ON TAX LEVY IN 5705.19, 5705.25
.EXCESS OF THE TEN
NOTICE Ia hereby
MlLL LIMITATION
given that In purRevlaed
Code, auonce
of
a
Sectlona 3501 .11 (G), , Reaolutlon of . the
5705.18, 5705.25
Village Council-of the
NOTICE Ia hereby Vllloge of Middleport,
given !hot In pur· Ohio, poasad on the
of
e· 28th day of July 2003
auance
Reeolutlon of the there will be eubmlt·
Board of Townahlp ted to a vote of the
the people of said aubdTruateea. -of
Townahlp of Scipio
vlalon at a General
Pomeroy.
Ohio, ELECTION to be held
.,.._ on the 8th day . In the Village of
of Auguat 2003 there Middleport ,Ohlq, at
will be aubmltted to a lhe regular placea of
VOtl Of the people of votlngtheraln, on the
aald aubdvlalon ,at a 4th day of November
General ELECTION Ia 2003 the queatlon of

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR ·AD NOW ONLINE . ~
tltrtbune
Sentinel

Prep Volleyball

Public Notices In N&lt;'W'P"I&gt;•••·
Your Right tu Know, D elivered Right to Your

NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Reference:
5715.17 Ohio Revised
Coda
The Meigs County
Board of Revision
has completed Its
work of equall•atlon.
The tax retuma for tax
year 2003 have been
revlsad and the valueIlona completed and
are open for public
Inspection In the
office of the Melga
County
Auditor,
Second
Floor,
Courthou•e, Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH.
Complalnll against
the valuations, as
aatabllshad for · tax
year 2003 mual be
made In accordance
with Section 5715.19
of the Ohio Revlsad
Code. These com·
plaints must be filed
on forma which will
be fumliohed by lha
county Auditor and
must be flied In the
County
Auditor's
Office on or before
the 31at day of March
2004. All complalnll
filed with the County
Auditor will be heard
by the Board · ol
Revlalon In tho men·
ner
provided
by
Section 5715.18 ol
the Ohio Revlaod

\Eribune - Sentinel - Register ·
C .L ASSIFIED

2003

5, Sexley 12-t.(J
43
6, Parma Padua IQ-0·4
40
29
Others receiving 12 or more points· 11, 7, Ke"erlno Alter 7-1·3
22
Bainbridge Paint Valley 32. 12, Hamler 8, LeMington 11 · 1·2
20
Patrick Henry 28. 13. Columbiana 18. 14, 9, Chesterland W. Geauga 13·1..0
10, Defiance 12·1·2
19
Minford 15.
DIVISION Ill
DIVISION VI
1, CVCA 1()-()-~
97
1. Cotumbus Grove (18• 7.0
301
2. Cin. Madeira 10-D-2
85
2, Cle. Cuyahoga Hts (3) 7.(]
239
3, worthington Christian 9-0-2
79
3, Norwalk S1. Paul (3) Hl
238
4, Gates Mills Hawken 11 · 1·1
61
4, Mogadore (3) 6-1
182
5, .Warren Champion 13· 1·0
56
5, Covington 7..0
176
6, Kalida 9·1 -2
51
6. Newarl&lt; C.th. (3) 6-1
174
7, Yellow Springs 12-1.()
42
7, COry·Rawson (2) 7.()
129
8, Fort Jennings 1 1-o-2
19
a, N. lewlaburgTrlad (I ) 7·0
101
13
9, Oola Hardin Northern 6·1
81 1 9, Wheelersburg 11·2·1
10, New Albany 1()-3.()
II
1O, Marla Stein Marion Local 5·2
38
GIRLS
DIVISION '!
Others rece1vtng 12 or more points 11 .
68
Spring. Ca1h. Cent 30. 12 (11e), Shadyside, 1. Strongs11llle 13-o·1
62
Leetonia 18. 14, New Matamoras Frontier 2, Cln. St. Ursula 12-0-1
3, Dublin Coffman 1 1-Q-1
49
15.
4, Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit 11-o-1
47
5, Hudson 10-2·2
39
6, Beavercreek 12-Q-2
38
7, Westerville Norltl 10·3·2
28
8, Uberty Twp. Lakota East 11 -2·0 16
Cols. OeSaleel()-1-3
16
Ohio hlgh school volleyball poll
12
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - The lourlh 10, Mentor 10.1·2
DIVISION II
weekly Oh1o High School Volleyball
97
Coaches Association poll lor 2003, with 1, Bay VIllage Bay 1D-4.fJ
80
school, record and total points (first-place 2, Bexley 12·2-0
3, Cln. Wyoming 8·2·3
65
votes 1n parentheses):
4, Middletown Fenwick 9.0·4
63
DIVISION I
5, Polanct Seminary 11 -2·2
48
1, Cin St. Ursula Acad . (35) 18·0 368
6, Elida 11-o-2
39
2, Tol. St. Ursula (2) 18·1
316
7, Akron St. V·St. Mary 9-4·2
23
3, Cin Ursuline Acad. 16·2
288
4, Cin Mt. Notre Dame 1Q-5
213
6, Cin. Indian Hill 9·?-0
20
5, Mentor 15·2
153
9, Circ18\lille 12-1-1
17
6, Amherst Steele 19·1
105
New Albany 10·0·1
14
7, Cin Oak Hills 16-3
102
8, Solon 16·4
69
9, Cin. Mother of Mercy 10·1 1
59
10, Elyria 16-4
49
NaUonal Ba1ketbal: A..oclatton
GOLDEN STATE WARR10R8-Walved G
DIVISION II
Derrick Zimmerman and F-C Josh Asset1n.
1, Kettering Alter (37) 18-2
415
MEMPHI S
GRIZZLIE S-Waived
Cl
2, NDCL (3) 17·1
329
3, Canal Winchester (2) 19·1
273
Richard Jeter,
Robert O'Kelley and F
4, Cortland Lak8111ew (1) 19· 1
228
Shelton Jones.
5, Bell. Benjamin Logan 18·1
21 8
MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVE5-Signed
6, Gin Roger Bacon 15·4
194
F Regg1e Slater
7, Millersburg W. Holmes 14-3
192
PHOENIX SUNS- Signed G Stephen
8, Mentor Lake Cath 17·3
Marbury lo a tour·year contract extens1on
134
9, Za nesville Maysville (1) 19·1
108
through the 2006-09 season.
10, Sunbury 81g Walnut 15-2
42
Natlonll Football League
DIVISION Ill
ATLANTA FALCON$-Walved S Travans
1, Huron (25) 16-0
393
Robinson. Activated CB Ty rone Williams
2, Orrville (9) 17·1
322
from the suspended list.
3, Zoarville Tusc. Valley (6) 20·1
319
BALTIMORE
RAVENS-Signed
DE
4, Wheelersburg 17·0
237
Riddick Parker. Released DE Joe
5, Newark Catholic (1) 1a-1
179
Salave'a.
6, Metemora Evergreen ~6-0
165
CINCINNATI BENGAL8-Signed P Kyle
7, Williamsport Westfall1 6·3
104
Richardson to a two-year contract. Waived
8, Marion Pleasant"(t) 17·3
83
P Nick Harris .
9, Genoa Area (1) 15-1
79
DETROIT LION$-Ra teased CB Atex
10, Woodsfield Monroe Cent 17·1 60
Molde n.
DIVISION IV
MIAMI DOLPHINs-Placed S Yeremiah
1, 51. Henry (31) 19· 1
373
Bell on Injured reserve. S1gned WR Ronald
2, Minster (I) 18·0
312
Bellamy to the practiCe SQuad .
3, Centerburg (4) 11·0
275
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTs-Signed FB
4, Franklorl Adena (3) 20.(]
258
Fred McCrary. Released S Arlc Morris
5, W1ndham 18·0
146
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Announced
146
Kidron Cent. Christian 18-0
CB Keyuo Craver was suspended four
136
7, Def. Ayersvllle 16· 1
games for violating the league's substance
8, Old Fort 16·1
123
abuse policy.
9, Sidney Lehman Cath. 14·6
113
NEW YORK GI AN TS-Signed K Brett
10, Cin. Summit Country Day 18·0 52
Conway. Waived CB Ray Green.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER8-Waived OL
Alonzo Cunningham from the practice
squad Signed DT Josh Shaw to the pracCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Th e ei&gt;rth ol tice squad.
se11en weekly state soccer polls as com- TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERs-Placed FB
piled by the Oh io Scholastic Soccer Mike Alsto« on InJured reserve. Claimed· S
Coaches Association:
Travari s Robinson off wa1vers from
BOYS
Atlanta. Signed WR Charles Lee to a twoDIVISION I
year contract Agreed to terms with LB
1, Tol. St. Francis 13· 0· 1
66
VInny Ciurc1u and LB Justin Smith on two·
2, Strongsville 11·1·1
64
year contracts Released WR Marvin
3, Hudson 11 -2-0
56
Minnix and DE Ron Warner. Waived LB
4, Dublin Scioto 8-C&gt;-4
38
Jack Golden Signed RB Travis Stephens
5, Westerville North 8-1 ·4
33
to lhe practice squad.
6, Cl811a. St. Ignatius 9-2·3
26
National Hockey League
7, Brecksville·Broadview Hts. 7· 1-3 25
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Placed
a, Fatrtleld 8·0·4
24
LW Geoff Sanderson on the injured hst.
Wadsworth 11-o-2
23
retroactive to Sept. 15. Reassigned RW
10, W. Chester Lakota West 8·1 ·2
15
Kent McDonell to Syracuse of the AHL.
DIVISION II
Released LW Riley Cote and 0 Anders
1, Young. Mooney 13·()-1
ao
Enksson.
. 2, Richfield Ravere 10·1·3
64
FLORIDA PANTHERS- Assigned RW
56
3, Dayton Carroll 11 · 1 ~2
,Jarostav Bednar to San Antoni o ol the
4, Dresden Tri-Valley 12-o-o
44
AHL.
1O, Morral Ridgedale 6·1

www.mydallysentlnel.com

All real estate advertising

In this newspaper is
subtec1 to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertiaa "any
preference, limitation or
dl1crl mination based on
race. color, religion. Mit
lamlllel statue or national
origin. or any Intention to
make any sucti
preference, limitation or
d1scrimmatlon "
Thll newspaper will not
lmowingly accept
advertiaernenta tor real
••tate which Is In
violation ot the law. Our
readera ere hereby
Informed that all
dwellings .-clvertlaed In
tt'lls newspaper are
evailatM on an eqUIII
opportunity ~-

PRICE REDUCED
Must selL 3 bedroom 2 bath
1n a mce fam1ly or rented sub·
d1111S10n 1n New Ha ven
130·1 )593·3690
Remodeled 3 beoroom 1
112 bath 1n good !"lelghborhOOd m Mlddiepo' \ (740)
992· 7743 or
v1ew
af
www orvb com • 81503

J32ll

l\IOHtLE

Hom::-

IURSALE
1994 Cl ayton 16x80 Elec 3
bedrooms. 2 baths •ound
tub, skylight. A!C 3 fans·.
some new carpet. $15 ,500
Kanauga Mobile Home
Sales
Gallipolis. Ohio
740-441 -0310
Coles Mobile Homes
US 50 East. Athens On1o

.
_
4570 1 740 592 1972
--------Good used l4X70 2 bedroom .
2 bath
01 il y
S8995 00 Includes delrvery
Call Ha rold (740) 385·9948
New 14X70 3Br.'2Bth only
S995 DO down and only
$ 196 43 per month Call
Karena (740 t 385· 7671
New 2003 Doublew1de 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down·
and &amp;295 1mo 1-800-69 16777
No Problem Safe· Want a
new sect1onal home? No
Problem Need foundatiO n
anCl sept1c? No Problem
Need uf!l 1 l~s run or dr1ve...:
way ? No Problem Want b1g
saVmgs on a 2003 model:
No Problem Cole's Mohlleus
so East,
Hornes
Athens OhiO 740-592-1972
S1nce 1967. Where You Gel
Your Money's Worth

Very good conditiOnlclean.·
1993 mobile home (14 XBO)'
sittmg on 2-lols on Second
Syrac use .
Oh •
Street
S1 orage·bu1 lding w/v1ny1 std· •
mg to match home. 21X21•
carport on a 24X70 paved:
Country IJke setting. Leon. drive. Ask 1ng $45.000.00
V"N. area. Phone. 304-458- OBO (740)992 -3330.
1876
Farm house- 3 bedroom. 2
baths. 2 story. newly renovated, uohnished basement.
screened porch , 22x20
CIOuble carport.
garage,
pubtlc water, Meigs County,
country sening 5+ acres. no
tand contract, $79.500 can
(740)742·9937

r ~~~ r
Office -Dudding tor rent- BooSF , elect heat 8/c, ce 1ll ng~
fan, R1ver Park. Mmersv 111e.·
$300/mo+ $200 dep (6 14)"

For sate by owner Why buy
one place when you can 1 acre of land on Centenary:
have 2 lor the same pri ce of Rd. $12.000. Celt 741}446 "
one. Here IS the dream v.ou 2296.·
have been waiting for.
Beautiful 08 acre of land 6 acres MIL water and alae·
w/2 mobile homes. &amp;
tr!c installed 1.500 ft road
4·bulldlngs. Close lo hun1· frontage
ln~shlng . Very nice. qulel &amp; Write To . J&amp;M Farms
private (3~)674-0 155
960 McCully Rd.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
House lor sate in Hartfort.
WV on Moore Street. Lot tor sale m Racine.:
(740)992·5858
00 OBO. (740)742·
Lot Spring Valley. Large lot
House tor sale. 704 4th aprox . 101 ' x 171 " city water.~
Street. NeW Haven 3 sewer. Nat gas. ekK:tric all
Bedroom . finished base- are available. Phone 74())ment witn wood burner 2· 446-9539.
•
car garage, beauty shop
bluld on. coutd be used as Lots 19 &amp; 10 Heatley S.•
shop or family room Ph. Addition in Bidwell. TwO:
(304)882·2770 (304)682· large level tots. Price to &amp;el~
2439
now. Phone 740-446·9539. ·

~~~000

"\

.,

�(

Wednesday~ Oct. 8, 2003

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

••

Wednesday, October 8, 2003

www.mydallyaentlnel.com .

The Dally Sentloel • Page 8 5:

NEA Crouword. Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

41 Shoul

T---

alglH
50 Round

52 LooM
530-IOCile
54- Hotogrom
fNikor

Gallia County Democrat.
Longaberger Basket Bingo
Thursday,
October 9th, 6:30 pm
American Legion, Middleport, OH

Syracuse Vol~nteer Fire
Department
MONTHLY AUCTION

Saturday; Oct. 11 th

New &amp; Different Merchandise
Christmas Items

~
I~ I

mR SAt,E

Hov.."ES .
RENr

FOR

1-3 Bed

FORECLOSED

1 bedroom upstairs apt. in
Gallipolis. $235 per mo nth,
dep/ref required . Call 740446-7130.

homes. Buy from $199 a
montn! 4% down, 30yrs ai 1 BR with 'stova and refriger8.5% APR. For Listing Call ator. starting at $290/mo. +
1-800-719-3001 Ext. F 1709

deposit 740-441 -1322

Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Used Furnitu~e Store, 130
ing applications for wa1ting Butaville Pike. Mattresses,
list for Hud-subsized. 1- br. dressers. couc hes. bunk
, apartment. call 675-6679 be ds. bedrOOm
suites,
reclmers, Grave
monuEHO
ments.
740-44 6-4782 .
Gallipolis. OH. Hrs. 10-4pm.
St•ACF.
Stop by.
mR R FNf

3 bedroom. 2 bath Brick 2

bedroom
apt.
in
home . References and 2 Centenary. appliances furmonths deposit req uired. nished utilities paid , ellcept
$650 a month. no pets. 7 4().. electric, clean-$350 month·
388-9851
call 740-256-1t35
3 bedroom. new carpet , no Apartment Available Now
pets. Dep.·Bidwell 740-379- RiverBend
Place , New
2540.
Haven , WV now acyepting
In Rio Grand/Vinton area, t7 applications lor HUD-subsi-

Offices,
(Downtown
Gallipolis) for rent. All electric , 3 rooms and a 4 rooms,
both on first floor, 400 Block
In Gal lipolis. Both are clean
&amp; nice. Phone 740-446-

9539.
\IHH II 1'1&gt;1,1·.

FlO

L.-------,.1

HOlJSF.J-IOlJl
acres, 2 1/2 car garage, Pet dized, .1 bedroom apartGOODS
Allowed. S400 n )nth 606- ment. Ulilities included Call
266-2146
(304)882-3121 Apartment
avai lable for qualified sen- Amish oak table, 2 chairs,
Large house for rent in
lor/disabled person. EHO
hand-made, finished .$350.
Pome roy,
reference
&amp;
deposit required , no pets, BEAUTIFUL
APA RT- like new, save $150. 446-

MENTS AT BUDGET 2506
PRICES .AT JACKSON _
B_e_ll-er_l_n_B_e_n·-s.-W-o_od
_ b_u-rn·

(7401949-7004

Reasonable rent. 4-room
ESTAT ES, 52 Westwood
house, water paid. Rent plus
utilities and qeposit. 740~ Drive from $297 to $383.
Walk to shop &amp; mov ies. Ca ll
446-0974.
740-446-2568.
Equal
Taki ng Applications 3 bed - Housing Opportunity.
room house Poner. Will rent
with option buy 2004. Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedReferences/deposit . 740- room apartments at Village

ing stove insert with blower.
Excellent condition. 740_
_
446 0138
Blue
Ridge
Mountain
Fireplace insert with circulation fan. $500 call 740-446-

Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport. Cherry stained Curio cabi-

Unfurnished 2 br, house with
full basement, close to town.

From $278-$348. Call 740992-5064. Equal ·Housi ng

HOMES

AI.!IU&gt;

r

Previous owners have valu- :d~riv::•c...::.$2::000:.::_:_·-~--::;­
able info. on his needs &amp; 1985.5 Porsche Coupe, 20,
habits. Please call 740-446- 150,000 miles, real sharp.

ANn QUES

Buy or
sel l.
Riveri ne
Antiques, 1124 East, Main
o n SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740992·2526. Russ Moore,
owner

7362

$3.000 304-773-511 1.

Year
old
She ltie,
brown/white, house broken,
great with kids, AKC regis~
tered. $250 call 740~379-

1991 Dodge Spirit $550:
1989 Ch ~vy 2500 pickup
$1,895: 1994Saturn$2,195;
18 others to $5,995;
COOK MOTORS
740-446..0103

2179.

j540 MISCEUANElJUS

M USICAl.
INsTRUMENTS

MEROlA NOISE

RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

_ _
740 992 7599

~======~~

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

,.4. ....

LARRY SCHEY

Rmr

750 East State Street Phone
· At hens, Ohio

Pass

6 •

All pass

30 Threw hoR 41 Brvn-

_,,.._
32 - Beatty
of fllrna
36 Deuce

Pa!l~

1

Wrlco;nes Betty Ho.&lt;clwr

Our Fall Specials:
Color &amp; Perms 25""

Ladies S«yle cuts 11..
Kids&amp;Men5 ..

Lorrger Hair Sliglrtly H(~lur
NOW

Tan11ing A ''a il aM,.
Wu/kir~ s 11r AJIJ1Virtrmr uu

wl'fcomt' &lt;lllj• lifllt'.

985-3348TIIImks.f•'r J'illlr l111 s in t'S~.

"'I:IE.'i', T~l~ I~

p 0

GOOD :&gt;TUFF,
Coli\D'&lt;S!

T

e

XD

Astro.Graph

G CC

B T W

C AD

I P A 5

-'Ill~:

HOWARD£.
WR!TfSfl
dOIRNG
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMLESS
GOnER
*Free Esumateh

949-1405

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Ever y Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Ea rly birds sta rt

6:30
Lasl Thursday of
every monlh
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bona nza Get
FREE

let me do it for youl

After 6pm "

'i .

&lt;(

f?.

(Before 6pm
\:::.
~
Leave MeUOQt) ; l~ · !!';!

~. &gt;..ot_.........."('_ ......

PEANUTS

YOU'RE TAKING THAT .
LEAF TO SCI-lOOl. FOR
··s~OW AND TELL"?

WELL, DESCRIBE TO Til EM
loiOW YOU FELT WHEN
YOU SAW TWE LEAF
FALL FROM T~E TREE ..

TELL. HOW YOU FELT
SEEIN6 IT DRIFT
DOWN TO EMTI-l FOR
TilE LAST TIME ...

YOUNG'S
AKC. Mini Dachshund puppies,
blackltan,
shots/wor med by vet Rea dy

Advertise
in this
IL
~40
I.
space for $1 00
per month.
BoA~s~(YffiRS I
86 Chevy Conversion Van .
Loaded, TVNCR , very nice,
new tireS, tow miles, $2,000
OBO. 740-256 -6476.

r.·"____

r~04169!;-3299
·o--go--0-c-lo_b_er- -1-1!-h. ~

A I.!IU&gt;
_ _ _.,J
,
.

mR SALE

M OTOI&lt;CYCUJ&gt;

For Sale Poms. 1 male. 1
1992 Goo Storm , run s good 2003 Honda XR 100R3 Dirt
female. $35 each· or both tor
$ 1,000. Call 740·379-2805
Bike, excell ent condition.
$60. Call 740-4 46~3997 .

r

$1,600 calf 740·441-9865.

I

1977 N~rris Bass BaSi with
85
HP Evan rude h as a
depth Iin der. fis h fi nder.
trolling motOr. full length
cove r. Nice Trailer. All in
good condition: {304)675·

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Add II Ions &amp;
Remo del ing
1 New Gar ages
1 E lectrical &amp; Pl umbing
1 Rooti ng &amp; Gut1ers
1 Vlnvl Siding &amp; Painting
1
Patio and Porc h Decks

BETTY
~ r-------------~

g

Free Estimales

992-6215

IMPR
.....

1

BASEMENT,
• WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime ' guar·
antee. Local reterences fur·
nished. Established 1975.

Call

24 Hrs. (7401 446-

0870. ' Rogers
Waterproofing.

C&amp;C

Basement

General
.Home
Maintenance- Painting, 'Jinyl
sidi ng, carp.entry, doors.
windows, baths, mobi le
home repair and more. For
free estlinate call Chet, 740-

992-6323.

L.

-·-

- - ·--·-

---

GP UD

J F VW JF P II

!'~!ZL!n

.f"\ ;r.;~:cr:9::t

l et~ar~

::i •:-;,.

V four :.c:-:::~ !:::l ed wct=s br
icw r.:::: ll:lr:-:'1 fcur sim;le wcr::i:

DRIVEWA'I'.

K0 S T E

I' I I f

~~~
S U T Y I~

~

"I've always thought .my kids
would inherit my business,' the

~,,-,J-;-'-;-,..-17

~=:;:::;:=~~·~ma n s1ghed to the acc ount. "Now

r

1t seems that the government has

B L E V A R ~-- -- - - • • to it!"

f--~r:,;:-l;:....:;lr;'_:,lr:rl--1
.

_

_

.

PR I~ T NUMS.ER ED
lE Tifi;!S IN SQUARES

.

e

~Iuckie

Comolo&lt;e tho

yo~

quoiod
wotcls
develop from step No. 3 below.
b"t • filling In ftle milsing

I' I'

!CIAM-lm ANSWERS
Entail ~ Amaze- Grana- Kimono- MAKE it AGAIN

My experiences with buy ing cars was upsettin g I've
concluded that experience enables you to recognize o
m1stake when you MAKE it AGAIN.

to handle a particularly demanding lndf· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - vidual. Don't btame yourself.
AR IES (March 21-Aprll19)- Your.fami- · CANCER (June 21-July 22)- You may
ly's welfare is apt to be your main conhave to stiHen your back and dig in when
earn today and you 'll taka extra meaconfronted by challenging developments
sures to be bo th prote&lt;Jtive and con'
today. Both fortitude and determination
cerned for their needs. Their apprecipJion
Will IJ&amp; required in Order IO realize person·
will be well worth your effort.
al success.

Pome roy. Oh10
:22 Years Lo I

aassffleds

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - People

~~~
tM~~ ~ High&amp;! Dry

e
. . . ~~
iiiiiii.lic

I ~~UND IT IN

SAG ITTAR IUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 211Boldness is your forte whA re joint ven·
lures are concerned, but today it might be
smarte r to cushion your verve wilh a
quiet approach. Leadership works in tan·
de"m with others.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Compa nions will ha'Je respect tor your directives today, but unless you have the
courage to adhere to them yourself , they
co utct lose con fidence in you . Lead by
example.
may mean well . but unless you truly have
experience in doing a job, don't volunteer
to take one on. Should it turn out to be
way over your haad, your contribution will
hurt, not help
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Normally
your pleasant manner can get along wirh
even so-called difficu lt types , but today
you may not have the tOle rance it'll take

V. C. YOUN G Ill

1993 Marada 2100 Explorer
21!t. all l ibSrglass pontoon
style boat. 115hp. Evi n
Rude. All seats replaced.
Has bathroo m &amp; gas· grill.
Tennessee duel axil trailer.
$6.500. obo. (304)675-7633

"' I H\ l l I "'

T

TG

TA

ii'IA7 DA:LY

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- You

3354

Model 4104 Bus conversion
recreati on vehicle, complete
sell contai ned ready for
camping. 740..256-6926

J

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 221 - Break
thro ugh those fi xed op inion!!: of yours
today and allow your brain to Oe infused
with trash , progressive ideas. For true
growth, be ready and willing to explore
the thinking ot others.

liNDA'SPAINTING

0401985-4180

G F 0

P A

PREV IOUS SOLUTION - 'Why should I tolerate a perfect
stranger.at the bedside of my mind?" - Vladimir Nabof&lt;ov, on
psychiatrists

By being motivated by reward in the year
ahead; you'll prepare yourself to tak&amp; on
greater obligations and responsibliititts .
Subordinate roles wilt hold no appaa'i lor
you ; you'll shoot right tor lh"e .head jobs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - You have
much more gain~;~ for you today than you
rea lize and unless you underStand thiS ,
vou may not strive for anything . lf you
thi nk you're a loser, yt.lu'fl be one. Be a
wi nner instead.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

TF D .TN

ND OGP AH

FTAN I D N

L.

GC

U POGTSD

CB

Thursday, Oct. 9 ..2003

·J

In Ylf'M

Linda' 5 'Beauty S no_r11

net, 1 yr old, $100. Sears
Pro fo rm 7-TO series treadmil l. Excel lent condition, 1
yr. old $400. Call after 4 pm
740-446-2350.

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Rep ii.ir-675·7388. For sale,
re-co nditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, ralrigerators, ga~. and electnc
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
re pairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

49 Alwar-,

~====:;::::=======:::=~

on

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1J2 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool .
Patio. Start S385/Mo. No
Pats. Lease Pl us Security
Deposit Req ui red , Days :
740·446·3481; Eve nings:
740·367-0502.
.

al "WHIw«tcl"

Susrm Ba11111

1 end 2 bedroom apa rtments, furnished and unfurnished , securi ty deposit
required, no pets, 740-992-

".

Pa~s

'

Pass
Pass
Pass

o.g.

THE BORN LOSER

APARTMENTS
FOR R ENT

304~675- 5162

••

uorciH

(7~0)593-66 7

800~537-9528.

3 bedroom, no pets. Rent &amp;
deposit.
Southwestern
School. 740-3792540.

no pets

2•

Pa~ ~

Jo.nglrau,

UGenHe

VllGETABLES

Now Tak ing App licationspets. (740)992-5039 no calls
35
West
2 Bedroom
afar 8:30pm
Town house
Apartments ,
2 bedroom trai ler, $275 tndudes Water
Sewage,
mon1h , plus deposit Call Trash, $350/Mo .. 740-446740-367-Q04 l ask for Doug. 0008

(3041675·5509

Pass
Pass

F.:asl

FRUITS &amp;

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·

$325 deposit. 1 yr. lease. no

2 br. W/0 hook up ref. dep,

1 NT

North

Hill's Self
Storage

Firewood. seasoned oak Bundy Tr umpe t w/case &amp;
$20. pickup toad. You cut you accessories $50. Yaniaha
haul. Not responsible for PSA- t 60 Keyboard $50.
accidents. (304)675-6440
304 675· 7777

Very nice. no pets. In Nice one BR unfurnished
Gallipol is. 740-446-2003 or apartment. Range. &amp; relridg
740-446 -1409.
provided. Water &amp; garbage
2 bedroom m obile home tor paid. Deposit required. Cal l
rent in Racine, $325 rent, 740·446-4345 after 6 p.m.

1 Bedroom Apa rtment.
Kitchen Furnis hed,
,All
Electric,
$300 Month ,
Deposit Required .Near High
School. (304)675-3100 Or

West

"Drocult'"

2 bd. w/w carpet, air, porch.

2218.

24 -Lnt ·lattora 45TH- l e a _:
2li Kind
41 llahwr'a
of dolllr
ahaut
27 StrMiclf 47 E - or

jcHiVRO,~T/

14x70 Trailer. electric heat." 3
bed room, HUD approved.
No Pets . Phone (740)742 27 14

r

South

building

39 C•lllgrlptiy 51 Folly wlnu
ftulda
4&lt;1 Gl~ In

behind Highway Patrol Post Full Size bedroom su ite.
Jackson Pike . 1 &amp; 2 br. w/serta mattress &amp; box
rent starting 5255. low &amp; spring. U pr ight l ree"zer. ref.
1 m o bile home with 3br. moderate income. Equal 19 cubic teet,· hutch , desk.
Located in Glenwood. All Housing Opportunity. 740· (304 )675-1687
appl ia!lces
with 446·3344 TDD 1·800·7500750.
W/0(304)576-999 1
MOBlLE
FOR

23 .........

K10~

I AJ 6 3
• Q to

I I

Windows
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL
and

Happy Jack Kennel Spot® $500' POLICE IMPOUNDS.
the
Spot-On
with
the Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps; etc!
strength to kilt ticks and fleas Caffi from $500. f.Qr listings ,
before heavy infestation .
More ac tive , quicker kill, 1-800-719-3001 ext 3901
longer residu al . Athens 1985 Cutlass Supreme. · 1
Landmark 740-985·3700.
owner. sharp 37819. v•rv
clean , $2000. new tires .

2

Dealer: South

• Replacement

Seeking new owne rs of
Washer,
Dryer,
Air recently bought Owake r 1990 Jeep Cherokee 4 liter
Conditioner for sale. $75.00 Parrot tram Pets &amp; Plus. 98700, sharp truck 2 wh.

all 3. (3041593·0652

•

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garage~

m R SAu:

20 "Corot roof 41 ChoooH
hobitllta
42 Sheritl
21 Aatonlah
· Andy' a kJd
22 Coet lenglh 44 llound

10 !

Vulnerable : Neither

766 1.

366·9946.

asking $400. a mon. +utili- Opportunities.
ties,dep.required call 304· -~------675-8902 or 304-593-0152. Honeysuckle H1IIS Apts .
Loca ted on Colonial Dr.

.

•

... H
South
• A 8 76

BUILDERS InC.

----'

10
~--PE
·
m
iilil
...
_.l
r
~
L

\I \I "i

•• 5
9 7 5
K J 8 6

BISSELL

6 pm

OOWN

East
.QJ54 2
• Q J 7

I0 9 3

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

20 Games $20
367-7530

•

A 9 4 3
K II 8 4
A !l 5 3

Cellular

55 F -

Self-Storage
33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy,Ohio

740-992·5232

GARFIELD
WHAT ARE IX&gt;U
DOING., GIARFIEL17?

t

see...

WELL, DON''T
OVERI701T

SOUP

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 BeechSt
middleport, Oh
[10'x10' 610'x20')

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

AH ••• &amp;Rt::A'THINGr,

ara n·r mind readers , so i"f they aren ' t
be ing solicitous to you. whose rault is
that ? Let eve rybody know w here you
stand and ~ha t you want; onty then can
they coma through for you.
GEMINI (May 2hJune 20)- It rOey hOI
be .1o your benefit today to be stubborn
about your buslneu concerni . Btfng
· ovtrly protective at you r lnterelts might
be at the expense·of other~. Compromise .
ypur need~ .

[740)992-3194
992-6635
SELF
STORAGE
In Mason

1 Dx10 - $35.00
1Ox20 - $55.00

740-992-3961

J&amp;L
Eledric

TO

be forgotten .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)- Don't let an
old project suffer today because of your
entnustasm tor something new , or atse all
you'll ha-...e to show for your ettorts are
two unfinished te.sks . Give attention to

:Get -, 'i

Fast ,_·:

Results'

• &gt; ;j~j:.,.,·
''iii'~··~'~·
!h~

.

. . ../~

"'f',&amp; • ~

'.
.

bolh .

NUT Z

01&lt;, wen! PC11'&lt;•n'
S~\RTS \/S S Kins

'(o,.fre s1&lt; 1ns .

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Jih 740-991· 0933
Cell 741H91-1 07J

LEO (,July 23·Aug . 22} - -Somelimes
silent participation Is requi red when we
set ·aut to help others in order to prorect
their interests. This mav be one of these
days. bul your hidden contribution won 't

w ~otoe\A!r

HeaRD

.

OF SHI~ vS .

PaNTS

!'

I .

t·
I

ROBERT
BISSELL

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complel e
Remodeling

740-992-1811
Stop &amp; Compare

,,•

�Campus police prepare for big game
MADISON; Wis. (AP) - A rare Saturday
night football game at Camp Randall Stadium
against defending national champion Ohio State
has campus police ~g extra security precautions.
But officials say Wisconsin fans are no
strangers to big wins after cheering the Badgers
to Big Ten titles, three Rose Bowl victories and
other bowl appearances under coach Barry
Alvarez.
If the No. 23 Badgers (5-l, 2-0 in the Big Ten)
end the 19-game winning streak of the thirdmilked Buckeyes, (5-0, 1-0), officials want fans
to stay in the stands and not go onto the field.
· In October 1993, 69 people were injured when
fans tried to rush the Camp Randall field after the
Badgers upset Michi~an. The stampede forced
the university to redestgn the stuclent section, add
a fence and railfugs and make other changes.
For Saturday's game, the number of police

B~ngals

officers inside the stadium will be increased by
about one-fourth, Burke said.
His department also will be available to assist
Madison police if a celebration gets out of hand
on State Street - a main thoroughfare in the
campus area. The Wisconsin State Patrol and
Dane County Sheriff's Office also will be aSsisting.
The Madison police force will have about twothirds of its SO-member Special Enforcement
Team on duty to helP. patrol State·Street, but the
number of police wtll be less than what can be
expected for Halloween in about three weeks,
said Central District Captain Luis Yudice.
"We want to make sure we set a proper tone.
We want a good police presence," Yudice said.
"We don't want to get caught flat-footed."
Downtown Alderman Mike Yerveer, a law student who has student season tickets, said he's
confident the planning has been sl!fficient.

change punters, sign Richardson

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Bengals changed
punters on Thesday, signing Kyle Richardson·to
a two-year contract reuruting him with head
coach Marvin Lewis.
Richardson was the punter in Baltimore from
1998 to 200 l, when Lewis was the Ravens·
delensi ve coordinator. Richardson is adept at
dropping punts inside the 20-yard line.
The Bengals waived Nick Harris, who was
last in the AFC with a 30-yard net average per
punt. His 29-yard punt into the wind in overtime
Sunday set up Buffalo's winning touchdown

Eastern
from Page 81
passes. Holter was able to set
those .passes for kills on 14
occas10ns.
"Another fundamental that
we work very hard on is
being able to pass the ball.

Marlins ,
from Page 81
ome'n. The last I 0 teams to
win the NLCS opener have
reached the World Series.
After avoiding
Barry
Bonds in the first round,
Marlins
manager
Jack
McKeon said he would pitch
to Sosa in this series.
And it was a good decision
- up until Slammin' Sammy
took his final swing.
Sosa tied it with a no-doubt
drive, taking a signature hop
after he connected off
Urbina.
Sosa pointed to the sky as
he touched home plate, as
much in joy as in relief. The
slugger with 539 career
homers had been only 5-for31 with one RBI in postseason play, and his October

Wednesday, October 8, 2003-

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

drive in a 22-16 victory.
·
The Bengals (l-4) claimed Harris off waivers
from Denver before the 200 I season. He averaged 40.1 yards per punt in each of his first two
seasons in Cincinnati, then beat out Travis
Dorsch in training camp to keep his job.
Richardson helped Lewts' defense in
Baltimore by dropping 39 punts inside the 20
line in 1999. He left for Minnesota as a free
agent for the 2002 season. He was in training
camp with Philadelphia this year, but was
released on Aug. 24.

We think if we're able to pass
the ball, then we're going to
able to set the ball and we
think we 're going to be able
to hit the ball."
Lodwick led the kill parade
with seven. Morgan Weber
amassed six kills followed by
Kat1e Robertson with four.
Lodwick and Robertson also
combined for 17 blocks on
the night

The junior varsity-was also
a winner over the Lady
Lancers, 15-6, 15-10. lilli an
Brannon led the way with 13
points for the winne.rs.
Eastern will play its final
match of the season on
Thursday when Trimble visits Tuppers Plains. Junior
varsity action gets underway
at6 p.m. ~

slumps were starting to cloud
hi s regular season accomplishments.
As . Sosa trotted to right
field for the top of the I Oth,
his fan s in the right-field
bleachers bowed and he
doffed his cap.
Game 2 of the best-ofseven series is Wednesday
night with Brad Penny pitching for Florida and Mark
Prior going for the Cubs.
Rodriguez ~ut the Marlins
ahead 8-6 wtth yet another
big postseason hit, a two-run
single in the ninth. He delivered right after a disputed
play that put the Cubs in
jeopardy.
With ruqners on first and
second and one out, Luis
Castillo hit a slow grounder
to second baseman Mark
Grudzielanek. He fielded it
cleanly, but fumbled it as he
tried to tag Juan Pierre and
start an inning-ending double

play.
Pierre landed on the infield
grass, and scampered to second as the bases became
loaded. Cubs manager Dusty
Baker argued umpire Fieldin
Culbreth's call to no avail ,
and Rodriguez took advantage with a liner past
Grudzielanek that broke a 6all tie.
Alex Gonzalez, with a history of clutch homers for the
Cubs, came through again
with a two-out, two-run shot
in the sixth off starter Josh
Beckett. His opposite-field
shot into the basket hanging
off the right-field wall made
it 6-all ..
The Marlins had threatened
to break it open in the top of
the sixth. Leading 5-4. they
started the inning with two
singles. but had to settle for
Jeff Conine's sacrifice fly off
starter Carlos Zambrano.

. CJhlq high schOol footlall computer ratlnp
orJ

COI.UMeUS.
(AP)- i'\OfV orelho NorHood (5-2) 9.23117. 10, L.ovoland (5-2) '
bll1h ~ fOolblll oompu!M ratlngO a.t214.
lfoM tile 6hto HIQII $chool Alhlotlc
DM110N II
'toQJIJJicn. FllllnDIIil't bf· &lt;t.ioiDn lind
Region il-1, eM. Boiii&lt;lctill'l (7-o~
region with ....,.a oncf -.go 20.ol8n. 2, Mentor Lako Calh. ~1

Region 11-\, ~Mill J'~ ~~·

Couch,BrolVOS'other
top picks set to prove
their worth, Bt

!
:

(1-ll) 15.1000. 2, ....., ~·~' '
'1
13..SS4. 3. N. Lima S. ~ (T-o •
1 1.495ol. 4·.SmlttMIIo (7-o) l\.1332. &amp;. •
.Minora! Ridge (8-1) 10.1071. 6, ~
P&lt;&gt;'*pei-(tl&gt;polgllt,_,.iYIIICII ' 16.2610 3 ChoolellandW. GeoUG&amp; -o independOnCI(ti'I)0.714a,7, l*!Oft(8-1) t
regian
ioglonol quarlOrllnall): 16.1011·. '4, Medina Buci&lt;oYt 6-1 9.7000. 8, ~I1(,(2.e-o)~ !~\~· ~
,
14.3825. 5, Hunt. ValleY Unlv. $ohool (8-1
Middten.ld ~""na ~
~·
•
'
DMIIOIII
13.6921J. 6, Chardon Ntl-Calhodral Latlll L.lebo!l David Andoi'IOII (8-1) 7Je85.
•
R11J1qn 1 - 1 , - (HJ) 19.7571. 2, (5-2) 11 .8571 . 7, Atuon Hoban (5-2)
~ 1 &amp;-;;~...S~~~(7(8-i)) &lt;
Werron Harding (7-o) 19.1785. 3, 11.5214. 8, Cuya, Fallt Waloh JtiiJit (+2) 13.~, · • ~"rt
,
~ St Edwol!l (8-1) 17.8871 . 4, 11 .1103. 9, Hubbar&lt;l (5.:!) 10.8525. 10. 10.• 14?. 3, tlelphQe St. Johnl (8-1 lt
eM. Bt. lgl:llllluo (7-Q) 17.4435. 6, etow. R""""""' SE (5-2) 10.0928.
9.mB. 4, LOrlln CI&amp;ANiew (5-2) 9.ol57\. l
Glenville (6-1) 14.5808. 6, L a - (6-2)
Region 1o-1 , Surbury Big W.IOY! (1-o) 5, Collns w..tem Reeerw (6-1) 9.3714. ,
12.41128. 7, Sloong~lo 15-2) 12.3142. 8, 15.2714. 2, Colt. WattOfoon (5-2) 13.3071 . 8, Oef.Tlnora (5-1) 9.1528. 7, lliutnon (tH) •
'~bung. AllotlniOWn·Flich &lt;1-3) 11.4357. 9, 3 , Bellevue (6·1) 13.2357. 4, Canal 8.2~7. B. Findlay Uberty- (6-2)
Mevtlold (5-2&gt;' 11.00.2 10. Euclid (4.'!) Winchester (5-2) 12.1785. · 5, Lima H714. 9, 6ucytuS Wynford (5-2) 7.4102. ,
10.8071.
, .
Sllawnee (5-2) 11.4428. 6. Cots. tleSalet 10, LlberiY Ctr. (5.:!) 7.3810.
•
(7.0) (&lt;1-3) 11 .3381. 7, Pamberville Ea!!JWQild(EIRegion 19-1, 8arahavile $htnend0ah ~
Rtglon 2-1 N. Conlon 19.7747. 2, Tot.'w_hllmer (7-o) 18.6428 . 3, 1) 11 .1214. 8, t&lt;onton (H) 10.4500. 9, (7.0) 16..724-4. 2. Mlnlold (1.0) 12.!142. 3, 1
EIIIJneWiek(7-o) 15.0785.. 4, Mus. Jackson
.
Colt. ~amlllon Twp. (6·1) 10~416_ . 10, Oak Amanda.Cioarcreek (6-H 11.9857. 4, j
(Sri) 13.78:18. s, GIWI\ (!i-1) 13.n63. 6 , Harbor (4-3) ~.&lt;Ie42.
1
Chloapnke
(1!-2)
11.4751.
5, 1
Wl.dtwon~ (5-~) 12.71170. 7, l,luo.
R!&gt;Qion 11-1, Llobon BeMr (7.0) . Newcomerstown (6-1) 11 .~· 6, 1
waotli1glori(W)12.5642.8, Hudson (6-1) 19.3142. 2. Dover (7-o) 18.3265. 3, Woodllleld Monroe Central (6·11 10:26&lt;15. •
11o7500. 9, TOI. DeSale&amp; (6-2) 11.0642. 10, S l e u - (7-o)16.8151 . 4, Canal Fulton 7, Wheelersburg (&amp;·2) 10.1455.. 8,
~ (4-3) 9.607(
.
N.W. (1-o) 16.12\4. 5, Rayland ~ .Crooi&lt;BVIIIO (5-2) 9.1071 . 9, W. Lafayont,
Region 3-1 WeotefVIIIe South (7-o) Loeol (HJ) 12.9134. 8, Now eo_.t John Ridao'MIOd (6-2) 6.2387. 10,l'IIIIIOf!\lllltl- '
19.178&amp;.; 2, Hilll&lt;ll!l o8v~n (6-l) Glenn (6-1) 11 .~. 7, Tllolrwille Yori:(W)I.OO!:In
' .
Pal .~ ...... 17 ;
15.3500. 3, l..lno:Uier (6-1) 14.8214. 4, Sl&gt;eridon (5-2) 10.8214. " Gill Qllllla
Region 20-1."" bri4ge nt ••..., - 1
DUOIIn ~ (6-1) 14.4071.
GroYo Aced. (8-1) 10.1437. 9, Minerva (8,1) 0) 11.8000.
MarlOn Plosanl
1
City (6-2) 12.0387. llutllln Sc1010 (6-1) 10,0714. 10, Poland Seminary (5·2) 11 .15071. 3. Gahanna ·Colt. Mad. (8-l!
12.8785. 7, wooater (5'2) 12.5785.
9.9142.
'
11 .2447. 4, Morral Ridgedale (6-1
MaltontloT&lt;IIng (6-1 ) 12.2Z!O. 9, Gahanna Region 12- 1. Newark Lk:klng V1111ey (7· ·10.1928. 5, Cln. Hilt Chrls11M Aca&lt;l. (8-1
l.lnilcln .(e-1) 11.6000. 10, Molin! Vomon 0) 15.1714. 2. Sl. Marya Mamorial (6-1) 10.4784. 6, Cols. Har11ey (4-3) 9.6828. , '
(6-1) 9.8714.
15.1285. 3. B•llbrool&lt; (6-1) 14.9ooo. 4, Aroanum (6·1) 9.6357. 8, L... Creel&lt; E. '
Rtglon 4-1, Cln. Col8!81n (Nl)18.8780. Archbishop Alter (6-1) 13.7500. 5, Day. Clinton (5-2) 8.7385•• 9, MJddl,e"""'
2, Ma..n (6-1 ) 18.4571 . 3 , Clayton Chanhiull...,. (6·1 1 _12.n85. 6, Hain. Fenwk;k (6-2) 8.3285. 10, Cardington·
l&gt;jorthmonl (6-1) 17.3828. 4, Cln. Elder 16- ~ (5·2) 12.6285. 7, St. Paris Graham Llncol~ (5-2) 8.1.000.
DIVISIONV1
,
,
1) 17.3625.5, Cin. Oak Hils (6-1) 15.&lt;l4~8. (6·1) 12.1857. 8, Cln. lndlai1 Hill (6-1)
6, Cl!1. Andtrton (6-1).142500. 7; Huber 11 .6785: (1, Germantown 1/a!eyVlew (1-o)
Region 21-1, l.logadprp (6-1) 1•.3000· •
Hto. Wayne (6-1) 13.9500 • .8, Cen.tervHio 11 .5857. W, Tipp City Tlppocanoo (8·1) 2, Norwalk St. PaUl (1-o) 10.9lj57. 3,
.(5-2) 13.3142: 9, Cln. Moeller (4·3) 11 .5367.
.
Windham (6-1) 10.4098. 4, CIM. Cuya. :
DM810N IV
Hts. (7.0) 9.5712. 5, Monroeville '(5-2)l
12.8461. 10, Cln. Prilicetcri (8-1) 12.1414.
DIY1810N U
Roglon 13-1 (tie), Young. Mooney (8· 1), 6.4357. 6, Leetonia (6-1) 8.1142. 7, Sl ,
Roglon 5--1, Nonlonla (f.O) Apple Creek~ (1.()) 12.3214. 3 Mary Cenlral Catholic (5-2) 7.3714. 8, New
18.8214. 2. Warren HOwland (6·1) Sullivan Black Riwlr (6-1) 12.0500. 4: Wash . .Buckeye
(5-1) 7,1883. 9, •
14.5367.
t.1ap1e Hts. (6-1) '12.4240. 4, Cuya. Falls Cuya. Valley Christian (7-o) ~MilO (5-2) 6.0571 . 10, SOUthington .
Parma Padua (5-2) 11.9044. 5, Chardon 11.4781. 5, Wlcl&lt;lllfe High School (6·1) Chalker(!l-1)5.3904.
,
(5-2) 11.1214. 5, Madloon(6-f) 10.6071 . 7, 11.2428. 6, SlruthOro (4-3) t0.6932. 7,
Region 22-1. Rawecn Cory-Aawaon (7- •
Copley (4-3) 10.2220. 8, Akron Gartlold (5- Onvllle (4'3) 10.4285. e. Woooter Triway O) 13.0428. 2. Columt&gt;ue GroYo (7.()) :
2) 9.$5'11 , 9, Olmsted F..e (4-3) 9.2428. (4-3) 10:4142. 9, '\bung. Uraullno (4-3) 11 .6214. 3, Carey (5-2) 8.4114. 4,
9.5231. 10, Girard (5-2) 9.3967.
HickSVIIe (6-1) 8.3852. 5, Edgerton (4.'!)
10. Beru (4-3) 8.9857.
Region 6-1, Sylvatlla SoutiMew (1-o)
Region 14-1, COldwater (7-o) 13.5428. 8.3630. 6, !.!&lt;: Comb (5-2) 7.8500. 7, W.
20.0842. 2, Maumee (6'1) 16.5857. 3, 2. tleHa (6-1) 13.1428. 3, Uma Bll!h (6-1) Unl~ Hilltop (6-2) 7.39150. 8, O.lphOI ,
Avon Lake (1-o) 14.2000. 4, Amherst 12.9428. 4, Urbana (6- t) 12.3928. 5, Jetfer..., (5-2) 6.6642. 9, -~6-2)
Sl- (6-1) 13.0768. 5, tleflance (5-2) Upper Sanduoky (7-o) 12.1214 . . B, 6.7387. 10, Hopewoii-Loodon 5·2) :
t2:2714, 6, Tot. WoodWIIJ1! (6-2) 11 .1500. WI.IPngton (5-2) 11.6857. 7, Huron (6-1) ~.4928.
.
7, Hollind Sprtngll,eld (6-2) 10.9428. 8,: 10.0714. 8, Milan !idleon (5-2) 9,5214. 9,
Region 23-1, Shadyside (8·1) 10.8657. 'i
Grafton Mldvlo\Y (4-3) 10.9357, 9, Tl"ln All&lt;lri (5-2). 9..2.428. 10, Rooafo'rd (4.'!) 2, Newark C.th. (6-1) 10,4928.. 3, Lane.
Coltlmblan (6·1):9.8285. 10, Lewis Ceiller 7.7000.
.
' . · .
Fls~ar Calh. (6-1) 10.2.071. 4, Cenle!bi.Kll
Cllenlangy (6-2) 8:4785.
· . . R.n 16-1, lron1Dn (1-o) 18.1237. 2, (5-2) 8.9428: 5, Now l.lalamoru Frunllilr '
Region 7-1. Plci&lt;arlngtQI) Conlral (1.0) Wl!IIJmapori Woot1all (6-1) 12.42115. 3, (6-1 ) 8.0857. 8, GIOUIIter- (8-t ) !
16.4571 . 2. Cots. Brookliaven · {7.0) ·Coa!l!&gt;Oio~ (6·1) 11.1428. 4, 8allalre (6-1 ) 7.1715. 7, WH!qw Waad Sy..- Vttilfy ,
15.4581 . 3, Wllltohaii·Vearllng (7·0) · t0.9517. 5, Ironton Rock Hill . (&amp;-1) ~
. 1)7.7142.8,MIIIerap0rt(6-1)7.4857.9, l
13.3285. 4, 'lbung. Chaflll)l (6-t) 13.3084. 8.8181 . 6 , l.lar~n• Ferry (5·2) 8.6357. 7, OlliMIIO (6-2) 6.7571 . 10. Marlon Oatt&gt;. (6- :
S, UnlonJpwn Lake (H) 12-0285. 6, Col&amp;. . River Vlltev (ll-1) 7:1214. 8 , Granville (6- 1) 6.8828. .
.
,
· Independence (5·2) 11.4117. 7, Colo. 2) 7.0642. 8, New LexlngJon (4·3) 6.8157. . Region 24--1, C&lt;wlnglon (1-0) 12.5785.
2, N. Lewisburg Triad (1.0) 11.2714. 3. ,
Wal nut Ridge (6·1 1 9.5325. 8, Now 10; PonamoU1h (3-4) 6.0285.
Philadelphia (8·1) 9.5071 . 9 , Alliance
Region 16-1, Clarl&lt;svllle Cllnton-M- Spring. C.th:
(1-o) 11 .1857. 4. Oola ,
Marllnglo!1 (4.'!) 9.0357. 10, Louisville (3- (7-q) 14.6724. 2. Versallleo (1.0) 13.1 142. Hardin Northern (~1 ) 9.2214. 5, Troy •
4) 7.2142.
3, Batavia (5-2) 9.3038. 4, Reading (5-2) Christian (6•1) 8.3000. 6, DeGroff !
Raglan 9-1, 1t)lnlon !'dgowOOd (7-o) 9. 1357. 5, Plain City JonathOn Alder (5.:!) Alveroide (~1) 8.2928. 7, Mana Stein •
18.8357. 2, Kings Millo Kings (8-l) 8.9928. 6, Dayton Oakwood (6-2) 8.8357. Marton local
(5-21
7.0357. 8, 1
15.1928.3,J-(6-1)13.3S7! . 4,Cin. 7, Cln. Marlon\Ont (4-3) 7.8142. a,
Mecllanlcsburg(4·3)7.1J285.9. Minl!er(3- 1
. Mt. Healtt!f (6-1) 12.6928. 5, Cln. Glon Millon Millon-!Jnlon (4-3) 6.8214. 9, $prtng 4) 4.1714. 10, Cln. Summll COuntry Day •
'
Este (~2) 12.4500. S. Cin: McNich&lt;&gt;laa (+ Norlheaslorn (4·3) 6.2857. tO, .Lomlon (4- (HI) 3.2024.
3) 10.2500. 7. Vandalia .euuar (5·2) 3) 6.2697.
'
· 10.1000. 8, Dey.. Correll • (4-3) '9.4571 , 9,
DIVISIONV

-to

'

2

1

, , l l \1', . \ ., 1

I

e.

5.

2,

(7] •

e.

1 '"

•

_,. Eastern looking to end
losing streak. See Page 81

I

c.m.

w.

Coaches: E-mail us, fax us or phonE
In your game reportsl

. OBITUARIES
'Page AS
• Gael Dudding, 79
• James McHaffie, 71

AGRICULTURE

www.jimsfarmequipmentcom

.

Bv BRIAN

INSIDE
.

LeBron

:• Community calendar.

See Page AS

:• Law you can use. See
P;&amp;ge AS

c- of ralr!, I!/:. 70., Low: &amp;Oo

~·-..-.....-- · jo&lt;• "'""

'

\ ,, . . . . .

.

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org

Detalte on Pace A2

MOTOR ROUTE
AVAILABLE

see it," James said, "so l'm

in Racine, Long Bottom and Portland Area

goin!) to try to put them in
position where they can score
a basket." ·
James also got his first
taste of what playing on the
road this season. will be like

Earn up .to S1.,000 per month
Call992-2155
'
for information

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Norris Northup Dodge

www.pvalley.org

LoTIERIES

NEWSPAPERS

Ohio

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

The Daily Sentinel

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com
ENTERTAINMENT

www.charter.com
Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
· Counties EYERYPAY with a listing of
your web address in our

WEB SITE...,••~~"'

Thursday, October 23

Bonus Ball: 36
Kicker: 4-G-1 -2~7-2
Dally 3: 3-Q-5
-Dally 4: 9-1-2-5

for only a $1 a day.

David King was the winner of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District's Big Tree Contest. This year's tree was
the American Beech and King nominated the winning tree which
is located on the Sherman White Farm on Murray Road near
Pomeroy. Vicki Morrow, SWCD education coord inator, presents
King with a certificate. He will also receive a $50 savings bond.

J.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Age-old excuses like "The
dog ate my homework" and
"I didn't know about the test"
won't cut any ice at Eastern
High School now, with the
introduction of an online calendar accessible to both students and their parents.
School events, athletic
schedules, state testing dates
and other important infonnation .
is fOund on the calendar, found'
at eagle.el.Kl2.oh,usldefault.
But the best thing about the cal.' endar, according to Principal
Rick Edwards, who introduced it and oversees it, is
that users can subscribe to a
notification service, which
will help students meet
~ssignments and prepare for
tmportant tests.
fn addition to the calendar's main page, teachers can
set up their own pages, complete
with
homework
assignment deadlines, test Jillian Brannon and Georganna Koblentz access Eastern High School's new online calendar
dates and other academic inforfrom the school's computer lab. Among other features, the calendar site allows students
and parents to receive important information about testing dates and assignments up to
Please IH C.lendlr, AS
two weeks in advance . (Brian J. Reed)
·
.

·GOD's Net moving
to Pomeroy Unitea
Methodist Church

.Calend;l.rs

AS

:Ciassifieds
:Comics

B4-6

Dear Abby

A3

J;.ditorials

Ax

:Movies
..

As

Sports
· Weather

"

111 1 1 11

I ,

•• II•

J.

B7

As
81-4,8

A2.

@ 2003 Ohio V.Uey Publlobins CO.

Southern
Local extends
Grueser's
contract
BY

J. MILES UYTDN

jlayton@ mydailysentinel .com

RACINE
Southern
Local School Board unanimously voted t.o extend
Supenntendcm
Bob
Grueser's contract anolher
three years at a special board
me"'ting Wednesday.
After just over a year with
the distnct, the board evaluated Grueser's performance
and extended his comracl that
was set to expire in 2005 but
will now ex tend to 2008.
"The board fee ls excited to
have him working for the district... sa id Board President
Richard Hil l. "He will be a
great asset. to 1he school and
the community."
Board
member
Ron
Cammaratta said Grueser's
extensive experience · benefit
school.
Previou sly.
the
Grueser served four years as
Ple•se see Contract. AS

MEIGS HOMECOMING

Keith Rader, God's NET
director, said the Church
has been very helpful.
"I would like to thank them
POMEROY
The for their. help in our time of
Pomeroy United .Methodist need," he said. ''The space
Church has extended a help- that they have donated will
ing hand to God's Net by help out until the Mulberry
allowing them space at the Community Center is open
church to continue the after- early neltt year."
school program until the
Rader said he is·uncertain
Mulberr)'
Community as to when .God's NE'f
Center is ready for business. would be able to move into
GOD's Net has to move the Mulberry Community
from its current location at Center, which is the former
106 W. Main Street by Nov. Pomeroy
Elementary
I to make way for a possible School.
The
Meigs
new business in thti build- Cooperative Parish puring. Carson Crow who owns chased the property from
the building said when con- the Mei~s Local School
tacted this week that while District m September for
he is negotiating with $1.
-potential lennants, "nothing
PleiiHIHMovlai,' A5
has been firmed up yet."
BY

JNnEX

:o bituaries

t uu l ,ul.

Outstanding cooperators for 2003 recognized at the annual
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District's annual banquet
were Bill Dix and Stacy Hall , Shown from the left are Hall. previous landowner Richard Manzey, Dix. SWCD Board Chairman
Chris Hamm , contractor David Chase and his wife . Sherry.

REED

MILES lAYTON .

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

2 SI!Cl10NS- 16 PAGES

Charter Communications

-.

Pick 3 day: 7-3·5
Pick 4 day: 6-1-2-6
Pick 3 night 1-6-7
Pick 4 night: 5-5-4-7
Buckeye 5: 2-1G-12-36-37
SuperLotto: 16-32-3341-45-47

West VIrginia
Point Pleasant Register

1\\\\\

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

AUTOMOTIVE
as the league's most heralded
rookie.
He was greeted with a mixture
of boos and cheers durfrom Page 81
ing pregame introductions,
one fan paraded around
baseline and as he dribbled and
the Palace with a sign that
across the lane, a Detroit read: "King of Over Hype".
defender stepped in front of
That wasn't all . As James
him. James then instinctually got ready for the start of the
delivered a no-look, behind- second quarter, a heckler sitthe-hack bounce to center
Zydrunas llgauskas . for a
dunk.
Of his seven assists, that
'
was James ~ favorite.
" I see a lot of things before
some of my teammates everi ·

·· ~t4) ' ~

Eastern implements online c.alendar

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

I)

newe@mydailysentinel.com

Ple•n see SWCD, A5

E-M•II: sports@mydallytrlbune.com
Fax numb•r: 4 4 6 - 3 0 0 8
Sports lin•: 446-2343. ext 33

WEB SITE DIRECTORY

tl\)(ll '• t l \'

STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - Bill Dix
and Stacy Hall were recognized Tuesday evening by
the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District as
the district's Outstanding
Cooperators for 2003.
The recognition came
durinjl the district's annual
meeting and banquet at
Meigs High SchooL
The couple, who reside
in Athens County, owns
and operates a new, 340acre dairy farm along state
Route 143 in Scipio
Township. Their goal was
to convert a grain farm
into a 150-cow dairy operation, with cows grazed on
multiple paddocks and

c.m.

a.

l l l l t \" " l l \ \

·q

Meigs SWCD names 2003 Outstanding Cooperators

SPORTS

.

ting behind the scorer's table
got his attention.
"Hey, ~eBron ,
your
Hummer is ugly," the fan
yelled, referring to the sports
utility vehicle that led to an
investigation during James '
senior season by Ohio high
school officials.
James had a quick reply.
He turned and smiled.

Bengals' new punter
has soft touch, Bt ·

POMEROY- It's been a
week of fun activities at
Meigs High School leading
up to Friday night's homecoming game between the
Meigs Marauders and the
Alexander Spartans.
The senior class nominees
for homecoming queen are
Page Bradbury, Katie Childs,
Lindsey Jeffers, Erica Poole,
and Sharon Stobart.
W~esday all of the high
school students cast their ballots for the 2003 queen to be
announced in pre-game ceremonies at Friday night's gart1e.
Dress-up days are being
observed all week with
Monday being opposite day;
Tuesday, logo day; Wednesday
Clllllouflage . day, 'l;hursday,
wacky-tacky day; and Friday
maroon and gold day.
Today a parade and bonfire will be held at the high
school. Parade entries will
line tip at the county garage
near the. fairgrounds and

Candidates for the 2003 Meigs High School homecoming
queen are ~rom the left, S&lt;lrah Stobart,. Katie Childs. Page
Bradbury, Lindsey Jeffers, and Erica Poole. The queen will
be announced In pre-game ceremonies at Friday night's football game in Bob Roberts stadium. (Charlene Hoeflich)
move to the high school
The homecoming dance
parking lot where there will wi ll be held from 8:30 to
be a bonfire and cookout. ll :30 p.m. on Saturday
Friday afternoon a pep rally night at the school.
will be held .

The Daily Sentinel
MEDICA-L CE,.;.TER

Call to have your
business Included!

992-2156

Discover the Holzer Difference

. ~

This FREE supporl !JIOIIP iJ ·
by tlte
Foondotion and Holzer Meclkol &amp;nllr
b1th), Octaber 14 • 5:30PM - 8:00PM • HMC ~ &amp; ConlweiCII c.....

Topics ~wil indudo.,.paln aonin&gt;l, .,..;.., ,.......,,laliguo, dopmoion and doctor/Potitnt ..lal;oouhip.

.

call . ' Rossa!

.

www ~holzer.org

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="483">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9934">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="21873">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="21872">
              <text>October 8, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1725">
      <name>cline</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="279">
      <name>dudding</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="865">
      <name>greene</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1317">
      <name>lusher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1030">
      <name>mchaffie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
