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                  <text>Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 9, 2003 '

www.mydallysentln~tl.com

Seniors win
home finale, Bt

Pomeroy ·l
McAllister to

-

{Q@(ID E~®~~ f®tr(Mtl . f®$l~~®U

perfonn

INelsonville I
Still life
with Iris
• Jeremy lee, a sixth
grader
at
Eastern
Elementary School, is
among the perfonners in
the Drama Club Youth
Theatre's production of
"Still life with Iris" which
opens Friday and runs
thro!lgh Sunday at Stuart's
Opera
House
in
Nelsonville. Jeremy lives
with Jo Hill of Long
Bottom. ,
The cast includes 32
young people ages six to
16 as well as two adults.
The actors hail from
across Southeastern Oho.
Written by acclaimed
playwright Steven Dietz, it
was the first play for
young audiences to win
the Kennedy Center's
Fund for New American
Plays Award.
Still life with iris focuses
on a little girl's se;ll"Ch for
the simplest of things,
home.
·
PerfOllllllllCiis star at 8
p.m. Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, with a 2 p.m.
matinee on Sunday.
Tickets are $7 for ages 13
to adult, $5 for ages, 9 to
12 and $4 for ages 3 to 8,
and may be purchased at
the door one hour before
each show. They may also
be pwdlased in advance
with a credit card by calling 740-592-3139. That
number can also be called
for additional information
on the show.

Chili
fest

'

SPORTS

local firemen visit elementary schools, teach fire safety

• Southern tops Lancers.
SeePageB1

J. MILES LAYTDN
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

Letart
Jam

•
sess10n
Morgan Leslie of Thurman, Ohio, comes
out of the tire in the festival hay bale maze~
The maze is just one of the popular chi~
dren's activities featured at the festival.

Lauderdale
and Box Set
·• Jim Lauderdale with
special opener Box Set
will be in the Fur Peace
Station Concert Hall
Saturday night. The concert gets underway at 8
p.m. Tickets are $25 and
are available at the Court
Grill or can be ordered
by phone with all major
credit cards
being
accepted at 992-6228.

!New Haven!

• There will be a Chili
Fest beginning at noon
Oct. 12 , at Union
Campground . ·
Enjoy chili, hot-d9gs.
and homemade ice
cream and desserts.
Proceeds go to ·maintain
Union Campground.

• Randy McAllister, a
roots and Texas blues
singer, will be penonning at 9 p.m. Friday at
the Court Street Grill.
At 9 p.m. on Saturday
Albert
"The
kid"
Castiglia , an electric b
blues pelformer will
take the stage.
There is a $10 cover ·
charge for both events.
More information can be
obtained by calling the
Grill at 992-6524 or
going
on-line
www.courtstreetgrill.co
m

• There will be a jam
session at the Letart
·Community Center from
6:30 to 10 p.m., Friday,
Oct. I0. Country, bluegrass, and gospel music
will be featured.
Admission is $1.
Letart Pioneers 4-H
Club will provide concessions.

jPoint Pleasantj
The Bob Evans Farms Homestead, built in the early 1820s, is on the National
Register of historic places. Today, it houses the Homestead Museum, featuring a company museum and historical center. Visitors to the Bob Evans
Farm's new Homestead Museum can see the likenesses of Bob and Jewell
Evans in their kitchen filming a commercial for Bob Evans Sausage.
Admission to the museum is free.

Dance at
senior center

33rd Annual Bob Evans Farm Festival
often entertainment, activities Oct. 10- 12
· STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIO GRANDE, Ohio · Starting Friday, musical
entertainment, traditional
crafters and artisans, farm
demonstrations, children's
activities and farm contests
will highlight the 33rd annual Bob Evans Farm Festival
in Rio Grande, Ohio. This
year's festival also includes
popular acts such as the
square dancing tractors,
lumberjack. shows , chainsaw carvers and a horseback
drill team.
The festival, held
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each
day, attracts tens of thousands to this annual celebration of the harvest season.
"We call it our weekend of
fun for family and friends of
all ages," said Bob Evans

Farm
Manager
Ray
McKlnniss. "The umque
combination of demonstrations and entertainment
offer the flavor of pioneer
life along with the excitement of . a modern harvest
celebration."
Musical
entertainment
includes country, gospel,
bluegrass and Dixieland
groups on the main stage.
More than 500 cloggers and
line dancers perform traditional steps and modern
dances on the clogging
stage.
More than 100 crafters
and artisans demonstrate
their work, many using tools
and techniques nearly forgotten
today.
Demonstrations
include
quilting, leatherworking,
blacksmithing, spinning,

weaving and glass blowing.
Farm demonstrations, such
as sheep shearing, horseshoe
pitching and corn shelling
are held throughout the festival.
Activities for the children
include a hay bale maze,
pedal tractor pull and lead
horseback rides. Contests
are offered for all ages,
including a feed sack race,
hog calling and a cow chip
toss.
Returning for the fourth
year is the H.O.P.E. Riders
equine-mounted drill team,
performing musical routines
and tricks on horseback.
Festival admission is $3
per person ·and parking is
free. School groups are
admitted at no charge.
Primitive tent and RV camping for the weekend is avail-

able at the farm.
While at the festival, visitors may tour the new
Homestead Museum, which
opened in May. The museum is an educational and
interactive experience that
tells the story of Bob Evans
Farms Inc., the Bob Evans
family and the history of
southeastern Ohio.
The
farm 's nearly 1,000 rolling
acres also provide a perfect
backdrop for hiking, picnicking and mountain biking.
For information about the
festival, the museum or
other events at the farm , visitors may call (800) 994FARM (3276) or visit the
company's Web site at
www.bobevans.com.

Vampire's Vault to open for Halloween
Do you believe in
Vampires? The legend of
vampires has been around
for centuries but most
people think they only
live in Transyvania. They
are closer than you think!
Vampires recently moved
into the olf schoolhouse in
Stewart, Ohio. The empty
structure was ideal for
them during the day and
the Ohio University cam-

pus provides a lot of
young 'blood donors' and
Hocking College is not
much farther (as the bat
flies) should supplies run
low.
The Federal Valley
Resource Center dares
you to roam the dark halls
of the vampire's domain
to see where they live,
how they live and what
they live on. Eat lots of

garlic before yoil visit just
to be safe.
The Vampire's Vault is a
haunted
attraction
fun
designed
as
Hallowe'en
entertainment. Though a safe
event, this attraction is not
recommended for children
under eight years old .
The Vampire 's Vault
opens on Friday, Oct. I0,

the first full moon in
October and will be open
through Nov. I every
Friday, Saturday an!f
Sunday from 7·11 p.m.
Admission is $5 per person.
Visit the Web site at
www. vampiresvault .com
or call Bonnie Lackey at
(740)662-4564 or Ledra .
Tanner at (740)662 -2666.

Buckeyes, Badgers face
stiffest test yet, Bt

• There will be a
dance from 7 to l 0
p.m., Friday, Oct. 10
at the Mason County
Senior Center. Music
provided by Rocky
Mountain Boys.
Concessions will be
available. A cake walk
and 50/50 drawing
will also be held.
· Admission
is
a
donation of $3 for singles and $5 for couples. Proceeds go
toward future activi ties at the center..
(Smoking and alcohol
prohibited.)

Southside
1hle
Country
• There will be a
dance from 7 to I 0
p.m., Saturday, Oct.
II at the Southside
Community Center.
True Country will
perform.

Ashton
Bean dinner,
gospel sing
• There will be a
gospel sin~ and bean
dinner begmning 4:30
p.m., Saturday, Oct.
II
at
Ashton
Elementary School.
Proceeds go toward
the cost of the sixth
grade
trip
to
Tennessee .

Co1ne on over to Bob's

INSIDE
·• Community calendar,
Please see A3
•.• Livestock report,
Please see A3

WEATHER
Showers, HI:

Detallo

Low: 40o

on Page A2

LO'ITERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 4·8-4
Pick 4 day: 8-8-5-6
Pick 3 night: 3-5-5
Pick 4 night: 8-7-3-9
Buckeye 5: 1-6-1Q-36-37

West Vll'ginia.
Dally 3: 2-0-7
Dally 4: '3-0-0-9
Cash 25: 1o-1 8-19-20-23-25

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- l6 PAGES

A3

Calendars
Classifieds

B4-6

Comics
Dear Abby ·
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies

B7

A3

A4
'

A6 .

As

NASCAR
$ports

BS
B1-4

Weather

A2

~

Far AU Your FaU Planting

7~,

"""3 Ohlo VaUey Publlshlltll Co.

smoking cigarettes who
carele ss ly dropped them
onto couches, sometimes
SYRACUSE - Education even bein~:o . unaware that
.they were sltlllit.
is a key to fire prevention.
other members of
Area fire departments vis- theHefireand
department including
ited Meigs County elemen- members of the Racine
tary school s thi s week to Volunteer Fire Department
talk to students about fire went to Southern Elementary
safety as part of the obser- to talk with students about
vance of National Fire what they could do to keep .
Prevention Week .
safe in the event of a fire.
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
"We told them to get
Department Chief Eber down, get low and ·get out,"
Pickens, Sr., has been a fire - said Pickens. "I think we
fighter for more than 45 made a difference. They
years serving 35 of those asked a lot of questions."
years as chief.
Gene Lyons, Meigs
"I have been to a lot of County
Emergency
fires that could have been Management Service direcElmer Newell, a memll!!r of the Chester Volunteer Fire
prevented," he said.
tor, reported that there were Department, tells seci!rd graders at Eastern Elementary
Pickens said he has seen 574 fire alerts last year in
about the importance of fire safety as part of National Fire
many kitchen fires as well
Prevention week . (J . Miles Layton)
Please
see
Safety,
AS
as tires caused by people
BY

Necessity
unites
community
behind quest
for generator
BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

RACINE
Last
February's ice and snow
storm proved how vulnerable Meig s County is
when the power is out.
The Racme Volunteer Fire
Department was used as an
emergency shelter, but sur\'iving inside was difficult
without electricity. Most of
the village wa~ also without
electricity for several hours.
"The tee storm made us
all come together as a
group,"
sa1d
David
Spencer, clerk-treasurer for
the village. "But it also
highlighted some areas we
are very concerned about
like getting a power generator to use tn emergencies."
Before spring arrived.
members of the community went into action to
begin raising $20,000
needed to pay for an emergency back-up power generator that will be used at
the fire department.
"Providing a generator is
the number one goal for the
communi~}','' said Doug Rees,
clerk-treasurer for the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department
Several community groups
carne together to begin a
fundrnising effort. Raffle tickets were sold for an Easter bas. ket on display at Home
National Bank in Racine.
Owing the spring and summer, several chicken-barlJeQue
fundmisers were held Most
recently, there was a basket
bingo tournament held at the
Middleport Legion Hall.
.Rees said that more than
$4,900 has been raised to
help pay for the generator.
David Spencer, clerktreasurer, said the village
appealed to Meigs County
Commissioners for funding
Community
through
Development Block Grants
but was unsuccessful.
Spencer
said
the
fundraising would continue
and is Qpllmistic the community will raise the money
to pay for the generator.

Things· of Halloween are the theme of painting projects being carried out in art classes
this month at the Senior Citizens Center. On cabine! doors and canvas tote bags, everything from ghosts and goblins to pumpkins galore are being painted by the dozen or so
women enrolled in the classes. Here Helen Smithson finishes off her painting on a cabinet door under the watchful eye of artist Michelle Garretson Musser. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Deadlock likely in mobile home measure
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com
MIDDLEPORf - A deadlock is expected Monday
when Middleport Council acts
on a proposed ordinance tightening restrictions on manufactured homes in the village.
The proposal to be decided
at Monday's regular meeting
is a tight revision of a mobile
home ordinance written in the
mid-1960's. The revisions
were recommended to council
by the. Middleport Planning
Commission, in an attempt to

bring about the repla&lt;:ement of
older mobile homes with permanent home snuctures.
To do so, the planning
commission asserts, would
increase the value of properties now occupied by manufactured homes, as well as
those properties adjacent to
mobile home sites.
The ordinance proposed
spells out minimum manufactured home lot sizes,
requirements for tongue
removal,
front
porch.
dimensions and specifications, and underpinning
requirements, and states

that any mobile home must
be re-occupied within 30
days after it is vacated.
A stipulation that all mobile
and manufactured homes beg
owner-QCCI!pied was removed
from the proposal during the
public hearing stage.
Council members Kathy
Scott and Bob Pooler voted
against the frrst reading of
the measure, held on Sept.
8, and Councilman Roger
Manley, who owns a number of rental mobile homes
in the village, abstained

....... -

Dudloc:fl. A5

Sheriff
transfer
allows for
depu.ty's
return
BY BRIAN

POMEROY - The tnmsJer
of nearl y $7,000 into his
sa larie s
budget will
a I I o w
M e i g s
C ounty
Sh e riff
R a I p h
Trussell to
bring
a
deputy back
to
work.
ho pefull y.
TI'IIAIIII
he
said,
throu~h the end of the year.
Me1gs
County
Commi ssioners.
meeting
Thursday, approved the transfer of $5,000 from Trussell's
contract services appropriation into his appropnation for
salaries. They also approved
the appropriation of $1 ,955.16
from hi s Furtherance of
Justice account, a discretionary fund Trussell controls,
into the salaries line.
A!so approved was a
$ 1,500 transfer from contract
services into Trussell 's gas
and oil fund.
The transfer into Trussell 's
salaries line will allow him to
pay Deputy Scott Trussell,
who has been back on the job
for two weeks. Deputy
Trussell, the sheriff's son. is
the highe st-ranking officer in
term s of seniority on the
deputy force. Tru ssell said.
and that' s why he is the first.
deputy to return to work.
Trussell laid off his entire
staff of deputies this summer,
after depleting his salaries
fund. Acivillawsuit, demanding a writ of mandamus providing additional county
funding for deputies' salaries,
continues to languish in the
Fourth District Court of
Appeals, awaiting a ruling.
Deputy Trussell was called
back to work initially to cover
for an office administrator
who was off the job, Sheriff
Trussell said Thursday, but
the transfer will "hopefully"
allow him to remain on the
job until the end of the year.
. "He's basically working
with me as relief," the sheriff
said yesterday. "The office
will continue to be open only
from 8 a.m. until noon, so
that we can take complaints,
and in the afternoons we will
serve warrants and other
papers, as I have been."
In the past, commissioners
have refused to approve
Trussell 's requests for interdepartmental transfers. In
April, Trussell requested the
transfer of $29.000 of his
$30,000 appropliation for prisoners' food, because the county
jail is closed. Commissioners
refused to approve the transfer,
acting on the advice of Tilomas
Leubbers, the Cincinnati attorney representing them in the
civil lawsuit

.And Decorating Needs!

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
A WIRED WORLD COMPANYN

228 Main Sl.

Drive-Thnl Wlodow

992-5432

Trai
rling
· · for
•

Real

.C row's Faml'y Restaurant

114 mile noith o1
Pomeroy -Mtloon Brtdge
M110n, WHI Vlrglnll

Phone (304) 773-5721
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

2400 &amp;lien! Avenue

Goilllpoll1; Ohio

Phone (740) 44&amp;-1711
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

1·800-972-5757

Real

•

J. REm

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

.. ,

�.

•

Thel Daily Sentinel
Oct. 11

AccuWeather.com lorecastlor dav~me conditions lowlhioh temoeratures

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Rain

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Snow

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show~rs

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Columbus
day ... Partly
Today... Mostly cloudy with cloudy. Highs in the lower
a chance of showers. Highs in 70s.
the lower 70s. Chance of rain . Tuesday.. .Panly cloudy. A
30 percent. .
.
chance of showers from early
Tomght. .. Pa;tly
cloudy. afternoon on. Lows in the
Lows tn the m1d 50s.
.
.
Sat urd .ay... par tl y c1ou d y. upper 40s and htghs m the
Highs in the mid 70s.
upper 60 s.
Saturday
night. .. Partly
Wednesday ... A
slight
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s. chance of show~rs in the
Sunday...Partly cloudy with mormng ... Otherwtse partly
a slight chance of showers. cloudy. Lows m the upper 40s
Highs in the lower 70s. and highs in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Sunday
night...Partly Lows in the lower 40s and
cloudy..Lows in the upper 40s. highs in the mid 60s.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10.000

Oct 9, 2003

D:w.J&lt;nes

.

9,500

.in::h:trials

9,000

+4CI.iJ'
,.

JUL

9,680.01

AUG
Low

Hlg~

Pet. change
tram pre'olkKJa:

+0. 51

9.766.69

oq

SEP

8.500

Record high: 11,722.98

9,633.20

Jan. 14, 2900

Oct. 9, 2003

2.000

Nasdaq

1,800

1,600

Hlg~

Low

1.400
SEP
OCT
Record ~lgh' 5,048.62

1.936.93

1.899.21

March 10, 2000

AUG

JUL

1,911 .90

Pet chlnro

from prev oua: +0.96

Oct. 9, 2003

1,0 50

Starrlard &amp;
R:xr.s 500

1,000

050

JUL

1,038.73

Hlg~

Pet. chl':t

from pre oua: +0.48

1,048.28

AUG

SEP

Low
1,033.78

0()0

OCT

Record high: 1,527.46

March 24, 2000
AP

Local Stocks
ACI-24.70,
AEP - 29.60
Akzo-32.26
Ashland Inc. - 35.80
BBT -3707

BLI-15.35
Bob Evans- 28.47
BorgWamer- 76.20
Holding- 36.40
Champion - 4.57
Charming Shops - 6.63
Col -25.88
DuF\ont - 40.89
DG-21:19
Federal Mogul- .21
c~

Friday, October to,

The Daily Sentinel

2003

Community calendar

Perspective: Car buyers thinking safety first

Ohio weather
Saturday,

PageA2

OHIO

';&gt;

Gannett - 80.95
General Electric - 30.13
GKNLY-4.55
Harley Davidson - 50.25
Kmart - 28.55
Kroger - 19.31
Ltd. -17.Q1
NSC-18.87
Oak Hill Financial-29.81
Bank One - 40.56
OVB - '25.75
Peoples ~ 27.76
Pepsico - 47.98
Premier- 8.81
Rod&lt;y Boots -12.15

AD Shell - 45.45
Aod&lt;v.ell -28.21
Sears- 50.18

SBC-22.04
AT&amp;T -20.24
USB-25.36
Wendy's- 36.69
W.O-Mart - 58.96
Worthing1on - 13.50
Daily stock reports are ll1e
4 p.m. closing quotes df
the previOus day's tnmsaclions, provided by Sm~
Partne&lt;s al Advest Inc. df
Galfipois.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(UsPs 213-9&amp;o&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published
every • afternoon,
Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street. Pomeroy, Ohto. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid al Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Our main number Is

Our main concern in all stories is to be

(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E)(t. 12

Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14

Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext . 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
ClassJClrc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
Dlo1rtct Mgr.: TBA, Ext . 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mall:

newsOmydailysentinel.com

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Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
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DAYTON (AP) - When
Aimee Cunningham bought a
Ford Expedition, the spanutility behemoth that dwarfs
most other passenger vehicles on the highway, she. was
thinking about her bal)y girl.
" ! could have cared less
about safety until I had my
daughter," said Cunningham,
29, of Springfield . "I want to
make sure she's safe. If
somebody hit us, it wouldn't
be as· much of an impact.".
Experts say safety has
become a growingfoncem and
selling point for many car buyers in recent years, in pan due
to the perception that the world
can be a dangerous place.
·Consumers cite past highway
experiences and changes in
lifestyles as reasons.
" If used to be: 'Give me the
leather seats, give me the sixCO changer, give · me the
power sun'roof,"' said Eron
Shosieck, spokesman for the
Alliance of Automobile
Manufacturers. The trade
group represents 10 automakers that account for 90 percent of U.S. vehicle sales.
Now, he said, consumers seem
more interested in anti-lock

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Franciscan brother admitted
Thursday to shooting a
Roman Catholic priest to
death in his office and setting
fire to the church rectory
with the body inside.
Daniel Montgomery pleaded guilty to a charge of murder and a charge of aggravated arson in the December
death of the Rev. William
Gulas, pastor of St. Stanislaus
Church. Montgomery had
previously pleaded innocent
to two counts of aggravated
murder and two counts of
aggravated arson.
Montgomery
quietly
entered his plea and apologized to Gulas' family before
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Ann Mannen
sentenced him to 24 year to
life in prison.
., ."1 want to say how truly
· sorry I am that thi,s happened," Montgomery said,
wearing an orange jumpsuit
and handcuffs. "I sincerely
hope and pray that I may be
rehabilitated and honor
Father William's memory in
that way."
Prosecutors originally had
sought the death penalty in
the case that shook the parish
in east Cleveland's Slavic
Village, a working-cla~s community where Masses are celebrated in Polish and English.
But after reviewing the evidence arid speaking with
Gulas' family and parishioners
- who were against the death
penalty - the prosecution
accepted the plea agreement,

CLEVELAND (AP) Over the past 10 years, a
woman used the identity of a
high school classmate who
died 30 years ago to get hired
as a Cleveland public school
teacher and get married.
After an eight-day trial,
jurors Wednesday convicted
a woman . who prosecutors
say is Elizabeth Roberts, 51,
of Cleveland. an ex-convict
who not only stole the identity of a Charmaine Woods, but
apparently came to believe
that identity was her own.
She was convicted on three
counts each of forgery and using
forged documents, one count of
identity theft and one count of
tampering with records. She
faoes one to five years in prison
and a $10,000 fine. ·
SPR ING VALt EY
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fRI10/10/03 • THURS 10116103

TUES BARGAtN

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said
Cuyahoga
County
Prosecutor William Mason.
More than a dozen family
and friends of Gulas gathered
at the courthouse.
"He was just a wonderful
man. There's no other words
to describe him-· just wonderful. It's been difficult for
the whole parisli," said
Debbie Heyink, 50, blinking
back tears.
Heyink , who works at the
parish's school, was one of
several supporters wearing a
pin with Gulas' photo that
said, "Father William forever
in our hearts."
Gula~· second cousin,
Richard Bedoya, tearfully confronted Montgomery during the
hearing while Gulas' friends
and family members sobbed.
"I wi II never shed a tear
thinking of what you will
suffer, but I will always shed
a tear for Father Willie,"
Bedoya
cried,
as
Montgomery stared straight
ahead, his expression blank.
"He wants me to forgive you
- l will never do that."Prosecutors
said
Montgomery confessed to
killing Gulas. He has been in
Cuyahoga County jail without bond since his arrest Dec.
8, a day after Gulas' death.
Franciscan officials had
told Montgomery just before
last Thanksgiving that he was
being fired. Prosecutors said
Montgomery was upset about
the firing and may have shot
the priest because of that.
The morning of the mur:'
der, Montgomery and Gulas

had breakfast and attended
mass
together,
and
Mont¥o1)1ery re!umed to the
pnest s office wlth a handgun
between ll :30 a.m. and ·
12:30 p.m., Mason sa,td.
Mason said after the hearing that
he
believes
Montgo~ery
was more
an.¥ry wllh someone else.
. There was _another Father
wtthm the pansh that he had
more rage towards - maybe
it was displaced rage that
ended up killing Father
Gulas," Mason said.
That man, Father Michael
Surufka declined to comment i~ a telephone interview after the hearing.
Montgomery, known as
Brother Dan, called 911 to
repon the fire, police said.
Montgomery
comforted
parishioners who had arrived
for that evening's Mass and
afterward
attended
a
Christmas party_ turned
tmpromptu memonal for the
beloved pastor. . .
A January mdtctment
charg~,d that Montgom~ry
ac!ed purpo~efully and _wuh
pnor calculation and destgn.
Montgomery's
mother,
Janice Montgomery, suggested in earlier interviews that
Montgomery may be suffering
a sr,lit personality disorder.
'Everybody that has ever
known him has seemed to
stop and say, what happened?
Thts could not be,' Janice
Mont~omery, of King of
Prussta, Pa., told The
Associated Press in July.
Both she and her husband

ADMISSION

Assistant County Prosecutor
EriG Weiss contended she took
over her Columbus classmate's identity to become a
teacher. State law prohibits
felons from teaching.
Roberts, who refused to be
addressed by that name on
the witness stand, insisted
she is a vic~-m of scheming.
and wild co cidence.
Roberts s ·d she was the
target of intertwined conspiracies by the Cleveland school
board and other perceived
enemies. Her persecutors, she
said, put a felon's fingerprints in her personnel fiie
and tampered with records,
all to get her fired, disgraced
and possibly imprisoned.
. She said &lt;l "clique" of
teachers who had ostracized

her had powerful influence.
Weiss said school administrators discovered sbe was not who
she claimed to be during a routine
background check ·for a school
district promotion in 200 l. A
computerized state catalog
matched her !lfints to Roberts,
who was imprisoned in 1978-79
for theft in Swiunit County.
That database did not exist
when the district did a background
check before hiring her in 1995.
That led investigators to dismantle a scheme in which
Roberts fraudulently got Woods'

Tuesday, Oct. 14
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
the town hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 15
RUTLAND
Rutland
Village Council will meet in
regular session at 6:30 p.m.
in council chambers.
Monday, Oct. 20
MASON - Mason Town
Council, 7 p.m ., town hall.

Clubs and""
Organizations
Friday, Oct. 1o
POMEROY -The Widows
Fellowship will meel 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 Jtees Bailey
of Tuppers Plain
FW Post
9053. Members' re to take
Christmas gifts for vete.rans.
Hostesses will be Eileen
Buc~ . Mary Kay Yost, Mrs.
George Skinner and Mrs .
Mark Grueser.
Monday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Republican Party will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Courthouse.
NEW HAVEN -· Smith
Capehart American Legion
Auxiliary Unit 140 monthly
meeting, 7 p.m.. Post Home.
Meetings are held the first
Monday of each month
unless it's a holiday, then will
be on the following Monday.
Members are encouraged to
attend.
Wednesday, Oct. 15 ·
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the home of
Phyllis Hackett. Leah Ord will

showed little emotion as their
son was sentenced. They exited the courtroom without
commenting after the hearing.
In a profanity-laced journal
entry
prosecutors
say
Montgomery wrote three
days before the murder,
Montgomery expressed his
frustration with the church's
criticisms of him.
"Also they say I make peo.
pie uncom~o~a~le I on I and
m group slluatlons (how the
(expletive) am l suppos~d to
change other people?) he ._
wrote on Dec. 4.
D~riilg his nine years at St.
Stamslaus, Gulas led the
restoration of the church's
interior, raising $1.4 million
to peel away years of soot
and tarnish that hid the gold
leaf of the vaulted ceiling and
stained the robes of the star-·
ues that stand on every column and doorway.
For several days after his
death, thousands of people
poured into St. Stanislaus for
prayer services and memorials in his honor.
Gulas was buried 1
.
a .a
FranCIScan_ cemetery t.n
Pulaski, Wts., bestde the fnary where both he and
Montgomery began thetr

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MATINEES SHOWN ON
Sf&lt;T &amp; SUN ONLY
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6'30 PM.

SCHOOL OF ROCK (PG13)
MATINEES1 :00, 3:20,
7:00. 9:20

'

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'fJ)41' Ad"'~

tr~~mn~.

l think the best that can be
said i~ it _was ~ally a tragic isofated mctdent m what was otherwise a perfectly exemplary
life," said Henry Hilow,
Montgomery's attorney. "It just
culminated with a horrible act."

Pennsylvania birth certificate
and used it to build an identity.
After school officials asked
her be fingerprinted again in
2002, she burned her own
fingertips accidentally, she
testified. The burns permanently altered her prints.
The woman accused witnesses, including her former
husband and Woods' family
members, of lying. She and
her lawyer, William Kelly,
declined to comment after
the verdict.

The Area Agency on
Aging is seeking dynamic
individuals who are looking to enter the
health care arena.

.... -··· ·-

·~

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Sunday, Oct. 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 music by Mercy
River, a gospel quartet from
Gainesville. Fla. Bob Werry is
the church's minister.
Sunday, Oct. 12
CHESHIRE , · Ohio
Annual Walker reunion, Kyger
Creek Clubhouse. Pot luck
meal will be served at 1 p.m..
Dinnerware and drinks provided. All relatives and
friends welcome.

Other events
Friday, Oct. 10
LONG BOTTOM - A hymn
sing will be held at the Faith
Full Gospel Church, 7 p.m .
with The Clark Family
Singers.
Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER - A genealogy
fair will be held at the old
restored courthouse in Chester
from 9 to 5 p.m. The fair is cosponsored by the ChesterShade
Restoration
Association ,
BeQ!grd,Lodi
Historical Group, and the
Chester Daughters of America

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

Support Groups
&amp; Assistance
Saturday, Oct. 11
POMEROY - Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m ..

~

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Friday, October to,

every Sat!Jrday, in the basement of the. Sacred _Heart
Catholic Church oitllberry
Ave .
Sunday, Oc 12
1 POMEROY - Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, 7 p.m.,
every Sunday, in the basement of the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church on Mulberry
Ave .
Tuesday, Oct. 14
MASON - Bend Area
Cancer Support Outreach
Group. 7 p.m., every Tuesday,
Mason United Methodist
Church . All area cancer
patients, families, and caregivers in.vited.
LETART- HELP Diet
Class, . Letart Community
Center. Weigh-ins from 5:30
to 6 p.m. , every Tuesday, fol lowed by a s hort meJting.
Friday, Oct. 10
LETART - Jam session at
the Letart Community Center,
6:30 to 10 p.m .. second and
fourth Friday of each month .
Admission is $1. Country,
bluegrass, and gospel music.
Letart Pioneers 4-H Club has
concessions.
Saturday, Oct. 11
NEW HAVEN - Chili fest
at Union Campgrounds to
benefit the campgrounds,
starting at noon until the food
is gone. Ho.memade chili, hot
dogs, ice cream and
desserts. For more information , call675-7472.
MASON - Chicken barbecue, Mason VFW, beginning
11 a.m., sponsored by Mason
Elementary.
NEW HAVEN - Car wash
sponsored by Wahama
Junior High cheerleaders for
their uniform drive, 10 a.m.
until 2 p.m., New Haven Fire
Department.
Saturday, Oct. 18
HARTFORD - Craft show,
food and bake sale at
Pentecostal
Lighthouse
Church, 9 a.m. until 5 p.m.
For more information, call
Marie Smith at 773-5964.

Rio Grande is a unique soldiers can take Internet coursin stitution. in that it is pan es from Rio Grande and study
communiti' college and pan to become Registered Nurses
private umversity. The differ- while still servi ng in the Army.
ent aspects to Rio Grande arc
Rio Grande ha~ a new bacheall attracting ncw·studcnts.
lor's program in collaboration
As for the community col- with Hocking College in
lege, studies show that more Nelsonville that allows students
and more students across the to enroll in the Rio Grande
country are now choosing 10 bachelor's program and take
stay close to home to go to classes on the Hocking College
college. Many arc stayin•-•_ for campus. Th.ts program benefitts
economic reasons, but studies Hocking College, which does
have also show that since the not offer bachelor's degree pro9-11 terrorist attacks. many grams, apd it benefits the people
people are choos in g to stay who live near Hocking College
closer to their families while who want to take Rio Grande
they are in college.
classes close to their homes.
In the region , more people
The
Early
Childhood
are also becoming familiar Education program at Rio
with all of the programs Rio G d · 1
· ·
Grande offers at an affordable
ran e ts a so growmg 111 pan
rate due to the com munity because of new requirements
college's recruitment etfons, for people working in that field.
and also due 10 word of mouth
Rio Grande is adding new
fron) Rio Grande alumni ;md technology and new facilities
friend s of the college .
to the campus to help the
Rio Grande has been already excellent programs
expanding its programs in the improve, and students are reccommunity college and uni- ·ognizing the 9uality educaversity, and that is also help- twnal opportuntttes avatlable .
ing to attract more student s.
. Dr. Greg Sojka, provost and
This fall , tor example, Rio . vtce_ prestdent of academtc
Grande started a radiolooic atfmrs at R10 Grande, satd
technology program on ca':n- that all of the new students
pus. The national health care can create some challenges
worker shortage has raised a for the college, but the chatdemand for radiologic tech- lenge s are ones that Rto
nologist s, and 20 student s Grande IS ready for.
enrolled in the Rio Grande
Prestdent Dorsey agreed.
In 1999. Rio Grande had a
program this fall, with another 62 students enrolled in the total enrollment of 2,080 stupre-radiologic technology dents at the end of the fall
program hoping to be admit- term. In 2000, that number
ted into the program.
jumped up to 2,3 13 students.
Rio Grande also offers an on- In 200 I, the number rose to
line nursing program lor sol- 2,35 1 and in 2002 , it
diers in the U.S. Army who are increased . to the record of
Licensed Practical Nurses. The 2,487 students.

Livestock Report
United
Producers
Iivestock report

550-625: steers $88-$94.
heifers $80-$85; 650-725:
steers $80-$89, heifers $75$82; 750-850: steers $78$87, heifers $68-$75.
Fed Cattle
Choice: steers $95-$100.
heifers $92-$97; Select:
steers $70-$80, heifers $68$75; Holsteins: steers $72$78.
Cows - higher
Well
muscled/fleshed:
$40-$50; Medium/lean: $32$37; Thin/light: $25-$33;
Bulls: $45-$53.

GALLIPOLIS - Here is
the weekly market report for
Wednesday, Oct. 8, from
United
Producers
in
Gallipolis.
Feeder Cattle- steady
275-415:
steers $95$117.50,
heifers
$85$117.50; 425-525: steers
$90-$100, heifers $82-$94;

Back to the Farm
Cow/half pairs: $400$675; Bred cows: $400$650: Baby calves: $30$180; . Goats : $30-$82;
Lambs: $79-$down; Hogs :
$32-$35.
Bred cow sale Wednesday,
Oct. 15 . Special Saturday
feeder sa le at I 0 a.m.
Saturday. Oct. I 8.
For information. call 4467476. or visit the United
Producers Web site at
www.uproducers.com.

Bend Area business notes budding first year
BY KANDY BoYCE

kboyce@ mydailyregister.com

crafts. flowers and arrangements.
Allen
offers
florist
· qrrangements for funerals,
weddings. special occasions
or just as a special gift for
someone. She is able to wire
the arrangements out of town
and offers free local delivery.
She uses cut flowers, silks
and live plants for her arrangements, and also makes custom
wreaths and customized.

NEW HAVEN- Vines and
Roses Florist shop in New
Haven will be celebrating its
first anniversary Saturday.
Owner Bernita Staats Allen
will be celebrating with
mu sic , refreshments and
door prizes.
"1 would like people just to
stop by and visit. While they
are here they can sign up for
the door prizes, which include
a $50 gift certificate, a gift ·
basket and a couple of other
smaller prizes," Allen said.
Allen, who is originally from
New Haven. moved back last
year and turned an old abandoned building in New Haven
into a cute little nest of gifts,
crafts, candles and flowers.
Allen said that her intent
was to make the shop look
homey and inviting. She incorporated an antique dinette set
into the decor so that friends
could come over and· chat
while she was working.
The shop is filled with linle '
novelties to dress up the home, as
well as scented candles, bears,

hand-painted mailboxes.
Allen said that the townspeople of New Haven have
been very supportive of her
over the last year and she
was grateful for their business and friendship.
Vines and Roses hours are
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday and 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Saturday.

Every Thursday
in the Sentinel ...
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~~ f(J _
Jf)fl ••
•

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TWIN OAKS

"Time to think about HolidaY gifts
Hours ·
&amp; gatherings"
w.
Mon. 111ru s.t..

Da

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lldlll

OPEN SEVEN DAYS AWEEK 11AM - 7PM
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2003

90069.

740-992-5829

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Most of my friends are
envious, and yes. it IS wonderful not ha ving to work.
However, I feel like I have
· become a kept woman . This
is all so new to me . I have
Dear
been independent most of
Abby
my life and I am having dif- - - - • · ficulty adjusting to this new
lifestyle . I feel '&gt;Cared that
my life is in someone else's
hands, not my own.
starting a new school with
What can I do to maintain
strangers. And I miss O')Y a sense of independence and
dad's black Lab. whom I still feel that my new '' wifehave grown to love. Dad ly duties" are important would never let me take him . and that I will be valued as
I don't know what to do. an equal partner with my
Please help. - SOUR AT 16 husband"- MARRYING A
DEAR SOUR AT 16: As MILLIONAIRE
much as you love your
DEAR M.A. M.: Feeling
father's dog, you were living nervous aboul losing your
in an abusive and potentially independence is understandfatal situation when you able. Lifestyle change. even
were with your dad. For if it is positive. can be stressyour own safety, you must ' ful.
remain with your mother.
Since your husband would
You do not have to lose prefer that you not work,
touch with your n~w friends . please consider becoming a
You can remain in contact part-time volunteer instead.
with them via phone and e- That way you can still con. mail. And since you miss tribute. but you will be freer
having a canine companion to accompany your husband
to love, ask your mother and on trips. Yolunteerism is a
stepfather if you can have a richly rewarding experience
family dog . Pets can be a and can lead to new contacts
bonding experience.
in
your
community.
. DEAR ABBY: I became However. you would be wise
engaged a week ago to to discuss this before your
"Max ," who happens to be a marriage so there are no surmillionaire. I come from an prises for you or your fiance
average working-class back- once the knot is tied.
ground and have worked
Dear Abb)' is wriuen b)'
since I was 18. I am now 49. Abigail Vait Buren, also
Max is a wonderful and lov- known as Jeanne Phillips,
ing man. We live in a beauti - and was founded by her
ful home with a housekeeper morher. Pauline Phillips.
and gardener. Max wants me Write Dear Abbr at
to be a stay-at-home spouse
and take care of our ocial www.DearAbbr.com or P 0.
and ravel arrange ents, etc. Box 69440, LOs Angeles, CA

DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-year-old girl, My parents
have been divorced for many
year~. Just befbre starting
high s.;;hool, I moved in with
my father and my older brother ari hour away, because I
wa~ not getting along with
Mom's new husband.
1t didn't take long to real ize how bad my father 's
drinking had become since
the divorce. He had a gun
and shot holes in the walls,
took a shot at my brother's
car, and cursed my brother
and me almost daily.
Just weeks after I moved
in, my brother went off to
college, leaving me alone
with Dad . Two days ago, I
was driving him somewhere,
and he got mad and yanked
the keys out of the ignition
while we were going down
the highway at 65 miles an
hour. The steering wheel and
brakes locked and we almost
n ashed .
I was so upsetthat I yelled
obscenities at him before
retrieving the keys to drive
back home. Once we were
on our way. Dad began
throwing thing s at me then he hit me. He yelled ,
"Go live with your mother!"
When we got home, he
called her and she came right
away to pick me up.
Now I'm back with Mom
and my stepfather, and she
wants me to stay. I ani torn .
As disgusted as I am with my
father, I am heartbroken at
the thought of moving away
from all the new friends I
made there. They provided
the only stability in my life
and kept me going . I feel lost
at the prospect of once again

34099 State Route 7 • Pomeroy, Ohio

___ ...;.._

. ..

BYTHE BEND
Teen misses her friends
after leavilng drunk Dad

Restaurant
the.flll,fow·in.!! people for

Serving Athens, HOcking, Meijs, Monroe, MOJJIUI, Noble, Perry, and Washington Couflliee.

··-~

e

Homecomings/
Reunions

Summarfields

"The AAA is currently accepting applications
for their Home Health Aide/Homemaker
Training Program. The program is of no cost
to the participants. Upon graduating,
, participant will be assisted with job
placement. For more information contact the
Area Agency on Aging at 740-374-9436.
Application deadline
October 17,2003.

·-·· I' -

i

RIO
GRANDE
Enrollment at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College is up again
this year, as the college continues to set enrollment records.
"We had a record headcount
enrollment both in the fall and
spring of last year," said Rio
Grande President Dr. Barry
Dorsey. "We're moving
toward another record enrollment this semester."
Rio. Grdllde bases its enrollment figures on head counts of
students taken twice during the
semester. The first enrollment
figure tor the 2003-2004 fall
semester showed a total enrollment of 2,273 students at Rio
Grande. At this time la&gt;t year, the
total enrollment was at 2,065.
Head count for the community college is I ,465, which I06
more than this time last year.
The in-district enrollment is
1.1 38. up 121 from last year.
Out-of-district students number 327, down 15 from this
time last year.
~io Grande also takes student headcount later in the
se me ster in order to account
for the classes and programs
that start later in the semester.
At the end of the fall semester
of the 2002-2003 school year,
Rio Grande had an enrollment
of 2,487. At the end of the
spring semester, Rio Grande
had an enrollment of 2,499. .
Since the number of students at this point in the
semester is the highest ever
for this early in the semestt;r,
Rio Grande officials say the
enrollment figure at the end of
the semester should be the
nighest ever for the institution.

Home Health Aide/
Homemaker Training Program

~

v

Robert Golden.

. .. ... ....

PageA:J

Enrollment record set at URG

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e

Memoirs of a Geisha" by

FREE TR\1\1\(; \\D .1011 Pl. \CE\IE\T

I

Mall Subscription

t .. .

Associates asked 20,000 car Americans seem more fearful
buyers how interested they today of such things as havwould be in 25 different fea- ing their children kidnapped.
tures that are, or soon could. That affects buying patterns.
be, in new cars.
"Safety across the board
Only about half of the 25 fea" has become more important
tures were safety-related, but the in everyday life, maybe
top seven as ranked by the buy- because the news is w grim
ers had to do wtth safety, said much of the time," Champion
J.D. Power research manager said . "Safety sells."
Mike Marshal. They UICiuded
Safety became very imporsuch things as morutors to detect tant to Bari Saul when her
low tire p~sure, _ann-whiplash van rolled three times and
seats and rught viston systems. landed on its top, throwing
Shosteck said there are sev- two of her children from the
era! reasons for the mcreased vehicle. The family walked
mterest tn safety. He satd away with cuts scrapes and
many of the newer technolo.
b
'h
gies are safety-related, so that spratns, ut t e memory
the newest features on cars remams fresh.
.
have to do with safety.
Saul, .42: of , Loveland,_ ts
But he also said today's buymg a used car and mststs
uncenain world- created in that II have atrbags. •
part by the terrorist attacks on
"You ~,;ant the_ most safety
New York and Washington - features, she satd.
.
has people looking for ways
However, Tanuny Valentme,
to protect themselves.
34, of suburban Riverside,
"Since September II , feels the added s~ety features
there 's ~een a greater empha- c~ bet~ expens1ve.
.
sis on personal security, and ·
I don t even thmk about tt
· that includes your personal when I'm buying a car, l
motor vehicle," he said.
guess because of the money
David Champion, director issue," she said.

Cleveland teacher not who she claimed to be

lnslde Meigs County
13Weeks ..
. ....... '30.15
26 Weeks . . ..... . ..... '60 .00
52 Weeks . ....... .. .. '118.80

.......

"We're at the point where
consumers wantto pay for safety technology in a way they
didn 't before," Shosteck said.
On Thesday, the National
Highway
Traffic
Safety
Administration announced 11
would begin supplementing a
mathematical formula with
road tests to better judge the risk
of a vehicle's· rollover and get
that information to car buyers.
In 2002, l 0,666 people were
killed in rollover crashes, up 5
percent from the previous year.
"Consumers need to consider
rollover risk when they shop for
a new vehicle," said NIITSA
Administrator Jeffrey Runge.
Automakers have tried
safety .before as a marketing
draw but with little luck,
Shosteck said.
In the mid-1950s the Ford
Motor Co. started an ad campaign called "You'll Go
Safer in a 1956 Ford" that
offered a range of optional
safety technologies.
In 1972, General Motors
Corp. hoped to sell l 00,000
Impalas equipped with new
safety technology, but could

Public meetings

Franciscan brother admits shooting priest

permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available .

Rates Outalde Meigs County
13 Weeks . ·... ... ......'50.05
26 Weeks .......... . .'1 00.10
52 Weeks . . . : .•... . .'200.20

brnkes, side-&lt;leployed air bags sell only 1,000, he said.
of Consumer Repons magaand stability-rontrol technology.
Last year, J.D. Power and zinc's auto-test facility, said

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P NION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October to,

2003

,.

Prescription: Love - another in a series on black churches

The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

STATE

PageA4

VIEW

Arnold
Caljfomia remll
Le Figaro, Paris, on the California recall:

You shouldn't mock Arnold Schwarzenegger; what
California invents, America adopts and Europe ends up imitating.
You can laugh at the 'Terminator," running for governor of
America's must populous state, stomping through his speeches with the strongest teutonic accent since Henry Ki ssinger. ...
· You can denounce the populist wave (that supponed)
Schwarzenegger's candidacy as an example of a democracy
gone mad .... But this is the same kind of groundswell that
made Ronald Reagan the first actor to be elected g\)vernor of
California, and then president.
Celebrity isn' t Schwarzenegger's only asset. He's in tune
with a changing political map ... voters from Latin America ...
represent 30 million Hispanic citizens nationwide ....
Yet California can't just be reduced to the glitter of
Hollywood; for the weak, the poor and blacks, it's a tough
. place to live .... Schwarzenegger must not forget this truth:
like all promised lands, Californi,a is also a place of hardship.

TODAY IN HISTORY

The sanctuary wasn't much
- one end of a vacant dru g
store . Instead of stained-glass
windows, worshiper' looked
up at empty shel ves that uncc
held things such as· asp irin,
cough &gt;yrup and spray cans
of shaving cream.
The ex terior wasn't mw;h
either. It still looked more
like a vacant drug store than
a church.
There was a telep hone
number to call fo r information on healing services and
prayers for the sick hut anyone would have had trouble
reaching the numbe r. One of
the di gits was mi ssin g.
Store-front churches have
long been a familiar sight on
the din gy. down-at-the-heels
urban landscape . The in vitati on in the window promises
salvation and a hetter life to
all who enter or pass by.
Never mind that some of the
letters in the sign may be
missing or that some of the
bulbs may be burned out.
You will he made to fe el welcome in the store-front
church - perhaps more welcome than you would be any where ehe in tl1e world .
There were only a few of
us at the store-front chu rch I
was att endin g bllt we sang
and clapped our hands and
listened to each other tell

THIS

Today is Friday, Oct. I0, 2003 the 283rd day of 2003 and
the 17th day of autumn.
TODAY' S HISTORY: On this day in 1845, in Annapolis.
Md,. the Naval School opened. It was later renamed the
United States Naval Academy.
On this day in 1957, President Dwight D. Eisenhower apologized to Ghanian Finance Minister Komia Agbeli after
Agbeli was refused serv-ice at a restaurant in Dover, Delaware .
The incident was one of many in which foreign diplomats
·were faced with the United States' widespread racial segrega'tion .
On this day in 1973, Spiro Agnew pleaded guilty to tax evasion and became the first vice president to resign in disgrace
- all in the same day.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Helen Hayes (1900-1993),
actre ss; Thelonious Monk ( 1917- I982), musician; 1-(arold
Pinter (1930-), playwright, is 73; David Lee Roth (1955-),
singer. is 48.
TODAY'S SPORTS: On this day in 1957, the Milwaukee
Braves won the World Series by defeating the New York
Yankees 5-0 in game three.
'
· .
TODAY' S QUOTE: 'The crimes of the U.S. throughout the
world have heen systematic, constant, clinical, remorseless
and fully documented but nobody talks about them.' Harold Pinter
TODAY'S MOON: Full moon (Oct. 10)

COUNTRY

NEEDS A

·p~ r,on u l Ri ghteousnc"i

George
Plagenz

what Je sus had meant to m.
Even I got up to make a testi monial. 'Pra ise the lord' '
they all said when I sat down.
A little girl got up and sang
'God never fa il s' without
any accom~animent. Then
&lt;.:arne the prayers. Things th e
re st of us compla in about
these people found a reason
to give · thlmks for. One
woman who was horn in th e
South thanked the Lord for
bringing her to 'this nice &lt;.:i ty
where we ca n ride the
buses .' A man gave thanks
thai 'God woke me up this
morning.
Th e pastor wa s 4 big.
good-natured man who was
'saved' 20 years ago and has
been preaching ever since .
He is a parking lot attendam
dur'ing the week :·
He never prepares his sermons in advance . ' I get a rc,velation from God when I
preach ,' he said. The Sunday
I attended. he spoke on

Services on Sund ay start at
about 9:00 in the morning
and end about 2JO or 3 p. m.
se rvices
on
Evening
Sundays. Weun esd ays and
Fridays start at about 7 p. m.
and end at about 10 or 10:30
p.m.
.
Nobody looks at a watch.
but at ahout 12:45 p.m. I had
to go 1 had been there srnce
1OJO a.m. 1 got up and made
another short te stimon y and ,
said I would be back. 'Prarse I
th e Lord.' they all said again .
The pastor at another storefront church I attend ed
was hed cars during the week
at a posh hi gh-ri se ,·ondomini urn. A 4~1iet. di gnified
man. he became transformed
in the pulp it. His eyes dan ced
and he became animated and
agitated.
A refrain ran through the
se rmon (which lust ed an
hou r). ·Do you hear me?' he
wou ld shmrt after he had
made a point. The congregation would respond with a
rollicking 'Yes'· 'Ame n'' or
'Go ahead"
Such enthusiastic responses would improve the performance of any preacher. It's
the blank faces found in most
congregations that kill many
a preacher's fervor.
When I was ~ pari sh min-

ister, I would often take off
my glasses when I preached .
The co ngregation would
then appear to be a b1g blur
and I would imagine th at
every bod y
had
eager,
expectant looks on the1r
faces. Peopl e didn't know
why but th ey always sa id I
preacl1ed better wi th my
gla sses off'
I had neve r been to a
dJUrch before that had an
Overseer wh~ sat on the platform to matntalll tlccorum .
On this
mornin g, the
Overseer told the peopl~ that
he saw 'too much whispering. gum-chewing and walking to the bathroom .'
I didn't notice any_of those
things. Althou gh. after hearing a yo ung woman soloist
sing ' Hi s Eye is On the
Sparrow.' I couldn't remember anything else.
(WRITE IN: Which are the
/II 'O or 1hree most imporwnl
COI/lllllllldments - th e ones
lt~e would use to /nul th e
e\'e11i11g neB'S? Wriie

w

me

1ri1h ll'hat \'011 think are th e
1\\ '0 or thrt~e mo.\·t hntwrtanl
commandm ents and . 1rlly.
Send rour lt!l!ers to Most
lmpo ria 11 1 C0 111111111 ulmen 1s.
Brh 06580, Columbu s. Ohio
4J206. l11 •i/f f'Ub/ish tfll' //lOSt
i111erest in g resJHmse s in a

fuw re column.)

C1IAHlffi

SUICIDE

BOMBING5

RELIGIOUS
FIGHTifi/6·

@1\to CJ~CINII&lt;If\f'OST
1.003

DICTAToR.

How ·to manipulate public opinion

THE DAYS WHEN
WE COULD ONLY

0ET THREE ...

-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

...t.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They shou{d
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
. ;be publi~·hed. Letters should be in good taste,
. :addressing issues, not personaliiies.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the. Ohio Valley Publishi"!g
; co.:~ editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
1

.

For the Record
Civil suits
POMEROY - Foreclosure
actions hav,e bee n filed in
Meig s County Co mmon
Pleas Court by Benefic ial
Ohio, In c., Elmhurst. Ill ..
against James R. Grueser,
Rac ine. alleging default on a
mortgage agreement in the
amount of $97.021.13 , and
by Beneficial Ohio . In c ..
against Guy B. Bin g. Sr.,
Middleport, anLI others. alleging default in the amount of
$29.183.96.
A civil suit has been filed
hy Stand Energy Curp.,
Cincinnati. against Alexis
Taylor Gardens . Portland ,
and others, alleging default
on a loan agreemem in the
amount of $ 102.826.6 7.
A suit ha,s been filed by
Putnam General . Hospital.
Kin gsport. Tenn .. again st
Jonnie
B.
Johnson,
Middleport. alleging an
unpaid debt in the amount of
$17.872.R3.
A complaint for repossession of collateral has bpen
tiled by Greentree Servicrng,

Inc., Columbus , aga inst
Barri nger,
Doroth y
Reedsville . and others.
Foreclosures have been
gra nted to Provident Bank
against Fred E. Ray, and others, and to American Genecal
Financial . Services, Inc.,
against Joseph W. Pullins,
and others.

Divorces
POMEROY Divorce
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court hy Lee Ann
Weddle , Portland . against
Gregory E. Weddle, Ponl and;
Pamela
Ruth
Pierce .
Pomeroy, against Sheridan
Elmo Pierce . Long Bottom:
Everett Michael. Pomeroy.
against Sharon M. Michael.
Pomeroy ; and
Virginia
Haning. Pomeroy, against
Warren M. Haning. Pomeroy.

Dissolutions
POMEROY
Di sso luti ons h&lt;tve been
gra nted in Meigs County

Local Briefs
Broadcast set
ATHENS - ,;Opening the
Door West: The Ohio
Compa ny of Associates,' ' a
docume1itury lilm produced by
Reedsville's Shelburne Films.
and featured in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel's "Along the
River'' section last week. will
be broadcast by WOUB-TV 20
at 8 p.m. on Oct. 16 .

Construction
zone off limits
MARIETTA
- Ohio
Department of Transportation
District I 0 is request in g
assistance from the public to
help maintain safety in major
work zones located in Athens
and Meig s Counties by steering dear of these areas.
"The Athens to Darwin and
R,avenswood Connector projects are major construction
zone s that are pre sently
restricted to the public," said

As most people know. the
objective of the politica l
opposition in a democracy is
to attack the political leader
by raising 'issues' that gradu~
ally chip away at his image
until he is reduced to bitesized bits suitable to be fed to
fishes.
The Democrats were making slow but reasonable
progress at deconstructing
George Bush in thi s way
until Sept. II came along and
rendered him, as a strong war
leader, practically unassail able. Now, however. in the
aftermath of the Iraq war, the
failure (thus far) to find
weapons of mass destruction
has opened up a new and
fruitful line of attack. The
opening salvo ,was fired by
Congressional Democratic
leaders, who demanded tu
know 'whether George Bush
· lied to us' by asserting the
existence of such weapons as
a principal reason for war.
Note that protective word
' whether.'
The liberal media promptly
· piled on - adding, for good
mea sure, th e anonymous
comments of former Clinton
administration officials · and
cashiered CIA agents, all
attractively
billed
as
'expe rt s' on the subject. The
word ' whether" somehow got
lost in this process, and all
that remained in the public

Bush had assigned to find out
the truth about the weapons
. of mass destruction, was to
issue a preliminary report.
Obviously, what Kay said
was going to be enormously
William
important to the success of
Rusher
the Democr&lt;tts' 'George Bush
lied' campai gn. Bush's opposition solved the probl em
brilliantly.
memory were th e three
What they did was obtain a
words 'George Bush lied .' In leaked copy of the Kay
dlle course. poll sters began report .about a week in
reponing that the percentage advance of its iss uance , and
of people who suspected announce that it reported
George Bu sh uf lying had finding 'no weapons of n\ass
increased significantly. and de struction .' Thi s version
this itself became a story was repeated daily until the
ge nerating gratifying head- report was actually iss ued,
lines.
and it seemed to reinforce tile
Never mind that President perceptio.11 that 'George Bu sh
Clinton himself had said , on lied.'
Feb. 17, 1998, 'One way or
Now. what poor Kay actuanother. we are. determined · ally reported (and tried
to deny Iraq the capaci ty to vali&lt;(ntly to rest ate when his
develop weapon s of mass report finally came out) was
destruction .' Or that Sandy considerably more nuanced.
Berger, his national security . To yuote The New York
adviser, had added the next Times, long after the damage
day, Saddam 'wi ll use those had been done by th e false
weapons of mass destruction characteriz11tions, 'The buragain, as he has I0 times den of Mr. Kay's report is
since 1983 .' Were they that while searchers have not
deceiving the Ame1:ican peo- found any weapons of mass
pie too'! Nobody thought to destruqion so far, th ey have
ask.
found evidence that Iraq still
That was the state of play intended to build them and
as the moment approached had retained equipment and
when David Kay, the unive r- personnel thai could be used
sally respected former arms to do it. '
inspector whom President
Quite a difference' But the

Democratic politicians were
ready with their fallback
position: The Kay report
demonstrated that 'Saddam
Hu ssein repre sented no
imminent . threat to the
United States that would justify war.' The weasel word in
that sentence is 'imminent.' '
The Bush administration
had never said that Saddam
represented an 'imminent '
threat. On th e contrary, Bush
and his advisers had quite
expli citly argued that we
dared not wait until th e threat
was ' immment' - that that,
when dealing with nucl eqr,
biological
or
chemi ca l
weapons. would be too late.
Hence the need to attack
sooner.
But such subtleti es were
predictably lost on many
people. For all practical purposes
the
Democratic
attempt to show that 'George
Bush lied: has been a brilliant success, as such things
go. Polls suggest that most
Americans still don't believe
it, but they also show a distinct upsurge in the number
of people who do. You c•1n't
ask more of a smear than
that.
(William Rusher is "
Distinguished Fellow of tile
Claremo111 Institute for the

Com mon Pleas Coun to
Sheila K. Jones and Duane L.
Jones, Sr., and to Terry
Wayne Spencer and Am y
Marie Spencer.

Sentenced
POMEROY • - Derek C.
McDani el was sentenced in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun to a charge of
burglary contained in a bill of
nformation .
McDaniel was ordered to
complete the SEPTA program, placed on five years of
community control. ordered
to participate in the community corrections program.
ordered to perform 500 hours
of COI!Jmunity service, and
ordered to seek full-time
employment.

Dismissed
POMEROY - Crim inal
actions against J imm1e W.
Seaton and George C.
Ramsey have been dismissed
111 Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun .

.•

ODOT District I0 Deputy
Director George M. Collins.
"When taking into account
the sizeable equipment working in these location s, it is
certainly not a favorable area
for exploring. "
Since this area is deemed
off-limits to the public and
construction crews are not

ex pecting to ti nd individual s
in tile work zone. venturing
there could prove dangerou s.
"Construction crews are
working on the se projects at
all times of the day and ni15ht
- and th ey are not expectmg
to find members of the public
in the work zone in any
capacity. " said District 10
Public Information Officer
Stephanie Filson. "To do so
could create a dangerous
environment for both yourself and those on the job."

Benefit sing
planned
MIDDLEPORT - A benefit

Study of Statesmdnship and
Political Philosophy.)

STOCKTON, Mo. (AP) - quaint town of about I ,800
Brian Hammon s has been residents. He doubted it was
eyeing black walnut trees as bad as his wife had
across so uthwe st Mi ssouri warned, but he immediately
drove back to Stockton.
from the cab of his pickup.
Hamnions, president and · "I had a big lump in my
chief executive of the country's throat and shed a few tears as
only commercial processor of I looked around," Hammons
black walnuts, likes what he said , recalling hi s arrival in
sees. If his gut is right, a bumper the town off~Missouri 32. "I
crop of some 30 million pounds grew up here. I can't even tell
of nuts will be .collected by you what it was like."
The devastation was so great
thousands of people in Missouri
the
federal
government
and 15 east -central states from
extended a rare offer to assist
lawns. pastures and tields.
The nuts will be distributed with long-term recovery.
Emergency
under the Hammons Products Federal
Company label at supennar- Management Agency assem~
kets across the country for use bled a team of architects, engiin cookies, cakes, pies and neers and community planners
other dishes. A variety of com- to create a comprehensive plan
panies also will purchase them to rebuild businesses and
homes. It also hired a recovery
for black walnut ice cream.
Only four months ago, manager - to be paid by
Hammons wasn't so optimistic FEM A for one year- to assist
about his company's ability to city leaders in pursuing grant
money to pay for projeets.
handle this year's crop.
Hammons knew he had
A tornado ripped throu gh
Stockton on May 4, damaging some' tough decisions to
40 of 120 businesses and more make about the business his
than 200 homes. Hammons family had staned in 1946.
Products Company. which The company's 87 employees
av'erages about $11 million in still had another eight weeks
annual sales, had an estimated of work to finish processing
$2.5 million in losses to its the 2002 crop. They needed
to clean and repair machines
plant and inventory.
It lost eight storage buildings in anticipation of the new
- leaving hur;dreds of bags that harvest that would begin
contained some 8 million arriving in October.
pounds of nuts tom and exposed.
Hammons could replace
" It would have rained black what was lost and ql\ickly
walnuts for miles if it had taken return to business as usual, or he
the bags, too," Hammons said. could implement modernizaHammons was at a tion plans that had been part of
Chicago food show when hi s the company's long-range plan.
Suppliers were sympathetic
wife called to tell him a tornado had . devastated the to ·Hammons' situation and

. .~~l'U~.--~iiWII""'~~,..'

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..

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Riverside Thrift Shdp
.

Buy

Sell

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www:.mydailysentinel.com

si ng for the Middlepon
Community Church located on
Pearl Street in Middlepon will
be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the
church. Singing will ~ Mercy,
Earthen Vessels, Salvation, &lt;md
Aaron Grate. Pastor Smn
1\nderson invites the public to
attend the si ng which will be
held at the church.

Family requests
contributions to
be made to Mason
Animal Shelter
MASON, W.Va. - The family of Gael Dudding of Mason.
W.Va., who died on Wednesday,
Oct. 8, requests that memorial
contributions be sent to the
Mason County Animal Shelter,
1965 Fairground Rd., Point
Pleasant. W.Va. 25550.

Tornado puts new twist on
Stockton's black walnut business

Moderately Confused
· ijUNDREDS oF
CABLE STATIONS'
/k HERE' rAM
DRAWN EACK TO

Friday, October 10, 2003

220 E. M.nin St.
Pomeroy, QH
740-992-1478

Buy

Sell .

Trade ?/e«. &amp; 'U4d ~ Trtlde •.

delivered · new eq uipment
within weeks.
Today, one · can look in any
direction from Hammons
Products and see damaged trees,
debris and houses without roofs.
The company's own skyline, however, is broken by
two new 80-foot-tall steel
storage bins, enough to protect and dry 9 million of
pounds of black walimts.
The new system allows
hullers - who remove the
gre~n outer layer of the walnut
- to dump nuts at the storage
bins. Large scales weigh the
nuts. decreasing the time
hullers spend at the plant.
Changes· were made inside
the plant, as well. An inte- .
grated computerized system
was installed to pluck nut ~
meat and remove shell pieces
from the cracked nuts.
Trained inspectors still give
the nuts the once-over to
ensure quality before they are
packaged and sold.
Nothing goes to waste.
Hammons Products is alSo the
world's leading supplier of
black walnut soft grit abrasives.
The ground shell is sold for a
variety of industrial uses, such
as cleaning abrasives, soaps,
cosmetics and oil-well drilling.

Deadlock
from Page A1
from voting, but said he will
work to place the issue on
the ballot so the public can
vote on it.

Ohio Val~ey Symphony off
to "Big and Brassy" start
GALLIPOLIS - Sit back
and brace yo urself f'6r a "Big
and Brassy" ni ght of exciting
and familiar musr c as the
Ohio Valley Symphony
opens ih 14th seu,on. Mu sic
director Ray Fowler takes the
podium in the hi ;toric Ariel
Theater .. in
downtown
Galhpoh s for the heart pounding program at 8 p.m.
Saturday, 0&lt;.:1. 25.
There won 't .be artillery.
but the OVS w1ll bnng o ut
the b1g gun s of . cla s "c~l
muSic w1th Tcha1kovsky s
"Ovenure So lennelle, 181 2."
Wnne~ to commemorate
Russ 1a s . v1ctory
over
Napoleo n s French-led rnvasron 111 1812. thts freedomJov1ng musrc has st 1rred
audiences ,at:ound the world
for more than a century and
become a staple of patriotic
programs in the United
States . Russ ia' s be st-known
composer is al so represented
with the tender "Elegy.'' a
brief. introspective piece that
reveal s a little-known side to
the
heart-on-his-sleeve
Tchaikovsky.
Starting the program is the

fanfare fro m "L" Peri.'' a
majestic miniature from the
writer of the long -time audi·
ence
favori te.
"The
Sorcer~r·, Apprenti ce ."
Roundin g out the program
are some brash Amencan
keyboard tireworb from the
pen of the song-writ ing
ge m us George Gershwrn .
Cut down by a bra1n tumor rn
h1s 30s, Gershwrn strll left a
legacy_ of masterpi eces.
mcludmg the Concertorn F
Full of the ea~y tunes that
were Ger.,hwrn s trademark.
the concerto also shows how
technrcally bnlhant a p1amst
- and a master orchestral
composer - he became rn
h1s bnefhfe,
.
Takrng on the concertos
challenges w11l be Dav1d
Curtin, a native of Rochester.
N.Y. Curtin earned his doctorate from the University of
Cincinnati. where he also
won the conservatory\ conceno competition .
Besides
performances
across the Unrted States. he
has performed in London , in
a nationall y-televised concen
- and a follow-up recital -

in Sou th Korea. and in
Mexi'co. Future pl am for
Curtin indude concert&gt; and
mastercla&gt;&gt;e&gt; 111 Greece at
the invi tation of Ion ian
Uni versity at Corfu .
The public is encouraged
to attend rehearsal s for free
on Friday. Oct. 24. from 7~ I 0
p.m. and on Saturday. Oct. 25
from J-4 p.m. OVS Saturday
dress rehearsal s are an excel ~
lent way to introduce young
ch ildren to
,ymphoni c
1111" ic . Tickeh for the g p.m.
concert are $22 . 520 for
&gt;.eniors and studen t&gt; and a
limited number of di ,counted
balcony ,eat&gt; are a\ ailable .
Tickets can be purchased at
Tawney Jeweler,. Purple
T 1 , d 0 . k Hill B· lks
. urt .e an
a
al
and at the door:
Ohio
Vall e\.·
. The
11
Symphony " 'P" '':'red 111
pan by Holze r Clrnrc. The
Ann Car,on Dater Fund and
the Oh1o Art' Counc1l. a ' tate
agency that su ppom pubhc
program., 111 the arts. For
more · informati on call the
Ariel Theater at t 7-+0 1 -l-+6ARTS .

Renaming California parish for
Vietnamese saint sparks controversy
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) pastor. the Rev. Bill Barman. worked too hard for tile new
- The ground has been convi nced them that the parish to step down now.
blessed but remains unbroken. change would be good.
The bishop called Barman
Construction of a multi Our Lady of Lavang. a fine priest but &gt;aid he lac b
Roman according to Catholic te·ach- experience
million-dollar
with
th e
Catholic church named for ing. was a vision of the Vietnamese culture . Brown
Vietnam's patron sai nt has Virgin Mary that appeared at ha' nut said who he will
been delayed indefinitely the end of the 18th century se lect to replace Burman .
because of a dispute over to persecuted Vietnamese
Many rn the Vietname &gt;e
who should be pastor of a Catholics. She is as impor- co mmunitv sav the new
congregation that is now tant to that community as church is overdue acknowl ~
mostly Hi spanic.
Our Lady of Guadalupe i' to edg.ment and see nam ing a
Bishop Todd Brown uf the Mexican culture .
nati ve-speaker pastor as a
Diocese of Orange wants to
Then Brown announced he part of that recognit io n. The
replace the parish's current wanted a Vietnamese priest to diocese recently named the
pastor with a priest of head the new parish in stead of countrv' s first Vietname se
Vietname se descent. The 'Barman. who is white.
bi s hop~ Dominic Luong. He
parishioners want . the cur·
Barman refused to step serves a s an a ux.iliarv to
rent pastor to stay.
duwn and Brown halted con· Brown.
The dispute underscores a struction, saying he will not
"The Lady of Lavang was
deeper tension for the give the go-ahead until he see n at a time when our
Catholic Church in 21st cen- can make the appointment .
country was in despair:· said
tury America as it attempts
Now parishioners fear they Hien Nguyen, 26. of
to accommodate its increas- will get lost in the new church. Anaheim. ;·Naming a church
ingly diverse !lock .
"With a Vietnamese priest. for her is like honoring our
;'Th e only reason the and a Vietnamese name. suffering. Maybe people
Catholic Church in the U.S. maybe they won't under- who go there w11lleam more
is still growing is because of stand us. They won't listen about our his tory."
immigration," said Michael to us," said Maria Chavez.
Expenssay language is the
Foley, a professor of politi· who has attended Our Lady biggest barrier to bringin g
cal science at Catholic
together the different ethniL·
University who studies reli· of Lourdes for 27 vears.
''Father Bill understands us." communities within the
gion and immigration .
The diocese acknowledges church. Like dioceses in such
The Diocese of Orange
the
difficulty in ministering areas as Rale igh-Durham.
wants to replace Our Lady of
Lourdes, a tiny, crowded to its '*verse community. N.C .. New Orleans. Ch icago.
church built in the 1920s for But Brown said, "We are and many parts of the West.
Mexican farmworkers, with committed io addressing the Orange County often mu st
Our Lady of Lavang, a needs of all the people." respond to the needs of three
parish with a name acknowl- which is why he says the or more language group' in
edging Orange County's diocese needs a Vietnamese- one church.
About a third of those who
Iarge Vietnamese-American named church with a pastor
of Vietnamese descent.
attend Mass in the diocese are
community.
he
is
being
Spanish
speaker.; and atxnn I I
Barman
says
The new pari sh was suptargeted
because
he
is
"the
percent
Vicmamesc speaker.-.
posed to be an example of
wrong
race."
He
is
tluent
in
The
rest
are predominantly
the church's effort to bring
together th e two cultures. Spanish and has visited white. thou~h there are increa'Now it has become an exam- Vietnam but speaks little of ing numbers of Filipinos and
ple of the difficulties rn the language. He says he has other Asian-Americans.
doing so.
.--------------------"We had become excited
1
cent of people killed in fires
about the new church.'" said
.
in Ohio die in the ir own
parishioner
Oselia
homes according to the
Maldonado, who worked
from Page A1
State Fire Marshal's office .
over ·the last two years to
Members of the Chester
prepare for the move.
Meigs County. Area fire Volunteer Fire Department
The plan began in 200 I. departments responded to and the Bashan Volunteer
when Brown offered more incidents involving struc- Fire Depanment Talked with
than $6 milli.on to construct ture tires, auto tires. brush second grade rs at Eastern
a church for the overflowing fires. and any potential fires Elementary Thursdav.
parish, which crams 300 associated with motor ve hi·
Larry Cleland. chi~f of the
Sunday school students at cle accidents. There have Chester Fire Depanment.
outdoor
piGnic
tables been 395 fire alens reponed
· d h
d
be
because it lacks classrooms. already this vear.
hotrce t at stu ents •come
at
fl'rst
'
more aware of fire safety
Parl.sht' oners
"Fire salety starts with pre·
adamantly resisted the
. .. 'd
"'
year atier year. He said they
sar Lyons. " ,..,e try to k·now a11 abo ut ca11 ·mg 911 rn
·
church' s new name and the venuon,
.1
promote tire safety to save
d
of
opening
it
up
to
the
lives."
case
o
an
emergency
an
idea
,
Vietnamese, but thei~ trusted
The most common cause about the imponance of tire
of residential fires is related alarms.
"No one knows for cenain
to cooking. Last year there
Mayor Sandy lannarelli,
were 3,112 cooking-related how much of a difference we
who breaks tie votes in some
in Ohio resulting in a make. but over the years you
fires
propos.ed measures. is not
total propeny loss of $14.3 can see a little improvement
authoriz~;.p to cast a tie-breakmillion . One of the leading in what the kids know:· said
ing vote on any proposed
causes of fatalities in resi· Cleland . "I hope they will
ordinance.
dential fires IS smoking. make sure their ·homes have
Nearly 50 people attended
Eleven Ohioans died last smoke detectors and they
a public hearing, held in
year in fire s caused by will know what to do if there
August, representing both
smoking. Mote than 80 per. .is a tire."
sides of the issue.

sa.ety

MOTOR ROUTE
AVAILABLE

·Syracuse Volunteer .
Fire Department

In Racine, Long Bottom and Portiand Area

Monthly Auction

Eam up to Sl ,000 per month
Call99l-l155

SatHrday Oct. 11 til 6pm
New &amp; D!J]frent Mercilandise
CilristmaJ Items • Craftsman Tool!
]C Penney .

for information

�.
'

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

FAITH

• VALUES
The story is told about a
man whose house started to
be surrounded by floodwaters. His opportunity for
escape on foot was soon
swamped . But , he prayed
expressing trust that God
would send htm dehverance.
Eventually, the waters submerged his front porch.
Someone m a rowboat oared
by,_ and mvtted the man to
safety by way of the boadt.
However, the n:tan rep 1te ,
. "No, I am trusttng m God.
He will deliver me."
The floods continued to
rise, forcing the man to the
upstairs of the house. One in
a motorboat ~pproached the
house.• and offered a rescue.
But. the man once again
expressed his trust in God's
deliverance.
The man was soon forced
onto the roof. A helicopter
amved, and dropped a re~~ue
ladder down to htm ... Go
help someone else, he
called. "God will provide a
deliverance for me!"
The sad news is that the
man who trusted God for
deliverance was eventually
swept off the roof, and was
drowned.
The good news is that he
went to Heaven . But, he was
mad as a hornet as he walked
u~.to God.
.
.
Lord, I trusted m you tor
deliverance , and I wound .up
drowning in that flood! "
The Lord replied sternly, "I
sent you two boats and a
helicoptt&lt;r - what else did
you want?"
.
Everyday, people want
God to respond to them for a
variety of reasons. Such is

Rutland Church of Christ

Upcoming events
will make a presentat ion
about life i11 1903 , and .a
clown show will be presented
GUYSVILLE
- The
for children.
Carthage Community Church
An old-fashioned bean dinof Guysville . will have a
The ner will be served at noon,
revival 7 p.m. on Oct. 17 and
JACKSON
a
movie
about
18. Sam Anderson will be the Christian Academy will hold and
speaker and' special music its fifth annual craflfest and Reedsvi lie, created by Craig
will be presented by Calvin bake sale from 10 a.m. to 5 Reed, will be shown.
Ruble on Friday and Randy p.m. on Nov. I in the CLA
Frank Jones will present an
Johns on Saturday with Josie gym on chillicothe Pike , oral history of the communiand Erica Cremeans providJackson . Hundreds of quality ty at I p.m., followed by a
ing music both evenings. Bill
C. Murphy and Steven L. handmade craft., and unique coloring contest for children
Cremeans. assistant pastor. jewelry will be for sale, along at 2 p.m., glider races, celewith homemade pies, ckaes, brating ftrst flight, at 2:30
invites the public to attend.
cookies and candy. There will p.m., storytelling and music
be face art, balloons. mini by S.ara Guthrie, at 3 p.m.,
character pumpkins and tasty and the announcement of
treats for the children. For winners of a pie-baking,
more informatoin call 740- cake-decorating and Teddy
REEDSVILLE
Eric 286-5690.
Bear-decorating contest at
Ross will give a "Creation
3:45.
Presentation" with fossil disA special worship service
plays and information at 6
with Circuit Rider David
p.m. qn Oct. 1.8 at the Eden
Maze will be held at 9:30
U. B. Church on State Route
a.m.
on Oct. 19, followed by
124, Reedsville. It will be
a carry-in dinner at noon and
followed by a wiener roast.
The public is invited.
REEDSVILLE
The music by the Gabriel Quartet
Reedsvi lle United Methodist at 2 p.m.
Church plans a two-day celebration
of
its
IOOth
REEDSVILLE - Revival annivesary, on Oct. -18 and
services will be held at the 19.
LONG BOTTOM - A
A parade is planned for I0 hymn sing will be held at 7
Eden U.B. Church, State
Route 124. Reedsville, Oct. a.m. on Oct. 18, with lineup p.m. Friday at the Faith Full
20-26. with Rev. Robert at 9 a.m. at the ball fteld. At Gospel Church at Long
Sanders as the speaker. 11 a. m. , Margaret Parker of Bottom. The Clark Family
Service to begin at 7 p.m. the Meigs County Museum will be singing.
each evening will feature
special music nightl y.

Revival set

Craft show set

about h.ts· und c•lt'vcred ·sJi uation. Suddenly. spectacu lar
things began lo hap pen .
There were a vwlcnt w1nd.
an C!)Jlh4uake. and a l1re.
But, God was not ustng these
phenomena as ~~ - mean s ul
responding 10 Ehp h s trust
for deliverance.
Rather, God responded in
"a still small voice."
It ;&lt; the unfortunate truth
that people get turned off to
G d ·r H d . 101 always
o 1. e ocs ~
.
bless m supernatural term s.
Howe ve r. th e deepest and
richest r~spon:es of God to
ou r trust1ng Hmt most olten
come by way ot those thm gs
see mingly un exciting.
Years ago, a certain man
whom 1 vi sited wanted to
give me something before I
left. All the man had to give
was an over-ripe banana. I
received it wi th the recognition it was God 's response to
' H bl ..
m~ request that c_ css me
wnh every dee p. nch blessing He wants me_ to have .
Thus. as I later ate 1t , my .so ul
was cheered Last week . I_
encountered Doc F1elds ot
New Haven at the ·Mason
Little John 's store. and he
bought me a copy of the
Register. It may have only
cost him fifty cents. but it
was like a million bucks to
me.
God ve ry we II may be providing for yo u in sh;ady
increments. If you are trusting Him in the right way. you
will easily recognize it to the
specta&lt;.:ular exci tement of
your soul'

Ron
Branch

abso lutely approved by
Scripture for those who
understand the rightness of
depending on God. Thus, the
practice of supplications.
Intercessions, and requests
are trustful outreaches to
God in which it is expected
He will in due course
respond.
But. trusting Him in · the
ri ght way is key. How is it we
should tru st Him in the right
way'
Obviously, as demonstrated by the flood victim, the
great concern insists that we
correctly view the ways,
means, and times God
responds to our trust in Him.
Boats and helicopters may
not seem classy enough for
us, but these ate suggestive
of how God often responds
to our trust. In other words, it
is not always the spectacular
through which God responds
to our trust in Him.
For example, when the
prophet Elijah fled before
Jezebel' s killing threat ,
Elijah undoubtedly expected
God to send a spectacular
deli verance. After all . thou gh
he was good at running, he
cou ld only run so far.
Taking refuge in a cave,
Elijah was clearly dejected

Religion in the News

Display to be
featured

.

Two nuns from South
·Korea permitted to
stay and pray

Anniversary
celebration
planned

Revival set

Friday, October to; 2003

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Are you trusting God in the right way?

Rutland Church of Christ to
celebrate 174th anniversary
RUTLAND - The Rutl and
Church of Christ will ce lebrate . its I74th anniversary
with homecoming Sunday.
Wors hip and communion
serv ice begins at 10:30 a.m.
followed by a carry-i n dinner
at noon. There will be special
music by the " Mercy River"
gos pel ·
quartet
from '
Gainesville, Fla .. at the I :30
p.m. program.
The church was organized
on Nov. 8, 1829 in a log cabin
locatedon Happy Hollow road
j ust north of the church's presen t location. The present
church building was competed in 1893. Bog Werry, pastor,
and the congregation invites
the public to join in the celebration.

PageA6

CLEVELAND (AP)
Federal immigration officials
said two South Korean nuns
who came to Cleveland to
pray will be permitted to stay
in the United States.
Chris Bentley, spokesman
for the Department of
Homeland
Security 's
Citizenship and Immigration
Services in Washington,
D.C., said Thursday the
agency will approve a
change of status for Roman
Catholic nuns Mary Cecilia
Yu and Mary Catharina
Laboure Yu as soon as the

Hymn sing

ments . They pray for causes
and for people who leave
phone messages or send letters
requestin g prayer.
Although they do not take a
of
silence.
the
vow
monastery in Cleveland is
quiet.

new visa applications are
received .
The women are biological
sisters who have no close rel'atives in South Korea since
their mother died in March .
"We are changing their
visa from vi sitor to temporary religious workers, which
means they get a one-year
visa that

is

Are dinosaurs alive today'~
What aboul carbon dating?

renewable ~ "

The public is

Bentley said.
In September, the two
cloistered nuns at Poor
Clares
of
Perpetual
Adoration were told that
their reque ~ts for visa extensions were denied and they
wou ld he depo1ted.
Cloistered nuns spend their
lives inside a monastery
except for doctor' s appoint-

in,·ited to

H

Creation Science Seminar
By
.
Dr. Kent Hovind ·
www.drdino.com
I -304- I 13-5429

Sat. Nov.1st &amp; Sun.l'iov. 2nd
6:00PM to 9:00PM
Wahama High S&lt;hool Gym
Mason, WV 25260

Fellowship
Apostolic
l"hurch of Jrsu!l Christ Apollolk
VanZandc ~ nd Ward Rd .. Paswr: James
Miller. Sunday S..:hool . 10:.\0 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30 p.m.

·r

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our communjty ·
Young's Carpenter Serulce

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Rt.-uVallty

Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

Emmanuel Apo!llollr T:l-;;••~·::~
Loop Rd off Nt'w Lima Rd
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs . 7:00 p.111 .. PaSior Marty H.. Huuon

Assembly of God
Libert)' Assembl)' of God
P.O . Box 467 , Dudding Lane. Maso n.
W.Va .. Pas1or: Nei l Ten nant. Sunday
Services- 10: 00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Hope Bapllsr Churth ISoUIIK'mJ
570 Granl S\., Middl eport , Pot .~ tor: Rev
Da\'id Bryan. Sunday ~c hoo l . 9:30 a.m..
Worsh ip - t I a.m. and 6 p.m.. Wednesda~·
Service - 7 p.m.
Ruthmd First Baptist Churtil
Sunday School - 9 : ~0 a.m.. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pumeroy 11rst Baptist
Pastor Jon Broc kert , East Main S1..
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship IU:JO a.m.

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy, OH

740-992-6215

106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH
740·992·2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing
Licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director
Licensed Pre-Need Insurance

~·

' "DO you smell smoke? Where is

the most ... when your ljfe .:
depends upon it. Each of us 'h~s
help whenever we call upon ~~r
Heavenly Faiher. He prom)ses
us in Isaiah 41:13, "for I, the
Lord your God, hold your rig!tt'
hand ; it is I whO s.ly to you; '
'Fear not, I will help you.'~ ;'li:\•J,
Wouldn't you like to le'arn
more about your Savior? T;he ,
better ·w e come to knOW Hl.:b\,
the closer he will be ill times of ·
distress. Remember, God 'i f
only a prayer away. Wo11'l you ·
visit God in Ris sancf'uat)l .
this week?
·
'

II coming from? Oh, look next
door ~I the neighbor's. It's the
garag~ Jfs on lire... and .they're
, SOi).e lot the day. Quick!! Call

.

'the.fire department.

Tell them
it''s iln emergency. The flames
wiJhpread to the house!"
"Oh, thank God ... they are
here alrea~y. We are blessed to
· have theni, so close. They witt
' know what to do to save the
' houfe from ruin. I pray that
evel)1hlng will be alright!"
• · ·., How wonderful to have
help nearby when you need it

uardrail, Fence &amp;
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(740) 992-645 t

------~

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
'

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WEDNESDAY

THUIISDAY

FRIDAY

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"A Home Bank for
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29670 Bashan Rd.

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33334 Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
For a whole
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740-949-2217

0 am - H pm

Atmu:lfJI/ere

Mi[[ie's 1?,gstaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Da1ly
Home Cooked Meal.v &amp; Daily Spec ial.~

Open 7 da ys a week
740-992· 7713

Birchfield funeral
Home
212 Main St· P.O. Sox I 88
Rutland, OH 45775

Our Carina WaYs HelP Families

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Local source for trophies,
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Carolina Antique
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507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohiu 45769
(740) 992-32'19
'-UJ'
Tol Free l-877-583-2433

312 6th St. Point Pleasant
675·1160
Variety of furniture, glass wart!, crafts,
collec_t ion of bottles &amp; primiliveOu1side fl ea market April- Oc1.
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Ph ysical . Occ upmion:~l and Speech Therapies
We Acce pt Medicare, Medicaid. &amp; Insurance

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· ··- ·~ · ----- -~

·~- · - -- ,_

...
I

Pomervy Wntsicle Chun:b otChrlsl
3]226 Children 's Hom e Rd ., Su nday
School - II a.m.. Worship - IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Churth of Christ
and Main, Pa!~tor: AI Hartson. Youth
Minister: Josh Ulm .. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship- 8: 1.5, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m..
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
5th

Keno Church or Cbrisl
Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday S c h~l 10:30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. I stand
3rd Sunday
BtarwaUow Ridge Chun:h or Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m,
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

First Southern Baplist
41R72 Pomeroy Pik e. P ~st or : E. Lamar
O' Bryanl. Sunday Schoo l - IJ:JU a.m ..
Worship - B: 15 a.m .. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wedne.-.Jay Se rvices · 7:00 p,rn .

Fil"!ll Baptist Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow, 6th and Palmer St.,
Middlcp0r1. Sunday SchrlOI - 9:15a.m..
Worship - 10: !.5 a.m .. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday ServicC- 7:00 p.m.
Racine Jo' irst Baptist
Pnstor: R1ck Rule. Sunday Schnol - 9:30
a. m.. Worship - 10:40 a.m .. 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Sen•k:es- 7:00p.m.

stl,·e r Run Bapdsl
Pastnr: John Swanson, Su nday School IOa.m.. Worship - ll u. m.. /:00 p.m
,Wednesday Se rvices- 7:00 p.m.
Mt. Union Baptist
PasiOr : Dav id Wiscmun . Sunday School9:45 a.m.. E\·e nin g - 6 :30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:36p.m.
Berhlehem Bap~isl Churth
Great Bend, RoUie 124, Raci ne, OH.
P[l.slor : Daniel Mecca, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Sunday Worship - 10:.10 a.m..
Wednesday Bible: Study - 6:00p.m.

Old Bethel Free Will Blptlst Chun:h
2860 1 St. Rt. 7, Middleport, Sunday
School - 10 &amp;.m.• Evening - 7:00 p.m..
Thursday Services · 7:00

Hillside Baptl1t Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor · Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr .. Sund y Unified
Service, Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Service~ -7 p.m.
VIctory Baptbllndependent

.525 N. 2nd St. MiddJeport. P11stor: Jame s
E. Keesee, Worship - IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Four1h &amp; Main St ., Middleport, Pastor
Re v. Gil bert Craig, Jr., Sunday School 9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Andqulty Baptist
Sunday Sc hoQI · 9:30 a. m., Worship 10:4.5 a.m., Sunday E\lening - 6:00p. m.,
Pastor: Mark McComas

Rut11nd f'TM Will Dapll.!il
Salem SL, Pastor: Jami e Fortner. Sunday
School • 10 a.m., Evening • 1 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Church
Ra..,.enswood . WV. Sunday School 10 am~
, Morning worship 11 am E\'ening · 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Catholic
Sacred Heart CathoUc Chu~h
!61 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992 -5898,
Paslor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Stu. Con.
4:4.'i -5: 1.5p.m. ; Man- .5:30 p.m., Sun.

Zioa Claun:h ol Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.J43 l.
Pastor: Roger Waason. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services- 1 p.m

Tuppers Plain Church or Christ

Rutlud. Cbllrtt. at~ NuaftM
Sund1y ScOOol - 9:30 a.m., Wonhip 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p .m .. Wednesday
Service• - 7 p.m.

Ccalnll OUIWr
Aibwy (Syratu~t ). Pauor: Bob Robi11100,
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m., WorWp - I I
a.m., Wednesday Service,- ':30 p.m.

Episcopal
GnK't Epbropal Chuftb
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy. Rev. James
Bemacki, ReY. Ka~n Foster, Sunday
School and Holy ~ §t l I :00 a.m,

Pastor: luland King, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wonhip · 9 a.m .. Bible Swdy Wed.

Flltwoodl
Pastor: Keith Rader. SuBday School - 10
a.m., Worahip - II a.m.

Dan-rille HoUneu Cburch
310.57 State Route 32.5, l.angsvlle, Pastor:
Gary J~~ek.son , Sunday school - 9:30a.m.,
Sunday wonhip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday prayer service - 1 p.m.
Calvary Pllarim Chlpel
Harri sonville · Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service - 7:00 p.m.

1/2 mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rc: .... O'Dell
Manlc:y, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wor&amp;hip - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churth
~arl St., Middleport. Pastor: Rev
David Gilben. Sunday School - 10 a.m
Wo~hip - 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00
p.m., Wcd~sday Service-7:30p.m

Forat Ru.a
Pa:owr: Bob Robill50tl, Sundlly School - 10
a.m., W&lt;nhip • 9 a.m.

Bethel Wonhtp Cc:11ter
Che8ter School. Paslor: Rob Barber,
Assistant Pa ~tor : Karen Oavi:!., Sunday
Worship: 10 am . Ev~nina Wonhip: 6 prn,
Youth sroup 6 pm, Wcdnelday: Power in
Prayer , and Bible Study - 7 pen
Alii Strtd Cburtb
Ash St.. Middleport- Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Momina Worship - 10:.10 1.m. &amp; 7
pm, Wednesday Service. 7:00p.m.. Youth
Service- 7:00p.m.

u..111 (Middloport&gt;
Pastor: Rod Omw.::r, Sunday School • 9:30
Lm., Worship - IJ :OO a.m.
Minenvi.Ue
Pastor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Wcnhip · IU a.m.

Paoli Chapel

Bradbury Church of Christ
Mini ste r: Tom Runyon. ] 9558 Bradbury
Roud, Middleport, Sunday School - 9:30

Hy~ell Run Holille!lli Ch•n:h
.Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Wonhip 10:4Ya.m.. 1 p.m.. Thursday Bible Study
and Youth · 7 p.m

' m

Rutland Chun:h of Chrbl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .. Worship and
Com munion - 10:30 a.m ., Bob J. Werry,
Minister
Bndford Church or Chri.!lt
Comer of St. R1. 124 &amp; Brodbury Rd ..
Mini5ter: Doug Shamblin, Youth Mini ster:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m..Wednesday Services - 7c00 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church or Christ
E\-angdist Mike Moore , Sunday School 9 a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m.. 6:30 p.m. '
Wednesday ServiCei- 7 p.m.

RmbvlUe Churth of Chrilt
Pastor: Philip Sturm, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m .. Wonhip Service : 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
Dexter Churcb or Cbrbt
Pastor: Bill Eshelman. Sunday school 9:30
a,m., Norman Will, superintendent,
Sunday wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Church of Chrllt
ln\e rscetion 1 and 124 W, Evangelist
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartrord Church of Christ In
Chrlldan Union
Hartford, W.Va., Pastor:Oavid Greer,
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10!30 a.m .. 7:00 p,m .. Wednesday
Services· 7:00p.m.

LMurel Clift' Fl'ft Methodist Churth
Re\ . Lcs Strand! and Myra L. Strand\,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a .m. and 6 p. m., Wednesday Service
-7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Christ of Latter-Day Salnb
Sunda y School 10: 20-11 a.m., Relief
Sociely/Priesthood I I :05-12:00 noon ,
Sacrament Se rvice 9 - 1 0 : 1~ a.m..
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lulberan Chun:b
Pine Grove. Wonhip - 9:00a.m., Sunday
School • 10:00 a.m. Pas1or: James P.
Bnody

United Methodist

POOHroy
Pastor: Rod Brower. y.'orship - 9:30a.m.,
Sundny School· 10:3.5 a.m.

Pastor: Bill Slaten. Sunday Strvtees - I0
a.m. &amp; 7 p. rn. Wc:UneJ;day · 1 p.m. &amp; ~
Youth 7 p.m

Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Roder. Sunday School - 9:15
a.m., Worship - 10 ll .m., Youlh
Fellowship, Su nday - 6 p.m.

Abundant Grace R.F. I.
92.\ S. ThinJ Sl.. Mi&amp;ileport. Pa~tor Tereu
Da vi s, Su nd ay s.::rvice, 10 a.m..
Wednesday ~ rvice , 7 p.m.

Full Gotiptl Chul'f:b of the Lhiftl
Savior
Rt. 3J8. Antrquu ~. Pas1or· Jes:.e Moms. •
Ser&gt;i~: c: ~ Saturdll~ 2 00 p. m

Rutland
Sunday School · 9:.\0 ll.m., Worshi p I0:30 a.m.. Thu ~y Services · 7 p.m

Fol.. Full Goipel Chur&lt;h
Long 8ouom, Pastor: Ste&gt;~e Rc:t&gt;d. Sunday
School - 9::t0 a.m. Worsh ip · 9 30 a.m.
and 1 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday ·
fellowship service 7 p.m.

SaJem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m.. Worship - 9:15a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm

Soowvllle

H•rrison,iUe Community ( 'burch
Pastor: The ron Du rham'. Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesday - 7 p.m

Sunday School - 10 a.m. , Worship - 9 a.m.

of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine. Pastor: lames
Sauerfield, Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.,
Eveni ng- 6 p.n1 ., Wednuday Sen.· ices- 7
p.m.

&lt;

Rutland Chun:h ol God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6
Wednesday Sen.·ices · 7
p.m.

P.m.,

Ease Lellrt

CoolviUe Untied MelhodiJt !'Irish
Pastor: Helen Kline, Coolville Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St .. Sunday Sc:bool · 10
a.m., Wonhip • 9 a.m., Tuesday Services·
7p.m.

Northeast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor· Jan e
Beattie. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worihip - ll a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chester
PaSior: Jane Beattie, Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sundny School - 10 a.m . , Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Joppa

Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m, Worship • 10 a.m ., Wednesday
Service5 · 10 a.m.

Church ot God or Prophe.:y
O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160, Pastnr: PJ.
Chapman, Sunday School - 10 1.m..
Worship - II a.m.. Wednesday Services •
7p.m.

~m .

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
LongBottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip 10:30 a.m.

Reedsville
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m ., Sunday School •
10:30 a.m .. Fint Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. sc:rvi~o""e

Hooper ROilld. Athens. Pastor
Coats. Sufl&lt;l.ay Worship 10:00 am.
Wednt'sda)·: 7 pm
Lonnu~

pm

Pentecostal
PeniKolital Mrlemboly
St. Rt. 124. Racine . Pastor. Wilham
Hobacl , Sunda}' Scll\.101 • 10 a.m.,
Evening - 7 p.m.. Wednesd.a) Sen.·ices - 7

Hazel Community Church
OfT Rl . 124, Pastor: Edsel Han. Sunday
School - 9:30a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m.,
7:30 p.m.

SyMK:UII Flnt United Pftlbyteriu
PM1or. Robert Crow, Wonhip · II a.m.

DyesviUe Community Chun-h
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., W?rship 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

H.,...,.nviU. "'"""'"""' Cltur&lt;h
P1stor: Robert Crow. WotJlip . 9 a.m.

Morv Clulptl Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Worship - II
a.m., Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Middleport Pmbyurlan
Pastor: Rober Crow., Wonhip - 10 a.m .

Presbyterian

Seventh-Day Adventist
Stwenth·DI)' Advenu.t
Mulberry Ht s. Rd., Pomeroy, Paslor: Roy
U.winJky, Saturday Sen·ices · Sabbath
School - 2 p.m .. Worship - 3 p.m

United Brethren

Service • 7 p.m.

Fun Gospel LiihthOMe
3~.5

Hiland Ro!Kl. Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Evenmg
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30

Nazarene
Middleport Chun:b or the Naurtne
Pastor: Allen Mid cap. Sun day School 9:30 a.m ..Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.,
. Wednesda y Ser\lices - 7 p.m ., Pastor·
Allen Midcap

p.m.
Soutlllkthel Community C.hun:h
Sil\lrr Ridg.::- Pastor Lindi Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 a.m .. Wo~hip Service
IO. a.m
Carleton lnlerd~oominaUonlll Chu':'Ch
Kingsbury Rood . Pa~ t o r : Roberl Vance.
9:30 a.m., WoBhip
Sunday Sc hool
Service IO:JO a.m., Evening Ser.·ice 6
p.m.
Flftliom Gospel Mi5Sion
Hald Knob, on Co. Rd . ] l. P a~tor : Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday S;;hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

Reedsville Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: Tere sa
Waldeck, Sunday School - 9:JO a. m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m.
Syncuw Chun-h of the Na:r.artne
Pastor Mike Adkin5, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a. m.. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Mt. Hermon United Bmhru
In Cbru1 Church
Texas Community 36411 \\;id :ham Rd.
Pastor: Pt:ter Martindale, Sunday School - ·
9:30 a.m.• Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m. ·
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;. 4lh Sundays
1 p.m.

Eden United Brethren In ChriiR
Stair: Route 124, Reedsville , Sunday
School - ! I a.m.. Sunday Worship - 10:((}
a.m. &amp; 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Services 7:00 p m., Wednesd11y Voulh Sen·i\·e - ·

HlOp.m

White's Ct..pel Wnleyan
Road . Pastor: Rev. Phillip
Ridenour. Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a. m..
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., Wednc!;l.)ay Sen·ice
-7 p.m.
Cool&gt;~ il le

Pomeroy Chun-h of tht Nu:artnr:
Pastor: Jan La\·ender. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Chester Churth ot the

LanpvUle Christian Chun:h
Full Gospel , Pa5tor: Raben MusKr,
Sunda} S..:hool 1L\O am .. Worsh1p 10:30
am - 7:00 r m. Wednesday Servic.:: 7:00

Mt. Olive Community Churtb
Putor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School ··
9:30a.m., Evenins - 6:30p.m .. Wedneday

Pastor: Bob Randolph , Worship - 9:30
Syracuse Flnt Church of God
Apple and Second S!s .. Pastor: Rev, David
Russell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m.
Evening Sel"·ices - 6:30 p.m.. Wednesday
Services - 6:30 p.m.

7:30p.m

Faith C.O.pel Chareh
Long Bottom, Sunday School • S1:30 a.m..
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m..
Wednesday '7 :30p.m.

Bethel Chun:h

Co. Rd. 63. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wor:ship-10:30a. m.

Hobson Chrisllu r ..Uowshlp Chun:h
Pastor· He~hel Whi te. Sunday Sc-tMIOI·
I 0 am. Sunda} Church ~m ce - 6:)0 pm
Wednesday 7 pm

p.m

lla&lt;IM
Puror: Brian Harkneu, Sunday School 10 &amp;.m .. Wonhip ~ IJ a.m., Wednesday7

Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.

Pastor: Cl:oode Ferrell. Sunday Sdx)()l 9:., 0
am , Sunda y e-~enmg sc:rvK:e 6 pm,
Wednc:;day servi.::e- 7 pn1

936:;

SyracUM" Mlssjon
14 11 Bridgeman St .. Syracuse. Sunday
School - 10 a .m, Evening • 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brillfl Harkness. Sunday School 10 a.m . Worship · 9 a.m., Wednesday - 7
p.m.

Torch Chun:h

Melp Coopendve Parish

Chu~b

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gilmore , Sunday School - II
a.m., Woehip - 10 a.m.

MI. OUve United Melhodlst

Salem Community Churdl
Lining Road, West ColumbuL W Va ..

Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl St.. Middle pon . Pas1or: Sam
An..derson, Sunda y School 10 a.m..
Evening- 7·30 p.m. , Wednesday Serv1ce ·

Faith \'.Ury Tabr:rnaclfo Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Re v. Emmeu
Raw so n, Su nda y Evening 7 p.m ,
Thursday Scr&gt;·ice- 7 p.m.

Graham United MelhodJac

Church of God
Mt. Moriah

Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds . Racine. Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Hodtlnaport Churtb
lirand Street. Sund•Y School - 9:15a.m..
,onhip • 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip De,ll

.

Restonlion ChrisU.n FellowsiUp

Bethany
John Gilmore , Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Wor.ship - 9 a.m.. WedneMJay
Services· 10 a.m.

Wonhip - 9:30a.m. ( 111 &amp;: 2nd Sun), ,
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun).Wedncsdly
Service-7:30 p.m .

Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10 :30 a.m .. 7 p.m .. Thursda&gt;·
Services · 7 p.m .

pm

Nt• Uf~ VIctOry Center

Our Saviour Lulhen1n ChuM

SL P•ul Lutheran Churth
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy,
Sunday Sc:bool · 9:45 a.m., Worship · I I
a.m. Pastor: !ames P. Brady

OH'ton Taberude Claurdl
Clifton. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Wuotnp - 7 p.m .• Wr:dneubi)" Servk-e - 7

.n n George ~ Cred: Road. Galhpohs. OH

p.m.
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood.
W.Va .. Pa~tor : David Russell, Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Worship· II a.m.

R.eJoki81 Uft Ckui"Cll
500 N 2nd !we., Middlqxwt. Pll!dor: .
Mike Foreman , . Pa_stor: Emerirus ,
Lawrence Foreman. Worship- I 0:00 am
Wedne&amp;day Seroices. 7 p.m.

Appr Life CenkT

The Church of Jesus
S t. Rt. 160 , 446-6247 or 446-74Rfl.

p.m

"Full-Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Pany Wade. 603 Second A\'e. Mason. 77 35011, Sc:r\'icc: time: Sundlly 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

Pa ~tor:

Worship - 10: 30 a.m.

StiwenvUI,e Coaunun.lty ~•"*'
Pastor: Wayne R. J.::weU. Sunday Servi&lt;:a
- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m., Thumby - 7 :00

Sunday School - 9 a. m., Worship - 10 a.m.

7~

Instrumental , Wonhi p Service · 9 a.m .,
Com mu nion - IO 'a.m.. Sunday Sc hool 10: I 5 a.m .. Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesd..l~· 7 pm

Calvary 8ibk Ch...-cb
~roy Pile. cO. Rd . Paa;LOr: Itt\·
Bl~tekwood, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
W&lt;nhip , 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m., .
Wedne!iday Servke · 7·30 p.m.

Conu.uaitJ ~ Ch.rilt
PortJand-RJCine Rd ., Putor. Jmy Smger.
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip 10:30 a.m., WedneMiay Services - HIO
p.m.

Rose or Sharon HoUness Churth
Leading Creek Rd., Rutlllnd Pas10r: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship . '7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

' Fol.. Ftlo~p Crwack r.,. Clolill
Pu&amp;or; Re-11. Fran.Uin Dij;k.enl. Serv.ce:
Fnday. 7 p m

Other Churches

7,30

Commun.lly Churt'b
Pas•or: Ste\'C. Tomek, Main Street,
Rutland, Sunday Worshi~IO : OO a.m..
Sunday Servia:- 7 p.m.

p.m.. Wedneiday 81ble Swdy · H JQ p.m. ·

Pordud FIN CIIOido fll dlo N Pastor: William Justis , Sundly School •
10:00 a.m., Mornina Wonhip - 10:4.5 a.dt.,
Sunday Service - 6:.30 p.m.

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Sunday Sehoul - 9 :30 a.m. , Worship10:30 a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services 7 p.m.

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Page AS

NATION • WORLD
All eyes now turn to London in Could it happen here? California
Episcopal Church's gay dispute recall sparl&lt;s interest but few
expect rush to the polls

The Daily Sentinel

DALLAS (AP) -After an
enthusiastic rally that concluded with a strong protest
declaration
demanding
church leaders repent for their
growi ng acceptance of gay
relationships, conservative ·
Episcopalians are waiting
anxiously for an emergency
summit meeting in London.
A delegation from the
American Anglican Council
(AAC), sponsor of the Dallas
meeting, will take its declaration to a Tuesday huddle with
overseas archbishops who
agree that the summer
Episcopal Church convention
violated church teaching
when it took steps toward
accepting same-sex behavior.
The · Oct. 15-16 summit on
the American church crisis
and a parallel dispute in
Canada involves the 38 heads
of the national Anglican
branches, one of which is the
Episcopal Church. The session is chaired by Archbishop
of
Canterbury
Rowan
Williams, spiritual leader of
the Anglican Communion.
For all sides, it's a decisive
moment for the Episcopal
Church and the world's 77
million Anglicans.
The 2,700 Episcopalians in
Dallas on Thursday petitioned
, the London summit. to discipline Episcopal bishops who
backed liberal actions on
gays, to have special bishops
intervene to lead conservative
congregations in liberal U.S.
dioceses and to "guide the
realignment of Anglicanism
in North America."
The shape of that "realignment" is unclear, but the
Dallas meeting began the
process of creating a new
U.S. conservative network
and, very likely, its total break
from the Episcopal Church.
The conservatives assert they
preserve Anglican teaching so
the Episcopal majority is to
blame for any.split.
· Canon David C. Anderson,
AAC president, said he met
Williams in London last
month and warned him ihat if
the London summit delays or
avoids taking action, much of
"the orthodox pafty of the
Episcopal Church" could be
lost to Anglicanism.
Anderson says that sex
"gets everyone's attention"
but the more fundamental leftright di sagreements plaguing
his denomination concern the
authority of the Bible and the
uniqueness of salvation
through Jesus Christ.
The week following the
London summit, the AAC
board will meet in Fairfax,
Va., and the week after that,
like-minded Canadian leaders will gather.
Beyond that, the AAC
plans a strategy session withm a couple months for allied
U.S. bishops and priests from
major congregations, then a
rally early in 2004 where
U.S. conservatives will set
their future course.
Pittsburgh Bishop Robert
Duncan told a news confer-

Friday, October 10, 2003

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bishops James Stanton, of Dallas, left, Peter Beckwith, of
Springfield, Ill., second from left, Gethin B. Hughes of San Diego,
Robert Duncan of Pittsburgh, second from right, and David
Benna of Albany, N.Y., right all bow their heads as The Rev. Dav1d
H. Roseberry, on video screen, rector of Christ Church in Plano,
Texas says a prayer for them on the final day of the American
Anglican Council meeting, Thursday in Dallas. (AP)

ence, "This is a definin g more difficult," Griswo ld
moment in Christian history." said, though the church "must
He said there's a "life-threat- take seriously" the..conservaening" disorder in the tives' "grief and anger."
Episcopal Church and world
" Regardless of what has
Anglicanism that "must be been said or concluded, those
dealt with now" by the gathered in Dallas are our
London summit.
brothers and sisters in
The issue-ofwhether there's Christ," Griswold wrote.
a binding scriptural ban on
The Dallas declaration says
gay sex has long been disput- conservatives should redirect
ed among Episcopalians, but their financial giving " to the
possible"
two votes by the Episcopal fullest
extent
convention brought matters to toward conservative minthe boiling point: approval of istries and away from the
a gay cleric with a longtime national denomination and
·partner as bi shop of New dioceses- and congregations
Hampshire, and acknowledg- that support its policies.
ment that some bishops
Tlle"i'{ AC clarified its earli" within the bounds of our ...,er .st'illement that-46 bishops
common life" allow blessings attended its gathering, saying
of same-sex unions.
only about half are in the
The Dallas declaration repu- Episcopal Church hierarchy.
diated those actions,- saying The rest came from groups
they broke "fellowship with that have already left the
the larger body of Christ."
denomination.
Twelve
The majority of Anglican Episcopal bishops took the
leaders worldwide suppoJl. platform to show solidarity at
the U.S . conservatives' pOS.- the closing session.
tion on homosexuality, but
Speakers said the conservathey are in the minority with- tives already have in place all
in the Episcopal Church.
they need to shape a new
Presiding Bishop Frank North American Anglican
Griswold, who agrees with denomination, with not only
the liberal majority, is the bishops but numerous priests,
Episcopal Church's .leader seminaries, missionary agenand its representative in cies, and even a Sunday
London. He issued a state- School curriculum.
ment Thursday lamenting
During the meeting, half of
what he called the "inflam- those attending answered an
matory rhetoric" and "ultima- electronic questionnaire. Of
turns" coming from the that group, 57 percent said they
Dallas meeting.
will definitely or probably
"In such a climate, mutual leave the Episcopal Church "if
pursuit of ways to build up nothing really changes in the
rather than tear down is made next few months."

Lawyers for sniper suspect to argue insanity
FAIRFAX, Va. (AP) Robert F. Horan Jr. said the
Defense lawyers for sniper reports of a court -appointed
suspect Lee Boyd Malva say mental-health expert working
their client had been brain- for the defense team suggest
washed a · victim of no signs of insanity or mental
"indoctrination" by older co- disease.
defendant
John
Allen
"It says absolutely nothing
Muhammad - and plan to about insanity," Horan said.
use the argument to propel an "Apparently it' s a lateblooming insanity."
insanity defense .
Cooley emphasized that the
In previous motions and
hearings, Malva's attorneys insanity defen~e is not an
have argued their client was admission that his client par"under
the
spell"
of ticipated in the shootings.
Muhammad. For the defense
Virginia law requires that
to work, lawyers must show Malva now submit to another
jurors that Malva could not mental-health examination,
tell right from wrong at the this time by an expert selecttime of the shootings.
ed by prosecutors, if he wants
Lawyer Craig Cooley will to present 11 the insanity
rely on privately retained defense to jurors.
mental health experts who
Also on Thursday, in nearhave examined Malvo, not by Manassas, a judge ruled
the ex pert appointed by the that Muhammad will not be
court. Cooley called indoctri . permitted to present any mennation a form 'of mental ill- tal-health evidence at his trial
.ness and said it will be up to because the suspect refused to
the jury to decide if it submit to an examination
amounts to insanity.
sought by prosecutors.
"This case is so bizarre in
Malva's lawyers also said ·
1
its facts, and the degree of Thursday that they' believe a
indoctrination is so severe, confession Malvo gave to
that we would be remiss if we police in November when he
failed" to put the sanity issue was .tran sferred to Virginia
before a jury, Cooley said at a custody was designed by
· Malvo
hearing Thursday.
to
protect
Fairfax
County Muhammad.
Commonwealth's Attorney
"There are a number

'

instances (in Mal vo' s statement) in which it is clear he ·
was
protecting .
Mr.
Muhammad," Cooley said.
Malvo's lawyers have fi led
a motion to have the confession tossed out, based on
enhanced audiotapes · on a
portion of the interrogation
that the defense team says
suggests Mal vo was revising
his statement in order to protect Muhammad. A hearing
on that issue is set for Oct. 22.
Malva, 18, is scheduled to
go on trial Nov. I 0 in the
slaying of FBI analyst Linda
Franklin outside a Home
Depot store. She was among
13 people who were shot, I 0
fatally, during a three-week
spree in the Washington,
D.C., area last fall.
Muhammad, 42, goes on
trial Tuesday in the slaying of
man who was pumping gas
near Manassas.
Both trials were moved 200
miles
to
southeastern
Virginia.
Along with the 13 shootings in Maryland, Virginia,
and Washington, D.C., the
two are suspected in · or
charged with shootings in.
Georgia,
Alabama,
Louisiana, Arizona an.d
Washington slate.

,,

'

California proved
it:
Recall s work. And now the
rest of the country is taking a
harder look at the populist
check on elected leaders,
spurring legislators to reexamine their laws and
activists to hope for replays
in their states.
Still, even the staunchest
ad vacates of the recall as a
political tool warn that
California was a unique case
- and those who hope to
use it in the other 17 states
where it's on the books
would face far different scenarios than a career politician versus a movie star.
California's situation was
"definitely an alignment of the
planets," said Dane Waters, who
traeks recalls at the Initiative &amp;
Referendum Institute.
Still,
"interest
has
increased. Awareness has
increased," said Waters, who
expects activists and politicians with vendettas will be
e ncoura¥ed
by
seei ng
Califorma Gov. Gray Davis
ousted. "People will definitely say, 'Hey, we should
pursue this."'
There's already a recall
petition drive gathering signatures against Nevada Gov.
Kenny Guinn, a Republican.
Opponents of governors in
Wisconsin and Minnesota
have raised the possibility of
recall drives, but taken no
real action.
The recall mechanism
beckons to the disgruntled.
A man in Arizona who
calls himself a Confederate
is gathering signatures
against
Gov.
Janet
Napolitano. Some New
Jersey doctors , already
angry about malpractice
insurance costs, are gathering signatures to recall Gov.

James McGreevey. And
Connecticut officials have
received a dozen calls asking how to recall Gov. John
Rowland - though there is
no recall law in Connecticut.
This week, state legislators from across the country
gathered in Colorado to consider what election issues
they would work on this
year, and recall was on the
table. They aim to examine
current rules and make sure
recalls aren' t misused.
"It's envisioned as a true
safety valve - and whether
or not it's viewed as that in
California is up for debate,"
said Tim Storey, an elections
expert working with the lawmakers at the National
Conference
of
State
Legislatures, based in Denver.
"Other states will look at it
through those glasses, and
say 'Is this the way we want
this mechanism to work?"'
he said.
Recalls are much more
common at the local level for city council or school
board - than for statewide
office or the legi slature .
Californili's recall of Davis
was the first in the nation
since North Oakota Gov.
Lynn J. Frazier was recalled
in 1921.
Political observers are
already debating whether
Republican
Arnold
Schwarzenegger's victory
means that incumbent governors elsewhere might suffer recall attempts from voters unhappy with a still anemic economy.
Such an effort wouldn't be
easy e.l sewhere. California
- besides the unique personalities of its recall - has
some of the easiest rules for
getting a recall on the ballot.

It only requires 12 percent of
the number of voters in the
past election; it doe sn't
require any specific act of
wrongdoing: and, 1t g1ves
signature gatherers more
time than many other states.
In Nevada, recall organ1zers
acknow Iedged Wednesday
the difficulty of the task
before them - irying to gather 128, l 09 signatures to put a
recall to the voters. Guinn
drew criticism for pushing
through an $836 million tax
increase to address the state's
financial problems.
Nevada law requires signatures from 25 percent of the
voters. California may have
added a bit of momentum to
the effort in Nevada, but it's
too early to say, organizer
Christopher Hansen said.
"It's a very different situation ," said Hansen, vice
chairman of the Recall Guinn
Committee. "Look at the difference between New York
and Las Vegas, the difference
between Florida and Utah.
They ' re different 1\!0rlds."
One
big
difference,
Hansen said - Nevada's
etl'ort is all volunteer, while
a wealthy Davis critic
bankrolled the California
~ignature drive, paying for
people to go out and gather
signatures.
Like watching a car
wreck, election officials
nationwide were transfixed
by the California recall, said
Kevin Kennedy, executive
director of Wisconsin's elections board.
''The whole recall, anyone
who's involved in the political process is paying attention
to it,'' he said. " But I didn't
see anything at the state election directors' level that says
we should change things."

Wife of Ma_,ryland's governor tries
.tQ, r~eov~r..Jrom. Britney Spears jest
BALTIMORE (AP) The wife of Gov. Robert
Ehrlich apologized for saying she would shoot pop
singer Britney Spears, but
reiterated her message about
the d1fficulty of raiSing g1rls ·
in a society saturated with
sexually provoc.ative images.
Kendel Ehrlich uttered the
statement Oct. 3 while speaking in FredericK at a conference on domestic violence.
Ehrlich, 42, talked about the
need for . "educating our
women to ~et as much schooling as possible, to not become
dep::ndent on anyone else." ·
'It is incredibly important
to get that message· to young
women. You know, really, ifl
had an opportunity to shoot
Britney Spears, I think I
would," Ehrlich said, laughing. "I hate to say that, but
you know, like I said, I'm
raising a boy ... and I think,
' Oh my goodness, what
would I do if I had a daughter
who is seeing these images

and having peer pressure?"'
After the story broke this
week, a spokeswoman for
Ehrlich sa1d she "inadvertently used a figure of
speech." A day later, Ehrlich
apologized to Spears.
"It was off-the-cuff and in
jest, and that's stupid when
you're in public hfe, al'ld I
should know better," she
said Wednesday.
However, Ehrlich said that
while she regrets her
remarks, she stands by her
message that sensational
images in popular culture
make it difficult to rai se
confident young women
who will stand up against
domestic violence.
Parenting is on Ehrlich's
mind. While hosting a fash ion show Thursday night in
Baltimore to raise money for
her husband' s campaign, \he
couple announced they re
expecting their second child.
Erlich and the governor
have a 4-year-old son, Drew.

Spears, 21, has gone from
singing songs such as the
relatively tame "Baby, One
More Time" and saying sex
should be saved for marria~e to recording "Slave 4
U,' kissing Madonna during
the MTV Video Music
Awards and posing provocatively for magazine covers.
Ehrlich said she'd like to
apologize personally to
Spears and suggested the
singer give a concert in
Maryland to raise money for
domestic violence awareness.
"As of yet we have not heard
from Bntney Spears or her
publicists," a spokeswoman
for Ehrlich said Thursday.
Jive Records, the New
York-based label that represents Spears, issued a statement earlier in the week saying Ehrlich "shot her own
self in the foot." A spokeswoman for the company,
asked Thursday for comment
on Ehrlich's latest remarks,
declined to comment. .

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
"lg Ten Notebook, Page B2
Yankees defeat Red Sox, Page B3
Ohio's winning teams, Page B4

Bl

•

I
Friday, October 10, 2003

Prep Football

ovc

IHm

0'C

All

2-0
2.0

6-1
5-2
6-1
2·5
4·3
1-6

Rock Hill
Chesapeake
River Valley
Sou1h Point

1-1

1-1
D-2
()-2

Fai~and

Coal GI'0\/9
Today's Games
River Valley at Rock Hill
Sou1h Point at Chesapeake
Fai~and at Coal Grove

SEOAL
~

IHm

All

Gallia Acad~my
4-0 6-1
Jackson
3-1
6-1
Athens
2·1
6-1
t;ogan
2·1
4-3
'
~int Pleasant
1-2
3-3
warren
D-3 0.7
(}4
f&gt;Jlarietta
1-6
Today'a Games
etJrtsmou1h at Gallia Academy
Jackson at Point Pleasant
L:{,gan at Athens
f&gt;Jlarietta at Warren

TVC

.
.
Nelsonville-York

Ohio Division

:&amp;inn

Wellston
E!elpre
'{inion County
~xander

l'jleigs

M
2-0
2.0

All
4-3
4-3

1-1
5-2
0.2 3-4
1).2, 2·5
•
0.2 1-6

Hocking Division

M

IHm
'Oimble
F.ederal Hocking
11&gt;/aterford ,
~iller

~astern

2-0
2·0
1-1
1-1

0.2
0.2

Sou1hern
Today'a Games
Alexander at Meigs
!;astern at Miller
Waterford at Southern
Vinton County at Belpre

All
6-1
4-3
4-3
1-6

2-5
0.7

N~~Xork~t ~lls!Q9 .

T~m61e at ~ra Hocking

Others
IHm

All

7·0
Ironton
Wahama
6-0
Symmes Valley
6·1
Sou1h Gallia
3-4
Oak Hill
2-5
Hannan
0.5
Today's Games
Wahama at South Gallia
Guyan Valley at Hannan
Pickerington North at Ironton
'Oak Hill at Lucasville Valley
Notre Dame at Symmes Valley

Tornadoes top Lancers
BY BRAD SHERMAN

sports@ mydailytribune.com

RACINE - In a battle
of second place Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division teams, it was
Southern that held on to
that
spot
Thursday
evening .
The
host
Lady
Tornadoes clinched at
least a tie for the runnersup slot in the league with
the 15-9, 15- 10 straight
games volleyball victory
over Federal Hocking.
Eastern ( 17-3, 14-2) had
already
clinched
the
championship
after
defeating those same
Lady Lancers Tuesday
evening.
The
win
improved
Southern to 13-4 overall
and I I -4 in TVC play.
Federal Hocking fell to
12-9 and 10-5 in the
league .
"Obviously we played
well enough to win ,"
commented
Southern
coach Roma Sayre. "I was
a little disappointed that
we missed three serves
the last game, its been a
strong point of ours all
year.
"B ut I liked. the way· we
moved, I think we hustled
pretty well."
The win by Southern
averaged an earlier · loss
on the road. Federal
Hocking won the previous
meeting
back
on
September 23.
Game one was a seesaw battle through the
early stages before the
Lady Tornadoes finally
seized control.
. With the game ·even .atfive
points
apiece,
Southern outscored the
Lady Lancers 9-1 to claim
a comfortable 14-6 advantage. Although Fed Hock
put up a struggle, it was
only a matter of time
before the .final point was

Please see Tomadoes. 83

Seniors
•
w1n
home
finale
Bv BurcH CooPER
bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

. ''

PIIIH 1H Buckeyes. 83

PlaaHIIIEI..H,83

Southern's Ashlee Hill served six straight points in game two putting her team ahead to stay
in a straight games victory over Federal Hocking. (Brad Sherman)

Buckeyes, Badgers face stiffest test yet
BY ARNIE STAPLETON

OHSAA hoops
instructional
course set

Still, Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel
expects to see plenty of Davis, the
only running back to crack I 00 yards
against Ohio State during its winning
streak.
He had 144 yards on 25 carries in a
19-14 loss to the Buckeyes at Camp
Randall last 'season, one of 10 games
during Ohio State's streak that have
been decided by a touchdown or less.
"He supposedly wasn't going to
play against us in 2001 and came in
and played very, very well," Tressel
said. "He played against us this past
year and did very, very well. We
expect him to play. This is a huge
game."
Even if he doesn't, that's no lucky

TUPPERS PLAINS -' On
senior night, it was· only fitting that this group of
Eastern
senior girls
recorded
another victory.
It's
has
become
a
common
theme.
Eastern
defeated
Trimble
Lodwick
Thursday,
15-3 , 15-3,
in the Eagles
final tune-up
before the
upcoming
sectional
tournament.
This group
of seniors
(Brandy
:;z:;..;::....::.....J B i s s e I I.
Bissell
Alyssa
Holter, Kass
Lodwick, Katie Robertson,
Rachel Elliot, Stacey Smith,
Becky Taylor and Tia Pratt)
have compiled a 56-10
record the past three years
and won s1x straight TriValley Conference titles . .
"It' s just remarkable," said
Eastern head coach Howie
Caldwell. "They have been
very, very successfuL They
deserve it . They've worked
hard for it."
On Thursday. Lodwick
fi ni shed with 12 service
points and Bi ssell had seven
as the Eagles compiled their
second-straight perfect serving performance, going 43for-43.
Lodwick was 14-for-14
serving and Bissell 8-for-8.
Meanwhile. Lodwick and
Katie Robertson each had
five kills, while Morgan
Weber contributed with four
kills to pace the Eagles '

Associated Press

JACKSON - Any person
interested in obtaining an
Ohio High School Athletic
Association basketball officiating license for the urcoming season should cal 286. 2482.
: You may also send an email to roumicha@ aol.com
to obtain information on how
to register for the course.
The course will be held this
month and in November.

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two public hearings at the Meigs
County Commissioners office, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio on Thunday, October 23, 2003 at
I :30 P.M. for the purpose of providing the public information and receiving .comments as to
the Notice of Availability of FY 2003 CDBG Community Distress Program from the Ohio
Department of Development, Office and Community Partnenbip.
The Community Distress Program provides grant funding to eligible communities to
improve the quality of life, livability and functionality of distressed areas and neighborhoods
by carrying out a comprehensive strategy of.revitalization. Tbe program can fund projects
designed to stabilize and enhance residential neigbborht~ods, or activities, support redevelopment of brownfleld sites or commercial or industrial sites excluding direct to loans to businesses). The Community Distress Grant.celllng for each qualified applicant is $300,000.

Wbet.it

Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on October 23, 2003 to make suggestions and
to provide public input on v,arious activities which may be undertaken in this program. lf a
participant will need auxiliary aids( Interpreter, brailled or taped material, asslstive listening
device, other) due to a disabUity, please contact Gloria Kloes, clerk, prior to O.ctober 23, 2003
at 740-992-2895 in order to ensure that yl!ur needs wlll be accommodated. The Meigs County
Courthouse is handicapped acceuible.
'
.
.
Written comments will be accepted untill:OO P.M, October 23, 2003,.and may be mailed to
the Meigs County Commls~ioners, Courthouse; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

~

..·
.'

t

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

.'

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs County Commissioners

1S20 Vdllfy DI'IW • Point PliOttMI,. WJI, JfU-d7S·4J40
-- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

·-· ...

~--

.1

~--- ---

I
· ~

�Page ~2 • The Daily Sentinel

Big Ten Notebook

·smoker-to-Zeke connection
provides 33rd completion
.

.

BY RUSTY MILLER
Assuciated Press

..

Maybe they should put an asterisk in
the Michigan State record book.
Quarterback Jeff Smoker was 32-for40 for 351 yards and three scores in a
31-3 win over Indiana on Saturday,
tying John Leister's school record for
completions in a game.
While leaving the · field, Smoker
picked up a flying disc and flung it for a
33rd completJon - to Michigan State
canine enterta iner Zeke the Wonderdog.
''I've never had a day like that."
Smoker said of his 80·percet\t accuracy.
"1 couldn' l even do that on a video
gaine.
Smoker isn't a huge video-game fan.
But he has played as himself a -few
times. And he said the computerized
version of No. 9 isn't as good as the
real-life performer, the Big Ten's cooffensive player of the week.
After being suspe nded for the final
five games in 2002 with substanceabuse problems, Smoker has been one
of the best stories in the country this season for the 5-l Spartans. And his last
completion was one of his favorites.
"That was pretty neat," Smoker said
of his toss to Zeke, the lOth receiver he
hooked up with on. the day. "He dropped
the two l threw him last week. So it was
time he stepped up and made a play. I
think that was a touchdown, too. He was
in the end zone."
• STAT OF THE WEEK: Maybe the
road to the Big. Ten title does NOT go
.
through Columbus, Ohio.
Over the last eight years, five teams
that did not play Ohio State in the Big
Ten's rotating schedule went on to win
at least a share of the league championship.
Northwestern ( 1995, 1996, 2000),
Wisconsin ( 1998) and Iowa (2002) got
at least a piece of the Big Ten title without having to meet the Buckeyes.
"! think it would be safe to say that
anybody who doesn't have to play the
Buckeyes goes, ' Whew! That was pretty
good!'" Northwestern coach Randy
Walker said.
· This season, Illinois and Minnesota
1

'

CONFERENCE
don 't play Ohio State. The 17th-ranked
Golden Gophers (6-0, 2-0 Big Ten) host
No. 20 Michigan (4-2, 1-l) on Friday
night at the Metrodome.
Told of the history of teams with a
"Buckeyes Bye," Minnesota coach Glen
Mason said, "Hopefully, we'll keep the
·
string going."
• BLUE BLUES: The folks in Ann
Arbor are not happy.
They hoped Michigan would end the
season in the Sugar Bowl, or the Rose
Bowl, but after the Wolverines lost at
Iowa, two weeks after losing at Oregon,
and onslaught of criticism was directed
toward the coaching staff and the players.
"Obviously, there' s going to be a
backlash when you lose and there's
going to be doubters," defensive tackle
Grant Bowman said. "There's always
people second-guessing what you do.
But that's what comes along with being
at ·Michigan and we accept that. Bottom
line, we haven 't gotten the job done."
· The Wolverines have dropped 17
spots in the polls in the last three weeks.
• RUNNING WILD: Kyle Orton didn't come to Purdue known as Mr.
Mobility.
But after last weekend's game, Orton
may force his teammates and coaches to
rethink that.
Orton was not hesitant to take off
when receivers were ·covered against
Illinois, and the result .was seven carries
for a career-high 49 yards _and five first
downs.
His previous best was 20 yards.
"There's some laughter in the huddle
after I run the ball," he said. "But I'm
doing a little better. The big thing is
when l run for a first down. I need to do
it in key situations to give us a chance at
a first down."
• HEALING HAWKEYES: A week

without a game couldn't come at a better time for lnwa.
The No. 14 Hawke yes (5-I , I, l) need
all the time they can get to heal and prepare for Ohio State on Oct. 18.
Siarting cornerback Jovan Johnson
was· added · to a long list of wounded
when he twisted an ankle against
Michigan on Saturday. Hi s backup,
Ma 'Quan Dawkins, was lost for the season with a tom knee ligament later in the
·
game.
The injured list also includes top
receivers . Maurice Brown and Ed
Hinkel, starting left guard David Walker
and running back Jermelle Lewis, who
tore up a knee in spring drills.
The Hawkeyes didn't have a single
major injury to a starter during last
year's co-championship. ·
"We would have had a hard time fielding . a competitive team this week,"
coach Kirk Ferentz said.
•NO OVERCOACHING: Michigan
State coach John L. Smith says one of
the dangers for anyone is to try to do too
much, with a possibility of a coach outsmarting himself.
"You can have paralysi~ by analysis,"
Smith said. "There have been some
times we've had to take a step back.
We've tried to do too much. It all looks
great. We have all these great ideas. And
we can do it on the board. But those kids
have to do it on the field. As coaches,
sometimes we lose sight of that."
• QUICK-HITTERS: No Purdue
senior cl'ass has graduated with wins
over every ·o ther Big Ten team since
1981. Should the Boilermakers beat
Penn State on Saturday, the seniors
would end that streak .... Michigan may
lean on freshman Jerome Jackson for
some tips on how to slow down his
brother, Minnesota running back Terry
Jackson. "Maybe we can get some espionage going," defensive tackle Grant
Bowman said .... Minnesota's Marion
Barber III has tied the school mark with
13 rushing touchdowns this year. .. .
Longest Big Ten title drought? Indiana
and Minnesota haven't collected a trophy since sharing first pl;tce in 1967 ....
Ohio State has not won an outright conference title since 1984

MAC Roundup

Big Saturday in MAC West
RESNIK
Associated Press

will
work
itself out ,"
Darnell said.
Bowling
Green coach
G r e g g
Brandon had
a similar take
on
the

BY ANDY

Although
the
Mid-American
Conference's 2003 sc hedule is still in its
infapcy, it's nol too early to recognize a
few must-win games.
Four of the live undef~ated teams in
the MAC West play within the division
on Saturday, providing early tests that
could &gt;eparate the .contenders from the
pretenders.
Coaches, however, don't like to place
that much significance on games this
early in the season.
"There's just so many big matchups
between here and the end of the season,
I think it'd be fooli sh to put yourself in
an all or nothing game," Western
Michi gan coac h Gary D&lt;.~rnell said. "It's
just too early in the season to be putting
that kind of label on something like
this."
The "this" he is referring to is the
Broncos' home game Saturda;t against
Bowling Green, which finds Itself just
one spot out of The Associated Press Top
25.
Other big West Divi si on games
Saturday feature Northern Illinois (5-0,
1-0) at Central Michigan (2-3, 0-2) and
Toledo (3-2. l-0) hosting Eastern
Michi gan (l-5, 0-2).
With head-to-head competition being
the first tiebreaker to determine a division champion, Darnell understands it's
important that his Broncos (3-2, 2-0)
beat the Falcons (4- 1. l-0).
But he doesn't want his players to lose
sitjht of the fact that every week could
bnng a make-or-break game for each
team, both of which still have to play
No. 16 Northern Illinois, Toledo and Ball
State.
"Whatever lies behind this Saturday

match up.
"I think it's a big game for both teams,
no doubt," he said. "You want to try to
win all your games in the West."
But?
"There are so many quality teams (in
the MAC), it appears to be pretty bal ~
anced at the top. Maybe one loss won't
·hurt you too bad," Brandon said. "I'd
like to think the winner of the conference
is probably not going to go undefeated."
Northern Illinois still has a chance.
The Huskies are the only MAC team
without a non-conference defeat, and
they show no signs of slowing down.
Last Saturday night's 30-23 overtime
win over Ohio was just the latest in a
string of close games the Huskies have
pulled out this season. They also have
won squeakers over Maryland (20-13,
OT), Alabama (19-16) and Iowa State
(24-16).

The Ohio win came without top wideout Dan Sheldon, who suffered a .dislocated elbow. P.J. Fleck stepped in with
14 catches for a school-record 234 yards
and the tying touchdown catch with l :42
to play.
It was reminiscent of last season when
tailback Michael Turner rushed for a
conference-record l ,915 yards after
starter Thomas Hammock was diagnosed with a careering-ending heart condition.
Huskies coach Joe Novak believes
sophomore receivers Shatone Powers

and Sam Hurd, along with Fleck, a
senior, will ease the loss of Sheldon.
"I don 't think there's any doubt that
any. of those kids can step up and have a
big game," Novak said. "It depends what
(defenses) are doing and who they're
trying to take away. Any of those kids
are very capable."
Central Michigan can't afford to make
any mistakes against the Huskies, who
rarely falter when the game is on the
line.
Chippewas coach Mike DeBord said
Novak doesn't allow his team to have a
letdown in the closing moments.
"They have a great confidence that it's
going to get done and they make plays,"
DeBord said. 'That's why they're win·ning. I don't see that stopping for them
this year."
Novak said he attributes the late-game
success to veteran players who know
how to execute down the stretch.
He reminded his team of that last ·
weekend against the Bobcats, when the
Huskies drove for the tying touchdown
on their final series of regulation and
won with a TD in overtime.
"Coach Novak said that we had been
here before. It's a mindset," said quarterback Josh Haldi. "The veterans that we
have know that you just have to keep
your cool. We' ve been in overtime with
some pretty good teams and once we got
into·overtime here, we knew momentum
would be on our side."
'
That kind of leadership could make the
difference in a division race that probably won't be decided until the season's
final weekend.
Elsewhere in the MAC on Saturday,
Buffalo is at Miami of Ohio, Central
Florida at Ohio and . Kent State at
Marshall: Akron hosts Cal-Poly in a nonconference game. Ball State is off.

Thrashers edge Blue Jackets, 2-1

:ALCS

After years of
neglect, Ohio State
discovers tight
ends can catch
lO plays
of the
day. Yet
the first
words
out of

BY RusTY MtuER

Associated Press
COLUMBUS The
tight end is no longer the
forgotten man in Ohio
State 's offense.
For years, Buckeyes
·coaches Woody Hayes,
Earle Bruce and John
Cooper looked at the men
who filled the position as
little more than a sixth
offensive lineman. Seldom
were passes thrown their
way. Blocking was all they
were trustee! to do.
But with the defending
national champions struggling to find a running
game and with Ben
Hartsock and Ryan Hainby
showing athleticism that
sets them apart from others
aligned up front - · it's a
new era for tight ends at
Ohio State.
"They:re talented," Ohio
State coach Jim Tressel
said. "Those are guys that
know what we're doing and
know why they're doing it."
As a result, ·the No. 3- ·
ranked Buckeyes (5-0, 1-0
Big Ten) have turned
increasingly to a ball-control offense that features
their brawniest receivers.
Heading into Satu'rday
night's game at Wisconsin
(5-l, 2-0), the two tight
ends are among the top four
receivers for Ohio State . .
Hartsock; a chatty and
personable 6-foot-4, 258pound fifth-year senior, is
second on the squad with 14
catches to Michael Jenkins '
23. Wide receiver Drew
Carter is third with 13
catches, with Hamby, a 6-5,
255-pound sophomore, next
with eight catches.
Hamby, a city kid from
Cincinnati, has two TD
catches. Hartsock, the farm
from ·
outside
boy
Chillicothe, has another to
account. for half of the
Buckeyes' receiving touchdowns.
So are tight ends now
considered receivers and
not blockers at Ohio State?
"The numbers would say
that, yes," Hartsock said.
"Insofar as being receiving
threats, yeah. We've caught
more balls. we've become
more of a viable option.
That says yes, but we've
also maintained our status
as being asked to do a lot as
far as our blocking roles."
Still, while Miami tight
end Kellen Winslow Jr. is a
Heisman hopeful, Hartsock
remains a glorified offensive tackle.
He had five catches for 50
yards iri the Buckeyes' 40-0
win over Northwestern two
weeks ago. His diving grab
of a pass near ihe Ohio
State sideline could have
made SportsCenter 's Top

Yankees get even
NEW YORK (AP) - Andy
Pettitte and· Nick Johnson
showed the Bos.ton · Red Sox
the grit that makes the New
·York Yankees so tough in
-October.
: Pettitte fought off early strug:gles to hold down Boston's
:bashing batters. and th~ slump·ing Johnson hit a go-ahead,
two-run homer that powered
New York to a 6-2 victorv
:Thursday ni~ht and tied the AL
-championshtp series.
: Seven of Boston's first nine
:batters reached base, but the
:Red Sox failed to score after
·loading the bases in the tirst
and got only ·one run in the
:opening two innings despite
·having six hits.
: New York, coming off a 5-2
:ross in the opener, went ahead
:on Johnson's two-run homer in
lhe second off Derek Lowe and
opened a 4-1 lead by the fifth.
Pettitte made it stand up,
lying Greg Maddux for second
;with his 12th postseason win,
one behind John Smoltz.
: Jose Contreras pitched l 1-3 .
:innings and Mariano Rivera got
the final three outs, combining
with Pettitte to hold the Red
Sox to four hits over the final
:seven innings. Jorge Posada
:added .breathing room with a
·two-run double in the seventh
off Scott Sauerbeck and fans
:serenaded Boston with chants
:of "19 18" during the ninth, a
. reminder of how long it's been
~~ ince the Red Sox last won the
:World Series.
: The best-of-seven series
'fesumes Saturday in Fenway
:Park. where forn1cc Red S0x
great Roger Clemens pitches in
:Boston for the final time,
opposed by current Red Sox
ace Pedro Martinez.
: Pettine has often been the
:Yankees' October savior.'"called
on to pick up his team when
:their postseason push was on
.the yerge of spinning out of
·control. After New York lost
:the first -ro und opener to

h

s

i

coach's
mouth after the game dealt
with his blocking.
"I don't know if there's a
better blocker ·in America
than Ben Hartsock," Tressel
said. "That one long catch
today, that was pretty
impressive.
He's
258
pounds flying through the
air. We had to fix the field
when he landed."
Even Hartsock's teammates have been surprised
by his dexterity.
"If you look at Ben, you
wouldn't expect hi!l1 to be
able to catch a football, but
he does have some good
hands," defensive lineman
Tim Anderson said. "It
seems like a lot of times
when you look at tight ends,
they're really good at one
thing and not so good at the
other. I think it definitely
helps tha.t Ben can make
those big grabs ... but he
also has the ability to
block.': ·
With Ohio State's running backs averaging just
3.3
yards
per rush,
Hartsock has become a
prime target after peeling
off their blocks at the line.
In addition, quarterback
Craig Krenzel has been out
the last month after hyperextending his right or
throwing elbow. It will be
easier for Krenzel to dump
a pass I 0 yards to a tight
end than to air it out 40
yards downfield to Jenkins.
Ohio State has been using
multiple tight ends to bulk
up the running game, while
at the same time putting
tight ends in the slot or in
the backfield to give opposing defenses a different
look.
"The tight ends have
been doubling as backs
some, so I don't know that
you can say that all their
catches are tight-end catches," Tressel said. "That is
an extension of our run
game in some ways. If you
study the evolution of football, people are throwing
more but not necessarily all
the throws are way down
the field."
Hartsock said he believes
the offense has ironed out
some of the problems over
the workouts surrounding
the bye week.
"It's hard to say whether
we've crested the hill or
whether we're going to get
things going for real now,"
he said. "Hopefully we've
got some of those kinks out
that have been tripping us
up the past few weeks.'' ·

Snyder died Sunday night tore two ligaments in ·his
from injuries sustained in a knee, which were repaired
car· wreck with AU-Star by team physician Dr. Scott
teammate Dany Heatley, Gillogly on Tuesday. · He's
who was charged with out
indefinitely,
but
vehicular homicide. The Thrashers general manager
Thrashers
. Heatley · Don Waddell said he expects
included - were scheduled Heat)ey to return to the ice
t{l travel to Elmira, Canada, this seas·on if his legal
fdr Snyder's funeral on troubles allow it.
Friday.
.
"He's feeling good about
Heatley broke his jaw and the surgery," Waddell said.

~

The Daily Sentinel • PageB3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckeyes .

Ohio State' s defensi ve line , anchored by
ends Will Smith and Simon Fraser wi.th
tackles Tim Anderson and Darrion Scott
inside
.
from Page 81
"The difference · maker is Will Smith ,"
Badgers offensive coordinator Brian White
break for the Buckeyes.
said. "Not that the other guy s aren ' t, but he
Smith " is a big, strong g11y. You look at
some of their ball games, they don ' t miss a . is a really special football player and as
beat, and amazingly the third person , good a defen sive lineman that has played in
Stanley, he's out there getting over l 00 this conference since I' ve been coaching in
it."
yards," Tressel marveled.
That would be since 1995 .
Davis rushed for 247 yards against Akron
The
Buckeyes, however, haven · t faced a
on Sept. 6, the highest individual rushing
Wisconsin . They ' ve stymied
team
like
total il) the nation this season, before getting
Washington,
San Diego State . North
hurt in a stunning loss to UNLV the next
Carolina State, Bowling Green and
week .
Yet, be~ind Smith and Stanley, Wisconsin Northwestern- none of which are big runaveraged. nearly 250 yards on the sround in ning teams.
"What our guys have been asked to do
victories over North Carolina, llhnois and
versus
the run, they ' ve done a solid job of
Penn State .
it,"
Tressel
said . "And they know that it 's a
The. Buckeyes had a bye last week, and
quantum
leap
in challenge" to stop the
Tressel said they needed every bit of the
extra time to prepare for what they'll face in Badgers ' run .
Load up against the run . however, and
Madison.
senior
Lee Evans, who ha s returned from
"They ' II pound it at you across the front,"
Tressel said. ''They can stretch you wide, two knee operations last season to lead the
they can just stay direct and they do a great Big Ten with an 86 .2-yard receiving averjob with their cutback plays. It's not like age , can burn you .
"Wisconsin will challenge us , perhaps
you can load up any one place to stop the
run.''
across the board, better than anyone has
The Badgers haven't seen the likes of challenged us this year," Tre ssel said .

Eagles
from Page 81

New York Yankees starter Andy Pettitte fires to the plate against
the Boston Red Sox in the first inning of Game 2 of the American
League Championship Series in New York Thursday. (AP) ·
Minnesota; the 31 -yeat-old
left-hander pitched them to victory in Game 2. starting a run of
three straight wins that put the
Yankees back in the ALCS
after a one-year absence.
He struggled mightily at the
start against Boston. falling
behind in the count to five ql'
his first six batters. Gabe
Kapler sing led leading off but
was caught stealing by Posada
as Bill Mueller st ruck out.
Boston then loaded the bases
on
singles
by
Nomar
Garciappara a nd
Manny
Ramirez (his lifth straight hill.
and a walk to David Ortiz. But
Pettitte got oul of trouble when
Kev in Millar popped out.

Jason Varitek doubled leading off the second, and scored
on singles by Trot Nixon and
Damian Jackson, but Kapler
bounced into a double play and
Mueller grounded out. That
started a run in which Pettitte
retired I 0 of II batters, challenging and beating the best
offense in the major leagues
with high fastballs and cutters
that moved across the outside
comer.
Pettitte,'starting on six days'
rest, came out after II 8 pitcHes,
allowi ng two runs and nine hits
over 6 2-3 innings. Contreras
rei ieved with a runner on first
and got Garciaparra to pop out
on l1is first pitch.

game at the net.
Eastern also had seven blocks as
Robertson turned back seven and Lodwick
two.
Now, Eastern will turn its attention to the
postseason, where the Eagles advanced to
the regional tournament last year.
Eastern opens play in the sectional 7:30

Tornadoes
from Page 81•
scored.
In the second contest, Brooke Kiser served
Southern to a fast 4-0 lead. Kiser scored six
points total in the match. which tied her for
·
team-high honors.
However, Fed Hock was able to mount a
comeback and eventually took a three point
advantage at 9-6; the lead was short-lived.
Southern's Ashlee Hill entered the contest
and proceeded to rattle off six straight to put
her team on top to stay.
"She got on a roll and she was the spark

p.m. Oct. !8 against either Crooksville or
Waterford · at Athens . Crooksville and
. Waterford play Saturday
It' ll be the seniors final chance to make a
run in the postseason.
"Our main objective right now is to
achieve something in the tournament," said
Caldwell.
The Eagles' junior varsity team was also a
winner Thursday with a 15-l 0. 15-8 decision
to improve to 19-l on the season.
lillian Brannon led Eastern's JV squad
with 16 service points.
we needed tonight," added Sayre .
The Lady Lancers only mustered one point
the remainder of the way.
Katie Sayre was the leading Southern hitter with nine kills followed by teammate
Emily Hill with five .
Kiser and Deana Pullins had eight and
seven assists respectively for SHS.
The Southern junior varsity won in three
games 15-4, 14- 16, 15-4. Casey Sellers led
the way for the winners with 12 points followed by Bethany Riflle with II .
. . Southern will participate in a tri-match at
Meigs on Tuesday; River Valley will be the .
third team. They will wrap-up the regular
season next Thursday at home hosting
Waterford. ·

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· ATLANTA (AP) - On a
night of tributes to Dan
Snyder, hi s former teammates gave him the best one
-, a season-openitlg victory.
Chri s Tamer scored with
2:24 left on a pass from
Marc Savard as the Atlanta
Thras hers capped an emotional night. with a 2- 1 vic to. iy over the Columbus Blue
Jackets on Thursday night.

Friday, October 10, 2003

Friday, October 10, 2003

www .mydailysentinel.com

"That's all he 's feeling good
about."·
·
·
Tamer, one of only three
players left from Atlanta's
maugural season, took a shot
that beat Marc Denis, who
didn ' t appear to see the
puck . The Blue Jackets
pulled Denis from the goal ·
111 the final seconds but
never got a ~lear shot at the

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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

•

t

"

BY JAMES HANNAH

Associated Press
.. 'DAYTON- Coaches arc rarely at a loss for
words. but when the topic tums to winning
Streaks. they clam up. Talking about streaks,
they say, can put extra pressure on the team and
distract the players.
. "All we ever try to do is win the next game.
We don ' t look in the rear-view mirror," said
bayton coach·Mike Kelly.
: Kelly 's team has a 14-game winning streak,
lhe longest among teams in Division 1-AA.
'fwo other Ohio teams have the current longest
)Winning streaks in Division 1-A and Di~ision
Ill.
Ohio State has won I9 straight in Division 1f'.. while Grand Valley State University. in
1\llendale, Mich.. has a , l9'game wmomg
itreak in Division II.
: Div ision Ill' s Mount Union College in
j'\ll iance hasn't lost a game in four years. The
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel,
team is riding a 46-game winning streak and is above, checks his play s heets durapproaching the all-time record winning streak
ing a game against Bowling Green
in any of the four divisions - 54 gaines. That
· State Sept. 20 in Colu mbus.
mark is held by -Mount Union.
.
Tressel says he doesn't thin k
But Mount Union coach Larry Kehres doesabout his team's winning streak.
n't like to talk about it.
now at 19, going against
~ ''I'm not superstitious, but it just doesn't
Wisconsin Saturday. Mount Union
serve any purpose," Kehres said. "It could
footbal l coach Larry Kehres. right,
almost be distracting. You're dealing with watches his team in this December
something that just isn't pertinent to this sea2001 photo. Mount Union has not
son."
lost a game in four years. The
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel agrees.
team
is riding a 46-game winning
" I don ' t think about it," he said. "When it's
streak
and is approaching the al l·
brought up. you acknowledge it. That's what it
time record winning streak in any
is. But reall y what's important is the next
of the four divisions , 54 games.
(game)."
WiMing streaks in college football come and That mark is held by, Mount Union.
Winning streaks in college footbal l
go, but some have stood the test of time.
come
and go. but some have stood
Okl ahoma's 47-game winning streak
the test of time. (AP)
between I953-57 is the longest in Division 1-A.
Montana (200 1-02) and Penn ( I992-95) both
had 24-game streaks in Division 1-AA.
Wis., to take on upset-minded Wisconsin. And
ln Division ll . Hillsdale College set the Grand Valley visits Northern Michigan. the last
record winning streak by posting victories in 34 team to beat the Lakers in a reguhir-season
straight games between 1954-57. However, game. Quarterback Steve Mariucci led
Morgan State had the longest unbeaten streak Northern Michigan to a 29-28 victory Sept. 30,
in that division, winning or tying 54 straight 2000.
"We're going back to the scene of the crime,"
games between \931-38.
Teams face the risk of having their streaks Grand Valley coach Brian Kelly said.
But he said he doesn' t think mtoch about the
snapped every time they step on the field.
streak.
On Saturday, Ohio State travels to Madison,

Holcomb's return
could take longer

"We don 't talk about it," Kell y said. "There's
too mucl1 pressure. I really don 't think anyone
cou ld sustain themselves with the kind of pressure if you talked about it. The &gt;tory i.s we don 't
make .ol a story. "
He said the winning streak affects the coaching only in that it tells the coaches they' re doing
sumethi11g right .
" It validates what we' re doing so you have a
tendency to stay with what '~ working,'' he said.

BEREA (AP) - It could take longer than
originall y anticipated lor Cleveland Browns
quarterback Kelly Holcomb to return from a
leg inju ry.
" It takes abo ut four to six weeks to heal,''
Holcomb said Thursday of the hairline fracture
of hi s right fibula .
Holcomb cou ld be out until after the Browns
bye wee k, mean ing he woul d he ready fo r the
Nov. 9 game at Kansas City.
HolcoJilb said he isn' t experiencing any
pain , but the pain woulu return if ile tried to
play at ga me· speed.
"Yes. it is fru strating a little bit." he said . "I
could sit there and belfyache alf day about it.
but in reality, what can l do'J lt's just an un fortunate part of the game."
Browns coach Butch Oavis said Holcomb
could return later this month if he can tolerate
pain.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

for less than twolhlrds of that amount.
Terms or Sate: '10%
down day of aale
. Jeffrey V. Laurlto
(SCf0014652)
Attorney lor Plaintiff
Ralph E. Trussell
Sheriff
•
Mliga County, Ohio
EXHIBIT A
The following real
11111te situated In the
County of Meigs anci
State of Ohio and In
of
the :rownshlp
S.llabury and bound·
ad and described as
folfowa:
Being a part of the
South of Section No,
17 In Town No,:!,

,.

Kesterson;

thence

according to the mag·
netic meridian North
one degree East forty
one chains and
forty-two links to the
center, line of said

Secticm; thence East
four chains and 57
links to a otake;
12
thence South
dagrees following the
West line fence of
NettlrColllna land
and the Lane road tc
the center of the Long
Hollow Rqad;
thence following
the meandering&amp; of
the Long Hollow
Road to
the South line of said
Section
No.
17;
thence Wut along
said South line of
said Section, 4 chains
and 33 links to the
place ol baglnnlng,
containing thirty-nine
39) acres, mora or
loss. Except Ten (10)
acres heretofore sold
to George
Weyeomllter on the
West side of oald
tract and North of the
road.

Permanent Parcel
Number;
14·00518
KEVIN
MICHAEL
GRAHAM
AND
CHERYL LYNN ORA·
HAM, HUSBAND ahd
WIFE 35215 Bl.U:E
HILL
ROAD,
I'OMEAOY OH 46769
Loan
Reference
Number: GRAHAM.
Firat American Order
No:
. 2900192.
(1,0) 3, 10, 17

Public N9t1ce
NOTICE
The

Ohio

Department
of and are open for pubCommerce, Division
lic lnspoctlon in the
· Industrial
of
office of the Meigs
Compliance,
pur- County
Auditor,
suant
to
Ohio Second •
Floor,
Code Courthouse, Second
Revised
Chapters 3781., 3791 . Street, Pomeroy, OH.
end t 19 has Issued
Complaints agalnsl
AdJudication Order the valuations, as
Number
03·0046 established for taJ~
"Notice
of year 2003 must be
Opportunity
for made in accordance
Hearing and Stop ¥Jith Section 5715.19
Work Order: to .Bruce of the Ohio Revised
Bumgardner, et al. , Code. These com31711 Noble Su111mit plaints must be riled
Rood,
Middleport,
on forms which will
Ohio 45769 .
be furnished by the
The Order finds
county Auditor and
that the Retail Store must be flied in the
(Pool People) located County
Auditor's
at 580 West Main
Office •on or before
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio the 31sl day of March
45769, has been or Is 2004. All complaints
being constrUcted or flied with the County
altered without sub· Auditor will be heard
mlttlng plans or en
by the Board of
Application for a Revision in the man·
Certificate of ?tan ner
provided
by
Approval
to
the Section 5715.19 of
Division of lnduotrlal
the Ohlo Revised
Compliance or any Code.
certified
building , Nancy
Parker
department, and that Grueser
the
Respondent, Meigs County Auditor
Bruce Bumgardner; Is (10) 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13;
In
violation
of 14, 15, 16,17
Sections 3781.04 and
379'1.04 of the Ohio
Revised Code and
Public Notice
Ohio Administrative
Code Auto 4104:Z·1·
PUBLIC NOUCE
17. The Order proNOTICE: Ia hereby
video the Respondent
given
that
on
with
Notice
or
Saturday, October 11 ,
Opportunity
. or
2003, at ·10: 00 a.m., a
Hearing of lis right to
public sale will be
appeal tho . Ordar to
held at 211 West
t,ha Ohio Boord of
Second
Street,
Building Appeals.
Pomeroy, Ohio, fn the
(10) 3, 10,17
parking lot of The ·
Farmers Bank and
Savings . Company.
Public Notice
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
NOTICE . TO TAXPAY· . Company is selling
ERS
Reference:
for ca's h In t)and or
5715.1 ~ Ohio Revised certified check the
Code
following collateral :
The Meigs Co.unty
'1993 Chevrolet S10
Board of Revision
IGCEKI4K2PZ22266
hes completed Its 1
wo'rk of equalization.
2002 Kawasaki ATV
The tax returns for . JKBt'FBA
I
02B
lax year . 2003 have 811941
been revised end the
1994
Dodge
valuatlona completed
s h • d 0 w

Brothers

no

expressed

or

Implied
warranty
given.
. For further lnfor·

matlon, or

cit the Wheel

Fall Po"ker Run

IB3AP64K7AN1 08177
1999 Chevrolet S
14
1GCCSI446XK
165463
1999
Pontiac
Sunfire
IGZJB5245X7576555
The Farmers Bank
Savings
and
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
end
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The· above described
collateral will be sold
"as is-where is" , With

for an

appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date contact Olane Recoor at
992-2136.
1018,9,10/03

First bike out 11 am,
last bike out 1 pm
All bikes in by 5 pm .
FOE 2171
BUFFET DINNER
Saturday, October 11
6 pm
Meat furnished by the men.
Ladies please
bring covered dish.
All members &amp; guest welcome
Eagles Club 2171
Band for Oct. 1Oth
"Third Shift"
8·12
Members &amp;
Eag les Club 2171
Band for Oct. 11th
"Rick Rumfield"
8·12
Members &amp;guest only
MIZWAY TAVERN
Pool Tournament start Thu
Karaoke Wed, &amp; Fri. '1&gt;
Band Sat Club .33

9-1.

''b.---...,......,...... :---r""'"'""l,..,-

RakB in thB
~aving!:
. .
you'll find

in the

Cf agg ifi ed~!

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

Elete
Saturday,
October 11 , 2003

Oct. 10-11-12

French 500
Flea-Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds
Dealers Welcome

Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

L ,:,· .....

-

ister

GailY Cou.N). OH

In One Week With ·Us
REACH OVER ,285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD
ONLINE
TO
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Sentinel

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Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lytribune.com

Offiee llou.r-~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

r

Word Ads

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

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad5 Should Run 7 Oay5

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___

Display Ads

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m .
· All Display: 12 Noon 2
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Bu•lness Days Prior To
Jn Next Day•s Paper
Publication
~~~....~~~~~~n -C olumn: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display: 1 :00 p . m.
Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sundays

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

\ \ \ 01 \ C I \ II \ I \

.,

Lr.•o--oiFORoiiHiiiUlliisili~iOLEii·O.·...· I

t.__ _ _ _ __.
lwrlghtC!IIc.net

[320

level

4 BEDROOM . 4 BATH
HOUSE! Foreclosure only
$9.900. for listings. 1-800719-300 1 Ext. F144

Sal. 8·5 . Graham St. Kids Silver,.
Gotd Corns,
olothes and more.
Prootsets, Diamonds, Gold
U.S. Currency,·
Tools, western books, fish - Rings,
ing gea r, general house· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
8 Week old female puppy. wares , much more. Thur·
740-446-2842.
Sat
Pine
Street
Storage
Mom wa s Black Lab - Dad
was large dog. Good home ~74
Outside Wood Burner, Water
YARD SA!.F:·
only ~740 )985·38 77
(304)675-4004 or
type

...,
1· 12 week old black &amp; white
male kitlen. Litter trained.
(304)675-611 8

cats

and

kiltens

Big Yard Sale: Fri-SAT
October 10· 11 9:00-5: 00.
White. fnendly male house
Ant1ques. cloth es. furniture .
cat. Litle~ trained , call 740glassware, Fenton , Kids
446-3897.
books. Bean1es. much more.
37985 ST AT 7 log cabin 1·
Lon ANI&gt;
2 miles lrom Chester

I \ 11'1 fl' \II\ I
'oi R\ Il l ..,

FOUNI&gt;

1110
.

·-------·
16 Day.CDL Training
TMC /Swift &amp; · 30 Major
Carriers Need Entry Level
Drivers. Grad's Rec. Top
Pay/B'tils/Job Placement &amp;
equipment, lawn equipment, Be off wk'ends. t -866·602·
wicker headboard, tots of 7035.
items.
A leading provider o! supHuge 5 Family Yard Sale: pan services to Individuals
SALE·
Oct 10 &amp; 11th. 9am. to 5pm. with MR/00 IS looking tor a
GALLIPOUS
Court Street Rd ., Racine. Full-time AN Supervisor to
Follow signs from Forest work in Chesapeake and
2 family sale. Friday &amp; Run ." or Morning Star Rd. Gallipol is. Supervi sory expeSaturday, 9·5. 10317 St. At Everything including ,'le rience requ.ired. Benefits
7 South. Clothing and misc. kitchen sirik . Years of cluHer included. Contact Dorothy
Harper at 74Q-446-7 146. An
have to go.
Items
Opportunity
Equal
2-lamily yard sale, Fri. 10 &amp; Multi-Yard sale October 101h Employer. F/Ml DN.
Sat. t1 . School desks, tools, &amp; 11th at Bashan &amp; Carmel
baby items, clothing &amp; m1sc . . Ads. Yellow house on hilt. An awesome job!. $6·$9 per
Cora Mills Rd . &amp; Dewitt Or. Winter clothes. books, lots hour after training! No expeof misc.
rience needed! Full/part
3626 Addison Pike. 2 lamily - - - - - - - . . . , - - ti me, flexible scheduli ng ,
fa ll clean out. Furniture. Oct. 11 . Harrisville. Ohio, conve nient
Pomeroy
dishes. lots of misc .. Fri &amp; State Route 684 112 mile Location , 20+ posil ions
Sat. 9·5.
lrom 143. natu ral gas available, call 9-S, M·F, 1·
heaters. hOusehold items . .888-974-Jobs.
Friday only 8:30-5;00. Green c.lothing (boy's), etc.
women
__.:._:,....:....:.____
Terr
· Kid. &amp;
AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
clothes·. winter coats, house- October 10-11 South 6th Sell. Shirley Spears, 304 •
hold &amp; misc. items.
Avenue, Middlepor~. Toys, 675 _1429 _
clothes
children-adult, - - - - - - - - Garage Sale Friday Oct. t 1· kl·lchen table, coffee tables, B
s I h g at
2295 Graham School Rd.
usy aon as re opporGallipolis. B~s 10. 6 m) &amp; baby changing table, and tunity for experienced stylist.
~,
lots more . Proceed will be with manager's license to
"girls
(7 · 8 )
clothing, for Christian Brockert;s take over excess clientele.
men's/wo men's
clothing Autism The rapy.
740·441 · 1880 or 740-256·
Misc. items and hOusehold _::_::._ _. . : . , : - - - - 6336 _
Garage Sale: 79 Brook Dr. In October 12 &amp; f3. Hysell Run - - - -- - - - Rodney. Prom Dresses, tires Road. Something fo r every- Christian metal rock baild
16• &amp; 15w, Chevy rims and one. Boys sizes 8-Hi. girls needs drummer. Our influ·
lot~ mora. Fri. &amp; Sat. dct . 10 size 4-6. Men anp womens. ences Include F1,.1gazy, Black
Lols of misc.
Sabbath, Alice Cooper, Pink
&amp; 11 ,9·4.
Floyd, Dio, Metalllca, Black
Garli\Qe Sale: Ocl. 9,1 0,1t Satu"rday, October 11 · 521 Label
Society: Staple,
583
Georges
Creek. Mulberry Hts, Pomeroy 3 Disciple, Tourniquet, Pillar,
Antiques, old records, Avo n tamily, lots of kids clothes, and a whole bunch of other
boltles. old buttQflS, jars , mise ilerr'ls
rock bands. We are looking
glass . collectables,. misc. Saturday, October 11 , 2003 lor someone who· can
Ra in or Shine!
9 .A.M.-3.P.M. A yard sale groove, if interested you can
Garage Sate": Sat ~-5 house- and bake sale will be tlafd at call Joseph. (740)441-1236,
hold. crafts , toys, clothes, the
Harrisonville CNA's ahd HHA's needed to
misc . 9579 At. 160.
Presbyterian
Ch urc~ provide In-Home Services to
Sponsored by:.Lend-A H,and the ElderiYtDisabled in the
Huge yard sale at ·1280 Come onecomeall
Wayne, Cabell and Mason
Eastern Ave . Big oon·s Auto
Sales lot lntluOes, old hard· Thursd8y and Friday Oct 9· County Ar~S. Call -Toll Free
. residonce. rue
~ ch 1,888-453·499Z
back bookS, refrigerator, 1,0 Maurer
motorcycles,
tlresfrims, Fork Rd. Co 19 Crafts, exer· Domiho's Now Hiring all
trash comPactors, furniture', cise equipment, 1979 GMC locations Pt. Pleasant,
other household lt~ms and 4.w~eel drive $1200.
Gallipolis, &amp; Pomeroy. Sale
•collacllbles.
Friday
&amp; Yard Sale: High-school drivers, must b~ 18. Apply In
aturday.
parking lot in Racine. Some , person a~ locations.

.c.

side and Outside yard
ale. 648 · 4th Ava ., Oct.
9,10,11. 9am-Spm.
Qct. 10-11 9:00·4:00 Patio
turnilure. drapes, spreads,
dishes. office equipment
many misc. items. 152 Oak

Or. Spring Valley.

.,

/D

www.comlcs .com

HELP WAI\'nD
Full tim e sales posilion.
mcperience preferred . Apply
in person "at ThOmas Do It
Center, Point Pleasant, WV
--------Growing Healing &amp; Cooling
company looking for experienced rnstallers with some
tech experience. lnstailation
e)(perience a must. Good
pay. (740)441·1236 if no
answer, leave message.
--------Help wanted caring lor th e
elderly, Darsl Group Home.
now paying m1ninlum wage.
new shirts: 7am-3'Pm. 7amt
5pm. 3pm -11pm, llpm7am, call 740-992·5023.

•t o

~
C&gt; 2003 b NEA , Inc.

(304)674-1315
Pawpaw fruit $1 to S2 per
pound, walnuts $10 per hundred pounds, (740)698·
2124

lot . Reduced to

S78 .000. 740·446·4737.

GtVFAWAI'

(7401992·6882

HousES
ffiR

110

Security Otflc;ers
GuardsmarK. LLC is current·
ly accepting applications fo r
part time secur1ty positions
in the Appl e Grove area
Hours will range from 16·32
t1rs per week w1th a pay rate
starting at $7.30 per hr.
Applicants must be at least
2 1 years o~ age, have a
clear policJ record and a
high school diploma or
equivalenl. Must also'pass a
drug screen. Apply in person
at M&amp;G Polymers Main Gate
in Apple Grove between
9am-2pm daily. Must be will mg to work weekends and
au shills. EOE M!F

' For Sale: Locat!KI in building
#3 (Chapel) Mausoleum of
Hope in the Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. Gallipolis,
Ohio 3 crypts in tier 1#4 .
Would like to sell 1ogether.
but wOUld consider sellrng
on or two. for more 1nto call
740-44 1-0233 or 740-4463488.

By owner 3 bedroom 2 bath
riverfront with boat dock 1.5
acres
in
Gallipolis
photos!mtormatiOn on line
www orvb.com code 90303
or cal l 740-446-053 1
By Owner 3 Bedroom Ranch
2 bath s. 2 car garage
Gallipolis photoslrnlormation
on line www orvb.com code
8 1803 or call (740)367·7039

rr:::--~~----,

All real ..tate advertising
in thil ntwtpaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair ttou•lng Act of 1968
which m•ke• It lll•gal to
tdv1r11•• " tny
prtf.,..l'lce. llmhation or
die..~ ' ~ r : natlon buad on
r~c•. \1\IIIOr, rel'alon, tex
ramUli! 1talu1 or national
ortgln, ot any inlitntion to
m1k1 any 1uch
prtt..-.nce, llmHatlon or
dl1c:tl mlnatlon."

1'110
W ,\NJ1ll)
.
To Do
L.---ioiiioiii0.-_.1
Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
mtll jus t call 304 _ 67~_ 1957 .
----------

HOUSECLEANING
Wanted licensed Ohio Available day or evemng.
Social Worker to provide Call 74Q-446- 1756. Ask for
co.unseling services for . Deanna or leave a message.
youth in a group home set·
Hng in the Jackson Ohio Jim's Carpentry and small

Manual lathe operator- must
be able to make own set ups
&amp; able to read blue prints,
need to have at least 1 yr.
experience, send resume to:
Imperial EleCtric. Att: Mark Area. This is a full time posiVenoy. 345 Sycamore St. , tion with competitive salary
Middleport, Oh 45760
and excellent benefits. Must
--------be motivated and have a
Need 7 ladies to sell Avon. wi llingness to work with kids
Send resumes to The
Call 740-446-3358
Counseling
Center.
Need to earn Mone11? Lets AHentlon AI Siebel, 608 Park
'
Ave, Ironton, OH 45638
talk th e l'iEW Avon . Call
EOE
Marilyn , 304·882-2645 to 1'1!!::'"-~----""'1

~~~:Capi~~~:o Y~s~~a~~~

licensed Daycarel Baby sitting • watch kidS all shifts .
take _private pay/state paid.
(?40) 843"1094

1120

:70

rlO

MISCELIANF.OUS I

•
•
,Pointers/CaulkersfCieaners 1
Experienced.
Columbus,
OH. Top wages. 614-491 · 25 Slrtoua People Wanted
0658 · '
Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash for lhe
Reception work available pounds you LO SE!
Moh·Fri. Full or Part-lime in Saf8, Natui-al, No Drugs.
· 800-201-o832
Medical Office. Contact

Thia nawapaper wUI not
knowingly accept
adwerttHmentl tor ,..1
e1tate which Ia In
vioLation of the law. Our
reader• are hereby
Informed th1t all
dwelling• adv.riltld In
thll new•paper are
available on an equal
opportunity ba....

74 0 4 46 2506
&lt;_ _ _l_ _ ..,·,.._ _ _: - - : -

MB Handyman Service
Hauling, painting , power
learn all the ways it can worK
SmrATIOI\5
washing, driveway repai r,
lor you .
nr..,~
seal coating, _gutters, chimnn..rul:£1"
- - - - - - - - - ~---oiiiiiiiii;.w ney, plumbing. Jack of all
Overbrook Rehab Center is
trades. 30yrs. exp. Senior
looking for a part-tiine relief Assisted living and extra Discount. Free Estimates .
cook, please come in and litl care lor your loved one .in my (304)882·2196. (304)377·
out and application at 333 jihfio:i
m;:.•·;.:7.;:4;::0-:388;::;:;·;;
0~11:.;:8~._""'' 8266
Page Street, Middleport, Oh. ~~.
TRABus~NtNltMNG
45760.
.
Will pressure wash homes,
--------trailers , decks, metal build·
Part· Time Tax Preparers
inQS and gutters. Call (740)
needed for busy tax office. Galllpolla Career College 446-0151 ask for Ron or
(Careers Close To Home)
Pomeroy location. We will
leave a message
train.
Computer
skills Call Today! 740-446-4367,
1·800-214-0452
II \ \ \ ( l\1
required. Send resume to;
The Dally Sentinel , PO 729- www.galllpolisca reercollege .com
.Reg fl:90·05·l27 4B.
~
13, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Oalena (304)773-5000

Approx. 2400sq. ft. 3-5 bed·
room. 2 bath, 1 car garage,
fenced back yard . storage
bUilding. has large den. new
carpet. Vinyl &amp; cenlral air.
Good location , close to
school Also includes 2
apartments on back lot, currently rented . $130,000 for
all . (304)675-7833

~-oiOProlmJNIIioioiiiiiillliilm'iioi-J
..,
INOnCEI ·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know. and NOT to send
money th rough the mail until
ypu have investigated the

3 Br. house for renl Localed

MOBILE Ho~ru;

on Sanders Dr1ve $550 per
month Depos11 and references
reQu rred
Call
Wiseman Real Estate 740·
446-3644

HDuse
lor
Renl
on
Aoc k;ca stte Road . Br os1a .
1994 Clayton 16w80 Elec 3 WV $350 Damage Depos1•.
bedrooms. 2 baths, round Refe rences Jrom Former
tub. skyligh t A/C. 3 fans· Landlords No rnstde pets.
some new carpet. $15,500. Call (304 1675-1277 alter ·
6pm.
Kanauge Moblte Home
Sales
In Aio GrandNinton area. 17
Gallipolis, Ohio
acres. 2 1!'2 car garage. Pet

74o-\41-0310

Allowed. S400 month 606286-2 148 .

COle's Mobile Homes
US 50 East. Alhens. Ohio. Just beyond Centenary.
45701 . 740-592-1972
large newly remodeled
kitchen• with all appliances,
Good used 14X70 2 bed· dinmg and living room . two
room .
2 bath Only bedrooms. bath . large Jront
$8995. 00. Includes delivery. and back decks $485
Call Harold (740) 385·9948 month. $400 depos1 t NO
PETS
740-446-4254 Of
New 14X70 3Brf2Bth only 740-446·0205
$995 00 down and only :..:.~2-::.::::::.... ___:._;_
$196 .43 per month . Call Large hOuse fo r rent rr:1
Karena (7 40) 385-7671
Pomeroy.
refe-rence
&amp;
deposit req wred , no pets.
New 2003 Doublewrde . 3 BA (740)949 -7004
&amp; 2 Bath . Only $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. t-800·691· New 3 b1. 1 bath . garage
6777
$500 per mo. + deposit N¢
pets. Call 740·245-51 14
No Problem Sale- want a
Tak1ng Application s 3 beetnew sectional home? No
room house Porter W111 renl
Problem. Need foundation
with option buy 2004
and septic? No Problem .
Reterences/depos1t 74'0Need util ities run or · dr1ve·
388-9946.
way? No Problem. Wa nt big
savings on a 2003 model. Unfurnished 2 br. house with
No Problem. Cole's Mobile full basement. close to town .
Homes. U.S. 50 East. asking $400. a mon. +Utili:
Alhens. OhiO, 740-592-1972 ties,dep.required call 304·
Since t 967. Where You Gel 675·8902 or 304·593·0 152 :
Your Money's Worth

r

M~~m;

(740)388·9818

WID(304i576-9991

Very good conditiOn/clean.
1993 mobile hOme (14X80)
sit1ing on 2-lots on Second
Streel
Syracuse,
Oh .
Storage-building wlyrnyl sid·
ing to match home. 21 X2 1
carport on a 24X70 paved
drive. Ask1ilg $45,000.00

14x70 Trailer. electnc heat. 3
bedroom . HUO approvecf
No Pets Phone (740)7422714

OBD

2 bd. wtw carpet, air, porch.
Very nrce. no pets. In
Gallipolis. 740-446-2003 or

740·446·1409.

( ~4Pi992 ·3330 .

2 bedroom mobile hOme tor
rent in Aac1ne . . $325 rent.
$325 deposit. 1 yr. tease . no
pets, (740)992·5039 no calls
afar 8:30pm
'-....:...:..:.::.__ _ _ __
Taking applications: 2 br
moblle "hOme, no pets. $100
deposit.
$250
month .
includes water 740-446·
3617

Office. building for rent- 600
S.F , elect. heat, a/c. ceiling
fan , River Park, Minersville.
Farm house· 3 bedroom. 2 $300/mo+ $200 ctep., \614)
baths, 2 story, newly reno- 876 . 1661 .
vated, unfinished basement. P.r;;,:,;~::.;;.
screen ed porch. 22x20
l..o1s &amp;
garage, double carport ,
public water, Meigs County,
Tre iters &amp; Apartments lor
·country seHing 5+ acres. no 2br. tba , home 482 Hornten rent. Call 740-367-0611
tand contract, $79,500. catl St. Mason. 41 acre lot adja- BV6nings and weekends.
cent Union Cemetery Broad
(740)742-9937
APAKI1\oftNI'S
Run . Map parcel 1660003
FOR RENT ·
House tor sate in Harttort , agents protected. (304)487WV on Moore Streei. 6723
1 and 2 bedroom apartt
$ 18,000.00 080. (740) 742·
ments.
fumished and unfur&gt;
2535
6 acres MIL water and electric Installed 1:500 ft : road nished, securit y deposn
House for sale, 704 4th
required. no peiS i· 74Q-992frontage.

_____.,

L---A-CRE.\iiil
'iiGiiE0.-,.1

r

Street, New Haven . 3
Bedroom, finished baS;B·
ment with wood burner. 2·
car garage, beauty shop
build on, could be used as
shop or family room Ph.
(304)882 ·2770 (304)88 2·
2439

2218.

Write To: J&amp;M Farms
960 McCully Ad
Gatlipotls, OH 45631.

Bedroom Apartment ,
Kitchen Fu rnisl"\.ed .
,All
$300 Month,
Lot for , sale in Rac ine, Electric,
Deposit Aequlred.Near HiQh
(740)992·58$8
School. (304)675·3100 Or
1! 1 ' 1 \1 '
(304)675·5509

Nice 3 bedroom Ranch, at
Spring Valley on Jackson
Pike.
1 tl2 bath, fireplace,
ABSOLUTE ~OLDMINEI
60 vending machines with basement, 2 car g8rage. On
I excellent locations .811 lor 1/2 acre plus. Completely 1-3 Bed. FORECLOSED
painled, new carpet. Asking homes. Buy !rom $199 a
$10,995 (800)~23:4·6982
108.900,· by appointment. month! 4% down, 30yru at
·

1 beQroom upstairs apt. in
GallipoUs. $235 per month,
deplref required. Call 740.

446·7130.
· 2 BR Quiet Loe&amp;tlon. Near·
Ho~zer CIA, WID Hookup 1
No Pets. $399. Plus Utilities

740·245·5713 ·or 419-?97· 8.5% 'APR. For Listing Call (7"'1)446·2957.
2390.
1-800-719·3001 Ext F 1709 2 br. W/0 hook up ,.1,

C ~AL ·1

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS so~:~~~=~~~~

740·992-6292.

1·888·582-3345

1

Older 2 bedroom. 12x65. 1n
great · co ndition .
Needs
nothiilg bul moved, ready to 1 mobile home with 3br.
live in. $4800. Located 1n Located m Glenwood. All
Bidwell -Vin ton
area appliances
With

ofta~inQ .

Complete Home Gym for
Sales-National Co. needing sale. ~ultilunctional ~11ercise
auto related sales/delivery " machine w/bench &amp; bars .
persons to service local 600 lbs ol plates &amp; dumbbell
market. Truck, salary, bene- . wlrack lor storage. Only 6
!Its included. Keystone months old, over~ value
new stuff. October 11, 9~?1 Fulltimehelp needad. Apply
Automotive
1·800·820· tor just $500. Call 740-256- 111!11!'""'~------.
Raif! cancels.
Mtw&amp;en 10_, 1 am, t,oton.,
3962.
8816or740-3393709. ·
r6 YARD SAl...&amp;
Thurs.1, Sat. McCiures
Pr. ~
Aestaura.nts. All 1ocations.
Jackson Pike, 0 allipolls
1068 , 4th Street, North 740-446·3837 ; Middleport
740·992-5248;
Mason ~ Fri. &amp; Sat 8 _7
Pomeroy
·
·
No Fee Unless Wi Wtnf

Rmr

3 bedroom . 2 bath BriCK
hOme Aelerences and 2
months deposil required .
$650 a month no pets 740388·9851

3 bdrm, FR, lg LA, Cath.
FOR SAI.F:
ceilings , wood beams. tireplace. hardwood floors,
1979. 24x48 SeCtional 3 BR.
more mlo (740)441-1724.
2 Bath. Den. French C1ty
3 bedrooms. 2 bath Ranch. Homes Gallipolis Oh10 740Remodeled kitchen . 1/2 acre 446·9340

L - - - - - - - - J Three family yard sate. Fri- Absolute Top Dollar: u.S

Free

H&lt;»rt-s

~OR SAL£

(7401992-3650

r

l'oMF.ROY/MDJOLE

r

Remodeled 3 bedroom.
1/2 bath in good nerghbor·
2 story, 4 bedroom house. h"OOd in Middleport. (740)
gas heat &amp; ate. 1:32 992-7743 or v1ew a1
Bullernut.
Pomeroy, ~. orvb . comlt8 1 503

kmck knacks. 9/10 mile out 1lth 9-4pm. xmas items,
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit of Evergreen, Hemlock Ad
canning jars, clothing, baby
·for sale , Chester Township,
items, pump jacks $50., 8w
Me1gs County, send teMers Oct. 11 &amp; Oct.13, 8:00-? circular saw $50., TV.
of 1nterest to : The Daily 4409 Bulaville Pike. Rugs,
Sentinel . PO Box 729·20, curta ins. tools, cookstove, 3 Family Ya rd Sale
potbelly stove more items for Oct. 10-11 . sam-?
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Monday·s sale
2109 Mt. Vernon Lots of
L&amp;L Scrap Metals will be
M1sc. items.
closed Oct. 3 thru Oct. 13, Saturday Only· Antique furOIIure. toys, pedal cars, Oct. 10-11, From 9-5, 1418
for inventory reduction.
school desk 700 Block of Ohio Street.
Say good bye to high phone Second Ave .
bills! New local phOne servYa rd Sale Oct. 11 . AI 2 &amp; 87
1c/e with FRE E unlimited Several family flea market, . on Chestnut Ridge Ad . MI.
rlle.tion w1de long Distance 1018·1 0/12. 3 miles east of Alto. WV. Antique items,
1-800-635-2908
or Bob Evans at Perry 's electric range, &amp; lots ol other
www.FreedomMovie.com/itp Green House. Lots and th ingS.
aysyou. Local Agents want· L.ots of stuff. Don 't milS O!fli.-~~-----r
ed.
this one. Also hot dog sale
WANTEn
Saturtlay 11th.
__
TO BUY

r

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

Rl \1 I .., I \ j I
oo
r.;;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~

YARD SAt.F:·
GAUJI'OLL~

. Oct 9,10, 11 Clothes, and 1105 Meadowbrook Oct

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

POLICIES: Ohio 'Valley Publishing renrns tft. righl to .eli~ rtj.ct, or eancel sny ad at any time. Enors must be reported on thl first dliy of publication and
Trlbune-S.ntinei-Register will be reaponslble fOf no more than the cott of the spKe occupied by the error and only tile firtt interlion. We shall not be liab'e
any loll or expense that results from the publication or omiatlon of an advertiMment. Correction will be made in the firtt tvailtblre .edition. • Bo• .number
ere alwayt confidential. • Currant rita c.rd appllaa. • All real etlata advertisement• art subjtct lo the Federal Fair Housing Ac1 of 1968. • This
accepts onty help wanted ada meeting EOE standardt. We will not knowlngty accept any ldvertlting in violltkin of the law.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

I

l\.egister

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
classified@ myda ilysentinel.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

Y.'&lt;IID

10 pm- 2 pm

Fri-Sat-Sun

~ribune -

.

r

Entertainment starring

BROAD RUN GUN CLUB
members meeting
Saturday, October 11 5 pm
Shoot Sunday, October 12
Outlaw &amp; Slug

..

Fall Cleaning Sale: Oclobar
lost: Nikon Coolpilo:, at 10. From Middleport Hill, go
Fre nch art colony, Sat. Oct.
past radio station . turn on
4. Call 740·446·03:39.
tirst road to lett. 5th h,ouse .
Lost:
Yellow
LHASA. lots of ite ms.
Garfield Ave . Old. sick. her Garage sale- rain or shine,
name is Lhuci. 740-446 - Oct 9,10,11
3622? Alleri
2125 or 740-446·2782.
St. , Chester. truck cap: golf

would like to welcome
Public Notices in NcWsp.upers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

Range No. 13 In said
County, beginning al
the South West
comer ol the &lt;}lllddle
one hundred and
elght~en
acraa of
Land In said hell sec·
lion at the South East
corner of land former·
ly owned by John

.

:~

t

GOOD TIMES

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

WI/IW.mydailyaentlnel.com
.

BEREA (AP) - Cleveland Browns president Carmen Policy still believes in coach
Butch Davi s and thinks quarterback Tun
Couch cou ld be a pan of the team's future .
Following the Browns' season-saving 33~ 13
victory against the Pittsburgh Steelers, Pohcy
said he's committed to Davi s and wants hom
around for the long t~rm.
The Browns were expected to bui ld on last
year 's postseason experience. but started this
season 0-2. Thi ngs got worse after a home
defeat agai nst Cincinnati and Davis became
the focus of the blame.
Asked of he had misgi vings abou t the direction of the 2-3 Browns, Policy ·said Thursday
t hat he 's more sure than.ever about fhe thirdyear coach.
"Hutch Davis is all about a plan . He's not
abou t getting this team just from A to B. He 's
about getting it from A to Z. with Z being a
Super Bowl championship." Policy sa id ~ " He 's
not perfect, hut he's tough and dec isive ."
Davis has two years left on hi s contract after
this season.
Policy wasn ' t as emph a~i c about Couch in
his commen ts. but said the former No . I over·
all pick cou ld remain wi th the Browns nex t
season if he 's the starter.
Coticb has a base sa lary of $6.25 million.
fou rth- hi ghest in the NFL, and counts for $7.6
million under tb e salary cap. The cap ·amou nt ·
will increase to nearly $9 million in 2004.

Ohio col.lege teams lead
in current win streaks

The State of Ohio,
Meigs County.
Sheriffs Sale of Real
Estate
Revised Code , Sec.
Z329·26
U.S. Bank, . N.A.
successor by merger
to Firstar Bank, N.A.,
lka. Star Bank, N.A.
l'lalntiH
Vs.
Kevin Graham aka
Kevin
Michoel
Graham, et al.
Defendant
No. 02-CV-t27
In pursuant of an
Order of Sale in the
above entitled action,
i will offer for sale at
~ubllc auction, at the
front door of tho
Courthouse steps, In
the above named
County, on Thursday,
day of
the 6th
·November, 2003, at
tO:OO o 'clock · A.M.,
the
foVowing
&lt;leocrlbed real estate:
SEE
LEGAL
DESCRIPTION
ATIACHED HERETO
MARKED AS EXHIBIT
·'A" AND BY REFER·
ENCE MADE A PART
HEREOF.
Said
Premises
Loca~ed at: 35215
Blake
Hill Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Seld
Premlseo
Appraised at $5:i,ooo
And cannot be sold

Friday, Oct. 10, 2003

Policy gives
Davis, Couch
vote of
.confidence

Ohio's
•
•
w1nn1ng
teams
.

2003

dep:

3 bedroom house
In 110 pets 3()4-675. 51 6.2
PRICE REDUCED
Must sell. 3 bedroom 2 bath Pomeroy - rent $300 .00 663 Third Ave. Gallipolis. 2
$250.00 Br upslairslbatl"t/no pets.
in 11 nice Iamity oriented st~ Dep. required
division In New Haven. HUD approved (740)742· $300 plus utilities l)lus

(304)593-3690

2896

' depos• 740-245-9595.

..

�Announcements

Annuuncemenls

t:XXXD:XXXfuX~
~

Folto:ecl R
•~
Sportsman lub H·~

H.

GUN

fla SHOOT
a

In Memory

BINGO

~

HOUSEHOill

Apartment

available lor qualified seniOrldlsabled person. EHO

Goon!;

May Tag washe r:
BEAUTIFUL
AP~RT· Kenmore &amp; Hot point wash·
!lENTS
AT
BUDGET er; Whirlpool dryer. All white
PRICES AT JACKSON $65 each. Attar 6:00 pm
ESTATES, 52 Westwood 740-446-9066.
Drive from $297 to $383.
iNalk to shop &amp; movies. Call Good Used Appliances,
and
'740·446·2568.
Equal Reconditioned '
Housing Opportunity.
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges,
and
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- Refrigerators, Some start at
loom apartments at Village $95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
&lt;Manor
and
Riverside Vine St.. (740)446-7398
~partments in Middleport.
hrom $278-$348. Call 740· Heat-N-Gio Propane Insert,
$2·5064. Equal Housing Maximum output. 24 ,000
Opportunities.
BTU. Excellent Condition
;c:!."-'=='---- $1 ,000 . 080. (3041895·
New Haven, 1 bedroom fur- 3769
nished apartment also have
washer &amp; dryer, deposit &amp; Jeweler Armoire cherry finceferences,
no
pets. ished $70. Call after 4 pm
(~401992·0165

f,

~r=-·.-~S:-P,-\Ql-'-...., t.,._______.~
FOR RENT
Mobile home lot will take 14
or 16 wide up to 80' long,
$~25, month. 740 -446 -0175.

or call

.

· .Eut
"',KJ10 53

Cellular

•

t08l5Z

• 6 2

•

A 6

tQJ 863
-'AKJ

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
South West North Eut
I NT
Pass
Pa!IS
Pass 3NT
All pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-446-5001

I Slaw

41 Foroboclt1f1

lcH€VRO,~T~

/

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

740-992-7599

;.;;,.-yet?"

42

43 JulceO..ecl
dl1nll
45 lhrto

apoctally

11 TlbnlloNu
( - ) 47-S....
13 A!ICMnt
·50 Thf'OIIll
Tollyo
51 -181
14 Cry
52 Prolix
a1 dollght
lor - _ . 15 Singer - '• 54 s.ntar

· Wuhlnton 5I Oungean

18 "My g8l
51 Mi_,.
al1011g
IPt1na
17 Monk'o title eo ·Thtt'CkMo
te Too heoty 81 Dovlouo
20 Space- 52 H...

-

(hyph.)
22 '-nie

Cattle"

NeAT. ..
A COUPLe
.,.Of OLI&gt;fN
60Ll&gt;IU.

The 1Oth card
in the suit

.......Haw~. 31 CioN

DOWN

F nnz-

24 Horwh cry

1 ScMolboy
25 Stoop
2 Kimono
26 Dill
.....
28 "Fomondo" 3 Forbid
32
wrop
33 Olllo'o
8 Computer

: =.,

J:l:.

longullgf

34 Blcycllot
- LeMond
35 Wruthl '
37 Bonk d!lp.

7 EuropNn
river
I Molt
oubelltuto

~~._~

J--

t Loughlin al

13 ·
Muzzle

poltner

"PiliVATe BeNJAMIN:'

LARRY SCHEY

FREE ESTIMATES

'"'

Opening lead: "' 5

.l ~teNTer&gt; "StiAMPOO" ANI&gt;

Windows • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

"

•

2.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemc nl

Q 9.

-'Q96 3

South

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

(An equal opportunity employer)

Trey &amp; .•amie

7 3

I

380 Colonial Dr.
Bidwell, Ohio

Husband : Charlie

to

Kl0i 54 ·2

II working in a friendly, "teamoriented" facility appeals to you,
please come see us Bt:

Children: Paul, Jane, David &amp; Linda
Grandchildren: Trisha, Patrick, Erin. Drew,

1D Tolk
31 Go piKel'
12 Army- 44 o-11 FIIIIOUI
populltl8tltrlil (Zwdl.) 4e ChUII
21~ '
.........
22 Yellow Sell 47 Oul....,.
-.y
4e Jain wood
23 Laall for
4t ....... 24 Holtowod eo O.nf!ll or
oul

, .....

21 Gong
27 ortmace

53 Acid 1'8in .
wltchllag ·

zt Aherne or 55 B-liod
Boltona

30 c.tc'*
..Stonpl
31 Scfwn.
writer

5I

R-

c-

57 Deli.,._

~~~

By Phillip Aider
What Is the lOth card in a suit?
Some would claim the five, but most
would go for the jack - or, as Robert

1...-1-+-+--+-

Darvas and Norman Hart call it in

Linda's 13eauty. Shoy
NEW AN.D USED STEEL For Sale: Hay, straw, &amp; fire-

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
'
accepting resumes for full lime- Registered
Nurses in the Emergency Departmenl.
Applicanlr musl have a currenl Wesl

Virginia license. Previo41s ER experience
preferred.
Flexible scheduling, excellent salary,
holidays, health insurance single/family
plan, dental plan, life insurance, VBC.f!tion,
long-term disability and retirement.

Angus Bulls, Hailers plus
Maine-Angus SteEirs and
Heifers. Top blood lines.
Slate run farm, Jackson.

Horse Boarding Indoor/outdoor pens. Box stalls. 740·
446-4710 barn; 740·6452475 cell.

c/o Human Resources

740-949-2217

(304) 675-4340
AAJEOE

Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM

Cover Crop wheat $4.50 per
bushel, and 1,000 lb ball hay
$15 each . Call 740-2455047.

PHLEBOTOMIST

FOR SALE

Pleasant

Valley

accepting

1984 Ford Cougar V-6 ,
auto/power windows, locks, ,
lumbar seat, AM/FM/Cass.

Hospital

resumes

for

is currently

a

Part

• Sand

time

Phlebotomist. Applicants must have a valid
driver's license. Exp~rience preferred.

• Dirt
• Ag Lime

Excellent salary, holidays, health insurance

740-985·3564

shiglclfamlly

dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long..term dis.ability
and retirement.

good transmission, tires.
740-446-4070 5-9 pm.
1985 Cullass Supre me. 1
owner, sharp 37819. very
clean, $2000. new tires.
1990 Jeep Cherokee 4 liter
98700, sharp truCk 2 . wh.
drive
$2000. (7401446~

plan,

HOWARDL
WRITfSfl

Pleasant Valley Hospilal

HOUFING

clo Human Resources

*HIME
MAINTENAICE
*SEAMlESS

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasanl, WV 25550

(304) 675-4340
AAIEOE

aumR

www.pvalley.org

i

Ir40

TRUCKS
t.,.--iiFOiiiRii.iiiSiiALEiiiit-.-J
·

MOTORCYCLFS

I

2001 Silverado, LS C1500
2WD Sporlside Body Med .
CharCoal. Interior Graphite
Custorrr Gray. Vortec 5300
VB SFI Engine. 4-SPO
Automatic Transmission with
Tow Haul Mode, Special
Trailering Equipment, POL,
PW, AC, _Remote Keyless
Entry wi th Th eft Alarm
AM/FM Stereo W/CD, CC,
Tinted Windows , Carbon
Fiber light Covers, Pace
Edwards Bed Cover, Dual
Exhaust. 10,000 miles. Call
740·446·2266 or can be
seen at 1011 State Route
588, Gallipolis, Oh. Price on
Inspection.

2002 Yamaha V Star 1100
classic, 4,100 miles, loaded.
740·446·6304.

r

1993 Marada 2100 E11plorer
21ft. all fiberglass pontoon

VM-6 &amp;

2003 Honda XR100A3 Dirl
Bike, excellenl condition.
$1,600 call 740-441·9865.

BoATS &amp; MOTOR'&gt;

FORSALE

.

1977 Norris Bass Boat with
85 HP Evanrude has a
deplh finder, fish finder,
troll ing motor, full length
cover. Nice Trai ler. All in
good condition. (304)6753354

i

I

r

r'a:

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished . Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs . (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .
_ ...:..,_ _ __ __
Home
C&amp;C
General
Maintenance- Painling, vinyl
siding, carp13ntry, doOrs,
86 Chevy COnversion ·Van. windows, · baths , mobile
Loaded, TVNCA, very nice, home repair and more. For
new tires, low miles, $2,000 free estimate call Chat, 740080. 740·256·6476.
992-6323.

1995 FORD E:350 CUBE 1998 Dodge .Grand Caravan
-BOX
TRUCK.
CALL Sport. loaded, new trans(740) 446-9416. M·F 9w5. mission, excellent condition,
Localed
1391
Safford 71 ,ooq
mlles,
$7500,
School, Gallipolis .
{740)949·4037 or 740-992·
- - - - - - - - . 5082.
1996 5-10 Chevy !ruck. LS -----~~­
package. 6 ft. bed. 4 cylin- 1998 Mercade~ ML320 suv
der, standard. Asking $3,750 4_-wheel drive, 59,000 miles.
740-441·1377 leave ames·
call 740~446 • 4525.
sage.

"

I

.*Freelsllmates*
949-1405

Aner South wins the first Irick and
drives out the diamond ace, he is safe

If the opponents plod on with clubs.
try spades, knowing that declarer has

At trick one, under East's club
queen, declarer dropped a knavish
East Continued with the club three.
Declarer won with his ace and drove

ECHOPOINf

"W.V's #I Chevy. Ponliac . Buick. Olds

9

FIN,.,L.LY, TOI&gt;"'Y'S
LUNC.H WILL BE FISH
STICI(S, TATE fl. ToTs,
FRUIT CUP ANP RAISIN
COOI&lt;.IE:S.

.Graph

\AIEL,!..so MOCI-l ~OR,
ANOT~ER MISERA8LE
•' 51-lOiiJ AND TELL''

6:30
Last Thursday of
every monlh
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing ·
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

I

BETTY

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

'GARFIELD
excePT FOR '!"He

"GtOINc;. OUT" PART

'JWI;~~

,....-...,..--------...---..,

AND 1"f-IA r

"RUNNING''T'HING'

IMPORTS

High&amp; Dry

.740-992-5232

vou

~~

WI-4.81'S Go1ri on.
HoW
'lt&gt;Jre In
UN De~? Wli&lt;S THS'T

toMe

MANUYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
ffilddleport, OH
(10'K10' 610'K20')

J&amp;L
Eledric

I Go\YC&gt;JI! Bas~lC?

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740-192-0933
Cell 740-591-1073
. &lt;

.

ROBERT
BISSEll

Advertise (740) gg2-3194
coNsmucnoN
992-6635
in this
• New Hpl]les
• Garages
space
SELF
• Complete
STORAGE
· Remodeling
for $50
In Mason.
1Ox1 0 - $35.00 .
per month . 1Ox20 - $55.00 '740-992-1611
Stop .&amp;co,;pare
740-992-3961

I

.THE GRIZZWELLS .
6UNT\4t:~. I'M A'm.\0 WR.
$~11-\6 IS
.
K~t:P\1-lG: ME

t:IP AlL .
~~~l-IT

.. ; A~D ALL PA.~!

L HltLAN

::::

-~---..:_

O R1arrang•

l•tt•l"l of th•
four scrombl.d word• b•
low to form feur simpf• words.

HDTBER

I I I I I I,
. l

I I' I

THONC

II

I

~

I., OJRUR
~~~=· After an argument with my boss ·
I
/
.
_ I overheard one fellow say lo anI.':~=~~===-~other,
"If our boss wasn't dumb
5 /

l
r

N F UE

ws would b!l out of ••• .••• 1· '

1e

t-,rAI""'.:.,-1:..,..::;.1_::,"'1~I
5

L~L..-l...-.1..-l..~l-....J

lETTERS

Complete the chucili! qvcted
by flllrnQ !n the milling words
yov develop from step No. 3 b•lcw.

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Pucke r · Fable · Humus · French · NUMBER
Not so smart fellow to policeman, · someone stole ·
my car! I ~ouldn 't see who it was but we 're in luck. I was .•
able ! o write dowr; the tag NUMBER!"

lu ckier Ieday working in unison w i t h - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - another then attempting to do lhe very
It'll find you. even though you ma_y not
know how or why.
sama lhing on your own. Tenm up with
an agr&amp;Aable ally who fits the bill.
CANCER (J une 21-July 22) - Being
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Keep your
involved in a situatiOn tOday that Includes
friends coUld produce some perlpher~tol
nose to the grindstone tOday : Before tne
day Is over (if you've done vour part) you
advantages for you other than camashould realize a larger prolit than usual
raderie. It may mean anything from 11
from some klnd of pra-estabtlshed
business contact to a new relationship.
arrangemMI.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Matters that
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Don't walt
pertain to your career . reputat io n or
material well-be ing could be lUckier than
for circumstances to initiate action on a
persona! objective of yours today -gat
usual fo r you today. When Involved In
out Into the world and make thing!l hap- any one ot these areas, fire your best
pen. Lady luck will assist you il )'OU pul
shots .
yourstUoulaM
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 221 GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Material
Experiences today rould provide you with
benelils could coma your way today, but
ample reasons to feel more confident
through a channel that might not be viSi·
about your future . Something that 11
ble to you. You won 't Mve to took tor It,
lmpor1ant to you to which yoo'ra .commit-

SOUP TO NUTZ

Athens

ldltool ~. ClAY

11, 2003

LIBRA (Sep1. 23·0C1. 231 - Al1h0Ugh ;1
may not be anything visible, things could
s'art to unfold In ways today that signal
positive things are happening for you in a
joint venture. II'll be just lhe beginning.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22} - Because
the Intentions of you and your counterparts are hOrlOfable, an important agree·
ment into which
enter today will be
laking off with Dame Fortune 's blessings.
Keep the falltl.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. 211Displavlng warmth and friendliness to
those wiltl whom you'll be dealing today
In your wort; world will produce larger
than usual dividends . Nice things could
stan to happen.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Important opportunities could develop for
you today through people wllh whom
you've maintained a good relationsh ip
and who think you're prettv nifty . Good
fellowship pays oH
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb . 19)- Your
chances for gaining cooperalion and sup·
port from 1h0se in high places are excel·
lent at this time. Don't let th is day go by
without presenting your ideas Or Interests
lo those who can help.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20)- You're far

PEANUTS

~~!:::~' S©~.{}l\'\- liJ £~s·

'blr'lltrth&lt;ll\y:

The year ahead should be an especially
fortunate one for you In your career and
social life. The only thi ng that can hamper
these benefits is if you don't make the
most of things. Your destiny is In your

TaKe the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

5 t' REE

TWHNTH

AstrO•

Saturday, Oc1.

Phone : 843-5264."

Bonanza Get

BHGFETlB

D F . "
ZR ~ FZ
DR A Z F
After declarer had claimed nine T I
tricks, We•t suggested that if South
p
had started with the doubleton ace· " I B T z K R D ?
W F J F Z
BRVEX
jack ol clubs and the spade ace. he
would have won the tirst trick, hoping B X F
IBYUU "
that West had the diamond ace and
club king and would not work oul to
CRXW
cash his club kins.
MPBXLRN
True, but South's play will usually
work In the real world -and always PRE
will in fiction.
VIOUS SOLUTION - "1.1 you're not feeling ~ood about
you, what you re wearing outstde doesn't mean a thtng ~
-Leontyne Price
.

·•

BIG NATE

Let me do i+ for youl

0

several1tories .

1-800-822-0417

"Not mel
My money is with
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH

Todsy's clue: K fK/IJS/s D

out lhe diamond ace. East, still hood·
winked, led another club. When South " p
produced the king. East's jaw dropped

475 South Church St.
_Ripley, WV 25271

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

by Luis C.mpos
Celebrity Cipher c"""ograms are.created from QuotatiOns by ramou1
people, past and present. Each lenar.tn tne Cipher stands lor anomer

jack! Thinking everythtns was rosy,

DeanHiU
New&amp; Used

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

CELEBRITY CIPHER

at most three cards in the suit.

YOUNG'S

Self-Storage

hT-+-+--1

But maybe it would occur to them to

v

'

one or two or dunfmy's spades.

CHIC)
WORKS

__...;4-;,WDs,;,;;ili'--.,J
L,

sAiydle bAo at. 115hp. Evln
u e. 11 seats rep 1aced.
Has bathroom &amp; gas grill,
1987 Ford F150 Conversion Tennessee duel exit trailer.
91 Ford Explorer 4x4 Lots Van w/whoel chair lift. In $6.500. abo. (3041675·7833
ol newer parts. Runs great, good Condition. $2,000.
body qamage to driver side. (3041675-6236
~ CAMPERS &amp;
No Ira me dama9e. $1,000 - - - ' - - - - - MOTOI! HOMfl!
080 call 740-446·49 10 1990
Jeep
Wrangler
Sahac.a. Looks ·and runs 2001 Hornet lile 24' loaded
leave a message.
~~~~.IR~U;;;CKS_'_ _, great Fiber glass top. No Must be sold. French City
FOR c......
rust. $3,495.
Homes Gallipolis, Ohio 740~
1999 Honda 450 Foreman 446-9340 U
4·wheeler. Low miles, excel· ---~---­
1983 Dodge Truck $2,000. len t condition. $3,300. 740- Model 4104 Bus conversion
57,000 actual miles. 2·wheel 446·3117
recreation vehicle, complete
drive. (304)576-3389
self conla ined ready for
199~ Jeep Grand Cherokee camping. 740·256·6926
1988 4x4, Jeep Pickup. 91 Laredo 4x4 , $8,995, 1996
engine.
!ow
mileage . Cadge Dakota Supercab
" I U\ tt I .._
(3041675·3476
4114, and many more 4x4's to • - - - - - - - - .
HoME
1995 Ford E-350 Van. 14ft. Choose from .
Motqrs.
b.IPRo"~:•u~:•l!.tn:&gt;
high cube bo&gt;: , excellent Riverview
. . . . . . . . . . .u-·~-"olorl
cond 740-448-9416
' (7401992-3490

II

US'ALLY

WUikiru or App,intmwts uJtlcomr anytitru.
985-3348 Tiranksfor your bu si" eJS.
SJmm BtJum

cover A heart fit, should rebid three diamonds. Note that rive diamonds
makes, unless West finds an unlikely
spade or diamond lead. On a heart or

club attack. declarer Immediately
plays clubs from the top and discards

THAT CHIC)

Ta11mtrg Ava~lable

"Right Through the Pack " !Devyn
Press, I991H. the knave. So, on 10110.
let's look at • deal from Ihat book rea·
turing a key play by a jack. Can you
· spot It? South Is in three no-trump.
West leads his rourth·hlshest club, and
East puts up the queen.
Perhaps North, after failing to un-

hB!lds.

Fnr more information:

1266.
-19_8_5.5-P_o_rs_c-he_C_o_u_pe-.-2-D,

II~

SCARE ME--

!')oW.

HAULING:
• Limestone

(Part time)

1999 Pontiac Bonneville
loaded $7;295. 2000 Saturn
4dr. Blue, 41,000 miles
$5,995. And many ' more
cars to choose from.
Riverview
·Motors
(7401992·3490

·

DANG,
I'M GOOD
AT THIS !!

HICCUPS CHIC) !!

Lo11.11er' Hair Sli.~l1tly Higher

Trucking

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

19g9 Lincoln Mark 8.
Loaded with options. power
sunroof. 47,000 actual miles.
$12,000 (3041675-3354

I CAN'T CHIC) GIT
RID OF CHIC) THESE-

R.B.

AlJI'O!i

FRurrs

Color &amp; Perms 25..
LCJdles SCyle Cub 11,.
Kids&amp;Men5 ..

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasanl, WV 25550

L~---,;;;;;;::,;._.,1

BARNEY

Our Fall Specials:

Racine, Ohio

45771

GRAIN

Bundy Trumpet w/cas e &amp;
.
$
150,000 miles, r~al sharp.
accesso r1e s 50. Yamaha $3,000 304-773-5111 .
PSR-160 Keyboard $50.
(3041675·7777
1986 Pontiac Bonneville. V6,
4 door, great 'War~ car $475.
455 cubic in . motor &amp; trMs.
&amp;
VE:Gc"TABLE'i
$350. , 984 Chevy Cilation,
runs good $350. 740·446·
2829 or 740·379-2386. John
Full Size bedroom sUit e.
Suing paw paw fruit $1 .00·
w/serta mallress &amp; box
Office Furniture
2.00 lb buying waln uts 1995 Grandam 20 99K
SPring. Upright freezer, ref. New, scratch &amp; Dent.
$10.00 100 lbs.
$2,495; 2000 Buick Century
19 cubic leet, hutch, d~S~ve 70%. 1-800-527-4662 Call 740-699-21"24
$4,395; 19 oth ers
57K
Argonaut 519 Bridge Stree t.
(304)675-1687
$1 ,195 lo $5, 795. We honor
Guyandotte/Huntington. M/F
Potatoes for sale 50# $10, PRC program cars.
Furniture: Dressers. beds,
COOK MOTORS
kitchen table &amp; chairs, Nordic Trac Pro S~i Trainer. Mon-Sal., 65002 State
$300 Route 124, Reedsville, Oh,
740·446.01 03
couches &amp; end tables. 740- Digital read-out
(304 1882·2225
(740)378-6291
379-9168.
1996 Mystique, 6 cyl, auto.
air, moon roof, leather seats,
106.000 miles. $1800,
(740)985·4418

lfe/comes Betty Hosclwr

29670 Bashan Road

Pleasanl Valley Hospilal

ILw &amp;

,·:r

Hill's Self
Storage

Send resumes to:

740~ 286 ·5395.

$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas, Chevys , Jeeps, etc!
Cars from $500_ For li stings
Jack Russell Terrier pups, 1-800-71 9-3001 ext 3901

t.,.-oiiNiiiilb"f.RiiUii~iilENTSiiiiliil'....

RNNURSES
EMERGENCY ROOM

LIVESTOCK

r

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar wOOd. Delivery available
For
Concrete,
Angle , 740~379·9168
Channel, Flal Bar, Steel
I \R\1 " ' 1'1'1 II s
Grating
For
Drains,
.\ ll\1 SllH I\
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monda:y,
FARM ·
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
EQuiPMENT
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
New Idea 323 One Row
Sunday. (740}446-7300
Pic~er. Mairy new
Corn
m:--B~IL--C--,
parts. Excellent Condition
U DIN,
SUI'I'LIES
740 992·7603

Buy or sell. Riverine hunt1ng type , $150 ea. Call
Antiques. 1124 East Main 740·367· 7770.
- - - - - - - -on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992·2526 . Russ Moore, Seeking new owners ol
recently bought Owaker
owner
Parrot tram Pets &amp; Plus.
1540 MISCELLANEOUS
Previous owners have valuable into. on his needs &amp;
MEROiANDISE
habits. Please call 740-4467362 .
3 Piece Full Size Bedroom
Suite w/mattress &amp; box ~~-"!"'!---....,
springs. (304)675-8861
70
Ml!llCAL

Amish oak table, 2 chairs,
hand-made, linished $350 . Firewood, seasoned oak
like new, save $150. 446- $20. pickup load. You cut you
2506
haul. Not res ponsible tor
accidents. (3041675•6440
.
Better in Ben's. Wood burn·
ing stove insert with blower.
JET
Excellent condition. 740AERATION MOTORS
446-0 13.9.
RePaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
For Sale: Good Used relrig- StOck. Call Ron Evans, 1erator, ca il 740·245·1015. - 800-537-9528.

miss seeing

&amp; grandmother,
You made ~ach one of our birthd&amp;)'!l a special
dav for us.
We are saddened tha·t \ 'OU cannot be \\o'ith us on
your sPecial day.
We miss ) 'Oil and wiiiiO\·e you always.

r

r

'H!

you cvel)' d&amp;)'.
You were a wonderful wife, mother

Motlohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877·830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 9o days same as
cash . Visa/ Master Card
~ow Taking Apptications- Drive- a- little save alot.
~5
West 2 Bedroom.
Townhouse
Apartments, Roper Ref. Good Shape.
Includes Water Sewage, Runs &amp; loo~s good . $175
hash, $350/Mo .. 740·446· (c3
__04.cl6_7_5-£
_ 98
_6_ _ _ _ · Block . bric~ , sewe·r pipes,
0008.
Solid oak dresser. mirror, w1ndows, lintels, etc_ Claude
bunk
beds, Windsor style. Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Call740-245·5121.
Are now taking Applications 740·245-5220.
for 28R, 3BR &amp; 4BR ,
PITs
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Applications
are ta~en
FOR SALE
Aepair-675-7388. For sale.
Monday thru Friday, from
re-conditioned automatic
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is washe rs &amp; dryers, relrigera- 4 full blooded Saint Bernard
Located at 11 51 Evergreen tor s, gas and electric puppies. $150.
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
ranges , air condiiiOoers. and 2 CKC Jack Russell Terrier
Phone .No is (304)675-5806.
wringer washers _ Will do puppies $125 . 740·256E.H.O
repairs on major brands in 1652.
Townhouse shop or at your home
- ,--- - - - - Tara
ApartmentS. Very Spacious. _.:..__..:___~-- AKC Lab Pups. 1 Yellow
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1 Used Furniture Store, 130 male $150., 1 black lemale
112 8 th N 1 C
1 d Bulaville Pi~e. Mattresses. $100. Shots &amp; W~&amp;~tmed .
e · ewy arpe 8 ' dressers. couches. bun~ (3041773-5103
~
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
·
beds,
bedroom
suites,
-Petio, Start $385/Mo. No
recliners. Grave monu - AKC , Mini Dachshund pupPets. Lease Plus Security ments.
740-446-4782 pies.
blackttan,
Deposit Required , Days : Gall'pol'
OH H
10 4p
shotsfwormed by vet. Ready
1
1
740-446-348 1; Evenings·
~·
· rs . - m.
Stop by
to
go
October
11th
•
•
740 367 0502
-W-a~sh~e~r.--O-ry~er-.--A-;r _(30_4_1_89_5_·3_29_9_ _ __
Twin RiverS Tower is acceptConditioner for sale: $75 .00 Bichon Frise pupp1es, white .
ing applications for waiting ali _(3
3 041593 _0852
only Royalty owned until
list tor.Hud·subsized, 1· br,
1930's. Perfect gilt. #1 fami ly
apartment, call 675·6679
pet.
740·441-9510
EHO
Ml'IQUFS
ce one BR unfurnished
artment. Range &amp; refridg .
ovided. Water &amp; garbage
fllllid. Deposit required. Call
f40·446·4345 atter 6 p.m .

Q 3
K

Ben&amp;llts Include:
• Competitive Wages
• !xperlence Credit
• Health Insurance- Full -time
• Life Insurance, Full-time
• 401 K (alter 1 year)

10. 1926 - ~ 27. 2003

Words cannot upress how much

Gold

740~446 · 2350 .

~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!~

Holzer Senior Care Center has
openings for 2 lull-time and 2 part-time
AN's. II you are a nurse who Is
committed to providing quality care,
you may be jusl the. person we 're
looking lor. We are a 70 bed long-term
care nursing facility located In Aural
Gallla County.

(MJe,.

31 Wrlltl

40 Hoi on time

eager
• . liN'

RN's

{k41tita- Z&gt;e~Mu ~ .

=-

ACROSS

5
Diffi1YNtt

dized, 1 . bedroom apart·

Goons

ALDER

fl

ment. Utilities included Call

NitA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

n.

applications tor HUD·subsi-

HO.USEIIOLD

The Dally Sentinel .• Page B7

Caring People ...

t

\Ill&lt; I II "IllS!

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

PHILLIP

.Rulland Post 467
Payin!;J 80.00 or
more per game.
&amp;m.ttla)l Ott.l 1. 1003
1:00RM.
~
Several special
;;:; 22 Rifo R.emfirt ~
games. for extra
::: Suttda)l Ott. 12, ZOOJ :~
money. All pack
:s~
I:OORM.
~
you can play for
Sl"g Malrh
•~ ·
$20.00. Starting
·~ time 6:30p.m.
~txrx:x:::::::::::::::tj
Starburst $550.00
2 or 3$300
Luck Baii ·Games
Apartment Allaitable Now.
Everyone
~iverBend
Place, New
Welcome
f-18\len, WV. now accepting

{304)882·3121

Friday, October ,10, 2003

Help Wanled

Help Wanted

In Memory

American Legion

::

Friday, Oct. 10, 2003

www.mydailysentlne1.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

lodshooldunloidposllively.

�October 10, 2003

.ALONG

SPORTS

LMNG

Devi.ls g~ their due
1n wm over
Portsmouth, 81

.THE RivER
Simply a-maize-ing
in Rio Grande, Cl

Making Halloween
costumes safe, D1

~ 11 you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
VVIN :""':t- 1'-JIN

' ~ tJt• ~ "f

UU~\ ..

IUt !''"'

11 ht It'll

~

Bill Elliott, and a young guy, What: Little Trees 300
Ryan Newman. As usual, the Where: Lowe's Motor Speedyoung guy won . It's a recu r· way, Concord, N.C. (1.5
ring theme. It would proba- miles). 200 laps/300 miles
bly be nice for the sport's When: Green fiag diPPS at 8
p.m. Friday
proud , honored corps of ex·
1.a1t
year's _
, Jeff Burton
perienced
veterans
to
win
Last year's winner: Jamie
their share of the races, but Track qualifying record: Ron
McMurray
Chevrolet,
Qualifying record: Jimmie the emerging young stars Hornaday,
·
18?..094
mph,
May 25,
are
running
away
with
the
Johnson, Chevrolet, 186.464
2002
trophies.
The
great
story
mph. May 23, 2002
Race · record: Jeff Gordon, would have been for Elliott Race record: Mark Martin.
Chevrolet, 160.306 mph, to win , but it's a long way Ford, 155.996 mph, May
from Kansas to Hollywood. 25,1996
Sept. 22, 1996
Most recent race: Nothing The 25-year·old Newman Most recent race: Veteran
David Green, In a Pontiac,
could epitomize the genera- won for the eighth time, givliOn gap being felt in ing him twice as many victtr won Saturday's Mr. Good·
NASCAR more than the out~ ries as anyone else. New· cents 300 at Kansas. With
come of ·Sunday's Banquet man's Dodge went 78 laps the victory, Green regained
400 at Kansas Speedway. on a tank of fuel at the end the points lead from Brian
The race came down to a of the race ·and never led un- Vickers. who crashed and
finished 32nd.
battle between an old guy, 111 the final 28.

What: UAW-GM Quality 500
Where: Lowe's Motor Speed·
way, Concord, N.C . (1.5
miles ). 334 la ps/501 miles
When: Green !lag drops at
7:30p.m. Saturday

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

What: Silverado 350
Where: Texas Motor Speed·
way, Justin (1.5 miles), 146
laps
When: 3 p.m·. Saturday

f Hlio \ a lit ' \ Puhli ... hi ng ( o .

Last year'• winner: Brendan

SPORTS

Gaughan
Track qualll)'lnC record:
Scott
R1ggs, Dodge ,
181.953 mph, Oct. 4, 2001
. Race record: Brendan
Gaughan, Dodge, 137.736
mph. Sept. 13, 2002
'Moot recent race: Dennis

.• Marauders conquer
Spartans. See Page B1
..• More prep grid cover·
age. See Page 82·4
• NASCAR Weekend.
See Page 87
.• In the Open. See
Page 88

Setzer, in a Chevrolet, won

Saturday's John Boy &amp; Billy
250 at South Boston, Va.
Travis Kvapll finish ed sec·
ond, followed by Ted Mus·
grave, Jon Wood and Rick
Crawford.

v

JEREMY MAYFIELD, WiN STON CuP SERIES

E

R

.

s

'

Kevin
Harvlck

·conserving enough fuel to win.

Sixth·place finisher Kevin Harvick
was most amusing.

"I'm just (ticked) off that the
15th-place car wins the race and can
go 15 laps farther on fuel than the
rest of us," Harvick said. "If he can
do that with his foot, then he's a magician, and I'll kiss his butt if he's doing it with his foot.'
Many of the competitors were

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

suspiCious of Newman's long run, in-

J

a.

~.-2~ ·

Qreen

Scott Blgl§

, •I,

-46:

~[i~n lll~ll!lri

R!l:!l HQ[!l~da~

'· ~~

I,

; 11~

. §!!.
' ·2§§

Jt&amp;Qn .~ll~r

8. BobQ)' H~milton Jr,

•ll l

S!;o!l Wlmulor

.. !!.

Kas~ Kahn~
Jghnnv ~~umr

. 482
·§U
. §2~

8,
·10. SlaCV'CQmDion
"

· ~a1

~r~ndan

~.274

• CRAFTSMAN TRUCII

•

\l&amp;l!&amp;t!an

. 20
. fill

2. Travl~ 1\VS~il
.3. Ill.ll Mu~~~twg

11. l.l~nnl~ Setzer
!!· Jgo Wood
.!!, aQ~Q\' ~amlnon
lt BIQ~ Qrawforg

·H
. 243
• 27§

. ~Q~

· 44Q

:'.'.' 1. Qarl &amp;~rl!i
•• Torr~ QQQk

-~~
·!U~

u. ~ball ~haffio

WHO ' !'o

~lO

I

ANU \/VtlO ' ~' NO I

'

·~

HOT: Ryan Newman has won
of the past 13 races and
•.:eight overall.
i&gt; NOT: Jeff Burton hes only one
top-10 finish in ·the past 10
• ·races.
:~ six

Ryan
Newman

s

Bill Elliott, who finished second in
Sunday's Banquet 400, wasn 't the
only driver who climbed out of his car
mystified by Ryan Newman's ability to
go so fast while at the same time

Mayfield and Co.
find their groove
late in season

1. Q~ld

U·

eremy Mayfield's future is uncertain, but he's certainly providing
himself with a bevy of options.
Mayfield, who currently drives the
No. 19 Dodge owned by Ray Evernham, has finished third or better in
three of the past five races and has
top-10 finishes in five of the past seven.
Evernham 's two Intrepids have yet
to win this year, but Mayfield's team·
mate, Bill Elliott, finished second in
Sunday's Banquet 400, one position
ahead of Mayfield.
Both race winner Ryan Newman
and Mayfield managed to squeeze 78
laps out of the last tank of fuel, which
was instrumental in a 1·2·3 Dodge
s\veep at Kansas Speedway.
"That's the first time we've ever
been up there on fuel mileage, so I'm
happy about that," said Mayfield, who
is from Owensboro, Ky. "To come
home with a top-five (finish) is pretty
awesome. It's just a great team effort
here."
Whether that particular team effort
will continue is another matter. Mayfield, 34, has expressed a desire to
come back, but there are those who
think he will drive a Chevrolet, likely
the No. 30, for Richard Childress next
year.
"It was very important to be up
front today,': Mayfield said. "We were
able to get a jump that one time we
were leading (laps 203-239, out of
267), but my car wasn't very good on
old tires. We'd run them up top pretty
hard, and then I still had a little bit of
push (to the outside, or toward the
walls) at the end even by myself.
That's just normal NASCAR racing
for you. These cars gettight for some
reason, and when you're in traffic, it
just makes it a lot worse.

cluding Tony Stewart and Elliott's
teammate. Jeremy Mayfeld, who was
third.
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton elves hlo take: •How can
Newman go so fast and yet get such
great fuel mileage. Maybe he and
crew chief Matt Borland know some-

thing that no one else does. Maybe
what they even know is even legal.'
YOUIC
IIIII

John Clark/NASCAR This Week
Jeremy Mayfield has finished In the top 10 In five of the past seven races.
Mayfield's late-season surge has made him a hot commodity for employment elsewhere next season In NASCAR's premier series.
"We just kind of ran our own race
horsepower, it takes so much fuel to
make that," Mayfield said. "When you
today as far as strategy goes. We just
knew where our fuel mileage was and
make the horsepower that they're ·
making (Newman's team) and burn- , .
stayed consistent all day. Then, at the
end, we were supposedly going to
ing the fuel that everybody's burning,
come up about thre.e laps short, and
then you've either got more fuel or
we just kept saving, saving and sav·
you're really good at saving fuel.
ing. We were able to come home at
"I don't know how they're doing it.
the end there."
We just barely made it through. At
Mayfield felt satisfied with the
the end of the race, we were saving
third-place finish but thought teamall of the fuel that we could just to
make it to the end. He was sitting
mate Elliott should have won.
"I think it was clear today who had
there doing burnouts on the front
stretch (after the race) and everythe car out ther~ . It was the No. 9
Dodge," Mayfield said. "It was by far
thing else. I don't know if we could do
-as far as performance-wise- the
that or not."
best car.... I think it shows for Evern·
And Mayfield scoffed at smaller .
ham Motorsports that what our
fuel tanks being a solution.
Dodges are doing right now is pretty
"If (NASCAR) made it a l()..gallon
awesome .. We've had the one of the
tank and everyone had those, I don't
fastest cars at the race track for the
think it'd make any difference," Maylast six or eight weeks now."
field said. "If you run 30 laps on 10
Even though his own car had simigallons, he (Newman) would probably
lar fuel mileage, Mayfield was a bit
run 45 or SO. I don't think the sblution
· is going to a smaller cell; it's probably
baffled at how Newman, conserving
fuel, was able to hold off Elliott at the
just figuring out how they're doing
end.
it."
"When you're making so much
Conteet Monte Dimon at hm0485801)e0plepc.com.

If~

I UHN

IliUM CIIIU IU·IIUIIIS

Ease up, Jeff

I

'd like to ·know why Jeff Gordon al·
ways gets mad every time some·
one crashes him out. like in Darlington. He was mad at Casey Mea rs
and said Casey needed a spotter. I
think Jeff should look back in the
spring at Dover. He crashed out Sterling Marlin, who had a car that was
running in the top f1ve and m1ght
have won the .event.

OBITUARIES

RuSSELL
mrussell@mydailytribune.com

BY MIWSSIA

STAfF REPORT

news@mydailytribune.com

Rrefighters from District 2 Are Department, Harrison
Township Volunteer Are Department and Crown City
Volunteer Are Department battled a blaze early Friday
morning at a hOme near the intersection of Ohio 218
and Ohio 790 in Guyan Township. (Millissia Russell)

'

'

'_;.· -

In GordonS defense, he Is one the
classiest drfvers in Winston Cup racing. Like most drivers who crash out
of a race, Gordon 's com ments were

. ''"":.:'f1."1lr'J"'......

·• Bob Evans Farm
Festival coverage. See
PageA3,6
.• New Haven begins
work on well. See Page A2
·• Supreme Court won't
hear death penalty
appeals. See Page A7

Bv BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

WEATIIER
Cloudy, HI:

701, Low: 1101

What's NASCAR mean?
B(lb Evans, center, takes time to talk with visitors Saturday at the Bob Evans 'Farm Festival in Rio
Grande. The festival began Friday and concludes today. See more Farm Festival coverage on Pages
A3 and A6. (Carrie Ann Wood)
•

E

Richard Meyer
WHifleld, Mau.

'

•

=
Det.=llaon=Page~~= •·

INDEX
4 SI!CI'IONS -

(
28 PAGES

Cs

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds

C4
D3-5
insert

Comics.

&amp; ·Suppi~Y.
Co.

A4

Editorials
Nation•World
Obituaries
Ohio
Region

Sports
Weather

555 Park St • Middleport

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·Officials concerned ab()ut security
in Meigs common pleas court
BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ rnydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - An incident
involving an attempted suicide
in another county exposed the
potential danger facing security
at the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas. ·
Ironton businessman Garry
Castle was on trial for arson in a
'nearby courtroom in Lawrence
County in August. Meigs

County Court of Common Pleas
Judge Fred Crow III was
brought in to serve as a visiting
judge. Castle had gone through
nl\merous security checks and
·was in handcuffs when Crow
sentenced him to 18 months in
prison and a $5,000 fine .
Without emotion, ' Castle
reached beneath his shirt sleeve
for a razor blade and slit one of
his wrists. Before Lawrence
County sheriff's deputies realized what was happening,

Castle slit his other wrist.
Deputies swarmed Castle and
he was immediately c'arried
from the courtroom and treated
for his self-inflicted wounds.
Crow said if that could happen in Lawrence County, which
has between eight to I 0 sheriff's deputies monitoring courthouse security, then it could
happe'n in his courtroom in
Meigs County which has only

PI••• ' " Court. AI

MIDDLEPORT -. Construction on a new
water treatment plant for the Village of
Middleport will not begin before ·next year, but
the process of applying for gram and loan funds
for the ,project begins this month .
The village's engineering firm, Floyd Browne
Associates of Canal Winchester. has been au tho·
rized to seek at least $500,000 in grant and loan
funds through the Community Development
Block Grant program and the Ohio Water
Development Authority to assist with construction of the new plant. The village will also apply
for grant fundin~ through the Appalachtan
.
Regional Commisston.
The first round of applications for grant fund·
ing for the project are due . later this month. but
fundin~ will not be awarded until July 2004,
accordmg to Becky Hays of Floyd Browne
Associates. who met with village council last
· month ·to outline plaps for the project.
The new water treatment facility will be com·
pleted at about the same time a new water well
field in Hobson is up and operating. Plans for the
purchase of the well field from Jay Hall were
recently completed.
The BPA is also seeking gram funds through
the Ohio State Capital Improvement Issue 1\vo
program for construction and repair at the sites of
two "outflows' on First Avenue. The outflows
allow for the disc harge of treated sewage into the
Ohio River in times of dry weather.
Annual increases in sewer fees for village residents will also help underwrite the cost of construction of the plant. A three-percent increase in
sewer rates went into effect this month. The BPA
also has access to funds collected through a water
improvement fund, to which water customers pay
$5 per month.

. .992-6611

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106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

252 Upper River Rd.
G~llipolis, OH

••
•

Mal.n Street, • Rutland, Ohio

740·742·2289 or 1-800r837·8217

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Middleport
seeks funds
for water plant

INSIDE

made out of anger and disgust. Gordon, however, did have a legitimate
beef with Mears that day.

very Thursday,' I 16\ forward to
reading NASCAR This Week in
the Springfield (Mass.) Republican. I've been following racing for
about three years now and I have a
question for you ... can you please
tell me what the letters NASCAR
stand for?
I've asked many people about
this and have not received any answers yet..l hope you might have it.

GALLIPOLIS - Planning for a proposed
Ohio 7 bypass around the City of Gallipolis has
been abandoned following the release of traffic
study conducted during the summer.
Officials from the Ohio Department of
Transportation District I0 made .that announcement Friday.
"The findings (of the study) were that the percentage of through traffic trips were co.mparatively small ," said Tom Camden, ODOT District
I 0 traffic engineer. "This is not a bad thing. It
means that the majority of motorists entering
Gallipolis have destination stops there.''
According to a prepared statement from the
ODOT District 10 office in Marietta, the origin
and destination study conducted in mid-July was
used to compare the number of through traffic
trips to city destination trips in order to monitor
traffic patterns. pinpoint causes of congestion
and determine possible solutions.
As a result the &gt;t udy. ODOT officials deter·
mined that through traffic is not a contributing
factor to congestion along Eastern Avenue in
Gallipolis. As a result, ODOT decided that pursuing the bypass idea was not feasible at this
time.
"The origin and destination study is a valuable
tool for determining improvement projects," said
George Collins. deputy director for ODOT
District I 0. " It ensures that we pursue projects

Pluse ... ODOI,M

-

Todd Hamilton
Bryan, Ohio

NASCAR stands for National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing.

Valley

Gallipolis
.bypass·idea
scrapped

:Page A6
·• Roger D. Luikart, 54
.• Kenneth L Jeffers, 52
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Mercerville·
family loses
home in fire
MERCERVILLE - A Gallia County
man and his family lost their mobile home
to a fire Friday morning.
The home. located at the intersection of
Ohio 218 and Ohio 790 in Guyan
Township, was a total loss after fire
engulfed the entire structure and left just a
shell.
District 2 volunteer firefighters respond·
ed to the fire, but wen; unable to save the
home.
Firefighters from Harrison Town,~ hip and
the Crown City Volunteer Fire Department
responded for mutual aid.
No one was home when the fire occurred,
said homeowner Jack White.
"My kids were at school and my wife was
at a dentists appointment," he said. "I was
at work when the neighbor called to tell
me."
Luckily, White had just purchased a
mobile home next door and was remodeling
it to move it, so the family has somewhere
to go, but have lost everything they own.
"I just bought the kids new school
clothe s," he said. "Now I don't know what
we're going to do."
The fire remains under investigation.
Anyone wishing to donate items to White
and his family can contact him at the
Gallipolis Goodwill store at 441-0336.

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