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                  <text>Ohio netters beat Herd

National-Football
League
.

Bengals can't find running game
Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press

"We have to get our coaching staff confidence to keep calling runni ng plays,"
Anderson said. "If we don't give them the
1
CINCINNATI _
confidence, we're not going to run it
dozen years, the Ci nnati Bengals uld enough and we' re going to have what we
be rounted on to two things: run the all had Sunday."
and lose the g
They may have to attempt the tumThey're no anger a sure bet to lo . 'around without a healthy Dillon, who
They' re no nger a sure bet to run, e ith_ .~._.s_trained his groij).wtril84!]3king a cut du r. One of e NFL's most dependable run- · g-tOOJI)lr~eofthe season d hasn' t
ning g es has gone belly-up just as the full y recovered.
Beng s (3-5) start to move away from
Dillon missed one game because o he
their sad-sack ways. With Corey Dillon injury and another because he w s
slowed by a pulled groin, Cincinnati has involved in an auto accident on his way t
turned into a one-dimensional team.
a gan1e. He also had to come out of severThe offen sive line is determined to al others because he was so limi ted.
change it this week.
He carried only seven times for fi ve
During a meeting of the offense yards at Arizona, and didn' t play in the secWednesday, right tackle Willie Anderson and half because the groin ti ghtened.
urged his teammates to get back to doing Dil)on, one of only four NFL runners to top
the Iitt le things right so the running game I ,000 yaids in each of his first six seasons.
gets moving again.
has 208 yards at the halfway point.
Heading into their game Sunday against
"We had the running game going last
Houston (3-5), the Bengals are rushing for year," tight end Matt Schobel said. ''We've
an average of only 85.5 yards per game, had the passing game going in situations,
second-worst in the league. During a 17-14 and we' ve had flashes this year where we
loss in Arizona last Sunday, they ran the had the running game going. Once we
ball only I 9 times and threw it 38 times.
have that balance, it's going to be tougher

to stop us."
Coa9h Marvin Lewis wants the offensive line..and tight ends to do a better job
creati ng space for Dillon, who has n' t been
able to cut as effectively.
" I think Corey teels as good as he has in
a few weeks," Lewis said. "I would n't say
he's 100 percent. We have to do a better
job of providing Corey some area to run in.
Also, you know that people get jacked up
to play Corey. W.e have to li nd a way to get
some space for Corey to get staned in ."
Dillon surpri sed his teammates by insisting two weeks ago that he feels unappreciated in Cincinnati and wants out. Thev
don 't seem to be holdi ng it aga inst him. "We know th is guy comes to work and
on Sunday he runs hard, and in the past that
has ignited us,'' Anderson said. "When all
we·could do was run in parts of 1999-2000.
the guy still put up I ,300 ywds. and we
couldn' t even throw for 100 yards a game.
"That's what carries us. As soon as he's
ready to go, whether he's 85 pe rcelll or I 00
percent, we need him in there. We need
him to be one of the leaders of this offense.
If he's injured, we have to block that much
better."

Johnson's benching shakes up Browns
BY JoE MIUCIA
(lssodated·Press

• BEREA - It took just four
seconds for Cleveland Browns
eoach Butch Davis to bench the
ieam 's leading receiver.
· Kevin Johnson said that was
the length of the conversation
Monday when Davis told him
backup Andre' Davis would be
~tarting in his place Sunday at
Kansas City.
Johnson said he didn't bother
(o a~k why.
· "He's the coach, I'm the player and I respect his decis10n,"
Johnson said.
.
But that doesn't mean he
agrees with the coach's call.
· "I know I'm a starter in this
league, whether it's here or
somewhere else," Johnson said
Wednesday. "! know I can start
in this league. I think my num\Jers speak for themselves."
Johnson said he was hurt by
the demotion, which has shaken
up a Browns receiving corps
that ha~ just six touchdowns and
has failed to perform up to
exr,:ctations.
'It surprised me a lot," wide
receiver Quincy Morgan said.
"K.J.'s a very good player. You
can't help but be surprised."
Johnson ·has led the Browns
in receptions in each of his four
seasons and leads them again

Thursday, November 6 , 2003

www .mydailyse~tinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

this year in catches (40) and
yards (378).
"I have one drop on the season," he said.
But it was a crucial drop on
fourth down in the final drive of
a loss to San Diego two games
ago. Johnson also cut short a
route that led to an interception
and underthrew a pass that
should have been a touchdown.
"Everybody has a couple bad
plays here and there,'' quarterback Tim Couch said. "K.J .'s
been our most consistent guy
over the last five years."
Johnson has been Couch 's
favorite receiver since the two
entered the league in 1999 as
the first two draft picks of the
expansion Browns.
Couch, who was benched in
favor of Kelly Holcomb to start
the season and will again back
him up on Sunday, laughed
when asked if he felt a kinship
with Johnson in · getting
benched.
"We're just connecting in a
different way now," Couch said
smiling. "We used to be on the
same page on the field, now
we're on the same page sitting
on the bench."
But Couch, who has handled
his benching with humility, said
. he was a little shocked by
Johnson's
demotion
and
defended his teammate.

"Obviously he's upset, but he
has a right to be," Couch said.
"Kevin has been the leading
receiver on this team· going on
five years now. He's made play
after play."
Johnson said he doesn't want
his situation to become a di strdction to the team and has
offered to help Andre' Davis
prepare for his first start.
Davis, who was not available
for comment Wednesday, is
fourth on the Browns in receptions (18) and yards ( I%) but
leads the team with three touchdowns.
"I'm here to support him,"
Johnson said. "I have his back."
Davis had two touchdowns
against the 49ers on Sept. 21 ,
including one with 29 seconds
left that gave the Browns their
lirst victory of the season.
But other than that game winner. the Browns' receivers- all
second round draft picks have failed to make big plays
for the 3-5 team.
Johnson is on pace to match
his numbers fi:om a season ago.
But Morgan, the Browns' other
starter, has just 19 catches for
237 yards with one touchdown
through eight games.
· Morgan wouldn't discuss
why his numbers are down
from last season (56 receptions,
964 yards, seven TDs).

"People wonder wh y K:J. got
benched and not me," said
Morgan, who h1rs ruticles fmm
local newspapers critical of him
han ging in his locker. "Just
because I don 't have as many
catches doesn't mea n I'm playing bad."
Morgan, who has dropped
three balls this season, bristled
at the idea that there have been
too many drops among the
receivers.
"Everybody drops balls.
Some of the greatest receivers
in the game drop way more
balls then we do .. .' Randy
Moss, Torry Holt, you ' ll see
them drop two or three a game.
You haven't seen guys drop two
or three ball s here in a game
since I've been here."
Butch Davis said Wednesday
that Johnson could see playing
time Sunday in multiple receiver packages. He has not given
specific reasons for sitting
Johnson.
And Johnson has left it at that.
"He 's made a deci sion,"
Johnson said. "''m not going be
upset about it."

ATHENS The MidAmerican Conterence-lem.ling
Ohio Bobcats won their 20th
straight match to remain undefeated in league volleyball play
by th umping Marshall in three
games on Wednesday at the
Convocation Center by scores
of 30-20, 30-18, 30- 16
Ohio (22-3. 12-0 MAC) is
now only one win or one Akron
loss away from claimi ng its lirst
MAC regular season crown.
Marshall fa lls to 6-6 in the
MAC and 16-1J overall .
Marshall senior Tracey King

BN.rl\V1lS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

$24.95

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SPECIAl
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Don !&amp;te Motors

hoefli ch@mydailysentinel.com
POM EROY
Information on the lifestyle
of Nati ve Americans depicted through artwork and narrati ve di spl ays by Meigs
Middle School students was
s hared
with
vi sitors
Thursday night.
It was called a Native
American
Culture
Celebrati on. Over the past
nine weeks more than 170
eighth graders have studied
the iss ues and propaganda
of Native Americans alon g
with their implications for
the future.
Their creation s to tell the
story of the various tribes
including numerous posters
and pictures, more than a
dozen large totem poles,
numerou s small er ones and
masks galore decorated the
auditorium.

MOST CARS

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BUI C K '
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Displaying masks they made are from the left, Dustin Lyons
and Travis Eblin. Vodo. a war mask; Brenden Blac k, the wind
God; and Morgan· Powell , a Tiki god. (Charlene Hoeflich )
Last night' s celebration
culminated the study project
which dealt with religion,
ceremon y, food, shelter,
clothing, and relationships.
Native American Indian

• Ronald Edward Davis, 77
• John Thomas Smith , 75

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel .com

WEATHER
Mostly clear. HI ; 50s, Low: 201

Details on Page A2

W'ITERIES
Ohio

Vaughan Bassett

Pick 3 day: 1-9-3
Pick 4 day: 0-3-5-3
Pick 3 night: 6-7-5
Pick 4 night: 6·9·3-6
Buckeye 5: 4-6-7-14-31

West Virginia
Dally 3: 6-2-6
Dally 4: 2-0-5-8
Cash 25: 1-8-9·11-1 5-16

NICHOLAS V. LANDRY, D.O.

~KKI~Ire,rt,
"!believe that my most important focus in patient care is my commitment to
build a relationship with a patient based on irust, confidence 4nd t~e practice of
evidence-based medicine. I respect my patients and their views and appreciate
1Vhen they become more interested in managing their own health."

Lane "Dundee" double ~eclinlng sofa
with matching rocller/rec/lner.

Lone UDundee" Sectional

11 MONtHS

SAM£ AS
C.ASti*!U

I

t Osteopathic Manipulation Medicine (Employment, Sports &amp; Other lnjtwy Rehabilitation)'

I · Weight Control &amp; Sinus Allergy Management
1 Pre-employn;~.ent, D.O.T., Sports/School &amp; General Physical Exa~s
e Minor Surgeries, Skin Tumors, Mole Suturing &amp; Laceration Care
e Cholesterol &amp; Diabetes Management

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

e Pediatrics &amp; Adolescent Medicine
e Gyn~ology!Pap Smears, Birth Control &amp; Teenage Management
1 Preventative, Adult &amp; Geriatric Medicine

music was played, and tlintknapper Jim Hammock of
Mason County known as
"Cedar Bear'' was on hand
to display and demonstrate
hi s craft.

BIERCE MARKER UNVEILING

too orulur7

.._.., "'j~ut!en Panel Bedroom Suite

.''

•see Store for details.

''

As
B4-6

Comi~

B7

Dear Abby
Editorials
Faitb•Values
Movies

A.3
A4

NASCAR

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A6

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88
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B1-4
A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Josh Clegg, Chelsea Young, Alyssa Holter and Tia Pratt, officers of the Eastern High School Student Council, ]bin the
Ohio Bicentennial Commission's Phil Ross in unveiling an
Ohio Historical Society marker celebrating Meigs County as
the birthplace of Ambrose Bierce. (Brian J. Reed)

TUPPERS PLAINS Student Council leaders at
Eastern High School
unveiled
an
Ohio
Hi storical Society marker
honoring
19th-century
Journalist Ambrose Bierce
Thursday aliernoon.
. The marker; posted just
outs1de
the
school's
entrance. commemorates
Bierce·, binh in nearby
Chester. It is one of a series
of markers commemorating
Literary Ohio as pan of
Ohio 's Bicentennial celebration. The school was chosen
because of the literary
nature of Bierce's accomplishments and because the
school is the closest to
Bierce's chLidhood home,
according
to · Eastern
Superintendent Deryl Well.
The
Bicentennial
Commission had considered placing the marker at
the Chester Courthou se.
which is even closer to the
Bierce home site, but a
similar
marker
was
already dedicated there,
commemorating
the
Morgan's Raid route.
Bierce was born at Horse
Cave Creek near Bashan in
1842, but after serving the
Union in the Civil War,
spent much of his adult life
in California, where he
wrote his satirical column,
"The Devil's Dictionary."
Bierce Wi!Ji also a world
traveler, and is believed to
have died. in his 70's,
while fighting with the
Mexican
revolutionary
forces led by Pancho Villa.
Meigs County
has
claimed Bierce for years,
relying,
the
Ohio
Btcentennial
Commission 's Phil Ross
said Thursday, on early
20th century accounts of
his life. It wasn't until

Please see Bierce, AS

f086Jackson Pike - Suite .206.·
GaJiipolis, ilhio 456,3,!
'

•

'

A collaborative effort wilh PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'

I

,-•

....,

Post plans
Veterans
service

,.,.

POMEROY - Dean Scholl.
Pa,t Department Commander
of Ohio American Legion will
be .the 'peaker at a Veterans
Day service at the Meigs
Courthouse
on
Count y
Tuesday. to al"' include the
unve il ing of a memorial
plaque honon ng Ohio's Medal
of Honor recipients.
TI1e service will bcj,~ n at I0:55
a.m.. and the publ ic is invited.
Those
soldie rs
who
rece ived the Medal of Honor
an d who are to be honored
wit h the new plaque are
Jimmy Goe the! Stewart. who ·
'erved in the Vietnam
Con lli ct. Edward Andrew
Ben nett from World War II.
and Willi am H. Barringe r
Samuel 0. McE lhi nny. Pl att
Pearsa ll . Charles Sc horn,
Joseph Van Matre and Ne lso n

Please see Vets, AS

Insurance pays
$160,000 to Pomeroy .
to pay for fire damag~
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Jlayton @mydallysentinel.com
POMEROY - Pomerov
Village Counci l ·approved :1
$ 160.000 settleme nt offer
with the insurance company
Wednesday 10 pay for the
re loca ti on of th e vill age
garage after the li re in Jun e.
Originally. Mayor Victor
Young Ill said the village had
anti cipated a $200,000 settlement with Midwest Cl aims
Inc .. but the company questioned the extent of the insuran ~e
policy's cove rage .
Young said there was concern
over whether the garage was
insured by itse lf or whether it
would be included al ong with
the other village buildings as
part of blanke t cove rage poli -

cy. If the garage was cove red
sep arately. an) sett lement
package wou ld not have adequately covered the (.'OS t of
replacing ur re pairing it. bu t
th e garage was considered
under the blank et policy and
thJS meant that the co verage
amount could be higher.
Young negoti ated with
Mid wes t Claim s for weeks
try ing to sec ure a fai r settlement. He 'aid the company
otfe red $140.boo to cover the
costs of relocation. but he
refu sed. The cost of relocati on will include the purchase
of the land. valued at
$78.000.
repa irs
and
upgrades made to the structure whe re th e garage will be
located. and the demolition of

Please see Damage, AS

Home Care and Hospice Month

The Meigs County Commissioners approved a proclamation
that made November as National Home Care and Hospice
Month. (Front) Kim Mitche ll , Hospice . Kelli Templeton,
Hospice , Sandra Peyton. Holzer Home Care . Sarah Negler.
Holzer Extra Care. Paula Eich inger. Manager of Holzer Home ·
Care; (back) Meigs County Comm issioners Mick Davenpo rt
and Jim Sheets. (J. Miles Cayton )

NING

1

740·441-9800
"'

Here David Casci sets a ·
totem pole 1n preparatio n for
Thursday night's
native
Ame rican Culture Ce lebration.
(Charlene Hoefii ch}

:J6"x60" Ook Fonn Tobie.with
storage dmwei'S onil
farmhouse side rholrs.

ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS:

·

rn\&lt;l,nh .., t·ntlrlt·l ~"'II

STAFF REPORT

East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH

(!)

\\\\ \ \

• Smith is no glamorous
star. See Page 81

TRANSMISSION
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Native American Culture Celebration held at MMS

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·Man arrested for
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outfielder's SUV, B2

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slow· dov.:111 elusrYe
retur·. :J: man~ !11

will have to wait until the weekend to notch kill No. I,000, as
she en tered Wednesday's contest with 992 career kills but
came away with only three ki lls
versus Ohio. Sophomore Katie
Stein assisted on 18 Herd poi nts
.while freshman Jen Harper led
the Thuudering Herd in kills
with six. Senior Ashley Bamard
tallied eight digs to give her 977
for her career.

:;o( 1."\l'S• \ol. •)~ . "\o. •;o

$89.95

fool\:

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Saturday, Nov. 8
AccuWeather .com forecas t tor dayhme co nditions, 1ow/h1ah temoeratures
MICH

~~
Toledo

.

Cleveland 27 /35

24 138

~

•

PA .

•

Voun!ifSiown 25"/34°

Mansfield

•

22 /39

IND

•

Dayton 24 /40

Columbus "27 /40

•

•

Cincinnati 28 144

.

.•

~

.

Portsmouth

W. VA
~--~---,

29 /43 " j

1

© 2003 AccuWeather. Inc

c..~~~·

,~~:~~] ~~~) ~,,._fi!'~- ~~~ ~~ ~) ~

SU1riV PI Cloud'(

Cloudy

S ~ ·owurs

T-s1orrrrs

•

FluiiiE!S

Fla rr

Snow

Ice

Getting colder at night
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Toda y... Moql y

with a 30 percent chance of
ra in. High around 52.
Monday
night... Mostly
cloudy wit h a 40 percent
chance of rain. Low around 42.
Veterans day ... Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
ra in. High around 59.
Tuesday
night ... Mostly
cloudy. Low around 45.
Wednesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Hi gh around 62.
Wednesday ni ght. .. Mostly
cloudy wi th a 40 percent
cha nce of showers . Low
aro und 45.

clear.

Patchy fo!..! in the mornin !.!.

High; cuw7nd 'iO.
~
Tonight...Most ly
clear.
Low&gt; in the mid ~ (b
Saturclay ... Mos tl y clear.
High aroLtnd 44. ·\Jortheast
winds around I0 mpl1 .
Saturday
night...Mostly
clear. Low anHmd 27.
S&lt;tnday ... Part ly
cloudy.
Highs around 51.
Sunday
night ..Mos tl y
cloudy wi th a ~0 perce nt
chance of rauL Low around 36.
Monda y... Mostly cloudy

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000

Nov. 6. 2003

Dow
Jones

o A

~ ---q

~

9,500
9,000

+36.14
9,856.97

AUG

Pet. change
!rom previous: +0.37

9.870 60

V'

OCT

Low
9 .773.12

High

Nov. 6. 2003

Nasdaq
composite

SEP

8.500

NOV

Record high: 11 .722 .98

Jan . 14,2000
2,000

/\/'\.~

1,800

h

'·'
, .. ,..
.

"

1,600

+17.00
Pt:t. change
from previ ous:

SEP

AUG

1976.37
+0.87

OCT

Nov. 6, 2003

Standard &amp;
Poor 's 500

High

Low

Record high: 5,048.62

, .953.34

March 10. 2000

+1!.24

.

v

1,058 .05
Pet. change
·trom previo us:

· "'-

+0.59

1,050

_/V'\z~

1, 000

SEP

High

Low

1.058.94

1,046 93

OCT

950

NOV

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
ACI - 24.93
AEP - 27.52
· Akzo- 31.79
Ashland Ire. - ~7 . 72
BBT -39.11
BLI-14.85
Bob Evans - 30.72
BorgWarner - 80.70
City Holding - 34.89
Champ1on - 4.55
Channing Shops - 6.66
Col - 27.97
DuPont - 40.10
DG - 22.27 1
Federal Mogul- .29

Gannett - 85.57
General Electric - 28.44
GKNLY- 4.85
Harley Davidson - 47 79
Kmart -28.23
Kroger - 18.03
Ltd. - 17.96
NSC - 21.46
Oak Hill Finandal-30.10
Bank One - 42.92
OVB - 24.75
Peoples- 28.56
Pepsico- 47.97
Premier - 8.85
Rocky Boots- 18.51

RD Shell - 44.57
Rod&lt;well - 33.03
Sears - 53.46
SBC- 23.14
AT&amp;T - 18.77
US B-27.20
Wendy's - 38.91
Wa"Mart - 58.61
Worthington - 14.05
Daily stock reports are lhe
4 p.m. closing quotes ol
the previous day's tomsactions. provided by Smnh
Partners al Ad\.est Inc. of
Gaii!Jolis.

~·--~~·:___::_._=-==::.__::::.:___:::::::::::__

__

The D~ily Se.n tinel
Reader Servtces
Correction Policy

I

Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·

2156

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed. E)( t 14
Reporter: J. Miles .Layton. E)(! . 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15

Class.fCirc.: Judy Cl~rk . Ext. 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: TBA, Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoefli ch, ExL 12

E-mail:
news@ mydailysentinel .com
Web:

www.mydailysentlnel.com

,.

(UsPs 213·960J
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published

every

Community events

Democrat says Taft hurt cause with ads
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft
s ~y s the hi gh-tech development issue he
pushed to get on thi s week's ballot was
~n integral part of his job-creation policy.
so it was natural that he would appear in
televi,ion ads to appeal to voters.
However, the govemor 's appearance.
without any other prominent supporters to
be seen, may have led voters to conclude it
wa' self-promotion, a vetemn Democratic
political observer said Thursday.
Voters turned uown the issue 5 1 percent to 49 percent. a loss of 50,000
votes out of more than 2.3 million cast.
Issue I. part of Taft's Third Frontier
program, would have authorized th e
state to borrow $500 million over 10
years for high-tech research and job
development, then given it 20 years to
pay the money back to bondholders.
Taft appeared in some of the commercials in the $2.8 million campaign.
Other prom inent names wou ld ha ve
helped, said Paul Tipps, chairma n of the
Ohio Democratic Party from 1974-8 1
and now a Statehouse lobbvist.
Tipps cited Taft's recruitment of fa nner
U.S. Sen. John Glenn in the campaign to
sell bonds to clean up browntields and
allow communities to acquire green space.

..The ·campaign (for Issue I) appeared
like it was designed to polish the governor's image, as opposed to pass the
issue,'' Tipps said ...The last time they
went to the ballot . they reached out and
got people from around the state to sup·
port the issue ...
But that's exactly what the issue's
backers did, said Brian Hicks, the governor's former chief of staff and director
of the Issue I campaign. They brought
in everyday Ohioans to endorse Taft's
plan and the governor was central to the
campaign, Hicks said.
"It was clearly the governor's program," Hicks said . .. 1 thi nk it was
important that people saw their governor out there doing something." _
Taft agreed .
"It's very important for the governor
to lead the charge tor economic development and jobs in Ohio . I think if I
weren' t in th e ads, people would have
questioned , ' Well, why isn' t the gover·
nor in these ads?"' Taft said.
Another theme of the campaign was
that it would not increase taxes. Voters
were suspicious because Tali in June
signed a two-year, $2.5 billion sales tax
increase as part of the budget, said Robert

Hunnel
homecoming

Adams, an associate professor of political
science at Wright State University.
"It is a complex issue and I think that
was part of the problem," Adams said.
" In this state , there is a general suspt·
cion that involves the state spending
money because people assume thi s
means more taxe s...
But insistin~ that taxes would not be
ratsed was cnucal to the ISsue, Htcks smd.
'' I think it was ab,olutely important to
point out that it was nol a tax increase:·
Hicks said. acldi ng that it would have
been impossibl e to explain how bond s
,are repaid in a 30-second ad .
Ohio's current economic struggles also
contributed to the issue ·s demise, said
Curt Steiner. a Republic ~ n who helped
defem a drug treatment-over-pri son issue
last year and was at the losing end of a
defeated 1998 sales tax issue.
.. In this adverse economic 'climate,
people were incli ned to vote no on
something they really didn't understand," Steiner said ...There was a lack
of specifici ty in peop le's minds about
what the money wou ld be used for. It 's
eas ier to sell an issue for sc hool constru ction or environmental cleanup ...
because people understood the result."

with two counts of aggravated
murder and three cou nts of
attempted murder, hours after
Indiana State Police arrested
him at a truck stop restaurant. He
waived extradition, a11d West
Chester police officers promptly
brought him back to this n011hem Cincinnati suburb for a court
appearance scheduled Friday.
West, in handcuffs and still
wearing hi s orange Decatu r
Co unt y. Ind., jail jumpsuit,
said nothing as officers
escorted him into the police
station and reporters shouted
questi ons &lt;tt him .
West had most recently lived
in the Chicago suburb of
Holtinan Estates. IU., Bruce said.
Watkins Motor Lines. based
in Lakeland, Fla., iss ued a
statement saying West had
worked out of the company's
Atlanta office as a trucker
from 1998 until he resigned in
200 I. The company did not
say why he left, and West
Chester police didn 't know.
When
the
shooting
occ urred, most employees
were in a separate warehouse
with loading docks where
dozens of trucks were parked.

An Ameri can flag outsi de
th e office was lowered to ha lf
staff Thursday aftemoon.
Donald Hau ry, 50, of
, Bellbrook, died at the company,
a11d Bol:i Lines, 65, of Cincinnati,
was pronounced dead later at a
hospital, Bmce said.
Lines' 44-year-old so n,
Randy, said his father worked
at Watk ins for 12 years. He
wasn' t sure whether his
father knew the gunm an.
About 2 1/2 hours after the
attack. Indiana State Police
arrested West along Interstate
74 near New Poi nt. Ind ., after
receiving a tip th&lt;tt a man in a
truck stop was saying police
were looking for him. Lt.
Marty McKinn ey said. West
was eating a meal when otlicers arriv ed and responded
"yes.. when police asked if he
should
be
hanucuffed,
authorities said.
West wasn't armed. and hi s
appearance matched the
descriptions given by witnesses, McKinney said . Indiana
State Police said West's van
was taken back to Ohio,
where authorities got a war·
rant to search it late Thursday.

afternoon ,

Monday through Friday. 111 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodi cal

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 11 ~
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

. CLEV~LAND (A ~) - A
federal court JUry has convtcted a Lake County man of
acqumng. thou sands of
!mages of chtld pornography
tn a probe which incl uded
allegations of pani es with
,teens, liquor and drugs.
Robert Noda, 54. of
Madison Township northeast
of Cleveland was convicted
·d
..
Th urs
. d ay. No a testt fted th at
h, e d td not know that com put er dt sks. 111 ht s room confamed chtld pornography.

Two of the men injured in
the shooting were hospitalized in serious condition with
chest wounds. said Bethesda
Hospital North spokesman
Joe Kelley. adding th ei r
injuries were not considered
life-threatening.
Billy C l ~ywell, 48, said he
ret urned to hi s home in Cave
City, Ky .. after he was treated
for a gunshot wound in th e
-upper right side of his back.
"I feel pretty well. I guess:·
he said from his home
Thursday ni ght.
Claywe ll said he didn't
know the gunman and must
have been a r~ndom victi m... It
was just one of those thin gs."
Claywell. who is married
with a 13-year-old daughter.
said he reg ul ~rl y haul s freight
to Florida and Texas and onl y
goes to the We st Chester location to switch loads.
The West Chester co mpany
employs 313 people. but police
did not know how man y we re
there Thursday mormn g.
Watkins Motor Lines transports freight from multiple customers and employs more th an
12,000 people at 132 locations.

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks .
. ..130.15
26 Weeks .
. .. '60.00
52 Weeks . . . . ... . . ' 11 8.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ... ..... .....'50.05
26 Weeks
... ' 100. t o
52 Weeks . . . . . . . .
'200.20

------·-----------1
•

sessin g chi ld porno graph y
and testified against Noda in
exchange for a lesser senten ce. She has not been senten ced
·
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••• •

What's Your Vision For

0

C

.

·

garden catalogues and seeds
from the Master Gardeners.
Registrntions are being acrepted and creeks can be mailal to
the OSU Washington County
Extension Office, 202 Davis
Avenue, Marietta. Ohio 45750.

Master
Gardeners to
talk holiday
decorations

Diabetes
education
class offered

Contrary_to what you may have been told,
now Is tlQI the lime to order your
Graduation Announcements &amp; Supplies -but
It IS lhe lime to stop In and &lt;ompare our
sete&lt;tlan and prl&lt;e. Why pay your deposit
now when you &lt;an wall lltl February or
March to order? Plus, you can custom taylor
your order to s'uil your style tnsteod of settling far what everyone else has. Stop 1
today and see.

Sln&lt;e 1948 ...

QUALITY PRINT SHOP, INC.
255 Mitt Street • Middleport, OH 45760
(740) 992-3345
F~(740)992-3394

Woman struggles to escape
her ties to drug-using cheat
I knov. ther ~\ trcJtlllcnt
DEAR ABBY: I ant 38 and
wus in a relationship for 12
for thi ,. but Hor JLC " •ure
years, We had three heautiful
he'll need 'urger\ li e hJ•n 1
children together. "John" started
been to a doctor •tncc htc ",,,
a c hild . and I thtn lo. he '
cheating on me a few month.~
afraid he'll ha1 e to ch.111gc
after we began dating and
Dear
hi s life style . An) J(l\ ~e·c
wound up cheating on me 14 ·
Abby
would be appreci ;ncJ -times throughout our relationCAROLE IN CLI·. \ '1: 1. -\ '&gt;D
ship. He has been into the drug
DEAR CAROL E: Huraec
scene and served some time in
halo a .erious medicalpn •hkm
prison for setting a church tire.
Tell him that you cart lor h1111
John and I never married.
how
you
are
going
to
support
and
think vou ha1e a lutUil'
but I remained faithful to him.
yourself
and
the
children.
together -·but unh 11 lic'dn .
He has been in a feueral
Your future is ahead of you. ing. There are treatmcn h lor
prison fur almost live years.
but we communicate through so stop looking backward . ; leep apnea that uc 111 t rcqu tre
letters and phone calls. I have There is no reason you &lt;:annot surgery. The lir'l 'll::p '' lm
no trust in {his relationshtp have a full life and a reward- Horace to con,ult a 'kep dt , .
anymore and get aggravated ing relationship with a man if order !&gt;peciali't and he prorc:rwhen I hear his voice. I want you want it. But regardless of ly naluated. Since he d•...:·n·l
to move on. but something what he might say or promise. have a phy,ic ian. perhap- 1, 'llf
keeps holding me bac~ . I feel that man isn't John, so let him doctor could ~uggl'"t ~~ ~..:linh.·
Concentrdte on the preAnother 'our(·c· .. 1 iniCir·
I am running out of time. Can go.
sent, and the future will take
mation that could he l1elplu l
you help me figure out what
care of itself.
to do with my life. Abby' is
apneanet.org . It prm ide&gt;"
DEAR ABBY: My relaKATIE IN WEST VIRGIN IA tionship with "Horace " has forum that faci lllat.•• th ,·
DEAR KATIE: Wake up been going well for several exchange ol inlormatt "n Jn J
and smell the coffee . The months. We're both in our ideas for per'tllh alkctcd h1
man to whom you have given early 40s. He drives 100 miles thi s conditi(ln.
There j..., J ... olutJon I t~
your heart is a phi landering. each weekend to spend time
drug-usi ng pyroman iac. He with me . The problem is he Horace\ prohle111. ~I n\\ ncr
has no respect for the house has a bad case of sleep apnea to find it he mu ' t hdt,l\c' 1,~,.
of God and what it repre- and refuses to see a doctor.
an adult and lace the· f't' 1
sents. and if he loved vou and
I am afraid he'll have a that he ha' J pmhkm
hi s children. he wou.ld have heart attack in his sleep .
Dear A!Jh\ '' 11 nlf1 ,, l-11
married vou and shown some Horace is a heavy guy and he Abigail \im Buwn ul \( 1 t,!/1111 n
responsibility years ago.
snores so loud the neighbors as Jeanne Pllillte• . um/ I HI '
Here is what to do with complain. He holds his breath. fowu:/(!d hr her r/lutlll'l: f'ulllil i&lt;
your life: Stop accepting his then jerks around until he can Phillips. Write Dear Ahl" '"
phone calls. If you haven't gasp air in again. It's scary.
"''""DearAb/&gt;1:.-olll or PI i fi, '·'
already done so, figure out
69440. uJ.\ Alt ~e/e.1. C:4 'JOIJ'J

PUBLIC NOTICE
I

MEIGS COUNTY RUTLAND TOWNSHIP WATER EXTENSION PROJECT
EARLY PUBLIC NOTICE FLOOD PLAIN DEVELOPMENT
Meigs County has applied for a CDBG FY 04 Formula Allocation Grant. for the
Rutland Township Water Line Extension project in the target area of Ruthtnd
Township, portions of Swick, Lash~r, Hatfield and Likens Roads. Portim" of thi'
project are located in the base floodplain. Federal regulations require that the puhlir
be given the opportunity to comment on construction work proposed fur a lluudplain
area. The County is securing public perceptions of possible adverse im part' that
could result from the project and possible minimization measures. Send "ritt cn rom·
ments to Meigs County Grants Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 7, Pomero'.
Ohio 45769. Comments will be received until IS days from date of this publir;llio;t.
Meigs County Commissioners
Meigs County, Ohio

1

ur ommumty

The Village of Middlepon is researching the Opinions of the
.'illage residents in order to determine projects that may be
tnduOea in an Ohio Department ofDevetopmcnt Community
Dtstress Program Grant Application

ou!

Your input is very important- Please Respond !
Please check all items that in your op1nion an: the most imponant for
our Community lmprovement.
_ Street Repairs
_S idewalk Repairs
_Community Center
_ Street Lighting
_ More Street Parlting
_ Child Care Center

_ Demolition Abandoned Strucmres
_ Fire Equipment and facilities
_Stonn Drainage Improvements
_ Improved Sewer Facilities
_ Improved Water Faci lities

I
I

•
••
•
I

Please clio out and return your completed survey to:

day, November 26.th

Vltlage of Middleport - 237 Race Street . Middleport , Ohio 4~760

The Village Post Office
Or bnng to the next public meeting l&gt;ith your comments . .
Addthonal survey forms may be picked up at Village Hal~ various
local merchants, and lhe .Local Post Office.

Next Public Meetinll
Middleport Council Chambers • November 1Oth at 4:00 PM
November 24th at 4:00 PM

Spoft~GtH b1: 11w Vlllqe otMkl.~port 2)7 Rat:t StrHt MWdk~rt. OhJo 45760

••••••••••••••••••••

I

Reach Over

•

•
•
I

•
:
I

··················-~·

'

.THANK YOU MEIGS COUNTY!
The staff &amp; participants of the Mei.gs Senior Center would like
to thank the residents·of Meigs County for their support of our
Levy campaign.
. .
·
Paid for by 1heMeigs County Senior Citizens Levy Committee, Ja ne Walto n. Treasurer.

···-·-· ····-··--·-····----':__ · --:---··-----~.~-·------------

6.000

Thank you voters of Meigs County
for showing your support of

•

~

Households
In Meigs
CountyI

Carleton School and Meigs Industries.

Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.
Multipurpose Seninr Center
112 E. ~emorial Drive, PO Box 722
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-2161

--· I

2003

Be a part of the plan for Middleport's Future

1

GRADUATES •..

Friday, November 7,

Bonnie G. Scott

Subscribe today • 992-2155

2004

PageA3

Thank You

tributing images off the
Internet.
Lake
County
Prosecutor Charles Cou lson
said the case remained open .
Toth pleaded guilty to pos·

Proud to be apart of your life..

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month ........ . ... '9.95
One year . ... .. . .. ... '119.40
Dally .................. 50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month ... . .. . .. ...'8.95
One year ... .. .. . .... .'96.10
SubsCribe rs shou ld remit in
advance direct to The Daily
S~ntinel. No subscription by mail
permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Noda and Lynette Toth, 35,
were arrested m Apnl after
pohce recetved mform.atton
about .pornographY. dunng a
narcotics mvestt gation ..
At the time, pohce satd the
co~ple Iured child~en ,i~to
thetr home for parttes wtth
alcohol and dr~ gs in
exchange. for usmg the
youngsters m pornographic
ptctufes and vtdeotapes
Noda·, ...sO th an d t wo ·o tl1er
defendants were charged
only with obtaining and di s·

And Mallory Hawley.
. Longtime family friends
attending were Mary Hood
Greer; Dick and Diane Hood
of Point Pleasant, W. Va.
A meeting will be announced
to plan a 2004 reunion .

POMEROY
The
Hunnel family gathered on
Sunday at the Meigs County
Senior Citizen's Center for a
homecoming and reunion .
A buffet dinner was served
and family members and friends
enjoyed an afternoon of sharing
memories. looking at old pic·
tures, anc4aJdng new ones.
ATHENS O'Bleness
Flower arrangements made
Memorial Hospital in ,Athens
by Debbie King and Tammy
POMEROY Pruning,
will offer diabetes education
Duff were given for spec ial Lawn care, herbs and natural
class sessions this month.
occasions.
Names were decoration s for the holidays,
The class sessions consist
drawn for door prizes and are just a few of the topics the
of
a one-hour individual
distributed
by
Jordan Master Gardeners will teach at
assessment prior to Tuesday,
Pickens. Cards was signed Garden Party I0 to be held at
Nov. II . and two three-hour
for the elderly and sick Washington State Community
classes, Tuesday, Nov. II ,
College in Marietta, Nov. 15.
un able to attend.
The featured speaker at the and Thursday. Nov. 13, from
The most honored family
I to 4 p.m . to complete the
member was Betty Hunnel program which starts at I
entire program,
Gilbert of Springfield. The p.m. will be Mike Ecker from
The class sessions will be
youngest attending was the Dawes Arboretum in held in the hospital's baseNewark. He wi ll do a sesMallory Hawley of Albany.
ment conference rooms.
Family members attending sio n entitl ed "Pruning for
Participants are advised to
were Edna Hunnell, Debbie Shape, Size and Bloom ."
attend
both sessions of the
Registration wi ll be in the
and Nick King, Lamar and
class since they are designed
Brandi Lyo ns, Bobbie Jo , lobby of the Arts &amp; Sciences
to provide education and
Katie and Caleb Hill ; John Building at 12:45. Ecker's preski lls to indi vid·
management
Ray and Violet Hunnell , sentat ion will fo llow with time
uals wi th diabetes or recently
Courtney,
Morgan. and for questions and answers.
diagnosed
with diabetes , so
Hal Kneen, Meigs County
Alysea Hunnell; Tammy and
th ey can have full, health y
Alfred Duff. John and extension agent will be one of
and
productive lives.
Re becca Gilland. Jacob and the presenters using as his topic
The goal of the class sessions
Joel Gilland of Columbus, "House Plants for Dummies and
is
to.offer information that will
Velessa Hunnell , Jordan, Lawn Care Basics." Other pre·
se nters wiII be Deciduous help people with diabetes make
Casey, and Trey Pickens.
positive choices about their
Don and Frankie Hunnel, Shrubs for all Season Interest by
lifestyle
and diabetes manageRon and Shirley Miller, Herb Eric Barren, OSU Extension;
ment. Barb Nakanishi , R.D.,
and Margaret Clonch of Getting to a Sustainable Garden
L.D.
, C.D.E., 0 'Bieness regisEnon; Jun e Safranek of by Charlotte Robe anc! Harriet
OS UE
Master tered dielitian/certitied diabetes
Athens; Martha Bennett and Collins,
educator. and Laura Ballinger.
Jered Ben nett of Vinton ; Gardeners; Natural Decorations
B.S .. R.N., O'Bleness' educa·
Ralph anu Jeannie Frazie of for the Holidays by Suzy
tion
.coordinator. will lead the
and
Berniece
Whee lersburg;
Sherrie Taggart
cla~s sessions.
Pennington, Luke and Mark McPherson, · OSUE Master
Resources and educational
Gardeners;
Saving
and
Starting
Collins of Wheelersburg;
will be available at
literature
Sherry (Fox) Kinnan, Andy. Seeds by Pat Lane. OSUE
the classes, A physician's writ·
Kyl e, and Emily Kinnan; Master Gardener; New Garden
ten referral using O'Bleness'
Tiffany and J.T. Hall ; Shelly Ideas: Herbs as Ornamentals by
Diabetes Self Management
(Fox) White and Holly White. Jody Rauch, Everyday Herb
Therapy
referral form is
Company;
Winterizing
Plants
Bob and Beverly Chapman,
Perry and Bobbie Kay Hill , by Arden McDougal &amp; Roxane required to attend class. The
referral should include diagJeri and Mallory Hill; Lori Cockerham, OSUE Master
nosis and hemoglobin A I c
Hill , Janey Bringar. and Gardeners
The $ 15 registration includes test results if available.
Autumn Hill; Bill and Sandra
To register for the next class.
refreshmen
ts. the Gardening in
Bretz, William and Brian
call Barb Nakanishi at (740)
Bretz; Doreen, Casey, and the Mid-Ohio Valley 2004
Calendar. and a proceedings for 592-9205. Nakanishi can also
Sydney Bretz, all from
all breakout sessions.
provide information about the
Columbus; Dan and Candance
Door prizes will include dates and times of future classes.
Wellman , Michelle. Mikala
Wellman of Gallipolis; Sherry
Ritchie and Morgan Roush;
Jim and Karen Gilbert and
Betty Gilbert of Springfield .
Margaret Ann Wyatt, Mary
for
McAngus, Roger and Diana
Your Continued Support!
Coates; Gloria (Autherson)
Johnston of Belpre,; Mildred
Salem Township Oerk
Alkire Phillips; Don and Bernice
lies of Mansfield ; Randy and
Darla Hawley, Randy !1awley,
Jr., Hannah and Abby Hawley;
Pai d forb the Cllndidates
Shawn Hawley, Devon, Brady,

Man charged with killing two at truck company shooting
WEST CHESTER (A P) -.
A trucker packing two hanclgttns evaded sec urity and
opened fi re at a company that
once em ployed him, killing
two men and wounding three
others. authorities said. The
mantled to Indian a, where he
was arrested while eating at a
truck stop.
Police said Tom West. 50.
fired at least 12 shots
Thursday morning in the dispatch offi ce of Watkin s
Motor Lines Inc.
The gunman drove past security guards without stopping at
the company's entry gate, strode
into the ofticc and opened tire
- . apparently without singling
out any specitic target, police
Chief John Bruce said.
Police declined to disc uss
West's motive. Bruce said th e
employees didn ' t know West.
"We believe that the suspect shot at anyo ne and
everyone he saw." Bruce said.
Butler County prosecutors
said they expected to seek th e
death penalty for West. also
kn ow n as Joseph John
Eschen brenner Ill.
He was charged Thursday

BY THE BEND

2003.

Man convicted of getting thousands of porno images

1, 100

AUG

Friday, November 7,

1,400

NOV

, ,977.91

.

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

Your support demonstrates your commitment
to the future of Meigs County.
,, ..

..

Please join us for a Levy Celebration at
Carleton School in Syracuse

Fri~ay,

November 14th, 6:00-8:00 p.m.

the Carleton

•

Advertising Deadline
·Monday, November 24th
Call Dave or Brenda

992-2155
Industries Committee for the Levy. Jim

•·

Treasurer.

·' '

···..

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.myda llysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

•

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

T O D AY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Nov. 7. the 31 1th day of 2003. There are 54
days leti in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : On Nov. 7, 1973, Congress overrode President Nixon's veto of the War Powers Act, which limits
a c ~ief executive's power to wage war without congressional
appmval.
On this date: In 1893, the state of Colorado granted its women
the right to vote.
In 19 16, Republ ictm Jeannette Ranki n of Montana became the
ti rst woman elected to Congress.
In 1917. Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place as forces
led by Vladimir ll yich Le ni n overthrew the provisional government of Alexander Kerensky.
In 1940. the middle section of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in
Washington state collapsed duri ng a windstorm.
In 1944. President Frankl in Roosevelt won an unprecedented
fourth tenn in oftice, defeating Thomas E. Dewey.
In 1'162, former tirst lady Eleanor Roosevelt died in New York
City.
In 1962. Richard M. Nixon, having lost California's gubernatorial mce. held what he called his "last press conference," telling
reporters, "You won't have Nixo n to kick around anymore."
In 1963. the all-star Cinerama comedy "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad,
Mad World'' had its world premiere in Hollywood.
In 1989. L. Douglas Wi lder won the governor's race in
Virginia. becoming the first elected black governor in U.S. histoJy :· David N. Di nkins was elected New York City's first black
mayor.
In 1992. Iarmer Czechoslovak leader Alexander Dubcek.
whose failed attempt to loosen the Communist grip on his country became known as the "Prague Spring," died at age 70.
Ten years ago: President Clinton, appearing on NBC's "Meet
the Press,.. assailed labor leaders who opposed the North
American Free Trade Agreement, accusing them of using "naked
pressure" to try to kill the pact.
Five years ago: John Glenn returned to Earth aboard the space
shuttle Discovery. visibly weak but elated after a nine-day missmn.
One year ago: In his fi rst news conference since the midterm
elections. President Bush, charting an agenda for the new
Republican Congress, said that homeland security came first and
that an economic-recovery plan with new tax cuts would wait
until the next year. Dick Gephardt stepped down as House
Democrati c leader in the wake of his party's election losses.
Today's Birthdays: Evangelist Billy Graham is 85. Opera
singer Dame Joan Sutherland is 77. Singer Mary Travers is 66.
Actor Barry Newman is 65. Singer Johnny Rivers is 61. Singersongwriter Joni Mitchell is 60. Singer Nick Gilder is 52. Actor
Christopher Knight ("The Brady Bunch") is 46 . Actor
Christopher Daniel Barnes is 31. Actors Jeremy and Jason
London are 31.
Thought for Today: "All forms of totalitarianism try to avoid
the strange, the problematic, the critical, the rational. To do so,
they must deny the metropolitan spirit, equalize everything in
city and country, and retain a center which is not the center of
anything because everything else is swallowed up by it." - Paul
Till i, h. American theologian ( 1886-1965).

PageA4

O PINIO

. Fr iday, November 7, 2003

The liberals fight back
A couple of yea rs ago I
tried to cheer up a discouraged conservati ve friend of
mine by pointing to the nonfi ction Best Seller list in that
Sunday's New York Times.
Here was a rough-and-read y
test of what Amerie&lt;l was
reading. from a source hard
to acc use of conservati ve
bias. And yet, of the 15 titles
on the list, half a dozen wen:
blunt ly
conservative
polemics, and most of the
rest were calculated to warm
the cockl es of a conserva tive's heart : biographies of
va rious Founding Fathe rs.
accounts
of
the
Constitut ion al Con ve ntion ,
and the li ke . Scarcely a book
on the list was written by. or
seemed calcul ated to appeal
to, a li bera l reader. It' that was
what America was readi ng. I
argued, all was not lost.
Onl y a couple of months
later, I got the distinct feeling that somebody at the
Times had noticed the same
thing I had, and had moved
swiftly to do somethin g
about it. Sudden ly. the Best
Se ller list began blossom ing
with argumentati ve tomes by
liberal authors. and books on
to pics sure to attract liberal
readers. Thi s has co nti nued
to be the case ever since.
Since how the Ti mes determines wh ich books get on its
Best Sell er list is one of the
bes t - ~ e p!
secrets
111

CT1A, eJU&gt;6;
tjlJt.ME;:

William
Rusher

American pub! ishing. I was
fa irl y confident that somebody on West 43 rd Street
was doing a litt le anodyne
ju ggl ing.
No w. however. I'm not so
sure. For there's si mpl y no
doubt about it: The liberals
have sudden ly changed tactics and start ed pushi ng bac k
at the co nse rvat ives with

impressive ferocit y.
Look :n the Time s\ Best
Se ller lis t l'or JS:ov. 2. To be
sure. the conservatives are
still well represented : 'W ho's
Look ing Out fur Yo u ' ~" by
Bill O'Reill y. the combative
con se rvat ive comment ator
on the Fox News Chan nel. is
No. 3. ·Persecution,' by
David Limbaugh (Rush's
brother ), which according to
the T imes · ar~u es that 'liberals are wagiiig war against
Chri stianity." is No . 9. And
'Shut Up and Sing' by Laura
Ingraham. another conservative , which the Ti me s
describes as· attacki ng 'the
of
Ho ll ywood.
'elites'
Washingto n and New York,'

clucks in at No. 14.
York Ti mes and The
But ·Dude. Where\ My Washington Post- that was
Count ry '''
hy
Mic hael certain ly the.se nsible thing to
Moore, the leftist demagogue do. Why respond to conservwho gut his _,tart wit h the ati ve cri ticism. when doing
docu memary ' Roger and so merely advert ised its ex isMe,' is at the very top of the tence and implicit ly concedlist, and ' Lies. and the Lyi ng edi ts signilicance '' Far better
Li ars Who Tell Them,' by AI to treat it as beneath eve n the
Franken, a liberal com ic. is 4grudging court esy of conNo.
2. What' s more . tempt.
·
But nowadays. with ta lk
·Bu shwhacked,' by Moll y
!v'ins and Lou Dubose. whi ch radi o firmly in co nservative
the Times calls ·an indict- hands a nd po undin g the
ment of the Bush administra- da ylig ht s out of liberali sm;
tion,' is No. 6: 'The Great with the Fox Ne ws Channel
Unravel in g,' by libera l hys- giving full and equal voice
te ric Paul Krugman. is No. 7: to co nserva tive spoke smen
·Madam Sec retary,' a mem- and dominatin g TV news as
oir by Pres id ent Clinton's a res ult: wiLh publishing
Secretary of State. is No. 8: houses creat ing whole divi and (wouldn 't you know'.' ) sions to. publi sh the con ser'Li ving History,' the reminis- vati ve. book s that are now
cences of Hillary. thou gh in demand - the li berals
down from its earlier heights. have clearl y dec ided t hey
is sti ll Nu . 12. Of the enti re can' t afford to gi ve conserlist of 15 books, three are -vati sm the silent treatmen t
conservati ve bri ckbats, four an ymo re.
are lerti st or li beral, and two
So the battl e has escalated,
more are the sel f-serv ing and hostilities have become
memoir,s
of prominent distinctly more mutual.
Clinto nians.
Personall y. I we lcome the
Thi s is hardly acciden tal. change It wi ll be a pleasure
Time was - and not so long to demonstrate that the ti berago. either
when als' arguments. now that we
Americtt' s li berals chose sim- are privileged to hear them,
ply to disregmd the conserv- are as phony as their previous
atives. as if they were n't there loft y silence .
at all. And when they con(William Rusher is a
trolled practicall y all of the Distinguished Fello11 · of tire
major sources of new s and Claremont Institute for tire
opinion - all three of the bi g Study of Swtesmansltip and
TV networks. pl us The New Political Pltilosophr.)

f &lt;JIZT IVOfl.1\11,.1fl.·l'Ef.AS!5-

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
'
be less than 300 words.
All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are I he consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. :5 editorial boarq, unless otherwise noted.

•

Loeal Briefs
Food drive set

off station fro m I0 a.m. to 3
p.m. on Monday.

POMEROY - Big Bend
Girl Scouts Annual Food
Dri ve will be held through
Monday. Troops will leave
bags on doors th ro ughout the
county with a note explaining
what they are for and when
scouts wiII retu rn to pick
them up. All non-perishiblc
food items wi ll be accep ted
and the food will stay in
Meigs Cou'nty to help fam ilies in their time of need.
Donations are to be place
in a bag and placed near your
front door. Those who would
like to do nate bu t who do not
receive a bag on the door are
asked to contac t April Smith .
Coordinator. at 992-3483 by
Thursday.
Th e Po meroy Muni cipal
Building will serve as a drop-

Supper, fun
night planned

Divorces

I CAN SEE.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

John Thomas
Smith

POMEROY - Actions for
dissolution of marri age have
been fil ed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Laura
R. Starcher. Pomeroy, and
Stanley R. Starcher, Rutl and;
John M. King, Reedsville, and
Brenda S. King, Batavia; and
Layne Robert Gray, Stewart,
and Helen Joann Gray. Long
Bottom.
Dissoluti ons have bee n
granted to Erin D. Smith and
Edward J. Sm ith, Jr. , Sarah J
Brewe r and · Terry L.
Brewer, Linda D. Milliro n
and Melvin H. Milliron, Tris h
D. Robie and Kenneth M.
Robie, and Clarence Lawson
and Kimberl y Lawson.

NOW

MY PAY RAISE-

He was bo rn Sept. 9, 1928
and nephews.
Besides his parents. he was in Betsy J._a ne. Ky., son of the
preceded in death by two late Floyd and Gertrude
brothers, Kenneth Davis. and McDaniel Smith. He was a
DEX TER
Rona ld a twin brother. Robe rt Davis. supe rviso r of shipping for
Graves ide services wi ll be United Natio nal Bank in
Edward Davis, 77, of
held
Sund ay fo llowing a I to Parkersburg, W.Va .. and was
Carpenter Hill Road, Dexter.
2
p.m.
visit ati on at the a member of Belpre Masonic
went to be with the Lord on
Thursday, Nov. 6, ut the Birchfield Funeral Home in Lodge 609 and the Alladin
Ho lze r Senior Care Center, Rutland. The Rev. Ronald Shrine Club of Columbus and
Heath will officiate and bur- Belpre.
Gal lipolis.
Born on May 19. 1926 in ial will be at Standi sh
Surviving ·is a son. Wayne
Dexter, he was the son of the Cemetery at De xter.
Friends may do nate to the Smith : four grandchildren :
late Worley and G Iada
America n Cancer Society in Tracey. Kelly. Jaso n and
Thomas Davis.
Jared; three grea t grand He was a rai lroad supervi- lieu of fl owers.
dau ghters: Emily, Katie and
sor and a Navy veteran of
Sage; and two great grandWorld War II.
sons, Austi n and Jaden .
He is survived by his wife,
A memorial service wi II be
Pauline F. Davi s of Dexter, a
held at 2 p.m. on Sunday,
sister, Mary Kat hryn Holter
Nov. 9. 2003 at White
TUPPERS PLA INS
of Bashan, a brother Clyde
Davis of Rut land ; a special John Thomas Smith , 75 . Funera l Home in Coolville.
Me morial con tribution s
Plains,
died
niece, Diane Molden: a spe- Tuppers
may
be made to Holzer
cial fri end Paul McDani el. Saturday, Nov. I, 2003 at his
Hospice. Gallipolis.
Jr. ; and several other ni eces res idence.

Ronald Edward
Davis

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Ju nior
Grange #989 will hold the ir
annual Thank sgiving supper
and fu n night at 6:30 p.m. on
Nov. 15 at the Grange Hall on
County Road I, th ree miles
north of Salem Center. All
members and interested person s are urged to attend.
Me mbers are to bring item s
for the food bank.

History of the Gideon Bible
Next to the King James it
may be the world's must
famous name in Bible s. It is
associated in the public mind
mostly with hotel s or motels,
but you can al so find Gideon
George
Bibles in hospital s and pri sPlagenz
on s - and in some homes.
Because Gideon Bibles are
not distributed to individuals
(members of the armed
forces ge t New Testaments) minum -ware salesman, had
it can probably be assumed entered the Cent ral Hotel in
that th ose home Gideon the town of Boscobel to get a
Bibl es were sto len - or room for the night. But there
'taken,' as the GideollS' chari- was a lumbermen's conve ntably refer to it.
ti on in tow n and all the
don't rooms were occ upi ed.
'Althou gh ·we
encourage taking Bibles, we The helpful · hote l clerk
don't complain when it hap- offered
to
int rod uce
pens,' says one Gideon.
Nicholson to another trave lThe loss rate for Gideon in g salesman named Samuel
Bibles is higher in hospitals E. Hill who was seated in the
than in hotels.
lobby. Hill had a double
' When today's patients see room. Maybe he would share
the size of their hospital bill , it with Ni cholson.
they may be forgiven if they That was tine' with Hi ll. That
assume that the Bible in their night before retiring Nichol son
room has been fi gured into · said, ' You will excuse me, Mr.
the bi!l and take it home with Hill , but before going to bed 1
~he m , say s one· G1deon try- always read out of God ' ~J Word
mg to put the best constru e- and have a little talk with him '
ti ~n _on the myste ry of the Hill replied, 'Pl ease read
'rntssrn g hosp1 tal B1 bles.
aloud. I, too, am a Christian
The idea of putting Bibles man.'
i~ hotel rooms had its_, oriThe paths of the two
~ m s , appropnate ly enough. crossed aga in several times
tn a hotel room m Wi sconsin in the next year as they covm 1898 , where two trave ling erect their sales territorie s in
salesmen met by chance.
Wisconsin . Eventuall y they
John H. Nicholson, &lt;m al u- decided to form a men 's

gro up 'devoted to carrying
out the Lord 's work.' and met
official lv in Janesv ille
Wise.,
Jul y I. 1899. Onl~
three men were present at
that meeting: Nichol son , Hill
and William J. Kni ght s. They
organized with Hill as president, Knights as vice pres ident, and Ni cholson as secretary and treasu rer.
They named their brotherhood the Gideons, aft er the
fanner-turned-warrior in the
Old Testament book of
Judges who was called by
God to lead a small band of
aga in st the ir
Israelites
Midi anite enemies. Gideon's
troops prevailed althouah
.,
m1tnumbered 450 to I.
Impressed that 'a few selected men could accomplish an
impossible task.' these latterday G idcons decided to take
on an impossible task of their
own. They wo uld provide
weary travelers. far fro m home
and footsore. with the comfort
of God's Word in their hotel
roo m.
In the front of each Bible
would be a handy re ference
gui de to pa ssages which
would help readers with any
probl em
facing
the m,
whethe r it wa s lo neliness,
discouragement. sick ness or
tro uble of any kind .
Gideo n Bib les (they all use
the Kin g Ja mes translation)

on

come in col ors to go with the
hotel room s' decor. (Las
Vegas hotels usually reque st
gold-colored Bibles.)
The Gideons check back
with the hotels twice a year
to replace lost or worn
Bibles. The average life of a
Gideon Bible is six years.
The Gideon associ ation
has more than 236,000 members, located in 179 countries
of the world . All hold memberships in eva ngelical
Protestant churches. They
have week ly prayer meetings
111 thetr commun ities (the
national · offi ces are in
Nashvill e, Tenn.) and monthly fell ow ship meetings. But
the Bible mini stry is their
sole reaso n for being.
Smce the first order for
was de li vered to a hotel in
Iron Mountain , Montana in
1908, the Gideons have distributed a billion Bibles in
179 countries - more than
59 milli on last year alone in 80 language s. And the
orders keep coming in. On
average , one million copies
of the Word of God are
placed . evefy seven days or
11 2 per minute.
'
While those who join the
Gtdeons must · be recom,
mended by their pastor, minISters cannot be members of
the Gideo ns. It is strictly a
lay men's organization .

POMEROY Di vorce
ac ti ons have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Larry 0 . Sellers, Jr.,
Pomeroy, again st Darle ne
Se llers, Pomeroy; John W.
McC lure, Rutl and, again st
Mauricia R. McClure, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; Deborah L.
Sutcliffe, Proctorville, against
Neil D. Sutcliffe, Proctorville;
Tory D. Swartz, Middleport,
against Kendra P. Swartz,
Pomeroy ; and Stephen M.
See, Middleport, against
Cynthi a C. See, Middleport .
Divorces have been granted to Erin D. Sm ith from
Edward J. Smith . Jr., and to
Rya n Marie lnherst from

Committee
meets

Pickup begins

•

David William lnherst.
A divo rce action filed by
Kelly L. Bart lett against Larry
E. Bartlett has been dismissed.

A st1 it filed by Edward D.
Dill against Christopher E.
Tenag lia, and others, h as
been dismissed.

Civil suits

Marriage licenses

POMEROY - Perso nal
injury lawsuits have been filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Bryan L.
Holman, Portland, against
Tirzah M. Dodson . Pomeroy.
and others. allegi ng personal
injury in an auto acc ident on
Oct. 29, 200 I, and by Tonya L.
Fuller, Pomeroy, against
Carolee S. Ri chards, Racine,
alleging personal injury in a
Jan . 20 auto accident.
A judgment suit has bee n
filed by Sherman Acqui sition,
Greensboro , N.C .. , against
Dennis Long. Portland. alleging default on a Sears
Roebuck . charge account in
the amount of $1.025.99.
A foreclosure suit has been
fil ed by Hom e National
Bank,
Racine,
again st
Shannon N. Wood. Syracu se,
and others, all egi ng default
on a mortgage agreement in
the amount of $75,063.90.
Foreclosures have bee n
granted to Home National
Bank agai nst Guy D. Webb.
and others, Benefi cial Ohio,
Inc., against David W. Deem,
and others, Fifth Third Bank
against Jane E. Mi chael, and
others, and to Ameri can
General Financial Services,
Inc., against Rosa lie A
Rayburn, and others.

formances by the Mei gs High
School Marching Band and
Jim Soulsby.
from Page A1
The ceremon y will also
include a salute to departed
W. Ward of the Civil War.
soldiers from all wars.
Drew Webster Post 99 of
The event will be held at
th e Ameri can Leg ion will the
Pomeroy
United
conduct the ceremon y, which Methodi st Church, in the
will also include musical per- event of rain.

Vets

10, 12, 13 and 14. Onl y
leaves raked to the street w iII
be pi cked up. Crew s wi ll
begin at Nort h Second Ave.

MARI ETTA
· - The
District
18
Exec uti ve
Co mm ittee of the Ohio
Pub li c Works Integrating
Committee will meet at I0
a.m. on Nov. 20 at the
Holiday Inn in Marietta.
The purpose is for the committee to recommend projects
for Round 18 funding under
th e OPW C State . Capital
Improve ment and Loc al
Transportation Improve ment
Programs.
Those with questions are
MI DDL EPO RT
Mi ddleport Public Works will as ked to contact Misty Casto
begin picking up leaves Nov. · at 374-9436.

For the Record

THERE IT
15...

Community calendar

Obituaries

Dissolutions

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www. mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 7, 2003

POMEROY - Marriage
li censes have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to David Lee Keller, 56 ,
Titusv ille, Fla., and Diane
Marcell a DonCarlos, 48 ,
Rutland ; Denni s Jose ph
McNa lly. 24, Albany, and
Shannon M a~ie Wheeler, 27,
Dexter; Davtd Allen Rose,
' 44, Shade, and Jo Ann
H1ckman , 44 ..Shade; Charles
R1 chard Dtll , Jr., 20,
Pomeroy, and Gina Niccole
Chamblin, 20, Pomeroy; Tom
Ray Lawson , 32, Portland,
a!ld
Robm
Fay,
37,
Columbus; and M1chael Paul
Laudennilt , 25, Pom ~roy.
and
Stephaf)t e
Ntcole
Pndemore, 18, Pomeroy.

Hostesses
a re
Peg gy Amy Perrin . Carry-in dinner
Moore, Ma ry Powell , Ma ry at 11 :30. The public is invitRose , Pat Holter, Cleo ed. Arland King is the pastor.
Thursday, Nov. 13
POMEROY - The Meigs Smith, and Betty Milhoan
Sunday, Nov. 9
Local Board of Education
TUPPE
RS PLAI NS- The
will meet at 7 p.m. at Me1gs
athletic
banquet for the
fall
High School
Tuesday, Nov. 11
football, golf and cheerleadPOMEROY
Drew
ers at Eastern High School
Webster
Post
99,
American
will be at 2 p.m. in the high
school gym . The athletic Legion , Veterans Day serboosters will provide the vice at Meigs County
meat, drinks and table ser- Courthous e , 10:55 a .m.
Friday, Nov. 7
vice. Each !amity is asked to Unveiling of Medal of Honor
SALE M CENTER
bring two cover dis hes - one plaque, and message from
Meigs County Pomona vegetable and one desert.
Past Ohio De partment
Grange wil meet at 6:30p.m.
Monday, Nov. 10
Commander Dean Scholl .
lo r officers conference and
POMEROY - The Meigs Music by Meigs High School
7:30 p.m. for a meeting at Band Boost!ll's will meet at
the
Star
Grange . 6:30p.m. in the ba nd room at . Band, J im Soulsby. Public
will
be Meigs High School. All band invited .
Refreshments
served .
paretns a re urged to atte nd .
Saturday, Nov. 8
Tuesday, Nov. 11
POMEROY - Burlingham
POMEROY - Retirement
Modern Woodmen, 5:30 planning
Wednesday, Nov. 19
seminar for teachers
p.m. potluck meal with 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Meigs High
POMEROY
Victor
Thanksgiving the me . Potluck School cafeteria. Speakers Hannahs who resides at the
dinner wit h turkey a nd ham , from STRS and ORTA. Call Rocksprings Rehabilitation
beverages and table service Athens-Meigs ESC office to Center will observe his 83rd
provided.
birthday on Nov. 19. Cards
CHESTER
Return reg ister. 992-3993.
may be sent to him the re ,
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Room 114.
Daughte rs of the American
Revolution , will meet at noon
Saturday, Nov. 22
Sunday, Nov. 9
at the Chester Courthouse
TUPPER S P LAIN S
POMEROY - Heritage
. for a Than ksgiving lu ncheon.
Fredrick
Goebel of Tuppers
Guest speaker wi ll be Day/homecoming will be
Kathe rine Colburn , past vice held at Enterprise United Plains will celebrate his 99th
preside nt and historian of Methodist Church with wor- birthday on Nov. 22 . Cards
the Nationa l Society on ship service to be held at may be sent to him at P. 0 .
paper dolls. Members are 9:30a.m. followed by special Box 256. Tuppe rs Pla ins
.
invited to take thei r dolls. program including songs by •· 45753 .

Public meetings

Veterans Groups

Clubs and
Organizations

Birthdays

\,
Homecommg

Court news
Cases heard in
Pomeroy
Mayor's Court
PO MEROY -

Case~

resolved in

the Pomeroy Mayo r's Court ur
magistrate Charl es Knight 1n
Oc10her arc as follows:
•·ined
Connie Chevalier. Racillt'. speeding .
$44 and costs: Thoma'i Deweese.
Pomeroy. DUI. $700 and cost~: three
day!-&gt; jail. 90 license ..;uspension. DUS .
$50 suspended: Crystal Rogers.
Pomeroy. speeding. S48 and costs:
Jo;eph T. Jordan-Wani, Willo" Wood.
DUI reduced 10 rc'C kless operation.
$500 and ''""· marked lanes dismi ssed;
Culley Th oma~. Point Plca'lant. W.Va..
wrongful entnJstmcnt reduced to disorderly conduct SIOO and &lt;USl&lt;: Jerry
Large. Pomeroy, failwe 10 conlrol, $6.1
•md cos&lt;s: Mindy Grady. Pomeroy. fai lure to yield luming let~ $30 and costs:
Gnogory Sheets. Pomeroy. defective
exhaust $50 and COSI.&lt;:
Annette Bare. Pomeroy. DUl. reduced
to reckless opemrion $7 10 plus co,"L".
marked lanes dismi ssed; Paul
McKinney, Middlepm, child cndan ·
germent $50 and eo5ts. driving under
suspension, $50 and cost&lt;, Slop sign,
$50 and cosrs, ficri uous wgs. $63 and
costs, DUI dismissed:
Joseph Weth&lt;.,-all. Vienna. W.Va. Dlll
dismi ssed. improper lane ~.,:ho.UJgt:. $50
and costs; Melissa Stacy, Pomeroy.

open con tai~r in moror vehicle. $50
and costo;; Charles Lewis. Rutland, no
operators license, $ 100 and costs:

Kenda GdffiCS. Middlepon. speeding.
$40 and COSL'\;

Sarah Blankenship. Middlepon. no
operator&gt; license. $100 and costs. fail·

Vi llage counc il unammou sly voted to purchase
nearl y one acre of property
and the old American
from Page A1
Electric Power (AEP) building
las t September pending
the old Pomeroy Juni or
High which is estimated to a co nt ract with Bob
Thompson for the s &lt;_~ l e of the
cost more than $35,000 .
Midwest Claims offered land . Thi s will become the
the village $ 160,000 and site of the new garage and
Young took th is offer to vil- become a ·storage depot fo r
lage council for considera- salt and gravel. Young said
the new garage should be
tion.
"This was a good settle- · completed and ready for use
ment offe r and I asked coun- by early January.
Council will also need to
cil to accept thi s," he said.
"The insurance company approve a bid for the demolition of the Pomeroy Junior
was really fair about this."
unanimously High building. There were
Council
approved the settlement two bid s subm itted. one
amount. Youn g said the next fro m Jeffers Excavation and
Pullin s
from
step in the process is to sur- another
vey the si te behind the Excavation. There is not yet
Meigs High School football a time line set for the de mostadium where the garage lition of the jun ior hi gh
building.
will be relocated.

Damage

Urt.:' In he Jirn d i.\ rn i-..'t.~: Re~ca

La wrellL.:C. Portland. :-.fJL"'"'l!ing.
l.
547 arKi
cost•..: Vince nt Stone. Middlerort.
de-.lrut..t ion \1f pr~n~. SI (X) and LThL-.:

disorck:rly h) lighung. S50 and t:nst. . ;
John T Rooch. Jr.. HanfonJ. W Ya..
DUI n:4..h.K:t.xJ to n.x.: kle~:-. opemtion.
S7t(J and co!-.t.': dcfo..:Li ve r.:x hJu.-.:t. SJO
m1d LCl'.t'. ·no 1i~.:ensc plme light. ~20
and
c u 'i t~:
Mitchell
Waugh.
M iddle)XXt. dri ving under suspe11.~ ion.
$150 ;md c·osts. cxpin:d lags. $63 ;md
cost.;; David Nakao. Pomeroy. no op.;rator. cost only. smp sign. $50 and crnt"i.
Bond Posted
Jason Boothe. McArthur. helmet
requi red. S50 and cost..,: Carnm)
Shaffer. Henderson. W.Va.. C)(pired
tags. $6?. and cost,: Da\·id lnher-.L
Long Bottom. rcckl~!i Opll'.tU o n. $200
and costs: Gwcndolcn Chapman .
Mitkllcpun. dri ving under ~ ll\pcn:-. i on .
$150 and costs: failun: 10 display. $63
and costs: Teresa Grigby. .·\lhany.
speeding, $60 and cosLo;.; Sue Thacker.
Mi ddlcpon . sJD:ding. ~9 and oNs.
Bond s Forfeited
William Call. Long Bottom. ,pecding.
S49 pltb costs: Tmvis Bate y.
M1ddlepon_ speeding. :&gt;+Y and c·os!S:
Alvin Smith. jr.. Bcn-.on. KC.. ~p-..'L-'d­
ing. $41l anJ l'USL&lt;: D.Jnald Sflil"th.
Stalfordw il lc. Ky.. ' P·'':ding. )47 :md

COSL'\: Mary Bumsi&lt;E. PnrTk!ru~ ....'fX.'Cding. S45 anJ cos!S: Bill) KenneJ) II.
Rutland. sr-fing. $48 and cost&lt;:
Shirley Smilh. Pomcmy. spxtling. S46
and cosL&lt;: Carl Musser. Whitehall.
speeding. S52 and ws rs: Jeremv
Coleman, R uthmd. ~p&lt;.'t.'d. S49 and

cw., pa'sing m no J:Xl~"'in g /..nne. Sh.~
and crl".l.": G..u: Gilrncre. L.tngvilk:.
,pt:t.·ding. ')...l6 and ....&lt;~b. : Mdi'·' J
B~\\t'f. Middl~pon.. "'ft.'U.iin~. ~ anc1
1.:\N.-...: MJI) Cund1tr. S~r.il.1J-e . 'i).X't.J·
mg. s..+h anJ J..'( l't-. : k'''..:;.~ EdJ~ .
Mari t'lla. &lt;;p..•t•ding. S52 &lt;ulll ..:&lt;..,b:
Stt.·rhng Sh1dJ. Ma"-1. 111. W.V11.. fX)'../'(' ' ·
'ion of..cnmmllcJ -.uh-.lru"l(.'e. }1(0 and
cc~.'-: Kasi Snuth. Pnnx.-,'0~, lca..J1 I~.tv.
S75 Jnd ,;o~t:. : Hnv.anJ Kim hlo:.
·Parker.-t u g.. W.Va.. dn ~mg wlder .. u.-,JXnMon. S ISO and ~..:O~·.t'. AbrJ Ohl lllgL'f.
RaLine. driving und__'f &lt;., u:--rcn\ion. S!50
and U"1.&gt;l'-. ' C:\pi red la~\, SlJ) and t.:D-.t.•,;
Jamye Hoffman. Pomcro). dn\ 1ng
under stt'\pen~ion. $150 •md t:(~l":
Larry Fred and. Middleport. dn'lll£
under ~u..., pensi nn . S150 and co"b.
un~e \C hlCic. S6~ and t."'Q!o.t\: D.."n.;..
HilL Gu ysville. dnvi ng uRJer ~.tspcn ·

:--ion. SJS(l and Cl~l..,, Brian l...a~ n t:-..,n
Mililep:rt. frullln' In rn:.umam ~,.·ontrol.
$6.1 and COS!" Marrhew St: llcrs.
~hiiltp:)fl imrroJXr h&lt;.ckin~. $50 and
mst~:

Tara Brx:M. Rzll..·ux:. fall wt' tl' JJm. Y,J
anJ wsl\: Sand ra HocJ.:ingh.:rry.
PlliTJt.' luy. imrn~r bi.tl..l mg. S50 plll'c~.)S{.. . : Stt--pht:n Cole. 8(\/t'maJn. Mnnl..
fictiti ous tag~ S63 and c~t-.: Paul
Bo," ell. Ch:.ui~~ton. \\· . V~t . c.-.:pu-cd
t&lt;.\g.-.. )6j and '-'""l": 1\ b nha Lnnoh.
Gu ~ ~\il le. e-.:pi rt-'tltag~. S(,J anJ C11.'&gt;l\;
Jody Wol[ Rat..-ulC. wrnngful cnln.l..t·
ment S ISO and &lt;'~L&lt;: Deti111e D.mlap.
Syr.lCll....C. no Cl('.."rJtCf' licrn-.c. SIOO
:md l'OSI\. expi red t.:lg'. Sf,) ::md ~o.'rt'\1:!-1:
l..arT: Cundill. R.1vem.w~1Uli. W.Va.. no
(lJLTJlLif"'' liccnx-. S I0.1 and co~l-...

Shade Historical Association
:me nded a school as&gt;embll'
prior to the unveiling. and
Well , Ross and the associafrom Page A1
tion 's Mary Powell shared
facts about Bierce· s Iife and
local hi storian Margare t his impact on American literaParker challenged the claim ture.
and a researcher ve rified
"The re 's no write r ali\'e
Meigs County as Bierce's today
like Ambrose Bien:e:·
birthplace, usi ng Civi l War
records. that -the marker Ross told the studen ts.
became a reali(y.

Bierce

Members of the Chester-

·e~~~!!~!s~~

SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30PM ·

-COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR-

"Living Life Witfi Diabetes"
• Friday, November 21, 2003

• 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Multi-pw-pose Room
• Public is cordially invited

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·Vendors, FUE Healtbca_re Screenings,
Educational Information,
Promotlc,t~al

Items &amp;, Door Prizes

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

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FAITH

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA6

• VALUES

Friday, NovJlmber 7,

'

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

2 003

Religion News
Register
for toys

'f

SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse First Church of
God at Second and Apple
Streets in Syracuse will have
registration for its Chrstmas
toy giveaway from I 0 a.m
to noon Nov 13. Needy families with children ages newborn ~o 17 year are to take
their medical cards, birth
certificate s
or
Social
Security Cards for chtldren
when applying For more
information, call 992- 1734
or 304-882-2866

RAC INE - In observance
of Remembrance Sunday,
the Dorcas Bet hany United
Method tst Church will honor
veterans at a special Sunday

Faith Baptist to host Life Action Revival

I was recently thrown out of a
Fnday high school tootball game
It ts regrettable to tepon that.
because of my heated and
voctferous protestatt ~ ns dtrected tow&lt;rrd home manage ment
and the officials, one of the re i~
etees insisted I leave the steleline. I did not use profamty or
make any ph ystcal threat.
Nonetheless,
in those
moments, l not only compromised the mtegnty of our team .
especially with the possibility
of a penalty. I also compromtsed. by way of unspom manlike conduct, the imcgtiry of the
muustry before the coaches tmd
players :.unong whom I serve as
team chaplam.
If my motl1er had seen my dtspla&gt; of temper, she would have
stghed tmd re&lt;tftinned her notion
that I contmue to take after my
hot-headed grandfather, Emory
So, wh,ll do you do when the
preacher goofs up ? How ts it
th at people should respond''
Ac tuall y, th ts confession of
mme is po111ted and rather gives
oppottunity to run home a ctittcal truth for consideration.
The unfortunate reality ts that
some preachers are going to en·
in one capacity or another.
Certainl y, one called by God to
the ministry has a profound
responsibtlity to mamtmn consistency in spiritual character
and morality to avoid grave
repercussions detnm ental to
the cause of Christ. The same is
equall y true lor all Christnms
when 11 comes down to it ! The

National Council of Churches votes to join boycotts

dgmnst ~nKo Bell dnd the nthe1

t.u-get mg Mt. Oli ve PICkle.
The council . dn ecumemcal
group of 36 Ort hodox ,
Angltcd n and Ptotestat1l
denom inatHlns. hadn't signed
nn to a co nsu mer boycott
~ 111ee

tak1 ng

.t

sldnd

a g~11n st

.tpMtheid 15 years ago It
approved the resolutions at its
annu al ge neral asse mb ly, held
thts year 111 Jackson.
"The h.1rd work IS ge ttm g
otll to the local ch urches
tllro uglmul the count ty to say
·no' to Tdco Bell .. to say. ' As

long as the exploitati on contmu es, we· re nut gomg to go
to yo ur fas t food restaurant," '
said the Rev. Robert Edgar,
the NCCs general secretary.
In the case of Mt. Oltve pickles. Edgar sai d church members should say: "We're not
go mg to accept your dtscuunts
at the loc,d Procery state.' '
The NCC s resolution agamst
Taco Bell accused the tranchtse
nl put ciMsmg tomatoes f10m
suppliers 'Nho p.ud subst.mdard
wages to farm workers. The
g10up S&lt;ud Dep.trtment oi
Labor data shows that the dVer,tge Wdge is 40 cents per 32pou nd bucket, and hasn't
changed 111 more thau 20 years
·'We think th&lt;tt it's unt01tunate

MIDDLEPORT
-The
Rtver Valley Worship Center
located at 873 Southern
Thnd St. in Middleport, wtll
be havmg revival servtces
this weekend .
The Sunday service wtll
be at I I am . with a cht ldren's serv ice to be held
al so. Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday se rvices wt ll
begin at 7 p.m.
Puppets, powerful preaching. anointed smgmg, worship and praise
wt ll be leatured The Rev.
E. Mi ller and Fa mi ly from
Bourbon, Ind. will be condueling the serv tces For
more infonnatt on call 9929124.

POMEROY - Hentage
Day/hnme co nung will be
held at Enterprise Uni ted
Me thodist Church with worshi p ' crv icc to be held at
9 30 ,1 m. Sunday followed

What do you do when the preacher goofs?

gtarns . The locu s ot the cru- group of 4 and 5-year-olds
sade ts on the ~ t ea test need in and first graders
Tht s energetic group, from
to llv111 g and teachr ng pr~h..: tl ­ Amcrka toda y. prac tic.tl
Buchanan.
Mtch., is one part
steps
on
how
to
li
;e
dail
y
by
c.d, ct.~dy .tppltc.ttton of the
o
f
Ltfe
Action
Mmtstnes
wmd nf God. is conung to the btblk.d values .mel princi Fat th B.tpt ist Clw rd1 111 ples upon which this country Founded 111 197 1 by evangelist Del Fehsen feld Jr., Life
Mason. No&lt; ~- 19 I o1 ,, was foumled.
Incl uded 111 this 11 -day cru- Acti on has bro ught toge thet a
ICvi v&lt;-t l crusdde.
Through a sene s of sc r- s.tdc .trc 111ghtly musical pre- stall of ove r 100 mdt vtduals
' ices and sem inars, the Lllc sc ntauon s by the nationally from across the continent
Lt le Act ton wtt h one bonding goal - to
Act ion team will prese nt recog n t z~ d
1l1ought provok1ng message'i Stngers In add tt tun, each see God empower and drdw
c1us.tde tncludes fam il y sem- Chnsti ans to practtcal depenand mUSIC
T h e ct u st~ de w1 11 beg n1 tnats, young adult semmars. dence upon Himse lf. resultSunday. Nov 9 at I0 a m ,111d an ml ormal dtscussion time tng 111 a spirit ual awakening
will mnt111 ue eac h weekd,ty lot teen'"tger .... d youth semi- .11110ng the lost.
nat called "Ma.ste r Control",
For addt tional info rm ation.
~ venlllg .11 7 This c t u~dde
call
Pastor Ron Bran ch ol
wtll feature tns tructtona l Dynamtt e Clu b to r boys an d
preach ing. f,tmliy semuMt s. gttls 111 grades 2-6, and Faith Baptist Church at (304 )
mu stc and ch tldrcn·s pto- Happt ness cl ub. a sparky 773-5429.
.. MASON. W. VA . - Lile
Actton. a mnmtry ded1cated

JACKSON. Mtss. (API The National Counctl ol
Churches voted Thursd.ty to JOin
two consumer boycotts over
conditions llll lann ;vorkers. one

Revival planned

Church to
celebrate

Veterans to be
honored
Life Action Team

by specwl program including songs by Amy Pernn.
Carry-m d111ner at II :30. The
public IS invited . .A,rland
Kmg is the pastor.

morning service.
There will be· readin gs
from an army nurse, a pilot,
and a ctvtlian The pastor
will share Joshu a's story and
there will be special mu stc
by a newly formed choir.
Pictures of veterans who
have been or are a part of the
church wtll be on display as
well as pt ctu tes of early
members and fami ly of the
church.
Members of the congregation wtll hght candles in
memory or honm of loved
ones or fri ends. The service
will begin at 9 .t m. and the
public is invited to attend

that they ha;e dtrected thetr
efltllts tnw&lt;tttl Taco Bell," satd
Lautie Schalow, a com pany
spokeswomtm based 111 Irvine,
Calif. She dtsputed the wage data.
The NCC says the Farm
Labat Or~.tni zing Committee, a
fann worKers' union. began. the
boycott uf Mt Olive 111 March
1999. TI1e Mt. Oli ve resolution
claims the company has shown
·'msulllctent prog ress" 111
tmpt mmg condtttons fm farm
workers employed by the companies that supply iLs cucumbers.
Lynn Williams, spokeswoman
for North C rrolina-based Mt.
Oli ve, said the demands were
inappropriate and unrealistic
Both boycotts are eftect1ve
im mediately.

Ron
Branch

potenttal for personal fa llibility
ts always present for those
stnving to be Lnthful to God.
Yet, here ts where the water
meets the wheel Dunng :-;uch

times when the gaffs of God's
people t)ecome evtdent. the
oppottl.mttv is often seized by
some to li.nd susuuni ng reason
lor not getttng then own lives
ri ght with God. TI1e acc usatory
finget ts pomteu .md the vtt11ol
is spewed, "They are supposed
to be a Chnsttan Why, then. do
I need GocP Why do I need to
become a Christian if Chtistians
are oomo to be li ke that''"
P~opFe who pos it their
lack of spirituality on the
goofs of others are lame wtth
an unacce ptable perspec ti ve.
The ~u th nl the matter ts that
God ts never intumdated by the
stns people commt t. Has 1t
occum:d to you that, if He were,
God woul d never have reported
the dramati Csetmdal of Davtd's
adtt lterous and murderous
aff,nr'' God wou ld not have had
menttoned the lickl eness and
hulutcs of unlaithfullsrae l God
would not have pem1itted

Abraham 's shoncomi ngs to be
re;ealed Petet 's deni al of
Chnst would h.tve been covered up The reveldltons about
Jtm my S. and Jimmy B. would
never have come to light
It 1s because of thi s fact 1t
must be remembered that
God never changes Hts standard s. He never alters Hi s
expectations. He never
excuses a person from personal responsibi lity to relate
with Htm nghtl y th rough
fatth in the Lord Jesus
Chri st. The person who tnes
to use others fm an excuse
from pe rsonal respo nsibility
only tool th emselves to th etr
o'Nn spirit ual detri ment.
Oh. how people try.
Howevet, it dtd not work when
Adam blamed Eve. It dtd not
work when Eve tned to blame
the Serpent. It did not work
when Esau tn ed to blame
Jacob. It dtd not work when
Jmla-;. through the mmifications
ot hts betrayal, tned to blame
Jesus. People who try to use
people to squeeze by the will of
God event uall y get squashed
In the Dav of Judgment and there wi II be one - God
'N tll not call for a corporate
accountmg. Rather. it will cert,nnly be an mdi vidual affatr in
which the goofs of others will
pruv.de no basts for acqu ittal.
If you have the propensity
to mampulate the goofs of
others for some sort of spiritual adva ntage. put yourself
on nottce th at you have none

Young's Carpenter Seruice

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Pwlm 95

26 vears in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

TUlSDAY

Pomeroy, OH

740·992·2121
Fax 740-992·2122
Ben H. Ewtng
L1cersed Embalmer, Funeral Dtrector

SUHDAY

Pwlm 91
WOHDAY

Pwlm96

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106 Mulberry Ave Pomeroy, OH

Ltcensed Pre-Need Insurance

Pwlm97
THURSDAY

Pwlm 98

before God and man."

Acts 24:16

fRIDAY
Pwlm99
SATURDAY

Pwlm 108

Homemade Desserts Made Datly
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specillls

"A Home Bank for

Open 7 days a week

Home People "

\\h) 11:1r·: I ht' dcotlh ;tnd dt'slrucl ion... lhc m1lh ons ut dollars spent l'or the
\\&lt;tr that could be used In ~ dd rcss oth{'r utrod tics orlife such as
fa mine and n:J iu rnl dilillSiers .. lht' famili es dcs lro~·ed or fore-1er hroken... uhy "-llr'!
Tht Lord addressed lh b ques tion m Mattheu 24:6. ·'And ~uu ~ill hear of
\1 ars und rumo rs of uar; st'l' th:il )UU are nut ahtrmcd; (or this must take plaer."
Did (;tKll cll us u h) it m usl hike place? :'\io, it see ms that Ht is gh ing ns t mnfort
and p{'rhap~ alikm~ u~ tn acctpt "a r as a matte r or trustm Him_
The philosnphcr Ra ltJh Waldn Eml'rson mu~l ha1e been cuntcm J)Ialing this
11 hen h(' said, "l ilt•on]~· rumpt_·nsaliun "ar ofTrrs fo r its manifold misc hief. is tn
the great pt rsonal tjU:I httc~ lo \\htch it ghcs scope and ocraston ."
\ li \'el eran~t' Uav approadtes. ue can choose to remain J)Osilh e, fur \\ilr has
hiji!hlighted the 411i.lll! t{'S nf lradershiJI, com passion, an d cour11ge in lhosr \\ ho ha \1'
~&lt;' nl'd in oor Arnlt'd 1-'llrl'C~. -\ddil10nall~ . " ar has ghen birth to resou n:dulm•ss
•md sial" art support b) thvse :tl honie that 143 11 for their loved om:s.
\\'u n't \'tJU l' i~it God's llouse this ~ eek? In llis Word is the stren~t h to trust
ou r ( re:Hnr ~ ~lit;tlnm •. the pt"ace nf knn"i ng that He IS ultimatrly Ihe One m
cnnt rol of &lt;til. fo our honort•d ' el{'ra ns... a hea rtfelt "thank \ OU·••
Scnptwfls Smec tr.d t1y Thr llmci/C!JI' Brble Sooet~

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-32 r9
Tol Free 1-!177-583-2433

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,,m

1110\1

&amp; 7ltJ

rm

fhu r' 7 1H) I'm P&lt;~•tur M.1 rt~ R Hut ton

Wcslo;1dc Church or C hrist
lH26 Cl11ilhcn ' llvml Rd Sunday
Stht~ll
II am, Wor~h1p · lOam, fi p m.
W(dnc"oda) Scr\ •~c !o · 7 p m
l'omt&lt;ru~

Assembly of God
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PO Ho\ 4h7 l&gt;udJm!! Lute',
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p,p,!or N~.: rl l cnn.tnt

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Antiquity 8 &lt;tpti st
SunJuv Sd1011l 9 10 :1 m Worship [{) 4'i ,, !\1 St md.1y I VCI\I tlg - {t ()()pIll .
Pastor M.trk MLCIHlta '

Chun.: h ur Ch rist
Mnli~IL!r T!lm Run von, .W'i'i~ Br;~dhu ry
H11,UI Mut.lkpmt Sund a) SL h110l · 'I W

Ru thmd (' hur ~-ft of Ch ri!il
Sund.J; Sd1ool IJ &lt;o a m 'Worship and
Cnmnwtlhlll HI 111 ,, 111 Boh J Werl)
Vlnll stcr
ll mdrmd Church or Chnst
(', ornu or St Rt l ~ .t &amp; Brat..lhu l) Rd
Mtllhln Doug Sll.llllhlm Youth l\11mqcr
IIIII ,\m hergl'r Sum\ •~ Sdmol 9 &lt;o J m
wnr ~ h•r
Hoo am . 10 '\O a m. 7 oo
p m .W..:d tll. •ll.ty Sen t c·t~ 7 tMl p m
lli(kory llill!i Ch urch uf Chr ist
h allJ!di' l M1ke Mour.:. S.u nd.l} Sth(llll
"} ,, m \Vnr.. tup - 10 ,, m 6 10 p m
Wednesday Scr\ I(.:CS - 7 r

111

H.rt&gt;ds, tile Church or Christ
PH,IIlr Phtltp Sturm Su nd ay St:hoo.1l 9 '\0
am Worsh ip Scrvtt C' 10 ~0 !I Ill. Bthlc
S tud ~, \\oc dn csdny 6 30 pIll
Dex ter Chun:h of Christ
Pas tor Btll Eshelman. Sun da~ school 9 \0
am , Norman Wtll ~ u pcnn t c n dcn t
Sunday v.nr~ l up I0 30 a 111
Chu rch of Christ
l ntc r ~ct lt o n 7 and 124 W E va n gdt~ l
Denm s Sargem, Sund&lt;ty B1ble Srudv
IJ :10 am Worship 10 W am and 6 10
p m , Wcdn c~da} Btblc Study- 7 p m

Christian Union
Jhtrtford Church or Christ in
C hri ~tian Unwn
l-l &lt;l ltlmd. WV:~ Pastn r LJ ,n td Gre er,
S u n Ja~ St huo l - 11 10 a m , Wm ~ lup ·
10 ' O a 111
"' 00 p m Wednesday
Scrllll c~ - 7 00 p PI

Church of God
MI. Mo n ah Chu rch of God
Mlle Hd l Rd R a ~ mc. Pa~tor Jaml ~
Suttcrfteltl Sunda) School 9 '45 n m
benmg - 6 p m Wed nesday Se rv1ces · 7
pm

H.utl and Church of God
Run Hcalh, Sunday Wo r~h 1p- 10
a m 6 p m , Wcdn c~dny SerV Ices · 7

Rutl and Free Will Ra pt1 Sl

S.1lcm St . Pa'-llll h nuL lm tncr Suml.l)
I[)

a

111 .

Evc 111 ng . "' p m

Wt•d t h.:~d , t y S~ f\ KC&gt; • 7 (1 Ill

Second Ba pdst Chun:h
l{,"cns\HI'llli WV SunJov School 10 am
, Murmn g wo,.J11p [ I~~~~ E\cnmg- 7 pm
7 p 111

Sat'red Ueart Ca thulkChu n:h
llil Mulh!!try A\\"~ Pomeroy, ~ 9 2 SK98,
P&lt;.t' lor: Rc1 W,tltct E lk uu Sa t Con
4 4'i -5 [ Sp m M as~- 5 l() p rn Slm

t 90 N. Second St. M1 ddiepo~ . OH
7 40.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
ola au es t-s hirts and more

Carolina Antique
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pleasant
675·1160
VarieLy ol furniture, glassware, crafts,

colleclmn of hollies &amp; primiu veOutside flea markel April- Oct.
Lavawavs Avail able

Care

740.667-3 156 F" 740-667-tiOso
rt y"c,ol, Oc'"pntoonn l nnd Sf"cc h t hm poc '

We Accept Mcdtcarc. Mcdllolld, &amp; Insurance

,,

••

"So I stri ve alwa ys to.
keep my consc ience c lear
befo re God and man."

Acts 24:/6
Davls-Qulckei.Agency Inc .
NCE
Full tine of

~ENCIESinc

Holiness
Com10unity ( ' hur~ h
P.tstor S!l ~e rmnd;
M,un Str&lt;:cl
Ru!l.mJ, SunJa} W.,r,h•r-111 no ,, m
Sunda} Scrv t ~l' - 7 p m

Siilll'

H&lt;~UIL'

l,!'i

Lang~'

lie

Cal van Pilgrim l hlltM'I
H.trmonv tll c RuaJ
P,J.,IOI
CIT&lt;tdc~
MLK;;·nltt: Su nd.1 ~ SL htM&gt;I 9 lO a 111
Wur,htp 11 u 111 7 DO r 111 w,·d n.:&gt;da~
ScntL~ · 7 (~) p m
R ~ or Shanm fl ohn~ I hu rr h
Lcadmg Creek Rd . RUJI,md, Pu\lnr Ru
Dcwty Kmg Sund&lt;t) ~ htMII 'I 1() a Ill
Su nd.n
IHIT ,h ip .7 rIll WcJm·~d"
prayer mccung 7 p m

7

Insurance

Products+
Ftnanctal
Services
992·6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Filth Street
·&lt;;oolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

Enlrrp~H

f'llllt"oods
P ;Hh ll K.11h Jt .ukr Sum.lay "ithtMII
,, m Wllr, lup II "tn

Rev Loury l..c mk} Sund.1y Sd11111l
4 l ll ,t m , Wur~h tp - IO.t'i .t m 7 p m
Thu~a\ Rth lc Stu Jv ,md Yt•uth · 7 p 111
Lllu rt'l t_ hiT f' rtt' Mcth nch ~ l ( hu rrh
Rc1 l cs Str,mdt ,md M)ru L Str11mh
Sunda y Sdl(lol 1) "\() ,, 111 \~ o r ~ htp
[U 1() ,,m o~nJ (,pm V.. td ne,tl t) Su\ llL'
7 1~ ) jl 111

Latter-Day Saints
r hc Chun·h uf .l e!i US
C hri !il of Lldl t'r· URy Sam ts
St Ht 160, .t.t6-62.t1 or .t.t6 7H6
Su ild .ly Sd wnl 10 ~(l I I a Ill . Rch.:l
Snne t yf Pn ~'th nnJ
II ll' ll DO noon
S.tLr.un cnt Slflll&lt;: IJ - 10 I " am
Hnm[rn.tklllg 111l'CIIng I,, Tho r.. 7 r m

fo~YSI kun
linh Rnhlll.,Url Su nda\ Sd t••• l
am Wor,h•p 9 a 111

C'hc~ t e r

llr11tll l \f1dfl leporli
Rt&gt;d Arn"'cr Sund&lt;~} 'i'h•11•l Ci
am W.. r\htp II IHI a m

~ff

S~hti'IJ I

Pu'l"r Uoh R..hm '&gt;t)!l Su nd1v.
a 111 'Wor~ lup II! ll lll

'J

l'e11 r l ( hape l
Sundav Sd1nol &lt;; ll m W,Jr,htp · 10 ~ m
l'onlt'rO)
1\l"tnr Rnd Brol'ocr 'W or, htp ·
Sundi.l) Slhuul Ill ~ ~ ..t m

I}

311 a m ,

Ahundant ( , nt'r-

Il l 111,1111

9 ll) .t m

fhu r~ ~ a;S L!n l ... c•

Wor~l11 p

Sum.l&lt;l\ 'l'riiLC
l,l,'cdnc...._l" ~n llt: 7 p m

St. Pa ul Luth eran Chun: h
Comer S)c,mJOrc &amp; Snond St r omero}
Sunday School - 9 .t ~ &lt;.1 m. Wu r ~h t p · II
am Pastor James P: Br,Kly

United Methodist
Grahom Unll ed Methodi st
Worsht p · Y 10 ,, m (I"' &amp; 2nd Sun )
7 ~0 p m (3 rd &amp; 4th Sun) Wednc-.day
Ser. 1cc 7 JO p 111
Mt. Olh~ Unitl'd l\1e!hodts l
Off I~4 hchm d W ilk c~v tllc . Pastor R~'
J{alph S p tr c~. Su nda} School - 9 30 a m
Wm~ htp . 10 ~0 .1m
ServtCT!S 7 r m

7 pm

Fanh f'ull t_,osptl ( hur.:h
Lun!l llolh lnt P&lt;~ • l nr 'i!L''ol 1-tl ~d Sun&lt;.kt1
S;; h o~&lt;.l l
4 ltJ u m w,,"l "p Y 11) am
aml 7 r rn , Wednt·~da• 7 p m htd al

·

- 7 pm

Meigs C oo ~ rRi l \~ l'11 ri sh
Nonhcast Clu stL!r, Alfre d Pa~ wr JanL
Beaut-: Sunday Sc hool
9 '0 am
Wu r~ l up - 11ar ll 610 pm

I ~J h, .., 'h ip

"'--'f\ I l l

7pm

Wtll t.ml K \1,tr, hull Su mluy
Sdu &gt;l•l 1() 15 t m Wor, hlp-':l l 'iam
Bth lc Study Mn ndll) 7 (!11 pm
Sno" vil lc
SunJa)SL i u~&lt;.•I · IOa m Wur,htp -IJ.l m

Pi.!•lnr

H a rrison , ilh~ (urnmuni tv Ch un: h
Pastm Theron Du rham Sundu~ "'11)
,, m and 7 p m Wed nc...: l1~ · 7 p m

!\.b ddleport Co mm un 11~ Church
"'i7'i Pea rlS! M t&lt;. ldl ~rnri r~''"r "i,11n
-\nd.:r &lt;. nn Sunda; S~ h ,,o l II) J m
h cmng 7 ~0 rIll \\.:dn~-.du&gt; s~n ll~
7 ~0 p 111

lk !h a n ~

P.l'tor Jt,hll Gil mu1c Su11d,,, Sd11'Ul Ill
am, \\ 11 r\h1p
Y OJ m
\\'cdnc~da\
Scr\I Ln l ll,, m
Cumll'I-Suuo n
Cmml &amp; 1\o~ ,h.m net, l-l. .lll llL Ohlt&gt;
Pa,lilr Juhn Gtlntntc, Sllltdll\ Sdtool '} \ tl a 111 Wlll ~ h t fl 1 114~ .1111 Bthlc
Stud) w~ d 7 1111 r m

S~ neuse

!\lornmg Stur
P.•,tnr Jnlm ( itlmnrl' Sunda\ Sdl,lnl
a 111, Wm,htp · 10 a 111
bt~l I t'turl
Sund.t} Sd 1oo l 10 am

Pa~ tor

Fa1th \'aile) Taht.·rnaclc {_ hurch
Run R\'&lt;tJ P&lt;.t,lln i•k 1 l:::rnmLit
R.t \\ ~U II
S un d.tl hl'll lllg 7 rIll
I hur),CjJ\ sl n lLC ., jl rn
Batl~'

am
Su 11d.ly Sdt~ol

I0

~()

am

Lon g Bottom
Sunday Sd1oul · 9 ~0 a m . Wnrsh1p
IO JOa m
Wo rsht p . 9 .30 &lt;t m . Sunda) SchL1nl
10 '0 am , Ftrst S'Undar of Month - 7 00
pm

~nd

..,.-1(1 \

'7()()

\1 1&amp;:llcpon

-\\l

Pa ~lut

\&lt;11Le

hm:mdn
l...!·Mr~c for~ man \ltoiXShlp 10 1.(1 am

V. cJno:....L11 '-t&lt;:"n.tl&lt;:"' I pIll
(IIfton Tatx-rnade l:hul'l'h
Cltlt"n 'J. \d Sund.t• S..:hn11l Ill a Ill .
\l. nr,lllp 7 r m 'Wednc--dll~ SL'f\tLe. 7

rm
'""' Life \ ktor~ Centrr
l7'' l~~.orgc' (red Rc~ad Guilt poll~ OH
P~ ~\111 Fldl Sil.llo:n ~undoJ~ Senile'
10
.. m &amp; " p m
\l. cdrl(''&gt;4.la\ · 7 p m &amp;
'••ulh "prn

Sa\IM
P.t~q•or
~ t~ J

k''o.C Morr1'

pm

Salem (. ummun•h l hun:h
L•~' 111~

Ku.1d

\\ c~t

Cu lulllhta

\.\ Va

P.l'l"r ( hdl l l·1rdl l,unJon '\,h,Mol Y 1H
um SunJ~1 ''"'~mg 'l'n ,,c n pn1
\\ L'i.lfl{,d&lt;~&gt; -cntu· 7 pm
Hohson Chnstillln f.' t!llowdup ( 'hun:h
HeN h.:! 'ol. httc Sund&lt;n SthutJI 1/l um Sund.!~ ( huKh ..e~tLC 610 pm
Wt:dnL·~dOJ~ i pm
Rnturat ion Chmtian f ~ llow!i hlp
H ~~·p.:r
l&lt;tl.JJ. Athcn' Pastor.
L••tlllt&lt; tn.tt- c;;und..t~ v.. ,,r~ htp li!IR) am

Y~h~

" eJn~-.J~n

7 pm

I angsulle I hmd11n Churrh
Full G"'f'l'l P. t ~ t ur R11bt n Mu,'&lt;r
Sund.1\ -.~ h,o l ~&lt;!Jam \A. ,•r&lt;&gt;htp 1010
.nn
--.1~1 pm '•hdnnda' ~ ef"\ t• t 7 (1()
pm

Pentecostal
Pl'ntetU!ilal As.wmbl ~

Mission

14 11 Bndgumm S! Sna~ u •e
Sdw;•l · 10 am bcntn !_!
\\\•dncsOa~ Sen tu• 7 p m.

II

Suml.l\
() p m

Rl
Ht&gt;hulk.
l-:Hntng

Sl

~~~

H..lLtne Pa~tt&gt;r 'Willtam
Sun,l,l\ Sd1o loll
Ifl a m
7 p nt
V..~·Jue~~ So:r.llC"' '7

pm
w, . ,~hlp

7pm

K~d ne

H az~l

Commu mh l'h un: h
O ft Rt 124, PaMor I d -el Ibn Sunda\
S ~ ho 10l 'I &lt;0 a 111 Wc•r,h tp
10 ~0 ~ m .
7 'Upm

Presbyterian
S \ rt&lt;"Use Flrit l n htd Pmbvttria n
Pa~h lf l&lt;llhcn Crw., " unhtp
II 3m

P.1~tnr P~·t e

.1m
pm

Sh.llll'r Sunday Sl: hoo l · HI
Worsht p · 11 a m \\ocdncsday 7

Coolville United Mt thodis t Parish
Pl.lstur Helen Kh nc Cotlh tll e Church
Matn &amp; Ftfth St Su ndOJy s~ h oo l · 10
,, m Worship 9 am . Tu esday Sen tees
7 pIll
B~ thel

Chun: h
Tow n~ htp tt d 4 flRl Su nday Sc hon[ 9
am, Worsh tp - 10 a rn , Wt:dnnda)
Ser. ICC:&gt; I0 ll n1

Dyes" llle Communln ( hu n:h
Sundil) SLh;;1o l Y lll 11m V. nnh1p

Ha rnsornille P rtSbvlr-ntn Churt'h
Rot-&gt;crt Crn"' Wm~ h1p t; am

P.t~tor

Ton:h Chu rch
Co Rd ri~ Su nda) Sc hoo l· 9
'Wutslup · lU 10 a Ill

~0

Morst t_ hs ptl Chu n:h
Sunda} sc hool !0 u m \\u r,lu p
am Wedne sdav Sen ,,e 7 p m

II

F11ith Gospf' l Chu rch
Bott om. Sund~' Schl)(tl 9 \0 J m
Wors ht p - 10 4' OJ tn
7 'l! p m
Wcdnnda1- 7 ~0 p m
Lon~

Ml Oh n Co mmumt~ Chun: h
Pastnr La,..rcn~&lt;" Bu' h Suud.t} Sl h(H&gt;I ·
9 30 am Elenmg · 6 \Q p m V. cdncda•
Scrvt.:e · 7 p m

Hockingpor t Chun: h
Grand Street. Sunday Sc hool Q 15 a m
Wnrsh1p · 10 1[1 am. Pa~ tor Phtl hp Dell

11 m
f' ull GO!Ipt-11 •ghlhouSC'
Ruat..l, P tl iU\.'10~ Paslilr Rn\
Hunter Su ndOJ) Srh&lt;i&lt;.'l 10 am EH·nm~
7 j () p m lucsda) lr. rhu r~d:!l
7 l{)
pm

11045

Nazarene
Middleport Chu n: h or th e Naza nmt'
•\lien Mtdc.tp Sumla~ s~· h oo l
9 10ttm Wnr, hl p- ltl l llll m 11 ltJ p m
Wcdn c~ d OJy ServKe " · 7 p m
Pu ~tn r

Hilar~d

Pa~1nr

1\ h dd l~po rt Pftsb} ltrian
R"bcr Crn.., \lo,W",h ip- 10 am

Seventh· Day Ad,·entist
\ lulhcrr' Ht" RJ Pomcn)\ Pastor Rl'\
La~~&lt;m ... b
'iaturda\ Sln t a~ Sal1hath
s~hl"''l ~ 11 m . v.. ~·f\i hlp ~ P 111

United Brethren
\ 11. Hermon l nitfd Brethnm
1n Chnst Chu rch
Tcu1• Ct•rnm urnl\ ~(&gt;411 Wt .-kh a m RJ
Pn~to r Pet.:r t\lanmdak Sunda' So.htK•I 4 lll • rn V.. t&gt;r,ht p
10 iO am 7 00
p m \~ cdnc,Ja&gt; S1'r' ''~' 7 ()(I p m
)t~uth gr~•up llll'ellll)! ~nd &amp; .ith SundR\"'

rm

Pa ~tur

Allen Mtdu tr

South Bethtl Communi!) Church
S1\H•r Rtdgc Pa ~tn r l111d ,, [)l.lmcv.t"l\"11..1
Sunda) &amp;. hool 9 a m Worsh1p Sc r\ tt.·~

Reeds"ill e ••ell uws hip
Ch un:h ol the N&lt;WH&lt;.'nc P .a~ tor T&lt;.'re:-a
\'-'ai&lt;JL~ k Sund:~y Sl honl
~ 10 ,, m
Worshtp - 10 4~ ,, m 7 p m , WednesJa)

Carltton lntr- rdenommationa l Chul'(' h
Kmgsl1or) Road . Pa~w r R11hcn Vtmlt
Sund.1 v s~· h o&lt;J l - 'I ~u u m . \\ nr~ h• p
ScrvKe 10 ~ 0 (I IU E\ C il lll~ Sen Ill.~ n

Ser' llC S 7 p m

pm

Jop pa
9 lO

TI1ur&gt;da~

PJ.~Ior

lOa m

C hesler
P.1stor hn !! Be.ttltc Wnrsh1p · '1 a m
Sunday School . I0 a m , TilU"J••}
Scrv1ccs 7 p m

~~ ~tprn

S IIIICIII Cenl ~ r

l hu rsd.1 ~

,,

IUI.fl.-m &amp;

Ht ~ \~ l.mii.JUH\
)en ,,l, ~ .t1urda1

"m

[ II

IOIO~rn.7pm

Our Saviour Luth eran C hun:h
WOJl nu t and Hem} Sts, R&lt;tvcn swuud.
WVa Pastor Da, ,d Ru ssl• ll. Sund ~y
Sdlool · 10 00 ,, m , 'Wnr~ht p · 11 a m

Stl'r-n\IUt• f ummunily t:hurrh
Wa\ tit' ~ lev. ell Suml¥; S~fll11.:c~

Pa ~llll

t' ull ( ,ospel t hurt·h of the Living

H. . ~ . l .

\l t JJI~pu!1 P&lt;~,iolr rl·~"

Da\t~

Kcllh k oltll'r SunJa; Sd1nol lJ I~
&lt;.1 111
Wul'&gt;h l[l
10 a Ill
Ynulh
l dlil'-'\htr Sulll.ll} 6pm

m

Rt&gt;JOifi na Uft Church

Pa ~ wr

Slhoul

Y~' S Timd S1

P.~~ t or

'7 ~~~ p

pm

R11h B&lt;1 1ht:1
A~'l ~ t ant Pa~tlll 1\,m:n Da\ 1~ ~und~1
Y.lor,h•p lll ,tm I 1e11HI)' Wttr,htp (I pm
Youth group tl prn "-c dm:'&gt;l.i.l• P o~~&lt;t"c 111
Pra\'ct &lt;~nJ R1 hk Sllttl} 7 pill
Adi Strtt't I hunh
A&lt;&gt;h St M1ddkpom•SundJ &gt; ""dtn•l 'J ~~~
am Mornwg "- or~htp
Ill \(J J Jl1 &amp; 1
pn1 W.:dn L·"_L' l,l'r\a.: ' l~!pm )olulh
ScnKc 7 00 p 111
A5!:111Pf Lift ( t'nter
" Full Gu,pel ( hu n h
P.a.JIIf, J .. hn lr.
Pam V..adc 60\ lielnnJ A1-e '-. Ja.,.lft "71
"117 Scr\ILL ltrlll' Sun.!a} tll'IJ .1111
WcJ n c~d,, ) 7 pm

~ 1 1nersv1lle

J 11m WL"d nc~Jti\

Lutheran

\lr.t:drk'..U.I\ ~en l ~ t'

Hf-tht-1 Wun;hlp I t'nler

i(J

Pa~1 11r

1

Sl. John Luth eran Church
Pmc Gro\e Worsh•r Y 00.1 m SunJllv
Sl'ht;ol . I U 00 .1m P .1~ 10r J ,11He~ P
Brady

( al\an H1blt Church
Ptl ~
Co Rd Pa~lut Rt:&gt;
Holad.~o~ood SunJa\ SdliJOI
IJ 30 am
'A,~r,hlp
Ill 111
dm
7 '\()
pm

t ..mmunlty of ( lln!i.t
P11nliltld lh t: tnc Jot ,J Pu.,tm Jnn Su'I!!C:'
'\und&lt;l\ Sl htKtl 'J 1\J am \\nr .,hLp
111 lf! am ~l'dm,J,,~ l,,·ntle~
7 1~1

Ill

rm

7

p,l(llefll)

1114" .1m

pm

Sum! I ~ Sdlou l

P&lt;t~t nr

M11rt11n~ \\ \1r~ h1p

Other Churches

~~~

R11tl liod

\\oeslcyun Bi blt• Hol mus C hureh
73 Pe arl St M11ldlq'M tl1 Pa ~ tnr Rc\
n.nlll Gtlhl:rt Sund&lt;JV Slhuol
10 ,I ll\
Wo rship -104'i jlllt , Su1lli.t) be 704)
p m. Wcdnl'-...d.1y Scn-'Ke 7 '\{)[1m

htda ~

Surnill) Sen tl e fl 11l p m

Arl .. nd Km~ Sunda) S~h111ll
tn \II ,,m \\m, ht p Y11J 11m H1h k

pm

Wcdnc~d.,~ Sl'm~l' - 7 10

Reed.'i' ill~

Church of God or Pro phtc)
0 J Whttc Rd nfl Sr Rt 16(] P r~ s l or PJ
Chap m.tn. Sunday Sc: hou1 - 10 a m ,
Wor'&gt; htp - I I am , 'Wednesday Sc rv1ces

.

RtK k Sprin~t-~
Pine Grove Rib I~ llo l m~o; Ch un: h
lf2 mtlc off Rt 1,!'i Pa ..tilr R {·~ 0 D~ ll
M.mk) Sunduv S d lt~ol
'J lO a Ill
Wor~h tp
- 10 \fl ,1 111
7 10 p Ill

t'ailh FtUo"shiP CruYCk ror t:hrilt
Pdl&gt;l"' Rt' 1-r.ut~hn [)J(Ir.en' ServJct

~.:dnc....L ~

pm

Purtl•nd r1n1 t ' llun;h of Uw NUJ~rerw
Pa~tOf V.1lham Ju~u~ Sunda) 1\t.houl

p~,llll

Gurv hJ'k'''n Sunda ) '&gt;l.hnnl 11 ltJ u m
Sumhv wur,htp
10 lO ,, 111 &amp; 7 p m
\l. ed n e~.ty p1a yl'r W f\' I~L · 7 p 111

V..nr~htp

9 \0 am
II '\0

S&lt;r.Jt.e' 7pm

Pu~tn r

Pa~tnt

Dan"ill~ llohnts!i I 'hurrh

'ilhu11l

F•i,.,.W"' BlbW Church
Letan. \.\ Va Rt '1 Pistor BrlloUl May,
Sur$) S...tk1ul 'I 30" m Worshtp ? 00
p m V.o:diK":.don R•hle Sua!) 7 lll p m

II " rn 6 p rn
7 p 111

"ien-1L~~

" m

10 ()()a n1

SIUd) Wed "

'pastor Boh R~ n d o lp h, \Aoor~ h l p

Sy nKuse Church of thr NazarentPaqnr Mtkc AJkms. Sundm SLhool - 9 10
am Worsh1p · 10 \{)am fl p m
WeJnc, J!uy Sen KC~ • 7 p rn
Pomt m~

Chu rch of lht' ~llzal'l'ne
P;.1ur Jun Ll\ cnJe r Sun da\ Sl hool
9 '0 am, Worsh tp · 10 '0 am 11nd 6
p m Wednesday Servrces 7 p m

Eden l nited Brethrn in ChriM
Stal ... Route ~~~ R eed~1tlle S unda~
Sl h\l(ll II am. Su nda) Worshtp-· 1000
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�NATION • WORLD

The Daily Senti.Del

Government promises to defend
abortion law after federal judges block it
NEW YORK (AP) - The
governme nt promi,ed to
defend a new law banning
certai n late-term abortions.
despite rulings by three federal j udges who blocked its
en fvrc:cment so legal challenges - whi&lt;:h they concluded wo uld likely succeed
- can go forward .Federal judges in New
York and California blocked
the law Thursday, a day after
it was signed by President
Bu sh. The rulings likely preven t enforce ment of'the ban
nationwide until a chall enge
to its CDnstitutionality can be
heard .
Judge Ric hard Casey in
Manhattan suspended th e
etTect of th~ law for I0 days.
say ing he ex pected an associatio n of abortion providers in
the United States and Canada
and seve n doctors wi ll succeed in their challenge. The
National Abortion Federation
says its members perform
half of abortions nationwide.
Later in the day, U.S.
Di strict
Jud ge
Ph yllis
Hamilton in San Franc isco
ru led th e law appears unconstitutional because it provides
no exemptions for a woman\
llealth, mirroring the re asons
cited by the other judges and
affecting doctors at 900
Planned Parenthood clini cs
nationwide.
The two rulings toge ther
cover a majority of the abortion providers in the United
States.
On Wed nesday, less than an
hour after Bush signed the
law. a federal judge in
Nebraska made a similar rulin g that covers four abortion
doctors licensed in 13 states
across the Midwest and Easr.
The Ju sti ce Department
said in a stateme nt that it
"w ill co ntinue to strongly
defend th e law prohibiting

partial birth abortions using
every .rcsOLirce necessary.··

It cited arguments it made
in court papers that Congress
considered testimonv over an
eight-year pe riod .• nclud1ng
physicians who " uni form ly
agreeu that a partia·l-birth
aburtiun 1s never necessary to
auvance the l1ealth or li fe of
women.

Casey noted in his threepage order grant ing a temporary restraining order that a
government lawyer lulu him
at a Wednesday heari ng that
the medical community
remains divided over the
issue and that Com1.ress did
not reach a consen sus.
He said the pos ition left
him wi th no choice but to
"conclude that it is substantially, li ke ly" that the law will
be fo und un constitu tionaL
Douglas
John son.
a
spokesman for the National
Ri ght lo Life Committee.
said the New York judge's
ruling was "'not s urpns ing bu t
it is distress ing."
" It means that partly born
babies wil l wntinue to die at
the point of 7-inch sc issors. "
he said. "Certainl y these judi cial orders severely impede
the government 's abi lity to
protect th ese premature
infants ."
Then~ law outlaws a procedure gene ral ly perfo rmed
. in the second or third
trimester in which a fetus is
partially dCiivered before
being killed, usuall y by punctllring it s skulL Anti -abortion
activi sts call the procedure
"partial-birth
abort io n."
Presiden t Cl inton had twice
vetoed simila r bills.
Opponents of the law say it
is overly broad , lacks any
exemption for the health of a
woman anu cou ld outlaw
several sa fe and co mmon
procedures. They al so con-

te nd ~d

it is the fi rst step in a
larger campaign to ban all
aborti ons and undo Roe v.
Wade. the Supreme Court's
1973 landmark decision
establish ing a woman's ri ght
to un abort ion.
Aborti on-rights auvm:ates
ex pect a showdown over the
new law wit h the Bu sh
ad mini strati on at the U.S.
Supreme Court.
Anthony Romero, executi ve director of the American
Civil Liberties Union. which
argued the case in New York,
said the ACLU was "enormously gratified hut not surprised that thm law appears
now to be unconstitutional."
ACLU allorney Talcott
Camp said the organi zation
go t calls from worried physicia ns after th e law took effect
Wednesday without co urt rulings immediately nullifying
its effect.
Camp sa\d they "were
indeed panicked at the
prospect of having to face
crimi nal prosecution for providing the abso lute best medical care they can."
The law imposes a twoyear pri son se ntence on doctors.
"We're awfully glad to be
able to protect"" women all
over the country against thi s
dangerous,
inappropriate
int rusion by the gove rnment
into thei r private , medical
decision," she said.
The rulings Thursday
brought re lief. though "we
were confident that thi s law
wo uld
be
temporarily
e njoined becau se it is so
obviously dan ge rous and
unconstitutional." she said.
Camp said it "would be
quite troubling indeed if the
Ju stice Department attempted
to enforce" the ban while the
challenges were pending.

Attorney general's remarks about misconduct
allegations anger Schwarzenegger
SAC RAM ENTO, Ca lif.
(AP) - Gov.-e lect Arnold
Schwarzenegger will hire a
private investigator to look
into allegati ons that he groped
women. but he may keep the
res ults fro m the state attorney
ge neral. a spokesman said
Thursday.
Sc hwa rzenegger' s reluctance tu turn over the res ults
of the inves ti gation stem from
remark s Attorney Ge neral
Bill Lockyer made earlier
Thursday. The Democrat said
he advi sed Schwarzenegger
that th e misconduct allegations '·are not go in g to go

aw ay" and he should cooperate with an indepe nd en t
investigation .
Schw a rzenegger
spokes man Rob Stutzman
said those statements violated
attorney-client privil ege and
have forced Schwarzenegger
to reco nsi der whether he
wou ld provide any information to Lockyer.
"In regard to a review of
allegati ons that surfaced late
in the campaign, the governor-elect had already decided
to engage a well-respected
inves tigative firm to look into
the allegation s," Stutzman
said . "He had intended to
instruct the inves tigators to
turn over the final results of

that investi gation tn the attorney ge neral; he will now
reconsider that option.''
Lockyer said he spoke with
Schwarzenegge r as recently
as Wednesday about the accusation s that surfaced during
the final days of hi s gubernatori al campai gn.
The allegat ions won' t gu
away ''until he is willing to
have some form of independent. third-party rev iew of
those complaints to see if
there's any criminal liability
or not," Lockye r said.
Stutzman said Schwarzenegger
was "extremely disappointed'' in
Lockyer's remarks.
"There was disappointment
here on thi s end, that the
attorney general would present himself to the governorelect as his lawyer, engage
him in discussion on thi s matter and make those di ss uasions public," Stutzman said.
Lockyer spukes man Hal lye
Jordan said there was no
attorney-client pri vi lege.
"Bill was giving advice to a
friend , as he has since before
the election," she said . "He
has said this both privately
and publicly to the governorelect."
. Lockyer S'\id Schwam~ negger
1s "very concerned, I think," but
"obviously thinks there's not a

legitimate hasis I{Jr a complaint"
&lt;uld believes that any review
would clear him.
But until the allegations are
reso lved. they are a "stain" on
the incoming governor's reputation and his administration , Lockyer said.
The attorney ge neral said he
had no plans to open an investi gation beca use th at is generally the jurisdiction of local
district attorneys.
A spokeswoman for the di stri ct attorney's office in Los
Angeles County, where some
of the incidents reportedly
took place, said any investigation would have to originate
with police age ncies.
Five days before the elec·
tion, the Los Angeles Times
detailed allegations from six
women
who
said
Schwarze negger grope,d or
sex ually harassed tl.e m
between 1975 and 2000. By
the Oc.t. 7 election , the number had grown to 16.
In most cases. the women
identified in the Los Angeles
Times story said they did not
tell law enforcement officials
about the incidents because it
involved their word as waitresses and low-level workers
on movie sets against that of
an internationall y known
celebrity.

~reaks~

If it

stings~ burns~

burps or

~ries~

Page AS
Friday, November 7,

Detective testifies that Scott
Peterson bought a boat the day
he claimed to be a widower
poena 1he FBI for copies of
MODESTO, Calif (A P) death penalty.
- Scott Peterson to ld his
The officer also testi fi ed the tape.
mi stress he was a widower Thursday that oftkers fou nd ' Brocchini said he arrived
the same day he bought the a loaded .22-caliber gun in at the Peterson house about
boat that provided his alibi Peterson 's pickup truck. pro- four hours afte r Laci
when his pregnant wife van- vidi ng th e first hint that Peterson\ stepfather reported her mi ssing to police. The
ished two weeks later, a Peterson ow ned a weapon.
Police have not disclosed de tective descr ibed Scott
police officer said Thursday.
Detective Allen Brocchini how Peterso n's wife and Peterso n as cooperative,
testi fied that Scott Peterson unborn son were killed. and saying the fert ili Ler salesbought the fishing boat Dec. the autopsy results are sealed. man never told him to leave
9. Peterson's mi stress,
Detectives sa id they took or get ou t of the hotiSe.
Mu ch of the hearing has
Amber Frey, said she had the gu n ' from Peterso n's
asked Peterson th at day pickup on Chri stmas Eve focused on a single hair
whether he was married, before taking him to · police wrapped in a pair of pliers
Brocchini said.
headquarters fo r an hou r- fou nd in Peterson's boat.
While Brocchini did nor long videotaped interview. which was s tored ~ n a warelink the two eve nts, he pro- They sai d Peterson culled house. Prosecutors maintain
vided the pieces of a puzzle police on his cell phone an the strand came from Laci
prosec utors are assembling hour after he was returned Peterso n.
Peterson was arres ted in
to show Peterson was plot- home, asking if they had
Apri
I. not far from th e
ling the demi se of his wife taken the gu n. Brocc hini
Laci weeks before he said police co nfirmed that Mex ican harder. He was carryi ng $ 10,000 and his orothreturned from a Christmas they had.
er\
drive r's license. and had
Eve fishing trip and reported
Before Brocc hini 's tes ti her go ne.
many, defense · attorney dved his hair hlond.
-His arrest came days after
Brocchini testified on the Mark Geragos told Ju dge AI
bodies of hi s wife and
the
sixth day of a hearing to Girolami that he rece ntl y
determine if Peterson will discovered the FB I conduct- unborn son surfaced in San
stand trial on murder ed closed-circuit TV surve il - Francisco Bay about three
charges in the deaths of hi s lance of Peterso n's home miles from where he sai d he
wife and unborn son. after his wife disappeared. was fi shin g on th e day
Peterson, 31, cou ld get the vGeragos said he will sub- be fore Christmas . '

Army soldier faces cowardice charge
after seeing mangled body of Iraqi man
FORT CARSON , Colo. .
(AP) - The Army di smissed
a cowardice charge and filed
a lesser count againsl an
Army interrogator who
sought counseling after he
saw the body of an Iraqi man
cut in half by American fire .
Staff Sgt. Georg-Andreas
Pogany was charged with
dereliction of duty, accord' ng to a statement released
Thursday afternoon by Fort
Carson officials. A military
court hearing set Friday for
Poga ny was canceled.
. The ne·.v charge was tiled
by the company commander
after military judges di smissed · th e
cowardice
charge, officials said.
Army officials did not
immediately return phone
calls for comment. Neither
did Pogany nor his allorney.
Attorney Frank Spinner, a
retired Air Force col onel
who handles military cases,
said dereliction of dutv is a
minor offense that. it disposed of without a courtmartial, usually is penalized
by loss of pay or reduction in
rank.
With a court-martial , the
maximum penalty is several
months co nfinement. said
Spinner, of
Colorado
Springs. Whether a courtmartial is held depends on
the military judiciary.
After seeing the mangled
corpse, Pogany says he began

Thank You!
I want to thank the
Bedfor9 Township Residents
for their support

Bar bara J. Grueser

shaking and vomiting and that is a moti vated one.··
feared for his life. Soon.
Pogany 's case and oth ers
Pogany says. he had trouble that are similar suggest Iraqi
sleeping and started sutkring deplo yme nt s are wearing
what he thought wene pcmic th in, said military analyst
attacks.
Dan Goure of the Lex ington
Six weeks later, Pogany, }2.
was charged with cowardice. In stitute. a Washington,
a count that he said was liled D.C.-based think tank.
"I thin k what you are seealter he sought counseling.
ing
here is a conseq uence of
Pogany denies that he acted in
the changed character of an
a cowardly way.
"What 1s tragic about thi s all-voluntee r fo rce." Gou re
is the message being sen t to said. 'The strain gets worse
other soldiers." Pogany sa id when yo u have longe r
rece ntly. " It 's not about me." depl oy ments or multiple
Cowardice violations can deployments or changi ng
be puni shed by death . deployments."
Military code does not
Assig1ied to the IOth Special
include a minimum se ntence.
Forces
Group, Pogany was
Arm y official s ha ve
declined to discuss th e case . attached to a team of Green
Cowardice charge~ ~u-e rare. Berets on Sept. -:26 when he
The last such conviction in the depa11ed for Iraq. He dec lined
Army _occuned during the . to discuss his responsibilities,
Vietnam War. Charges were citing security issues.
tiled against a manied couple
Three days later. he was
during the Gulf War, but st&lt;mding in a U.S. compound
reduced to mistreatment of near Smmura no11h of Baghdad
public pro~tty. said Eugene
Fidell, president of the National when soldiers ' brought in the
Iraqi man's bloody body. The
Institute of Military Justice.
soldiers
told Pogany the man
"You have to look pretty
hard to find any of tnese was killed after he was seen
cases, " Fidell s.aid. "We shooting a rocket-propelled
have a well-trained army grenade.

Larry Ebersbach
Paid fat by lha cll.ndidB!e.

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2520 Valley Drive •Point Pleasant, WV • 304-675-4340

•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

j,

Friday, November 7, 2003

Ohio football
game times
changed

Prep "
Volleyball

Holt~r,

ATHENS - The starting
tim es of Ohin's fin al two
ga mes in 2003 have been
changed for te levision, th e
Mid -American Conference
announced recently.
On Tuesday. the MAC
selected the Bobcats' home
finale vs. Miami on Nov. 22
as its Game of the Wee k,
moving the kickoff 30 minutes to 2:30 p.m.
The game wi ll air live on
Fox Sports Ohio, Pittsburgh,
Chi cago and Midwest and
w iII be joined progress on
the Sunshine and Empire
networks ,
Prev iously. the Marshall
Ath letic Department moved
the start time of the Nov. 28
ga me with Ohio to noon, so
th at Fox Sports Pittsburgh
co uld
pick
up
the
Thunderin g Herd network
broadcast.

Sayre
,. earn
top.TVC
honors
!

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydattytribune.com
ATHENS - Eastern and
Nelsonville- York.
wh ic h
captured champion,hips in
their · r espc~: ti\ e Ji,isions.
led th e way in to p indi vidual
hon o r' in the 2003 TriValley Confere nce vo lle yball team s as se lected by
leag ue coac hes.
Eas tern's Aly~sa Ho lter
and Southern \ Katie Sayre
earned co-most va luable
player
ho nors in the
Hocking Divi&gt;ion . whi le
Eag les · head coach Howie
Cald we ll earned top coac h-

Cavaliers
release forward
Jelani McCoy
CLEVELAND (AP)
Forward Jelani McCoy was
release d Thur sday by the
Cleve land Cavaliers.
The 6-foot- 10 McCov had
played ju st 12 minutes in
tw o ga mes for Cleveland,
which signed him during
training and gave him its
fin al roster spot to start the
season.
"He was n' t going to play
ve ry much ," Cavs coach
Paul Silas said. " He was just
kind of a luxury that th e
powers that be weren't willing to shell out for a guy that
was n' t going to play that
much." ·
McCoy has played with
Seattle, th e Los Angeles
Lukers and Toronto in his
fiv e-year N BA career. He
averaged 6.8 points and 5.3
rebounds in 67 ga mes with
the Raptors last season.
For now, the · Cavaliers
will carry II players on the
roster. The club is expected
to acti va te forward Ira
New ble from the injured li st
on Saturday when the Cavs
face Washington.
Newble has been sidelined
· with a knee injury.

ing honor\.

Also on the Hocking fir st
team was Eas tern· s Kass
. and
Kati e
Lodwi ck
Robert ,on and Southern's
Deana Pullin s.
·
Holter.
Lodw ick ,
Robertson.
Say re
and
Pull ins we re on the TVC
team las t • yea r. while
Lodwick was also a 200 I
all-leag ue member.
On the second te am was
Morgan Weber for the
Eagles
and
Kri stiina
Williams for the Tornadoes.
In the Oh io Division.
Ne lsonville- York 's Whitney
Maide n was named MVP.
while Stephani e Breeze was
named coach of the year.
Jay nee Davis o f Me igs
was named to th e first team
in th e Ohio Divis ion . while
tea mmate, Ren ee Bailey
and Nikk i Butche r we re
named to th e second team .
Butcher is a repeater from
the 2002 All-TVC team.
2003 All-TVC
Volleyball Team
Onto Dlvlalon
Firat Team

Padres, Hoffman
agree to new deal

Many thanks
to the Voters of
Sutton Township
who elected me
as trustee.

I

we~ve

2003

INSIDE
Charlotte, St Louis may Join A-1 0, Page 82
Big Ten Notebook, Page 83 ·
"
Cavs still winless with James, Page 84

SAN DI EGO (AP) Closer Trevor Hoffman was
so intent on staying with th e
San Diego Padres that he
was willing to take a big pay
cut.
The Padres had a $ 10 mill ion option on Hoffman for
nex t season but had no
intention of pi cking it up
after he missed the first five
months of last season while
recovering from two offseaso n shoulder operations.
Instead, th ey bought him
out for $2 million and
agreed to a new deal with a
$2.5 million salary next year
and a chance to make another $500,000 in ince ntives.
" It 's an opportunity to
show the team that I am
going to be healthy and that
I plan on pitching a . few
more years beyond this contract,"
Hoff man
said
Wednesday night. "This is
home . ~think th at ultimately
has the final say."

Wanted: Your .
varsity winter
sports schedules .
All varsity winter sports
coaches and adminstrators are
urged to send us your schedules for the upcoming season
as soon as possible.
You may e-mailed them to
sports @mydail ytribune.com,
or fax them to 446-3008. You
may also drop them off at our
Gallipolis office on Third
Ave.
if

Elizabeth LaPorte. Alexander
Meghan Raines. Alexander
Jayl"lee Davts. Mergs
Jordan Bateman. N·Y
Ashlergh Fitterer . N-Y

MH
S
OSH
OH
S

Sr
So.

Jr
Sr

Whllney M arden N· Y
Kayla Jewrtt . VC
Hilary Patnck. Wellston

MH

Jr

OH
MH

Sr
Sr

Sr

Second Team

Ohio State defensive end Will Smith (93) battles through Iowa blockers towards quarterback Nathan Chandler (10) Oct
18 at Ohio Stadium. Though he shares the same name with the movie star and rapper. this Wi ll Smith prefe rs to be just
another hard worker behind the scenes . (AP)

COLUMBUS -, This Will Smith is
no movie star. He's certainly not a
slick rapper.
Ohio State defensive end Will Smith
is about as glamorous as hi s plain last
name, detlects attention like Dominik
Hasek kicks away a long slap shot and
prefers to be just another hard worker
behind the sceries.
It is that work ethic that is his gift to

the rest of the Buckeyes in this, a season that they might not have eve n had
him.
When Smith walked off the field in
the desert chill of the Fiesta Bowl last
January with an incredible feeling of
accomplishment. This was the way he
had always dreamed he would cap .his
college career.
Not only had ~he B_uckeyes won the
nauonal champ10nsh1p w1th a threeovertime, 31-24 thnller over topranked Miami , but Smith had further
stamped himself as one of the most

OH
Fr.
MH Jr.
OSH Jr.

Nrkkr Butcher Merg s

OS

Sr

Alama Monk. N-Y
OH
Sr
Hayley Sowers. V·C
S
Sr
MVP - Whrtney Marden. NelsonvrHe York
Co1ch of the year - Stephame Breeze.
Nelsonville York

Ohio State defensive end Will Smith is no glamorous star
BY RUSTY MIUER
Associated Press

Jamr Turrr ll , Alexar~der
Tabatna Van Dyke. Belpre
Renee Bailey. Mergs

Hocking Division
First Team

ferocious defenders in the nation.
The 6-foot-4. 265- pound j unior
rac ked up eight tackles. including a
sack and one other lllckle for minus
yardage against the mighty 'Canes.
He already knew what NFL scouts
were saying - they raved about hi s
size and quicknes s and about hi s
knac k for always being around the
ball. Smith was ass ured of be inu a
high draft pick and he was all but "'set
on leaving Ohio State early.

Alyssa Holter. Eastern
Kass LodwiCk. Eastern
Katie Robertson. Easte rn
Ashley Castle. FH
Faith Grlders. FH
Deana Pullins Sou thern
Katie Sayre. Southern
Allory Hopper. Tnmble

S
MH
MH
MH
S
S
OH
OH

Sr
Sr
Sr.
Jr.
Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr

S.condTeam
Morgan Weber. Eastern
DH Jr
Terri Wolfe. FH
OH Jr.
Malane Altter. M1ller
S
Jr.
Knstnna Will1ams. Southern
OH So.
Haley Drayer. Waterford
S
So.
Mallory McCutcheon . WalerfordOH Sr.
Co·MVPs ~ Alyssa Holyer, Ea stern,
Katie Sayre. Southern
Coach of the year - Howie Caldwell,
Eastern

Ple•se see Smith, I:Z

Browns look to slow down elusive return man
BY JoE MtLICIA
Associated Press

BEREA - The Cleveland Brow ns can punt the
ball ht gh or oot of bounds, but at some point on
Sunday they ' re going to have to tackle Dante
Hall.
The speedy Kansas City retutn man has gone
three games without a special teams touchdown .
But the Browns know Hall is just a key block or
stutter-step away from doing it again.
"He hits the hole. He gets goin~ in a hurry and
he's got good guys in front ·of htm," kicker Phil
Dawson said. " If the hole is not there, he finds
one."
. Hall's rec_~rd-setting run of touchdown returns
.m four straight games are a big reason why the
Chiefs are 8-0.
The elusive Hall had a game-winning punt

return against Denver
on Oct. 5 where he
retreated about six
yards - us uall y
cardinal sin in the
return game - before
darting 9J yards into
the e nd zo ne. The
play looked like it
should have hap.
pened on a playground, not against an NFL special teams unit.
" You know when you play football wi th your
little brother or your big brother, you just run
around trying to escape from him. It's kind of like
that," special teams player Shenod (:oates said .
. Browns coach Butch Davis said he .has emphaSized th1s week that punter Chris Gardocki needs
to r.ut sig nifican~ hang time on the ball. Davis said
he II sacrifice some yards for more time to get

a

downfield and contai n HaiL
Gardocki said the Browns ' strategy in defending
Hall wi ll depend on the weather at Arrowhead
Stadium. Punters lose hang time in cold weather
and a stiff wind could make things eve n more dif.
ficu lt.
As for punting the ball QUt of bounds, Gardocki
said it's risky if the Chiefs put on a solid punt
rush.
"That's all good an&lt;\ easy to talk about, but it's
not that easy to do," he said.
Dawson doesn' t have the lu xury on kickoffs of
putting the ball oul of bounds, which results in a
penalty that puts the ball at the 40.
That brings the Browns back to tackling.
"It's going to be a ch a ll e n ~e." Coates said. "You
can' t be,t&lt;)() overly aggresstve and_ make_th~. big
h1t. ... It s 1mposs1ble to get a btg htt on htm.

PluM- Browns. B:Z
'I

l

�/

www.~yd':bysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 7,

..

2003

A-1 0 in_
vites Charlotte, Man arrested for driving
slain outfielder's SUV
Saint Louis to join
BY DAN GELSTON

Associated Press

PHI LADEL PHI A - Charl olle and Sa int
Ltw i' w e r~ im it ed In jo in th e Atl anti c I 0
Cnnfc rence o n Th ursday in an ex pan sion
that wou ld boost the leag ue to 14 team s.
C ha rlot te and Sa int Lo ui s are c urrently
in Ct, nfere ncc USA. wlti c h alread y will
lme Cinc in nm i. Loui sv ill e. So uth Fl orid a.
Marqu et te and De Pa ul to the Bi g Eas t in
200'i .

Wh1k neithe r sc hool ann o un ced a dec i~ion.

A t la nti c

10 co mrn i\sio ne r Linda

Brun o sa id th ~ oile rs wo uld not ha ve bee n
exte nd ed un le" the con fe re nce kn e w that
the sc hno h " ou ld acce pt .
"T hey we re in teres ted in j ~! inin g us and
we w~ r e interested 111 th e m. Bru no satd.
Sill' 'ill d th e sc hools wi ll hav e to pay an
e ntr ance fe e. altho ug h she would not say
how mu c h it wa s.

Cha rl ott e a thl e ti c director Jud y Rose
said th e schdnl was "th rill ed to rece iv e an
i111i tation ."
"Wi th th~ invi tati on come s access to
great e r infor matio n ab ou t the le ague . We
ha ve do ne o ur home wor k. bttt we are
(1 oi nu to use th e nex t few days to rev tew
~tc ir'po l icics and fo rmat&gt; ." Rose said .
Charl o tt e sch edul ed a news conte rence
Monda y w announce th e sc hool 's dceisl on .

Saint Lnuis ath leti c dire c tor Dou g
Woolard said th e Bill ikens we re " pleased
and ex ci ted to be cons idered for ex pan sion by the Atlan ti c I 0."

The moves co me in the same week the
Bi g East a lso voted to e xpand , although
Brun o said that was n' t a !ac to r 111 the
decis ion .
" We' re o ne of th e few conferen ces that
didn ' t need to expand unl ess we saw
somethin g c ome a ra ilab! ~ thai~ould be of
va lue to th e conl ere nce, she satd .
One of those factors wa s expanding into
mark ets where the Atlantic I 0 did not
ha ve a pre se nce. Bruno said . Sh e sa1d
addin g bigger markets also would help
tele vi sion e xposure.
The Atlantic I 0 already has 12 membe rs: Dayto n, Duque s ne . Fordham ,
Geo rge
Wa shington.
La . Salle,
Mass achu se tt s, Rhod e Island, RIChmond .
St. Bon aventure. Sai nt Joseph ' s, Te mple
and Xavi e r.
Charlotte and Saint Loui s will add to an
already strong basketball league . The
Bi lliken s made the NCAA tournament
four tim e s in th e last I 0 years and
Charlotte advanced in 2000. Their additions cou ld make it a tw o-divi sion conference .
''We haven'' t de termined if th at ' s what
we'll cont inue to do ," Bruno said . "We'll
have di sc ussion s abo ut the best sc hedu lin g format for everyone. "
Char lotte a nd Sai nt Loui s do not fie ld
football teams .
Bruno said the co nference would not
change it s name and had no other plans to
expa nd.
" I think we 're at a good number," she
said .

Saint Joseph's expected .to
lead the way in ,Atlantic 10
PH ILADELPHIA i AP) I- Two seasons
a~o. Sain t Jo seph 's coach Phd Marte Ht
n1ade a basic coaching mistake: He patd
attention to the prese ason po ll s.
.
The hi ohlv -touted Hawks ope ned wtth an
upset I&lt;~'S · to Eas tern Washin gton. Six
month s later. th eir tltsappo tnttng season
ended in th e second round of the NIT.
This year. with his team ge tting aH 34
fir st- place vo te s in the Allani te _ 10 East
divi.si o n preseason pol l. Mar telli tnSJ sts he
and his playe rs ha ve learn ed the1r le_sso n.
"The last time we were ra nked before th e
seaso n started. we ' d have a bad practi ce
and I would say. ' We didn't get better
today. but we ' ll be all rig ht,"' Martelli sa td
Thursda y durin g the confere nce's medw
clay. "Now. at the end ol th e day, I revt e':"
pract ice in my head. I see where we dtdn.. t
get better and I add ress that the next day:
Expec tations are h igh on Hawk Htll w1th
the return of se nt or po tn t guard Jamee r
Nel" &gt;n - who a ve raged 19.7 points per
uam e las t sea so n - and three other
&lt;=
start e r..,.

Th e tandem of Ne lso n and junior Delonte
Wcsttl 7.1, ppg) g ives the Hawks o ne of the
best backc ourts in the nalt on. Two other
starters and three key con tri buto rs also
remain. making the Hawks a formidab le
foe.
"We definitely ha ve an
on our bac k,"

·x·

\Ve~ t said . ·'Teams are going to be out gun -

ning fo r u ... . 'W'e-J ust have to stra p o ur shoes

up every gam e and try not to get caught up
in the hype."
.
.. . ·
Tltc Ha wks maut compet tlt otun the A- 10
Eas t will li ke ly come from Te mple and a
vastl y improved Rhode Island team that
surpri sed many with 20 wi ns and a secondpl:tce fints h in 2002 -0.1 ._
.
If the Owh can avutd anot her slugg1sh
start. th ev should be in th e mix ih March
with David Hawkim ( 16 .9 ppg) leading the

Browns
from Page 81
Hall ca n turn a game
around eve n if he doesn' t
reach the end zone by gi ving
runnin g back Pries t Holmes
and the potent Kan sas Ci ty
offense a shorter field.
"They ' re in an en viable
situation in that they ' re getting points put .on the board
with their pum return s and
kickoff return s," Davi s said .
" When they're not putting
points on the board the~'re
getting htt ge, great fte ld
position."
The Browns haven ' t done
either this ye ar.
They have no special teams
touchdown s, and whi le Hall
is averaging 2 1 yard s pe r

way. The Rams hope to finish strong after
losi ng four of thetr las t stx regular-season
games last year.
.
"Top to bottom, this leag ue 1s the mo s.!
balanced in all of my years coach111 g,
Temple coach John Chaney said.
.
The West aga in shou ld be dec1ded
between Xavier and Dayton. which has a
new coach in Bri an Gregory.
Xavier has wo n the A• l 0 regu lar-season
title for th e laot two years. but lost threetime confe rence player of the year David
West. Guard Romai n Sa to ( 18. 1 ppg) a nd
forward Anthony Myles (I 0.2 ppg, 6.8 rpg)
provide sen ior leadership to a key group of
inexperie nced players.
" David was a big part of our te am, but
he' s not he re now. We understand th at,"
Sato said . "B ut we have four fre shman that
can help fill the hole he left. That will definite ly be good for us."
La Sall e' s youn g, but talented nucleu s
and Richmond' s fou r returnin g starters also
provide hope fo r a co nfere nce that has
strugg led both on and off the court tn recent
years.
Not since 1996 has an A-I 0 tea m made
the Final Fo ur and tw o seaso ns ago. only
Xavie r earn ed a berth in the NCAA tourname nt. Last season, the Mu sketeers
advanced to the second round . but Saint
Joseph's and Dayton were upset in the
opening round.
More problems occurre_d la te last season
when St. Bonaventure forl'e1ted tis f1nal
two games after playing a portion of its
sc hed ul e wit h an ineligible player. Coach
Jan van Breda Kolff was fired short ly
the reaft er.
''The 111ain thin g is that the co ntroversy
was last year. An d that's where it's go ing to
stay." said Bonnies guard Marque s Green ,
the co nfere nce's lead ing scorer 111 2002-03
at 21.3 ppg.

punt. Den ni s Northcutt is
averaging just 6.6 yards.
"He really hasn' t had a lot
of great opportunities to
return the ball ," Davis said.
" He ' s averaging probab ly
one good op portunity a ball
game.''
·
Coaches preach that games
are won and lost on spec1al
teams, but wi th Hall that old
adage is magnified.
Rookie linebacker Chaun
Thomp son. who has eig ht
tackles on special teams. said
he knows he can't make a
mistake on coverage this
week.
"You just ha ve to do your
job. Coach put a game plan
in. you've !lOt to execute it,"
the rook ie ltnebacker said. "If
yo u do n't execute it, you'll
see on ES PN what happened."

Bv Boa BAUM
Associated Press

PHOENIX - Demell Stenson wasn' t even
supposed to be playing in the Arizona Fall
League.
. .
.
The promising young Cmcmnat1 Reds outfielder was a late addition when Wily Mo Pena
was granted his wish to play winter ball in the
Dommican Republic.
.
Early Wednesday, Stenson 's body was lound
111 a street in a residential neighborhood Ill the
Phoenix suburb of Chandler. The 25-year-old
prospect had been shot. then run over and
apparently dra~ged some d1stanc'e by h1s own
SUV. pohce smd. . .
.
.
A man found . dri vmg Stenson s SUV two
hours later, I 0 m1les away 111 Mesa, was arrested and booked on a charge of possession of
stolen propeny.
.
Chandler police called the man, Kevm
Riddle, 43, an "investigative lead." Police said
Riddle was a transient.
"People are stunned,' ' said Donnie Branch,
Stenson's high school coach 111 LaGrange, Ga.
"In baseball , we ' ve never had a better.player.
People in the country hadn't seen that yet and
he was fixing to prove what he real ly could
d0 ..
Stenson 's body was found about I :45 a.m.
Wednesday atier police responded to a report
of shots fired. Witnesses told poltce that a black
sports utility vehicle was involved and was
seen leaving the area.
. Mike Gallo a Houston Astros pitcher and
Stenson 's te~mate on the Arizona league's
Scottsdale Scorpions, said the two had become
good friends in the short tune they had been
together. He said Stenson had a 14-.month"'ld
ch1ld.
"He's just one of the m?.st soft-spoken, at~­
letic guys," Gallo smd. You JUSt wouldn t

Smith

total of 16.5 tack les for negative yardage throug h nine
games. "And I ju st wanted to
be a good footba ll player a nd
from Page 81
hopefully. go to the N~L ~nd
be a top pick. We won t fmd
"I looked at it seriously. I that out for eight months."
wasn't co ncerned about
Smith is the Buckeyes· gowhe ther I would go in the to guy on defense. leading_ a
first or second round. I knew unit that leads the natiOn 111
I' d get drafted," he said. "I defense aga inst th e run
figured if I went to the
(allowing j ust 49.4 yards rer
(scouting) combi ne I'd be game)
and is No. 3 overal 111
.able to separate myself from total defense.
the other defensive ends. I
"He plays hard every
wasn't that concerned about down," fellow lineman Tim
it. ..
Anderson said . "A lot of
Yet the U.ica, N.Y., nati ve teams aren 't real successful
changed hi s mind. He blocking him. Watching the
delayed hi s shot at the b1g tapes, you can definitely see
bucks and a big profile in the his impact for our defense ."
NFL to return for hi s final
It is not ju st what ta kes
season of college ball .
place on the field th at sets
He continues to separate Smith apart from others. In
himself from other collegiate the offseason, he was amon g
players while excelling for the Buckeyes'leaders in conNo. 7 Ohio State, helping ditioning an.d lifting. He has
lead one of the nation 's top provided
guidance
for
defenses.
·
younger players and has
" About I 0 months ago. been a rock for the veterans.
Will had a to ugh decision to
" He co ntinues to play
make because it was appar- extraordinarily
hard ,"
ent that he could probably be Tressel said. "He's a guy that
a second-round draft choice knows our defense · through
or maybe eve n higher," Ohio and through and is asked to
State coach Jim Tressel said
earlier thi s week. "He had a do a lot of different things
and is a great leader out there
pass ion to come back here."
Smith had three reasons for
returnin g: to get hi s degree,
play a bigger role in leading
the team and, lastly, sohd1fy
his spot in the draft. Check.
Check. Check.
'T m on pace to graduate
this year. And I wanted to be
a leader and I' m a captain of
the tea m. So I guess you
could say I did that," said
Smith. who has 9.5 sacks for
59 yards in losses and has a

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Big Ten race
Conspiracy theories surround · comes down to
Ohio State's poll, BCS rankings three Saturdays
"There have been games in the past

Bv RUSTY MILI.ER
Associated Press

self Thursday as the judge in the mi~demca~or JU~~\~"2:~~~ty Common Pleas Judge David
case chargmg suspe_!lded Buckeyes tatlback w Fais denied the affidavit of disqualification on
Maurice Clarett w1th ftltng a false poltce r~pok~· · O~t. 2, saying the motion by Clarett's attorneys
It was not tmmedtately clear why Fran m . "without merit."
County Municipal Judge Steven B. Hayes took w~ayes said at the time that he could not think
himself off the case. He could not be reached for of a reason why he couldn't be an impartial judge
comment late Thursday.
in the case.
.
.
"Originally. Hayes was adamant that he ~ouldA message seeki ng comment was l eft
n 't step down," said Jeff Roose, a supe~ 1sor 1~ Thursday night for Clarett lawyer Percy ,Sqmre.
the court clerk's office crinunal diVISIOn. l d~~ I
While Woody Hayes was Ohio States coach
know what made him change h1s nund today.
from 195 1 to 1978, the Buckeyes won two
The case was reassigned to Judge Mark S. Associated Press national titles, 13 B1g Ten
Froehlich the clerk's office said.
·
crowns and 205 games.
Clarett has pleaded innocent to a misde~eanor
Clarett is suspended .for his sophomore season
falsification charge, which has a max~mum with the defending national champton Buckeyes
nalty of six months in jail and a $1 ,000 !me. . for NCAA vtOlauons of accepttng money_ frorp a .
peHe is charged with tiling an exaggerated theft family friend and lymg about 1t to mvestlgators .
report with campus police in April after a dealer- He is suing the NFL, asking a federal .JUdg~· m
shi ·s car he was borrowing was broken into. New York to throw out a rule that prevents tm.
Th~ police report said cash and stereo equipment from entering the draft unttl he has been out of
worth thousands of dollars was taken.
high school for three years.
.,

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we win out in November and
people drop ahead of us, an~
1f we don ' t play on Jan . 4 ,
then they should j ust sc rap
the whole system. "
• PHOTO FINISH: Hold
ou tight for a sprint to th e
wire .
With three week s left in
the season. Purdue is one of
four teams with one conferen~e loss. With what almost
appears a round-robin tournament among the leaders,
only
Ohio State
and
Michigan can control thetr
own de stiny by wi11'ning out.
"We are in somewhat of a
playoff situation and, I think
that 's true for a lot of teams
in our league," Boilermakers
coach Joe Tiller said.
The
schedule-makers
couldn 't have createc.j a more
exciting November.
Purdue (7-2. 4-1) hosts
No. 10 Iowa (7-2 , 3-2)
Saturda y. then vis it s Ohio
s~ate before closi ng at
Indiana. After faci ng Ohio
State. Michigan State trave ls
to Wisconsin and then hosts
Penn State. Michigan has a
bye this week before travel ing to Northweste rn a nd fac ing the Buckeyes in their
annu al riv alry. Minnesota
(8-2.
4-2),
Iowa and
Wisconsin (6-3. 3-2 ) have
yet to be elimin ated.
"'It's very possible tw o
losses co uld win it," Tiller
said.
• NOT WILD RHYS :
. Minnesota' s Rhys Lloyd is
maki ng a name f? r himself,
and not JUSt for h1 s accuracy
on fteld goals. extra-potnt
attem pts, punts and kickoffs.
Ll oyd. a junior college
tra nsfe r from England who
joined the team JUSt before

COLUMBUS (AP) - The son of former Ohio
Clarett's lawyers filed a request fo~ H~e s '
State football coach Woody Hayes removed him- removal on Sept. 24. Cases are asstgn to

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rm•J moximrnn 5 q t.f of oil.

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OSU offensive tackle Shane Oliver

Judge removes himself in
Clarett falsification case ·

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where teams ranked ahead of us who
didn't play well against unranked
opponents and they seem to move up
or stay, while we di'Qp:•

Do the poll voters have . a
grudge again st poor Oh10
State?
·
Many of the Buckeyes and
their bunker-mentality fans
sure think so .
A year after :winni_ng the
national champtons h1p, the
Buckeyes have been ranked
among the top I 0 teams
most of thi s season. Yet they
look at the ri ses and fall s in
the polls and say they ' re getting shafted.
. CONFERENCE
"There have been games
in the past where teams the win .)
- The Buckeyes dropped
ranked ahead of us who didn't play well
agai nst in the poll s twice after wins
unranked opponents and in September. (Favored by
they seem to move up or 32 points, they barely edged
stay. while we drop.'' offen- San Diego State 16- 13, then
sive tackle Shane Oltvea beat North Carolina State
said . ·"I don ' t know if it's 44-38 in three overtimes
coaches or media are j ust after blowing a 24 -7 fourthjealous, but after a while quarter lead .)
- Ohio State ha s won 22
you ' ve got to say if you win
of
its last 23 games . Just
a close game. it 's not always
win
, baby. (Victory margins
luck . You have to sit there
and say maybe they ' ve got matter to voters but not to
reall y good kids and reall r, comp uters. The Buckeye s
good coaches. But 11 stmks . won half of their 14 games
Only Oliver Stone cou ld last season by seven points
uncover a consp•racy agamst or less and have done it
Ohio State, but that doesn't another five times this year.
stop Buckeye Nation from ·They're on a hot streak trying to find one .. Here_ IS and an incredible streak of
their case , with a d1ssent111g good luck .)
.
Ohio State (8-1 . 4- 1 Btg
opinion in parentheses.
- Ohio State, ranked No. Ten) take s on No. 14
8 last week, edged · Penn Michigan State (7 -2, 4-1) on
State 21-20 on a touchdown Saturday. After that, the
pass in the fi nal two min- Buckeye s play . No. _16
utes. Three team s ranked Purdue at home before go mg
ahead of OSU - No . 2 on the road to meet No . 8
Miami, No. 4 Georgia and Michigan .
No. 6 Washington State Even if they win out
all lost. Yet the Buckeyes against th at mine -filled
moved up just one spot in schedu le, th ey will still need
the rankings and . we re help to make it back to the
leapfrogged by Y1rg1ma national titl e game at the
Tech which jumped f1ve Sugar Bowl. They are fifth
spots' after its 31-7 whipping in the BCS.
of th e 'Canes. (Yeah , but
Olivea says it will be a
Penn State is all of 2-7 and joke if Ohi o State goes Il - l
the Buckeyes needed two and doe sn' t play in New
flu ky missed ca ll s by the Orleans.
refs that thw arted a Nittany
"I thought the whole point
Lions drive and extended an was to win.'' Olivea said .
Ohio State o ne to pull out " It' s disappointing. But if

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B:J

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

Big Ten Football·Notebook

TRANSMISSION
FlUID CHANGE

Nominate them for

email:

I

mu sic and even make some

of his own. playing the trumpet.
The Buckeyes still have
three regula r-season games
re mai ning, agai nst th~ee
ranked opponen ts. starttn g
with
Satu rd ay 's
game
against No . 14 Michigan
State. A shot at a repeat Bi g
Ten title beckons. as does
anothe r shot at a BCS bowl
- possibly eve n anot her run
at th e national champ ions hip .
Smtih doesn ' t look back
with regret. doesn't think
about what mi ght ha ve been.
He prefers to look at the present, enjo ying his time with
teammates and preparing for
what come s next.
" It feels good," he said ,
retlectin g on his se nior season. "The main thin g is yo u
want to win ga mes. I think
I' m havi ng a pretty good
year. It could be better. At
the end of the season I'll be
able to tell you how it all
feels. "

I . Buy aset of tim and get a

1.) Send us your name. address and phone number.
2.) Include YQUr carrier's name. your route number

THANK THE PEOPLE .OF
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

for an exce llent defense."
Smi th is no self-promo ter.
He' s a crim inology major
who hopes to someday be an
FBI agent. During his idle
time he ltke s to listen to

All MAJOR BRANDS
DISCOUNT

fnc!udts

John Hood would like to

imagine it could happen to someone like th~l1 "
Gallo said that alter a day game on Tuesday.
Stenson had gone out with some teammate.~
"for a few drinks. to re lax and JUSt hang. out.
Stenson called him. apparently to a~k h1m to
come along, Gallo said, but he d1dn l answer
the phone.
.
Gallo said it was a mystery how Stenson
wound up in Chandler. which is several m1les
from the Scottsdale clubs the players trequ~nt. .
'There's nothing out there;· Gallo satd. · He
had to be forced into doing it.''
. .
Stenson was claimed by the Reds oft wmvers
from the Boston Red Sox on Feb. 25. Alter
seven seasons in the ~ed Sox mmor league
organization, he made his majot league debut
with the Reds. batting .247 w1th three home
runs and 13 RBls in 37 games. H1s last home
run accounted for Cincinnati 's linal 11111 of the
season .
. h
Stenson was having a big season 111 t e
Arizona Fall League. where up-and-comtng
players are sent to hone thetr skills. He was batting .394 - third-best in the league - throu gh
18 games.
The Arizona Fall League cance led games on
Wednesday and Thursday._Play was to resume
on Friday. Only a week ot the season rematns.
"I am terribly saddened by the sudden and
tragic death of Demell Stenson yesterda_y
moming. My deepest sympath1es go o~~ to hJS
family, his friends and h1s teammates, baseball commissioner Bud Seltg s;ud.
.
In LaGrange, which also produced Mtke
Cameron of the Seattle Mariners. Stenson was
remembered as a popular all-around athlete.
"He was someone every mother would want
their child to be like - a great student, a g~eat
athlete. a super young man." LaGrange H1gh
School secretary Ellen Batchelor satd.
(Associated Pre.u t&lt;Titer Daniel Yee contributed to this stun ·. )

Friday, November 7,

PON1"'AC

BUICK"
•...,,~~~~no

lati!Micarf'

'.
• I

'I

th e season - ofte n draws
do uble takes fo r his ru gbystyle punts - afte r catching
th e ball. he run s a few steps
to eithe r side before bootin g
il
"'We had a hard time prote ctin g him beca use he
walh so much to the ri ght. ''
coac h Glen Mason said. " I
can ' t get him to walk
..
strai ght ahead."
Lloyd is 8- for- 10 on fie ld
goal s. 53-for-55 o n PATs and
ave ra ges .19.7 y ard s per
punt.
•
TIRED
PERRY:
Michig an's Chri s Perry ran
for 219 yards on a sc hoo lrecord
51
carne s
111
Michi gan 's
27 -20
win
against Michi gan State on
Saturday.
Perry leads th e Bi ~ Te n
and is third 111 the natiOn an
average of 13 1.3 ~ a r ds ru shing a game and ts tted for
third in the country wtth 15
touchdo wns.
Hi s ru shing atte mpts last
week broke the pre viou s
team record shared by Ron
Johnson 11967! and Anthony
Thomas ( 1999). Perry gets a
much-needed break as the
Wolverines are oil Saturday
"There' s no que stion that
when you carry the .ball that
many t1mes there s mor~
recovery time reqUired.
coach Lloyd Carr said .
• QUICK-HITTERS: A
wi n Sat urday wou ld make
Purdue 5- 1 in Big Ten play
for the first time si nee 1979.
... With two games left.
Minnesota has a chance to
record a nine-win season for
the fir st time sin ce 1905 . ...
Mi chi gan
State ' s
Jeff
Smoker had not thrown an
interception in 2 I quarters
before havin g a Hail Mary
picked off on the last play of
the los s at Michi gan .... Ohto
State' s Craig Kren zel is
peeved that he wi ll share
time wit h backup Scott
McMullen on Saturday.
" I' ve never been a fa n of a
two-quarterback system. " he
said.

BY RUSTY

Mtll.ER&lt;

Associated Press

COLU MB US Three
weekends will decide the Big
Ten .
"It 's a dog fi ght at the top;·
Michi gan State coach John L.
Smith sai\1.
There is little room for
error among the top contenders. Four teams - No. 7
Ohio State (8- 1. 4-1 J, No. 14
Michigan State &lt;7-2. 4- 1).
No. 8 Michigan (8-2. 5- 1l
andNo. I6Purdue (7-2,4- l )
- are almost in a stalemate
for the top spot. Barel y
behind are No. 24 Minnesota
(8-2, 4-2 ), No. 10 Iowa (7-2,
3-2) and Wi sconsin (6-3, 32), hoping to grab a piece of
first place.
· "We talk about November
constantly," said Ohio State
coach Jim Tressel. whose
team plays Michigan State on
Saturday. "November 1s
when you reall y measure
yourself as a football teant."
By the end of the month. it
will all be sorted out . The
season rests on the next three
weekends.
"There's a lot of big things
to come." said Ohio State
defensive end Will Smith. "I
know a lot 'o f the guys want
to finish harcl these next three
games."
The Buckeyes face the
tallest task in the conference.
After the Spartans. they host
Purdue before closing out the
regular season at Michigan.
To reach a second eonsecutive national title game. the
defending champions would
have to wi n all three and then
hope for some help agai nst
the teams ranked ahead of
them in the BCS standings.
The players. however._are
trying to deal w1th M1ch1 gan
State first and worry about
the rest later.
''You' ve got to foc us each
week on the game at' hand.
because if we lose this week.
it doesn't matter." offensive

tackle Shane Oli •ea 'dtd
Ohio Swte ha' alrcatl' ""n
five time' h1 a touchdm• n ur
les;. after "·inning tt.dl ol the
games in last 1car', 14-11
sprint to th~ tit le h1 no "'"It'
than seven pntnl ' The
Buckeyes heal I&lt;&gt;" I~ Pen n
State 21 -20 la' t \.leek . \.\nt
ning on back up quancrha,·k
Scott McMullen ·, S-1ard
touchdown pa" to \1 tchacl
Jenk ins "i th I .\'i le ft
"It's a sign of a g&lt;xJCI_1." '1ball team ... Michi gan State '
Smith &gt;aid of th e l:l tK·kc lc,·
performance . ."Thn lind a
way to ge t tt dmtc . he n
when the) 'replay in ~ r&lt;"rl! .
they tind a way nt'.maktng
plays to wm a game . .
A new co ntn\\ cr" i"'PI"-'U
up for th e B u ,· k c'~' thi'
week.
Mi chi 2an nat I\ c Cra1g
Kren zel: ~ 1-2 as a 't&lt;tl1c'r.
was less than pl ca'c~ IP lind
out he wi ll ' hare lime• "llh
McMullen 111 SaturJa1 ·,
game.
.
"If I wrote tht• ''"r' . It ,lc-J i nitely wouiUn · I h:J \ L' . t-'I_H IL'
this way... he said. ") &lt;&gt;ll 1 ,.
just got to come out "'"r'
day. no matter " hat th.~ ,llua tton and do yo ur he't.
There is no quarterback
controversy for 1\.lidtigan
State. Jeff Smoker i' the ' tor:
of the year in the c't&gt;nfl'rl'lll'l'
after ba ttli n~ 'uhq ;nll'c'·
abuse pruhlen1, to lc;lll tit,·
Big Ten .111 mo:-.t pa ... -.111~ ~ullI
total offe nse categ&lt; \I'll' ' .
"The offe nse 1' h"l'Fd
around htm... Ohiu Sto~l~- ,
Smith ,aid . " Jt·, jtht the kll
Smoker show...
Smoker ctn turn the g;un,·
against the B uc"kc! c' :twunu
by h1msell. · Lt kc "'en \lllC
else in the wnkrc'tll'C. It,·
knows wh at i' at '1.1ke
After Ohio St .ttc. the
Spanans play at \\;,,.,liNn
and at humt·

; 1 ~:tHhl

Pl'nn

State.

··rr"

far

fnH Jl

tlhT

Smoker said. "\Ve ,·"n 'itll
finish tied f(,r the Bi ~ l en ...

I

�Friday, November 7,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Ohio prep fooll•ll playoff pairings

.NBA
•'

"It's tough. I've lost more
games now than in my
whole high school career:'

B Y T oM W ITHERS

Assoc1ated Press

Ct:EVELAND - On a
dreMy alternoon outside
G•.md Arena. there was no
hun of the prevtous night's

-

fe~tlvtttes.

The TV sate llite trucks
had packed up and moved
on to the next b1g story, the
Goodyear Blimp had flown
back to Akron and the on ly
people seen through the
wmdows of the Cavaliers'
team shop we re store
employees.
The buzz had lett town
: alo ng wnh n1ppcr Jay-Z
and Ntke mogul Phil
Kntgh t.
: · Th ings were normal : way too n011nal.
. Four ga mes mto a new
·. NBA season and the
prom tse of a new era of
excitement with rook ie star
Le Bron
James,
the
C leve land Cav aliers are
wm less, undi scipl ined and
scemmgly unin sp tred
Same as they've been tor
years
"I' m not happy with anythi ng n ght now," coach
Pau l Sil as said.
What's to li ke''
The Cav aliers dropped to
0-4 on Wed nesday ni ght
wi th a 93-89 Joss to the
Denve r Nugge ts, who
c ras hed Cleve land 's city Wide bloc k part y fo r
James' home debut.
James had seve n points,
II reho und s and seven
ass.,ts m th e f1 rst act of hi s
med w-created n valry with
fe ll ow rookte Carme la
A9.thony. who countered
wtth I 4 point s and six
bo,ud s f01 the Nuggets
But Anthony got the most
releva nt stat : a win ,
De nve r's th ird tn fi ve
games.
For the
18-yea r-o ld
J&lt;t mcs, who JUSt one wee k
mto ht s pro career may be
Cleve land 's best pl ayer. the
losmg has already grown
old
" It's tough,'' James said
" (' ve lo st more games now
than tn my whole ht gh

sc hool career"
Despite
a coachmg
change and an mtlux of
new players, the Cavaliers
have so far resembled the
same sorry squad that wen t
a league-worst 17-65 last
season.
Sil as is ftn dm g that some
things are more eastl y
fixed than others.
"We've got to change the
attt tude from a losing att itude to a wmmng attitude,"
he said.
Against the Nugge ts, the
Cavaliers resorted to many
of the sa me early-seaso n
bad habtts and lost to a
team that they should be
able to handle at home.
Cleveland fe ll behind
early, a trend th at began in
their season opener last
week m Sacrame nto and
has n' 1
abated
The
Cavaliers battled back, but
couldn ' t overcome doubledi git deficits.
Once again , the Cavs
were atrocious defensively,
allowing the Nuggets to get
too many easy instde baskets.
Sil as, who doesn' t plan
any lineup changes, is puzzled by his team's reluctance to play wtth any passion when they don't have
the ball.
"We were runn1ng into
picks and not ge tting back
properl y," he said before
the Cavs left for a Frida y
game in Indi ana. "We
pomted those th ings out in
the tape sesstons and that's
about all you can do. That
JU St can 't happen. Good
team s co me up with stops,
and so far we JU St haven' t."
On offense, the Cavahers
resorted to dumpin g the
ball inside to 7-foot -3 center Zydrunas Ilgauskas and
then standin g around to
watch as he got double -

AI -

AI games at 7 p.m. SallJ'day
~13

At WOU81oo Folio Fllld
(1) SlJIIM111 Black RIYer (9-2) vs. (4) W&lt;:it:JI;ter Tri'Miy (8'3)
At llarbertan RIICIV Shii1IIY Stadium
(2) Apple Creel&lt; Waynedale (10- f) vs (6) Cle VASJ (7-4)
Region 14
At Uma s8ntor Stadium
(1) Urbana (10-1) vs. (4) Delta (10.1)
AI wapakOneta Harmon Field
(7) Uma Batll(B-3) vs. (6) Coi&amp;MIIaf (10-1)
Region 1!
At Zanesville Sulsbolger Memorial Stadium
(1) Ironton (10-1) vs. (4) Belaire (~2)
At Dover Crater Stadium
(2) Coshocton 110-1) vs. (3) Marli1s Ferry (~2)
Region 16
At Cln. Prlnceton VIking Stadium
(1) Ctarl&lt;sVllle Clrnton-Massle (1 Hl) vs (4) Cin.
(8-3)
•
I
At Huber Heights wayne Heldkamp Stadium
(2) Versa!les (11-0) vs. (3) Readrng 1~2)

ByeN Field

(1) Mentor (1 Hl) vs (5) Cle. St

pus (11-2)

At cantan Fawcett Stadium
(2) Warren Harang (11.0) vs. (3) LakeM:&gt;od St. Edward (B-

3)

LeBron Ja mes

and triple-teamed.
When they weren't doing
that, James, R1cky Davi s,
Darius Miles and J.R
Bremer hOisted tll-adv•sed
jumpers Many possesston s
consisted of one pass followed by a qUJck shot.
It all added up to another
loss, but S1las " conlldent
the wi ns wtlt come.
"We've go t to keep
worki ng at thi s thing," he
said ''This is not an inst,mt
f1 x. We just have to get bet ter. We took a litt le step
back lastmght, but we sull
have close to 80 games to
go and th at's what tt's
about. "
James d1dn' t sc01e in the
second half aga mst Denver,
taking just four shots afte1
Silas moved him to shooting guard and put Kevt n
Ollie at the po mt.
W1thout the ba ll 111 h1s
hands to tngge r the
offense, James was tentati ve.
.,
And alth oug h he has
shown he can dri ve past
defenders and take a g &lt;~m e
over, James seems hcsillln t
to be the first opti on on
offense He may have to
start.
"He has to assert h1mself," Sil as satd. " I can't do
everythtn g for him . He
does n' t unde rstand thi s
game yet where he knows
he can take ove1 and se 1ze
the ball. He' ll learn how"
Smcc hi s brtlhant debut
at Sacramen to, James '
point total (25 , 21. 8 .md 7 )
has dropped 111 every ga me
But while some Cleve land
fa ns left opemng ni ght at
the Gund d isa ppo inted.
James hasn' t been shaken
by the Cavs' slow st art
'Thtngs will com e."
James said. " It ' s earl y 111
the season, so I' m not eve n
worri ed about 11 "

CLASSIFIED

DIYlSlON IY

DIVISION I
AI games at 7 p.m. Saturday
Region 1

Cavs still winless with James

Raglan 2
At Maaalllon 1'11111 BIOWI1 T1gtr Slaidlum
(1) N. Can. Hoover (11-0) vs. (5) wadsworth (lf-2)
At Lorain George Daniel Stadium
(7) Tot StJohn's (8-3) vs. (3) Brunswid&lt; (10-1)
Region 3
AI Upper Al1ington Moorehead Memorial Slaidlum
(8) Hi"iard Davidson (8-3) vs. (4) Dublin Coffman (lf-2)
AI GRMI City Cenlnll Croa8inV Stadium
(2) Lancaster (10-1) vs. (3) Dublrn SCioto (10.1)
Reglon 4
At Dayton Welcome SIB&lt;tlum
(1 ) Cin. Elder (10-1) vs. (5) Clayton Northmont (10-1)
At Unl-slty of Cincinnati Nlpport $tadlum
(2) Cot ColemJn (1 Hl) vs. (3) Cln Moeller (8-3)

---=---•c::

.we»
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO EBER I. PICKENS
Plaintiff
vs
EDWARD R. FOREMAN, ET AL.
Defendants
Case No. 3-CV-89
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
To:
Edward
R.

aka

N.G ..
N.

Gilbert Foreman aka

Foreman
Aka
N.
Gilbert Foreman aka

DIVISION II
All games at 7:30 p m Friday
RegionS
At'IINinsburgTiger Stadium
(1) warren Howland (10.1) vs (5) Copley (8·3)
AI Lakewood Stadium
(2) Macedonia Non:lonla 110-1) vs (3) Chardon (~2)
Raglon6
At Findlay DOnnell Stadium
(1) Sylvanra Soullwrew (11-0) vs (4) Defiance (B-2)
At Fremont Ross Hannon Stadium
(2) A110n Lake (t 1-0) vs. (3) Maumee (lf-2)
Reglon7
At Gahanna l incoln Stadium
(1) Cols Brookhaven (10-0) vs. (4) Whnehall-Yearling (10-

1)
At Coshocton Slewart Field
(7) Loursv\lle (6-4) vs (3) Cots lndapendence (8·2)
Region B
At Dayton Welcome Stadium
(~)Trento n Edgewood (11-0) vs (4) Day. Carroll (B-3)
At Hillsboro Richards Mem!&gt;l'ial Field
(2) Kings Mrlls Kings (10.1) vs. (3) Jad&lt;soo (9-2)

Nathan
Gilbert,
Minnie Sutton aka
Minerva Sutton, Mary
R..
Hall , Charles
Foreman aka Charlie

Foreman, Frances A.
Foreman,

John E.
Foreman, Lia Combs ,
J.E. H. Combs, Gene
W. Foreman, George
Cundiff, Ruth Cundiff,
Mary Midkiff, Gaston
Winters, E. M. Winters
ska Edward Winters,
Pater Harpold , J.
Lawson aka John
Lawson,
Franklin
lawson ,
Jacob
Midkiff, W.H . Sevy,
John Tibbs,
Earl
Winters aka E. M.
Winters aka Earl T.
Winters,
Emma
Winters, Una Forman,
Rose Forman, M.S.
Sutton, J.P. Hall,
Frout A. Foreman,
Cena Foreman, Elza
Foreman,
C.E.
Foreman,
John
Combs, Lilly Combs,

Nathan
Gilbert,
Mlnnie Sutton aka
Minerva Sunon, Mary
R.
Hall ,
Charles
Foreman aka Charlie
Foreman, Frances A.
Foreman , John E.
Foreman,
Lila
Combs,
J .E.
H.
Gombs, Gene W.
Fqreman,
George
Cundiff, Ruth Cundiff,
Mary Midkiff, Gaston
Winlers, E. M. Winters
aka Edward Winters.
Peter Harpold, J.
Dalla Davis, Bertha
Lawson aka John
L.awson,
Franklin Rose,
Sarah
Lawson,
Jacob Foreman, Kenneth H.
Midkiff, W H. Sevy,
Cundiff, A.G. Midkiff,
Lydia Matheny, Ellen
John Tibbs, Earl W.
Winters aka E. M. Arnott, Golda Heiney,
Winters aka Ear l T. Glenn
Cundiff,
Winters,
Emma William C. Cundiff,
Winters,
Una Edna Ours, Stella
Foreman,
Rose Clark, and any other
Foreman,
M.S. Individuals organize·
Sutton, J.P. Hall,
tiona or entitles who
Frout A. Foreman, maybe entitled to
Cena Foreman, Elza claim an lntoreot In
Foreman ,
C.
E. the real eatate which
Foreman,
John Is the subject of tho
Combs, Lilly Combs, Complaint,
Names
Della Davis, Bertha
and
Addresoaa
Rose,
Addresses
Unknown:
Unknown ;
Sarah You are hereby noll·
Foreman , Kenneth H.
fled that you have
Cundiff, A.G. Midkiff,
been
named
Defendants In tho
Lydia Matheny, Ellen
Amon, Golda Heiney,
action entitled Eber I.
Glenn
Cundiff,
Plckeno, Plaintiff, va.
William C. Cundiff, Edward R. Foreman,
Edna Ours, and Stella at al., Defendants.
Clark,
Present
Thto action hao been
Addreuea Unknown;
aulgned Case No.
and the unknown 03-CV·89, and Ia
heirs, next of kin, pending In the Court
1pouses, devisees, of common Pleas of
legatees, administra- · Meigs County, Ohio.
tors, .executors, suc- The object of the
cessors and assigns Complain! demands
ol
Edward
R. that the following
Foreman ,
N.G... described real estate

the Stale of Ohio, and
In the Township of
Lebanon, and bound·
od and described as
follows:
Also one other par·
eel of land situated In
lebanon Township,
County of Meigs, and
In the State of Ohio,
and being in Sections
Number 22, and 28,
Town No. 2, Range
No. 11 of Tho Ohio
Company's Purchase,

Inman's

veyed by deed by hrm
to Mary E. Hayman
who later deeded It to

southeast
corner; thence North
61 ·3/4 rods i thence

being a one acre lot
off the land formerly
owned by John S. L

Lawson,

and

con-

Emma Winters and

east 81 -314 ; thance
South
20
rods ;
thence East 32 rods;
thence South 41-314

still later transferred
to her heirs, Bartha
Rose, E. M. Winters

rods; thence West

and Earl T. Winters,

114-112 rods to tho
place of beginning,
containing
16-112
acres.
Ills the Intention of

and lying on the East
side of Public Road
and off East end or
said John s. l .
Lawson's five acre

1)
At Mason Dwire Field
(7) Germantown Valley Vrew (10-1 ) vs. l6) Crn . Wyomng
(1 0-1)

this . deed to convey
16·112 acres, more or

tract.

teas, of the above
described 40 acre
tract, and It lies North
ol the Public Road

leading from Racine
to Portland.
Also the following
real aotate situated In
the Township
of
Lebanon, County of
Melga and State ol
Ohio, and bounded
and deocrlbed •• fol·
Iowa: Being In Range
11, Town 3, In Section
22128, lot 11 , middle
of lot 201 , except 5
acral South, containIng 21 acreo. Former
owner, A.a. Midkiff.
Reference Deeds:
Volume 269, Page 1
and Volume 261, Page
t 31, Melga County
Deed Recorda.
Plaintiff acquired
title to aald real
estate by vlnue of
deeds recorded In
Volume 21111, Page 1,
and Volume 261 , Page
131, Melgo County
Deed Recorda.
TRACTIWO:
Slfuatod In the
County of Meigs, In

Reference Deeds :
Volume 85, Page 171,
Meigs County Official
Records, anti Volume
261, Page 133, Meigs
County
Dead
Records.
Plaintiff acquired
title to said real
estate by virtue of a
Certificate of Transfer
from his deceased
sister, Effie Elizabeth
Plckena, recorded In
Volume 85, Page 171 ,
Meigs County Official

Recorda.
TRACTTHREE :
The
following
described premises
situate In lebanon
Townahlp,
Meigs
County, Ohio, and In
aoctlons No. 22 &amp; 28,
In Town No. 2, Range
11 , Ohio Company

Purchase,

and

described as follows,
to-wit: Beginning at

the northwest corner
of a forty acre lot
heretofore deeded to
John Kaye by William
H. Sevy having a date
April
13th
1869;
thence east 38-112
rods; thence aouth 15

l...t..il-!:,1••

rods to the big road;
thence In a weste rly
direction along said
road 38-1/2 rods to a
stake; thence north
24 rods to the place
of beginning to con·
tain four acres , more
or less.
Reference Deeds :
Volume 85, Page 171 ,
Meigs County Official

Records, and Volume
38, Page 269, Meigs
County
Deed
Records .
Plaintiff acquired

title to sa1d real
estate from his sister~
Effie Pickens and/or
his parents , Eber
Pickens and ' Goldie
Pickens, all of whom
are deceased.
Plaintiff's title from
Effie Pickens results
from her estate 1 Case
No. 30604 of the
Meigs
County
Probate
Court

Records,

To
Place
Your
Ad ...

DIVIStONV
All games at 7:30 p m Friday
Region 17
At Canton Central catholic.
(8) Lisbon David Anderson (10.1) vs (4) Oahon (10-1 )
At Niles Mckinley Bo Rain Stadium
(2) Wanen JFK (9-2) vs. (3) N. Uma S. Range (11-0)
Region 18
At Tltlln Nailor.at Field at Frost-Kalnow Stadium
(1) Patrick Henry (9-1) vs. (5) Loom Clearview (8-3)
At Lima Bath Stadium
(7) Bloomdale Elmwood (8-3) vs. (3) Delphos St. John's (~
2)
Region 19
At Byesville Meadowbroot&lt; Stadium
(1) Amanda-ctearcreek (1(}.1) vs (4) Woodsfield Monroe
Centra1(1 0- 1)
At Athens High School Rutter Field
(2) Sarahsvilk&gt; Shenandoah (1 1-0) vs (6) WheelafsOOrg
(9-2)
Region 20
At Worthington Kilbourne Hopper Memorial Stadium
(1) Manon Pleasant (11 -0) vs (4) Gahanna Cots. Academy

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

,At Picl&lt;aringtan North Panther Stadium
(2) Bainbridge Paint Valley (11 -0) vs (3) Morral Ridgedale
(9-2)
DIVISION VI
All games at 7 p.m Saturday
f'leglon 21
AI Elyria Ely Stadium
(1) Mogadore (9-2) vs. (4) MonroeYrlle (9·2)
At Medina Ken Dukes Stadium
(7) Sandusky St MarYs (7-4) vs (3) Windham (9·2)
Region 22
At Napoleon Bucl&lt;enmeytr Stadium
(1) Columbus Grove (11.0) vs. (5) Nor1hwood (lf-2)
At Fostoria Memorial Sta&lt;tlum
(2) Cory-Rawson (1(). 1) vs (6) Carey (8-2)
Region 23
At WeS1ervllle North McCan Stadium
(1) Newark Calh (10-1) vs. (4) Centerburg (8-3)
AI Nowark Whlta Field
(2) Shadysrde (1 0-1) vs (3) Lancaster Frsher Cath. (9-2)
.
Region 24

by

a

Certificate of Transfer
recorded in Volume
85 ,
Page
171 .
that
However,
Certificate of ;rransfer

Incorrectly described
the four (4) acre parcal described above .
TRACT FOUR :
The
following
described prem ises
situate In Lebanon
Township,
Mergs
County Ohio:
Beginning at the
Norlheasl corner of

land formerly owned
by David Inman of
North tone of Lot No.
201, Section No. 28,
Town No. 2, Range
No.
11
Ohio
Company's Purchase,
said point of beginning being marked by
a stake and marked

stone from which a
Wild Cherry 6 Inches
In diameter bears
South 11 degrees, E.
21 .9 feet and a
Hickory 3 Inches
bears
North
72
degrees E. 4.5 feet;
thence East 1195 feel
o n the North line of
said Lot N. 201 to a
stake by a marked
stone from which a

C.•• II&lt;••••""'-

J• -. al~ ll c

'L&gt; ~ Ii " ~ • - ~c:J

Beech 18 In ches
bears
North
42
degrees East 5.7 feet;

2.
The
above
described real estate

A White Oak 14 inch·
as bears North 75

new survey as fol·

degrees 30 minutes

w.

22.7 feet; thence
South 698 feet to a
point 2 feet East of he
West Gate Post of the
Gate opening Into a
certain Road hereInafter
Deeded ;
thence West 1217feet
to a stake and
marked ston&amp; from
which a Beech 14
inches bears S. 6
degrees East 20 feel ;
thence North 718 feet
to the place of beginning, containing 19.6
acres, tho above
described tract being
in Lebanon Township,
Meigs County, Oh1o.
Also the following

described premises,
situated as follows,
viz: Beginning at a
point ten feet east of
the Northwest corner

is all descrobed by
lows :
Being a part of
tracts of land transferred to Ebsr I.
Pickens as recorded
In Deed Book 269 at
Page 001 and tracts
recorded In Official
Records Volume 85 at
171 , Meigs
Page

county

Recorder's

Office, Meigs County,
Ohio , also being a
part of 100 Acre Lots
201
and
202,
Townshlp -2- North ,
Range - 11 - West,
Lebanon Township,
Meigs County, State
of Ohio and more par-

ticularly described as
follows:
Beginning at a 1/2"
1ron pin with i.d. cap

sat which is assumed

to bear North 85 deg.
56' 22" West a distance of 2070.74 feet
of a forty acre lot
from the assumed
heretofore deeded to
Northeast corner or
John
Kaysly
by
said 100 Acre Lot
William H. Sevy bear201 ,
Township· 2,
Ing date April 13,
Range· 11 ;
1869, thence South
Thence South 03
20 rods parallel to the
dog. 29' 43" West a
Weslllne of said land
distance of 688.88
to the middle of the
feet to a 112" Iron pin
the road -leading from
with l.d. cap sat;
Cowdery's Mrll to
Thence South 85
Portland; thence West
deg. 56' 22" East a
•n the middle of said
distance of 678 .00
Road 10 feel ; thence
feet to a 112" Iron pin
North on the west line with l.d. cap sot ;
of said Lot 20 rods to
Thence South 03
the northwest corner de g. 29' 43" West
of satd lot. thence
passing through a
East 10 feet to the
112" Iron ptn with l.d.
place of beginning, ca aot ot a distance of
contalnh,g one thir- · 151.881eetand going
teenth of acre.
a total distance of
' The
above
176.88 feet to a point
described premises
In the cantarlina of
being situated In
Township road 135,
Lebanon Township,
Sellers Ridge Road;
Meigs County, Ohio.
Thence afong said
Reference Deed:
centerline tho followVolume 130, Page
Ing fifteen courses:
284, Meigs County
1. South 80 deg. 43'
Deed Records.
39" Weata distance of
This real estate
134.84 feet to a point;
waa Intended as
2. South 82 dog. 07'
access to the real
28" West a distance of
estate descri bed as 145.86 feet to a point ;
21 acres, which Is
3. South 84 deg. 53'
part
of Tract
1
41 " West a distance of
described above.
205.71 feet to a point ;

J.;c.l~-~:,1' (.

r

1 -&gt; c•&lt;e••- ·

a point;

from an actual survey

11 . South 47 deg.
50 ' 29" West a distance of 171 .61 feet to

made on the 1st day
of July 2003, by C.
Thomas Smith, Ohio

a point;
14. South 57 deg.
16' 15" West a distance of 138.67 feet to

a point;
15. South 51 deg.
37' 47" West a distance of 42.37 to a
point on the assumed
South line of 100
Acre lot 202 ;
Thence
leaving
said centerline . and
along said South line
North 85 dog. 17' 39"
West
passing
through a 112" Iron
pin with !.d. cap set at
a distance of 39.41
feet and going a total
distance of 290.00
feet to a 1/2" Iron pin
with l.d. cap aet;

Thence

leaving

said South line North
03 deg. 29' 43" Eaot a
distance of 1693.00
feet to a 112" Iron pin
with l.d. cap atlt on
the aBBumad North
Una of said 100 Acre
Lot 201 ;
Thence along aald
North line South 85
deg. 56' 22" East a
distance of 1327.96
f8et to t~e principal

Bearings
are
assumed and are for
the determination of
angles only.

All iron pins set are
1/2" x 30" rebar with
plastic
i .d.
cap
stamped " CTS-6844".
The above description was preparei::l

Professional
Surveyor 16844.
Reference Deeds:
Volume 269, Page
001 , Meigs County
Deed Records and
Volume 85, Page 171,
Meigs County Official
Records.
You ere required to
answer tho Complaint
with In twenty-eight
(28) days after tho
last publication of
this Notice, which will
be published onco
each week for six (6)
succaaalve

weeks.

The last publication
will be made on the
21st
day
of
November, 2003 , and
tho twenty-eight (28}
days lor answer will
commence on that
data. In the case of
your failure to answer
or otherwlae respond
as roquoated by the
Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure, judgment
by default will be rendered against you
and for the relief
demanded In the
Complaint.
Dated this 1st day
of October, 2003.
Dated thlo 1st day
of October, 2003.

Marlene
Harrlaon,
Clerk of Couna
(10) 17, 24, 31 , (11) 7,
14,21

A REALISTIC
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FREE. 3 year old male cal , Training Provided
He has been neutered Call Call for Info
(304)675·680 1
1·800·88 1· 1540 Ext 3258

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Part-tlme18--20 hrslweek
PRN'sJCaaual s opp t
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1·888·582-3345
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10

HOMf:S
FOR SALE

Haven $24,000 Posstble
Owner Fma nctng owner
payment (304)882·2890

G
__eo_1_ge_ s_Po
_rl_ab-.,-:-S:-a-w-m""d:-l.· 3

bedroom house

4 112

don't haul your logs to the acres, cia, fenced pasture,
m1tt JUSt ca t1 304 ·675· 1957
vmyl S1d1ng, Thermalpane
w1ndow. (740)985·4288

PICKY PAINTERS
tntenor &amp; Extenor
Sen1or C1t1zens Discount
Residential, Commercial &amp;
mobtl e ho mes
Roofs. barns. pressure·
wash•ng
Expenence &amp; References
avai lable

304-895-3074
Free estimates call M·S
aam-7pm

Will Care for elderly hght
house wor k &amp; coo · 0
JObs Call (304 l 675' 7460

k dd

--------W•H Cl ean Hous e, cook
take care of di sabled or aid·
01, , Caii(304) 67541

oa

''

1\1

m~-"!'-----,
B~
0PPoR11JNm

i10

~~;~==~~~
r
hHIOIIJVAL'lEY~Pu:usH

rr.JG CO. recommends lha
~.
lth oeoP" "'u do business w ~- :~
te 1"'"'U know and NOT t
"

~&amp;end money lhrough thE

~ 81 1

r

unhl you have I0\18Sti

~:••~oo::•~:e:o~~~':'n~
o· ::::~
MONEY
10 LoAN

1140

_s_

_w
_

subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It 11te91t to
adnrtln ' any
prefcuenc•, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, relig1on, se•
familial atatus 01 nati onal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, llmltatton or
discrimination."
Th le newspaper wlll not
knowl ngly accept
advertisements tor rea l
eahtte which Is In
violation of the law. Ou r
readers are hereby
Informed that aU
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity baau

lol Sprmg Valley· Large lot
apr())( t01 x171 City water
sewer. Nat ga s electnc all
are available Phone 740·
446-9539

_,_e__

Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Po rte r Oh1o
(7 40) 446·7444 1·877·830·
9162 Free Estimates Easv
l•nancmg 90 days same a:;
cash V•sa1 Ma ster Card
Dnve· a· li ttle sa~o~e alot

For rent one bedroom apart·
men! 920 Fourth U!lllltes New IO\Ie seat $100 dresser
1ncluded $400 446·8677 S20 and' table w1th 3 cha• ~
525 Call 740·44 6-4479
days 256·1972 even •ngs
Thompsons Ap pliance &amp;
Repalr-675·7388 For sale
automatic
re -condtiiOr'\ed
washers &amp; dryers retngera·
tors
gas and electriC
GraCIOuS llv1ng 1 and 2 bed ranges a1r cond1!10ners and
room apartments at Village w nnger washers W1ll do
Manor
and
R•vers1de repa1rs on ma,or brands ~
Apartments •n Middleport shop or at your J1ome
From $278-$348 Call 740Used turnllure store 130
992-5064 Equal Housmg
Bulavdte P1ke Matlresses
Oppor tunities
dressers
couche~
Modern one bedroom apt ounkbeds bedroom SUites
rectmers
Grave manu
740-446·0390
ments
740·44 6-4782
North 3ra Ave M1dateport 2 Galltpoils OH Hours 10·
bedroom furn1shed apt 4pm Stop by
Oep osti
&amp;
refe rence
reqUired No Pets (740)992· wasner S95 dryer $95
etect nc range $95 retnoger
0 165
ator white (like new) $1 95
Now Takmg Applicat•ons- Fndg1d1are retngerator $150
35
West
2
Bedroom wasMer &amp; dryer sets $300
Townhouse
Apa rtments each gas range S95 couch
Includes\ Wate r
Sewage ~very n1ce tan &amp; brown )
Trash S3501MO 740-446- $125 couch $50 2 ful l g,ze
beds wlbox spr~ngs and
0008
- - - - - - - - - mattresses $200 PICtures
One bedroom full bath S 12 each tamps S10 eactl
kllchen w/stove In town n•ce fJrep lace msen S t 50 2
w/pr•va te park•ng Cable love seats $95 each 4
etectr •c
gas water
&amp; cha•rs $20 each
ga rbage mctuded
$400
month 740-44&amp;2414
Skagga Appliances

For rent one rD&lt;_)m et1tc1ency
LOIS t9 8: 10 Heatley S
apartme nt Utilities mcluded
Add1hon 1n B1dwell Two
$300 s1ngle $350 coup le
large level lots Pnce to sale
920 4th Ave 446·8677 days
now Phone 74Q-446·9539

1(1 \Ill'

HOUSE'S
I'OR RflsT
1·3 BED FORECLOSED
HOMES Buy from $199/mo
4% down . 30 years @ 8 5%
apr For LiSt ings/InformatiOn
call 1·800·719 300 t E•t
1709

2 bedroom on Te~as Rd 1n
GallipoliS
S2601month
$200/depOSit Ca li afler 5pm
740·446·7309
2 BR near Holzru C/A eco·
nom1cat gas heat all applt·
ances lurn1~ hed . 1nclud•ng
W/D, no pets, lease and
deoosit reQUired $485 740·
446. 2957

Monn.E How :s

3 bedroom hOuse lor rent

FOR SALE

$450 per month Call 740.
446-4543

Weekly or biweekly house
cleanmg References ava1l·
able can (304)675-6805

11 '\\'\~

3 Br, 2 ba th , Ranch . 3 yrs
old, 2 car garage, 1/2 par·
11 ally f1n1shed basement ,
1800 Sq It • C/A gas FP,
fro nt &amp; rear decks 4 5
acres 10x12 bU1 Id1ng 6
m•les !rom R10 Grande
county schoolS $129 900
74Q-379-2666

All real estate advert1 stng
In this newspaper Is

H Ol\'&gt;EHOU)

For rent one and two room
apt w•th shared bath ul1ll!les
•ncluded $200 smgle $250
couple 607 Second 446·
8677
days
256· 1972
even1ngs

Rac tne

t0

Now ta king appli cations· 45631
Driver w/COL.:s preferably
B~
I
wldozer &amp; backhoe expe n·
TRAINING
Mortgage•, Mortgage•lll
•
We otter competitive Interest
B!g yard sale· Nov 7th &amp; ynce, laborer preferably
rates on mortgages and
Sth, on Loop Ad,, Rutland , wlsome s• ding , roofing,
computers. prlntefl, every· plumbing &amp; electrical expen· Galllpoll• Carwr CoU9 debt consolidations and
ence Apply Cote's Mobile
(Cereers Close To Home)
specialize tn good and bsd
th•na el se
Homes, 15266 U.S 50 East. Call TOday! 740-44&amp;4367, credit. Call toll tree to find
Alhena, O h 4570 1 No
1·800-214..Q452
out at:&gt;out our )Ow Interest
www galtlpollscareercotle9' com rates and receiVe expert
phone calls please
Reg 190-05-12748.
al1vtee
~ ., ___1 1 1_ 7_ 3 7
3 Fa mily Yard Sale No\/ 7 &amp; Part t1me detrvery pe rson
Must have knowledge of
,.~r.uu,:,
8, 9am·3pm Glassw are.
1
1 Need extra yast'l? We are
toots, mise,
hou&amp;ehold Gallipolis afea, good with
people. and good wrlt 1ng
Items Mason Co
Fa1 r
skillS Apply In pe rson at 25 Serlou• People Wanted the lo an specialist we don't
Grounds
Floral Fash,lo n, 244 Third Who want to LOS!!: wetght
speculate, good or bad cred·
Ave Gallipolis, O hio.
, .., o...,
C h fo th 11 excepted. There are no
n e • .. , You as
r e fees fast approval. and low
Multi Famlly Yard Sale
Interest rates For more Info
Saturday 73 15 Five Mile Wanted front desk clerk, full pounds you LOSE!
Safe, Natural, No Drugs
ttme,
apply
10
person
call
toll ' free 1· 866 • 8 2•
~ad lnfanl 1tems. furnitu re,
2
Holiday Inn of Gallipolis
!J00.2Q t.&lt;JIIl
6875.
tote
stuH.

•I

Com merc•all ln ves tment
property. 512 Second ave
Gallipolis Great tocal10n 4
rental units $5 000 down
land contract to Mlance

Lot lor sate 1rt
(7 40]992·5858

•

L---.iGooos
iiilriiiiio--"'

8 ll'&gt;JNEXS ·

•

A~~~~ Iii!i~to;:::~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
\I IIH 11\ \ \Jhi

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, lurmshed and unlur·
n1shed. secur1ty depos1t Complete K•tchen 15 b1rch
requ1red no pets 740·992· cao1nets Bu11t 1n gas stove
oven torm1ca counter tops
22 18
staonless steel s•nl&lt;. fauc ets
1 BA With sto 11e and refr 1(}er· breakfast bar (304)675·
ator, starting at S2901mo + 3275 best oHer
depOSit 740-441 · 1322
Good Used Appl1ances
and
1 BA nea r Holzer W10 Re cond•!loned
#ashers
hookup CIA no pets $359 Guaranteed
Dryers
Ranges
ana
plus ulthtles 740-446·2957
Retrrgerators Some start at
B EAUTIFUL
APART· $95 Skaggs Appl1ances 76
MEN TS
AT
B UDGET Vme St ( 740~446 7398
PRIC ES AT JACKSON
ESTATE S, 52 Westwooa Hot oomt washe r $75
washer
$75 ,
Dnve lrom $297 to $383 Wh 1rtoool
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call Wh irlpool and GE dryer S60
740·446·2568
Eoual each All are white Call after
6 OOpm 740-446·9066
Hous1ng Opportunity

ANt&gt; B UIIJ)JNGS

0

a

I

~

Older 2 bedroom 12x65 1n
great cond111on Ga s heat
Need s noth•ng but moved
ready to live •n
S4,500
Located m B•dw eli·VIn ton
area (740)388 9818

---.illi'oO.DoiiiiO._... L,2•B•e•d••oo
.,;mrlliiHiloiluse
iiiriiii,n-N•ew,l

176 ................ • ...

r

New 2003 Ooubtewlde 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down
and &amp;2 95/ mo 1·800·691·
6777

L,.

'

~ Poii!EROY/MJOOLE .

HOMfli
H)R SAJ..F:

lwnght~1c . net

Su rr ogates
Needed
Interested 1n helptng cou·
pies complete the 1r fam•hes?
Your eggs w1ll not be used If
McKeu on
Automated Interested, please ca ll 440·
Healthcare see ks a mot1· 356·4604
vated tnd1v1dual to manage
and mamta 1n all on s1te
1110
W,IN'J'EI)
I
mediCat iOn packagmg U!III Z·
1
1ng bar-code tech nology
related to our automated
lady
Honest
robotiC drug d1spensmg sys· Cleamng
reasonabl e
tem 1nstalled wtthln the dependable ,
Hetzer Medical Center's rate s Call 740·256·8128
ask for Tammy
Inpatient Pharmacy.

Syracuse, O h 45779 or piCk
up appllcallon at Gulf The
Commumty Chest
Con\len1ence Station 10 Buyer's Gutde 1s no w
Syracuse
accepting applicatiOns for
outside sates representa·
Looking for Rock Guitanst ttves Requ ires excellent
I band Mus' customer relation ski lls, hOn·
and smger 10 JOn
be aerlous 10 play 9 lot Call esty &amp; de pendabtilly To
Youth M•ntstry yard-sale.
~obb1e (740)7 42·3200
applu bnng tn or mail your
First Church of God, 109
Need
ladies
to
sell
Avo
n.
resu me to The Commun•ty
7
Garf1eld Ave , (lndoo~t~) Sat
44
6·3358
Cheal
Buyer's Guide 28
Call
740•
11·8 at 9 ooam
Locust Street, Galltpo lts O H

I

MOIIII.E

Are you lookmg for the nght
part t1me po!llton with a
good work schedule and
competitive pay? 11 so

&amp; 7 Fn -Set , Bam to Spm
601 Polecat Road, Dillard
res1dence We have furni·
ture, glassware, house h04d
Items. adu lt and children 's
clothmg and much more

yARD SALE-

&amp; CARLYLE

www comtcs com

r
r

4

.,...,P••po;•l

Part -T•me
Commun1ty
01rector Organ•zed , well·
motwated and outgo1ng per·
son needed to manage and
Implemen t !he March of
O•mes West V1rg1n1a State
Chapter's
Walk- A.menca
even ts m PI Pleasant Job
beg1ns on January 7 and
ends May 31 approx num·
ber of hours Will be 20 per
week Job can be ~to~orked
oul of your home computer
necessary
Pnmary sk•lls necessary
mclude ab1hty to organ•ze
and pnont•ze . outgomg per·
sonality, expenence 10 worktng w11h volunteers. sell·
starter who IS proactive Job
h•s tory of sales. spec•al
event management andfor
fu ndra1smg
Send resumes to Mtndy
Sm1lh State 01rector WV
Chapl er March of D1mes,
3508 Smunton Ave . Second
Char leston
WV
Floor.
25304

r

r

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

L,.

Pretty kltt l&amp;s , 9 weeKs old AVONt All Areasl To Buy or
Sh1rley Spears. 304· The successful ca ndidate
male &amp; female assorted col· Sell
must be goa t onented relt·
675·1429
ors 740-441·0 145
able and able to work we ll
Clan A COL Drivers
mdependently
Oth er
Very lr1endl y CaliCO k1tten Wanted
requirement's mclude gOOd
Call 74(}256·1012 leave a
orgamzat1onal &amp;k•lls a h1gh
message
M1n1mum of 1 year experl· degree of efficiency and a
ence. Med•cal Insurance. computer aplllude
LosT AND
401K Hom e Wee kends.
FOUND
Dom 1c1le m Jackso n, OH ,
Send resume to
S1g n on Bonu s 34C per
Tom Dean
Found '
2002
Ga lll a m•le, 95% No touch NO
Rec ruttmg Manager
Academy class nng "on a NYC freight.
McKesson Automated
cha•n Found at Wa i-Marl Cai11·80CJ-652~2362
Heallhcare
Ca ll 740·4 4 H 155
500 Cranberry Woods On\le
Earn money lor Chnstmas
Cranberry Twp, PA 16066
FOUND Male G rey cat. by selling Avon call Joyce
Fax 724·741·8026
green eyes. white cottar 304·675-6919
tom deen,@ mckesson com
(304)773·9143
Full t•me maintenance pos•·
t1 on Apply tn person at the H1gh School d1ploma req'd
Found Set of Keys found at Holi day Inn No pho ne calls pharmaCy or mediCal exp
R•o Grande Elem Call 74().
prefe rred. but not req'd
Head cashterlcterk needed EOE
245-5333
for local conven 1ence slore
Responsibi lities Include tlut - - - - - - - - not ilm1ted to orden ng prod· Resld enUal
Treatm ent
FaCili ty, now hlnng Dtrect
uct scheduli ng &amp; general
"""""
store maintenance 30· 40 Care workers &amp; one \,oVUft
hours pe r week, ellpertence pos111on needed for boys
IS a plus but not necessary. program Pay based on
Send re&amp;Ume 10• TNT Pit ~xpenence Call 740·379·
PO
Box
220, 9083 ask for Lisa
4 tam1ty ga rage sale. Nov 6 Stop,

or

I

ro

16 Day CDL Training
1 year old 1ndoor cat, to
gweaway to a good home TMC/Sw1ft &amp; 30 MaJo r
Camers Need Entry Level
740·388·8279
Dr•vers Grads Rec Top
3 K1ffens free Gray &amp; black PayiB'ftts/Job Placemen t 8:
str•pped htter tramed 8 Be off wk'ends 1·866·6027035
wee ks old 740·256-9125

point of beginning
containing
28 .258
acres, more or less,
in said 100 acre Lot
201 and 18.116 acres,
more or less, in said
100 Acre Lot 202 for a
total of 46.374 acres,
more or lees . Subject
to all legal easements
and rights of ways.

12. South 58 deg.
37 ' 03" West a distance of 120.92 feet to
a point;
13. South 65 deg.
40' 07" West a distance of 141.43feet to

.

Vtsit us at: 200 Main Street, pt. Pleasant
Ca ll us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister.com

POUCIES Ohk) Valley Publiahing reHrVes the right to edit, reteet. 01' c:a neel any ad at any time . E"or' must be reported on the f1rst dey of publ•c:at1on and
Trtbune-Sentmei·Rtgilttf will be reapontl ble for no more than the &lt;:Oi l of the IPI&lt;=• oc:eupted by tht ..-ror and only the fire! maert1on We •hall not be liable
any lou or expenn that resutt1 from the publlc:etloruor omlesion of an adver11Mment Conect1on will be made 1n t~ f1ret aval~ble edition
are alway s co nfldtntial • Current rate card appli111. • All rill astate adver1111ment1 are subJect to IM Federal F11r Hoo11ng Act of 1968 • Th11
accept• only help wanted ad• meeting EOE ettndarde We will not knowingly accept enw advertl11ng m violatiOn of the law

tO

HFLP WIIN'J'EO

GtVI:AWAY

Display Ads
All Dle pl•y: 12 Noon 2
Bus ine s s Days Pr ior To
Public ation
Sunday Display : 1:00 p . m.
Thu r s d H for Sundays

KIT
II' -·Hru&gt;--W•A-JI(J}-r'
;n

Say good bye to h1gh phone
b1llsl New local phone serv·
W AN'Il'll
1ce w1th FREE unhm1ted
8 1.1''
nahon w1de long D•stance
or Absolute Top Dollar US
1-800·635 2908
www FreedomMov•e comfltp Sliver
Go ld
C01ns
aysyou Loca l Agents want· Proolsets D1amonds Gold
ed
U S Currency·
R1ngs.
M TS Co1n Shop, 151
SENIOR PORTRAITS•
Second Ave nue. Ga ll1 pohs,
Get Vo u best deal at
740 446-2842
Main Street Photography
Honda 250 must run and be
511 Ma1n Str eet.
street worthy 740·2 45-5027
POint Pleasant
Call lor Appom tment
I \t i'I (J , \1 1 \I
(304 )675· 7279
.._,1 IH ll I...,

r

4. South 84 deg . 12'
15" West a distance of
141 .99 feet to a point;
5. South 78 deg. 28'
41"West a distance of
150.23 feet to a point;
6. South 72 deg. 30'
24"Westa distance of
94.13 feet to a point;
7. South 66 deg. 32'
26" West a distance of
157.50 feet to a point;
8. South 61 deg. 17'
09"West a distance of
121.70 feet to a point;
9. South 57 deg. 02'
19" West a distance ol
58.70 feel to a point;
10 South 47 deg.
45 ' 25" West a distance o1126.55 feet to

a point;

y MID Slll.ll·
J&gt;r. PLEAsANT

:au Rummage Sate Sacred
Hearl Women's Club 2222
Jac~son Ave A Whale ol a
Sale AU types of clothing.
men . womens and chll ·
drens Var1ous types of ChlnB
and glassware Toys, stuff
an1mats games Stloes
me n women &amp; ch 1idren
Chnstma s
decorations
Electr1s lamps and apph
ances Many. many more
118ms
Doors open at
900am

November Perm Spec1al,
Tuesdays on ly Q uantum
perms $25 at L1nda s Beauty
Shop call , (740)985·3348

l"""&lt;t.t~C-"""' S p a- •p~• - - ~

••• ~... ._•• -

ANNOUNCEMENTS

C·1 Seer Carry Out permit
for sale Chester Township,
Me1gs County, se nd letters
of 1nterest to The Da1ly
Sentinel, PO Bmc 729·20,
Pomeroy. Oh•o 45769

At Piqua Alexander StadlumiPurk Field
(8) Maria Stein Marion L&gt;ocal (8-3) vs (5) Spring. Calll
Central (9-2)
At Bellefontaine Dodd Field
(2) Dota Hardrn Northern (10·1) vs. (3) N. Lewisburg Triad
(10- t)

l"'"'oo.. .. .-ai &lt;&amp;:C' ~ 1.-.

r

Ir~

6

Word Ads
Dally In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Friday fo r Insertion
In Next Day•• Paper
~ u•n•ta~ In- Column: 1 : 00 p . m .
For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads W1th A Keyword • Include Complete
Detc::rlption • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrev i ations
• Inc::lude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Ru n 7 Days

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

1\egtster

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

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

Offtee llo~&lt;f

1~2)

DIVISION Itt
All games at 7:30 p.m. Friday
fleglon9
At Perry Alumni SIB&lt;tlum
(1) Cle. Booedic1ine (1 0.1) vs (4) Huntrng Valley Umversily
(1 0-1 )
At Euclid DIBlasio Field
(2) Chesterland West Geauga (1t -O) vs (3) Mentor l ake
Cath. (9·2)
Region 10
At Marion Harding Stadium
(8) Cols Beechcroft (9-2) vs. (5) Kenton (8-3)
At Dublin conman Stadium
(2) Cols. DeSales (7-4) vs. (3) Cols. Watterson (lf-2)
Reglan11
At Youngstown Austlntown-Fhch Falcon Stadium
(1) Steubenvtlle (11-0) vs. (4) Lrsbon Baaver (11 -0i
At Newcomerstown Lee Sta&lt;tlum
(7) Them, lie Shendan (9-2) vs. (3) Canal Fun on i'NI (11 0)
Regian 12
AI Hilliard Davidson AthletiC Complex
(1 ) Kenenng ~ne r (10.1) vs (4) Newark Lreklng Valley (10-

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

be quieted In the
Plaintiff,
Eber
I. ·
Pickens:
TRACT ONE:
The following real
estate situated In the
Township
of
Labanon, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio ; Being a part of
Lots No. 201 and 202
In sections 22 and 28,
Township 2, Range
11, of the Ohio
Company's
Purchase. Beginning
126 rods East of the
Southwest corner or
lot No. 202 at D.

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

"'1"rierro11

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Foreman,
Foreman

www.mydallysentlnel.com

200 3

Used · homes under
3br 2 run baths. deck
3 bedroom houSe tn
S2
000
00 Call N1kk1 Call
whulpool tub Located near
Pomeroy
rent $300 00
schoo l 1n Gall•a Owner (740) 3115-9948
Oep reqUired
$250 00
f•nancmg
IS
ava1lable - - - - - - - -HUO approved (740)742·
(304)675·1352
1993 Clayton mobtl e home. 2896
- - - - - - - : - : : - - - 14.:60. 2 bedroom 1 bath
w/deck 8: outbu1k:tmg $9 500 3 bedroom 436 Mam St
4 Bedroom 2 Bath Pomeroy
OBO 74()-44 1·9334
Rutland $350 "" a month
Ohi O
Vtew
$300
depOSit,
HUD
Photoflnformalton onl ine 1997 14x70 Oakwood tra1l·
approved. (740)593-7113
www O AVB com
code
er. for sale or take over pay80603, Call (740) 992 •3650
3 B1 house for rent located
ments 740·379·2651
on Sanders Dnve $550 per
Fleetwood month Depos11 and refe r·
4 BEDROO M 4 BATH 2001
reqUired
Call
HO USEl ForeclOsure only Doublewtde 3 br. 2 bath. all ences
$9,900 For hsltngs Call 1· appli ances $35,000 or W1seman Rea l Estate 740·
assume note Move or lot 446·3644
60Q-71 9·300 1 Ext F144
rent ophon Located by
4 br, 1 112 baths Located on
V1nton 74().983·1900
SR 141 near Centenary
Beautiful Dream Home
S700 per mon th DepoSll &amp;
3200sq f1 with wrap around Cole's Mob•le Homes
Ca ll
deck, upsta•rs balCony, 4-112 US 50 East. Athens. Oh1o relerence reqUired
acres, 4br, 2ba, large 11\/lng 45701 , 740-592·1972
W1seman Real Estate at
room W/11replace, dming
74(}446 -3644
room , '2 car garage Owner FINAL CLEARANCE
fmanctng
JS
available Just a lew 2003 model Bride. m Gallipolis 3 bedrooms. 1 S baths. basemen! .
(304)675-1352
homes rema1n , come early,
carport. 5650. references.
make your piclc·then-talk to
deposit, no pets 74()..446·
Ernie Of lynn get the best
Completely refiniShed home
9209
Great locatton . 1n Galllpol•s possible pr ice, you It be
Ohto, 3 bedrooms. 2 full pleasantly surpnsed. toun- For sale or rent· 4 bedroom
batps, priced 10 sale now da!loons hea1 pumps, central house In ~meroy, $450 a
PhOne ( 40}44S-9539
a~rs and septiC systems our
7
month re111. $400 secunty
;.:;~:..:;,.::,:_:_:::...:.=.; ("'1 spec1atty. Cote 's Mob1le
deposit no pets stove trig
MUST SELL
Homes 15266 US 50 E,
&amp; d•shwesher, (740)949·
Athens, Oh10 45701. PH:
bedroom, 2 bath, '" Ne
740..592-1972
•
71104 •
•
aven Owner movtng ou
f state. P nced be la
Mobile hOme &amp; lot for sale pets referenced requ ~red
ralsal value Fo r mor Gal!lpohs city lot 140, 4 security depostt
$725
ntcrmation. and piCtUres
rooms &amp; 1 bath, 2 bed· monthly 740·446·2423 after
o
www oryb com( cod
rooms washer. refr . stove. 8 OOpm
02703) Or caH evening
ltke new gas furnace Only ~~;;.~---::-~"'"1
~
·3973
$10,000 Behind Pizza Hut
Phone (740)446·9539
___
~1
•
111 Syracuse, 3 bedroom. 2
bath, new windows, pat•o on
New 14 w1de only $799 00 2 bd wlw carpet. ai r porch
front. beautiful covered deck
down and only $169 76 per Very n1ce, no pets In
m back, 740·667-()674 or
month
Call
Ka rena Gathpolis 740-446·2003 or
740-591 -8298
(740)365-7671
74()-4~ · 1409

-------7

74 -6-7398

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now takmg A.pphalllons
tor 2BR 3BR &amp; 48A
App1 1ca!t0ns
are
taken
Monday lhru Fnday from
9 00 A M -4 P:M Ofllce •s
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve Potnt Pleasant WV
PhOne No IS (304)675·5806

76 Vine Street
lll'!:r;"",.;.:~~;;;;,;,;;;--,

i

MOIIFOR
ILEnJ!~

~

L---oliiriiiiiiiii--rl
Mathews Bow w•th acces·
sones $ 350 Call after 6pm
_
_
740 388 0162

r

Iii:!;;;::~~-----,

EHO
Rooms lor rent Back ol
Add•son close to Gaw1 and
Kyge r Creek plants Call
367.0 102

L~--------pl

Buy
or
sell
R1venne
Antiq ues 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740Ru ss Moo re
Tara
ToWnhouse 992·2526
Apartm6nts Very Spac•ous
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA 1
112 Beth Newly Carpeted
AdUlt Pool &amp; Baby Poo l
Pallo. Start $385JMo No
3 pc sectiOnal wlh•de·e·bed
Pets, Lpase Plus Secunty &amp; reclmer $200 740.9e5·
OepoSll Requned . Days
4150 or 740·667·3107
74Q-446--348 1
Evenmgs
740·367.0502
1-t Out\~ 1 1 4 ~ BO drill
Mtlwauk.ee

sawza ll

and

Twtn Rtven Tower •s accept- blade Rockwell screwdrwer
1ng appbcallons lor watti ng
ltst fo r HOO·substzed. 1- br HD

~~tmenl

i

I

HD sterlmg sande r

McCulloch chain saw and
call 675 -6679 blade LP gas hose and reg-

I,

ulator Martin 35.000 ery

SPACE
FOR RENT

V
__'. _Y n_&lt;:e
--3-'-b-,ed,oo
-m-.no !.,~------"'
Comm&amp;rctal property tor

r:·

SPoimNG

gas heater and ~ 1 Futon
couch like new 740-4 48·
8786

_ _ _ _J_E_T_ _ __

rent· a store front In
AERATION MOTORS
H1storlcat
downtown Repaired New &amp; RebUttt kl

Pomeroy, Oh tacmg rtver, St()CI(.

cau

Ron Evans, 1·

(740)589-7122

800·537·9528

'

Off1ces,
(Downtown
Gallipolis) tor rent All elec·
Inc, ~ rooms and a 4 rooms,
both on first tloo r. 400 bbdc.
tn Gai,IPohs Both are clean
&amp; nice. Phone (740)446·

Pantograms
modet
Xl
Jacket Master embro•dery
machine E:.cellent condi·
tton , templates and new
spools of thread Included

9539

S750 Call740-4&lt; 1-&lt;1243

\

�,P~ge

~.
Applications for
waiting lisl being
accepted,
: Colonial Park,
~00 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, 45769,
~40-992-6183.

i ~ Announcements

Phillip
Alder

Sherm an Bu ~ kirk
\\'ant 1 ~1 ex pre... ~ th~:ir
than"- ~ 11. 1 tlu.: ~ pcc ial
people w ho se nt
pra y l"r~. can.J.., anJ
l\or1-

food du ring th e

FOE 2171
Band for Nov. 7th &amp; 8th
"Fast Eddie"

8-12:00
Members &amp; Guest only

li:ritp M etals Open Mo nday.

MIZWAY TAVERN
Euchre Tuesdays
Pool Tourn . Thurs.
Karaoke Wed. &amp; Fri.
Band Sat. Amix 9-1

al ways he

PETS
FOR SALE

r

~. . . .&lt;.JR•"•IRA
. . UE•
. ' . .-" ~. . . . . .G.··.RA_.IN. . . .-"

L,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .

-.

AKC Registered yellow Lab
Massey Fergu son 50 live
puppies. 7 weeks old . 3
power. good co ndi tion,. Kir1g
·sizes and length . Must see
males, $250. Call 740·367·
Kutter brush hog included.
~o pric e. Call 740-441 -7390 .
0038 0 c 740 367.7202
$3,800. (304)6J5.8052
.l:fough cut lUmber. Various

Kenmore

large

70

MUSICAL
INSrRUMENTS

·capacity, almost new. $350;
Gibson electric range, huge;
$350 . Kenmore po rtable For sa le Guit ar Gibson ,
dishwasher. almost new, DOVE 100 years anniver$ 150: RCA 27' inch TV $100: sary
Ed. $2500
Call
all 1terns $90 0 Estate saIe
304)593·3988
G75·2208. 965·5597 or Cel
FoR SALE
550·7153

P""

OR TRADE

550

f3UILilL'i&lt;;

..

SVI•PUF~~

Foe Sale-S acres of rea l
estate situated on Pau!i ns
Block, brick, sewer pipes. Road in Cheshire Township,
windows . lintels. etc. Clau de Gallia
Coun ty.
Ohio
Wi nters, Rio Gra nde, OH (Auditor's Parce l #003·002·
Cal l 740·245·512 1
171-00) Sa le price $6.000.
The real estate is uniml'f~Pi
1500
proved woodland . Interested
IUR SALle
parties may cal l 30 4- 273~
!1 170 or 7!10-992·7 10 1.
3 male full blooded Rat
Terri er pups _ Born 91 11103,
wormed and ta ils docked
,$ 100 , 740 -367-7 468

NORTHUP DODGE

"-r~o--F~R-L~-~

1100

94 Corvette Coupe. White.

LIVHilOCK

Lively's Auto Sales
$500' POLICE IMPOUNDS.
740-388·'9303
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, et c!
Cars from $500. For listings
3 Fair Steers . $600 each. 1 t -800·7 19·3d01 ext 3901
1987 Ford E 150 Van $650;
extremely tame. excell ent for
1988 Fo rd Thund erbird
young. 4·H membe r 740· 1987
Cadill ac
Co upe
$ 1.000 :
1992
C hevy
245-9315
Deville
Run s exce ll ent,
Cava li er. 5 spd .. $800: 1994
power everything. $1,000
Plymouth Voyage r. $1,800:
4 Holstern Herfers, 4501bs. OBO, Cell 304-675·561 2.
1987 Mercury Marquis ,
$700 each. 740·682-6519.
1993
Chevy
Ca mara, $500; 1989 Dodge Dynas!y,
Burgundy, au tom atic . fully $800: 1992 Ford Tempo,
A ngu s Bu ll s. Heifers plus loaded_ 740· 379· 2389
$900: 1990 Olds Ciera,
Main e- Angu s Steers and
$1.200;
t 965
Pontiac
Hei fers, Top ·bl ood lin es. 1993 Chr ysler Conco rde, Sunbird , $600; 1992 Olds
S late run farm. Ja ck son . runs e)(ce llent, $2,000 080. C1era , S1 ,200: 1994 Chevy
740-286-5395.
Phone: 740-446· 7025 or Cava lier, $ 1,600; 1993 Old s
7 40-446-0905.
Ciera, $950: 1993 Plymouth
Sunr:l ance,
$800;
t994
Arabian Gelding broke to
1995 Ch ry sler Newyorker , Chevy Corsica, $1 ,600;
buggy
or
ride
$550 .
loaded , mint conditi on, 1991 Chevy 8· 10, standard,
(3041576A079
$4500 080, (740 )992-573 7 $1.000
Hou rs: 9-5 Monday-Friday.
1997 Ford Escort, clean car,
9·3
Saturday
Closed
runs great $t 995. (740)992·
Sunday.
5737

Public: Notice
State of Ohio
Ohio School Facilities
J::ommission
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
: 1. Bids will be
~calved by the Meigs
Loc~ School District
Board, at 320 East
Main Street, Pomeroy,
OhiO, 45769, Attn :
Mark Rhonemus, ror
the following Project;
Demolition
and
Abatement of Salem
Center and Rutland
Elementary Schools
Pomeroy, Ohio
in . accordance with
the Drawings and
Specifications prepared by:
I

Bidders only, upon
receipt of a check,
which is refundable,
in the amount of
$25.00. Checks shall
be made payable to
the
Meigs
Local
School District and
forwarded to the construction Manager.
Upon receipt of a
request,
accompanied by a deposit as
named above , Jhe
construction
Manager will forward
copies of bidding
documents to the bidder.
5.
Shipping
charges for all bidding documents are
non-refundable and
are to be paid via a
separate check in the
amount of $25 .00,
also nlade out to the
Meigs Local School
District and forwarded
to
the
Construction
Manager with the
deposit check.
6. Interested bidders should contact
Melissa HuH at (614)
865-9000 or send
deposit check directly to Key Blue Print
6180 Cleveland Ave.,
Columbus, OH 43231.
No more than three
(S·) sets will be provided on a refundable
basis to a Bidder.
Deposit
will
be
refunded to Prime
Bidders only per
Article 2.10 of the
Instructions
to
Bidders.
7. The Contract
Documents may be
reviewed for bidding
purposes
without
charg~ ,. during business hours at the following locations: ,
Architect's Office: ·
Studios
SSOE
Architects
1001 Madison Avenue
Toledo, OH 436241535
SEM
Partners
Architects
167
South
State
Street
Westerville, OH 43081
Gandee &amp; Asaociates
4488 Mobile Drive
Columbus,
Ohio
43220
Construction
Manager'i Office:
The Quandel Group,
Inc.
8181 Worthington Rd.
Westerville,
Ohio

43082
F.W. Dodge Plan
Rooms in the following cities:
• Columbus. Ohio
(43216-1073), 1175
Dublin Road
and the following
additional
plan
rooms:
•
The
Builders·
Exchange o1 Central
Ohio, 1175 Dublin
Road,
Columbus,
Ohio 43215
•
Ohio
Valley
Construction
Employers Council,
21
Armory Drive,
Wheeling, WV26003
• Marietta Contractors
Association, 4424 9
Emerson
Avenue,
Parkersburg,
WV
26104
Owner Office:
Meigs Local School
District
320 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
., 8.
The
Owner
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids
and to waive any or
all irregularities, mistakes, omissions or
informalities relative
thereto.
All questions pertaining
to
securing
Contract Documents,
Bidder's List, etc.
shall be directed to
Melissa Huff, The
Quandel Group, Inc.,
8181
Worthington
Road, Westerville, OH
43082 (614) 865-9000.
(10) 31, (11) 7
Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
MID-STA1E TRUST, IV
PLAINTIFF,
CASE NO. 03-CV-102
vs.
MARY J. HAWK, ET
AL
DEFENDANTS.
Montgomery Ward
will take notice that
on · August 28, 2003,
Mid-State Trust, IV,
filed Its complaint
against you In the
Court of Common
Pleas
ol
Meigs
County,
Ohio,
requesting the Court
to larmlnata any
interest that you have
in
the
premises
described as follows:
in
the
Situate

1995 FORD E350 CUBE
BOX
T RUCK
CAL L
(740)446 -9416 . M-F 9 · 5
Located
139 1
Safford

• Replace ment .

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESID ENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

GMC Picku p, Sie rra Grande
LS with camper shell. One
owner.
41,000
mile s,
$2,500. 740·245·9619.

VANS&amp;

LARRY SCHEY

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

#cHiVRO,~Tj

East State Street

,

1987 Jim my 4 wheel dr.,
au tomatic , 350 engi ne,
65K., fat tires 304-675-5516
after 2pm.
1989
P lymouth
Grand
Voyager , runs good , new
parts. $1 ,000 or make offer.
1992 Dodge Caravan, 4
cylinder. automatic, 161 .DOD
miles, very good condition,
second owner, $1, 200. Cal l
740·446·7215 or 740·446·
7669.

1996 Chevy Blazer LT. 4x4,
loaded, leather. $5,500 obo.
Township of Rutland, (304)675·8931

Athens, Ohio

HA~e

,

'

,.

,

'' ·_d

~-

~:::;::::,:::;:::::;=::;::::r=;:=T=~ ~

-

Stitch

18 Patterns 4vailable
Connie Curnutt
895-3962 Shop
OW!Jer/operator
895-3512 nome

f# buy quilt tops

BARNEY

..

II

NOBODY'S
AROUND ...

TH' LEAVES ARE ALL RAI&lt;E'D
AN' READY TO GO !! NOW,

WHAR ARE

9 miles from Pt. Pleasant
011 Sa11J Hill Road.

THEM

YOUNGUNS i'

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740.949-2217

',; $Jzii•,~·x,to·

1

't

i· tiS .1Q'x30' '.
Hours

7 :00AM- 8:00 PM

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

4 75 South Church St.

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

THE BORN LOSER
SoRR'&lt; 10 fl(f.,IZ. '&lt;OU N'olt&gt; r:.v2
~f::f_

f\1\VIN,t;, PROOLE./&lt;'6, Pf\IL .. ,

"W.V's #I C hevy. Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Va n D eal er'"

p-C&gt;O'IOIJ Tf\1!'-IK
'&lt;OU C~ \'.IOR.K
\f\1!'-IGS OUI 7

P"IF

II WEREJ-.1'\ FOR OUR

""'!

li=.IZ£(0!,KILI\BL( C&gt;Wf(~
WE \'.IOULDI'I'I J.J,r--,1/( NW"\l\11'\G

I f\1 COI&lt;\MOf\11

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

6:30
Lllst Thursday of

every month
All p~rk $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

Bonanza Get

BIG NATE

NNotme!
My money is wi1h
Rocky Hupp Insurance

1\LL I&lt;.IG.HT, SP ITSY,

EIEFORE WE ~T/'o.RT T H£
'D06S 1\I&lt;.E SMA~TER
THAN ·CATS" EXPEI1.1 MEt-IT,
T NEED TO CHECI'.
YOUR HEI\RT R/'o.TE .

and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone: 843·5264."
•MWII

1\10!

HEY' .. HEY! ... SToP
DROOLtNC. ALL OVER
ME! THI\T·s DISGUSTING! . . JU ST SIT

{)ON'T SITE

TKE ~T ETHO SCOPE,
YOU MORON' I'M
TRYING TO.. WIL L
YOU LET ME .. .

5 FREE

THE PKRASE
JU ST
"MAD
WORK.
SCIENTIST ..
WITH
I S TI\K.IN6
ME , '(OU
STU PIP
O N 1\
WHOLE NEW
FLEA8A&amp; 1
MEAN IN&amp;!

r --------------- --- ----

HOWARDL.
WRITESEl

•ROOFING
•HOME
MAINTENANCE
•SEAMlESS
GUTTER

949-1405

Wicks Hauling
·and
Excavating
Cununercial Residelllial
Bulldozer &amp; Backhoe Trucking Ser.,i,es
Septic Sy.\·tem l"slallatiun

Land Cleari11g

PEANUTS
MARCIE, I-lOW CAN 't'OU
CATCfl TJ.IE BALL IF
'(OU'RE 5TANDIN6
8Ef\IND A TREE?

Home Sites Po11ds Driveways

740·991-3470
Toll Fre'e I -866-267-0072

HOME CREEK

' ~NTERPRISES

740·992·7953

BALL ...

BETTY
fl~'(!

See!

11-IIS

L-EO WEINER

11-IGSIU..'&lt;

MUSIC IS OK!

!

NM\es

1

WOP.I&lt;S!

!

~~C.IP\.E

l'VE
OEFI \II I"reL'(
TASTED
SILLIER

T

v

IMPORTS

0

Athena

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'1110' 610'1120')

J&amp;L
Eledric
Licensed &amp; BOflded
Ph 74G·!Mil·OIU

Ceii740·511·107J

ROBERT
BISSELL

(740) 992-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
COISTRimll
992-6635
·New Homes ·

Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilities

6ET HIT IN TI-lE

5TOMACil WITii TJ.IE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

740·992·7953

740-992-5232

PRETT'I' 6000
CATCfi. f.llli-1. SIR?

YOUNG'S

General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

~~~
High&amp; Dry
Seff-Storage

I DOt•iT WANT TO

Pomeroy, Ohio

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

FOR YOll!!

West

North

t:asl

l NT

Pass

:1 :'-lT

All pas~

Arnerlnd

Do you worry
about the overtricks?

EXTeNSIONS ..

~

~achlne Quilting - l!egu1ated

Meigs County, Ohio:
1
BEGINNING at a point 1998 Pontiac Tran spor t, V6,
while , loaded, new tires.
in the centerline of
ru ns and loo ks great. $7,000 I
Route 124, said point
080
7 40·44 H365
is where the centerline of Corn Hollow 40
Road intersects with [
M&lt;YIORCYO.FS
Route 124; thence
with the centerline of
2000 Kawa saki Bayou 300.
Route 124, S. 50 Deg. 4)(4, like new. Less than 50
33'E., 153.97 feet to a hours $4,000 lirm. 740-256p,oint at the center of 6239 .
li' bridge; thence N. 37
i *Free Esti01118S*
Deg.) 132'" E., 24.91 2000 XR80 in good condi·
teet to the true point tion . \740)992-2070
of beginning, said
point is also In the 2003 Honda XRtOO, and a
northerly right of way Go-Cart. (Outgrown) Call
line of Route 124; 740-446·3486 after Spm
thence leaving said 60 AtJm PARTS &amp;
right of way and
ACCFSSORIES
along a severance
line through the property
of
Douglas 1990 Toyota Celica for parts.
Chapman, D -B. '109,
Pg, 395 (lour calls)
and following the
centerline of a small
creek for (two calls),
N, 2 Deg. 25" 13 " E..
94.17 feel, N. 35 Deg.
20137" E., 60-51 feet
to a point ; thence
leaving said creek, S.
54 Deg. 08'43" E,
313.52 teet passing
an iron pin at 20.00
feet to on iron pin, S.
41 Deg. 28'39" W.,
164.01 feet to an. Iron
pin In the Northerly
right of way line of
Route # 124; thence
along said right ot
way line, N. 48 Deg.
31121 "W., 246,21 feet
to the point of BE~ IN- ·
NJNG end containing
\
1 .00 Acres, more or
less.
FOR LAST SOURCE
OF TITLE SEE D.B.
324, Pg. 597 of the.
Meigs County, Ohio
Recorda of Deeds.
· No.
11Parcel
33795 Hiland Rd.
00025.001
Pomeroy, Ohio
The
Plaintiff
re.q uests that said
premises be sold,
your Interest therein
foreclosed and for
any other relief as
shall be just and equitable.
You are required to
answer the said com·
plaint by January 9,
2004 or Judgment by ·
'
, Default will be rendered against you.
MARK K McCOWN,
REG , NO. 0068743
AITORNEY
FOFi
PLAINTIFF
(11) 7, 14, 21 , 28 (12)
5, 12

I

'·

Phone (740)593-6671

Let me clo it for youl

1/ 14!1 mo. pd

4-WDs

Soutb

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

GRIZZWELLS
PI~~T, 1'5\-l'i \1 ~IOU 5

1'HIS C0\...1-AR

t:JO!! CHAFE
'

33 Clooe
34 -Stanley
Gardner
35 Post-h
mes11ge
37 Jacquea'
girlfriend
39 Feelln&lt;t

Duplicate bridge is so called because
evei-yone plays the same deals. But there
are two common formats : pairs and
teams . In the former. each parr's scores
are compared with those of the other
pairs stning in the same direction either North-South or East-West . Th1s
companson makes overtricks very important.
When you are play1ng teams (or rubberbridge or Chicago) , overtricks are rela·
lively insignificant. You .sho uld concan·
trate on making - or defeating - the
contract
This deal exhibits both approaches. You
are South, the declarer in three no-trump
West leads the heart live. How would you
plan the play if overtricks are important.
or if you a:re tryrng to bring home only
nine - not 10 or 11 - tricks?
II you are play1ng in a pairs event, you
should take the 'heart finesse , hoping
West has led away from the king . 11 he
has. you rate to win 11 tricks via one
spade. three hearts. four diamonds and
three clubs. However. here East wins with
hts king and shills to the spade lour. You
play low, but We st wins with the 10 and
continu es with the king . You duck again.
but when you win the third spade and
play a diamond. East takes the ace and
cashes the 13th spade to defeat the con·
tract.
Agreed , you were unlucky - but you
played co rrectly and will have lots of compa ny
H owe~Jer, if overtricks are unimportant,
you shOuld guarantee the contract by
winntng the first trick with dummy·s heart
ace and driving out the diamond ace. You
will collect at least one spade. one heart.
lour diamonds and three clubs

G

54
58
59
60
61

--1

Dealer South
Vulnerable: Easi·Wesl

Opening l ead: • 5

out of PAINTING!

00
_
_ 1_1_·- - - - - 98 Super Cab, White
RanQer : 4-wheel drive, 4.0L
engine, 4 door, automatic
ove rdrive transmission. air.
cruise, tilt. power locks and
windows, aluminu m wh eels
with AT du elers, chrome
bumpers and grill, bed liner
and cover. Garag ed. non
smoker. Perfe ct! 37,000
miles. $ 10,500.00 (740)592·
2761

j

.. A K 5

Ta~e the PAIN

shape, high miles. 5 spee d.
$3,850 firm. Call 740·388-

HAS
SOMETHING

.. 10 7 6 I

TFN

,

=~~~~·n~S ;~~~ 5 • 7e;~~~~=~:

... THE

.. J 9 8 2

• J 9

~Sc_h_o_oi~·~G~al_n~~Hs~·~~--

NOMATTr·nJ
WHATYOU'RI
STYlE...

• 6

• Q 7 64
¥ K3
t A52

Robbery
Serape by
Camp bed
Alltrm
mHIIgo
Jellyf)ah
(hyph.)
hablbtt
22 Gold dlggar7 62 utility bill
24 Trpe
abbr.
o wraotllng 63 Mr. Gingrich
25 Computer
datum
DOWN
26 Wrllor
Derlaive
snort
28 Hoax
2 Fish-to-be
32 Weatern

New Homes • Vin yl

c2.:.39:_4_.-::-::-:--::--::--::-::

r30

• K 10 l
• 1086 52

double dale
t B Coat or
•-er
20 PC

t KJ 9 I

Siding • New Garages

re ~
leather, glass top,
63 6
loaded $10,000. 740·682· __~8~.- - , - - - - - 7512.
94, S- 10 ext. cab. 4x4, good

Burgu ndy 93 Eagle Vision ,
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS loaded. V . CD player.
6
Hand as, Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Power everything. $2,0bO or
Cars from $500. For listi ngs
best offer 080. '7 40-256·
1-800-7 19·3001 ext 390 1
1652.

1-:asl

South
• A J 5

BISSEll
BU ILUERS InC.

I

. 2001 Kia Spectra 33 100 1·999 F250, 4WD. ccuise.
·
·
'
miles. 4 cy linder, automatic, AJC, AM/ FM cassette, bed
4-door. clean. Take ove r pay- liner, topper also included
menls. 740•388 •8788.
T
Fi ber g1ass .onneau cover
ex tra
whee ls &amp; tires .
. ()..
_
'91 Acclaim, new tires . Need $l ,
7 700 74 446 7554
repair $400.00 080
{740)992 -6778
1999, S-10, 4 cy l. 5 sp., PS,

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Vour Ri~hl to Knn"'• l)clivere d Right to Your Door.

Gandee &amp; Associates
4488 Mobile Drive
Columbus,
Ohio
43220
Phone: (614) 4598338 - Fax : (614) 4422t58
SSOE
Studios
Architects
1001 Madison Avenue
Toledo, Ohio 436241535
Phone: (419) 2553838 - Fax (419) 2556101
SEM Partners, Inc.
167
South
State
Street
Westerville, OH 43081
Phone: (614) 7943100- Fax: (614) .7943088
The
Construction
Marlager
for
the
Project is :
The Quandel Group,
Inc.
8181 .
Worthington
Road
Westerville,
Ohio
43082
Phone: (614) 8659000- Fax : (614) 8659001
www.quandel.com
2. Any proposed
Equal for a Standard
shall be submiHed to
the Architect no later
than ten (10) busl·
ness days prior to the
bid opening. If no
Addenda is issued in
association with the
Bidder's request, the
proposed Equal shall
be considered rejected.
Sealed bids will be
received for:
Meigs
Elementary
School,
Estimated
Contract Value
Bid Package No. 14:
Demolition,
$174,00.00
Bid Package No. 15,
Asbe~;tos Abatement,
$138,900.00
until the Bid Date of
November 17th, 2003
at 1:00 p.m. (local
standard time), when
they will be opened
and read.
· 3. A pre-bid meeting
will be held on
November 10, 2003
1:00 p .m. at the fol lowing location:
Meigs Local School
District Board Office
320 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
4.
· Bidding
Documents may be
obtained from the
construction
Manager• by Prime

"-r--~~-~ALE
-KS.......

2000 Buick Regal LS, 4 1k 1994 S-10 Blazer, 4.3
miles. exce llent con dition. Vortec. 64.000 miles, $2.000
$10,250.
Estate
Sale. excellent shape. 740-446-

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, November
8, 2003, at 10:00 a.m.,
a public ~ale will be
held at 211 West
S~cond
Street ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, in the
pa·rk!ng lot of The
Palmers Bank and
Savings
Company.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following collataral:
1)!92 Olds Achieve
1G3NL5434NM432816
2003 Nlssan Sentra
JN1 AB51 D33L7t 9850
1993
Nissan
P;athfinder
JN8HD17Y9PW11790
5
The Farmers Bank
and Savings company, Pomeroy, Ohio ,
reserv~s the right to
bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above
:CO.Iateral prior to
'Sirle. Further, The
if'armers Bank and
.Savings
Company
~·~rves the right to
fG]ect any or all bids
'Submitted .
: The
above
11escribed collateral
:will be sold "As is!W'here is", with no
!BKpressed or implied
~Atarranty given .
l
For further infor~atlon, or for an
a-p pointment
to
ID$pect
collateral ,
prior to sale date conJDct Diane Rector at
992-2136 . XT 122
J11) 5, 6, 7

992-5479

1997 Toyo ta 4 run ner. t992 Chevy 3/4 ton. 5.
loaded, mint condition. call speed. w/toppe r $4.800
Call 740-446-8832.
for details, (740)992-5737

_10_7_9_._____________

West

Jeff Warner Ins.

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740·4411·0842 • 949·1155 Evenings

(3041675-2208. 965·5597 oc
7 153
Get 55 020 00 Lin co ln Conti nen tal
~I'"'"'"":~~~--, Cl:::\"-'""'::':"'~:---, Like new co ndition , low
pw
FoK SAt E
HAY &amp;
mileage. Phone 740·446·

For Sa te. Large 4-Wheel Rou nd ba le hay, first &amp; last
Scooter, trea ted lumber .
..,eesda'y'. Wednesday &amp;
cu tting. Orchard grass &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm Closed AKC Choco late Labs. vet English saddle/ bridle, bath clove r. Ca ll 740·446·7787
_T-tlursday,
Satu rday
&amp; ch ecked , 1st shots &amp; sink and cabinet. 304-773·
wormed., ready 11/7/03 5207
Squ are bails of hay for sal e.
-Sunday. (740)446-7300
740·441 ·093 1
$2-$3 per bail. 740 -245·
9044.
1•11!\1 Sl 1'1'1.11-S
Office Furniture
AKC
English
Bulldog,
,\II\ I SIO&lt; h.
11&lt;1:\SI'OI! I I 110:\
:·Ne~-,:. scratch &amp; Dent.
female, 12 weeks old , colo r
·Save 7oo,;, _1-800-527-4662 Br indle/whi te
Adorable
10
FARM
~Qo naut 519 Bridge Street andlovi ng. Shots &amp; wormed . j610
AIJilll'i
E()UII'MENT
~andotte/Hunti ngton . M/F 740·446·2895.
IUR SALE

:washer.

Cellular

.......1

Yuur kindness wi ll

r

t Q I OI 7l
.. Q 3

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Nov. 9th
·· Outlaw &amp; Slug
Club Meeting 10 a.m.
Under new management.

friends,
ncighhors and my
co Wllt'kl:rs at thl!
Hea llh DcpL and
TB C l intc I'm tl-lcir
vts it s and cards.

:Gra ting
For
Drams,
j)_riyeways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L

14 DiKovarw'l 45 ~bot·-··
lhoUI
47 -gor
15 Wldeapread 50 Wolf famtly ·
~
51 Voungater
16 Yole alum 52 Paleozoic,
17 Hill •
e.g .

11 01 OJ

¥ AQ 1

our Uad and
granJpa .
A sp!.!..:ialt llanks to
R!.!v. Keesee.
f-isher Funera l
Hotn c . Tina Story.
Fra nk &amp; Linda
Brode rick.
Hulzcr Hosp ice
1\'urscs. hi s
caregivers- Sue
Simpson and

Family

5 FltneM
41 T..-nplko
center
oxh
8 JFK arrlvol 42 Awful
11 Soya firmly 43 RCA
13 Juat a 1m1e
~oducta

• 9 8 2

II Inc~ ... ~md death uf

0la ncy Broderick

louey
&gt;10 DiacrMI
I Belloound
oum......,.
ACROSS

T he fa mil y of

rc membered .

NEA .Crossword Puzzle

'BRIDGE

1110

:NEW AND USED STEEL
·S teel Beam s, Pipe Rebar
.For
Concrete ,
An gle,
•Channel. Flat Bar. Steel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Nov. 7, 2003
ALLEY OOP

Card of Thanks

Carnlyn Linl c. All

ML&lt;;C"LIA~WUS
MEROL~NiliSE

Friday, Nov. 7, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

AstroGraph
qjJur 'lllrthdll,y:

Saturday, Nov. 8, 2003
By B11rnlce Bede Oaol
Exci ting. happy changes are in store tor
you in the year ahead where lmpo11ant
relationships are conce rn ed. You c·ould
become actively involved with a new
friend who wi ll introduce you to a tun
group
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Keep the
~we" principle in mind today at all t1mes.
Conditions are such that your mos t fortunate arrangements will be those that
reqUire some for m ol teamwork or pa rt ·
nership.
SAG ITTAR IU S (Nov. 23-Dec . 2 1) Circumstances are such today that situations th at affect your career coul d be far
more propitious than usual. Pounce on
any opportunity that is offered, rega rdles s
ol the .s ource or timing.
CAPRICOAN ·:Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Things
cou ld work out happily for you in the soc ial
realm today concerning a perso n wh o ha s
been hard to deal with lately, due greatly
to .your positive. upbeat attitude.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- A domes·
tic matter that might have weighed heavr·
lyon your heart could be alleviated today
due to a very fortuitou s happening . Just
be patient and wait lor the tog to lift .
PI SCES (Feb. 20-March 20 ) - Today's
early 8\/Eints might put some people's positive thinKi ng to the test. but not yours .
BecBuse ol your visions ot VIctory, everything will turn out positively.
ARIES (March 21·April19)- The harder
yo u try today. the luckier you'll get. Th is is
especially true in work- related areas
where fi nancia l profits are at sla ke
Large i'-than-usual rewards will be there for
jobs well performed
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Lady Luck
will be rooting lor you today where an
affair of the heart is co ncerned. so fi re
your best arrows at the parson of your
affection. Chances are. you'll hit d bull'seye .
GEMINI (May 2 t ·June 20)- A question·
abte situation that may have had yo u a bit
worried will work out advantageously
today in a manner th at will be quite pleas ·
lng to you , Stay positive no matter how
things start out
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - 'Don't be
afraid to think in more expansive terms
than usual today. In tact, big plans have a
better chance of succeeding thBr'l small.
meaningless ones. The more far-reaching
they are thft better.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2:2) - Ambitious ob)8C tiV8$ will be taking a turn tor the better
today and you could lind yourself quite
lucky In w11.at you undertake at thi• ti me.
Don't be a !raid to reach for the moon
1/IRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - Don't allow
a negative lhln~er to in fluence you into
believing you can·t accomplish wl'lat you
aspir8 to do. Have faith In your Ideas and
abilitie s and Lar::ly Luck will open doors tor
you .
UBAA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Owing to a
beneficial chan ~e In a troubleaome clr·
cumstance, it looks like you mlgl'1t come .
out lar bener today In a collective venture
that you have GOing with another than you
thought.

1&lt;.1nda GroOV"'

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40·992·16J1
Stop &amp; Compare

\,

flclc kin
23 Artlcln
24 XylophOIII
couain
25 Swelling
'rT One ollie

47 H!IWaNerl
41~•

22

Thrwo-..

41
50
53
55

ol vlctDry
Brain wM
Storm lnP
Dlopullt
Pelt ot UK

56 Ull I

beverage
9Fena-

44

5 Dancemove 31 Blend
6 Compenlon 36 Actor
-Kruger
7 Farewell
8 Carbonated 36 Hlotorlcal
perloda

s-tar

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
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Two kids disputed wh1ch one had broken my w1noow .
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ALONG
THE RivER
Finding his place
in the world, C1

._ If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR

This Week. cjo The Gaston Gazette.

national Raceway. It was What: Target House 200
North Ca ro lina
Earnhardt Jr.'s first win at a Where :
non-restri cto r-plate track
Speedway,
Rockingham
(1.017
miles ).
197
since he won in Dover, Del..
in September 2001. It was
laps/ 200.349 miles
also the third-generation dri- When: 1 p.m. Saturday
ver's ninth caree r victory. Laat year 'a winner: Jamie
and it cefllented his hold on
McMurray
second pla ce in the points Track quallfylnt~ record:
stand ings behind Matt
Greg Biffle. Ford . 156.368
mph. Feb. 23. 2001
Kenset h. who started 37th
and finished si xth . Kenseth
Race record: Mar k Martin,
needs onl.y to fini sh 30th or
Ford. 124 .39 7 mph , Oct.
19,1996
better in the final two races
to win the title. Dodge driver Most recent race: Bobby
Ryan Newman, who won his . Hamilton Jr., in a Ford , won
10th pole, finished third .
Saturday at Phoenix. Wi th
Kurt Busch fin ished fourth .
two races re ma ining , onl y
followed by Michael Waltrip.
60 points separate first Kenseth, Jeff Gordon, Jeff
place Scott Riggs from fifth·
Burton, Scott Wimm er and
place' Jason Keller in the
Mark Martin.
points standings.

WI NS TON

No. 1 Redmen
keep rolling, B1

From passion
to profession, 01

en

•

NC 28053

What: Ford 200
Where: Hom estead-Miami
(Fla.) Speedway (1.5 miles),
134 laps/201 miles
When: 3 p.m. Nov. 14
Last year's winner: Ron Hornaday
Track qualifying , record :
Rand y Tol sma. Dodge .
149.813 mph. Nov. 9. 2000
Race record: Ron Hornaday,
Chevrolet . 133.26 mph ,
Nov. 15. 2002
Most recent race: Kevin Harvick , in a Chevrolet. won Friday at Phoeni)( . With a second-place finish , Ted Musgrave trimmed Brend an
Gaugha n's points lead.
Gaughan leads Musgrave by
26 po ints heading into the
finale.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

CAS"EY MEARS,

Box 1893. Gastonia.

LIVING

C RAFTSMAN THU C M

HIJSCH !&gt;ERIES

What: Pop Secret M icrowave
Popcorn 400
Where :
North
Carolina
Rockingham
Speedway.
(1.017
m1les).
393
laps/399.681 m1les
When: G1een flag drops at 1
p.m. Sunday
Last year 's winner: Johnny
Benson
Qualifying record: Rusty Wal·
lace. Ford . 15B.035 mph.
Feb. 25. 2000
Race record: Jeff Burton.
Ford. 131.103 mph. Oct.
24. 1999
Most recent race: Dale Earnhardt Jr. held off fellow
Chevrolet driver Ji mmie
Johnson to wm Sunday's
Checker Auto Parts 500k
(312 miles) at Phoeni)( Inter-

P.O.

SPORTS

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ alit-~ Puhli ... hiu~ (

SPORTS
• Bevo Francis still No.
1 in college hoops. See
Page 82
• Basketball Redmen fall
in opener. See Page 83
• Four Raiders named
AII-OVC. See Page 84
• Youth sports gallery.
See Page 85
FEUD OF THE WEEI(

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Appeals court denies Trussell's motion ·
BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY - The Fourth District
Court of Appeals has denied Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell' s
request for an order providing additional funding for his office.
In an opinion filed Thursday, the
court voted two to one to deny
Trussell's motion for a writ of mandamus, ruling lhat the county commissioners have no duty to appropriate all funds Trussell has requested,
and thai no statute exists requiring

full funding .
The court also
found that the
commissioners did
not abuse their discretion by appropriating less than
Trussell requested
last year for this
year's operalions.
Through Athens
Tru11ell
Attorney Herman
Carson , Tru ssell
filed his motion wilh the appeals
court asking them to order the commissio.ners to fully fund his 2003

budget request.
Citing dwindling revenue and
increases in unfunded mandales
t'rom the state and federal levels, the
commissioners have imposed budget
cul s ac.ross the board to county
offices for the last two years.
Trussell 's requesl of $738,384.50
was cut to $65 1,963.62 when commi ssioners approved lheir 2003
counly general fund budget. an 8
percent cut.
Trussell al so asked the court to
order paymenl of $140.000 spent in
2002 without an appropriation.
In June. Trussell was forced to lay

off his entire staff of deputies and all
office staff but one part-time clerk.
because his salaries line item was
depleted. Deputies were returned towork last month, and will likely continue working through the end of the
year using funds remaining in line
items set aside for housing and food
for prisoners.
"Because we find that the board
has no duty to appropriate all the
funds requested by the sheriff. that
no special statute requires full fund·
ing of the office of sheriff, and that

Ple•se

He

Denied. M

s
u

Casey
Mears

Casey Mears' engine was goine;
bad in Sunday's Checker Auto Parts
500k, and wh1le he was tr ying to get
out of the way. defending Winston
Cup cha mpion Tony Stewart thought
he was block tng him.
"'He tried to s pin me out all the
way down the backstretch , but I wa sn't trying to do anything there . The
motor was starting to go bad , an d I
was just trying to get out of the wa~·...
Mears sa id.
Stewart mustered an 18th-place
fini sh. and Mears ended up 42nd .
NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton gives his take: .. Stewart IS a
young ma n in a hurry, and he probably wasn· t of a rnind to give a rook1e
the benefit of the doubt..·

Mears trying to make things work in Winston Cup
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Thi s Week

I

t's quite a feather in NASCAR's cap that Casey Mears chooses
to compete in its premier series.
Mears, 25, is the nephew of four-time Indianapolis SOO winner Rick Mears. His fa ther, Roger, raced Indy cars occasionally
aM was an accomplished off-road racer.
Yet Casey is trying lo make his mark in NASCAR. He has a
long way to go. He's yet to finish better than 15th in a race. The
season highlight is a fourth-place starting position in July at
Chicagoland Speedway.
"It's tough for me, because I want to win races," Mears said.
"I'm not real happy with being mediocre, and that's what
we've been this year. I guess that's what is making
us better.
"The team is not hap py with that, and I'm
noi happy with it. We've got to keep getting
belter, and we want to win races. We all do.
We'll keep working hard at it, and we'll get
il someday."
Mears fini shed 2l't in the Bu sch Series
points standings in 2002, but he finished in
the top five only once. He qualified second for a race at Nashville Superspeedway.
He competed in four CART races in
2001, twice finishing in the top 10. His
best career finish in CART was in his
very first race, when he finished
fourth at California Speedway in

With two races to
go, Casey Mears
sits 35th In the .
points standings. By
comparison, Mears'
rookie teammate at
Chip Ganassl Racing
- Jamie McMurray
- Is 14th In points.

WHO ' S ttOT
ANO WHO ' S NOT

John Clark/
NASCAR This Week

~HOT :

Da le Earnhardt Jr. has lin·
ished in the top 10 in fou r straight
races .... Scott Wim mer. who will
compete in the Nextel Cup Series
fu ll·t1me in 2004, finish ed ninth at
Phoenix.
~NOT : Mark· Mart 1n has n't fini shed
in the top five since Pocono in June.

In the doghouse, again
NASCAR officia ls have taken a
rather unusual step in getting Kurt
Busch·s att ent1on. Busch had hi s
" hard card," i.e., NASCAR 's annual
credential, revoked.
The series qf events began in th e ·
Oct. 19 race in Martinsvi ll e, Va ..
wh en the Impet uous
25-year·ol d
spun on the narrow
pit road after blowing th e engine on
his No. 97 Ford. In
the view of many
present al the time .
when Busc h roa red
through the pits.
th en back down the
back straight , leaving an oil slick in his wake, he endangered other crew members as well
as NASCAR offici als and safety crew.
He was summon ed to the NASCAR
transporter after the race, along with
oth er Rous h Raci ng representatives,
but did not show up.
Then at Atlanta, he turned in his
hard card to sti ll-miffed NASCAR
president M1ke Helton.
The practical irf.lpact is only inconven ience. Because Bu sch no longer ,
holds the annual ca rd . he must
check in at each track, presumably
tor the remai nder of the year, and go
through a li ne to pick up paper credentials to gain admittan ce t o the
tracks.
NASCAR . of course. has a time·
honored traditiOn of making life miserable for th ose it cons1ders incorrigible.

2aoo.

.
·

.

I - A N "'I I P S

Ford Championship Weekend
· Racefest will be held Nov. 13
from noon to 11 p.m. at Las Olas
Riverfront in downtown Fort Laud- ·
erdale , Fla. This marks the shcth ·
yea r that Ford will bring its top
NASCAR drivers to the Sunshine
· State to meet race fans of South
· Florida.
The event serVes as an intro.d uction to the final NASCAR
· caces in the Winston Cup, Busch
' and Craftsman Truck series at
Homestead-Miam i . Speedway.
Among the drivers scheduled t o
appear and sign autographs at
Racefest are Dale Jarrett, Ricky
Rudd . Mark Martin; Kurt Busch,
Jason Keller, Rick Crawford and
Terry Cook .

Also a former competitor in off.
road racing, USI\C open-wheel divi·
sions and Indy Lights, Mears was
the second-youngest driver to win
a feature race in USAC history. He
began racing BMX bicycles at the
age of four.
"NASCAR ha s been quite an
adjustment," Mears said , "but
the flip side of that is that I have
probably learned more this
year than any comparable time
in my career. Being successful
in this series is very difficult ,
and I've had to learn to be patient and work very hard on being
successfuL
"It's going to ha ppen."
Contact Monte Dutton

a1 hmd4858@peoplepc .com.

Valley

&amp; Sup-ply

Co. · .·

555 Park St • Middleport

Ill

,WI'VtCIIl'

Aging nurses·could
create new wave of
shortage in region

rt Is

BY CARRIE ANN WooD
cwood@ mydailytribune.com

GALLIPOLIS - As the
average age of nurses
approaches to 50-years-old.
more nurses are looking at
retirement .
A generation of nurses that
has been caring and changing
with new medical techniques
edges ever closer to retire·
ment. Area hospitals and
healthier providers are looking
at ways to alleviate the nursing
shortage and prepare for the
anticipated retirement of a
large generation of nurses.

OBITUARIES
Page A6
• Daniel L. Sutton, 43
• Daisy L. Harden, 65
• Leona 0. Taylor, 95
• Sam L. Early, 65
• Lindsay B. Musser, 2

INSIDE

Holzer Medical
Center

• New Haven sewer rates
going up. See Page A2
• Locals honored at
Gallia SWCD banquet.
See Page A3
•Portsmouth in decline.
See Page A7
• U.S. paratroopers die in
attack. Page A8

At Holzer Medical Center.
the average age of nurses is
lower than the national. With
an average of 39 for regi slered nurses (RN) . the hospital has an advantage. Vt ce
President
of
Human
Resources Rosie Ward said
the hospital has few vacancies and little lrouble filling
the positions currently.
In the past she said the hospilal has experienced staffing
shortages in nursing fields .
She said the hospilal employs
licensed pracli cal nurses
(LPN ) and RNs.
Ward said the hospital has

WEATHER
Clear, HI: 40s, Low: 20s

Tiffanie Hager has come home to Gallia County to play basketball for the University of
Rio Grande. (Brad Sherman)

BY ANDREW CARTER

4 SECI10NS- 28 PACES

Around Town.
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials.
Obituaries
Region
Spo(ls
Weather

As
C4
D3-5
insert

A4
A6
A2
81-8
A2

R

IO GRANDE - Anyone who
knows Tiffanie Hager knows she's
a tough kid.
Opponents who faced her when she
played basketball for River Valley and
later Gallia Academy, know that's a fact.
Moreover, the folks at Kent State
University, where she spent two seasons,
know that's fact.
Hager, daughter of David agd Nora Hager
of Gallia County, battled thfough various
injuries Ia excel at the prep level, but faced

worked closely with the
University of Rio Grande and
the Holzer School of
Nursing.
"It is a big plu s for us being
in a small area,'' she said,
adding many employees Jive
locally and want to work in
the area. Ward said it is an
area that will have to be monitor. She said six months from
now the situation could
change. but currently it is noi
an issue for HMC.

Pluse see Nurslnc. M

its beginning in 1988 and ha&amp;
grown inlo one of the most
impressive collective events
POMEROY - Humorous in the history of the modeni
·
lales, folklore , and slories storytelling revival.
"Thousands of people
that touch the heart wi II be
the world will gathe(
around
featured at Tellabration 2003
in
small
towns and big citie~
to be held at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building auditori- to enJOY an evenmg of story.
um on East Main Street on telling on Nov. 22," satd
Greene who noted that in ·
Nov. 22:
Donna Greene, Meigs 200 I communities across si~
County storyteller, is coordi- continents participated iri
:
nating the event which will Tellabration.
"Here
in
Pomeroy
we
will
begin at 7 p.m. following an
have a terrific lineup of story ~
afternoon workshop imd chil- tellers who are donating their
dren's story hour at the oulstanding talents in suppofl
Pomeroy Library.
of this event. There will be an
She explained Tellabration
as a global event which got
PIIIM-MAI

her most dangerous opponent off the playing floor in the fonn of thyroid cancer.
After missing more than a year and a
half to surgery and treatments. Hager
found her way back onto the playing
floor on Dec. 18, 2002. when she suited
up for Kent State against Arizona State.
While she loved her time and friends at
Kent State, Hager felt the urge to come
home to Gallia County and finish her
academic and athletic career at the
University of Rio Grande.
To learn more about Tiffanie Hager's
personal odyssey, reod ,Brad Sherman's
story on·page 81.
·

~

PI..M - Nut,. AI · ·

hoeflich@ mydaily8entinel.com

Hager finds a home at Rio
acarter@ mydailytribune.com

RIO GRANDE - The
University
of
Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College has
implemented several educational options to help
alleviate the potential
nursing shortage.
The .Holzer School of
Nursing is looking at making continuing education
more accessible for nursing studimts.
Dr, Barbara Hatfield,
interim dean for the

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Details on Pace A2

INDEX

URG/RGCC
trainihg next
generation

Tellabration 2003 set
for Nov. 22 in Pomeroy

© 0003 Ohio Valley PubUshtng Co.

992-6611
,...QatOe

the

Tony
Stewart

s

Nove111ber Is National Ho111e Care
.· :
ancl .Hospice.· Month

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·106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis,,OH

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(74014&lt;UI-5301
(740) 992-1n2 or
1-888-225-1135

Main Street, • Rutland, Ohio

740-742-2289 or 1-800-837-8217

..

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Call for hours or to make an appointment

(740)446·5074 .
or

1-8()()-5()()-4850

17401446-9560
or
' 1-800-92Q-8860

'Your Health. Your Home. Your Choice."

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