<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="22631" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/22631?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T11:19:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="61093">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/abe83d4e5097fbc041777e6428c7842a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>9addfcf099f3326af10c41318f01c323</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="71247">
                  <text>Steelers steamroll
Ravens,B6

Bobcats blown out
by Iowa State, Bt

• •

CALL NOW! Take advantage of FREE hearing tests and our special rebate offer
SPORTS
Browns lose battle of
field goals. See Page 81
o Bengals still bad. See
Page 81
·
o

Think for a moment... you don't think twice about getting
your eyes tested... but what about your hearing?

• Aztecs accept millions
to take 16-13 loss on the

,.

road. See Page 81

I'm Abby Kyle and I invite you to call or come in for a FREE
Hearing Evaluation.
And, If you need hearing help... Be/tone is currently offering a $500 FACTORY REBATE on the most advanced digital technology in the industry, The Be/tone Oris.

Don't forget... we're Be/tone... the most
trusted name in hearing aids.

INSIDE
Vehicle, shotguns
seized as part of slaying
investigation. See Page A2
• -$!&gt;~@!Metals, unieR
reach 'tentative agreement.
See "Pirde A2
• Community calendar.
See Page A3
o Myths and facts about
Social Security retirement
benefits. See Page A3
• Morgan's Raid pictures.
See Page A6
o

People seem to mumble more frequently.
o You hear, but have trouble understanding
all the words in a conversation.
o You often ask people to repeat themselves
o

•

1312 Ea$tern Ave.

•

Gallipolis, Ohio

,.

HE~RING

...

LOSS

•

Your family complains that you play the TV
too loudly.
o You have been told that you speak too loudly.
o You experience ringing in your ears.

. WEATHER

o

Partly cloudy, HI: 701, low: 1101

If you experience any of these symptoms you need a FREE hearing t~¥·
' ...
•

,''(";

''
.

'

l

~

$500

. ,.
".

Detallo on Pace A2

INDEX ·

FACTORY
REBATE

2 S ECriONS -

Calendars
Classifieds

Receive a $500 Factory Rebate*
upon purchase of our digital technology,
Beltorie Oria™
•$500 rebate for two lnatrumenta. $250 rebate for alngle
lnatrumjlnta purch•-· Cannot be combined with dlecount off.,.•
or lnauranca plan•. Offer valid on purohaaea untll10115103.
Rebate muat be •ubmiHed by 1211103. Bellona H-rlng
Care Center• are Independently oWned and ope,..ted.

'

.

'
··
'
···································
'

w

•

••
•

4:

30 DAY TRIAL!

Factory trained specialists on hand.
COUPON S125.00 VALUE

•

•

..•

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED!
0% MONTHLY PAYMENTS

........................

•

•

••

~

..••

•

12 PAGES

A3
B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Movies

As

Sports

B1-2,6

Weather

~""'!·

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•
•••
•••

HEARING TEST

CHESTER- A long, hot
day in the saddle might
make almost any man want
to shoot someone while riding thrQugh Meigs County.
Confederate General John
Morgan's men have been
riding for more than 12
hour&gt; a day since the raid
began early Thursday morning in WilkesviUe.
Richard Lynch, 61 , of
Jaffrey, N.H., said the ride
Thur&gt;&lt;lay was hot because
of the humidity, but the riding was very gopd::Friday. · ·
"It has been : wonderful
riding through ~tl'li! · 'coun-··
try," he said.
Like many of Morgan's
men, Lynch has not had a
bath since Tuesday and he
has been wearing the same
clothes the whole time.
Lynch said toothbrushes
were optional. With that in
mind, the Civil War Ball
was probably ver'j interesting Friday evemng .
When General Morgan ·
addressed a crowd assembled in front of the old
Meigs County Courthouse
at Chester. he said his
troops have climbed
mountains so high that
they forgot they were on
mountains. By Friday,
Morgan and 192 horsemen
.,
had been through two skirmishes ·with Union forces
and had ridden across two All dressed up in period costuming for Saturday's parade are Brett Milhoan and hi s sister,
counties in two days. The Makya Milhoan, children of Mr. and Mrs. Rhett Milhoan, Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoefl1ch)
men's spirits were soaring.
"It's not bad riding l2
hours in the saddle," said
Confederate Trooper L K.
Mayall. Mayall, 48; is an
experienced horseman and
a seasoned re-enactor from
New Holland, Pa., who
has seen more than just the
sites at Gettysburg.
After liberating Chester,
Mayall and his horse
"Baldy'" set up camp along
the banks of the Shade
River qutside Chester.
There would be no soft ·
bed waiting for him, but. a
simple blanket placed on a
•
makeshift spot of ground
near a grove of trees. Confederate General
same as the original
John Hunt Morgan
raiders back in 1863.
takes
the field at the
"We're doing everything
Pickens Farm near
.. Chester. (J . Miles
Please see Ride, AS
·
Layton)
•, "I

'It .,.

~

Bv C!iARLENE HoEFLICH
hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel .com

1744 or 800-634-5265 -

WARNING SIGNS OF

Pomeroy
alive with
Raid
activities

BY

Abby Kyle- Hearing Aid Specialist

Hearing Aid Center

A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POM EROY - From midmorning on Saturday when
local legionnaires conducted
a ceremony al the Civil War
memorial on the courthouse
lawn , to nearl y midnight
when the last dance was held
at the Morgan's Raid · ball.
Pomeroy was alive with
activity.
The bicentennial parade led
by the Drew Webster Post 39
and a couple ree nactors fea'
tured colored !lags from all
88 counties carried by athletes of Ell!;tem, Meigs and
Southern High Schools.
As grand marshals of the
parade. George and Nellie
Wright rode in a horse-drawn
white carriage driven by John
Clonch. The Meigs . High
School band of Toney
Din ~ess provided appropriale
mus1c as the pamde moved
through town. Enhancing 1hc
yesteryear theme were t":'o
dozen ur so women and ch1l·
dren all ired in period costume.
Among the churches repre·
sented with lloats were the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church which is observing
it's bicemennial year and lhe
Enterprise Church. A tloal
featuring a replica of the
Chester Courthouse, a unit by
Return Jonalhan Meig'
Chapter of the Daughters of
the American Rcvo lu twn.
scouts and 4-H club mem·
bers, several polilicians. the
DARE car and a Pomeroy
fire truck were also included
in the parade.
About 60 men. women and
children in period costuming
took part in the grand prome·
nade which began at the
gazebo on lhe upper parking
lot. and conti nued down the
walkway alo ng lhe Ohio
Ri ver. Each participanl wa'
presented with a gift basket
by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association , sponsor of the
day's events.
. .
There were plemy ot lhmgs
to do and see all day in down ·
town Pomeroy and visitors
could do it by walking from
place to place. or riding in the
Clonch .carriage.
A marble shoot ing tournament was held wit41 trophies
being pre sented to the coun··
Please see Alive, AS

.,

EAR INSPECTIONl •

... , .,. ... c.

C.'
P.0. . . 117
RID A . . . 0t1 41174

Is it a hearing loss, or just ear wax? :~ •

COUPON sso.oo VALUE
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

•

/'

Morgan's
men ride
into
the
.
sunset

You deserve to hear all the wonderful things around you.
CI!J/1 now during Be/tone's better hearing days and their
factory rebate ... you have everything to gain.

Call

PSUP

MORGAN'S RAID

•

•'Tr.mma

coontllll'e IIVIIIIble for both hlab echool sllldflniB

inti adulta.

�. I

PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 8, 2003

States·push"for federal help in elections upgrade

0

:~"""
~~
'@D:I ~

Surtn~

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

tt.iilo •'~
Show&amp;rs

~;;._
~

&lt;;,

T·storms

Rain

-~. ·

..

g1fya· -·.·.:.~

~ ~~

Flurries

Sf1ow

Ice

Partly cloudy, cool
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Patchy tog and low
clouds
until
mid
morning .,.Then
variable
cloudiness . Highs in the
upper 70s, Northeast winds 5
to I0 mph.
Tonight .. .Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s. Light
and variable winds.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 70s. East
winds 5 to 10 mph .
Tuesday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows near 60.
Wednesday,.. Partly cloudy.

Highs near 80.
Wednesday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday ... Partly
cloudy,
Lows near 60 and highs in the
mid 80s.
Saturday.,. Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
Sunday,.,Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 60s and highs in the
upper 70s.

Vehicle, shotguns
seized as part of
slaying ·investigation
MOUNT HOPE (AP) Authorities seized a vehicle
and several shotguns from
two residences near where a
motorist, upset his car was
pelted with tomatoes, tired
mto a corntield, killing one.
Authorities used search warrants Friday and Saturday to
remove the items, Holmes
County Assistant Prosecutor
Steve Knowling said Sunday.
The residences, a couple of
hundred yards from each other,
are less than ti ve miles from
where Steven L. Keirn, 23, of
Orvi lie, was fatally shot Sept. I.
Keirn was hiding in the
cornfield with about 10 others, ages 15 to 23, who told
authorities they were throwing tomatoes and firing paintball guns at passing veh1cles.
Knowling would not say
who owns the residences or
what else was taken. He said
the sheriff department's
mvestigation and tips prompted the search warrants, wh1ch
County Court Judge Jane
Irving sealed. No one had
been arrested as of Sundar,
Knowling and the sheriffs
department said.
The items were sent to the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Identification
and Investigation for analysis,
Knowling said, Investigators also
have sent tour shell casings from

the scene of the shooting til BCI,

said Sheriff's Chief Deputy
Nathan Fritz.
Tests to identify any fingerprints on the casings are
expected to be completed
early this week, Fritz said,
The shooting has shocked
this Amish community about
60 miles south of Cleveland.
The county has what's
believed to be the world's
largest population of Amish.
Keirn was bocn into an Amish
famil •OOthis family left the Amish
wxl became Menoonites.
Mennonites share similar beliefs
with the Amish, but drive cars and
use modern conveniences.
According to the sheriff's
department, the driver of a
Lincoln or Cadillac stopped;
got out and threatened to shoot
whoever threw the tomatoes,
The vehicle turned around
and drove past the cornfield
again. The car was struck
with tomatoes a second time .
About 25 minutes later the
vehicle traveled past the cornfield two more times. On a
third pass, the driver stopped
and challenged the group to
throw more tomatoes, then
fired three to five rounds into
the corntield. Keirn died .of
multiple pellet wounds to the
chest, the coroner said.

ch:J;

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

1

(USPs 213-9801

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an errdr In 9 Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992-· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Assoclallon.
Our main number Ia
Poetmlattr:
Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Department extensions are: Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

News

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
Reporter; Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J, Miles Layton. Exl. 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Exl. 15
Cta11JCin:.: Judy Clark, Exl. 10

Circulation
Olllrlct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charle&lt;le Hoellich, Exl. 12
E-mail:
news C mydailysenlineLcom
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

Subacrlptlon Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month .......... ..'9.95
One yoor . . .. ... .. .. .'119,40
Dally .. .. . . . .......... .50'
Senior Citizen ratoe
One month .... . ..... . .'8.95
One.year , .. ..... . ....'96.70
Subscribers

should

remit

in

advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subscriplion by mail
permined In areas where home
carrier service is available.

Mall Subscription
!nelda Melgl County
13Weeks . ....... ... .. '30.15
26 Weeks , , .. . . .. , . , . ,'60,00
52 Weeks .... ... . . .. .'118.80'

R•t•• Outalde Melga County
13 Weeks . . . . . . . . .. . ' 50.05
26 Weeks ,, ..... ,., ..'100.10
52 Weeks ...... ...... '200.20

..

President Bush announced
Some Ohio counties that
"Let's just hope that
COLUMBUS (AP)
his
plans in June to nominate
Obstacles still face Ohioans Congress doesn't make this have tested new voting systwo
people to the commisexpecting to see upgraded an endless summer for elec- terns are concerned about
reform,"
Leslie being ready for next year's sion: Paul DeGregorio, execvoting machines when they tion
utive vice president of the
arrive to cast ballots next year. Reynolds, executive director presidential elect ion.
Those concerns inc Iude , International Foundation for
A judge last week ordered of the National Association of
Systems, and
Secretary of State Kenneth Secretaries of State, said-in an relying on a new system in a Election
Blackwell io consider anoth- NASS newsletter last month. presidential year and havmg Deforest Soaries Jr., the forThe federal Help America the resources and people mer New Jersey secretary of
er bid by a company that
makes v~ting machines. Vote Act requires new voting av.ailable to truin poll work- state. The Senate must
approve the president's nomBlackwell has dismissed the machines for Ohio's 88 ers and other employees
The act calls for the ere- inees to the commission.
company -. Sequoia Voting counties, along with the rest
"The nomination process is
Systems Inc. of Oakland, of the nation, by the 2004 ation of the four-member
still
ongoing but this is an
election. Election
Assistance
Calif. - as a potential sup- presidential
imponant
commission that the
plier for new voting Congress passed the law Commission to help states .
The commission was sup- president wants to see up and
machines to Ohio's county after problems with Flori&lt;.h1.'s
election system in the 200!l~ed to be in place 111 running as quickly as possiboards of ele~tion,
Blackwell says only three presidential election .
~~~ary,
said
K&lt;tY ble ... White House spokesman
Ohio is expecting more Albowi~tz. spokeswoman for Jim Morrell said. Friday.
companies have met the
Bla~kwell said questions
qualifications he outlined in than $140 million in federal the Nati'tnal Association ot
about
a key issue facing
a request for proposals this money to help install the Secretaries f State.
states
-.
the security of new
" It's reall caused a lot of
year. He's appealing the new systems.
Counties will have a problems.'' Jil. owicz said . voting machines- can't be
JUdge's order.
Meanwhile. a national choice of electronic touche "This commi"ion is sup- answ,-ed until the commis. group representing state screen niachines or machines posed to be · answering a sion is in place.
Once thut happens, "Ohio
that read markings on paper. number of questions and
1 elect1ons officials is calling
and other states can establish
m\ Congress to speed up the known as optical scanners. helping states. "
1l1ose questions indude how the next generation of highcreation of the new fedeml They will replace the punchagency meant [0 help staies card and mechanical lever to best upgmde voting tech voting standards and the
comply with mandatory vot- voting systems currently in machines and make sure tl-.e laws and policies that go
ing requirements. ·
most Oh1o counties.
equipn)ent' is secure from t'mud. with them.' he said.

Bank is brewing a warmer retail environment
CLEVELAND (APJ Many banks are trying to
become pl&lt;tces customers can
relax. spend some time considering tinancial strategies
and perhaps sip their favorite
coffee, industry experts say.
An Ohio-based bank is
planning to gradually add
Starbucks coffee shops to
some branches. As pah of the
arrangement. Charter One
branches that include a
Starbucks will be open from
6 a.m . to 10 p.m .. the same
hours as the coffee shop.
"They're (Starbucks) in
every sense of the word a
premier retailer with great
customer recognition and a
brand that everybody's familiar with," said Mark Grossi,
executive vice president and
chief retail officer of
Cleveland-based
Charter
One Financial.

Special
Metals, union
reach tentative
agreement
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Special Metals
Corp. and union officials
have reached a tentative
agreement.
The two sides reached
common ground Sunday,
one day after contract
talks restarted in an effort
to avoid a strike and keep
the company's West
Virginia plant open.
Last week a federal
bankruptcy judge in
Kentucky accepted the
company's two motions to
void the workers' contract
and retiree benefits at its
Huntington plant. Judge
William S. Howard sa1d
he would not sign the
order until Sept. II to give
the two sides time to
resolve their issues.
Rick Lewis, president of
United Steelworkers of
America Local 40, said
Sunday that the union will
hold an informational
meeting on the new agreement Wednesday, witlt voting to be held on Thursday.
He said he did not want
to discuss details of the
agreement before. sharing
them with union members.
Local 40 members twice
voted last month to reject a ·
new, live-year contract.
Similar contracts had
already been approved at
other Special Metals plants
in Kentucky and New York.
Special
Metals
is
Huntington's largest manufacturing employer and the
66th
largest
private
employer in West Virginia.
The company filed for
Chapter II bankruptcy
protection in March 2002.
The Huntington plant,
which specializes in heatresislallt nickel alloy products
for the aerospace and automotive industries, employs
984 people; 612 of them are
represented by the union and
covered Wl(ler the contr.lCI.
Special Metals acquired
Huntington-based
lnco
Alloys International from
lnco
Ltd.,
formerly
International Nickel Co., in
late 1998. From that acquisition until Special Metals
tiled for bankruptcy. the
company reponed only one
profitable quarter. ·

•

The first Charter One
branch to feature a Starbucks
will open in Albany. N.Y..
most likely this year. A sec.ond wi II open next spring
near Rochester, N.Y. , with
others
planned .
for
Indianapolis. The plans do
not include any Charter One
branches in Ohio.
Charter One has more than
550 branches, including
more than 100 inside grocery
stores, in Ohio, Illinois.
Indiana, Michigan, New
York and Connecticut.
Seattle-based Starbucks
Corp.. the nation's biggest
specialty coffee retailer.
operates nearly 5,900 coffee
shops in 25 countries,
It sells coffee in seven Wells
Fargo banks in San Francisco.
as well as inside Barnes &amp;
Noble bookstores, shopping
centers, supermarkets, office

buildings. airport terminals
.a11d at least one hospital. the
Cleveland Clinic.
"This is just part of an
overall trend i1i retail banking
these days to focus on the
individual and small business
customers." said Tmcey
Mills. a spokeswtumm for the
Washington-based American
Bankers Association .
"So there are designs
encouraging customers to
come into the branch. even
though there is technology
available to access m:~ounts
any time and any place."
The association is planning a
bankers' marketing conterence
from Sept. 14 to 16 in Chicago
to consider such ideas.
One motivator behind the
trend was federal legislation
in 1999 that allowed banks tQ
do business in tinancial services other than traditional

banking. such as selling securities m insurance, Mills said.
When a bank's customers
are willing to stop into a
branch and stay a while, the
branch has more opponunity
to provide them with information about various services, she said.
Comfortable lounges with
lntemet access and play areas
for children arc becoming
more common at banks as
they try to create a more personal, meaningful relationships with customers. she said.
,;It's a nice publiCity ploy in
my view," said banking analyst
Fred Cummings, of McDQnald
Investments in Cleveland.
,;Starbucks absolutely has a
great brand name, It's a nice
convenience to go into the
bank and get your coffee on the
way to work. You .might not
even do any banking."

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRIClJl T LJRE

MEDICAl

Community calendar
Public meetings

meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Meigs County Courthouse.
CHESHIRE - Disabled
Monday, Sept. 8
Meeting time change ·
American Veterans '#53 picSYRACUSE
_
The nic, 6 p.m., Cheshire Park .
Syracuse Board of Public
TUPPERS PLAINS
Affairs has changed its meet- Eastern Elementary PTO will
ing date from Sept. 1 to Sept. have its first meeting at 6
8. The meeting will be held at p.m. at the school . .
RACINE - Regular meet7 p.m . in the water board
If'
s
.
ing
of Racine Chapter 134,
0 ICe 0 1 yracuse Village ' Order of the Eastern Star will
Hall .
POMEROY
F. d
f be held at 7·:30 p.m. Monday
nen s 0 at the hall
Pomeroy Public Library, 7
Tu~sday Sept 9
P:m · at the Middleport Public
POMEROY - ' The' Meigs
Library.
Cunty GeAealogical Society
Tuesday, Sept. 9 . wil meet at 5 p.m. Tuesdday
POMEROY
Meg1s at the Meigs County
County Board of Elections, Museum . Anyone interested
in genealogy is welcome.
8:30a.m. at the office .
POMEROY Bedford Those wanting to have their
Township Trustees, 7 p,m. at family chart placed in the
the town haiL
upcoming ancestor chart
CHESTER
- Chester book should send it to the
Township Board of Trustees society.
Wednesday, Sept. 10
regular monthly meeting, 7
p.m., Chester Town HaiL
GALLIPOLIS
Wednesday, Sept. 10
Southeastern
Ohio
POMEROY
- Meigs Advocates for Recovery will
County Board of Health meet at 2:30 p.m. on
meets 5 p,m., in conference Wednesday at the Galliaroom of Meigs County Health Jackson-Meigs Board of ·
Dept .. 112 E. Memorial Dr.
Alcohol Drug Addition and
Mental Health Services, 53
Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.

Holzer Medical Center

www.Jimsfarmequlpment.com

www.holzercllnic.com

Norris Northup Dodge

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis,

www.pvalley.org
BUSINESS TRAINING

www.turnpikeflm.com

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

CHURCHES
Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info
NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

ENTERTAINMENT

www.mydailytribune.com
CharterCommu.nications

www.charter.com

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Window Systems, Inc.

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

Monday, Sept. 8
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Republican Club will

Saturday, Sept. 13
CHESHIRE - The 36th
Samuel Allen Eblin family

honor cords.
Thoene graduates wilh 4.0
GPA
in
Busine"
Administration . He is a student in the Honors Tutorial
College . An Eagle Scout. he
remains a leader in scouling..
serving as both an assistant
den leader and assistmit
scoutmaster. Thoene is also
an active memher of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, where he holds the
position of Sunday school
superintendent, In addition.
he is u member of ·Alphu
Lambda Deltlt. !he Golden

Key International Honor
Soci ety. and the Mortar
Board National Senior Honor
Sol'ictv.
Tho~nc has made the
Dean's List every quarter and
has rec~ei ved several scholarships.
including
the .
President's scholarship and
the Dean's scholarship,
Between quarters of his col kgc career. he has interned at
the law firm of Little, Sheets,
and Warner. Following graduation , he will attend graduate school at Ohio University
to pursue his MBA .

School news
Thoene presented
excellence award
ATHENS - Wesley Steven
Thoene of Pomeroy was
recently
presented
the
Academic Ex~ellence Award
in Business Administration
. from the Ohio University
College of Business,
· The award honors topranked graduating seniors in
their chosen area of study.
Thoene was recognized at
commencement as the top
graduate
in
Business
Administration and wore

Emily Dickinson comes to life
MILES LAYTON

.llaytonCmydallysentlnet.com
CHESTER - Renowned dead poet Emily
Dickinson made an appearance at
Confederate .General John Morgan's skirmish
at the Pickens Farm a few miles from Chester.
Gina Pines, who studied Dickinson while
she was in college, dressed up as the woman
who would explore the world from her bedroom in Amherst, Mass. Dickinson was a prolific writer during the Civil War.
School children of all ages approached Pines,
who was dressed in Dickinson s trademark long
white dress, to ask questions about the poet who
inspired a generation of writers. Ashley Stone. 9,
from Columbus asked why Dickinson was
refe_rred to as "the myth" by ,!he townspeople.
Pmes sa1d D1ckm son dec1ded to shut herself
off from the world and never leave the com. fort of her own home. She was never seen
again in Amherst and l?eoplc thought that
maybe Dickinson was a 'myth" because they
did not know whether or not she truly existed.
Pines has seen many of the original drafts of
Dickinson's work on file at Harvard
University. Before Morgan invaded and raided
the P1~kens Farm. D1ckmson dtsappe&lt;u·ed mto

our

DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

Dead Poet Emily Dickinson {Gina Pines) was
more than a m)1h Friday at the Pickens Farm in
Chester. Dickinson told students from ~ear and
far about her poetry and life . Dickinson was very
prolific .during the Civil War. (J. Miles Layton)
tl1e crowd probably to write another poem in
the seclusion of her hom ~.
Pi1-.es is director of the Meigs Rio Grande Bmnch.

Do You Just"'~n~
Your Sentinel
Newspaper Carri

www.mydailyregister.com

,?.
;t;;
\s)_ &lt; youW~Bd;iT~

t/!'trv~t

Birthdays
Gwinnie White of 100 East
Memorial Drive , Apt 309,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 will
observe her 90th birthday on
Wednesday, Sept 10.

Point Pleasant Register

•
Take your business into the homes
of over 40,000 consumers in
4'[ Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties
EVERYDAY with a listing of

00

Tuesday, Sept. 9
GALLIPOLIS
Fibromyalgia Support Group.
5:30 to 8:30 p.m . in the
Holzer
Medical
Center
Education and Cnference
Center, To register or for more
information call Missi Ross,
740-446-5121 .

Reunions

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
~

Support groups

www.holzer.org
Holzer Clinic

AUTOMOTIVE

reunon will be held at the
Cheshire Village Park. There
will be a 4 p.m. social hour
with a covered dish dinner
following . Family members
are to take table service. a
covered dish and their own
beverage.
Sunday, Sept. 14
RACINE - Mryta Kerwood
and Chapman Hill family
reunion 1 p.m. Star Mill Park ,
Racine. Carry-in dinner. All
famly and friends invited.
POMEROY - Wood famUy
reunion , 12:30 p.m. picnic
lunch · at the King Farm,
39858 Smith Road , Pomeroy.

Clubs and .
Organizations

Bv J.

Jim's Farm Equipment

BY THE BEND

the Daily Sentinel

Nominate them for

Keeping
Meigs
·County
informed

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your ~
carrier will win dinner
ni~
f&lt;;&gt;r two at
rjiiAt'
.·

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut '

'r

Th

Do~1

e
·.. Sentine

I .)

send us your name, address and phone number.

2 .) Include your carri er's nan1e , your route numbe r

3 .)

..
.

•

.

or subscriber number.
In 50 words or tess, ten us why we should choose
your carrier.

'
Mall your entries to: Paul Barker
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, O N 456J I

•

PageA3

Monday, September 8,

2003

Woman's dream wedding does
not include fiance's family
DEAR ABBY: I have been
dating "Karl'',for nearly two
years , We are discussing
marriage. The problem is. I
can 't stand his family. They
are rude. unkempt. lazy and
opinionated. ,i(arl's finnily
blames me for helping him to
overcome his poor social
skills and unhealthy lifestyle .
Karl has lost a lot of weight
smce we staned dming. He
now wears dean clothes and
has had his teeth tixed.
I ' have always wanted a
lavish outdoor wedding and
reception. but I don't want
to invite Karl's family. I am
afraid they will ruin it. I
think it might be better to
have a small civil ceremony.
Karl dis_a~rees , and it's ~au sIng a ntt m our relatiOnship.
Please help. - BEWILDERED IN OHIO
DEAR BEWILDERED:
Before your wedding plans
go turther, you and Karl
have some importmll issues
to 1ron out. For better or
worse. those rude. unkempt.
lazy. opinionated people me
his family. Do you expect
hun to divorce them in order
to marry you" If the answer
is yes. tell .him now. If the
answer no. accept that Karl
• comes with some heavy
baggage that will be difficuh
to handle. unless a way is
found for you to accept his
family the way they arc.
Remember, too, that his parents will be YOUR children's grandparents. So look
again before you leap.
DEAR ABBY: I am gay
and have been dating
"Warren" for more than four

Dear
Abby

years. He's wonderful.' The
pmbtem is. some memhers
of his family strongly
oppose his homnsexuality
and are rude when we visit
his parents .
Because of their overt
hostility, I no longer wish to
attend these family func tions . However. I want
Warren to i.."Onlinue to go tn
the gatherings - without
me . Warren disa~rees . He
says I should contmue to go
with him. because the more
his family sees us together.
the more understanding
they'll bewme.
Do you agree'' Should I go
to Warren's family gatherings. even though it' s clear
that I am not welcome'' - HELPLESS IN HARTFORD, CONN .
DEAR HELPLESS: Since
this treatment has continued
for more than four years, it's
obvious Warren's family is
not receptive to the two llf
you as a couple . Warren
might , try speaking to his
parents about this pwblem.
1f he hasn't ulreudy. But if
that doesn't , change the
atnmsphere. I see no reason
for either of you to subject
yourselves to more rudeness

or hostility.
DEAR ABBY: I have been
widowed for live years. My
neighbor. "Matt ." lost his second wile three years ago. We
are both in o'ur 60s amJ have
been friendly fm two years.
Man seems convinced that
every woman who is nice to
him has marriage on her
mind. I don 't want to remarry ~ and he knows it - but
it dnesn ' t seem to mancr. He
has been in my home
numerous times. but nothing
.comes of it. He seems shy.
and I know he is lnnely. but
he doesn ' t seem intcres.ted
· in an intimate relationship.
Man is a wonderful man . I
know he and I wuld be doser if he would just open up a
linle. People need penple.
Abby. What do you suggest'' ,
- PEOPLE PERSON IN
PEORIA
DEAR PEOPLE · PER SON: That you ease up and
&lt;tccept your neighbor for the
person he is. Man may not .
want an intimmc relmionship - or he m&lt;ty he unable
to have one .
'It's also possible he doesn't w&lt;tnt to be hurt again .
His reasons are his own. and
if you prcssme him. you
may cause the end of a very
nice friendship .
Dear Abhy is written by
Abigail Van Bu.n·n. also
known as Jeanne Phillips.
and was founded by her
mother. Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.cnm or P.O.
Box 69440. Los Angeles.
CA LJ006&lt;J .

Myths and facts about Social

Security retirement benefits
LtSA CRUMP
Special to the Sentinel
BY

Social Security is a vital ·
program that touches the
lives of almost everyone in
the country. In part because
of its size and in part
because of its national
impact, there are many
myths and misunderstandings about the program.
Myth: My Social Security
benefits will be based on my
last three years of ear,nings.
Fact: Social S~curity
retirement benefits are based
on a lifetime of earnings. To
figure your benefit, we will
add up your highest 35 years
of earnings after adjusting
each year for inflation. Then
we will divide by 420 'the
number of months in 3 5
years) to come up with your
average lntlation-adjusted
monthly wage. Then we
apply a formula that
replaces a percentag~ of that
monthly wage with a Social
Security benefit. Assuming
you earn an average income.
your re'tirement benefil

would represent about 40
percent of your pre-retirement earnings.
Myth: I can take my
reduced retirement benefits
at age 62 and later switch to
full retirement benefits at
my full retirement age.
Fact: If you take an early
retirement benefit, you generally will live with a permanent reduction. Your benefit does not increase when
you reach your "full · retirement age." (A handy chart
on
our
website
at
www.socialsecurily.go can
tell you what your full
retirement age is,) You must
decide if you're financially
able to live with the reduced
benefit for the rest of your
life or if you'd be better off
waiting until your full retirement age to get a higher
monthly rate. A · Social
Security representative can
go over the numbers with
you so you can make an
informed decision.
Myth: There is a limit to
how much a m&lt;trried couple
can receive.
Fact: There is no "marriage

penalty"
with
Social
Security. As u general rule,
nothing prevents each member of a married couple from .
receiving his or her own
Social Security benefit. For
example , if a husband has
worked and earned u $1 ,000
monthly Social Security
check, and if his wife has
worked and earned a $1,200
Social Security check. they
will each get their full benefit for a total of $2,200 per
month in Social Security
benefits.
Myth: If I take my own
Social Security ben~fit, I am
always locked into it. If my
husband Iuter dies. I cannot
switch to a widow's benefit
on his record.
Fact : A woman who
becomes a widow can
switch to benefits on her
husband's record if it is to
her advantage to do so. (A
widower a],, o can make the
switch if it pays him more
money,)
(Lisa Cntmp i.~ tile So£·ial
in
Security
Manager
Atlwll.\'. )

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF
MEIGS COUNTY?
111

ord~r

to 110te in tlte No11ember 4, 1003 Gerteral Elatio11 you m11st be rt:ttistered by'
October 6, 1003.

'

'

Vote at yortr 11e11' pred1tct a11d ,u•oid lo11~ liii&lt;'S at tlu· b&lt;&gt;ard ,,. Elecrim1 D•lJ' by cltan~- '
ing yortr addreu (ifyortlliii'I'IIIIII'Cd ll'it/ri!t tire C&lt;llmty) or ifJ'Oit ''"'''' cltall,t!t'd yo1tr
name, by ltJidillill,t! your rt•gistrillion by October 6,1003 .
Tltr board of elrctimu ll'ill be 11pm tire firllowilrg additiottal lrmus .for your cortl'ffl it•nu:

I

September 15-September 19-8:00 a.m. till 4:36p.m.
September 22-September 26-8:0Q a.m. till 4:30p.m.
September 29-0ctober 3-8:00 a.m. till 4:30p.m.
October 6-8:00 a.m. til/4:30p.m.
You may also register at tlte.foll.m•irrg locations: Ml'igs Couuty Departflll'llt •?f Human ,
Servius, Meigs County WIC Qffiu, License Brrreatt, Board of MRIDD, PomerOJ' '
Public Library, Middleport Prtblic Library, Easter11 Library, Meigs County Treasurers
I"'
Office, a11d all area higlt schoolsI
For any additional information, call 991-1697, or stop by our o,ffrce located at 117 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, 0/rio, Mrigs Courtty Courrltotm Annex. QOice locmed
. bl'lri11d Holur Clinic, Meigs Branclr . .

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 8, 2003

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

VIEW

Debates
Playing the scfe game
Los Angeles 7imes, on Schwarzenegger and debates:
Arnold Schwarzenegger campaigns for governor as an outsider, but he 's acting like just another business-as-usual pol by
refusing to enter more than one debate or candidate forum
before the Oct. 7 election to recall Gov. Gray Davis.
It's an old front-runner's tactic : Don't expose yourself to
attacks by your opponents when you get all the attention you
want through celebrity and media attention ....
Only live. unrehearsed questions can take the measure of
the candidates. Office-seekers should have to spontaneously
demonstrate their familiarity with big issues like the state's .
chronic budget troubles and at least outline how they would
address them. But Schwarzenegger is following another old
political dictum: The less specific you are, the less you give
your opponents to .criticize.
Debates are particularly necessary in a short campaign like
this one. Schwarzenegger says voters are tired of the old politics and old ideas. One round of rehearsed answers would be
a slam-dunk for actor Schwarzenegger. But that won't give
voters any new politics or better ideas- or any good reasons
to vote for a candidate who refuses to do more.

Most of us on Labor Day
took breaks from jobs we
had not aspired to hold. One
thing led to another and you
found yourself in a job that
maybe isn't better or worse,
Joan
but certainly different from
Ryan
what you had in mind back
when yoJI pretended to be
·Sandy· Koufax in the backyard.
I say this as introduction toned to his neck with an
to Ryan Lee, supervisor of old-timey oval patch on the
headstone operations at San right breast that says
Francisco
National "Ryan." He grew up in
Cemetery in the Presidio: He Reedley, a farming town
and his two-man crew south of Fresno, where at 15
straighten headstones.
he worked summers packing
Sometimes
they
dig the peaches, nectarines and
graves for the spouses of other tree fruit that keeps the
those already interred. (The locals working 16- hour
cemetery stopped taking in days for three or four
new military casualties months of the year. Then he
some
years
ago.) moved on to year-round
Sometimes,
when
the work at the glass plant,
groundskeeping responsibil- where he learned to be a
ities are light, they trim the glasscutter. Then he so ld
grass around the headstones.. Fords for five years.
But mostly they keep the
He landed the headstone
30,000 headstones in the 28- job by answering an ad on
acre cemetery lined up in the Ca!Works Web site .
plumb-straight rows, like During his interview, the
soldiers
at
attention. boss pointed to a headstone
Shifting soil and rain cause and told Lee to lift it. Each
them to loosen and become of the white military headcrooked.
· stones weighs 250 pounds.
It is backbreaking work, Lee lifted 'it and got the job
as Lee will be the first to tell on the spot.
you. He's been :;tt the job for
Then he had to [earn the
about 2-112 years and tig· art of straightening.
First, Lee explains to me,
ures he has only about
another full year in him. the crew puts down string to
"It's too hard," he says. ''I'd guide their lines, working in
get a little arthritic.'' .
sections of 15 rows up and
Lee is a wiry 35-year-old 10 across. Then they cut out
in a· striped work sltirt but- a square of grass behind the

headstone and set it aside to
be replaced afterward.
They dig a hole 14 inches
deep, which allows Lee to
lift the stone out of the
ground. Each stone is 42
inc.hes high -- exactly 24
inches above the ground and
18 inches below.
The empty holes are then
tamped with a sledgehammer to just the right depth,
taking into account that -the
headstone will compress the
soil either I inch or 2,
depending on the looseness
of the soil.
Thi s prep work for the
I SO-stone section takes the
three-man operation about
IQ hours.
Then the headstones go
back in. A worker lifts the
stone off the ground and
stands it upri ght, then he
lifts it again and drops it into
the hole. If he has calculated
perfect ly, he needs only to
fill in the dirt around stone,
replace the patch of grass
and he's finished. But often
there is some tinkering, dig·
ging out dirt or adding some
until the ·stone is exactly 24
inches above ground. The
replacement step takes , on
average, .about !'ive minutes
per headstone . Each man
can reset about 70 stones in
a day.
"My first day, I got about
six or seven in ," Lee said.
"My supervisor was a~out to
die."
He tell s about the rainy
day when thick mud stuck to

all the stones. Lee and his
crew lifted away the ground
to put the markers back into
their holes. When the rows
were all finished, straight a&amp;
yardsticks, Lee realize&lt;)
some of the headstones hao
been pijt in backward. In the
mud, the crew couldn't tell
front from back.
"We' re still getting razze~;i
for that," Lee says, smiling:
"And Mike (his boss) is still
finding them."
Spend any time in a ceme·
tery, as Lee does, and yo1,1
feel not only the weight of
dirt and sto ne , but the
weight of all the stories
packed into these acres of
earth. Lee still reads the
headstones as he works: an
ft:tdi an guide named Two Bit
who Lee once read about in
a book; a woman who was
Union spy; a private whose
comrades decided a standard
headstone wouldn't do and
bought him a 4-foot high
obelisk engraved with poe(,.
ry about his bravery chiseled
into the sides.
·
It matters to Lee that the
headstones stand in digni.
fied . perfect ro ws. In thi s job
he never imagined, he takes
care of those whose jobs
demanded more than they;
too, might. ever nave imag ined.

a

(Joan Ryan is a columnist
for tire San Francisco ·
Clmmicle. S&lt;'nd comments
to her in care of this newspaper or send her e-mail at
jo(IIJ YJW1@ sfchmn icle.com)

•••••••

The Birmingham (Ala.) News, on destroying domestic
chemical weapons:
When the issue is deadly toxins, there's no room for error.
That's why American taxpayers are spending billions of dollars to destroy chemical weapons in Anniston and why officials there insisted that millions of dollars be spent on emergency response gear.
But all the grand scientific designs and disaster planning
won't go very far to protect the public if the Army doesn't
shoot straight when thtngs go wrong at the incinerator.
So far, it's not looking good.
'
After insisting that an alarm Aug. 21 had falsely indicated a
sarin leak at the incinerator, the Army has now acknowledged
it was no false alarm. Sarin was actually detected in a room
where blades that cut up rockets had been washed.
Army spokesman Mike Abrams acknowledged the leak just
this past Monday, having repeated the false alarm story as
recently as Friday. He said he got the story wrong because he
didn't ask the right questions of incinerator officials. This was
no effort to deceive the public, he said, just a failure to com- '
municate.
His explanation is supposed to be· what· comforting? ...
This is a deadly serious matter. The people of Anniston must
be able to rely on the Army to keep them informed about the
incinerator. Any deception seeping from the facility is as toxic
as sarin to public confidence. It kills it. That is cause for real
alarm.

.U[; CAN'T lK
Am Cf i--llS WlfbS
~NNl/ TO KhTC.\tUP,
vvv 1UA1 lib'S

&amp;:J.I&amp;INZ tl'[ \Nn.u:
RACb! ~~S lN A

:CMQ\JA

Tt-U€&gt; lS_
GCNNAeb
ALONG
RAa;r

RCllt. 6b:\

lT?ON A

.,. . ROLL'

PltKL6! t OON'T
RI;L\SW ~\S ?OSlT\ON!
Lbr; FtU: n. Ju;
CAN'T CUT -n.\6
MUSTAt2D

TODAY IN HISTORY

Tne Taunting Continues..,

Today is Monday, Sept. 8, 2003 the 251 st day of 2003 and
the 80th day of summer.
TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in 1664, New
Amsterdam became New York as the British seized control of
the city from Dutch Governor Peter ~tuyvesant.
On this day in 192 1, Margaret Gorman of Washington,
D.C. was crowned the first Miss America.
On this day in 1974, Preside nt Gerald Ford pardoned
Richard Nixon for any crimes he may have committed or participated in while in office.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Sid Caesar (1922-), comedian, is
81; Peter Sellers ( 1925-1980), actor; Patsy Cline ( 1932-1963 ),
singer; Aimee Mann ( 1960-), musician, is 43; Jonathan Taylor
Thomas ( 1981 -), actor, is 22.
TODAY'S SPORTS: On this day in 1965, Kansas City's Bert
Campaneris played all nine positions in one baseball game.
TODAY'S QUOTE: "The trouble with telling a good story
is that it invariably remi11ds the other fellow of a dull one."-·
Sid Caesar
TODAY'S MOON: Between first quarter (Sept. 3) and full
moon (Sept. I0).

Moderately Confused

OO!HifR·

C 2003 by NEA. Inc.

Sentencing riform gains ~nlikely allies
A senior federal .judge had
this to say recently about
criminal justice in America:
"Our resources are misspent,
our punishments . too severe,
our sentences too long.''
The problem, he added, is a
system of sentencing g\lidelines and mandatory criminal
penalties
enacted
by
Congress that simply does
not work to reduce crime ot
protect citizens. "I can accept
neither the necessity nor the
wisdom of federal mandatory
minimum sentences," the
jurist explained. "In too many
cases, mandatory minimum
sentences are unwise or
unjust."
These are not the words of
some bleeding-heart liberal
with a soft spot for criminals.
In fact, they were spoken by
Justice Anthony Kennedy, a
reliably conservative voice
on the Supreme Court who
was appointed by Ronald
Reagan.
What
makes
Justice
Kennedy's argument so striking is that it directly contradicts the current ·policies of
the Bush administration and
its leading voice on criminal
justice issues, Attorney
General John Ashcroft.
Ashcroft is detennined to do
exactly the opposite of what
Kennedy recommends by
increasing penalties rather
than lightening them, .and
restricting judicial discretion
· instead of expanding it.
Last spring, at Ashcroft 's
prodding, Congress passed a
law urging a crackdown on

first enacted mandatory
penalties and federal sentencing guidelines. Since then,
the
federal prison population
Cokle
has increased almost fivefold,
and
and
the total number of pri sSteven
oners in all jurisdictions now
Roberts
tops 2 million. To put this tigure into perspective, one out
of every 143 Americans is in
jail compared to I out of
judges who regularly issue every 1.000 citizens in
sentences that are more European countries like
lenient than the federal guide- · England and Italy. ·
lines. Ashcroft then followed
But that is. not enough for
up a few weeks ago by direct- Ashcroft. He's still furious
ing the federal court adminis- that in nearly 35 percent of all
trator to start keeping records federal criminal cases last
detailing the performance of year, the sentences fell below
these judges.
official guidelines. Never
This campaign represents a mihd th,e fact that in most of
triumph of rigid ideology and these cases the government
political demagoguery over went along with the lighter
practical reality. Many judges penalties, accepting a plea
and prosecutors side with bargain in exchange for coopJustice Kennedy, not with the eration by the defendant . In
attorney general, in this dis- John Ashcroft's world,
pute. But in the current eli- leniency is a sign of weakmate, it is impossible for ness , and mercy borders on
Congress to stand up to the immoral.
Ashcroft and ri sk being . Since federal judges are
branded soft on crime. That's appointed for life, Ashcroft
why many Democrats voted can't remove any of his tarfor the anti-leniency provi- gets. But he can make their
sion. .
.
li v~s miserable. This very
The Irony ts .that the Bush pomt was made by Chief
administration, in virtually Justice William Rehnquist ,
every other area of public hardly a criminal -coddler,
policy, favors givin~ local who wa_rned that the attorney
?ffict_als more authonty. But general s campaign "could
111 tli1s area, where many of amount to an unwarranted
those officials disagree with and iii-'Considered effort to
the White House, the presi- intimidate individual judges
dent wants more power cen- in the ·performance of their
tralized in Washington.
judicial duties."
This battle goes back to the
It would be one thing if
mid-1980s, when Congress loJler sentences and less

judicial di screti on actually
reduced crime and made people feel safer. But in the view
of Ashcroft's critics. the very
opposite is true.
Listen to Judge John S.
Martin Jr.. appointed to the
federal ben ch bv the first
President Bush,- who ·has
denounced the current sentencing system as "unnecessarily cruel and rigid ." When
Steve interviewed him on
NPR. Judge Martin maintained that in many cases,
" we ' re ware houswg
.
peop I"'...
~ho are dangerous to no

one."

A smarter idea, he says, is
using the JllOney now spent
on impriso ning nonviolent
criminals to bolster police
patrols and expand drug reha•
bilitation programs.
Justice Kennedy concede~
that some prisoners are incor•
rigible criminal s who will
never ~ reformed. However,
he adds: "We must try to
bridge the gap between proper
skepticism about rehabilitation on one hand and improper refusal to acknowledge that .
the more than 2 million
inmates in the United Siates
are human beings whose
minds and spirits we must try
to reach.''
·
That's not a popular message
today. The "lock 'em up and
throw away the key" crowd is
riding high in Washington. But
conservative jurists like
Kennedy, Rehnquist _and
Martin think there 's a better
way to make ou( streets safer.
and they deserve to be heard .

'

POMEROY- The Meigs
High School .Band Boosters
Meeting scbeduled for
tonight has been canceled
and
rescheduled
for
Monday, Sept. 15. It ,will be
held at 6:30 p.m. in the band
room, and all band parents
are encouraged to attend.

Business after
Yoga classes to hours set
CHESTER - The Meigs
begin

'

POMEROY- Beginning ·
yoga classes wll begin Sept.
15 at the Senior Citizens
Center. They will continue
from 6 . to 7 p.m. each
Monday through Nov. 17.

County
Chamber
of
Commerce will be having a
business after hours session
at 5:30 p.m on Tuesday. The
event will be hosted and
held at the Chester Court
House.

President seeks $87
billion in anti-terror funds

SACRAMENTO. Calif.
(AP) - Polls are playing a
prominent - albeit capricious - role in this year 's
gubernatorial race, as voters
face an unprecedented recall
election and a colorful cast of
135 replacement candidates.
In just one month, candidates have cited polls as the
reason for entering the race.
dropping out or asking their
opponents to drop out. And
most have used polls to help
them raise money. So far, campaign finance report s show.
the candidates have spent
more than $200,000 on polls.
But just when polls have
become most essential, many
say they have become the
most unreliable. Changes in
the way Californians and
Americans live have made
calls from opinion pollsters
unwelcome intrusions. forcing
them to make more calls and
take more time to get what
they hope is a representative
sample of public opit\ion.
"Polling has always been difficult to do, but it is just getting
that much worse- I think half
the time these guys are just
guessing,"
said
Allan
Lichtman, a historian and political scientist at American
University in Washington, D.C.
"It's really an an not a science."
So few people vote these
days that polltakers are lucky
to judge who will vote and
who won 't, Lichtman . said.
Since most people now don 't
focus on campaigns until just

WASHINGTON (AP) must begin the process . of
President Bush, facing fully engaging our allies and
doubts about his handling of sharing the burden of buildIraq amid rising casualties, ing a stable democracy in
is asking Congress for $87 Iraq," said Rep . Dick
billion to fight terrorism and Gephardt, D-Mo., a White
cautioning Americans that House ,hopeful.
the struggle "will take time
Howard ' Dean, another
and require sacrifice.''
Democratic candidate, on
Bush's money request Monday accused Bush of going
would come on top· of the into Iraq "recklessly" and said
$79. billion that Congress "failure is not an option."
approved in April for the iniQuestions have been
tial costs of the war and its raised by the administraaftermath and for worldwide tion 's failure to tind any of
efforts against terrorism.
Saddam's illegal weapons or
Despite
calls . from the ousted Iraqi leader himRepublicans and Democrats self. Rice said Monday she
WEST PALM BEACH ,
alike for more troops, Bush remained confident that . Fla. (AP) - Of all the ways
said the 130,000 U.S. forces in Saddam would be found.
attempted to free up space in
Iraq were sufficient. But he . Bush made just one referFlorida's crowded class·
urged other nations, even those ence in his speech to
rooms, this one · could be a
that had opposed the war, to weapons of mass destruction .
dream CQme true for high
contribute troops and money.
schoolers in a hurry: a diploBush said Iraq and the
The president addressed
ma without a senior year.
the nation Sunday night, his Middle East are critical to win·
Supporters of a law grantifirst speech on Iraq since ning the global war on terror.
ng
a high school diploma in
Describing Iraq as the cenMay I when he stood on the
just three years said it will
aircraft carrier Abraham tral front in the war against
help curb crowding in
terror,
he
said
the
"enemies
Lincoln and declared an end
Florida's
schools. Critics fear
of freedom are making a des·
to major combat.
it will deprive early graduates
In the four months since, perate stand there, and there
of
extracurricular activities
they
must
be
defeated."
U.S. casualties have risen
and senior year milestones ..
While saying the United
steadily, to the ~oint where
The state's top education
States
has
enough
troops
in
more have died m the afterIraq,
Bush
said
American
official
is already warning that
math of the war than during
commanders have requested
the new law essentially
the combat phase.
a
multinational
division
to
enabling
students to forgo their
The attacks on American
serve
alongside
similar
units
senior year is not for everyone
forces continued Monday
and shouldn't be abused.
when an explosion struck a led by Britain and Poland.
Some countries have
U.S , patrol convoy near the
"It was meant for a small
sought
an
explicit
U.N.
center of Baghdad. Two solgroup, a band of students.
diers were wounded, a mili- peacekeeping authorization,
who were not only mature
and Bush said Secretary of
tary spokesman said.
enough but smart enough to
Bush described Iraq in his State Colin Powell would
graduate,"
Education
IS-minute speech as the seek a Security Council resoCommissioner Jim Horne
central battleground of the lution to authorize deploysaid. · "It's not an attempt
terrorism war and blamed ment of new forces. Bush
under class size pressure to do
the violence on Saddam will address the U.N. General
away with the 12th grade."
Hussein loyalists and for- Assembly in two weeks.
The fast-track graduation
eign terrorists.
Referring to France,
Jaw was among several mea"We are fighting that Germany and Russia, Bush
sure s passed this spring in the
in
Iraq
and said "not all of our friends
enemy
wake of a voter-approved
Afghanistan today, so that agreed with our deci sion (to)
amendment
requiring the
we do not meet him again on ... remove Saddam Hussein
state
to
take
immediate
action
our owp streets, in our own from power. Yet , we cannot
to start reducing class sizes .
cities," Bush said, four days let past differences interfere
The
amendment sets caps for
before the second anni ver- with present duties."
every grade, including no
sary of the Sept. II attacks.
He ~aid $66 billion of the
more than 25 students per
Bush's national security $87 b11lion he will seek frol1l
high school class by 2010.
adviser, Condoleezza Rice, Congress for the fiscal year
Under the option, students
said Monday the additional starting Oct. I is for military
money the administration is and intelligence operations
badly needed.
in Iraq, Afghanistan and
If Iraq can be stabiliZI)d, elsewhere. Earlier cbst esti"those costs will be won mates of the terrorism war
back 0'\ler and over again," had ranged between $60 bil·
from PageA1
she said on ABC's "Good lion and $80 billion.
Morning America."
While the United States
While the confrontation has shouldered most of the
ty winners by Becky
with Saddam made the pres- ·
Anderson and Bobbie Karr,
idem's popularity skyrocket, burden of the effort in Iraq,
co-chairmen.
public confidence in his Bush said other nations will
In the competition the winhandling of Iraq has dropped be asked to help. He said
ners from last year's fourth
since the war, leveling off in Powell will meet with repregraders, were Adam Warden
sentatives
of
many
countries
the: mid-50 percent area.
of Southern, chamRion , with
Heading mto a campaign later this month to seek conTyler Cundiff of Meigs. ruf1ner-up. From last year's fifth
year hoping to unseat Bush, tributions for rebuilding
Democrats have
been Afghanistan. Next month, ·graders, the winners were
Ryan VanMeter of Meigs,
emboldened to criticiz!! him Powell will hold a similar
champion, and Cheyene
on Iraq. Even some funding conference for Iraq.
Bush said U.S. strategy in
Dunn of Southern, runner-up.
Republican allies have urged
Iraq
has
three
objectives:
Everythinjl from primitives
~im to change course.
"destroying
the
terrorists,
to pottery, from authentic sun
A fresh
burst
of
bonnets to Civil war books,
Democratic criticism fol- enlisting the support of other
for
a
free
Iraq
and
nations
from
paintings to prints, from
lowed. the speech.
helping
Iraqis
assume
stitchery
to Sai anu (han(lwril"Now that the president
ten keepsakes) were on exhibit.
has recognized that he has responsibility for•their own
Those demonstrating their
been going down the wrong defense and their own
crafts
included Bill and
·
future."
path, this administration
Minnie Thornton preparing
apple butter the old fashioned
Fairtield, Pa.
way - in ·a copper kettle
Bonitatis horse "Dakota" over an open fire. Donna
was in the Civil War movie Davidson weaving rugs on a
from Page A1
"Gods and Generals.'' After a, loom, Joq and Margaret
Martin making yarn on a
the same way Morgan would long day of riding, Bonitatis spin ning Wheel, Marvin
it ,"
said · said he was only a "little sore" White demonstrating ·the piohave
done
Confederate
Trooper but was fully ready to give neer 's way of maki1]g
brooms, and Kim Kmutt er
Dominic Bonitatis, 59; from Union torces plenty of tight.

before Election Day, he said ..
it's also unclear about what is
being measured.
"took at the Bush-Gore
election and how wildly the
pi&gt;lls changed day to day," he
said. "That's a presidential
election which is far less
volatile than what is going on
out in California with 135 candidates and everything else."
The Oct. 7 recall elect ion is
unlike anything seen before
and the polls show it.
Three surveys taken within a
couple days of one another came
to three different L&lt;mclu.,ions: -the
Public Policy Institute of
California poll had Republicun
actor Arnold Schwanenegger
ahead: the Los Anl;leles Times
poll said Democmt1c Lt Gov.
Cruz Bustamante wa' leading;
and a Field Poll measured
Bustamante and Schwart.enegger
nearly in a dead heat.
Two of the polls agreed that
most voters were ready to
toss Gov. Gray Davis from
office, while the Times survey suggests that voters were
split on the question.
One reason for the discrepancies is that each poll had
different assumptions of
voter turnout.
In California , pollsters
assuming that only a small
percentage of ll1e registered
voters will actually cast votes
means that Republican candidates will be favored because
conservatives rarely miss a
chahce to vote.
On the other hand, an elec -

tion with wide appeal will
draw out the state's majority
party, the Democrats. and
thus will favor more liberal
candidates.
Determining the recall '&gt;
turnout is just guesswork ,
said Walter Stone, a
University of California at
Davis political scientist. "If
you look at the history of
where polls have gone astray
in the past it is on this &lt;.[Uestion of turnout.''
A far bigger problem facing
pollsters, however, is finding
people willing to be interviewed tor the polls. Polls are
based on the theory that a
small number of people randomly contacted and interviewed can represent the opin·
ions of the broader elec!orate.
Now, however, many fami·
lies ha ve two working parents who struggle to keep up ·
with chores and children and
don't want to share their free
time for a poll.
Twenty years ago. 70 percent of those people cal led
agreed to be interviewed, said
Mark DiCamillo. director of
the Fi eld Poll. Today poll sters are lucky if half of those
called will talk, which means
DiCamillo's staff must make
many more calls to obtain the
number of qualified responses needed for a scientificall y
accurate poll.
·
One culprit is the number
of telemarketers who inundate American homes durin g
· the dinner hmn:s. Pollsters all

over the country complain
that telemarketing firms especially aided by sophisticated computer systems have made people increasingly reluctant to even pick up
their phones at night.
But that doesn't mean polls
life less accumte now than in
1970s. DiCamillo said, only that
they take more time to complete.
The new federal no-call list
for telemarketing. which
doesn 't apply to pollsters,
should help, said Richard
Hertz, a pollster based in
Petaluma. But polltakers will
still be facing busy, stressedout people on the other end of
the phone line.
Hertz and other pollsters
have begun using a Webbased system tor conducting
polls. Working with a Bay
Area television station. his
system invites viewers to log
on to the polling site and sign
up as part of a permanent ·
pool of voters that can be
tested just like any other sur·
vey sample.
Critics question whether a
se lf-select ed pool of voters
can provid~ the same survey
results as a pool randomly
drawn_ But Hertz ·contends
that tests of the Web-based
system show it works. at least
in the tech-savvy Bay Area.
"People had some of the
saine issues when polls went
from interviewing people in
the street to calling people on
the phone," he said.

Three years and out Florida law allows
high schooler students to forgo senior year

Alive

Ride

. . . . . . .-

•

Recall, high-profile race, make extra work
for pollsters, emphasize polling's flaws

All ages are welcome to
Connector work attend.
For more informaresults in t.raffic tion call992-268l, Ext. 233.
pattern change Meeting
POMEROY- The Ohio postponed
Department
of
Transportation announces
that traffic . patterns will
cltange
beginning
Wednesday at the intersection of U.S. 33 and State
Route 681 to allow for construction progress ·of the
Athens to Darwin Connector
project. Traftic at this intersection will remain in effect
until completion of the project in late summer 2004.

The Daily Sentir el• PageAs

www .mydailysentinel.com

2003

Local Briefs

.A job of weight and honor

The Daily Sentinel

NATIONAL

Monday, September 8,

PageA4

·

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

J

---·~·

_._,.:.,.. _

_,.,.__ _

.~· ..... ~-- .......... -

~

•• - · · - · - · ·••

••

•'n

'0

can graduate with six fewer
credits, as long as they double
up on English classes to earn
four credits and study a for·
eign language for two years.
They are allowed to skip several elective credits, including
physical education, art and
life management courses.
No other stale has tried a
similar program, according to
the National Conference of
State Legislatures. Texas
started offering scholarships
this year to students who
graduate early, but only those
who complete an advanced
high school program . .
Educators across Florida
say the program encourages
too many students to miss out
on the life and learning experiences gained during high
school's senior year.
."Kids are having r a hard
enough time as it is in college,"
said Okeechobee County
School Di strict Assistant
Superintendent Lee Dixon.
"You're giving up the fourth
year of high school math, and
high school science. You don't
want to leave it up to kids to
shortchange themselve;;."
Other educators say stu·
dents who have six credits
less than their peers when
they graduate won't be as
competitive in university
admissions. And they ' ll likely be too far from their 18th
birthdays to immediately
enlist in the military.

'This is a strategy for class size
reduction, not for quality education," said Fay Clark, an executive director with the Broward
County School District.
Still, some schools aren't
dissuading students from taking advantage of the early
diploma. Instead, counselors
are working with teens and
their parents to explain the
potential pitfalls.
"We're giving them the
cold, hard facts," said Palm
·Beach
County schools
spokesman Nat Harrington .
"If that's what they want to
do, we just want them to go
in with their eyes open."
State Board of Education
member William L. Proctor
said the board should defend
the program.
"The thing that worries me
most abeut it is what does it
say about the senior year''
Probably the kids looking at
this option are the kids that
need the senior year the
most,.. proctor sat'd .
Cole Crock well - agrees
most students shouldn't skip
their senior year - but he
believes he's one of the few
students who should.
Crockwell, 17. learned of
tile option about two weeks
before fall classes began at
Florida
lnternati omd
University and hurried to
wke advantage of it. He
already had the credits he
needed from Miami Sunset

Thompson, a silver des igner,
showing how she creates
jewelry.
Visitors enjoyed a display
of prints of Mort Kuntzler
Civil War paintings, along
with aq extensive exhibit of
Civil War meniorabilia by
Jimmy
Epling
of
Cattletsburg, Ky. at the Meigs
County District Library.
The mini-park on Court
Street was converted into an
elegant outdoor Victorian tea
house where fancy sandwich·
es. cookies and flavored teas
were served at small tables
by waiters in period wst um:
ing. Background piano music

was provided by Sue Legg.
Entertainment included
puppet, magic and medicine
shows throughout the day by
Eric Scites Shows; an Uncle
Sam .rendition, "I am the
Spirit of America" by
Howard Richard , music by
· Mike Morningstar and Rick
Roberts, a program of Civil
War music by the Meigs
County Chorus directed hy
June VanVranken. and a concert by the · Riverbend
Community Band directed by
Roger Williams'.

740·753·3400
MOVIES

1 0 ""

Ml• "

""""

Thant you
JD Drilling
for buying my
Martet
Chlctens at the
2003Helgs

County Falrl

Cheyenfle

Doczf

I

High School and wanted w
get a jump on his college
business degree.
Crockwell said he won't
miss his prom or other high
school activities he's
much too busy sending e'
mail s to businesses around
the world about technology.
"Maybe I'm just a bit
ahead of my time," said the
honors student. "It was a
good move for me but I don't
think it's for every student. If
there are students that enjoy
activities more, maybe it's
not for them."
High school counselors
have had little time to learn
about the program and tell
students of their new option·.
Linda Eichas, guidance coordinator at Forest Hill
Community High School in
West Palm Beach. said several students have already
signed on.
She sa id although many
educators are wary of the
fast-track diploma, the real
test will come after students
who graduate with onl y 18
credits move on to college.
"One parent's first question
was, "What 's the downsideT"

Eichas sa id. "And I told them,
'You' re going to have to tell
me in 12 months because we
really haven 't discovered the
downsides yet."'

FRI 915/03 • THURS 9/H/03

TUES BARGAIN NIGHT
$3.75 ADMISSION (Excludll Sony
PIC1ure1)
MATINEES $3.75 ADULT (12+) $5.75
Child {1H $3.7!5
WE!l:f.~~~M~~ATINEES END AUGUST 21
I

OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON • FRI.
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT- SUN.
FREDDY VS JASON (R) .
7:00&amp; 9:30

OPEN RANGE (R)
7:00 &amp; 9:30
JEEPERS CREEPERS 2 (R)
7:00.9:00

(PG13) 7:00 • 9:20
I

FREAKY FRIDAY (PG)
7:10 &amp; 9:10
MATINEES 1:10 &amp; 3:10
OICKtE ROBERTS: FORMER
CHILD STAR (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:16

�The Daily Sentinel

MORGAN'S

RAID

Page~6
Monday, September 8,

2003

INSIDE
Week 1 In the NFL, Page B6
OSU faces some tough questions, Page B2
Newman wins Chevy 400, Page B6

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 8, 2003

Lady Eagles win
two of three in
Athens tourney
THE

Aags from all 88 counties were featured In Pomeroy's bicen- The Reedsville United Methodist Church, celebrating Its 100th
tennial parade Saturday. The honor guard from Drew Webster anniversary this year, had this float In Pomeroy's parade
Post 39 led the parade followed by legionnaires Mlck Williams, Saturday. (Charlene Hoeflich)
left, and Frank Vaughan, two of the Morgan 's Raid reenactors,
and the flag bearers, athletes from Eastern, Meigs and
Southern High Schools. (Charlene Hoeflich)

I

Confederate General John Hunt Morgan and his officers survey
the field they have taken from Union forces. (J. Miles Layton)

!
These Confederate soldiers prepare to mount an assault on
the Union forces. (J. Miles Layton)

''

About 60 women, men and children in period costume leave
the gazebo on thl! upper parking lot in Pomeroy for a promenade along the sidewalk. (Charlene Hoeflich)

This Confederate horseman rode up to crowd of school children to take aim and fire at a defenseless pop can some litterbug had thrown onto the battlefield. (J . Miles Layton)

Tracy O'Dell gets fitted with an old-fashioned sun· bonnet by
Rushie McAllister of Oak Hill who was In Pomeroy Saturday
selling her creations. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Bill and Minnie Thornton demonstrate how to make apple butter in a copper kettle over an open fire at Saturday's celebration.
Afriend, Bob Mitchell. center, looks on. (Charlene Hoeflich)

After taking Chester without even a shot fired, Confederate
General John Hunt Morgan reclines in a recently liberated rocking chair on the front porch of a local home on Main Street. (J.
Miles Layton)

County winners in the marble tournament held at Saturday's
celebration pictured here with Becky Anderson, lett, and
Bobbie Karr, right, chairmen, were left to right, Adam Warden,
Bob Titus of Pomeroy attended the VIctorian tea wearing a tam· champion, and Tyler Cundiff, runner-up of last year's fourth
ily outfitfrom the late 1800s. He was joined for tea by Donna graders; and Cheyene' Dunn, runner-up, an Ryan VanMeter,
champion of last year's fifth grade winners. (C harlene Hoeflich)
Carr and served by Whitney Thoene . {Charlene Hoeflich)

Confederate General John Hunt Morgan seize~ the commons ·
area 1n front of the old Meigs County Courthouse at Chester
Fnday afternoon. (J. Miles Layton )

..........
..........

Confederate General John Hunt Morgan and 192 horsemen
cross the Shade River Into Chester. (J. Miles Layton)

--

..........

PLAINS The
Ea~tern Lady Eagles won more
than they lost at Saturday 's
Athens volleyball tournament.
Coach Howie Caldwell's
. crew defeated Federal Hocking
and River Valley, but fell to a
tough Nelsonville-York team
14-16, 10-15.
.
Versus the Lady Buckeyes,
Ea~tern led 14-12 in game one
before Nelsonville mounted a
comeback.
The Lady Bucks posted four
unanswered points to pick up
the win .
In game rwo, it was more of
the same ..The Lady Eagles had
Nelsonville on the ropes, leading 9-2, before the Lady Bucks
mounted another come-frombehind win.
Eastern was outscored 13- 1
the remainder of the way in a
10-151oss.
Kass Lodwick paced her
Eagles with I0 service points,
followed by teammate Alyssa
Holter. who chipped in seven
points to go along with her
seven kills. Stacy Smith had
nine assists.
But Ea~tem made leads stick
in it's two other contests. ,
The Lady Eagles defeated
Federal Hocking 15 ~ 10. 15-9 in
straight games.
Lodw1ck had nine points and
six kills. Smith added eight
assists and Katie Robertson
had three blocks.
In its 15-5, 15-8 win over
River Valley, Eastern ·was
paced by Lodwick 's 10 points
followed by eight und seven
from Holter and Stacy Smith
respectively. Holter and Smith
· also collected six assists apiece.
Eastcm will have the opportunity to avenge its loss tu
Nelsonville, as the two will
meet again on Tuesday in
Tuppers Plains.

Brown says he's
not respected as
Clarett's adviser
COLUMBUS (AP) - Hall
of Farner Jim Brown insists
he's not being treated with
respect by Ohio State in his role
as adviser to suspended tailhack Maurice Clarett.
Brown said Ohio State athletic director Andy Geiger was
dismissive of him.
"When I am being respected
by a mother and son und they
are giving me that respect. then
I doggone expect to be respected by an athletic director,"
Brown said. "When you have
the power to destroy a kid's
life, you have to be gracious in
your investigation ."
Clarett 1s suspended froin
the team while the NCAA and
the university investigate his
behavior off the tield.
Geiger said Clarett was suspended because of ullegations
of acl-eptinll improper benetits
and li1r m1sleadi1ig investigators. He said the university has
been working tor the past two
weeks on a response to "several pages" of allegations sent by
the NCAA to the school.
Brown said Geiger was acting like a "sluve master" in an
ESPN.com story earlier in the
week .
"I think Andy Geiger wants
to start a revolution. He is acting like a slave master. If Andy
Geiger wants to act like God,
then this ballgame is over,"
Brown was quoted as saying.
Geiger shrugged off Brown's
comment.
"I do what I think is right I
do the job I'm supposed to do
and I res~ct other people's
opinions," Geiger said before
No. 2 Ohio State's 16-13 victory over San Diego State. "I
don't wish to elevate or deni-.
grate:or do anything else."
Geiger said Ohio State's
response to several pages of
NCAA allegations against
Clarett is nearing completion.
He declined to specify when
the repon would be sent.
Brown said Geiger and Ohio
State seem to be trying to
demonize Claret! for other
rroblems at the school.
"I guc." Ohio State is
squeaky clean. I guess Geiger
is squeaky clean," he smd.
"What is Ge1~cr's agenda? His
agenda can t be Maurice
because he's just a student athlete."
Gciger ·scoffed at the notion
that he would be vindictive
against Clarcu.

Colle.ge football

Bobcats blown
out by Cyclones
Bv CHUCK SCHOFFNIR
Associated Press

AMES, Iowa - Austin Flynn threw for two touchdowns
and had 330 yards in total offense, while Michael Wagner
rushed for 115 yards and two scores as Iowa State beat
Ohio University 48-20 Saturday.
Iowa State (2-0) was much sharper offensively than in its
17- 10 victory over Northern lowa a week ago but still got
a scare from the Bobcats ( 1- 1), who burned the Cyclones
with three big plays.
Fred Ray 's 68-yard touchdown run and Ryan Hllwk's SOyard TD pass to Scott Mayle left Ohio trailing 17- 14late in
the tirst qu11rter. Ray, who altemated with Huwk at quarterback, added a !·yard touchdown run early in the third quarter after completing a 71-yard pass to Anthony Hackett.
But Iowa State blanked Ohio the rest of the way and
secured the victory with touchdown drives of 88 yards and
78 yards. Hiawatha Rutland scored both times on runs of 7
and 2 yards.
Wagner carried 21 times in the fifth I()().yard game of his
career. He scored on t1rst-half runs of 3 and 4 yards.
Flyhn was ·14-of-27 for 252 yards, including touchdown
passes of 6 yards to Jamual Montgomery and 59 yards to
Lane Danielsen. The redshirt freshman also ran 14 times
for 78 yards and had a 51-yard completion to Jack Whitver
to set up Rutland's second touchdown.
Danielsen' s touchdown came on a shon pass that he
turned into u big gain with a stiff arm on cornerback T.J.
Wright. With Wright on the ground, Danielsen outran the
pursuit down the left sideline.
With tout catch, Danielsen became Iowa's career leader
in receiving yards. The former walk-on finished the day
with five receptions for 102 yards, running his career total
to 2,077 yards on 124 catches.
Tracy Henderson had been the leader with 2.048 yards on
150 catches from 1982-84.
WhiLver had five catches for 110 yards.
Mayle's over-the-shoulder catch of the perfectly thrown
bull from Hawk was the second-longest touchdown pass in
Ohio history. Earlier, Ohio stunned the Cyclones by taking
a 7-3 lead when Ray faked a handoff at his own 32, ran up
the middle and sprinted into an empty secondary.
Iowa State went back ahead on Wagner's first touchdown
ami led the rest of the way.
Though the Ohio offense is geared to running. Ray and
Hawk combined to complete 12 of 22 passes for 237 yards, Ohio's Justin Roush grabs the face mask of Iowa State's Michael Wagner during the first half
Saturday In Ames, Iowa . Roush was charged with a penalty on the play. (AP)
the most by an Ohio team sinca 1993.

Buckeye Notebook

Aztecs accept .millions to take 16-131oss on the road
Bv RusTY MtUER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) _ For
money-strapped collegiate athleti~
departments, sometimes the bottom
line
. 1. is more
f himportant dthan playing
m ront o a o!lle crow
.
·
. When San D1ego St~te. dec1ded tcr
sell us home ~ame agamst Oh10
~tate for $,2.4 m1llion, _1t made good
f1scal sense not only for the Al.tecs
but for the Buckeyes.
"The arrangement is that we're

about a $4-million .gate here and our
guarantee to ~o there was almost
$400,000," Oh1o State athletic dircctor Andy Geiger said Saturday. " I
don't know what their gate is , but
$2.4 million is huge for San Diego
State. And we get $1.6 million
·mstea d o f' $400,000 ."
It was good for the No. 2-ranked
Buckeyes that they made the switch.
They were mediocre at best in almost
every facet and were fonunate to
sneak out of Ohio Stwiium with a 1613 win.
"7'

Ironically, the deal was brokered
b~ Rick Bay. the former athletic
d1rector at hoth sd10ols . The Aztecs·
were originally scheduled to host
Ohio State in 2003, but the home
game was basically "sold."
Bay, then San Diego State's AD,
left in the spring after a dispute over
an alhletic department audit. He has
been replaced by former Memphis
and UCLA men's basketball coac~
Gene Bartow, who ts filling in on an
interim basis.
Bartow said he hasn :t heard many

nega1ivc comments from A1.tcc fan s.
''!think that everyone understood,"
Bartow said. "It was a decision tha t
lBliY) thought was in the best inter·
csts nf )he Aztec uthletic dcparlment.
It 's a vel'y good payday. L1kc many
universities. we need the money. "
Geiger sa id the ~.:osts lor ;1
transcontinental flight would hardly
have made it worth the Buckeyes·
while.
Asked if it would cost Ohio State

Pleese see Notebook, 81

Browns lose battle of field goals New pants, same
old story for Bengals
Bv ToM WtTHERS
Associated Press

CLEVELAND - Peyton
Manning saved hi s hest for
last.
Manning
drove
Indianapoli s 65 yards to set
up Mike. Vanderjagt's 45 yard field goal with I second
left Sunday, leading the
Indianapolis Colts to a sloppy
9-6. win over the Cleveland
Browns.
Vanderjagt 's third field
goal ended what figured to be
a shootout between two of
tlie AFC's best offenses, but
turned into an error-fi lled
matchup
of
penalties,
turnovers and blown chances.
Manning, who finished 27of-43 for 214 yards, threw
otWO interceptions - one in
the end ione - in the first
half and didn't look sharp
until late. .
He went 8-for-10 on the
Colts' ~amc -winning drive,
using f1ve receivers. A year
, ago, Manning rallied the
· Colts from a 16-0 halftime
delle it to beat the Browns 2823.
After Indianapolis made
the Browns ~unt, Manning
took over at is own 8-yard
line with 2:3 left. He cumpleted three passes for 26
yards to get the Colts out of
the shadow of their end wne,
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning (18) tires a and then hit Reggie ' Wayne
first quarter pass In front of the rush by Cleveland Browns'
Courtney Brown (92) . (AP)
PI•..• ~ 8...,_n •• 81

Bv Joe KAv
Associated Press

CINCINNATI - Murvin Lewis gave the Cincinnitti
Bengals a whole new look, sending 1hem onto the field
dressed all in black. Then Clinton Portis made them look
like the same sorry team.
Ponis ran for 120 yards and two first-half touchdowns
Sunday. and the NFL's worst team of the past 12 years
went on another self-destructive binge that helped the
Denver Broncos"roll, 30-10.
The Broncos (1-0) turned to their Rookie of the Year
rusher to pull them througll their new quarterback's shaky
debut. Ja~e Plummer was repeatedly off-target, threw three
mtercept1ons and looked sk ittish.
While Plummer stumbled, the Bengals (0-1) were hapless against Portis, who a&lt;.:counted for 159 yards on 24 runs
and five catches. Denver's blockers latthcd onto the defen sive linemen, keeping them in place while Portis tlew by .
The shift y running llack touched the hall on 13 of
Denver's first I') plays, while Plummer was restricted to
short tosses and rece1ver screens. Ponis' louchdown rum
of 2 and 8 yards made it 20-3 at halflime .
Linebacker Ian Gold returned Jon Kitna 's shovel pas' 12
yards for a louchdown early in the third quarter, prompting
the crowd of fiJ .K20 to boo with gusto over another 'ca son-opening embarrassment.
Lewis wanted hi s team to look sharp in his head ma..:h ing debut, and provided ocw, black p;mt' for the occasion.
The offensive unit was introduced to bursts of on-field
tireworks - another new trapping for a new era.
Once the game _began, they were the same old Bungle,.
They had a field goal nullified by pe1wl1y, fumbled away
a kickoff and mi"ed 1uckles galore. Much of the fan, ·
wrath was directed at Kitna, who won't be the •taning
quanerback for long if he plays like he ditl on Sunday.
He threw into a crowd and was intercepted in the first
half. bringing the first round of jeers. He wu' booed off the
field after his third-quarter 'hovel pass buried his team.

Ple•se ... 8enc•la, 81
•

..

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 8, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, Sept. 8, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

.... .'
m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\egister"
CLASSIFIED
&lt;.

~ Buckeyes

face some tough questions .after close call

:BY RusTY MIUER
Associated Press

. COLUMBUS
Ohio
·State won but cenainly was: n't wonderful.
After his No. 2-ranked
Buckeyes eked out a 16-13
win over 32-poi nt underdog
San Diego State on Saturday.
coach Jim Tressel hinted that
· maybe his players had read a
:few too many clippings about
·their national championship
season in 2002.
"We'd spent a whole offseason with everyone telling
us we're wondetful," Tressel
said. "We came out and had a
solid win and then ... I guess
it was human nature" that the
Buckeyes had a bad game:
There was very little wonderful about and for the
Buckeyes, except for the fact
that they moved to 2-0 on the.
year with their 16th consecu·tive win .
"It's ·good when there are
some slips (and) you don't
fall ,"
Tressel
said .
"Hopefully we'll just learn."
What the Buckeyes have
learned in their two games
·this season is that they need
:to play a lot better than they
:did against the Aztecs or they
won't have to be concerned
with defending their title
much longer.
'
Several .problem areas

popped up agai nst a team that
had trouble the week before
winning at home against a 1AA team. There was plenty
of blame to go around.
"It was spread out." Tressel
said of the culpability. "We
all had a hand in it."
- TI)e running game
remains missing in action.
Maurice Hall netted 91
yards on 19 carries. but 33 of
those came on one attempt.
As a team, the Buckeyes
gained just 130 yards on the
ground. Through two games,
they are averaging under 3.3
yards a carry.
Maurice Clarett is suspended from the team while the
NCAA and the university
look into his financial dealings. Clarett, who averaged
5.6 yards a carry last season,
didn't show up at the game
and it didn't appear the rest of
Ohio State's running attack
did either.
Tressel agreed that the running attack was anemic. He
just didn 't know - or wouldn't say - why.
Asked if Clarett was his
best back at breaking tackles,
Tressel gulJ?,Cd and said, "I
don 't know.'
- Quarterback
Craig
Krenzel had the worst game
of his career.
The senior, who is 17-1 as
a starter, looked like a rookie

Browns
from Page 81
for 16 yards on a crucial third-and-! 0..
Manning then completed four straight passes to get the Colts to the Browns 25 with 6
seconds left. The Browns, who played in 12
games decided by eight points or less a year
ago, called a timeout to try and ice
Vanderjagt, who entered. the season as the
NFL's most accurate kicker.
But Vanderjagt drilled his game-winner, the
seventh time in his career he has won a game
with a kick in the tina! 15 seconds. Earlier, he
kicked field goals from 22 and 46 yards.
Marvin Harrison , who destroyed the
Browns in the Colts' 28-23 win last season,
had nine catches for 44 yards.
Phil Dawson kicked two fteld goals for the
. Browns, who dropped to 0-5 in season openers since 1999.
Kelly Holcomb, who beat out Tim Couch to
be Cleveland's staner, finished 20-of-29 for
182 yards. but threw two interceptions in the
tirst half and seemed reluctant to throw any-

compared to San Diego
State's first-time starter, Matt
Dlugolecki. Krenzel completed just 5-of-20 passes for
76 yards with one interception.
''There were some guys
open and I didn't get them
the ball," Krenzel said.
"Sometimes when we, had
some guys open and maybe I
didn't step up or should have
thrown the ball away. A couple of times we weren't on
the same page on routes. We
didn't do anything consistentl y."
Krenzel threw an interception on the Buckeyes' first
play from scrimmage. They
seemed to be climbing uphill
the rest of the day.
- Both the offensive and
defensive lines were manhandled.
Krenzel was chased around
most of the day and was
sacked three times. Earlier in
the week, Tressel had said
one of the key statistics that
the coachin!l staff looks at it
how many umes the defense
gets to a quarterback and
knocks him down.
The crowd of 104.433 grimaced and moaned on several hits that Krenzel sustained
against a defense that hadn't
held a team under 200 yards
of total offense (the
Buckeyes had 196) in three

Ben gals
from Page 81

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel points onto the field during the
Buckeyes season-opening 28-9 victory over Washington
Saturday. Aug. 30. 2003. (AP)
years.
- The Buckeyes were listless, disorganized and undisciP-lined all day.
'We were ready to Rlay.
I'm not sure about the nauonal champions," San Diego
State
linebacker
Kir'k
Morrison said.
Ohio State was doubled in
ftrst downs (20-1 0) and had
more penalty yards (124)
than it had running (120) or
passing (76) the ball. The
Buckeyes convened on just
one of 14 third-down plays.
Krenzel also lost a fumble in
addition to his interception.
"We were tlat today,"

thing deep after halftime.
William Green rushed for 86 yards for
Cleveland, which wore orange pants for the
first time since 1983 .
The Browns had ftve cracks inside the 10yard line in the founh quaner, but couldn't
get in as Dawson's 20-yard fteld goal with
8:50 left tied it at 6.
The Colts twice had first-and-goal opponunities in the first half and only scored three
points.
Holcomb, who spent five years with
Indianapolis, was picked off twice late in the
second quarter - both times by Nick Harper
-as the Colts .tied it 3-3 at halftime.
Harper returned the second pick 39 yards to
the 10, but Manning couldn't get it in the end
zone and the Colts settled for Vanderjagt's 22yard field goal on the ftnal play of the half.
Dawson's 19-yard field goal late in the first
quarter gave the Browns a 3-0 lead. The score
carne after Kevin Bentley picked off Manning
in the end zone.
Converting three third-down passes,
Mannirig drove the Colts to the Browns 2. But
on first-and-goal, he underthrew Marcus
Pollard. allowing Bentley to reach up and
snatch it in the end zone.

offensive lineman Adrien
Clarke said .
Tressel was asked if he
sensed before the game that
his team was n't focu sed.
"No," he said before facing
down the next question from
reponers. ·
Three Mike Nugent tield
goals and Will Allen's 100yard interception return were
enough on a day when the
Buckeyes were favored to
win by more than four touchdowns.
"Fortunately we found a
way to win,' Kreqzel said.
"Great teams have to win
ugly some times."

Trying to avoid a sack, he
made a backhanded toss
toward Corey Dillon , but Gold
caught it in · stride and ran
untouched for a touchdown.
It was remin iscent of the
defining moment of the
Bengals' 2- 14 season last year:
Gus Frerotte throwing a lefthanded pass that was picked
off in Cleve land.
Kitna was I 0-of-20 for 86
yards in the first three quarters,
and finished with two interceptions, two fumbles and four
sacks, getting the worst of the
game's key matchup. Kitna and
. Plummer have a hi story of
making mi stakes under pressure and dooming bad teams.
Plummer was 12-of-25 for
115 yards · with three interceptions. The Broncos are expectin~ much more out of their $40
m1llion quarterback from
Arizona.
With Kitna self-destructing,
the Bengals had no chance.
Dillon ran for only 34 yards ·
against a defense that wasn't
about to let him have another
big day. The last time they
played in 2000, Dillon ran for
an NFL-record 278 yards at
Paul Brown Staaium. Only
three starters remain from the
defense he shredded.

me . You had to score with that."
San Diego State coach Tom Craft said,
"I'm not about one play deciding a game. But
the interception was it."
from Page 81
Howard "Hopalong" Cassady held the previous
mark after an 88-yard interception run$100,000 to make the trip. Geiger said, "I
don 't know if it's that much . but it's healthy." back against Wisconsin in 1954. Two playBartow di sagreed with the perception that ers, David Brown in 1986 and Marlon Kerner
the·San Diego State players· interests became in 1993, picked off passes and brought them
secondary to making a few bucks from the back I00 yards- both times at Purdue .
Bucks.
QUICK-HITTERS: The victory over San
"This is a ga me that these players will
Diego
Sta{e extended Ohio State's non-conremember the rest of their lives. The atmosferenc?"home
winning streak to 33 in a row,
phere here is just so great. This is what college sports are all about," Bartow said. dating to a 35-26 loss to Southern Cal on
"These players would like to come in here Se~t . 22, 1990. ... The Aztecs are 0-13
against teams ranked in the top I0... . Despite
every year, payday or not."
having an off day, senior quarterback Craig
HISTORY-MAKING: Will Allen's 100- Krenzel is 17 -I as a starter.... No opposing
yard interception return for a touchdown in running back has topped I00 yards against
Saturday 's 16-13 win over San Diego State is the Buckeyes in the last 12 home games ....
the longest ever in Ohio Stadium a1\d Mike Nugent kicked two field goals to
extend hi s Ohio Stadium record to 17 in a
matched the longest evet by a Buckeye.
"Chri s Gamble had excellent coverage and row before the streak ended with a mi ss ....
he tipped the ball up and I reacted to the ball Ohio State had 196 yards of total offense, the
and revved up there ," said Allen, a senior first time it has bee n held under 200 since a
IJ -6 loss at UCLA in 2000 .
s~fety. "I had four or five blockers in front of

Notebook

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
by
the
Ohio
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Environmental
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF . Protection Agency
(OEPA) last week.
TRANSPORTATION
"Actlone" Include tho
Columbus, Ohio
adoption, modificaOffice of Contracts
Legal Copy Number: tion, or repeal of
orders (other than
030466
UNIT PRICE CON· emergency orders);
the Issuance, denial,
TRACT
Mailing
Date: modification or revo·
calion of licenses,
08/22/2DD3
permits, leases, varl·
E036(196)
Sealed proposals ances, or certificates;
and the approval or
will be accepted from
all pre-qualified bid· disapproval ol plana
ders at the Office of and specifications.
Contracts of the Ohio "Drall Actions" are
Department
of wrlllon statements of
Director
ol
Transportation , the
Columbus, Ohio, until Environmental
10:00
a.m. Protection's
Intent
Wednesday, (Director's)
September 24, 2003 ·
with respect to the
FOR IMPROVING Issuance, denial, etc.
SECTIONS ATH·124· of a permit, license,
(0.24)(1.50); MEG·124· order, ate. Interested
57.10;
MEG-681· peraona may submit
15.90,
STATE wrlllon comments or
ROUTES 124 AND request a public
VARIOUS, TROY AND meeting regarding
actions.
MEIGS TOWNSHIPS, draft
ATHENS AND MEIGS Commenta or public
requests
COUNTIES, OHIO, IN meeting
ACCORDANCE WITH must be aubmlttod
PLANS AND SPECIFI· within 30 dayl of
CATIONS BY GRAD· notice of the draft
"Propotad
lNG,
DRAINING, action.
PAYING
WITH acttone" are written
ASf&gt;HALT
CON- statement• of tho
CRETE ON A BtTUMI· director's Intent with
to
the
NOUS AGGREGATE ra~pact
denial,
BASE AND BY CON· laauante,
STRUCTING
PRE· modification, revoca·
CAST REINFORCED tlon, or renewal ol a
CONCRETE STRUC· permit, licente. or.
Wrluen
TURES AT VARIOUS vtrtance.
LOCATIONS.
com111ent1
and
"The date eel lor requ1111 lor a public
completion of thll meeting regarding a
work ehatl be ae 111 propooad octlon may
fo"h In the bidding be eubmlllad within
propoeel:' Plene end 3D daya ol notice of
Specification• ere on the propoHd action.
llllln the Depertment An adJudication hear·
lng may be held on 1
of Trenepo"atlon.
propaHd acttan II a
GORDON PROCTOR
DIRECTOR
OF hearing raqu11t or
TRANSPORTATION
objection Ia received
(I) 2, 8 2TC
by the OI!PA within 30
.daya al l..uanca of
the prapaHd action.
Public Notice
Written commente,
requ111a tar public
PUBLIC NOTICE
meetlnge, end adJudl·
The following appll· CiliarY
hearing
callona and/or veri· requeate muat be
lltd complaint• wert unt to : Hearing
Ohio
received 1nd the lol· Clerk,
lowing draft, pro· Environmental
or
final Protection Agency,
poaed.
. ectlona were lllutd, P.O.
BoK
10411,

I

•

effective

If so, you qualify for a

Senior
D
nt*
on your home~-ered subscription!

upon

Issuance or a stated
effective
date.
Pursuant to Ohio
Revised .Coda Section
3745.04, a final action
may be appealed to
the
Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commission (ERAC)
(Formerly Known As
The Environmental
Board 01 Review) by a
party to a proceeding
before tho director by
flUng an appeal within
30 days of notice of
final
action.
the
Pursuant to Ohio
Revised Code section
3745.07, a final action
Issuing,
denying,
modifying, revoking,
or renewing a permit.
license, or variance
.which Ia not preceded
by a proposed action,
may be appealed to
the ERAC by flUng an
appeal within 30 days
of Issuance ol tho
final action. ERAC
appeals must be Iliad
with: Environmental
Review
Appaala
3D9
Cammloalon,
South Fourth StrHt,
Roam 222, Columbue,
Ohio 43215. A copy
ollhe appeal mull be
••rved
on
the
Dlractar within 3 day•
altar filing the appeal
with tha ERAC.
Final Approval of
pl1na and apactllcatlona
Tupper
Ptatna/Cheatar Water
Dlatrlct
3958t BAR 30 RD
Rladevltle, OH
l11ua Dell 08/2812003
Facility Deacrlptlon:
Community
Weier
lyetem
fhta flnat ectlon not
preceded by pro·
panel action and 11
1pealable to ERAC.
Detail plane ol new
Lottrldge 12 Tenk.
(818

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Call us at: (304) 675·1333
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax
us
at:
(740)
992·2157
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
Fax us at: (740) 446·3008
£-mail us at:
£-mail us at:
£-mail us at:

Offee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response."

r

I \11'1

o'

ANNouNCIMEIVtS

_HH .PWANrED

C- 1 Beer Ca rry Out permit

for sale. Cheste r Township.
Meigs County. send loners
of Interest to: The Daily
Senlinel. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Oak G rove Church needs
50ft 8 inch wide disconlin·
·ued white wood grain vinyl
siding. (304)882-2648

Say good bye lo high ph one

Arbors at Gallipol is, a skilled
nursing facility, Is· seeking an
AN , Slafl Deve lopmenl
Coordinalor_ Mu st po sses
stron g orga niz alional· skills
and ability to function as pan
at an di scipl ina ry learn . We
offer co mpetitive wages and
benefits. Qualifi ed candi·
dates please conl act Teresa
Woods . DON at 1·740·446711 2 o r apply in person at
170 Pinecrest Or.. Gallip oli s.
OH 4563 t

b1ll s! New local phone serv·
ice wilh FRE E unlimited
nation wide long Distance
1-B00-6 35-2908
or
AVON! A ll Aulas! To Buy or
www FreodomM ovle .com/ilp
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
aysyou. Loca l Agents want·
675-1429.

·•d

The Montgomer y Family
reun1on
will
be
held
September 14, 2003. 0 .0 .
Mcintyr e Park Sheller: KillDeer. 1Oam · dus~

AWESOME CAREER
$ t4 .80-$38.00+fhr,
Postal Positi ons . Hi ring for
2003 Full Benelits. No exp.
req .. Call Now 1-800·8759078 Ext. 2072

----------------------------------------------··
Subscriber's Name ------------------

1
I

I

:Address --------------------~---­

In Next Dey •• Paper
$u1ndley In- Column: 1:00 p.m .
Sundaye Paper

POLICIES: Ohio V1ll1y Publlthlng reMrY" the right to .cflt, reject, or c.nctl 1ny 1d 1t tny tlml. Errort mutt bt r~port!MI on tht flrat day of
Tribune-Senlinei·R-alatar will be reaponalbla tor no mora ll'ltn the coat ot tiM apace occupied by the error end only the tlrat lnurtlon. We
not bt
any 1011 or expenttlhtt rHulta ffom the publlcetlon or oml11lon olen advertlttmtnl. Comtction will tM mtdtln the ftratevtlltblt edition. • 8011. •:~::.:=:1
art always confldtnt~l. • Current rllte oard tppliet. • All ret! eatate edvertleemanta ere aubject to the Fedtral Felr Houalng Acl ol1968. • Thll 1
accepla only Mlp wanted adt mtttlng EOE atandtrda. Wt will not knowingly accept eny advtrtltlnp In violation of lht lew.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
HELP WANllll
Meigs Counly Council on
Aging is accepting applications/resumes for the Posi·
tion
of
Acliv ity
Director/Vol unteer Program
ASSIStant
Quali i iCi"'t iOnS
1nclud e a BA or assoc1ate
degree in relevanl tie ld and
or tive (5) years eqUivalent
experience. The successful
candidate will possess good
compuler skill s; good communication skill s: written and
verbal and have experien ce
in working wilh diverse community agencies. busine ss·
es and MCCOA funding
enlities . Thi s is a 30 hour a
week position w1!h heallh
and 40 1K benefits available.
To apply !or this pos1!10n see
Darla
Hawley.
Human
Re so u r c e s
Oireclor/EMeculive Assistant
al th e Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Conte1. 11 2 Easl
Memorial Dnve, Pomeroy,
Oh. An EOE

wrrti

--It\~ "fJZoU&amp;t:e
B(;/N~
A U·:f 1'7 'f~r&gt;;f 1'~6 foo[)

ct-~ANN~l- /oJ~I/6~ ~,v, ANY

u(}()t)

CA"f foo.D !2-E:'Ct ~?-

:City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :Phone_____________: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mall or drop oft thla coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

•

MOBILE HOM•~

MoBILE Ho~m;

FURSAtJl'

IURRt:NT
12•50 2BR. nice-lol-water·
paid ,
no
pels
$275/mo -tdep/rel ,
3897
Georges Creek Ad. 740446·43 16 afler 5pm.
--:-:--:-:-::-~:___ _
14x60 2BA. wi AC. WID. FJS,
no pels, $200/clep. Rl.21 8,
740·25&amp;1044
2 BR, perfect. air, porch,
very mce_ 740-446-2003 01
740-446-1409

2 mobile homes . both wilh

Lmli&amp;

3br. Located 10 Glenwood

At'REAGE

•

.,,.,

~

ro

HOMEN
IUR SALE

3BR house lor sale. asking No Problem Sale· .Wa nt a
$40,000 740-446·4084 or new sectional home ? No
Problem . Need foundation
740-388 -8923
and seplic? No Problem.
5 Main Stre et. Middleport. 3 Noed utllilies run or drive bedro om. brick. 1 ·bath. way? No Problem. Want big
library, garage. hardwood savings on a 2003 model.
floors. $74,500, (7401592· No Problem. Cole's Mobile
4409
Homes. U.S ·so East.
Athens. Ohio. 740-592· 1972
8 Room Ra nch on full base·
Sin ce 1967. Where You Get
menl 3BR. 2 1J2 bath s. 2 1/2
Your Money 's Walth
acres. covered deck. F.A
$107,900. 740·446·2 196

Busy Salon has great oppor·
Meig s
Den tal
Sealant
!unity lor experienced stylist.
Program needs PT. employwith man agers li cense 7 40ee. will train. ca ll 740 -843·
· 50 + tons of c lean fill dirt.
441 -1880
5268 or 740-992·3913.
"FRE E.
740-441-19 7 1,
wee kd ays . 740-44t -0816 Domino's Now Hiting all
. Cl 2003 by NEA, Inc.
www.comica.com
ni ghts and weekends
locatio ns
Pt
Ple asa nt. Need to earn Money? Lets
Gallipolis, &amp; Pomeroy. Sale lalk tho ~EW Avon .- Call
Fem ale ca t , spayed. all
1, . . - - - - - - - . 11'11:""-"':':':-"_ _ _.,
drivers. musl be 18. Apply in Marilyn. 304-882·2645 lo "1,.
10
shots. indoor/outdoor. liter
learn
all
the
wavs
11
can
wo
rk
H•J
.I'
WA'"Ill&gt;
WANTJ.])
person at locations.
'
• .
"
ML&lt;;CIJJAN.:OUS
T0 "'"
boJC train ed. tree 10 good
lo• you
'-" 1
home. 7 40-446· 7143
Driver/Owner
Operator ·
DEDICATED .Owner opera- O ftice Cler1ca l positio n. Registered Nurse (AN) for 25 Serious People Wanted Want to care for elderly perFree BeaytifLJ! ki!lens. 6
son In thelr"home. Call 740tor Pos itions a11ailabte now! Word. E)(cel . Acces s, need- lull time and pari-tim e work Who want to LOSE weight
weeks old. litte r !rain ed
388-9783.
anylime, leave a
in
a
11
4
Bed
Long
Te
rm
We
Pay
You
Cash
lor
the
2500
mile s/week . ed, Gallipolis area, Kellv
13041675-3164
message. ca ll collect if
Care State Facility. Full-time . pound s you LOSE!
G uaranteed
hometime. ·Services 866-286-4777
needed
employm ent ofters an exlen- Safe, Natural, No Dru gs.
- Free kittens. white or gray, Q ualified owner operators
sive
benefit
pac
~ag
e,
includ·
800-201-0832
50
mites
ol
POSITION ANNOU NCE·
tree small dog to a good within
in g State civil s.ervi ce retire· - - -- - - - - Will babysll in my home
Parkersburg, call ·lodayl You
MENT
hom e, (7401992-7285
ment, ea rn up to 15 days 3 roll s 4' used link fence, Come and enjoy a tun . lov can be approved in i 0 min· Posting Date: Septemb er 3,
vacat lon. 18 day s s1ck leave. 740-367-0144
ing, and educallonat envlFree to good ho me, 12 week utes.
Must have Class A
2003
. h ·d
ronment. I am a Mother off
and 12 plus pa1d Oil ays; For Sale· Cra lls man 12"
· old female golden relriever. COL+ 1 yr, OTA 800-496.1
·
c
·
·
lwo
. and have over 5 "1 ears
h ea llh/11e 1nsuran e IS ava1-1 band saw_ 74e-44s- 1o10
740-441 -9714
4698
SECR ETARY
able. Salary is co mm ensuprofe ssional eMperience with
SCHOOL OF EOUCATION
w ith
eMp erlence . Lennox gas furnace and air chil dren. Flexible hours.
Giveaway 5 kittens to good · Dnvers to transport cars &amp; The University ot Rio rate
home. ce lt 740-245-9076
pick-up lruc~s . call 740·992 - Grande invites applicalio ns· Conl acl Kim Billups, DON at -cond -unil , only 2 years-old. Call or leave message 740·
56_·_
63_3_
8 _ _ _ __
9716
i or a se c rela r~ at pos1tion lor Laknl Hospital, Lakin, WV at exc . cond $2000. 740 -446· _2_
Orphans need homes! l uke,
13041675·0860,
.,,
126,
:2.:.81
.
.::
5
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
Wilt
pressure
wa sh homes.
the Schoo l of Educa11on
Moses, Smitty, a nd Glimmer Fram ers needed . some trav ·
Monday th ru Fnday tra m
trail
ers.
deck
s.
metal buildREWARD · for finding a red
. of Hope. Call 740-446-1756 el. vali d drillers license.
Responsibilitie s include. but 8·oo a.m.-4·00 p.m Lakin 2003 four-whee ler. stolen 1ngs and gutlers . Call (740)
or 740·286-1553.
depen.dable lran sportatlon . nol limite d to, schedulmg Hospital 1S an EEO! AA
Aug 30'31. call B.J. 740- 446·0151 ask for Ro n or
call between 7:30 -10:00pm appo.ntments and meetings. Employer.
leave a message
367-0249
I.A~"l' ANil
740-446-1874
g
information
.
ty
ping
gatherin
FotJNU
W illing to sit wilh an elderly
AN/LPN (HOME HEALTHI Washe r $75.
(min utes. lett ers. memos.
pe rson . 5 days a week,
Full Time positions . moslly agendas. etc) . compiling Part or Full lime. per visil or Dryer" $50.
Losl 3 112 mon. old mi xed days. Flexible schedule's,
hourly.40 1k. cafeteria plan . Mirror dresser wilh 4 draw· hours 7am-5pm, no week·
syllab1 and othe r docu ·
ends, call (740)94 9-2722
Black pup w Brown on eye &amp; apply between 1Oem· 11 am,
mileage. uniform
ers $25 .
ments. proofing , printing,
paws on Tri bble Ad I Leon Mon -Thur·Sat,
allowances. CEU reim McCiures pho tocopying, ordering sup Childs des~ &amp; chair $5.00
II \ I \ I II
area
Restauran t 820 Jackson plies and" maintaif] in g l1nan - . bursemenl , Sam's club,
Double Door Cabinet $2Q
Health &amp; Ute ins. PTO
Pike. Galli poli s, Ohio 45631 cial rec o rds: prnv1d1ng d1rsct
wan Stove &amp; tank or gas !210
RtiSINfXS
whi ch accumulales •trom
$100
Ol,~lll"t'l!Nrn·
Furniture -Warehouseideliv- support tor _
th e ·Head 01 first work day. Top pay in Tn2 wooden end tables $ t 5.
teacher
education.
the
ery po siti on. immediale
Stale. Sign on bonus. 800- bed·matress &amp; frame lull·
Chair. the Dir ector of
INOTICEI
openi ng.· full-time. Apply in
759·5383 "
·size$ 30.
YARJJ SAI .E·
Tea chin g
and
Student
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
person, U fe Sl yle Furniture,
EOE
chicken
incubator
$10
Parlnershlp Coordinator, lhe
GAt..LII'OI.L'i
lNG CO. recommends lhal
3rd &amp; Olive Gallipolis, OH
cabinet 3-door 1o· side 1' 6"
Experi ence
Field
yQu·do business with people
9:30·5pm, No phone calls
wide
5'9"
tall
$10
Coo rdin ator. and nine facul - Wanted someone to live in
6 family ya,rd sale. Sat 916, please!
you know, and NOT to send
ty members In addition to or care lor an e ld ~ r ly lady. love sea t blue $15
9am·? 2580 S t. At. 141
money lhrough lhe mall until
Help wanted ca ring IOf the norm al inquiries .. this ollica mu sl havo references . 740you have investigated the
Huge Yard Sale 160 Mount elderly, Darst Group Home. serves as a clear ing hOuse 256- 1267 01 740·339· 1267
Weight-Equipment , power- offering.
Olive Ad . Bidw ell Sept 9&amp; now paying minimum wage. for informatiOn on Praxis I
.
.
cage-squat-rack wlpull-upABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
10 1Oam·5pm. Everythi ng new sh ifts: 7am-3pm . ?am- and Pra,;is II , Acceptance WANT EO: Part·tlm e d1rect ~ bar, T-row back-machi ne.
5pm. 3pm- t tpm. 11 pm- 1nlo the School of educat1on. care wor~ors needed IO peck·deck 400 or will se ll 80 Vending ma·c hlnes with
must gal
excellent locations all for
7am, call 740-992·5023.
"S tudent Te achmg. and leach pe rson al and commu - separale 740 . 367 . 7630
074
YARil SAt.F.·
nily sk1ll s to indiv1duals with
$10,995 BD0-234.()982
Cer lilicationJUcensure
ment al re larda tlon In th e ~.,.--~----.,
Po~mROViMUXllJl Insurance Agency now hir·
1180
WAMlJ)
I
mg: Local Administrative Must have high sc 11001 diplo- Athens Area ·
1)
38
hrs:
3pm
Fri
th
ru
Bam
•
To Do
~OI"FSSSONAL
ma
or
equival
ent
Assocl
atf;:
2 miles off At. 7 on Leading Assislant , must have cleri·
Mon
:
sleep
-ove
r
r~:~qulred;
__
SF..RVIOS .
degree
ill"
sec
re
tarial
sci·
Creek Road, Monday 8th- ca l, secretarial. business
10am-6pm Babyalltlng In Syracuse
Saturday 13th , 9am -5pm.
skills, and knowledge ot ence or computer related 2) 29 hrs :
4-Bpm area , county cenllied,-or prl· Coral Adull Clroup Homo
computers . Good people field prelerred. Must have Sat/Sun:
vate . pay. days, nig ht s &amp; hu a vacancy tor e male or
4 family yard sale, Se pt, 8·9- skills a plus. Full-ti me pos l· knowledge of computer s, WMIThurs/Frl:
10·1 1. Rocksprings Rd ., tlon a~Jallable Send resume InCluding AS-400 , word pro· ReQuirements: High School weekends . (740)99 2·8318
lomale, call (740)992-5023
valid
driver's
King residence
to : ClA-574 c/o Gallipolis ceasing , e-mail, and Internet degree ,
TUAN!D DOWN ON
Previous offi ce lic ense. good driving record - - - - - - - - Dally Tribune , P.O.Box 469 usage .
OIJ Picky Pllntere
SOCIAL S!CURITY 11181?
Sap!. B1h-121h. Depo1 51 .. Clalllpollo, Ohio 45 53 1
experience preferred. Good and Adequate auto lnsurSalary Free EaUmat11 . In terior en
No Fee Unlese We Win I
Rulland, boys 4T. girls 14 10 - ' - - - - , - , - - - oral and written communlca· ance coverage.
7.00/hour Send reaume to: exterior paint ing. G ive yo ur
1·868·082 -3340
aljult. more. (740)742·2716 LlclnMd Practical Nurett lion akllts required.
Bu ckeye
Community
home or garages lrelh
I\
I \ I I ...., I \ II
Yard Ilia· Sop!. 8•9, 258 (LPN) for lull·tlme and pari·
time work In a 114 Bed Long A.u applicants muaf submit a Servlc8s, P.O. ,o' Sox· 604, new lo'ok. We Pflnt homes ,
OH
458 40.
g_
aragaa, mobtta ,~omea ,
Salem St. , Rutland, some· Term Care Stale Facility. lette r of lntereat and reaume J ac~eon,
HOI\ml
thi ng for everyone, cheap Full-time employment offe rs Including the names and Deadline: 9·10-03. Equal buildings, bsrne tnd rcof1.
FOR SALE
Opportunity
Employer.
Licenced
an
d
lnaured.
prices.
an extens lvs benefit pack· addresses of th ree refer·
(Coli M·l, H)
on
or
before
WANI'FD
age , lnc'tudlng State civil enc81
(3041115-3074
(31FHA &amp; VA homoo 111 up
BUSINESS
September
17,
2003
to
Ms.
BUY
service retirement, ea rn up
20 Yelre experience
tor Immediate po11esalon all
Mason. SPHR,
to 15 days vaC(_atlon, 18 days Phyllss
· end rlferencH .
within 1~ min. of doWntown
ol
Human
sick leave. and 12 plus paid Otrec1 o r
Rataa aa low as
Gallipolis.
Absol ute Top Dollar: U.S.
holidays ; health/life lneur· Resources. Unlver&amp;lly of Rio Galllpoltt Ceraer ca.l lege Cloorgoa l'orlable Sawmill ,
6%. (7401446-3218.
Silver.
Gold Coins ,
To
Home}
(Careers
Close
ance Ia IIVI!IIIable. Salary Is Grande . P.O. BoM 500, Ala
don't haul your loge to the
l'roofsels, Diamonds, Gold
commensurate with eMperl· Grande . OH 45674, e- mail Call Todey l 740·446·4367. mill Just call 304-675-1957.
10 Room houM, 7 acrtt ol
Rings,
U.S . Currency,·
,
l-800·2
l
4-0452
ence. Co htact Kim Blllupe. pmngnOu rgrgcc Bdy faM
land, fe11eed pasture, River
M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 DON at Lakin Hoepital , 740·245·4909.
I
740·367·
Jim's Carpentry and small Valley District
Second Avenue. Gallipolis.
Lak in , WV al (3 041875·
landscaping. 20 yrs e•perl· 0144
740 -446 -~ 842 .
EEOIAA Employer
0860, ext 126, Monday thru
ence. · Free
estimate .
2 br Housel
University of Rio Grande
Friday !rom 6:00 a.m.·4:00
(7 401446·2506
HUO home. Only $6.500 .
p.m . Lakin Hospital Is an and Rio Grande Communlly
For listing call 1·800·719·
Tranemlsalona,
alltypte
,
Co !Ieee
EEOIAA Employ$r.
3001 Ext F144
740.205-151177.

i

. classified@ mydallyreglster.com

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

1 "'ll'lllib:-"____....,
•

r

Word Ads
Dally In -Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday- Friday tor ln-rtlon

• Start Vour Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevletlon5
• Include Phone Number And Address Whf:n Needed ·
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

\11 '\ I

'-. I U\ U I""

~

classified@ mydallysentlnel.com

classified@ mydallytrl bune.com

r

• Once you have elg_ned up for the Senior Dlacount. your renewal notice will reflect your dtacount.

•

Ad •••

l\egl~ter

Sentinel

s

&amp;unbap Gttmeli·- 6entintl

I

Your

m:rtbune

I

c§allipoli• J9ail!' tJ;ribune
~oint tllea·• ant jl\egt!tter
The ·Daily Sentinel

I
I

TO
Place

=.:::.::::::...:...:::.::..:::::...:..:::._

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

person who was a

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

,...------"1·"

Are you 65 or older?

Columbus,
Ohio
43216·1049
(Telephone: 614.6442129): "Final Actions:
are actions ol the
director which are

(",.Jlla Co.. n1y. OH

TRAINING

All real eatate adver'llllng
In thll newapaper Ia
IUbj.ct to the Federal
Fair Houllng Act of 1968
which melle• It IUegello
adver'IIH "any
preference, llmltetlon or
dllcrlmln•llon beaed on
race, color, religion, ••x
tamllltl etatu• or national
origin. or any Intention to
make any 1uch
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmii'Nitton.''
Thla newspaper wilt not
knowingly accept
adver11aementa tor real
estate which Ia in
vlolt11on of the t•w. Our
reader• ers hlftby
Informed that ell
dwelling• adver11eed In
thl• new•paper ar•
available on an equal
opportunity

b••••·

All
appl iances
WID(30415 7~·999 1

32 acres on Cenlenary
Road. 740-446-0936
5· 3BR Mobi le Home. water
and gas pa id
$400/dep.
8pm serious calls only
$400/rent.
2Br Mobile
Large lol ap10x. 101 ' }( 171', Home. 740·446·024 1
city water. sewer. nal gas.
electric . ell are eva11abl e Trailer Jar rent. 3BA. 2 lull
bath, exc cond _on Sl. t60,
740-446 -9539
m Po rter. $400fmo ... deposit
Lot lor sale in Racine . 740-446-4514 or 740-446(7401992·5858
3248

m;;;."'"':'A•I'A•II"•I•~•U•;N"•I•'S-.,

level lots. Priced to sell now
740·446·9539

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

New on markel. Baaulilul 5-t
acres. Co untry setting, 5
min fro m hosp1tal and all
amenilies. Homesite ready
with sloned driveway and
water.
Timber. ser ious
inqu iries only.
740·4460908 or 740-645-0244

1 BR with slove and refngerator. starting at $290/mo. +
deposit 740·441 -1322

LOIS • 9 &amp; I 0 Heatley S
Addition in Bidwell. two large

nnt Rt-:N'I'

1 and 2 bedroom aperl·
ment s. turnished and unfurni shed, security deposit
requi red. no pels. 740-992 ·
2218.

1 BR. , C/A, Quiet Location.
near HOlzer. WID Hookup,
$359.00 plus utilllles. lease
&amp; deposll required. no pets.
740·446-2957

Nice mobile home lots, quief
country setting, $115 per
month , includes water .
sewer, !rash, 740·332·2 t6 7

H1storical 3 story home, Opening Morning
Deer Season
adjoining business building.
where will you be'i'
spacious parki ng, pnvate
entrance. front age RT33,
city wate r. septic system. Scout 'our p'roperty now and
make il yours oy Hunting
$119,000. (3041;773·915 1
Season . Call lor free maps!
Homa wi lt'. 3 Acres in West
Columbia
across
fro m
800-213-8365
Ballfield .
Priced
be low
www .counlry1yme.com
$48.000.
appraisal
Rl \ I \ I ""
{304 )773-5343
:_:___ _ _ _ __
Letart Falls. OH: 3 .bedroom
house. 1 ba th , detached 1410
HOl!Sl'~
garage, new roof . siding.
FUR

1 room cottage 4 rental.
Bath &amp; kitche n. $175. a
' month . (304)675·2495 alter

:6:.pm
: _.,-,-,-,---,--,I br All ulilltie s inclu ded.
$325 . monlh. {J0 4 )675 _3654
2 beduJom a ~a r t me n t , $250·
plus utilit1es. Th1 td Street,
Rac ine. b h, (740)247- 4292

2

BR .
unlurnished,
$300/mo. $300/dep, plus
ulilities. no pels 740-448·
431 3

L.-------,.1
Ri-:."n

windows. cB.rpet. &amp; kilchen.
$65.000 .00 (7401247-2000

wilh

2·2BR apt , $375/mo ultilites
2 BR , 2 car garage, lull Includ ed,
$300 /de posit,
.
Newly Refinished Home- lor basemen!, 127 Ki neon Ave. 740-992 -2274
sale in Gallipolis. 3B A. 2· $500/mo. + deposit, 740 3 bedroom apartment for
best-locati on. 441 · 1322
tutl ·bath s .
rent . no pets. (74&lt;l)992·585B
vinyl -siding. Price to sa le
233 Se(;ond Ave , 2-story
now. 740·446·9539
·
house 2BA. 1112Bath . fur· Applications being accept ed
for very nice. clean 2 bedPrice redu ced, newly redec- nlshed kitchen , W/0 hook·
room
aparlmenl in country
orated 3BA with carport 135 up, oil street par~1n g, walk setting, yet close to lawn.
anywhere
·downtown.
t
2
Kineon
740 -446-2776
month s min. $545 . month. Large living room &amp; kitchen
$59.000
relfdep. no pets. 7 40-4~6 - Washer, dryer , stove. frig,
and dish washer included
Remodeled 3 bedroom, 1 4926
Landlord pays water and
112 balh in gOOd neighborhood in Middlepo rt ." (740) 3br m Park Drive wfwasher garbage. Ten ant pays elec992·7743 Or
VIOW at &amp; d1yer &amp; kitchen appli· tric . Total electric wiAC . No
ances
No pel s.
Day pets non smoke rs only.
www.orvb.comH81503
evening $400 depos1t
(304)675·2404
$450 per
Small hOuse tor sate at Bass (3041675·4655
month 446-2205 or 446·
Bend on Pleasant A1dg e 7 Room . 2 lull baths , base- 9585 Ask tor Virginia
Road. Inside completely
APART·
remodeled. Stovo. relrigera· menl , wAter paid ; no pets. BEAUTIFUL
to
schools,
$550/mo.
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
close
tor, washer and dryer IncludPRICES AT JACKSON
ed. Perfec t as a get away 740·388·1100
.
ESTATES,
SjXlt, reUrement spot. or lor Fo r Rent- N1ce 4 BA home Orilla from $52 Westwood
.
297 to
a new couple . (304)576· near Alo Grande. $~50. 00 . Walk to shop &amp; movies5383
. Call
3335
per month. D~pOslt and 740·44 6·2568 .
Equal

MOBIIL HOM~
FOR SALE

~~:~~.c:s Rr:~UI~!·aleC~l~

Housing

740·446·3644

Beech Street, Middleport, 1

Oppo~tunltv.

"'--------'
Home rrom $tQQf monlh. bedroom lurnlahed apart•
Cole's Mobile Homet
rorecloau re
nomea 4% men1. urlllllat paid, dtposlt &amp;
US 50 Eaat, Athena . Ohio.
down. 30 yellrs at e.s% apr. references .
no
pall,
40701 ' 740·592 ·1972
01 8 5
2 ·:.
4 llallngo call 800·319-3323 :(7~4;.::0:.:19;.::9 :.
..::;.::_ _ __
Land Home Package• avail· ext 1709.
For Laaae: Beaulllul . 1800
able . In you r area . (740)44e· :
H:.o~u.-e=-F-or_R_e_n_l- -18-R, Sq .Ft. , r11tored , ttcond

3384.

unrurn. AJC, waeher/dryer·
Mobile Homt 12.1110. 3Br. 1· hook-up. S3~0fmo, no pats,
AI\
deposltlraferences rAf'l ulred .
bIIh · new 1Yremod '1'd · 7 """"
...'1
""8
740·446-3687
,.;g

•eoa

" ""

Muat eet l nice 2 bedroom
14x70. VInyl aiding and 2x6
walls . Call Kare na 740·385·
9948 ..
New t4 wide onlv $899
down and only $187.98 per
monlh Call Nikki 7 40·385·
7671

floor aptrtment in Hlatorlc
District, ldlll for prof111lon·
11 couple . an modern
amenltlea. 2 bedroome·,
SpiCiOU!IIIvlngldlnlng; lots
Ta king applications lor 1 ot storage, 11 12 oatha: rear
bedroom . $300 per month deck: HVAC. $800/monlh
plus deposit &amp; utilities &amp; rei· plus utllltlea. Security and
key deposit. No pett.
eronces, (7401992·8154
Retertncll requlrtO. 740·
448-4425 or 448·3938

r M'=~~

1

10x60 2BA mobtl e hom e
S325fmo. $200/dep. no pets.
New 2003 Doublew lde. 3 BR
referen'ces. will ·sell for
&amp; 2 8a1h Only $1695 down
$4,000.
740-388·0578,
and &amp;295/mo. t -800·691 -'
leave message
6777

·~--....

Graci ous living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Vil lagt
Man or
and
Ri verside
Apartments In Middleport.
Frory1 $278-$348. Call "0·
992·5084. Equal HouSing
Opportunities.

--------------

.

'

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

r

In Memory

APARIMFNTS
FOR RENt

~

BRIDGE

....

1,...,__

No pets. 7.40.446-4425 or

446-3936

tUf11''

.... . . .

r

c.

rooms. one Is 4 rooms, both Sunday. (740)446- 7300
on first floor. 400 block in
OHica Furniture
Gallipolis. clean 7 nice. New, scratch &amp; Den!.
14~46·9 539
Save 70%. 1-B00-527-4662
Argonaut519 Bridge Street,
'IIIH II \\llhl
Gu.yandotte/Huntington . M/F
r.l~'"":':-----,
1
Houst-:l KJLO
Riding
mower,
Sears
·--•Gooo,;iliiiiiiiilli·--,1 Craftsman, $375.00 14 HP
...,
38" deck . Ag Tires. Good
Brookline matching sofa. condition. DayS 992· 4294
love seat. and chair, dark _Eve~n-ln;;,gs-9~9-2-·3-1-87_ __,
blue with chew'"' wood F
8UILDJN(;
accent, good cond $200.
S
740-441-1971 weekdays,
UPPU~
740-441-0816
evenings, .
weekend
Block, brick, J;ewer pipes,
- - - - - - - - - windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Good Used Appliances. Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Reconditioned
and ,ciall-17:;4::;:0;:·2;,45~·~5,:,:12.:1;,
. -.....,
GuaranteEd .
Wa shers.
1\:'r.-J
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
Aefrigerators. Some start at " -·-·roiiiiRiiiSiiAiiLEi"- ·
"$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76 '
Vine st.. (740)446-7398
5 month old Registered
Yorkie. (304)675-2793 leave
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark message.
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio.
(7 40)446-7444 1·877·830· CFA registered Himalayan
9162. Free f;:slimates, Easy kittens, $250 each, flame &amp;
linancing, 90 days same as seal point, (740)992-0383
cash. Visa/ Master Card.

i0

' r

r

~~:g·:~~:le$;:.~ew:li:lt.pool ~~~al~.o~~~~ b~ta~l~hfr~P:

iD40

HAY &amp;

GRAIN

Hay For Sale 30 round
bates- t000-12001b·S20.00
70- square bales- orchard
Qrass and clover- $3.00 bale
740·256·6444

F'0
~

IF40

AlJIUS
FOR SAu:

[I_O__.•rvn.
!_UTOS~iiiii.,
·~-...~
ru..~:t

tlloA~~~

,

table 4-chairs, $95·· King· 00 Tama Rockstar custom
size bo~~:- spring/mauress
$ 100·· chesu..0 resser w1m1.r· drumset. Pa1ste ·sound , tor·
·ror $140.
Skaggs 740· mula cymbals.
Cases
included $1 ,500. 740·256·
446 _7~98
1537
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale.
V•·•·E~'"I 'lS
re -conditioned automatic ·---~iiiiii"il'~
iiiiiii
~
ilio.,J
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera· C
. -r
"'
. k
tors. gas and electric anmng .omatoes. •OU piC
·
d"
d $4 .00/bushel .. we
pick
ranges. au con 111oners, an
wringer washers. Will do $5.00/bushel . Please call a
repairs on major brands in day ahead to order. O"Brlan
shop or at your home.
Farms Letart Falls 740247 "2113

rio;,.-,FH,-u_n_s_&amp;,...,....,

ANilQllt~

.._

'

Buy or sell. Riveri_n ~
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740·
992-2526. Russ Moore,
owner

F!"'l

MlscELIANBJUS

rm

IMPRO"~-~

i~---4-iioiWDsoi.iiiiio-_.1

~~~~~~n~~io~-~ 3~; 5 excel·

1989 Chevy 2500 $i ·895
1990 Astra Van $895
l8 cars 1·n st'ock.
COOK MOTORS 74~46·
0103
-------1997 Cadillac Oe\lllle 74,000
miles. $6.500. (304)675·
~58:..1..:5::1.:..30:..4.:..15..:9.:..3·..:2_76:.:3_ _
t 997
Pontiac Firebird,
3.8Liter, T-Tops, sound syslOOk
.
$
tam.
m1 1es. 7,000 .
Call -(304)675· 1501 l eave

_M_e_
ss_a.::g•_·----~

··-------pi
r
'----'------(304)429·3333

740-446-1714
92 Corsica, 6 cyl.. auto, 4
dr .. new tires, paint. many
other new parts, $2 200 .
- - - - - - - - (740)742·0509

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

HELP WANTED
SERVICE
TECHNICIAN

MOfORCYLUS

1,

1998 Harley
Davidson
FXSTS Sprl.nger Soltail,
Simster Blue, 10,000 miles,
$14,500 080 740·645·3309

2000 Arctic Cat 300Cc 4)(4,
20001b
Warn
Winch,
95
Pontiac
Grand
Prl&gt;
35k
Loading
Ramps.
Low
miles,
miles. Black &amp; gold wheels.
garage kept. (304)675·1805 Great shape, kept inside.
$3,200. 1997 Suzuki Katana
600, 11k miles, runs great.
)1,1 · kept inside. $2,900. Call
tl
Jl!,j (304)875 -1501
Leave
Message.

iI'

Advertise
in this
'
space for $1 00
per month.

•• wealth

All pnss

: .~ W"

a

~~
.&gt; :1
~

The found card,
the wild deal

DOWN
1 Recolor
2 Wide all.
3 Olaaolve
4 Prooe

pieces
5 Tortilla dip
6 Sour·
dough'l
strike
7 Borge
8 Commandear
9 Ponaltlea
10 Unwrap

34. Wom
37 "- upon
lhla quiet

llfel''

39

Boulder ot

~~t·r·•

13 Growle

~~~--

EARRINGS

DID SHE

"W.V's # 1 Chevy, Pontiac,

llH i NC; IN

SO MANY

THAT

WOR'DS

?

IIJ~I
I.

I
1I

'

HUNIJRI

U

,r,A$H~

No;;:,Tt A ~
.C...: IV

r·-...
au
VU

GEt Cash

Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

·~

"'

*RIOFING
*HOME
.MIImNUCE
*SEAMlESS
GmER
•free Estlmllll*
949-1405

1\c.TUI&gt;i.L.'&lt; ,

i

Olds

..~. . .r~. ~l· ~ "

If'

:: 1 ,_:,.'1J.-:,..~J"?'
. ·'

1 1:~..

,;r

W~~!P!,
Monday, Sept. B. 2003

Grea ter emphasis could be placod upon
your leadership Qt•alitle s In the year
Ahead . You mAy La put in positions
where you will be e~~:pected to give dlrec·
HE WA.S
li ves rAt her tha n following some one
TALK 1NG
else's orders .
A.BOL.lT T HE. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt . 221- Your crltl·
CAFETERIA cat, ncute lacultios easily spollmparlec·
SERVI Nb
tions and flaw!;, bu! that doesn't mean
TATER TOTS othms wan11o hear about them. 11 someUJ.(_L_ _:"-._ _ _ __j thing d is turb~ you , you'd be wise to keep
your com m o n!~ to yoursell.
LIOAA (Sop!. f".I 3-0ct. 23) - A love lor
IBk lhg chances cout d !Jo your uudnrng
today II you loolishly pul your chips on
some1111ng without considering the Odds.
Money Is too llard to come by to 11\ke outlandish risks.
SCORPI O (Oct 24·Nov. 22) - Be dou·
bly sure !hAt lila mo tlvos~ for what you do
toda y Ar e conslr uctl ve nnd nohle,
becau !'t e th e consequences o r rudo
beha Vior could dolettuiousl y aflect olhers
AS well A!! yourMII.
SAG ITTARIU S (N ov 23· D• c 21 ) Umter most co ndition~ you're An Aasygolng per son who gives lots ol room for Oltl·

189 Mlddi•JKirt

(740) 843-5264
Ta~e

1

Let me do 1\ for youl
50RRV, MAAM ..THERE WAS
NO ONE TO STA'I' WITH M'l'

6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
!\II pack $5.tHI
Rrlng this toupon
Buy $S.tHI
Bonanza Gel
SFREE

006 TODAY SO I J.lAD TO
BRING "'IM WITH ME ..

NO, AS LONG AS HE
"'AS SOME CRA'I'ONS, HE
WON'T BE AN't' T~OU!lLE

YO NG'S

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

JIM'S SMALL

ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740·992·2432

CARPENTER
SERVICE

740·992·5232

Person

THE 944
STORE

Location: 252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

. Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County
'

Rd. #35

Racine,

OhiO

X E

ti'ANV OF 0\111 (U$TO~Ei1S
ACT\IAI.(.'I' ~IlEfER.

"AR~-Sti!EO

-,.

S!IOES

•

YZHGWVB

M E V

D E C E V

XOW

FJSJCF

E M

A W J C F

U H B

J

·~~~::;~· S©'R~N\-~'Et?iS® ::!~

ldlt•d by CI.AY It POUAN -~----

0

he rron go lellors o f th e
lour !Crambled word! be-

low to form leur simple words.

CWE S HE

I RUROJ

I' I I I''

I

--11 :,;·

,-,D_O'rM,..;..
, Y.-o..·

The seN1ce desk cle rk was on
the phone. After my nasty look,
L.--''-..l-.1..--'_.J "'
she said to her ca ller, "I' ll call you

r-

LIKE HER, DOESN'T IT?

~~~c~: ~·~~ ~~~1ng Interrupted by a
l--~.--~r7,-lr--~ra,-/r--1 () Cnm pl~:~t'" 1he chudle quoted

~

!

SAS\CAU.Y SAYII\VO

I

992·62 15

8tJr BV SWING !11«5
i!-IAT A~E NOi MV

i

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

on•••'

5

I

/' 1 1

..

T REAp T

I

.

.

.

.

.

' - - ' - - ' - - ' - - ' - - ' - - ' )"Ou

e

by l dl1nCJ 1n !he m1s~mo words
d ~tvttiop f ro m ~lep No. 3 below.

1
PR !NI NLJMIJ[R f \l
LE1lf:R S IN SQUAR ES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

SIZE., AllCN'T I

' If you r dale oores you With co nstant chatler." th e CLo lrE
told t10 r fn cnd, "Just loo k thoughtful, nod your 11eacl and
don' t SAY a WORD. ·
.

WOUL.O YOU

PAill!::P-

ena the day empty handed, It'll be your
own laull lor not cultlvat1ng good money-

1'\IE 5!\08:

making cond1tions.
·
AQUARIUS (,Jan. 20·Fab. 19} - By failIng to eslahli!!h realistic objectives today,
lor AI ICASI bein(l Able to n1A ICh
A~LEIE'?
YOUR~PY;' yoU invite Severa lrustrn tlon by striving for credit
your capa1J II1 tins.
-ysomethi ng that, practically speaking, Is
GE MINI (Mriy 21-June 20)- II your
unat!Ainablrt. Loy out n fea sible blueprint.
hoarl isn'l In your work IOdfly, ~ o u could
PISCES (fet"l. 20-Marctl 20) - You know
easily lgnor o rev1ew lng tile de toit s
from pAs t pers onal e~t perlen ces what
Involved In your assigne d tn sks anct
causes problems for you. so don't ignOre
un co nsciously cteAte pr obl ems that
your beller judgment today when your
shouldn 't 11ave &amp;Misted.
memory anempls to warn you abou l
CANCE R (June 21-July 22)- Hnr!.tleel·
impending lrouble.
ings cou ld re!nrlt lodfly if yo u 0 1 your
ARIE S (March 21-Aprll 19 ) - A pushy
cohorts ex reel loa much from one anott1·
p8reon could involve you In somelfllng ., er conce rning a jbin t pr oject or venture.
. - - - - - - ; , - - - - . - - - - - . today In whlcl1 you huty don't wl911!0 pa lSst tho &amp;llnmple tor all to follow
•
ticlpate . II you lsck the neceSili iHY
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) - Once you open
rA solve , she or he will win out.
Pandore ·s box , II Is lmpo5!1ible· to close 11
TAURUS (Aprll 20·May 20) - By being
agRJn, so b&amp; careful abou t finding fault
co mplacen t. chances are you might com·
with others tO&lt;Iey. You can &amp;Kpect tharn
mit a grlfllvout error and 'underes1imate .. to counter you by pointing out your
your competition today. Otve ever'tlbodY
unworthy traits. ·
·

I AM NOT AN

CONTJIAOtC.T

THE REST OF

~~ ~

at

Classlfieds

1

GAIU'IELD

Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

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

Get

Fast
Results

.SOUP TO NUTZ

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

[veRY Ti~ I fn.eeR

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
110'x10' 610'x20')

(740) 992:-3194

992-6635

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month .

1H 1~

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

740·892-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

'inNG,

I heve.

a OtuDDY GaMe .

THE GRIZZWELLS

I'M ~rn"&lt; MUC\4

ROIERT
IISSEll
COISTIUCTIOI

~

HZZ

X 0 H C T

Subdue- Rtgor · Lusty- Lawyer. SAY a WO RD

• Room Addltlon8 &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Eleclrkal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Patio and Porch Deck•

Remodeling

(740) 517-9138
or
(740) 949~0020

UHC X

LOOKS A LITTLE BIT

" " to

PcitnOIO~ . O hiO

t
t

Doop water
Club for Glo

by Luis Campos .

.Astrc-

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
the PAIN
out of PAINTING

a 1alary

next five tri cks, ~~nsl h~)jn~ nverruffed
RHBWG
BXWCFWZ
lhricr. unci underrufflng twice. f'iniiii,Y,
.vou luke trick 1:1 with the heart qucc11 . PREVIOU S SOLUTION ·- "L.A. is my favorite museum.'
Ucnutiful!
- David Bowie
"Success means never hAving to adm1t you're unhappy ."
- Robert Evans

gel the coverage you need.

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:,, 0
Early birds start'

Fear" ec:tor
Make

Celebrity Cipher crypt ograms am creatod tram QUOTfl!10ns by lamous
people, past and present Eacn le!ler In tr w c1phe1slands tor another.
Today's clue · T Aquals K

hl'flrt two . Then, yuu cro ss ruff lh c

· affnrdohle ond easy ills lo

Ru•

31 Poaolbllltles
32 Aughl or
48
naught
33 Right ,
51
to a mula
53
35 Prefix
for poo
36 More
· curlou:s

CELEBRITY CIPHER

dinmond 10. discarding dummy's r!ub
two. anrl ruff a low club with dummv's U 0 H X

for your fulllily and
loftd ones.
.
Let me show you how

I I. I

I

I
I
I

Don'lleove.lhe debt

syllable
l1lenda
30 Run a fevar 47 " Primal

I

11-0· HJ shape with th e tiinglcton tlia ·
mond j Hck . You ruquost 11 r ed -suit
.
...., lcHd, furcin~ West to stnrl with that tli ·
r\( IS t-IOT C:VE.N r.5 umond jack, which is co vered by th e " J
queen, kin~ and ace. (lt.dotsn't help
SAARP !'{:, 1-\E
EAst lo duck .l You co ntinue w1th 1'1 p G
LOOK) I cl uh tn dummy's nee, u diamond to
your six. a ~pade to rturmny's 1\l'e, nnd
u diamond to your elf(ht. You cash the PW

J . · ,\\ burial and final expenses

t ·(~
·~

I

Bring your

Jump

IJ

.-..

I

::11

p-

Dealer"

1HI S All

I OH UNl Y Sl'lll•l f'l 'l

Buick .

- Sanford
41 Congeala
42 Upright
43 Mtdfovol
adventure
44 Strow lllml
45 Low-lying

interesting.
Look on ly nl the Nnrlh·Sonilt cord"
please ignore the blrldin~ . You are told
thnt heRrts are trumll.S, that you mRy
plncc the .,i,ing cnrd• wherever you
like, nnd thnt you muy request We st to
lend either a black · or rcd ·colorcd
card . How high wou ld yo u bid, and
how would you make the contract?
1'here Is, nf courl'le, no nuclion in the
book. And who knows how It would flO.
This sequence hn~ some sanlty, with

NOT IN

SAY

THE BORN LOSER

1-800-822-0417

e(o pride

40 Actre11

While wnlking alons 11 MKnhuttan
sidewalk earlier thts year , I found n di nmond queen lyint( faceup. As soon as
pn,.ible, J dived Into "Right Through
lhe Pack" by Hobert Dnrvas and
Norman HRrt (Oe\'yn Press, J\196).

The r ight answt!r is se\'en l1t'nrt s 1
Tlmt is, if - &lt;t biK "if' - )'flU Kive Wes t

IMPORTS
Athens

39 BodybUIId-

r-~~

ltc!

Dean HlU
New &amp; Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

19 Poker elake
21 Slatilsh
arms
24 Iced
drink
25 Ruby
26 - Kippur
27 " - aorryl"
28 Telegraph

By Phllllt• Alder

be defeated by one tri ck, but miRht not

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

PIIS!l

EY!Il

North's second-round cue-bid being
gnme-forcing. Four dubs cloublcd can

~'R~
High~ Dry
Seff·Storage

UNLIMITED INCOME
POTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
Must possess good people skills,
ambitious attitude. and the desire
loo succeed. ·

59 Host Joy -

Zen

...

HE~,

Cell

Now IntervieWing In

...

LttKEcD TH'

878-2487 or 4411-2812

Dldge ..

Phi.
Obi.

Pas!!

20 Rabbit

gueaeee

_·_!!!!'::=:::::!::!::!::~~=~:::;:::::::::::::~!::__-:G~~·-·~,@~Ji:#C~:
-~:?: ,:J;f;:. ,.•;:..~:S~.-·~':b!: ~S:~-:'ti~:.-:!:~ !s!~J ~~l~~~i~l.~~·.~\!(~~~;t1J::p~:~t~~~::~~

1 DON'T THINK MAW

Henderson, WV

Nerrls Nenhup

~

•

"'nARNEY

MYERS PAVING

740-992-6614 or
1-800-837-1094

I .

~

I

fii

Q-...

""'vn..:

22 ¥e rs

GM Experience a Plus
But Other Qualified
App1icants Will Be
Considered
Call Roger Jessie

I
1

WRITfSEl

F4i)

'
•I

HOWARDL

0 lder Pin ball machine in 2001 Chevy Impala' auto' .._
20 cubic toot treazer for sale working order or not PS/PW, AJC $12,200 080,

~

740-992-7599

J

on
SAVINGS

g.,-

Phone (74·0)!i93- W&gt;711
Athens, Ohio

Unconditional lifetime guar·
•Last checking statement
antee. local relerences fur·
•Last pay check stub
nlshed. Established 1975. !*Photo 1.0. *Phone Bill with name and address
1988 Chevy 4x4. 350, 5 Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
116 Main St.
speed, 112 ton, needs little
0870, Rogers Basement
Pomeroy; OH
work, $1800, (740)742-4011
740-992-CASH (2274)
Waterproollng.
1988 Ford Ranger 4x4, 2.9
auto, XLT, Needs paint, runs C&amp;C
General
Home
good. $1,200. 304-875- Maintenance· Painting, vinyl
5815, 304-593·2763
siding, ca"rpentry, doors,
1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft. windows, baths, mobile
home repair and more. For
high cube box, excellent
free estimate call Chet, 740·
cond. 740·446·941 6
992·6323.
91 Dodge Caravan LE.
loaded, one owner, 86K,
$2,000. 740·949-2481 or
740-992-6145 leave mes·
sage.
I Makes &amp; Models

-

n
N

7~0 East State Street

°

!~~G~~s~~~;;:.3:~~

TATTOO···~ LIIC~

tMPPY eNI&gt;INGS. " " '

a-

1998 Buick Century Gold
w/Gold interior, loaded, cold
air, garage kept, e~~:cellent
condition. 57 •000 miles, 35 95 Nissen Pathfinder 4114,
W-\NTI-D
miles per gallon. $7,500 s-speed, $2600 .
Rl BUY
(304)675-7 873
97 Ford Ranger 4x4 $4600.
2000 Toyota Camry V-6 XLE 96 Ford EKplorer 4x4 $4200.
A commercial 3 door refrig· 33,000 miles. Still uhder B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HWY t60
erator. (304)675-9726 ask warranty. 2000 below retail. N. 740·446·6865
lor Carolyn.
(304)675·2728

~~H~e~lp~W~a~n~le~d~~~~H~e~l~p~W~a~nt~e~d~~

IT'S A

FREE ESTIMATES

t

a l!o

exceeder

56 Procllced

;.;.;;.;;,;,;,;;;.,;;,.:;;;.::::.;:.:;:::.,:~---------...,.--------------------- .__ _,;_,;_,;__-'----.J 38

1

RESIDENTIAL

~ 994

Norlh

Opening lead: t .l

COMMERC IAL and ·

States 17'6" bass boat
X25, fis h Iinder, trolling
motor, 120hp Evinrude,
1947 Jeep Overtand SW, 4· 1994 Chevy Blazer Tahoe black &amp; silv&amp;r metallic, white
WD, 4-cy, std. 2-door, runs, LT, 4WO, 4 door, $4 ,000. bo"om, trailer. $7000 firm,
needs care 740·446·4999 OBO, 740·256· 1539 or 740· 740.742·0509
1972 one ton Chevy, good 256·1343
~
con dllton $1400 · NO •1raUIIJ
1997 Tahoe, 4dr, 4&gt;4,
AliTO PAIUS &amp;
7_4_0_·9_9_2·_3_564
_ _ _ _ _ $10.000. 1981 Chevy 314·
A~RIE&lt;;
1975 Ford Elite, 118,903 ton, 4X4, $1500.
16fl ,
mites, 351 w, runs great, Checkma te -Speedboat. ~987 2.8, S-10, 4~~:4 engine.
(740).949-0t24, ssoo, good 115hp Mercury, $2000. Hear It run . $350. (304)773·
tires, fair condition.
prices-firm/no-trade 740:._:::::_::.:...;=:...::.:..:...__ :.24::5::·0:.:1.:..44..:.__ _ _ __
t986 Ford Escort. 4 dr., 4
cyl .. auto. great litlle car. lots 1998 GMC Yukon
SLT
leather , loaded, axe. cond.
1400
740
742
new parts, $
•(
)
' 304-882-3855 or 304-8820509
1986 Tlago MOtor Home,
3138 .
Buick
lesabre
custom
21~.
generator, tully sell-con·
1992
24.090
miles,
133.800 mlles, runs goad, 1999 Dodge Ram 1500 tained,
needs paint work $900 neg. Laramie SLT 4K4, V-8. AT, '$7,500. 740-441 · 1583
AC, PW. CD , 51,000-miles - - - - - - - 74 446 _0519
c_..:_..:_:.::_..:__ _ _ ~sking ·$13,500. 740·992· 1988 Cruise Master Motor
1993 Mustang GT 81,000 2060
Home Class A. Ford 460 Vmjles . Leather. sunroof, cowl
B, 33.000 miles asking
hood, all power. E~~:cellent 2000 Chevy 5 10, LS ,exf· $11 ,900 . 740·992-2060
Condition. S3,800. 304•675 _ cab, 3dr, cruise. tilt, CD, 4cy,
Ssp, 35,000 miles, $7500 89 Holiday Rambler Bumper
58 15 _
304_
593 2763
_..:._
'
• _
• _ __
740-446-2300
pull. 32ft. BIIC&amp;IIent condi·
1994 LeBaron LE. V·6,
tlonl Has queen bedroom.
loaded, 68,000 actual miles, 200 Ford F· 350 · super Asking $5,500. (304)882·
$3,450 080, 740.992·3394 duty, 4x4, power-stroke, 6 2576
weekdays, (740)742·3020 speed, 48 ·000 miles 740 "
\ I I ~ \ It I ...
weekends.
:6.:..
43:,:·2=0:8.::.
: 9 _ _ _ _ _ jftp;;;;;;;;;_;~;;;;;;;;;;;

MERC11ANDf&gt;'E

(740)992-7869

Pnss

New Honlcs • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Rooting

1994 Polaris SL 650 twoseater jet ski. 83hp with trail·
1974 Honda CB550 motor$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. cycle, $500; 1986 0100. 2 er. $1 ,800. 080. (304)675·
Hondas.
chevys,
etc!
d 0 d
I k
$600 2314 after 5:00
cars/trucks from .ro::nn . For w · 0 ge p c up,
;

.....

~~UMENTS

J.

In Pari•
18 Wild

Pa~s

,.
'"' J. ••

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : E:ast·West

I NT

t7

briefly
55 Some
whlakeya
56 Blowa a
chonco
57 Mach 1

burrow

t AIOHG:I
"' G 4 3

Wul

attention,

22 Pro vote
23 Knockt
llrmly
24 Secret
meeting
27 Lazily
HeiJ&gt;-Wantod
abbr.
30 Piling up,

Y(l1 0 ~6

BUILDfRS InC.

FOR SALE

~
1989 Park Avenue. V-6,
listrngs 1-800·719·3001 eXt auto,
4
door.
$900;
3
_9_0_1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ {304}773-9151

... 9 8

South
l!o 3

BISSEll

12 ft. John Boat Manly"
$100. 060, 36 lb. thrust,
trowelling motor. minnkota
$100.
740-379·9122.
leave message If not hOme .

'fkUCKS

K Q J Ill 7 5

South

2001 Honda 450 S, 4-wheel·
er. green, low miles. 740.
446·6688
2001 Honda Shadow Spirit.
VT 1100, 7.400 mites, askIng $5.900. 740·446-7668

.K!t 7 ~

992-5479

L,~------_.1 L----'::;":::&lt;~,:.tm::;:•:J:J

.

99 Ford Mustang $6500.
98Toyo1a Camry $4900.
98 Pontiac Flreblrd $4800.
95 Olds Cutlass 2dr. $2600.
95 Ford Probe $1760.
98 Ford Conture $2500.
00 Ford Focus 5-!lpeed
$2800.
92 Cavalier $1200.
96 Ford Conture $1800.
87 Pontiac Grand Am $300.

r

Hour•
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

4 • If
¥,1 97!13

J

Jeff Warner Ins.

MOIURCYIUS

-t9_9_4_P-on-1-ia_c_S_u_n_b_lrd-.-4
Washer $95 ., Kenmore cream. shot s &amp; · worme d . cylinder, 100,000 miles, 4dr, lent condition . (740)446· ~--iiiliiiiimiiiiii'~;;,;,"iiio",l
exc. cond. $1850 740-446·
dn-r $125 .. GE. refrigera· $200
. 1740 )992 .737 1
4385
11!'="'.;...~~--....., 4514 or 740·446·3248
tli:jr;..-~--""1
BASEMENT
tor. like
new. $195 ..
MIJ.I&gt;1CAL
VANS &amp;
WATERPROOFING

r:ro

Cellular

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

1 1f2 year old white laying
hens tor sale, 50e each, ~1'11~-~---...., ~!1111""_ _ _ _ _ _.,

740\985·3956

East

to r,

TO pesura
Oeuntlen
Practice
Stein filler
Asauago

52
54 Admirer
Kind

llnoa
Drink
Lampreys
Novellat
-Uris
Single,

14
15
18

.ALUiiL

29670 Bashan Road

...._

Hay tor sale. Tlmot"hy and
Orchard grass
Round
Bales. $t5.00, Square bales
$3.00. Good horse hay. Call
B &amp; D Auto Sales HWY 160
(304)937-4811
N 740.446·6865
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· - - -- - - - II{\ \\l't IH I \1111\
ing applications lor wailing NEW AND USED STEEL
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
apartment, call 675-6679 For
Concrete,
Angle,
EHO
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
5PAO:
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
FOR lb:NI'
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Offices (Downtown For Friday. Sam-4 :30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
Rent) All electric, one is 3 Thursday,

Htll s Self
Storage

Join Male Only Clogging Team
ages7 to 70.
Beginners Male Line and Clogging
classes Tuesday, Sept. 16th ·
6 :30 • 7:30pm Pomeroy Municipal
Building· Pollee Station.
For more Info. Contact 992-7853

..t-..&amp;.
r_.J\o.~
~ ~.-:.,JI

43
44
46
49
50

12 Curved

tf(.,.cf14U. ....

Now Taking Applicationsu· ••
35 West 2 Bedroom __ JYU.Kl...IV\I·u,..,~:.
•
Townhouse
Apartments.
Includes Water Sewage, 1·10x12', insulated, metal
Trash. $350/Mo .. 740-446- siding tan &amp; brown. rollup
door. was $1750 now
0008.
$1400: 1·10x15. msulated,
. Small Apartment for rent melal Siding tan &amp; green,
$250. Month. Utilities paid rollup door. was $2100 now
except electricity. Deposit $1700; (740)742·401,
required . (304 )675· 1365
Central
Tara
Townhouse Cool Down!!
Cooling
Systems,
New
and
Apartments, very Spaciou~·.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1 Used Installed. (740~446·
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted. 6308
Adu.lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
JET
Patio, Start $385/Mo . No
AERATION MOTORS
Pets, Lease Plus Secur ity
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Deposit Required, Days:
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
740·446-3481 ; Evenings:
800·537·9528.
74()-357-0502

41 Alrpon

arrivals
1 Knight 's
w"e
5 " Titanic "
menoge
8 TabkOdtopk

St.
rI!~~!!'!~~~!!!!!~~~ 11 -Laurent

tlf5/5f-9/ll()f

ing. Relerencea Required.

iiri.r.;..;;;.;.;.;.....;,;..;._ _,l

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

74ttl&gt;r4M

water included. Security and
key deposit. Of1 street park·

~;:,o;~c:::s~r ~~~ye:a~~~

NEA Crouword Puzzle

a'TN..'4 $.

AJC; $300.00 pe r month :

.,,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

In Memory

for lease.: One bedroom.
. l,ijlfurnished, newly redeco·
rated, second floor Apt.. at
corner of Second and Pine.

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Monday, Sept. 8,.2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Cf A ~P\..i
~

\

�.P ageB6

The Daily Sentinel

Steelers steamroll Baltimore
PITISBURGH (AP) - Tommy Maddox
threw t!tree touchdowns passes, two to Hin!!S
Ward, and Pillsbu'lh's defense roughed up the
Baltimore Ravens rookie quarterback Kyle
Boller in a 34-15 Steelers victory Sunday.
On Ward's second touchdown catch, a 28yar~er late in the third quarter that made it 270, Ward shed his coverage on a crossing pattern and Maddox hit him in stride for a 28yard score.
Before that, Maddox repeatedly found
Plaxico Burress for big yardage, with completions of 19, 16,47 and 18 yards setting up the
Steelers' ftrSt three scores.
.
Burress had six catches for 1!6 yards and
Ward had nine for 91 yards.
Maddox also hit tight end Jay Riemersma on
a 20-yard touchdown pass play in the third
quarter. Maddox wenJ 21-of-29 for 260 yards
and no interceptions.
Bills 31, Patriots 0
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. (AP) - Safety
Lawyer Milloy needed less than a week to.
stick it to his former team. Quarterback Drew
Bledsoe's wait was longer, but the victory just
as sweet.
The two former Patriots sparked the Buffalo'
Bills to a 31-0 victory over New Enghmd in
their opener Sunday.
·
Milloy started despite getting in only two
practices with Buffalo, causing an interception, recording a sack and taking part on five
tackles.
Bledsoe engineered scoring drives of 80 and
90 yards on his first two possessions. and finished 17-of-28 for 230 yards with a touchdown and an interception.
Travis Henry 's !-yard plunge. Dave
Moore's 7-yard reception and defensive tackle Sam Adams' 37-yard interception return put
the Bills up by 21-0 early in the second quar-.
ter.
Tom Brady finished 14-of-29 for 123 yards
and threw four interceptions.

'

''\

14

..

Tampaetyat

J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com
Bv BRIAN

Baltimore Bavens wide receiver Travis Taylor: top, tries to catch
a pass over Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback Dewayne
Washington . (AP))

Geint

9p.m.

Falcons 27, Cowboys 13
IRVING, ' Texas (AP) - Bill Parcells'
Dallas Cowboys could not stop making mistakes and the Atlanta Falcons recovered from
a slow start to win the opener 27-13 Sunday.
Doug Johnson didn't make the kind of
magic Michael Vick does, but he threw thirdquarter touchdown passes to a sliding Warrick
Dunn and a rumbling Alge Crumpler, then ·
dove 1 yard tiJr a victory-sealing score early in
the fourth to spoil Parcell s' return to the sideline.
The Cowboys got a 63-yard touchdown run
from newcomer Aveion Cason to lead 7-3
midway through the lirst quarter. After intercepting a pass by Johnson. Dallas reached the
Atlanta B-yard line .on a 48-yard pass from
Quincy Carter to Joey Galloway. but the gain
was wiped out by a penalty.
Johnson fini shed 16-ot-27 for 22H yur.ds
with one interception.
Carter was 15-of-32 for 26H yards · with an
interception and a fumble .
~

Titans 25, Raiders 20
The
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Tennessee Titans found a new hero, giving
them some revenge against the Oakllmd
Raiders.
Steve McNair threw two touchduwns and
punter Craig Hentrich matched hi s career hi gh
by kicking three field goals as the Titans
downed the Raiders 25-20 Sunday night.
It was a messy opener that doubled us a
rematch of last season's AFC championship
game. The Titans came in wanting to a•lenge
the loss that kept them from their second
Super Bowl in four seasons- and get a jumpstm1 for this season. Oakland wun the AFC
title g~me 41-24 in January and outscored the
Titans 93-49 in two meetings last season that
featured plenty of Tennessee mi stakes.
This game had lots of errors. too . The teams
combined fgr 28 penalties for 284 yards, but .it
was the Raiders who hurt themselves over and
over. Their share was 17 for 173.

HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
Supplement to:,
Point Pleasant Register
GallipoHs Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Thomas C. Martin, 67
• Earnise Sayre, 76

INSIDE
• Time Out for Tips. See
Page A3
• Community calendar.
See Page A3
• Dettwlller's grand
opening. See Page AS

WEATIIER
·
'
'
. ' 1"\

looteled -~~. HI: 70., Low: 1101

Detallo on P.,. A2

LO'ITERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 9-8-6
Pick 4 day: 0-1-2-3
Pick 3 night: 7-1-1
Pick 4 night: 0-1-2-0
Buckaye 5: 9-12-19-22-33

to fly to the 12th time, setting up the ninelap finish .
· Again Nt;wman was pulling away, but
Ricky Rudd, running third, nudged Harvick .
on the fmntstretch, sending Harvie!( slamming in the turn one wall and bringing out
one more yellow, giving Newman four laps
10 hold on.
On the si'ngle-file 're start, Newman's
Dodge pulled away from that of Jeremy
Mayfield's Dodge and went on to his series·high sixth victory thi s year,
Rudd finished third in a Ford, followed by
that of Jeff Burton, and the Dodge of Rusty
Wallace.
Afterward, Rudd ·and Harvick parked
side-by-side on pit road and crew members
gathered. The drivers exchanged words ·but
were kept apart.

• Hardware
• Paint
• Construction
•·Banks

• Furniture
• Carpet
• Wallpaper
•Insurance

Dally 3: 4-4-7
Dally 4: 5-2-0-0
Cath 25: H-10-12-18-20

•

INDEX
2 SI!CI10N8 -

Sports

• And More ...

''

''

''I '

''

'

''' '''.

I

'' ''

Bicentennial event began in
Vinton
Count y
last
Wednesday. and included
battle re-enw.:tmcnts in several locations, as well as Civil
War-era balls, hi storical
exhibits and other activities
along the battle mute and in
Pomeroy and Chester.
The
·Meigs
County
Economic
Development
Office, which also oversees

tourism promotion for . the goud things ahout attendance
county, placed guest registers for all of the events, and the
at each event lo.:ation. same goes for the merchants
a•·cording to Perry Varnadoe. in the business community,"
but those registrations have Varnadoe said Monduy. ''It
not yet been counted. •
se.ems that most of the merLast week. before the Raid chants experienced a good
re-enactment
st;trted, sales day,'
"1 think the evems were
Varnadoe said preliminary
estimates of visitors ranged very successful, and exposed
from 10,000 to 40,000.
the county in a positive light
"'I've heard nothing but to a lot of people who ltad

never been here before."
At last 3,000 school children from Meigs County and
districts in the surrounding
areas attemled re-enactmen t
events, and at least 7,000
people attended Saturday
morning 's hattie re -enact ment at the farm of Ray und
Patty Pickens . near Chester.

Please sH Pleases, AS

Injured
juvenile found
in Pomeroy
parking lot
J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

BY

POMEROY - A man
charged with an assault
agui1lst a juvenile was
armigned Monday in Meigs
County Court.
Christopher Smith, 20, of
Pomeroy was charged with
one count of felonious assault
against Darin Horn . 17. when
the two allegedly had a light at
approximately Rp.m. Friday in
the parking lot located at the
riverfront · in downtown
Pomeroy. Hom was life tlighted to Cabell-Huntington
Hospital and Smith was placed
in the Middleport jail until his
mmignment Monday morning.
Assistant Pomeroy Police
Chief Floyd Hickman and
police corporal Ronnie Sp;tun
r~sponlled to the scene.
Police reports indicate that
several people witnessed the
altercation between Smith
and Horn.
Smith was released on his
own recognizance bond
Monday after the arraignment. There is a temporary
prote,·tiun order tiu·h1dding
contact between Smith and
Horn. Smith will go before
Meigs County Court Judge
Steve Story for a preliminary
hearing on Sept. I M. The case
is stillttnder investigation.
Pomeroy Polil.:c Chief Mark
Proflitt said this kind of violence will not be tolerated .
Prof1itt said that a.~idc fmm this
incident. the Morgan's mid festivities did not bring an increase
in crime or tratlk citations.

Buffington island Civil War site to benefit from ·grant
news@ mydailysentinel.com

Movies

• Plumbing

'.

BASHAN - The Spencer
Fannin Bashan and the Pickens
Farm near Chester saw plenty
of action on and off the bmtlefield by hordes of re-enactors
and spectators last week.
.
Behind the scenes, Harry
and Avice Spencer worked
hard to make life u little easier for soldiers and civilians
alike who came to their 79acre farm in Bash an .
A lot of planning went into
providing bathrooms, generators, parking lots and shuttle
services. More than 40 volunteers were involved including
students from Eastern High
School. At least 80 pies were
made for Morgan's raiders.
"I got ve~ little sleep last
Friday night,' said Spencer who
went to bed at I a.m. and woke
up at 6 a.m. "It's been a struggle
and a tremendous effort from
every~y il.1 the co~'l\l~~~ty to
make thts thmg posstble.
·
Parking was a big priority
for everyone who traveled
near and fur to the battle site.
The Spencers organized an
army of parking attendants at
strategic points on the road
leading to their farmhouse.
Mary Cmherine Holter. a
neighbor. volunteered the use
of her lield for parking.
Many other businesses or
neighbors provided equipment
or volunteered to help the
Spencers
out.
Gheen's
Industrial Services provided
generators for extra electricity
so that guests did not have to
worry about living in the time
·of. before the lights came on
without having to light a match.
There .was a war waged
against the rain to keep
Spencer's fields ready for action. Harry and Avice Spencer used a map of Meigs County to find the best places to stick parking attendants Saturday morning. The Spencers planned for Morgans · invasion for more
Pleue SH F•rms, AS
· than a year. (J. Miles .Layton)

STAFF REPORT

Obituaries

• Appliantes ·.
• Electrical

•

West Vuginia

Editorials

DON'J MISS OUT ON THIS....

I

MtLES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinet.com

Dear Abby

0

• '.

BY Jo

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

NASCAR

'• 1 1' 1 1 \ 11 ~ 1 1: ' '

Farms.play important role in Morgan's Raid

rushing on 22 carries and Aaron Brooks completed 29 of 47 passes for 274 yards with one
mterception. He threw a 2-yard TO p&lt;tss to Joe .
Horn in the fourth quarter.
o

l I '• 1 ' \ '

Raid attendance pleases organizers

..

Ryan Newman wins Chevy 400'

I

POMEROY
Local
organizers may never know
how many visited Meigs
Ceunty to wat.ch the reenactment of Morgan's Raid
unfold , but most agree attendance was good and events
were successful.
Ohio
The
four-day

will be here Thursday, September 25

RICHMOND, Va. (AP)·- Ryan Newman
dominated a late long run and then held on
through three restarts _ the last with four
laps to go _. and won Saturday night
Rtcllmond International Raceway.
Newman, whose crew said he m_ight not
have; enough fuel to finish under the long
green flag run that started with 77 laps to
go, got a break when Robby Gordon
crashed with 19 laps to go, causing a sevenlap caution in the Chevrolet 400.
He appeared to ' be pulling away from
Kevin Harvick when the race went back to
green with i 4 laps to go, but lost that edge
when debris on the track caused the yellow
,

\

..

2003

Associated Press

...

• Bucs shutout Eagles.
SeePageB1

attempt was blocked hy Mike Minter as time
Smith ran for 64 yards on 13
expired.
carries.
Delhomme fini shed 12-of-20 for 122 yards
Harrington was 17 -of-30 for 195 yards and
passing with two interceptions and twq touch- no turnovers in head coach Steve Mariucci 's
downs . ·
.
Detroit debut.
Arizona's Jeff Blake was 28-of-46 for 363
SteJ?hen Davis marked his first gm:ne as
Carolina's featured running back with Ill yards with three TDs.
yards rushing.
·
.
Jacksonville
quarterback
Mark
Brunell
tin49ers 49, Bears 7
Chiefs 27, Chargers 14
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Jeff Garcia
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) - Showing no ished 23-for-27 for 272 yards and two touchpassed for 229 yards and two touchdowns , and
ill effects from offseason surgery, Priest downs.
Garrison Hearst caught a TD pass and rushed
Holmes rushed for two touchdowns to lead the
for another score as the 49ers sparkled in
Kansas City Chiefs to a 27- 14 victory· Sunday
Texans 21, Dolphins 20
over the San Diego Chargers.
MIAMI (AP) - Kri s Brown kicked his fifth ·coach Dennis Erickson's debut. beating the
Holmes had TD runs of 5 and 24 yards and field goal, a 35-yarder with 25 seconds left. Chicago Bears 49-7 Sunday.
Ahmed Plummer returned an interc~ption
159 total yards in the first half as the Chiefs and the Houston Texans stunned the Miami
68 yards for a·score.
·
took a 24-0 lead.
. Dolphins 21-20 Sunday.
The 49ers took a 33-7 halftime lead with
Newcomer Vonnie Holliday sacked Drew
Houston's David Carr threw for 266 yards,
Brees three times in the first half, supplying including a 78-yard touchdown to Corey their biggest offensive output in a half since
the outside pass rush Kansas City · sorely Bradford. The Texans limited Ricky Williams 1992. They punted just twice in the first three
lacked last year.
to 69 )lards rushing and forced three turnovers, quarters.
With a variety of big plays. San Francisco
Holmes took a swing pass from Trent Green mcluding an mterceptton by Marcus Coleman
scored 23 points in the final 6:01 of the game.
on the Chiefs' first drive of the second quarter that set up the winnm~ score.
and sped 3 I yards to the 20.
Brown also made held goals of 50, 36, 24 Tai Streets had a TO catch, Terrell Owens
caught sever. passes for 112 yards, Plummer
Green then found Johnnie Morton by him- and 23 yards.
self in the end zone on the next play for a 21Williams put Miami ahead in the fourth had two interceptions and Jeff Chandler
0 lead.
.
quarter on a 35-yard catch-and-run touch- kicked five tield goals.
New Bears quarterback Kordell Stewart
Green finished 21-of-34 for 282 yards and down.
one TD. t
The Texans answered with a 76-yard drive, went 14-of-34 for 95 yards, missing open
Holmes carried 18 times for 85 yards arid capped by Brown's 24-yard field goal that left receivers and forcing balls to covered ones.
caught seven passes for 98 yards.
Houston trailing 20-18 with 4:55 left.
.
Fiedler's three touchdown passes tied his
Seahawks 27, Saints I0
Vikings 30, Packers 2~
career high, but Carr was better, completing
SEATTLE (AP) - Matt Hasselbeck and
Shaun Alexander made sure the Seattle
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) - Randy Moss 17 of 31 attempts.
Seahawks maintained their offensive momen·caught nine passes for 150 yards and a touchdown as the Minnesota Vikings beat the Green
_ Giants 23, Rams 13
tum from last season.
A retooled defense did its part Sunday, too,
Bay Packers 30-25 in front of a record crowd EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) of 70,505 at the remodeled Lambeau Field on Kenny Holmes recovered one of Kurt in a 27-10 victory over the New Orleans
Sunday.
Warner's six fumbles for a touchdown, and the Saints.
The Vikings built a 27-3 lead and then held New York Giants sacked the St. Louis Rams'
Hasselbeck threw two touchdown _passes
off Green Bay's furiou s rally.
quarterback six times and intercepted him and Alexander ran for I08 yards and scored
Javon Walker's 24-yard touchdown catch once in a 23-13 vic'tory Sunday.
twice. Seattle's defense held the Saints to 103
pulled Green Bay to 30-25 with 1:55 remainMatt Bryant kicked field goals of 24, 47 and yards rushing.
.
mg. But Ryan Longwell's ~nside kick went 44 as the Giants' revamped special teams perThe Seahawks scored 21 straight points in
out of bounds, and the Vtkmgs took over formed flawlessly. Bnan ·Mitchell, another the second quarter. reaching the end zone on
thanks to a new NFL rule that doesn't allow a offseason acquisition, scored his tirst rushing each of their possessions.
rekick with less than five minutes left.
touchdown since 2000.
Alexander started the! binge with u !-yard
· Daunte Culpepper threw three touchdown
Warner, who completed 34 of 54 passes for dive, Hasselbeck threw a 35-yard TD strike to
passes and the Vikings' defense forced four 342 yards, threw a 37-yard touchdown pass to Koren Robinson and, later, a I0-yard TD pass
turnovers in the first half.
Torry Holt and drove the Rams into New York to Alexander.
Ahman Green's !-yard TD run cut the territory twice late in the game.
Deuce McAllister of the Saints had 99 yards
However, both drives faltered on fourth
deficit to 30-18 and Green Bay 's Erwin
Swiney recovered the onside kick with 6 1/2 down, the last ending when Keith Hamilton
minutes left..
tipped a Warner pass and it fell incomplete.
But Brett Favre threw his fourth interception
Tiki Barber led the Giants' offense with 146
in the end zone with 5: 13 left
yards rushing on 24 carries. Quarterback
,
Kerry Collins finished 14-of-26 for 202 yards.
Panthers 24, Jaguars 23
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Jake
Lions 42, Cardinals 24
Delhomme replaced Rodney Peete in the secDETROIT (AP)- Joey Harrington threw a
ond half and energized Carolina's offense with career-high four touchdown passes as the
three touchdown passes - the last with 16 Lions beat Arizona 42-24 Sunday, spoiling
seconds· to play - to rally the Panthers to a Emmitt Smith's debut with the Cardinals and
24-23 victory over the.Jacksonville Jaguars in . Anquan Boldin's record for a receiver in his
Sunday's opener.
NFL debut.
Delhomme was facing a fourth-and-12 on
Boldin, a second-round pick from Florida
the Jaguat:s 12 with time ticking away.
·
State, caught 10 passes for 217 yards and two
With the defense closing in, he found Ricky touchdowns.
Proehl in the left corner of the end zone for the
Detroit's rookie receiver had a good day,
winning score.
too. Charles Rogers had four receptions for 38
The Jaguars moved quickly downfield, but yards and two scores'. He dove to catch a 13rookie Seth Marler's 55-yard field goal yard/ass from Harrington to put the Lions
ahea 14-7 in the second quarter.

'
'
BY HANK KURZ JRo

'

SPORTS

..,. .. ''

Amato sees few ·
changes for OSU, Bt

Browns off to similar
start in 2003, Bt

Monday, September 8, 2003

Weather

.

12 PAOllS
,

A3

B2-4

Bs

A3

A4
As
As

Bt-2,6
A2

tel aooa Ohio Volley Publlahllll eo.

POMEROY - The Ohio
Historical Society. in ' partnership with the Buffington
Island Battlefield Group, has
• been awarded a grant ·of
$52,000 to purchase preservation easements on areas of
the Meigs County Civil War
battlefield site.
Buffington · Island State
Memorial commemorates the
only significant Civil War battle
·., that took place on Ohio soil.
On July 19.1863, the Union
Army engaged a column of
Confederate cavalry commanded by General John Hunt

Morgan as they u·icd t1i cross OHS site can view a monuthe @hio Rtver. Morgan's ment made of broken Ohio
troops had entered the state glacial boulders. enjoy picJuly K and had foughl. burned nics and read interpretive
and looted their way across signs describing the battle.
The grant from the Center
Ohio in search of a place to
cross the river. Morgan ;md his for Civ1l War Livin~ History
remaining men were finally will be used to buy Irom willcaptured
July
26
in ing property owners preservation easements that will
Columbianu County.
located about , 20 miles prevent the sale of mineral
east of Pomeroy in Meigs rights, limit development ,
archeological
County along State Route protect
124. the Buffington Island resources and prevent further
battlefield is not actually an loss nf the battlefield. A sand
island, but lies on the flood · and gravel company has
obtained mineral rights and
plain above the Ohio Rivec
The
O,hio
Historical licenses to mine a portion of
Society site consists of about the battlefield.
"We are pleased to be workfour acres of the 1,500 acre
battlefield. Visitors to the ing with the Butlington Island

Battlefield
Battlelield Gmup as a key part- . American
ncr in the preservation of the Protection program of the
site. said George Kane, director National Park Service. Kane
nf facilities management l(lr also said that the Society
the Ohio Historical Society. wants In work with local
The support of an orgaili7lltinn groups in Meigs County to
like the Center demonstrates preserve and promote this
the importance of preserving llllg'?,rlant historic site.
·The grunt fmm the Center
the battlefield."
lilrCivil
War Living History is
"In addition to Buffington
Island Battlefield Group and a step in the right direction in
tl1e Ohio Historical Society. preserving the onl y Civil War
two other nonprofits have battleticld in Ohio:· said Tony
become partners in the Ten-Barge. prcsilknt of' the
Buffington lslanll preserva- • Bullington Island Prescrvatiou
tion etlort by providing Grou\). "With our partners, we
funding : the C1vil War arc p cased 10 bt: ahk to proPreservation Trust , a non- ll'Ct pn1tions Lif this historical
profit group in Virginia thai area for the education and cuiworks nationally to protect
Please sH Grant. AS
Civil War sites, and the

Dlabttes Support Groups
The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, September 14 from 2:00pm 4:00pm at lhe. HMC French 500 Room .
0

FeahJred speakJr - Rick Slocker, Holzer Noedical Therapy Center, who will discuss "Exercise"
In Meigs Cpyn!Y: Thursday, September 18 at 10:30 am - Meigs Senior Center

Dave or Brenda

at 991-2156
1: til: Ill,:lu :mu[:Ui·l Im: I111.:1 C:tili ~llliir·UD1ITII,; IU:mUJli'li·l

Seple!nber 20 from 8:00 am - 5:00 pm in the Hospitol's French 500 Room
· Please bring a list of home medications to class.
Please have prescription from your physkian to attend.
For :more information on these FREE programs, or to register, call (740t 446·5080

MEDICAL CENTER .
Discover· the Holzer Differ·ence

www.holzer.org

1

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="482">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9933">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="71249">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="71248">
              <text>September 8, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
