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•·

Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce flags for
merch~ts available, AS

Sotithern donates to ~­
-Katrina victims, A3

1Jo If you have a question or a comment, wrtte: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
Nt: """t l

.

t

, . , . , . "'•t l.rtl

.
Race: MBNA RacePoints 400

CIIAflSMAN

HlJSCti St-Hit.:S

--..

Hoosier hotshots from the
Where: Dover (Del.jlnterna· old school of dirt tracks arid

TIUICI\

Race: Dover 200 •
Where: Dover (Del.)lnterna·
heat races, dueled it out as if tiona! Speedway (1.0 mile),
it were for bragging rights in 200 laps/ miles. ,
the old neighborhood at New When: Saturday, Sept. 24

R.-:e: las Vegas 350
Wllere: Las Vegas· Mo tor
Speedway 11.5 miles) , 146
laps/219.0 miles.
When: Saturday, Sept. 24

La1t year's winner: Ryan

Hampsh ire

Last year's Winner: Shane

Newman
Qualifying record: Jeremy
Mayfield, Dodge, 161.522
mph, June 4, 2004.

Speedway. The two swailfJed Truex Jr.
the lead twice in the final Qualllyln&amp; record: David
nine laps. Stewart"s Chevy Green, Chevrolet, 157.916
edged past Newman's Dodge mph, June 6, 2004.
on the back straight at lap Race record: Dale Earnhardt
292. With two to go. Newman Jr.. Chevrolet, 130.152 mph,
returned the favor. this time May 30, 1998.
on the front straight. Mean· IJtat raca: Kevin Harvlck won
while, a lew lengths back, the Emerson Radio 250 on
Matt Ken seth was edging out Sept. 9 at Richmond , culmi·
teammate Greg Biffle in a nating a big night. He had
side-by-side finish for,third. won the Nexlel Cup pole ear·

' tiona I Speedway p...O mile),

400 laps/miles.
When: Sunday. Sept. 25

Race record : Mark ,Martin,

, Ford . 132,719 mph , Sept.
21, 1997.
Last race: Ryan Newman
gave Tony Stewart a sense of
d~iil vu the Nextel Cup points

International

lea der hadn 't experien·ced,
since ea rly in the y~a r. He
outdueled Stewart in a race Stewart preser\led his 1foints

No . 20 had dominated fo r lead , but the victory lifted
most of the afternoon . New· .Newman from lOth all the
man and Stewart. a pair of way up to a tie for third.

r.
MAn KENSETH

Last year'• winner: Martin

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o ! "F:'Ii"l S • \ nl. ;;;;, :'1/o. 2H

Hmiel
Quallfylne record: Mike Skinner, Toyota, 165.320 mph.
Sept. 25, 2004.
Roce record: David Starr,
Chevrolet, 135.394 mph,
Oct. 13, 2002 .
IJtot week: Rick Crawford
gave Ford its first victory of
the season, narrowly holding
ott D~nnis Setzer, in a
Chevrolet, and Ted Musgrave,
lier in the evening . Another in a Dodge, to win the Sylva·
Chevrolet driver. Paul nia 200 in New' Hamps,hire
Menard, finished a career· by .221 of asecond.

SPORTS
• Southern wins fourth ·
straight. See Page .B1

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

f\!EXTEL

CuP

SERIES

No. 17

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDA1LYSENT1NEL.90M
, Meigs
County Commissioners will
seek a gralll through the Ohio
Department of Transportation
for improvements to the parking area they are developing
behind the county courthouse.
Meeting Thursday in regular
session,
commissioners
approved a resolution seeking
grant funds through the ODOT
Metroparks Road Improvement
allocation for next year, to pave

FEUD OF THE WEEK

v

DEWALT POWER TOOLS fORD

Kasey
Kahne

lnrt!nn'• vile Insult of
~ltrlp on national tei&amp;-

·• Hampshire left only two Chase ·
participants, Rusty Wallace and
. :· Mark Martin, in the winless col·
, · umn tor the year.
.l&gt;·lWrt Busch's lone Chase victo·
· · ry In 2004 was in the very first
race. This year, New Hampshire
left him with a decidedly differ·
ent result. He's 142 points be·
hin&lt;l Stewart" as the Chase
moves to DOver, Del.
1&gt; Title contenders finished in the
ftrst four positions and took seven
·~ .ql the~ elg!lt spots. Only Jeremy
..; .Mlrflleld, C.rl Ect.wrds and Buscl1
. finished outside the top 10.
:, ·I&gt; Dale Earnhardt Jr. had an im·
: pressive fifth-place showing in
"his first race with TonyEury Jr. as
·· his crew chief. Jeff Gordon fin·
lahed 14th In his first outing with
._crew chief Steve Letarte.
!~I&gt; Jimmie Johnson has been in
· the top 10 of the Cup points
~;

~. stindings for 60 consec utive

J•,.Ces. Since he's in the Chase.
·' :that streak will continue for at
.. least nine more weeks.
~-~·
• 1&gt; Stewart's prospects for Dover
·.~,· ·are " strong. He's finished in the
. \'&lt;" top 15 In a1113 of his previous
-~· appearances at the
high·
• , b"anked. concrete-paved mite
'

•. ; track.

'

i!'ll
.
~I :t&lt;J.;.,..,
~.·~
WHO ' S HOT
-\ ANO ~VHO " S NOT

ig nations at the Chester
Courthuuse ~ind a donated
tract of land at Minersville.
The lot and roadway leadingto the Chester Courthouse has
already been paved.
Commissioners demolished
the condemned Masonic
Temple building to make way
tor a lot for courthouse employees, to help alleviate parking
problems at the courthouse lot
on East Second Street.
Other business
.
Theresa Lavender and Kenda
Hill of the Meigs County

Depanmenl of job and Fami ly
Services met with commi " ioners to ex plain a. Longaberger
Basket Lollery the DJFS-,;ratt
has created in order to rai se
funds for the American Red
Cross Hurricane Kat ri na Relief
efTorts. The Red Cruss now
operates through the Meigs
Cou nty DJFS. offering relief
for those who lose belonginos
through tires and olher di s&lt;~ters, and the Red Cross
has helped man y local
residents through those means,
Lavender said.

u

s

Kyle
Busch

v1. Kyle Busch

Against all odds, t.he 2003 Nextel
Cup champion.has put himself in position to win the title again.
Matt Kenseth, 33, never reached the
top 20 in the points standin"gs until
July. By mid-August, he was 15th, but
soniehow he managed to make the
Chase with finishes of seventh or better over the past six regular-season
races . A third-place finish in New
Hampshire lifted Kenseth to fifth
place, only SO points behind Tony
Stewart, who finished second in ihe
first race-off to Ryan Newman.
"Our performance has been up and
our finishes have been a little bit better, so I think everybody has bee.n a
little bit more excited the last few
months," said Kenseth, a master of
understatement. "I think your goals
are to ·try to win every week, and I
think when you're running better in
general it's probably a little bit less of
a grind and everybody" is more excited
to get to the track when you're running good.
"It's cool to come from behind and
be where we're at right now."
·
Kenseth's victory'in Bristol, Tenn.,
·an Aug. 27 was the lOth of his career.
He has been both champion and, in
2000, rookie of the year. He is one ·of
five Ford drivers representing Roush
Racing who made the Chase for the
Nextel Cup. In New Hamp'shire, he
held off one of them, Greg Biffle, in a
side-by-side finish for third.
"If it would've been any other time
in the race, he (Biffle) would've gone
right by me," noted Kenseth, "but
right there, you've got to race all you
can for that position. And the way the
leaders (Newman and Stewart) were
going at it, I thought it maybe
could've been for the win.
"I was a little tight (meaning his car
was difficult to turn), but I had the top
·of the race track to contain my momentum. It was a good race."
Kenseth scoffed at the notion there
was some sort of master plan to his.
late-season charge.

•'

The norma lly mild-mannered
Kahne took great ollense at being.
booted into the wall by the 20-yea(old rookie and, by his own admission,
returned the favor under·a yellow flag:
·If people .are going to run over you

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

for no reason and think they're going

,to get away"with it. you just got to go
out there and ruin their day. too." said
Kahne. "That's the way Ifeel."
NASCAR Thla Week'o Monto
Dutton &amp;lveo hla take: "There were
many nominees lor the weekly feud
in New Hampsh ire, but Kahne and
Busch get the nod in a close race
over Robby Gordon and Michael Waf·

I;,
J
:J

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTIN EL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Clara D. Krider, 82

trip. This race was the most unseem·

ly slugging match In recent memory.~

INSIDE
FAN TIPS

·

Jet-powered outhouA Jlllrt
of I,MS' motorized mayhem

Who says the days of outrageous .
promotions are over? Lowe's Motor
Speedway hosted ·a red, white anq
blue night of motomed mayhem " at
its dirt track last week, also knpwn

as the CRASHCars Tournament of
Thrills. Paul Stender saw his attempt
to set a world speed record come to
a crashing halt when Port·O·Jet, the
world's only jet-powered outhouse,

turned over while attempting to negOtiate turn one . That was the evening's

highlight. Or was it the lowllght?

YOUR TURN
LETTERS FROM OUR READERS

John ClarkjNASCAR This Week

Matt Kenselh nev•r reached the top 20 In the . points standings unUI July. By mid·
August, he was 15th, but somehow he managed to make the Ch1s1 with finishes of seventh or better over the ftnal slx regular·seas'on races.
"I don't know if you ever plan to be
a certain place," he said. "You go out
and race as hard as you can every
week and hope to have good cars,
hope to have things go your way, and
go from there. I'm happy with our
performance the last couple of
months; it's been much better. We had

a couple of· cars that were capable of
winning races.
.
"We've be~n having things go our
way a little bit more lately, so that's
good."

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

l.elldllll just - lap
,
lllouldn't 8111'11 bonus polntt
sn't it about time NASCAR changed
its,scoring sy.stem? A driver who
leads the most laps earns live
points .... But the big ineQuity is that
a driver can lead just one lap and
also earn li ve points. During one
race, Roush Racing dr ivers handed

I

out bonus points to each other all

• Rita's march on the
Texas coast stirs residents
into an agonizingly slow
exodus. ·See Page A2
• Cruise boat docking at
p~:~rk. See Page A3.
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Teddy Morgan back in
town. See Page AS
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Blessed are those who
' '
mourn. See Page· A6
• Local Church Briefs.
See Page As
• Reinhardt sentencing
delayed to Oct. 11 .
See Page AB
• Lydia Circle to send
care packages to college
students. See Page AS

- WEATHER

race long. Isn't that just wonderful?
Is this fair to teams that field only
one car? Come on, multicar teams al-

ready have a huge advantage. Acar
should have to lead at least 10 laps
to earn bonus points.
••
Bob Gardner
Eustis, Fl.;

Brian J. Reed/ photos

With sirens blaring and lights flashing, a parade of firetrucks, old and new
and repr-esenting communities from throughout Me igs County and as fqr
away as Cottageville, W.Va. and Centerville, kicked oft the Sternwheel
.Riverfest in Pomeroy. The weekend-long event includes an- almost-con·
stant stream of local entertai"ners on the Riverfront Amph itheater, such
as Katie Reed of Middleport, who opened the show ·on Thursday evening
with a show of popular music favorites . A second parade follows Saturday
morning, and the Meigs High School Band will commence the entertain·
men!" with a show on the parkmg lot on Friday afternoon.
'

.

Putting local donations·directly into ·the hands of Katrina victims
BY .!:IETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
EMA Director Bob
Byer passes one of
200 comfort kits to
Joh n Davis of
Pomeroy and Team
Jes us Min istnes ·
who are loading up
a trai ler to make a
seco nd trip to
Hurricane Katrina
victims in
Waveland. Miss.
thi s week . The kits.
consisting of sham·
poo , soap, towels,
etc , were collected
from thro ughout
Meigs County and
Dav.is promised to
deliver them direct·
ly into the hands of
victims )Vho are still
sleeping in tent
cities.

POMEROY - Getting local dona.tions directly into the hands of Katrina
victims had been a concern of Meigs
Emergency
Management Agency
Director Bob Byer until he met John
Davis when responding to a house fire.
The fire was on Davis' property after
he recently returned from Waveland,
Miss. with friends from Team Jesus
Ministries.
Waveland, located along the Gulf
Coast, Was devastated by Hurricane
Katrina and Team Jesus Ministries had
been there to lend a helping hand.
After the fire was put out and everyone was safe and so und, Byer found out
that Davi s and others from Team Jc &gt;us
Ministries were going back to Waveland
this week. Byer decided that the 200
comfort kits that Meigs County residents
had donated and packed would not end
up in a warehouse due to some bureaucracy and through the Team J~su s caravan would go directly into the hands of
. people who needed them.

&amp; Supply

Dotallo on Poco AB

Co. ,

INDEX
2

SEcnoNs- 16 PAGES

B8
Buckeye Edition
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
84-6
Comics
B7
A2
D,ear Abby
'
Editorials
A4
A6-7
Faith 'Values
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
B Section
Sports
AS
· Weather
© :ulo5 Ohio V•lley Publishing Co.

Submitted P.,oto

This visitor to the ··cruisin ' Saturday Night" car show in Racine
inspects the best in show winner, a 1971 Buick Skylark owned
by ChariE!s and Judy ~ee .
•

RACIN E -The recent
"'Cruisin"Saturday Night"' classic car show in Racine raiseu
$1,200 for the Racine Area
Community
Organi-zation
scholarship fund for two graduating seniors from Southern.
Event organizers felt the
show was so successful that
there are tentative plans to
host another next year.
One of the event organize rs
Melody McKay said automobiles ol" ewry make, model
and year partici pated in the
show, while others just wanted to park and be a part of the
spec tacle at . the Ho me
National Bank parking lot.
•"

Red Cross
bloodmobile
offers new
technology
BY CHARLENE HoEFLiCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAlLYSENT!}'lEL ,COM

Please see Cruisin; AS

. Please. see Red Cross, AS

Part of till' ,pcctacle

11 ~rc

~:Jao;~ic ~n l d l' ll-"tom

car-".

th e

some of them ha rkenin g back
to ihc 1950\ which kq)t wit h
the show 's theme of ce lebrating the fi fti eth ann ive "ary of
the Ford Thunderbi rd. ·
Be sides the cars there was
also classic food .
'The back y,ard barbecue
kept us full with chicken.
burgers. and lwt dogs. and a
blast from the past 1\i th a hot
dog saul:~ r~ c ipl' from
Adolph·, Hnt Do~ s·t; rnd.'"
McKay .'a id.
Du rinl!

lhl'

L':tr

'

•

Please see Jury, AS

Rucinl' :--pt,-" trn a:-.IL' r l3nnn ie
Brown unl"cilcd a '"Cus of ·
the 50";"" stamp c·ollcc·ti,in.
Brown also 'et up a te mpo-

'Cruisin' Saturday Night' raises $1,200 for scholarships
BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Only two
charges against Martin Pierce
of Rut land will go to a jury in
Mei gs . County Com mon
Pkas Court . on Friday. after
Judge Fred W. . Crow III di smi .~&gt;ed two counts prior to
the start of the trial and three
others after the state rested its
case Thursday afternoon.
Closi ng arguments in the
trial against Pierce, 44, ,will
begin Friday morning, and the
jury will consider only 1wo of
seven ch,u·ges remain ing. those·
of receiving slolen property.
Pierce wns imJictcd in May
on two count.&gt; of theft. two
counts of rece ivi ng stolen
property and three drug
charges, alleg ing ' that prescripllOll medicat ions found
in hi s home durin g a search
by law enforcement officers
was packaged for lilegal sale.
Sheriff's deputies also found
marijuana plants on the propert y on Beech Grove Road.
The dmg cha rges. allegi ng
Pierce repackaged prescription
medicati ons Zoloft. Buspar
and klonapin for resale. were
dropped "on the motion of

' POMEROY ·- '"Thi s is a
beller way of gelling what we
need - red blood cell s.'' said
Randy Pennington CT2 who
came with 1he American Red
Cross
bloodmobile
Wednesda y to th e ·senior
~i ze n s Center.
Pchni ngtnn was tal king
about the latest tec hnology
hcing used by lhe Red Cross
where two un its of red cells
are w llccted throu ~ h an automated collection te,· hnique at
one time fronl one donor.
Chairs f1· a loun ging pOSition are used in th e process . A
donor"s blood is drawn
through one arm and channeled' through a sterile. single-usc tul;ling to the automated system which separates and collects two units of
red eel b . and then returns the
rem;rini ng components back
to the donor.
Pennington 'called it '"the
double red procedure .'" He
exp lained that it takes about

Beth sargent/photo

Please see Donations, AS

,.

Please see Funding. AS ·

deliberate
on two
counts in
,Pierce trial

KaMy Kabne

Kenseth comes on strong in final six races to make The Chase

"Now we feel it is time to
repay that, and help the Red
Cross in their efforts to assist
rhoseviclirns !)f the hurricane."
The DJFS hope s lo se ll
1.000 tickets - at $10 each - .
each of which wi ll bear a
th ree-d igi1 number corresponding with possible numhcrs in the Daily 3 Ohio
Lottery drawing. A basket will
be awarded to a winner each
day who holds the tick~! bearing that day 's lotlcry number.

Jury to

Festival hegins

s

:·;~.Ver"Jt suph no-nos from making
:t1,~ir ,'NSY into your li11ing room?
~· .:. Newman's victory in New

and improve the emplpyee lot
they ,have developed on the ·site
oftheoldMasonicTemple. The ·
$12,682 grant · eligibility . is
made possible from veh icle
registration fees, and can on ly
be used for paving 'l'tnd other
road
improvements ,
Commissioner Jim Sheets said.
In order to qualify. the co m- ,
missioners must use the fund s
for a parks district -designated
are'a, of which there are three
in the county. In addition the
Masonic Temple site, the
county has parks dist_rict des-

E

R

WII\·•lso result in discipll·
by NASCAR, but
f,
. a QUeStion: What ·hap·
-~.- pened to the five-second delay
' Implemented last year to pre·

www.myduilyscntincl.cnm

Commissioners seek funding for courthouse lot ~mprovement
POME~OY

best second.

·

JCRII&gt;AY, SEI'TEMBER 2;~, 21105

-

&lt;lw w

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�.

!he Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Friday, September 23, 2005

RITA'S MARCH -ON THE TEXAS COAST STIRS Neighbor can't close his eyes
to nude gardener next door
RESIDENTS INTO AN AGONIZINGLY SLOW EXODUS wifeDEARis ABBY:
I am 76, my
65 . Our neighbor
Bv MIKE GRACZYK

''Roy" is retired, bm probably
less than 60 years old. The
fence between Roy's property
and ours is 6 feet tall, but the
Dear
wood has shrunk and there
.
Abby
are gaps of about half an incb
or more between the boards.
Abby, Roy likes to work .
nude in hi s back yard and has
told my wife he does thi s.
Otherwise, ·he .l)eems like a DODGE CITY, KAN.
decent fellow. He has given
DEAR WONDERING : The
my wife nectarines from over person who needs help isn' t
the fence, which is as close as you, it' s Dawn, who appears
I want his naked pre sence to to be insecure, je~lous and
my wife. Roy insists he has lacking in judgment. Her
the "right" to go naked in his remark was extremely inapown
back
yard. propriate and not in the le~st
Unfortunately, my wife bit funny. Your mothlir should
agrees, and tells me she's not have explained thah&amp;'Dawn_
looking. I have asked her not and also discussed it with her
to accept any more gifts over mother. My advice. to ~ou is
the fence from Roy' and to to do some serious rethtnking
keep her contact with him to a of your relationship with
minimum . Am I being fool- Dawn . Best friends support
ish? How would you reconi· each other; they don't one-up
mend I handle this' -TOO each other or put each other
CLOSE FOR COMFORT IN ·down . Your parents are lookCALIF.
ing out for your best' interests
DEAR TOO CLOSE FOR in wanting you to limit your
COMFORT: With a 6-foot time with her.
fence around hi s property,
DEAR ABBY: My fiance ,
Roy is probably within his "Simon," and I are being marrights to garden "au nature!." ried in three months .
One way to handle the prob- Although my parents are pay·
!em would be for you to ing for the wedding and
develop an interest in horti- reception. we would like to
culture. Perhaps the appear- acknowledge his parents in
ance of that fence could be the invitation. The problem is
improved
by
planting Simon's'inother passed away
bougainvillea, or poison ivy last fall , and. we're trying to
on your side of it. Or a lovely find an eloquent way of
cactus garden ... the possibili- including her name on the
ties are almost endless if you invitation. Any suggestions?
put your mind to it. P.S. Just - "STUCK" IN SHREVEbe sure to wear gloves.
PORT, LA.
·
DEAR ABBY: Hello! I am
DEAR SJ'UCK: The invita11 years old. I have known tion could be worded this
my best friend, "Dawn," . way: ,
since preschool. She has
Mr. and Mrs. John
a! ways been one step ahead of Smythe
·
me. If I managed to get one
Request the honor of your
step ahead of her, she'd get presence
jealous and mad.
ai the marriage of their
Recently my mother got daughter
pregnant. A few days ago she
Louise "Stuck" Smythe
heard the heartbeat. Dawn
to
was there when Mother was
Simon Wallace Penn Jr.
telling me and my brother the
the son of Simon Wallace
good news. Dawn said, "Oh, Penn Sr.
it's not dead yet?" She
and the late Sylvia Palmer
thought it was a' funny joke. Penn
She has been saying things
etc.
like that ever since she heard
Dear Abby is writte11 by
about the pregnancy. ·
Abigail Va11 Buren, also
Abby, I have told her once known a~· Jeanne Phillips,
to stop all the chaos. I'm and was founded by her
afraid to tell her again. My mother, Pauline Phillips.
parents are now telling me Write
Dear Abby at
they no longer want me going · www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
to Dawn 's house. Please help Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
me . - WONDERING IN 90069.

ASS OCI ATED PRESS WRITER

troops.
The U.S . mainland has not
been hit by two Category 4
storms in the same year
·si nee 1915 . Katrina came
ashore Aug . 29 as a
Category 4.

'

,

Community Calendar
•

Public meetings
Monday Sept. 26
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m . at the-office.
117
IYiemqrial
Drive.
Pomeroy.

Clubs and
organizations·
Monday, Sept. 26
POMEROY - · Oh-KAN
Coin Club will meet at 6:15
for a grading class followed
by a 7 p.m. meeting. Plans
will be fmalized for the Oct.
2 coin show.
Thesday, Sept.·;;!?
RACIN E :o.... The Racine
Area
Coinmunity
Organization will . meet at
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
There will be a potluck dinner.' New members welcome.
Thursday, Sept. 29 .
SYRACUSE- Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at
~oon at the home ·of Shirley
Hamm who will conduct a
prQ,gram on gourds. Take
potluck dish for luncheon. ·

Church events

Other events

Sunday, Sept. 25
BIDWELL - Benefit for
the Fall Harvest Gospel
Friday, Sept. 23 '
Sing; I p.m., Clark Chapel
POMEROY
- The Meigs
Church on Bidweii: Porter
Road . Dinner at noon . Cooperative Parish nurse
Singers will be Sid and Carol will take blood pressures
Hayman . Brian and Family from 10 a.m . to noon 'Ut
Powell's Foodfair.
Connection, and others.
POMEROY - His Own
Monday, Sept. 26
ministry in song will be at
CHESTER Chester
. the I0:30 a.m. service at the
Township
Trustees
will
close
l:aurel Cliff Free Methodi st
Scout
Camp
Road
(T-112)
at
Church, Pomeroy.
Camp Kiashuta from 7 a.m.
to 5 p.m. daily through Sept.
30 for slip repair.

Homecomings

Sunday, Sept. 25 ·
RACINE - Eagle Ridge
Community Church home coming, Sunday school, I0
a:m., basket dinner-~at noon.
Afternoon singing, I p.m.
featuring Everett Grant and
· the Southbound Express.
HOBSON ' - The Hob'son
Christian Fellowship Church
homecoming with the Rev~
Jimmie.
McK night
of
Institute, W. Va. preaching
and singing. A luncheon will
he held at noon and service
will follow.

·Reunions
Saturday, Sept. 24
RACINE - Ninth annual
Thomas and Isabell Weaver
Stobart reunion, I p.m. at
Star Mill Park . Take covered
dish.

. Thesday, Sept. 27
PORTLAND - Friend s
and Neighbors Community
Food Center food pantry. 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. every Tuesday
at Portland Community
Center.
·

Birthdays

Saturday, Sept. 24
LONG
BOTTOM
. Ralph H. Ballard will
obserye his 82nd birthday on
Sept. 24. Cards may be sent
to him at Bas han Road , Long ·
Bottom, Ohio 45743.
Monday, Sept. 26
ALFRED - Nellie Parker
will observe her 92nd birthday on Sept. 26. Cards may
be sent to her at Arcadia
Nursing Center, East Main
Street, Coolville. Oho 45723.

Saturday, Sept. 24
BIDWELL
Special
singing and preac hing at the
Clark Chapel Free Will
Baptist Church. 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 25
RACINE -A weekend
Friday, Sept. 30
me.r.tng wi II be held at the
POMEROY
- Wood
- Lester
VINCENT
Reo. Bru sh Church of Christ. reunion for descendants of
Bashan Road, 7 p.m. Joshua and Mary Botts Seaman will observe his
Saturday and I a.m. and 6 Wood, Will be held at the 90th birthday on Sept. 30.
p.m. Sunday. The mifiister King Farm, 38858 Smith Cards may be sent to him at
will be Denver Hill of Road. Pomeroy with a 10720 State Route 550.
Foster, W. Va .
potluck dinner at 12:30 p.m. Vincent. Ohio 45784.

His Own to sing

RAC IN E
Southern
Elementary
families
responded to Hurrkane
Katrina by donating water.
formula,
diapers, food.
cleaning
supplies,
and
school supp lies to her victims. T. K. Leamond, broth·er of Southern Elementary
fourth
grader,
Nathan
Leamond ,
along
with
Jennifer· Tucker and Maria
Leamond he! ped staff load
supp lie s
'collected
for
Hurricane Katrina's victims.
The Leamond family then
delivered them to Bob's
Market and Greenhou ses
where they were shipped to
Biloxi ,
Miss. Southern
Elementary is sti ll collecting
monetary donation s to. send
to Pastor Val Taylor and hi s.
·wife Becky (Sayre), former
Meigs county resident s.
Pastor Taylor 's church is
called, LIFE Church and
they are the distribution center for the Walker, La. area .
Pastor Sayre 's church has
taken in many Hurricane

POINT
PLEASANT;
W.Va. - The .Chattanooga
Star. a side-paddlewheel
cruise boat, will be docked
at the Point Pleasant
Riverfront · Park for five
days beginning Wednesday,
Sept. 28.
All cruises will be $6 per
person and the fee will be
due when boarding. The
schedule for cruises will be
as: follow s: Wednesday,
Se'pt. 28, and Friday, Sept.
~

6

&amp;

a

task ·ahead of us once the
storm pa »es." said City
Man a~c r - Steve LeBlanc .
.. Gah·fstun i-; gojng to ~u f­
f~r and we are S!Oi n!.! to nccU
to• ge t it hac k· in ·order as
soon as po"iblc ."
· The las t majnr hurricane
tn strike the Hous ton area
\\U!'I Categor)-~ Alicia · in
1983 . It i'looded Jo\\·ntown
H ou~ton. :-.pawned 22 torha does and lefl 2 1 people
dead.
'
At Ho uston· ., Johnso n
Space Center. 0/ASA evaCLI'

I

~con a '"~'crit&gt;cr in the past 30 ~ay&lt; . .En~losed is my payment of 530. 19 for 3 month s of th.c Dllih· Senti,.•/.

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t ha\ c not

J0

I c urren t! } ..~o . .~.:rihe to the Da ily Snlff11ef . Enclosed is my pay mL' nl of $59 . i5 for a 6 month subscription .

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8th Annual

Girls
·Time Out
"Navigating the Teenage Years"

Student Assistant Coach
Marshall University Womens Basketball

\~lill~~R~§f~lB.

Chiropr.~.-.

of tho: Y'¥ l'l'M
v.r wv Chir&lt;Vc'L1K: S&lt;x:icty
Mcmba of AI11&lt;&lt;CM Boord of
10) rs e~[X'ricrx:e
Mcmb.t ~· American AcaO:m~·
of Medical Acup.lnc'IIK~

Karen Stocker, AD, LD
HMC Nutrition Services

"Navigating the Calorie Waters"
PRI~E Teams from South Gama

and River Valley High Schools
"Navigating the Cold Waters of
Substance Abuse"

For more information, please call Bonnie McFarland at (740) 446-5679.

• Same~)' itpJ)(.

aavensw&amp;od
Chiropractic Canter
· e.304-273-5321 E ·
n St.

"Importance of Physical Activity and
Teenage Girls"
Healthy Lifestyles..for
.

All. are welcome! Dress is casuaL Refreshments will be served.

• S(Xlrt~ lnjunt% .
• McdJt:.arr
• M~ lnsumflrel:

316 Washln

Holzer Medical Center
!=ducation &amp; Conference Center .

Jamie Kellerman

wir. l~~l~ tK. \)~Jil~
• Acupun c1urc

1 :00 PM - 2:30 PM - Program
2:30 PM- 4:00 PM - Health Fair

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In addition. pre - ~rranged
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Katrina victim s. Anyone conract Southern Elementary
wishing to co ntribut e to at 949-4222. Checks can be
Pastor Taylor's church may made out to LI,FE Church. ·

•

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY - Travis and
Sammi Mugrage announce
the birth of a daughter. Bella
Kae. born on July 20, at , St:
Joseph's · Hospital
in
Parkersburg , W. Ya . The
inJant weighed 6 pounds, 1.1
ounces.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Mugrage
have another daughter, Avary
Mae. Maternal grandparents
are Joyce Sisson and the late
.Ernie Sisson of Syracuse, and
·the paternal grandparents are
:Peach and Charlie Mugrage
of Racine.

2oin2 lO have a monum t:! ntal

Submitted photo
Katrin~

The Leamond Family prepares to del iver Southe rn's
donations .

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

...

Submitted photo

·:r-----------------------------,
The Daily Sentinel
·
:

•

,:;· ·

Birth announced

.

.

CrUise boat docking at park Visit us .

•

.
out.
The city .Pinned its hopes
on ib 11 -mile-long. 17- foothi gh granite seawal l to proteCt il from tht! ~wrm sunrc.
and a skelel&lt;\n ere" ·or
police and fire fight ers tu
wa rd off potential looters .
··Whatever happens is
gt)i ng to happen ~Lild we are

Friday, September 23 ,'2005

Southern donates to.Katrina victims

His· Own, presenting a ministry in song,' will be at the 10:30 · a.~.
· Sunday service at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church, Pomeroy.

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OPINION

•

:The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

..

Jim Freela'nd
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

.Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
.free exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the, right of the
people peaceably to assemble, a!id to petition
the Go11erument for a redress of grievances.
-The first Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

,

•

To a world desperately in
search of hope. may these
two stories offer some· inspiration and food for thought.
''The Story of Three
Gardens"
A Yale professor had been
known to remark frequently
about his backyard gar(len·s
exquisite beauty.
One day. one of the professor' ~ students came to his
New Haven. Conn., home to
see the garden. The student
was astonished to find that it
was only a very small ga(den, 'no more than six feet
wide. squeezed between two
·apartment buildings.
"How narrow it is 1" the
surprised student said.
"Yes."' suid the · professor.
Then he pointed to the sky.
"But see how high it is."
There is . a garden that
grows in the city of Boston
known as the Public Garden.
It has rolling lawns, a pond
where swan boats ride, beautiful flowers and spreading
shade trees .
When sewers were being
laid under the Public
Garden. steati1 shove's dug
up a vast amount of oyster
shells. Shell.s by the thou-

George'
, Plagenz

sands.
Passersby
who
inquired were startled to
learn that those oyster shells
were part of a giant heap of
rubb.lc and debri s on which
their city's beautiful garden
had been built more than 100
years before.
· In a small city in South
Carolina, another . garden.
grows. There is a bus driver
in that city who nad ll&gt; wait
10 minutes lit the 'end of his
run in an empty lot in a dirty.
run-down part of town. At
first he was resentful. Then,
he got an idea. He took tools.
plants and !lower seeds and
began to plant a garden.
Today that Jot is the prettiest
pa'rk in his town and the driver cherishes the refreshment those minutes of waiting now provide.
This is the story of the

Middlepotts speed limit is one

2005

·.

Cara D. Krider

three gardens. It shows that forth dwindled down ..to a
no matter how cramped and precious few. Then I got the
closed-in your life may urge to get in touch again. I
seem, no matter what was placed a call to Los Angeles.
there before. no matter how It was when I did that the
poor your environment is , answer came back, . "I am
you can plant a garden that ' sorry to tell you ... "
"He ·spoke of you often,"
will reach to the sky -anywhere in thi ~ wonderful said the woman at the other
end. Tears welled in . my
world.
eyes.
Last . month I decided to
"Keep in Touch"
It was deja vu all over call another old friend Bill Donaldson, an attorney
agam. ,
in
Salem, Mass., who attend"I am sorry to tell you,"
said the voice at the other ed divinity school with me
of the line, "but Mr. before he switched careers.
end
.
Abbott died four months We kept in touch off and on
through the years - in later
. ~go.'' .
I had just placed a call to years the correspondence
Los Angeles to Walter was more off than on. Then
Abbott who gave me my the urge came to call again.
"I am sorry tQ_ tell }'Ql!.,"__
start as a writer. I still have a
Photostat copy of the check said the· woman "s voice on
(for $'125).thatl received for the other end, ' 'but Mr.
the first detective story I Donaldson died five months
wrote for Actual Detective ago." Again the tears came.
'Why do we let the ties that
Stories Magazine.
bind
us to those who blessed
Abbott himself had gone
on to bigger and better our lives become broken?
things - as a screenwriter Pick up the phone tonight
for Paramount Studios in before you regret the passing
Hollywood . But he didn' t of time.
(George P·lagenz is an
forget his boy protege.
We corresponded for ordained minister and veter·
many years, but as the years an newsman based in
passed the letters back and Co lumbus, Ohio.)

50N6 OF TH~ SOUTH ...

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

:I_.,,,;,,., to the editor are welcome.

They sl;ould be le&gt;s than
300 •rords. All/etters are subject ro ·editing, mu.&lt;t be signed,
and include address and re/eplume mmrber. No unsigned letters H'i/1 be published. Letters should be in good taste,
r1ddre.uing issues, nor personalities. Letters of thanks to orgartf:ations and imli•·iduals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Carrectlan Polley
Our main concernJn all slories is 10 be

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-eccurate . If you know of an error in a
:Story. catl the newsroom at (~40) 992·

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Our main number Is

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Oeparlmen1 extenslons'are:

News

Editor: Ct1arlene Hoeflich. EKt. 12

l Reporter: Bnan Reed, EKI. 14

Reporter: Beth Sergen t, Ext. 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
Outside Sales : Brenda Davis. Exl 16

j ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
·

General Manag·er
Chartene Hoeflich. Ext. 12.

E-mail:
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Published e\lery afternoon , Monday
through Frlctay, 111 Court Street,
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paid at Pomeroy.
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Teddy Morgan
back in town

Donations_
from Page A1

POMEROY
Teddy
Davis said he and his group
Morgan
and
the
Pistolas
will
RACINE -Clara D. Krider. H2, Racine , passed away at
would
gladly deliver the com12:20 PM on Wednesday, -Sept. 21, 2005 in the St. Joseph's be playing at the Court fort kits that consist of soap.
Street Grill Friday and
Hospital in Parkersburg. W.Va.
wash cloths. towels. tooth
Born December 17, 1922 in Middleport she was the daugh- Saturday night.
brushes, combs. fingernail
ter of the late Russel and Margaret See McDaniel . She was a . Opening on Friday night for clippers and shampoo directly
homemaker. and a member of the Bethany United Methodist Morgan will be Dave A., to victin1s that are still sleepwhile the Wailin' Elroys will
·
Church, Racine .
ing under iarps. Davis will
She is survived by her loving husband of 55 years, Marvin open the Saturday night show. .also be delivering two custom .
Tickets are. $5 each night
F.·Kridcr whom she married·on March 29, 1950 i'A Pomeroy.
available
at the door. The made kits for i'nfants made by
Also surviving is a son. Vernon (Avis ) Harrison of Racine .;
Grill
is
now open on Byer's granddaughter Sarah
daughters. Deloris (Elmer) Leihgcber of Seviervi.lle, Tenn.,
Hubbard who wanted chil'
Nancy Scott of Titusville. Fla .. and Carol.( Dwayne) umg of Sundays for NFL games. On dren to be included in the carTaylor, Mich. ; ·I I grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Sept. 29, Dav.id Childers will avan . .
Also surviving is a brother, Robert McDaniel of Chester and be at the Grill.
"We'll go to them," Davi s
two sisters, Maxine Bealmcar and Betty Frazer. both of
said about his group that will
Middleport: also sisters -in-law, Alta Dill of Middleport,
drive to victims as opposed to
Martha Bruch , Mt. Vernon, Elsie Ra ines of Ft. Myers, Fla.,
setting up a station and havMinnie (Howard) Bloch of The Villages. Fla. and a brothering victims · -in Waveland
in-law. John Krider. Pomeroy. Also surviving are special
from
Page
A1
come to them.
friends , Jim and Vicky Taylor and her friends at Old Glory
'
"A lot of those people can't
Auction House.
·
.
get
to you," Davis added.
In addition to ller parents, she is preoeued in death by a Lavender said the baskets
He then went on to
have been purchased at cost,c
brother-in-law, Russell Krider.
describe
tent cities in K-Mart
and
the
agency
emplo
yees
Funeral serviees will be ·ll a.m. Saturduy. Sept. 24. 2005 at
parking
lots
and people with
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine . Officiating will. be Rev. hope to raise $7.500 for the
John Gilmore. lnterl11ent will be in the Gntvel Jiill Cemetery, Red Cross. The drawings will only the clothes on their back
nearly one month after
Cheshire. Friends may be call from 6 to 9 p.m. on · Friday, begin on Nov. I.
Katrina hit.
Hill
said
those
interested
Sept. 23. 2005 and one hour prior to the service on Saturday.
In lieu of !lowers memorial contributions may be made in may purchase a ticket at the · .Davis said he witnessed
Clara's memory to the Bethany United Methodist Church. PO Stern wheel Rivcrfest or from one woman wrap herself in a
tarp in I07 degree heat and
the DJFS office.
Box 368, Racine , OH 4577 1.
Commissioners also:
realized she had taken off her .
• Approved appropriation clothes under the tarp for
adjustments for the MR/DD cover and was rinsing her
Board. in the amount of clothes in a bucket of water
$5,000. nnd the dog and kennel and bleach because that was
fund in the amouln of $1,000.
all she had.
• Approved payment of bills
Davis said in the area near
in the ammmt of $266-,448.02. · Waveland and Bay St. Louis,
POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in Meigs ·
County Comnwn Pleas Court by Sara Neal. Rutland. against
Donald Neal. Ru(land.

Funding

For the Record

Divorce

Thefts

REBUILD

Submttted photo

Proving that people of all ages are contributing to relief efforts
Sarah Hubbard, 14, of Syracuse assembles her own infant
comfort kits for the tnp to Waveland, Miss.
Mi"·· a population of around Trisha Baer at 992-6909 ur
has seen 487 dead 992-2839, or Byer at 9&lt;12--15.1 I.
Team Jesus Ministries has
and 'J7 missing after Katrina.
Some of tho le survivors set up a Hurricane Relief
belong to a · church Team accJ)unt at Peopb Bank
Jesus volunteers have been hmnches for their rebui ld ing
working with . During the eflorts ln Waveland . According
storm 21 parishioners that to a Team Jesus reprcsentati H·
were staying in· the church all donations are I 00 percent
realized the water was com- tax deductible and will be used
ing in so they ended up wait- "I{)() percent toward helping
ing out the storm in their pas· the people of Wa ve land."
tor's boat parked near the
Donation s c~n abo hL·
church which they now ar:·ec- mai led to Team JesL"
rionalely call "the ark."
Ministries, 4JK45 H a rtin g~r
Team Jesus will be making Road. Pomeroy, 45769.
" I fee l comi'onable nivin~
·several more trips to the Gulf
Coast region of W&lt;tveland. these kits to these people ."
Donations of money or materi- said Byer as he shook Davi.'
al can be made by contacting hand.
2~.000

"'

from Page A1

POMEROY. - Meigs County Sheriff Rober) Beegle report- I0 minutes longer to comed th!;! following theh.complains fi led with hi s office:
plete the draw but provides
• Bonnie Starcher. Carpenter. reported that a laptop comput- twice as many red cells
er and accessories· were stolen from her home on Monday. The which helps save more lives.
computer was located in a Lancaster pawn shop, and the case
"A regular unit of tluid is
is under investigation. with charges expected.
• Joe Bolin. Rutland. reported that chains and binder were half red cell s and half plasma,
stol.en from a backhoe owned by Bob Lane\ Welding of bllt when processed through
Marietta and parked near the Rolin residence. lnvesrigalion this equipment. its just red
cells," said the technician ..
continues.
is the third time the new
This
• James Birchfield, Rutland. reported the theft of a new
equipment
has been brought
chain saw from his vehidc at Rutland Department Store. Carl
Hysell of Rutland later reported finding the saw near his to Meigs County.
For those donors giving
garage.
two
units of red blood cells in
• Mkhael Vance. Carson RoaJ. reported that so meone .
one
donation,· the deferral ·
.
Chartene Hoeftlchj photo
entered his barn and stole . a S400 bow and arrows.
period
is
extended
from
·56
to
For
the
first
ttme
Jon
Jacobs
of
Middleport
had his blood drawn
Investigation is continuing. A maroon-colored veh.icle was
11
2
days
between
donations.
using the American Red Cross' new technology where two
seen in the area.
·
There is some "other eligibili- units of red cells are taken from one donor. The blood is chan·
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Police Department recov- ly · crileria on weight and neled through a tube into a machine where the separation· take
ere.d a stolen vehicle owned by Randy Arms of Long Bottom. height and all donors are place and the remaining components returned to the donor.
The 2000 Chevrolet Monte Carlo was found on the parking lot required to have at least a 40
scheduled visit for the type 0 whose volunteers handle the
of the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services percent hematocrit.
Wednesday's
visit
of
the
donors
and a regular visit paper work.
and was impounded for investigation by the Ohio Bureau of
bloodmobile
in
Pomeroy
was
··we need more donors and
where all types of blood are
Crimin~l Identification and Investigation.
more blood drives, which
The department is also investigating the following theft a ·•scheduled visi t" where drawn.
means
type
The
28
donors
at
this
0
donors
are
contacted
new sponsors and curincidents: ·
week
·s
scheduled
visit
howrent
sponsors
addi ng drives.
sched)lled
in.
The
blood·
and
• Texanna Wehrung. Front Street. reported the theft of two
mobile is at the Senior Center . ever, were fewer than usual, Just five percent of the U. S.
solar lights from her lawn.
• Tammy Zcdeker. Mulberry Street, reported the theft of every third Wednesday, I to 6 according to Diana Coates. · population gives blood each
p.m. , alternating between a the Center"s RSVP director. year, although more tlwn half
.medication from her residen&lt;:e .

...

EVACUATE~

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TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Sept. 23, the 266th day of 2005 .. There are
99 days left in the year.
Today"s Highlight in History:
On Sept. 23. 1779. during the Revolutionary War, the
Ameri&lt;:an warship Bon Homme Richard defeated the ' HMS
Serapis after the American commander. John Paul Jones, is
said to have' declared: "I have not yet begun to fight!"
llmught for Today: 'The only interesting answers are those
which destroy the questions." ~ Susan Sontag, American
~itthor and critic ( 1933-2004).

, The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Red Cross

~

Mason County has the myth of the MO!hman. They have
&lt;:hosen a bird for their myth. People wme from all over to get
in on the Mothman myth .
Meigs County has a myth. Middleport-Is-Myth of the 25
mile speed limit These signs are all over town and few abide
by them. Our streets are more and more like a NASCAR practi ce town. Racing is okay. but not on streets that have 25 mile
limits. Folks on many of our streets are weary of this. It has
gotten out of hand. It needs corrected.
I will commend the teen drivers. Rarely do I eveqee a teen
speeding. The middlcagcr and older yes. The top culprits are
public vehicles. I cannot name names . .but I'm ch;lgrined to
think utilit y companies. trash handlers and delivery companie., do not teach their drivers ro .obey 25 mile signs.
My ultimate speeding observation was a small 'truck going
approximately 50 miles per hour while talking on the phone
and brushing his teeth. Only God knows who was driving that
truck.
: Our block has several great chiidren on it. and if they or
. •uiyone was inadvertently in the street when one of the racers
fly down a street. they wouldn't .have a prayer. How sad it
wou ld be if that 50 miles per hour driver with his or her music
blasting wouldn't be able to hear the screams of the person
they hit.
·
r ve spoken to city officials to no avai l. Doe~ someone have
to die before real enforcement starts? I hope not.
,
Marjorie Walbum
Middleport

Obituaries
I

(

/)ear Editor:
I have been reading about how diligently Middleport
Cou ncil is working to improve our town. I have a suggestion
tliat echoes t~e thoughts of other~. I feel it would improve·
lhmg~ .

Friday, September 23,

Encouraging words

The.Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 23, 2005

PageA4
.

How .11Jany. warnings can people st~nd?
One would think that by
this time Htirrkane Katrina
had been analyze.d from
every . conceivable point of
view. Certainlv the liberals
wasted no time co-opting it
William
for every cause in their playRusher
book . The anti-Iraq war
crowd complained that so
many members of the ·
Loui siana National Guard
had been sent to the Middle of 1he media's performance
East that nobody was left to before the storm hit New
cope with the crisi·s at home . Orleans.
For several years now, the
The global-wam1ing hystercable news networks and the
ic~ were sure the storm was
caused by the warming of the news divisions of the major
world's oceans, thanks to the TV networks have been able
··greenhouse efi'ect." The Big to count on four or five hurGovernment
enthusiasts ricanes per season seriously
insisted that the calls for threatening one coast or
swifter involvement of feder- ·another of the United States.
al troops and resources prove The formula for reporting
that the public is at last these storms is now "thorappreciating the virtues · of oughly predictable: Scare the
their favorite remedy for living daylights out of the
every problem . The tax-rais- TV audience as often as posers were certain that tax &lt;: Ut.l si ble .
The fun begins .with a
were out for the foreseeable
future, and higher taxes vir- "'tropical disturbance .. not far
tually inevitable. The Bush· from the Cape Verde Islands
bashers declared that the in the mid-Atlantic Ocean. IJ
president's allegedly ,)ow is 1hen tracked, day-by-day
response demonstrated hi s for a week or so, as it drifts
incom petence (their notion westward · and increases in
of executive skill s pre,um- size: The weather fore&lt;:asters
ably peaking ut N_ancy note the growing intensity of
it' winds. and any incidental
Pelosi).
There ha ve abo been. with damage·it does to any islands
far more justitlcation. kind in its way. As it nears the
words for the generall y good coast of Florida or the Gulf
job the media did in report· Coast 'tates, it is ·shown on
ing Katrin a's devastating maps as a huge circu lar
aftermath . But. L·uriously mass, always colored bloodenough. I have seen little dis- red, rotating clockwise. Only
cu.,sion: let alone criticism, the worst-case scenario i,

discussed at any length. ("If pared when an aclual crisis
you live between X and Y, arises.
There is a real problem
prepare to meet your
doom!") At last the storm . here. We ·want people to
makes landfall somewhere, know when a hurricane is
with winds identifying it as indeed likely to come ashore
"a category 3 hurricane" pr in their area, and to take
whatever. The forecasters are whatever anticipatory action
now'pictured in their slickers is necessary, up to and
on the beach, screaming into including evacua.tion. when
a microphone in the teeth of the authorities order it. And
the gale. Then it blows itself the media have an important
out..as it moves inland, and role to play in spreading \he
everybody goes back. to news. But it would be a wei- .
looking for the next tropical come relief if they would just
disturbance off Africa. '
tone down their preliminary
There is a case to be made rhetoric. ("The storm is still
that these attacks of hysteria about four days. off the coast,
are necessary. if coastal resi - and there's a 60 percent
dents are to be warned. in chance that it will turn before
'time, or serious danger. The . reaching it, ·so continue to
networks probably sincerely enjoy your summer and we "II
believe that such reportage is keep you informed.") Then ,
·a gen uine public service, and when the danger really
that the phenomenal ratings requires actioo. there will be
are just the icing on the cake a better chance of inoucing
- their reward. so to speak. it.
for a job well done.
This will be no simple
But how can we reason· . task, as the media have conably expect ordinary human ditioned the public \O believe
beings to react to such · that the level of hysteria indirepeated inundations of cates the level of importance.
alarming news? They can't Such a sea change · would
(or won't) board ·up .their require an industry-w ide
shop windows and fortify · reconsideration of how best
their houses four or five to serve the public without
times every year. let alone damaging profits. ·
But. given the media's
abandon their home' and llee
inland. when they know that responsibility to inform the
the chance of a hurricane public , such a reconsideralanding right on top or them tion is essential.
(William R11sher is a
i' more like once every 20
years. Such continual fe ve r- Distingui.l·hed,Fel/ow of the
pitch reporti ng results in a Claremoll/ lnHitllle for {he
.. cry wolf' desensitization Swdy of Statesmanship and
that may leave some ill-pre- Politic(// Plrilosoplrr.)

..

Cruisin'·

Jury

from Page A1 ·

from PageA1

rary poswl station at the show
for custnmers who wanted
the special cancellation
stamp commissioned for the
event and designed by
McKay. McKay 's de)ign was
inspired by both the nostalgic
car show and the 1955 Ford
Thurderbird .
McKay also supplied all the
infommtion for this article.
were
Prize drawings
awarded as were 33 trophies
to car owners who entered
the contest. The winners and
their categories were as fol·
lows: ·' B" Mack. John
Summerville.
mayo.r's
choice;
·,69
Chevelle
Convertible, Mike Lawson.
people ' s
c·h,\ice:
'69
Mu stung. Jeff Hill , fireman 's choice: '71 Buick
Skylark. Charles and Judy
Lee, best of show: '69 Ford
Mustang, Julie Spawn. fir't
place original: '74 Dodge
Dart custom~ James Ramsey.
second place original; "H4
Buick Regal Limited, Carol
Little. third place original;
'69 Ford Torino Cobra.
- Larry McGrath. first place
Ford; '71 Ford Mustang.
Brian Murray, second place
Ford; "95 Ford Mu stang.
Tammy Hood, third place
Ford: "27 Chev y Capitol.
Charles Pennington. firsl
place GM ; '67 Chevy Nova.
Mike Howper. second place
GM; '67 Che vy Camero RS.
Neil Woodridge. lhird place
GM: '72 Plymouth Cuua.
Ru ss Elliot. first place
MoPar; '72 Plymouth Cuda.
Ri ch Gontalet.. 'ecoi1d
place MoPar: ·n Dt•dge
Demon. Ed Carson, third
place MoPar; '65 Ford
Mllstang. Sue Ann Corder.
Cirst place classic: '6 7

c

is eligible to donate ... said
John Armitage. M.D .. CEO.
Greater Alleghenies Region .
He · added that a five-day
supply is optimal to mee t
patient and hospilalneecb and
urged support from cnmmunities in repl enishing suppli es
so that pati ents at area hospi·
tals can rest a ssur~d that their
transfusion . needs will be mel. ..
Donating blood at the
Senior Citizens Center blood·
mobile this week were helyn
Mugrage,
Jaqllcline
K
Vanover. Kenneth Longs1 rc1h.
Charles Mugr ~lge. ;\laney
Thoene. Jon Jar ohs.• Dale
Bing. Vaierie Notringham.
Janirc K. Salser. Kclh
Freeman. Romdd Sal,ci·.
Marta Blackwood. Joyce
McDaniel. Michek Imboden .
Cyndi King. Darla Thom;h,
Tim King, Robert Rnmsburg,
Harry
Brown.
Shaula
. Laudern1ilt. Joseph Hall. Sr..
Sharla Denny. Ro~er Gaul.
Floyd Graham. Alice Pen it.
Cassie Lee . . Joseph Howard .
and Kathleen White.
Retired Senior Vo lunteer'
working the bloodmobile
were Polly Cllrtis. Jimm y
Cummins. Juanita Roush anu
Mary Lou Haw kin,.
Pierce could not ha\'e knn"·
because he · did nut lu11e
access to the databa,e .
Crow asked Kni ght to pro·
vide case law in 'Lipport of
his argument.,

Pierce's attorney, Charles
Knight, after Pierce ·s wife
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA7
admitted to packaging the pre446·4524 I.IO'.'IE hQTLINE
scription medications during
FRI ·9123105 • suN 9/25105
the state ·s case early Thursday.
Box Office Opens 112 Hour
The theft and receiving
Be1ore First Show
Stolen property charges relate .
TIM BURTON'S CORPSE BRIDE
to a tractor and camper found
PG t:oo 3,oo 7:00 &amp; 9:00
on the Pierce property duri'ng
FLIGHTPlAN (PG13)
the search, which were
. to have been stolen
1;15 3:15 7:15 &amp; 9:15
revealed
JUST LIKE HEAVEN (PG13)
when deputies. checked serial
numbers on theni .
1:20 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
Crow dismi ssed two counts
LORD OF WAR (R)
of theft prior to jury selection.
1:00 3:20 7:10 &amp; 9:20
Knight also made an oral
EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE
motion that the charges 'of
PG13 1:00 3:10 7:00&amp; 9:10
receiving stolen property be
REMODELING HAS BEGUN!
dismissed. because officers
We now have theater seats,
discovered the items stolen
with cup holders lor sate at
by using a computer database
S10each. Myou are nterested
available only to law enforcein purchasing used theater
ment. Pierce maintains he did
seats, please co~tactthe
manager. during regular
'not know the items were .
business hours. for details.
stolen. and Knight argued \:i;;iiii~iii;i;~ii;iii~;iiii~~

Sllbrntlted photo

Racine Postmaster Bonnie Brown unveiled the · cars of the 50's" stamps as part of the
"Cruisin' Saturday Ntght" car show. Car show cosponsor and owner of Hill's Automotive Marvin
Hill and Racine Mayor J. Scott Hill take part in the stamp presentation .
••
Chevy II Wagon. Rich Love. Ri&lt;:hmond, first plac~ Euro
\C&lt;.:o nd place classic; '53 car: '96 Chevy Cavalie'r,,
Ford Cit,tom ' Line .. Carol Mikey Lawson. second
Will. third place classic: '56 place Euro car: '90 Nissan
FIOO. Dave' and .Sis Wright. 3002, Nicoy Jeffers, 'third
first place truck; 50 F-1, Jim place Eur6 car: 2000 Boss
HEUOS
Will. seeor\d place truck: ·so · Hoss. Greg Mill s. fir't place
P£1lSDNAL
OXYCEN~M
GMC P/U, Roger Shoultz, motorcycles : 2004 Honda
third place truck: ·~~ Goldwing. Richard Fetty,
HEUOS • Easy to ~any.
.
__ ....., ...... • Cool. qu•et operation.
Plymouth Business Coupe. second place motorcycles:
'
• Weigl1s juss J.6
Walter Elli s. first place pro· ·99 Honda Goldwing. Roger • Requir~ no eiKtricity or bafterio.
j~ct: '69
Chevy Camero Lutz. ·third place motorcy- • L11sts up to 10 hours at a setting of 2.
about 40 ~nds fu fill.
·RS/SS. Dana Lewi s. first cles: '56 F-100. Dave and •• Takes
Operates upright, on its back or in any
position inbet'Neen.
place modified: "67 Che'y Sis Wrigh1, first place original custom interior.
Cam~ro .' Paul Crump. &gt;ec·
740-446-0007
Sponsors for the eve nt
ond place .modi.fied; '71
Toll Free 877-669-0007
Chevy Camero. Teresa were .Hill's Automotive and
Home
National
B·ank
of
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Mills. 1hird place modified:
Locai/J
OM'fltd. Uf
about
·99 Chevy Cavalier. Neil . Raci ne .

(]tuuily

'

'

BE.N EFIT P.O KER RUN
Saturday; September 141/t
For 13 Year Old
Charles Otis Noland Ill
who has polycystic
kidney disease &amp; .
needs a kidney
transplant ·
Meet At
Powell's Food Fair ,
@ II:(}(} lea~·e @ 12:00

Run ends at Jordan .'s
Campground
/.mire/ Rd.

I

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Page ,A6

FAITH. VALUES
BLESSED ARE mOSE WHO MOURN
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 23, 2005

.•

Ftllowship
Apostolfc

Scripture: Matthew 5.1-12

was a means by which we can your God will bless you in the
come to know the Lord, and land ... This day (God) calls
has been entrusted to us for heaven and earth as witnesses
showing us His ways, His against you that (He has) set
purposes. and His presence.
before you life and death.
And so David could write, blessings and curses. Now
· "The earth is tilled wtth Your choose life, so that you and
love, 0 LORD; teach m~ your children may live and
Your decrees ... Your statutes · that you may love, the LORD
are my delight; they are my your God, listen to His voice.
counselors" (Psalm 119:64. and hold fast to Him. For the
24 NIV).
' LORD is your life .. .'' (verses
Even as God Almighty 11-16 and 19.l20a.NIV).
imparted His Words of life to
Whatever '!ideas one may
His people in ancient times, have about the Word of God.
those words were not given to it must be understood that the
place burdens upon His peo- Word has been given to us so
pie. replacing the slavery of that we may embrace Him ...
Egypt wi'th an entirely new for He Himself is our life.
kind of slavery. flis Words Without His Word, we cannot
were given that they might come to know Him . And
become truly free - free to without Him, we are dead
be what they had been created tl:)ings though our~ bodies :
to be: free to pursue a divine· · breathe and . move and go
ly appointed destiny; free to about their daily business.
truly become alive, with the
So ... invited as \ve are to
distractions and undue bonds · seek His face, to meet Him in
of selfishness amputated from ·the written revelation of
their existence . Truly. the Him self that we call the
Words of God were "not just "Bible," and to partake of life
idle words for them, they as we come to know Him and
were their life" (from learn to trust Him, what will
Deuteronomy 32:47).
we choose today? Life ... or
So what is the relevance of death '! Blessings ... or curses?
the Word of God for our daily May we each choose today to
living? And what does the pursue His offer of life.
Word of God counsel us to
"I call with all my heart,
do'' Is the pursuit of right- answer me, 0 LORD. and I
eousness and a genuine life will obey Your decrees. I call
of faith re.tlistic ... especially out to You; save me und I will
when all the world seems to keep Your statutes. I rise
be out of control and all before dawn and cry for help:
morality a thing of some for- I have put tny hope in Your
gotten age of long ago?
Word. My eyes stay open
In Deuteronomy 30 we through the watches of the
learn that "What (God is) night, that I may meditate on
commanding you today is not Your promises. Hear my voice
too difficult for you or in accordance with Your love;
beyond your reach. It is not preserve my life, 0 LORD,
up in heaven, so that you have according to Your laws"
to ask, 'Who will ascend into (Psalm 119:145, 149 NIY).
heaven to get it and procla1m
Please take time today to
it to us so we may obey it"' pray for victims of Hurricane
No, the Word is very near Katrina and those Who are
ydll'~t is in your mouth and in even now in the path of
your heart so you may obey Hurricane Rita.
it. See (God sets) before you
(Thorn Mollohan and his
today life and pr-9spcrity, family have ministered in
deat h and destruction. For southern Ohio the past /0
(God commands) you today years. He is the pastor of
to love the LORD your God, Pathway Community Church
to walk in His ways, and to and nuJY be reached for com·
keep Hi s commands. decrees ments or questions by e·nuJil
and laws: then you will live at pastorthom@pathwaygaland increase. and the LORD lipolis.com).

Local Church Briefs
Special service set
BIDWELL - Special singing and
preaching will be held at the Clark
Chapel Free Will Baptist Church 6:30
p.m. Saturday.

Gospel concert Sunday
MIDDLEPORT - The Bend Area
Gospel Singers wil be in concert at the

old Bethal Freewill Baptist Church.
Route 7. Story 's Run, at 6 p.m. Sunday.
Proceeds will go to the Bend Area
Gospel Jubilee.

Weekend meeting set
RACINE - A weekend meeting will
be held at the Red Bru sh Church of
Christ. Bashan Road·, at 7 p.m. Saturday
and I0 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. The min-

"B lessed are those who
Rev.
mourn," Jesus said, "for they
will be comforted." This is
Jonathan
the second great beatitude
Noble
given in the lord's Sermon
PASTOR.
on the Mount, following very,
TR.INITY CHURCH
nat.urally the first, which
promises the very Kingdom
of Heaven to those who are
poor in spirit or, in other
words, truly humble.
This is true because if we tlow in the falling rain . He
have humbled ourselves smi les m the sunshine,
before God in the knowledge reminds us of Hi&gt; power in
that we are truly sinners saved thunder and lightning, and
by grace through faith in pledges new life at the dawn
Christ,- then pure sorrow for of ever spring. All of ere·
those sins that sent Jesus to ation , if we look closely and
the cross will naturally follow. listen. becomes a mmistry of
So tlrst and foremost we are compassion and reaS&gt;unmce.
taught here, "blessed are
But there arc other. perhaps
those who mourn" for their even more Important. ways 111
sins, "for they w1ll .be' com- _ which the Lord , c!Jnlfort~_
forted" in the knowledge that those. "ho moum. The Lord
they have been forgiven , ~omtorts us through other
washed in the Blood of the people. and He comtorts
Lamb, cleansed from all orher people through us, too .
unrighteousness
and Someumes 111 our hcct1~
promised an eternal life of world, a world that really ts
glorious fellowship with God. qUite se lf-centered. we tend to
Yet we should also recog· forget th1s tundamemal truth.
nize .that within this life of · But St. Paul renm1ds us to
redemption there are certain- '"comfort each oth er and .
Iy other reasons to mourn, to ed1 f y one a~10t her. .. &lt;\Old bear
feel sorrow in so many differ- one .~nothF r s burdens, and s~
ent trial s and afflictions: so, fullftll the law ot Chn st.
too, the Spirit of God, whom Certainly He hore our bur·
we also refer to as the dens . Should we not. then.
Comforter, is always near to help each other curry the load
sooth and console; to cleanse of sorrow and gnc l?
and refresh us.
When we do. 'tl1is is the
As James Russell Miller Lord working through us to
said. "Blessing never is near- comfort those .who mourn.
er to us than when we are in Tbrough a smt le. a warm
aftliction. if we submit our- embrace. kind words and
selves to God in love and helping hands we help fult\11
trust... Tears are len ses . the Lord's prom1se in this
through which our eyes see beatitude. .
.
more deeply into heaven and
So thts 1s what we arc
look more clearly upon God's taught here: "Blessed are
face than in any other way."
those who mourn". Jmin.g so
·So does the Lord care when many tnals anu tnbulations,
our heart s are deeply pained? "for they will be comforted"
Does He cry when we mourn by the Lord 111 an hundred
the loss of a loved one: when dtfferent ways, espec1ally
we lose our job; when we are through His people. if those
passed over for a promotion; who mourn are numbered
or when someone ridtcules among Hts people. II not ...
they have missed the first and
and makes fun of us?
Yes. most assuredly He greatest comfort of all such
cares and He cries with us that no other consolation
just as surely as He wept over really matters.
Jerusalem and shed tears at
''Blessed are those who
the tomb of Lazarus. But mourn. for they will be comsome may wonder just how forted.'_' They \Viii be com·.
He .shows this compassion ; toned 111 new ltt e. the ltte ol
how He tenderly ministers to redemption 111 Chnst Jesus.
our wounded souls and bro~ They wtll be comlorted by
ken hearts.
the ministry of God's Holy
And there are. I suppose, so Spirit through Word ·and
ister will be Denver Hill of Foster. W.Va. many ways He does this that Sacra~1ent. through the peait might be better to ask, pie ot God. and throug.~ cre"How does He not show atton and ltfe Itself. They
Benefit planned
~ompassion? How does He · shall be comforted ... , We
not mimster to our hearts and shall be comloned.
. BIDWELL - A benefit for the Fall souls?" He comforts us
Editor's Note: Tire Rev.
Harvest Gospel Sing will be held at I through His Holy Word and }onatlrarr Noble is pa.ftor at
p.m. Sunday at the Clark Chapel Church the Sacraments, of course. Trirrity Clrurclr of Pqmeroy
on Bidwell-Porter Road. Dinner' will be but at times. He is less con· arrd nuJY be reaclred at trirrity·
held ·at noon. Singers will be Sid and spicuous:
.
ijdrr@clrarter.rret 11r by writirrg
Carol Hayman, Brian and Family
His Spirit whispers softly to Trirrity Church, P. 0. Box
Connection, and others.
in the gentle breeze. His tears 429, Pomeroy, 0/rio, 45769.
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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's carpenter Service
26 years In local business
_Roolir.g &amp; Building Work

Stan&amp;tinJ.•I 1M boUOI~

Pomeroy, OH

lht rtldl (at't appan ._... t
rhlllmp to • • ar ,

740-992-6215

-.&amp;lh .... .tiiL \

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

C

J. 740-667-3156
"Still small enough to care"

333 Page Slreet
Middleoort OH

Located less than 30 minutes from

IU,.........r .......... woold
•:w -.ncr Idol. ••n. ld:t
It ~MWM,., .. • Unw"'. l"~

Dairq
Queen

dw hiJhrr we rlimb, tht

................. b«mnos;

., '"SIUda r.r .,.. tuotJnc
wtlh tMft *P ...t nntr ·
tMII da•n •ltiiU •aor Nth

-

8t~lll"t

.... ...,.

700 N.,2nd St
7

Uleplo&lt;.-W.,. ..

""'' ...,..,
c...
..... _ . .
_.. ...._,....,
"'-"1&lt;.-.
... .,............
.........
rn.,._ .....
1.-tmoe~ldahlr~ )d

Middleport. OH

•itb

740-949-2210
·A IIane lJdnk for

111)1 hln~

Racine, OH

___ .,....

P.O . Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

· Wlll•ldon....,
,....., In Qw A....,. ..
\'loll , _ - . ,
-.tp lhlt weet. u }'01

·-·'""' .....,.. ,.. ....
btfto.td th• hn•t)' .....

499 Ri&lt;'hland Annu~t. AtherL'i

LOOI: op oH ltd C;.d ~
prtlk'tt«. .\8 )Oil rach Cllr

740-59J-6333

llbn.k.OO• ttat'1y.. rh1Jhctf
...,nUoD it as ._r ti •
pra)«. l~r. aoo...
., lowv4 Uka. •. M"tf
look &lt;Iowa.

t-800-451 -9806

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10

to

10 x 20

If ye. abide in Me. and My
words abide in you, ye shll/1
ask wh11t ye ••ill, anJ it shall
be dorre unto you.
John 15:7

190 N Second 51

740-985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes

Ken and Adam Young

MEIG$ FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Fret&gt; 1-877-583-2433

Scrvll·es· Sun 10 00 am &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thuh. 7:00p.m., Pastor Many R. Hunnn

Assembly of God

Pomeroy Church of (;hrbt
212 W. Main St .. Su~day School- 9·30
i.l . lll . , Worship · 10 30 am . 6 p m ,
Wednesday Serv1ces- 7 p m

Ll~rty

A.sscmbly or God
P.O B o~ 467. Ouddmg Lane. Mason, •
W Va . Pa~mr· Neil Te nnant, Sunday
Services- 10·00 a m and 7 p.m

Baptist
Ca r~nter

U!plist Churdt
Pi'Cocfimir
Serv1ce JQ·]Oam, Evenmg Serv1cc
7:00pm, V..ednesday Bible Sludy 7.00 pm,
Jntc:nm Prcocher - fluytl Russ
SUfillliY~LKll ~ :- 9 ~Oam.

Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve LJUlc, Sunday School 9 30
am. Mommg Wur.;htp. IO:.lO am. Sunday
evenmg 6 10 pm Wednesday 6 30pm

' .,

Middleport Church ol Christ
5th and Mam, Pastor AI Hartson, Youth
Mmister Josh Ulm. Sunday School - 9 30
a.m.. W()rship - 8:15. 10:30 am. 7 p m .
Wedne&amp;day Sei'\'Jces - 7 p m

Br.arwallow Ridge Church ol Cbrisl
Pastor·Drw.:c Terry, Sunday Sc hoo l -9.30
am. ·
10:3 0 am, - 6' 30 p m,
Worship·
Wednesday Sci'\ ices · 6:30pm

Pomero~

t'irst BapU~t •
Pastor Jon Brockert East Mam St ,
Sunday Worshtp - 10 00 a m , W~·d S1hle
Study 6 30 pm

Zion Chun:h ur Christ
Pome roy. Harri sonville Rd (R t 143 ).
P11 stor Rog er Watson , Sunday Schqol •
9 30 a rn ., Worshi p · 10.30 a.m.• 7.00
p.m.. Wednestllly Servtces ~ 7 p.m.

First Southern Baptist
4 1872 Pomeroy P1le . Pa~tur. E. Li!rnar
O'Bryant, Sunday School - 1)·30 am.
Wnrship - H· ICi am, 9~Ci am &amp; 7 OOpm.
Wcdncsd~ y Scn'ICCS- 7 OU p.m
l'int Baptist Church
Pastor Mark M(,rrow, Oth and Palmer St .•
Mu.h.lkpurt., Sundi!}' S~houl - 915 ~tm .,
Wor ship · Hl 15 am , 7:00 p m.
Wellncsd.Ly S&lt;.-nKc- 7.(1) p m

Pomeroy We!itslde Church of Christ
3J226 Chddrc1t's Hom_.: Rd , Sunday
S.:h,ool - II a m , Worship· !Oa.m., 6 p m.
Wedncsda) Serv1cc;,s- 7 p m. _
_

Keno Church of Christ
Wo rsh 1p · 9 3\l a.m., Sunday School JO·JO a m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, I~ • and
,\rd Sunday

' Ho~ Bapti!Jt Chun.:h tSoulhrrn)
570 Grant Sl.. Mtddlepmt, Sunday ~hool
- 9·3nam , Worship -I t am and6 pm,
Wodnesday Scmce- 7 p.m.
, Ruthmd First Bap1lst Chun:h
,Sunday School - 'J ·JO a,m, Worsh1p
10·45Hm.

Thppers Plain Chun:h of Christ
St:TVICC - 9 a.m.,
Commun ion - lU am . Sunday School
10 15 am. Youth· 5·JO pm Sunday. Btble
Study Wc:dnl!sday 7 pm
ln ~ trumcntal, Wur~hLp

R~hur)'

1

Chul'l'h of Chrisl
MIIII Sier· Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury '
Rolll.l. Mlddlc!J'&gt;rl, Sunda y School - 9 30
LL Ill .

Sil\'tr Run Bap1ist
Pastor. Juhn Swanson, Sunday School lOa.m .. Wur-.hlp · ll am .. 700 pn1.
.Wt'tlncsdn) Servu·es 7 00 p m

1\-11. Unioa Baptist
Pastor : David Wiseman, Sum.l11.y S..:hooi IJ :-1.5 a.m., Eve mn g
6·30 p m,
Wednesday Services-6:30pm
Btlhlehna BapUsl c•urth
Great Rend , Route 124. Racme . O H.
Pastor Damd Mecca. Sunday School ,
9.30 a.m., Sunday Worship· 10 30 am.
Wednesday B1ble Study· 6:00p m

Ofd Bttbd Free Will Baptist Cllurt:h
28601 St. Rt . 7, MLddlepo11 . Sunda)'
Sen·ice - 10 a.m., 6 00 p.m., Tuesday
Sel'\'lctS-6:00

Hlllsidt- Bapllsl Churth
St Rt 1~3 JUst off Rt . 7·. Pastor R.e''
Jaml.'s R Acree. Sr .. Sunda y Umfu:d
Sen·icc. W"rsh1p 10 30 am . 6 p m .
Wcdne~} Sen 1&lt;X5 · 7 p m.

Rutland Chun-h or (;hrisl
Sunduy School 9 30 a.m.. Wur sh1 p and
~ornmunton - 10·30 am. Rtlh J Werry.
Mim ster
Bradford c;:huMh of Chri..&lt;ol
Comer of St Rt 1 2 ~ &amp; Brudbul) Rd .
MmL ster. Doug Shambhn. Youth Mm1~ter
BLII Ambc:rgt:r, Sund~ty Sehoul - 9 . ~0 a.m.
Worshtp 8 00 a.m , 10.30 a.m.. 7 00
p m .Wednesday Sft'VK:es - 7'()[) p m
Hkkory Hills Church of Christ

Tuppers Plains. Pastor Mike Moore. B1ble
class, 9 11m Sunday: worship 10 am
Sunday , worshtp 6:30pm Sl.lnday: fhble
class 7 pm WaJ:
Reedsvlllt Churth or Chrisl
Pastor: Ptuhp Stunn, Sunday School· 9· 30
a.m., Worship Sen·1ce: 10:30 11.m. B1ble
Study. Wednesday. 6 30 p m.

Congregational

9

am . w.wship - Ill a.m.. Tuesday Scrvu·es
-7:.IDp ~n

Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pustor: Rev
Jonathan Noble, Wors hip · 10·2~ am ..'
Sunday Scho?l Y.l5 a.m

Central Clustu
Asbury (Syracul&gt;C), Pa~ tur Bob Rubmson.
Sunday School - 9·45 a.m, Worshtp II
am , Wedn csda) Sen'1ccs • 7·30 p m

Episcopal

Enterprilir

Graet Epl!i('opal Churth
32b E. Mam St., Pomeroy, Sunday Sch O(l]
and Huly Eu~hal'i st II :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Holin~ss

•

· Communi1y Church '
Pastor S t ~~·e Tomek. M~tm Street.
' Rutland, Sunduy WorshLp- 10·()1) am
Suod'-'Y Serv1ce;? p.m

Christian Union
llatd'ord (.1turdt ol Christ in
Chrisliu Ualoo
, Hartford. WV1 . Pastor:Oa\'ld Greer,
Sunday School - 9 JO a.m . Worsh1p ·
10 .,:\0 a:m. 7 ·00 p.m., \\b.1.ncWa~

Other Churches
Amwzinrr: (;nee Community Church
Pa~ lor

Wuynr Dunlap. Stall' Rt 6!!1.
Sun Wor.-.h1p 10 am'&amp;
6 \0 pm .. Thur.-d.Ly H1hl c Study 7 !Kl p.m

Arlund Kin g, Sunday School .
10 ·'0 am. Wnrjhlp - 9·30 am B1bk
Stu dy Wed 7 .JO
,
1-' JahHMtds
Pa~tor Kei1h Rad ~r. Sunduy Sl'hnol - 10
ani , WOrShip · I I am
P~tsLor

Forest Run
Pastor· Soh Robinsun. Sunday Scl)_09l
am.Worsh1p - 1Jam

Church of God
Mi. Moriah Church of God
Mile= H1ll Rd . R.adne. Pastor: Jame s
Saucrlield, Sunday S\·hool · 9·"'"i am .
EH·nmg 6 p m • Wed 1k·~~ Sen1cc~ - 7

The Chun:h nr Jt11118
Christ of Ulttr-Day Saints
St Rt lbO, 446 6247 or 446-7486.
Sunday Schtltll 10 20 II a.m.. Rehcf
Soc1ctyfPnc~thood
11 ·05· 12'()() noon,
Sa~ramcnt
Sen·1ce 11- 10 15 a.m .
~lnnu.:makmg mcetmg. ht Tim r.-. . · 7 p.m

United Methodist
· GnhiDillnlled !'tfelhodist
WC'II'Shlf' · 11 am Pastor Richard Nt·ase
Bechtel t:nilrd Methodist
~ew Ha\cn , RL &lt;.:hard Nt:a~e. Pastor.
Sunday \\ or..h ip 9 30 a m TUe s. 6 JO
prayer and Bible Stud) .

ML Olilt UnUed Methodisl
Off 124 bc=hmd Wilkesville. Pa~ tor Re\'.
Ralph Spin:~. Sunda y School - 9 .lO a.m..
Worship - 10·30 am . 1 p m . Thursday
Sen•icc s - 7 p m.

Melp Coopentht Parish
Alfred. Pastor· Jan;:
8 cat11t:, Surn.la~ SchtHll
t,I · JO &gt;1m.
Worship · II a.m . 6:30 Jl.m
Olaltr
Pastor. Jane Beanie. Wur~h 1p . 9 "m .
S unda ~ Sc h•llll - 10 :1 m. . Thur~y
Sc:n'ICC-.- 7 p ffi.

pm

a m Sunda' S.:h•·u l · l U 1,j1 a m

a..rdl ., c..t or """"""
OJ. Whitt Rd. off St. Rt. 160. Pastor · PJ

ll

RaciiU'
Pa~tor Kerry Wolild. Sund.1y School - 10
a m , Worslup • J I a.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Cbui"Ch
Comer S)·camurc &amp; S«:und St. Pomeroy.
Sunda)' School . 9 : 4~ am. Worsh1p 11

J .....

P~~tor. W.J ~

(;ommunity ur Christ
RJ. P.L swr· Jim Pro!fi tt
Sunday Sl·h unl · 9 1iJ am Wor,hi p ·
10 ~0 il m , Wetlnnd,1~ Scrvkc' - 7 0()
r m.
Hethel Worship Centrr
3')782 S R 7, R~'\: d:., lllc . OH 4~'' ~ . I !~
mile l\l.)rlh of Eu~lt:ru SthoJols ~n Sl{ 7 A
F-'tlll &lt;111 ~ ~~ Churrll , Pm;mr Rnh ll :irh~t
1\ssnciatc PJ slor Kat yn [);1\b , Y\IUth
Pastor SullC' l·r:t nc 1 ~. SunLiay ~~n 1 ~;es
10 00 am worsh1p, 6·00 pm F.tmi ly LJ tl'
Classes. Wed . Honw Cell Grnur ~ 7.(}0
p L\1. Outer Unut ~ Cell Gn1up ;~t the
c hur~·h 6 30 pm tu 8.\0 pm

Pa ~ 1nr

Coolville Un.ltOO Methodist Parish
Pastor· Helen ktme. Coolville Church,
Mam &amp; Fifth Sl .. Sunday School - 10
a.m. Worsiup - IJ a.m , Tue~day Sen'Jces1pm.

Hoddnaport Churth
Grand Str-ecl, Sunday School - 9.JO a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 am . Past or Ptulltp Bdl

Affdsvillt 1-' ell••ship
Chur\h of IlK Naum:nc . Pa~wr· Jam1c
Peun. Sunday Sd1011l - tJ ~0 am. Worsh1p
10 "'5 am . 7 r .m \\cdncl'day Sem~'t'~
- 7 pm
SyncUR Chui"Ch of' Utt ~aDIR'IIf!
Adk ins. Sunday ~hool IJ 30
am. Wonh1p - 10 30 .am . 6 p m .
\\Cdnc~\ Sc-n'll C5-. 7 p m
Pa.~101 ~hkc:

L0111;: ~ttum

Pomero~·

Churth of tht Nazaft~
Pa(tor: Jan Lau:nder, Sun.ta~ Sch.'ltll t:UO am. \\tlr~htp - IU.JO a.m . .and t&gt;
p.m.. Wednesda) Sl.-n' J ce~ . 7 p m

"'"r'lup
00 I'm B11'11t'

• Nc\\- !.1ft\ il'tor ,\ Ct'nlrr
J773 Gl·wg'e,, l'1 c~:k J{!•.td. Ci .1llq'll &gt;l l~. OH
Pa.,tor BLll Stat .:n. Sunda) St'I\Ll't'' Ill
U lll &amp; 7 r ~n Wcdnc,d,l\ -7 pm &amp;
Youth 7 p rn

Jell Snnth
Sun day Sehoul · 9 ..'0 a rn .. Murumg
Wnr ~ hlJl · IO·JO o 111 &amp; h
pm
Wcdnc sd~y Scrvi ~·c - t.·JO p m , Youth
Scrvll'C· (1,)() p.m. •

'0

Asupe Ufe (;rnter

f-'ull Guspel ('hun·h

· Fuli - Gn~pl' l Church", ·Po~~tflP; John c~
P&lt;Ltt }' W.td~ 60J S.: cond "'"' M,ts,•n. 7:\.'i!H7. Se1vLcC tmlc. Sunday 10 ..\U ,t 111 .
Wednesday 7 pm

i1f the l.h·ln]i!i S1wlnr
Anllqtlll ~

Kt 'l 'X.

Scr, l lC~

Abundant Gract' R.F. I.
923 S TimJ St, Midtllcport, P~~tui
Dav1s. Sunday scn1cc. 10
Wednesd ay :-;cn•k c. 7 p m

~ rn,

1-' aith F'ull Gu~pel Church
Lm1g Bnnom. Paslnr Stc1c-Rc~J. Sund~)
Schnol · Q JO .1 m, Wursh1 p · 4 ~0 d m
and 7 r m . Wednesday · 7 p m . Fnd~ty fellowslup sen kc 7 Jl 111

Lommunit~

Hohson t:hristian Fl'lh1"ship l'hun·h
Hl'h,hd Wlutl' Sunlia\ Sl'lltM&gt;I·
IU am . Sunday Chu r~ h 'en I • ~· · t-. ~f) pm

Pn~L•• r

Wcdn~ ..t1&lt;L)

'I pm

Rutnratlnn

'll

{ ' hri~lilln -Ft• llo\1-~hlp

KuaJ . At h~11~. P . l ~lll r
Lohme Cuats, Su n J&lt;..~y W u r~h1p 10 ll(l :Jill,
Wednesday· 7 pm
J 16 :'i

Ho1&gt;j1~r

1

Middltpnrt Community Church
575 Pc:!lrl St ., M1ddkport , Pil sltlr Sam
Ander son, Sunday Sl·hool I U a L!l ,
E~·cm n g- 7·30 p m . Wednesday Ser.·1cc .
7 30pm

l.anj15lllle Chrislian Church
Full Go~pc l. P~t :; ttlf Rubert M u~~c1,
SunJa} S\·huoi1J.3!) am,, Worship 10:30
am . 7 (){) pnt , Wednesday Servu.:c 7'('10
pm

Faith Vullry Tabermd~ Church
Ra1ley Run Road Pastor: Rt!\' Emmell
Raw son. Sundlly Evening ' Jl m .
Thursday Sef'\ LCC · 7 p m
Syracuse Mission
1411 Rndget)t an St, Syracus ~. Sunda}
School · 10 am, benmg · ll p m .
Wednesday Scrvtcl! • 7 p rn.
, Hazel Communit) Church
Off Rt 124 , Pilstor · Edsel Han , Sunday
School - 9 30 am. WorshLp - 10:30 u m .
7.30 p.m.

Pentecostal
St Rt
H,llla,·k.
E\'~mng

Penternslal AsSC'mbly
Rauue , P.tMtll Willuml
Sunda~ S..:hnt1l · 10 .1 m .. '
- 7 p.m.. WcdiJe'it.lll) Scr\\l~t'!i · 7 ·
1~4 .

pm

Presbyterian
'syn~u.w First United Pre:shyterian
Pastor Robert Crow, Worshtp · II a m

Harrisom'lllt Pmbylerian Church
Crow. Wnr ~h1p 1;1 a.m

Pa ~ lor Rl~n

Community Chun-h
Sunda y School - 9 '0 am Wor ~h1p
1030am, 7 pm

~ liddltpor1 Prtib~ tt-rian
Jame' Sll\tl~r. w,,r~h1p · II i! m

Pa~ t\•r

Morse Chapel Chun:h
Sunday 'IChool - 10 LJ m . Worship
a m , Wedlll!sda~ Sen ice · 7 p m

k ~ ,,· Mnrn~ ;

ilO r m .

'
Church
ljJ~·k ul \\o:~L Columhl.t , W V,L t• lll L1c1 mg
Road. l-';~~tur Cha1k ~ R n u ~h ~~IJ-IJ 675 22!\K SunJn) Sl'lw•ll IJ .~o :1m SunJ~Y
C'\Cillng ~l' f\ll'L 7 tiO pm Hihh Stud~
WcJnt:!&gt;tl.t\ ,~r\;KL' 7 lHJ pm

T~1e~.1

Harrison\ille Community Chuh:h
Past or Th eron Uurh~m. Sunday · IJ
a.m . anJ 7 p m , WcJne~d~y · 7 p m

l',l,t"r

S,J]LIRI~~ ~

Salt'nl

Seventh-Day Adventist ·

II

Sr-l·c-nth-llay c\d\entiSI
Hh Rd .. p, , mcw~ Pa~ I N
Hcnnt."lt Lud.1~· s h . S,1Lu rda~ St."n: •e•
Sahbath s~·h (ll&gt; l 1 r m . \\,,r,htl' · .t r m
~lulh..:r~\

hith GO!ipd l 'hurch
Runom. Sunda~ S~ hu{l[ · IJ JO u11
Worsh1p - 10.-l~ a m , 7 ~() p m
Wedn~ta) 7 ~~~ p m

.

Oliu• Communi!' Church
Lav. rt!na llu~ h Sunda~ School
!:1 JO am . E'l•n1ng · ;, ~~~ p m . ~ l'llnt"day
s~· f\ l&gt;:l' . 7 r m.
Pa~lor ·

Middleport Chun-h or tht ~uaR"M
Pastor. Allen Mido;ap. Sunday Sch011l 9: lO a m ,\\'Ontup - 10·30 a.~ . 6· 30 p m •
We:dne:sday Scn·ice: s - 7 p m . Pa ~tor
.-\lien Mukap

(I

Clirt11n Talwrnud't•l'hun·h
\\ V,J . Sundn&gt; Sdtoml . 111 ,1m
Wul'h lp. 7 rIll, w,·dnl-tl,l\ ServKe - 7'
p ill

~ft.

Nazarene

~und;~ ~

·

~[ l1ll on .

M1ddleport· P~~I(If

Lon~

T&amp;rth Churdl
Co Rd . 63. Sunda)' School · 9 )0 a m.
WoThhlp 10 ..10 a 111.

Wcdnc ,do~o~

R~:j01dna l.iff Church
500 N. ' 2nd A'~ . Mllldl l]•urt. Pa ~ t 1 n
M1kc FtHl.'lll~ ll
P~ '-tll r
1-. meritn ~ '
I..,&lt;Jwrcncc Fnreman Vu•r-,hlp· I(J on !!Ill
wdi1~sd.1y St'n'lc C'... . 7 p m

D~· t:.nille

Bflhe.l Church
Township Rd , 46SC, Sunda) School - 9
a.m. Worsh tp · 10 a m... Wednesday
Services - 10 &amp;.11'! .

no: K. J.:wdl.

6 00 p nl:
Stud)

Ash Street Churth
3Y K Ash St..

Uni'ted Brethren
,II, llermon l nitt"d Drt'lhnn
in ('llml C hun: h
Texa s CommunLL~ \t&gt;-Jll \\ ~o.:lhu m KJ .•
Pastnr Peter \tJn m.J.ll . - S un Ja~ St:ho..)l · ·
1:1 \ 0

.1

r 111 .

111 . \\ , r,Jup . Ill ~~~

\\ cJnl''ol.l\ ~ .. n l~e-

Ynuth grt•llr

Full Gospt"l Llghlhouw
1~U-15 H1lanJ R•l.l.t. l'umeT•l~ . l'u'l• •r:

R,l~

Hum~· r. Sunda~ s~· hvo l · 10 o~ . m , E1.:mng
7 30 p m . Tue sday &amp; Thu n day · 7 .\0

South Bt-thel Cummunil~ Church
S1hcr Ridge- Pa ~ lill Lmda Dam~'"'"~"-' .
Sunda~ Sd\tM&gt;I - 9 am , Wrmh1p St'l"'ln'
10 :a.m. ~nd and -'!h Sunda\

m t'l'lln~

.t

111 . 7 (K J

... 00 p.m

:nJ ..'.: ..Jth

S und a~'

; r n)
1-:den l'nitt-d

K~lhrrn

in l'hmt
l&gt;l'LIIt'l'll R ~~·d,\lllc ,\: ·
lJ,...: ll11)!f"1r\ -.un,l. l~ S,·hCllll Ill a 0\
Sund ~l \\ ur-h~p · It Ill I .llll \hJn~·'-tJ:~'
Sl•n l•C' · 7 tit \ J' m . P.l -tt•r· \I Ad;ml

'&gt;we !{,lUI•'

pm

l~..t

\\ Ill

Carltlon lntenlenomination11l Chun·h
K mg,t-.ur~ R ~ad , P.t~lt•r
Sun.ta~

~()

R ,~ht'rt \ , 11l~ l·

JO a 111 \\nr,hlr
a.m , E• cmnJ.! St·r1 1, c 4•

s~- ht&gt;t&gt;l

SenJCe 10
Sunday School - 9.30 am .. \\'or•htp 10:30a.m
Kmb•iUe
Wonhip - 9 .~0 am .. Sunda) s~·huul 10:30 a.m.. FiN Sunday ol \.lt)nth 7 00
p.m. sen·Jet

Aposwlir

{'hun.·h

Lutheran

Our Saviour Lutheran Chui"Ch
Walnut and Henry SLs . Ra\l.·nsw~Jud,
W.Va ., Pasmr: David Russel l. Sunday
School· 10·00 a.m . Worsh1p - 11 am

( 'ommunu .~

Stl vcr s\'illt

l ll

Sl. John lulheran Church
Pine Grove, Wonhip · 9 00 am, Sunday
School · 10·00 a.m. Pastur. lamt'~ P.
Rrady

Pa~tur B.ltl lhndtllph. \\'or ~h1p - 9.JO

s,rkU!it' 1-"irsl Church or God
Apple and s«ood Sh. P;b.ur: R'-·~ Da\ 1d
Russell. Sunday Sc hool and Worship· 10
am . E'·ening Ser"'IU S- 6·30 p m .
Wednrsda) Servicn • 6.30 p.m

Morning Slllr
Pastor· John Gilmore , Sunday SchlW)[
a m ,Worshtp - IOam

7p m

Cah· a~· Dibl.: Church
P•mwrtt) P1kc, Cu. RJ, Pa ~t••r. Re v.
Blad'.'.illld SunJ~) Sdltlol \) 11) a nl .
W'h r ~ h1p
IIIW .1 111 . 7"1 11 pm.
We d rti.",&lt;Ji.l~ S'l"' l~l· , 7 Jil [1 1U

011sls &lt;.:hrisllan Fello¥~sbip
(Non-dennmmnt1imallel lnwsh1p1
M~ctmg m the uld Ameman Lt: g1un H~ll
South h•unh Aoenu ~. M1tldlerort '
Pa{tor Chr1 ~- Ste\loarl 10 (I() am Sunday
Oth&lt;Cr mcdmg' 10 home~

East Letart
Sill Mar~hall Su nday School 91l m. Worsh1p "- 10 am . 1st Sunday
cv~ry month evenmg ~Cf\ILe 7 00 p m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Rulland Churda ol'f'.od
Moo Heath, Surwb} " orshlp · 10
a.m.. fl p.m. \\'-'\J m.-~~ Sen 1~ e~ · 7
P"o~s tor.

Fnd~)

T_i.!p~.r.,:.P l a m~.

Heath tMiddleport)
Danville Holiness Church
Pas1nr Rrian Onnha.m, Sunday SchcHII ·
:\1057 State Route 325, Lan~~vllc. Pastor
- 9 30 am, Worsh1p - 11 ·00 am
V1o; tor Rou sh, Sunday s,chut)l - 9.JO a.rn,
Sunday worship - 10.30 a.m. &amp; 7 p 111 ,
Mlnenville
Wedne!i.dJI.Y prayer ~crvice · 7 p m
_ _ __!~sl nr· Bob ~obm&lt;;on, Sunday Sc ~CHl l -r9 _
Ca lvary Pllgri~ 'Chape~
l ~.
am.W(\rShLp · IOi'l m
Harnsunville Road, !t'a~tur. ChiUlts
Mc Kenzie, Sunday School 9 30 am.
Peaarl Cht~pel
Sunday School 9 a m . Worship - I 0 a m.
Worshtp · II am .. 7{10 p m, Wednesday
Servu;c • 7.00 p.m.
Pomeroy
Pastor Brii!ll Dunham. Worsh ip - 9:30
Rost or Sharon HniiOOi!i Chun-h
am, Sundoy School- 10 3~ 11m
Leading Creek Rd , Rutland, Pastor Rev
Dewey King. Sunday school- !1.30 a.m.,
Rock Springs
Sunday worship •7 p m • Wednesday
Pastor: K~ith Rader. Sunday School - 9:1.5
prayer meetmM· 7 p.m.
11 m . Wor sh ip - I 0 a m , Yomh
Fellowship, Sutw.la) • 6 p m
Pine Gron Blbl~ Holiness Church
1/2 mile nff R1 ~25. Pastor· Re'l. O'Dell
Rutland
M!lnk y. Sunday School · 9•30 a m .
PaMor Rick Bourne, Sunday School WorshLp · 10.30 a.m., 7 JO p. m..
9·]0 a.m.. WurshLp · 10:30 am, Thursday
Wednesda)' Serv~cc · 7.30 p.m.
Services - 7 p.m .
Salem Ce nter
We~~ltyan Bible Holinm: Churth
Pastor·
W1lham
K Marshul l. Sund a~
75 Pearl St., . Middleport Pastor R1ck
School · 10. 1.5 am, Worsh1p - ~ 15 am ,
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 u.m Worship
Bible Study. Monday 7:00 pn!
-1 0·45 pm , Sunday F.ve 700 pm,
Snowville
Wednesday ServiCe - ?-:\0 p m
Sunday School- 10 am. W••rsh1p - 9 am
HyRII Run Community Church
Bethany
Pastor· Re\' Larry.L!mlcy. Su nday School ~
Pasto r· Jnhn GLlmnre. Sunclay Schnnl - 10
• 9.30 a. m.. Worsh1p · lOA~ a.m., ·7 p m,
a m , Wor sh1p · 9 a m . Wet!ne sda}
Thursday Bible Study ~tnd Youth · 7 p.m.
Serv1..:es- 10 a.m.
Lau~l Clift'Ft'ft Melhodlsl Chu~h
Carme l-Sutton
Pasto r Glenn Kowe, Sunday S~hoOI Carmel
&amp;
U
~ts h.m !{d ~
!{a~;mc, Oh10,
IJ.JO u.m.. Worship - 10 30, am . ami 6
Pastur
Juhn
Gt
lmun.:,
Sunday
School _.
,
Wedn
~stlay
Sen
IC
C
7
!)()
p
m
pm
9 ~0 11m , Worsh1p . !0·45 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed 7 Oil p 111

~orthtast Clu~t e r.

-.7 00 p m.

Falnie~&lt;&gt; Blhle Church
Le!&lt;.U( , w v~ Hi l. Pa~IHI l:lllotll Ma\ . .
Sunday S.: huul IJ 31! J m . \\ur,htp - 7.00
p 111 . Wedn c'&gt;t.Ll~ A1hk SLUJ} · 7 [I() p 111
Fll.ith f-' cllo"-§hip Crus~tde for Chrht
f'~ ~ Lur . Kc\ 1-i.m ~h n D1 d~n~. St' I\JCe .

P o n la nd - Ri!~Lnl'

o.m

Onur Churth of Christ
Sunday s..:hool9·30 am, Sunday -.-.orshtp
• 10 30 a.m.
Church of Christ
lntersc:ctLOn 7 and 12-1 W. E\·angelist :
Denn1s Sa~gent. Sunday' R1hle Stud} ·
9 :30 am , Wor~h1p . 10.30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m .. Wednl:sday B1ble Study - 1 p m

Sem~s

Tuppers P!ains St. Paul
Pa~ tur. Jane BcllLLL~. Sunday s~hool .

p.m

Rlde'nour. Sunday Sch(ll&gt;] · tJ ·.\0 11 111 .
Woroh1p · I U ~0 .1111 Wed nt!..d~y Scr. ICI."
7 p.m

- 9 . ~0 a.m. Wor~hip - II i!.m, 6 pn1..
WtdneM.Iay Semce' · 7 p.m
Rulland Church oflht Na:zah:nc
SunJa} School · ') Jtl a 111 • WurshLp 10.10 am .. 6 30 p.m.. Wednei&gt;W y
S!!n!Le~ · 7 p m Re\ M1kc ClarK

Latter-Day Saints

Wnrsh1p - I 0 ~0 a m
Radne First Baptisl
Pn~ t nr· Rh.' L: Rule. Sunduy Sl' hoo l · IJ '0
am, Wursh1 p • IOAO 3m· . 7:00 p.m .
WcdncMia)' Sen KC ~- 7.01lp.m.

•

"Let your light so shine belton' I
men . that they may see
good works arid glorify
Father in heaven ."
·
Matthew

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies ,

and more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
Bill QuiCkel

An Accounting &amp;
Financial Srnict!s Firm

White Funeral Home ·
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667-3110

618 E. Mam Street • Pl1mcrm

(740) '191· 7270

Hemlock Grove Christian Churc'h
Mim stl!r. Larr} Brown, Worsh1p · 9 30
u m Sunday Sehoul . 10:30 ~.m .. BLblc
S,tudy - 7 p m

Chapman, Sunday School - I 0 a.m.,
Wur:.hip - II un , Wedntsda y ServJces - 7

"

~

p.m

ff'Hdflftl (;ospcl 'lis.o;ion
H.~ld Knt1l&gt;. ''" (',, RJ ,\I . Pu-..Lur H:o

\\1ll furd
\\ionh1p- 7 p m
R o~c r

Su1Jih~

s •.-h,'l •l

. ~;~

'tt.1 m

llte!itcr Chuh:h ol' thc "\aurtM"
Pbtor: Re ' . HcrtiCrt G111te. Sunday s •.- hl~~;' l

•

.

"f)o not steal. .Do 'not lie . Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; I J

'

Emmunuel Apostolic T11.bernade Inc.
l.o(lp Rd nff New L111M Rd Rutlam.l,

'
Middleport, OH

ues t-sh1rts

Church of Christ

Rutland Frtt Will Bapmt
Sakm St., Putor. JamiC' Fortner. Suoda~
School . I() a.m.. bcmnl!i • 7 p.m ..
W~y Snvkes - 7 p.m.

"e~k

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Ia

The ftppllance man

(.Oobd .Ural~ &amp; lkli~r ~tHcia/1'

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

Rh·er Vallty
r\[llhtolic Worsh•p Center, H7J S .1rJ
A\t: ., Mtddh:p!.]ll. Ke~ m Kunkfe. Pn ~tor.
Sunduy. .10.30 11m
Wednesda y, 7.00
p m , Yomh Fn 7·~0 p n1 .

Anliquit~ B•ptis(
SunJay School - 9 '0 a.m . Worship 10.45 &lt;~.m, Sunda} EH' mng · h 00 r m .
Pastor: Don Walker

h .un·!-lpm

740·992·7713

29670 Bashan Rd.

!'-.
....: ..... ol Go4, ....lot

lhtOr.

Open 7 da)'" a

Sacrtd H111r1 Catholic Church
16 1 Mulberry Avf!, Pomeroy, 992-5898,
l'~t stur Rev. WBltc r E. Hemz, Sat. Con.
-1 45·5 l~ p m. Ma ~s - 5·'0 p.m.. 31un.
Con · - ~ :"' 5-9·1 5 am .. Su n Ma~~ - 9·JO
a nl. Daily Mm- 8 30u,m

Founh &amp; \tam St .. MiddlcJIQl1 . Pa~ t or:
Re:,·. Gill'lcrt Craig. Jr.. Sunday School 9:.~ a.m.. \\(&gt;().hlp· 10 "'5 am

Homemade Desserts Made Oa11y
Hom~

Evemng · 7JU p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist

:Mif[ie's 1(estaurant

Home

Hills Self Storage

·.~~e~p

•l't'nlf,th wt cUrt

209 Third
Racine, OH

Catholic

1-' &amp;rest Run Baptist
Pastor · -\.rius Hun. SundaY ScOOol • I 0
am.. Worship - II am

(740) 992-6472
Fax/7401992-7406

" l1m1 Fnt&gt;"o/11
Atmwwhnl'

Church of Jesus Chri~t Apo§toHc
VanZandt and WMd Rd , Pastor. Jamr: s
. Miller, Suqd11y School - IO.JO a.m.,

Fallh &amp;pdsi 'CIIul"l'h
Rr.ulroad St. Mason. Sunday School - I 0
am, Wonh1p - II a.m. 6 r m .
Wed~..c.t.a~· Srr.•tces - 7 p.m.

Michael L. Crites
Di~ctor of •"amil~' &amp;
Community Sen·ices
Overbrook
·
Rehabilitation Or.
·A Celebration ol We"

Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

Coolville , Ohio

Second BlpU~tl Church
Ra~enswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am
, M()n1~ng wor~h1p II am Evening- 7 pm.
Wt'dnesday 7 p m.

. \ 'iclory B•ptisllndepeudtnt
525 N ~nd St Middlepon. Pasuw James
E. Keesee . Worship - lOa m , 7 p m .
Wrdnesday Sen· ~ees · 7 p.m

•

'

WORSHI·P Go·o THIS WEEK

Friday, September 23, 2005

"Your Word, 0 LORD, is
eternal; it stands firm in the
heavens" (Psalm 119·: 89
NIY).
As we read the Word of
Pastor
God, let us hope ·that we do
Thom
more than read and even slmMollohan
'ply memorize what it · says.
Unless we begin to perce1ve ·
the Author Who penned the
Word of God through the living quills that its human writ. ers were, we have seriously their eyes were darkened.
missed the point of the Bible. Indeed, those who professed
As we seek to navigate to know the Scriptures simply
through life with not on ly refused to recognize its
mere survivors' mentalities. Author. though they were starbut that of victors whose · ing Him in the face: Nor could
lives have signirtcance and their ears discern the sweet
purpose ., we must begin to melody gf God the Father
perceive that the B1ble is not speaking 10 them through the
simply a list of "thou slmlts" Person of God the Son, Jesus.
and "thou shalt nots." Neither. It did not matter that all that
IS it merely a historical docu- He said and all that He did was
ment or compilation of mas- in fulfillment of the very
Words they believed that they
terful l1terarv works.
upheld. Though the Living
0(1. no. The B1ble IS quite
Truth spoke the truth to them.
actually the wntten record of they would not acknowledge
the L1v1ng Word of God the legitimacy of His testimoHnmelf In its beginning, 1t • ny. Jesus Si!id, " ... the very
pOints to the· Living Word, work that the Father·has given
Jesus: th10uehout its account Me to tinish. and which I am
of nur world in its youth. it is domg, testifies that the Father
Jesus to Whom it directs us. has sent Me. And the Father
Even .ts that written Word Who sent Me has Himself tesdray,s to its grand conclusion. tified concerning Me. You
spelling out for us those things have never · heard His voice
which have not yet all come to nor seen His form, nor does
pa-s, its Subject, as well as its His Word dwell in you, for
&lt;\uthor. is Jesus Christ.
you do not believe the One He
"In the beginning was the sent. You diligently study the
Word. and the Word was y,ith Scdptures because you thmk
God. and the Word was God that by them you possess eterlie was with God in the nal life. These are the
heginning. Through Him all Scriptures that testify about
things were· made ; without Me. yet you refuse to come to
H1m nothing was made that Me to have life" (John 5:36bhas been made .. : The Word 40 NIV)
became tl6sh and made Hi s
How tragic' How ironic!
dwellmg among tts. We h'ave Those who had spent their
seen His glory, the glory of entire lives searching the
th&lt;: One unci Only, Who came written revelattons of God
from the Father. full of grace had reduced it to rules and
and truth" (John 1:1-3 NIV ). regulations,.. forgetting in the
Oh. the tragcJy of hav1ng process that the point of the
read the Bible and not really Law of .God was to bring us
seen the One Whn stands close to Him.
·behind it ... the One Who
David, who penned tremen·
stands full of gmce and truth. dous portions of the Old
In the days of ksus ' earthly Testament, passionately pur·
ministry before Hts crucifix- sued his relationship with His
ion. He labored and sought to Creator. recognizing the inesbring illumination to .the timable worth of .the Word
gloomy. condition of all of that God had given the world.
humanity ... but for so many, For him, the Word of God

The Dally Sentinel• Page A7

www.mydallysentlnel.com

-- -

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If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
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Matthew

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.Page A~

LOCAL • STATE-

The Daily Sentinel

Friklay, September 231 2005

Bm:keyes• weapons playing like popguns, Page 82

Bl

Gallia County prep volleyball roundup, Page 82

.

.

The ·Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Chad Johnson is more than mouth, Page 83
MLB .News, Page 84

Disease strikes ~einhardt sentencing Lydia Circle to send care packages to college students
.
'
premature babies
POMEROY
Plans given. Thanks were extend- Doug and Sherry Shambliq
ed for those who helped was announced for Oct. 2 111;
delayed to Oct. 11 ingwerecare packagesforforpreparat hospital
col- •.with the meals for shutins.
3 p.m. with a scond hayridl'!

J

.

~nnounced

CINCINNATI (AP) -_ A
hospital said it will take extra
precautions in its intensive care
llllit for infants because of an
increased number of cases of a
gastrointe5tinal di ~easc in the
past month.
'
Two of the seven infants
being treated for necrotizing
enterocolitis at University
Hospital have died. spokeswoman Laura Koehler said.
The exact cause of their deaths
has not been detennined.
The other five babies are
recovering. Koehler said.
. The disease inflames the lining of the intestines and can
cause stomach pain, diarrhea
ahd fever. Doctors aren't sure
how the disease, which usually
occurs in the fi rst t;wo weeks of
life. is spread.
Studies show the disease
strikes HOOUt one in 20 highrisk, premature infants . in
neonatal intensive care units,
the hospital said in a release.
Doctors are Losually treating
· one or two infants with the dis'
ease in the 50-bed unit.
The, hospital said it noticed
about I0 days ago that the
number of cases was higher
than normal. .
· As a precaution, the hospital
is limitmg new admissions to
the unit and taking extm care in
how babies aie fed. Different
doctors and nurses are caring
for babies with the disease and
babies without it, arrd all medical staff are wearing gowns
and gloves around the infants.

lege students again this year
noted that the case has and the deadline for collectNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM
been COntinued , several. ing the items was · set for
times and has been on the Oct. 2 at the recent ·meeting
IRONTON.
. court's docket for a year.
of the Lydia Council held at
Sen1enc1ng 111 Lawrence
The judge s'aid there is the 'Bradford Church of
Count y Com mon Pleas - a presumption of J'ail time Christ.
Court for a former area
The meeting began with
radio
personality
.was on . a burglary charge,
prayer
praises and prayer
rescheduled when witness- whoch could be two to
Phyllis Baker had
requests.
es on hi s · behalf were eight years. Each of the
the
opening
prayer. Sherry
un able to attend.
stalking charges against
Mart y Stillpass, attorney Reinhardt carry a sentence Shamblin passed out the
Bible verse to learn for the
for · Steve Reinhar'dt - of of 18 months.
month. The secretary's
Proctorville , requested and
Earlier,
Assistant
report and other committee
received a _co ntinuance on Prosec uting Attorney Bob , reports were read.
the sen tencong. now to be Anderson said he would
Becky Amberger will be
Oct.
II ,
the recommend a sentence · sending cards to sick and
held
Huntington
(W.Va.) "on the low . end" of the shut-ins and thanl.&lt; you
Herald-Dispatch reported
in its Thursday edition.
possible two - to eight-year cards were read at the meet· har dt , · d&lt; 1., p 1f ad ed - sent;;,n_
Reon
- ce, th,.e newspaper ing. It was decided to_
-wnom sunsnifle
g uilty in August to ·a reported.
. bags will be
felony burg,lary cparge
and three counts of menacing for stalking a 22. year-old Lawrence County
wdman. Reinh·a rdt was
known as "Rhino," an onair personality for WRYVFM, based in Gallipolis
and Huntington.
Final sentencing was set
for
Wednesday,
but
Stillpass asked Judge W.
Richard Walton to -allow
several witnesses to take
the . stand in Reinhardt's .
defense. Some of those
witnesses were unavailable
for Wednesdaty's proceedings. the Herald-Dispatch
reported.
Walton allowed the sentence rescheduling, but
STAFF REPORT

.

Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
flags for merchants available
.----~

Extra cleaning of the
church was discussed and
members were asked to
check off what they had
done or will be &lt;;loing.
There was a discussion on
the church picnic and- the
low attendance and how to
get the attendance up.
Members signed up for
items needed to make the
tacos in a bag for the last
fifth quarter party after the
ball ~arne. A committee was
appomted to take care of
the food pantry distribution.
The ladies retreat and ladies
.fellowship were announced
and it was noted that Tomas
Shelton will . be at .the
_church for the Oct. I and. 2
service. A church hayride at

at 4, dinner at 5 p.m. an¢
devotions at 6 p.m . Eacll
family is to take a covere~
dish. A ladies shopping tri~
was announced for Oct. 28.;.
Paula Pickens · and
Phylli s Baker hosted the'
meeting and had devotions:
Pickens had the closing
prayer and blessing fo(
refreshments.
.
Attending were Nancy, .
Morris, Sherry :Smith, Neva ·
Chapman, Diana Maxwell,
Cathy Dyer, Misty Deweese
Carolyn
Nicholsott
Charlotte Hanning, Becky,
Amberger, . Paula Pickens,
Brenda Bolin, Suzie Will;
Sherry Shamblin, Madelin~
Painter, and Phyllis 'Baker. -;

Friday, September 23, 2005

fNP Schedule
.. GAtLIPOllg.- A.IChedule of upcoming college
and high school varsity sporting events involving
teams from G.allla, Me!gs and Mason counties.

Fridoy'sgamoo

Foolboll

Chartone Hoofllch/photo

Merchants now have a w&lt;sy to let shoppers know when they are
open for extended hours. Red, white and blue ftags available from
the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce for purchase by merChants are being used for the first time this weekend in Pomeroy.
Here Debbie Hysell, left, of Makin' Memories. the scrapbook store,
at the oorner of Main and Court. dis pays her new ftag, just delivered
by Chamber di~ector, Erin Roush. "This will make it easier for those
driving through town to see who's open and who's not," said Roush.

.L

Local weather
Friday... Partly cloudy with
Sunday
night
and
a chance of showers and thun- Monday... Mostly
cloudy
derstorms. Highs in the lower with a chance of showers and
80s. Southwest winds around thundersiorms. Lows in the
5 mph ... Becoming nonhwest lower 60s. Highs in the upper
in the afternoon. Chance of 70s. Chance of rain 40 perrain 50 percent.
cent.
Friday
night ... Partly
Monday
night
and
cloudy with a slight chance of Thesday... Partly
cloudy.
showers and thunderstorms . . Lows in the mid 50s. Highs in
Lows in the lower 60s. the upper 70s.
Northeast winds around 5
Thesday
night ... Mostly
mph. Chance of rain 20 per- clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
cent.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny
Saturday... Partly cloudy. in the morning ... Then becomHighs in the lower 80s. Nonh ing partly cloudy. Highs in
winds around 5 mph.
•
the U!Jper 70s.
Saturday , night ... Partly
Wednesday night and
cloudy. Lows in the lower Thursday.•. Panly
cloudy
60s. East winds around 5· with a chance of showers and
mph ... Becoming south after thunderstorms. Lows in the
riudnight.
lower 60s. Highs in the lower
Sunday... Partly
cloudy. 70s. Chance of rain 50 petHighs in the lower 80s. ,
cent.

Local stocks .
ACI- 66.92
AEP - - 38.96
Akzo --. 42.91
Ashland Inc. - 54.09
AT&amp;T- 19.59
BU- 10.94
llcib Evans - 22.56
llcirgWamer - 55.76
CENX- 22.60
~hampton - 4.24
Charming Shops - 10.93
City Holding - 35.97
Col- 46.77'
DG -18.72
DuPont - 38.96
Federal Mogul - .45
USB- 28.94
Gannett - 68.47 ·
General Electric - 33.30
GKNLY- 4.95
Harley Davidson - 49.75
JPM -, 34.25

.

Kroger - 20.28
Ltd. - 20.15
NSC- 38.41
.
Oak Hill Financial - 30.47
OVB- 25.30
BBT- 39.50
Peoples - 27.51
Pepsico - 54. 15
Premier ~ 13.29
Rockwell - 52.20
Rocky Boots ~ 29.90
RD Shell - 64.81
SBC- 23.83
Sears- 121.91
Wai-Mart - 43.19
Wendy's - .44.94
Worthington - 19.76
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

-

'tYler Consolidated at Point Pleasant, 1 p.m. ·

c..... eountry

River Yaney, Gallla Acaclemy at Lancaster
lnvtational, 9 a.m.

College soccer
Houghton at Rio Grande, t p.m
Women'&amp; College Soccor
011io Don;n&lt;an al Rio Grande, T8A
.
College llolleyboll
Rio Grande/Walsh 81 Urbana. 11 am.

'
'

Sports Briefs

1VC Ohio

Meigs wins TVC Ohio by double digits
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWA.LTERS@MYDAIL'(TRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY - Meigs had
already clinched the TriValley Conference · Ohio
Division golf title. but the
question was by how much?
The Marauders finsihed
their final 2005 Ohio match in
style Wednesday with a 14stroke victory over Belpre .at
their home gmund of Pine
Hills Golf Course. ·
MHS posted its eighth victory in 10 league contests and
completed the season with 47
points~ 10 more than its closest competitor.

T
h e
second on
Maroon and
the day wi'th
Gold fired a
a 165, paced
s taggerin g
by oitedalist
team score of
W
e
s
151 , led by
Cooper's
dual effons
low-round of
of 36 by
' 35. The twoSteven
time defendStewan and
ing champiJake Venoy.
ons
also
Jake Venoy Kirk Legar
Stewart
completed
added a 3\1
the year with
and Josh Venoy chipped in a 37 points.
40 to round out the team scorVinton County (173) edged
mg.
out Wellston for th'ird by a sinDan Bookman shot 44 and gle stroke, but the Rockets
Cody Davidson added a 50 for clinched third place with a
the victor~. ·
season tally of 3I points. The
The Golden Eagles finish ed Vikings finish ed founh with

21 points.
Alexander placed fifth on
the day and year with totals of
225 and 12 points, respectively.
·Nelsonville-York was dead
last with a 228 Wednesday
and a season total of two
.
points..
Meigs trave led _oo Ironton
Country Club Thursday for a
battle with the host Tigers, but
came up II' strokes shan with
a team score of 164.
IHS had co-medalist round s
of 36 from Dennis Gagui and
Nathan Kern s en route to
posting a team tally of 153.
Bookman paced MHS with
a 40, while Stewan and Legar

Tuning up f~r Riverside Invitational

NFL Punt, Pass
and Kick coming
'j

I
Employee
Price

ON All NEW

'
'..

2005's···

Color Keyed Ap~ranoe
Pl&lt;g .. ea.t Aluminum

. Air Conditioning,
luggage Rack

Wheels

UIIPII, 1Cllftlllll

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
Parks
and ' Recreation
Department is sponsoring the
NFL Gatomde Punt, Pass and
Kick com!Jetition.
Tl\e competition · allows
youngsters to showcase their
talents in punting, ~sing and
place-kicking wtth scores
based on distance and accuracy.
.
The event will be held at
Memorial Field Saturday, Sept.
24 beginning at noon. Pre registration will begin II :30 a.m.
It is free and open to boys and
~iris. ages 8-15. Age c.lassi ficanon ts as of Dec. 31, 200~. ·
You may enter only one local
competition, winners advance .
. to the sectionals.
• Scores will be detennined
by one.punt, pass and kick. The
distance and accuracy will be
used to determine the panicipant's score. The total score of
each event will be added for the
' final score.
•
No
football
shoes/cleats/turf shoes are
allowed. Only gym shoes (soft
sole) will be pennined. No bare
feet allowed. Failure to wear
gym shoes will result in a disqualification. .
· • All equipment, other than
shoes, needed for the competotion will be provided by the
school or hosting agency.
Participants may not utilize
their own equipment (tees or
· footballs).
For more infonnation. contact Brett Bostic at (740) 4416022.

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BELLE, W.Va. (AP) Riverside High School football
coach Dick Whitman has
kicked seven players off the
team and suspended another
for two weeks because of rules
violations.
Whitman would not identify
the players or say whether any
was a starter. He S8Id both
juniors and seniors were disciplined but would not provide
details about the violations,
which involved beth team an_d
sch.ool rules.
"We had some young men
who eliminated themselves,"
Whitman said Wedne5day.
Riverside is 2-3 going into
Friday's home game against
Spring Valley.
"We've still got 45 players
on the varsity squad," Whitman
said. "It's just that 26 are
sophomores. But just like
always, we're not 'going. to
make any excuses or any!lung
like that. We' II line up and see
wl:1at happens."

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Prices good Sepltm..r 22nd -.ough Stpllmbtr 25th.•• fxdudlnt Carvetlts.

Contact Information
Fax- {7401 446' 3008

-

E·m•ll -

sportsO mydaltysentinel.com

Soorta StaH

Brad Sherrftan, Sport• Editor
(740) 446-2342, .ext. 33
bsherman 0 mydallytrlbune.com

Bryan Wettert, Sport• Writer .
(7401446-2342, ext: 23 .
bwaltersOmydailytrlbune.co":'

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(30-&lt;)675-1333, ext. 19
ICrumOmydallyreglster.com

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·..,.__../ _

followed with effons of 4 I.
Jake Venoy completed the
team score with a 42 .
Josh Venoy and Dru Reed
each tired a 48 to complete
Meigs' day.
Ironton improved its season
record to 47-3 with the victo.- ·
ry.
2005 TVC Ohio Golf
Final Standings

Meigs
Belpre
Wellston
Vinton Co
Alexander
Nels-York

47
37
31
21
12
2

Eastern
grounds
Waterford
BY BRYAN WALTE&amp;S
BWALTERS@MYDAilYTRIBUNE.COM

Seven Riverside
players kicked off
team for violations

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country Prices ~J

Corvettes
In Stock!

Chilioolhe at Gall~ Acaderni
Moigs,al FaJrland
·
Wnfield at Point Pleasan1
RIYer Valley al Alheos
Scuh Gallia at Miler
Wahama at Buffalo
SotAhem at Hannan
Belpre at Eastern
Golf
CNC ChampOOship {Poo1srroolh), 8~ a.m.

•·

AND IIUCT2008's

'

Prep Golf -

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern's Bryan Harris. front, watches his birdie putt on No. 18 drop in the hole during Thursday's quad at Riverside
Country Club in Mason , W.V,a. Pictured in back are Waharra ·s Danny Roush, holding flag, and Point Pleasant's Eric
Milhoan. The Riverside Invitational is scheduled for Saturday.

WATERFORD - Eastern
volleyball remained unbeaten
. in Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking
Division
play.
and
increased its
current winning streak
to
seven
after defeathost
ing
Waterford
L _ _ _..J -Thursday by
a score . of
25-21, 2517, 25-16.
The Lady
Eagles
improved to
10- 1 on the
season with
a 70-of-73
serving_ performance
and had five
L._ _ _-..J players with
Winebrenner three
or
more kills in
-the triumph .
Darcy Winebrenner and
Katie Hayman had outstanding hitting nights with I I
kills apiece, while Jillian
Brannon followed up with
five kills and three points.
Brinany Bissell. who finished 87 -for-RR in passing,
led EHS with I 2 points.
' Bissell 'ilso had a kill in the
victorv. Winebrenner was
nex·l ivith nine points .and
Kelsey Holter chipped . in
seve n points and three kills:
Erin Weber had a collective
eflon of six poi ills. four kills
and a t ea m - hi~h three blocks
for the Gree~n and White.
Hayma n also had fo~r points
and a block.

Prep Volleyball- 1VC Hocking

Southern wins fourth straight
Bv Scon WoLF£
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE -· These days the Soul hern
Lady Tornadoes (8-3) have been playing
with confidence. What a long way that little noun has taken the 'Does of Coach
Roma Sayre who posted their fourth
. straight win, and kept them in contention
for l'hc Tri- Valley Conference Hockong
Division title behind Eastern. Thursday
night the Lady Tornadoes grounded the
Trimble Tomcats in three competitove bouts
to claim the match win . ·
Coach Sayre credited the team with the
win, noting the team has staned to play
really well together. Sayre· searched for
that right combination and has apparently
found the right ingredients as Southern
continues to look impressive in 2005. Add
in the confidence factor and SHS appears
to be developing into a force.
Scoring across the board was once again
·fairly even. Kri stiina' Williams served up I~
points and a pair of aces, Jenny Warner had
thineen with ao ace, Whit~ey Rime eleven
woth two aces, Bethany Roflle eoght, Kasoe
Sellers seven, and Selena Spencer five .
Southern took a narrow lead in a compel-•
iiive first game, then Trimble tied the score

on a trio of . Katelyn
Walton
serves,
7-7.
Warner put Southern up 97 as the game continued in
the sao11e fashion . Trading
points in pairs. the game
was tie'd three different .
times with the point spread
no more than two points.
Finally. Bethany Riflle
ran off a strin~ of" five
Riffle
straight se rve s for a 20-14
SHS lead . Southern carried the momentum down the strclcn with
Warner addin ~ three point s and Williams
two to win the game .• 25- 19.
In the second game. an instant replay put
Southern up 10-8, then after · a Trimble
missed-serve Sellers added five points that
'sent the Tornadoes on their way 10 a 25- 17
win. Besides adding eiTicieni tloor play
and three serving point s. Williams had
three kill s at· the net . while Whitney Riffle
added nine points and a great floor game .
Eylem Gurbuzcr abo had ri great gume at
the net with three kill s.
Carrie Woodgerd had sc\'en points for
Trimble.·
' The tinale was even closer. Trimble oook

Please see Southern, Bl

Southern's Kasie Sellers. right. ttps the ball past a Trimble
defender durin!'; Thursday's 25-19, 25-17, 27-25 win .
'

..

.

�. Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday,-September 23.2005

Friday, September 23, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio,State's offensive weapons playing like popguns
BY RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED eoess

said earlier this week during
preparations for Saturday's
Big Ten opener at home
COLUMBUS _ So far, against
No. 21
Iowa.
Ohio State's offense has been " Winning is usually nm
about as volatile as -a wet ·fire- enough for me."
•·
To Gonzalez - . and a lot of
· cracr.er.
Sure. the Buckeyes are 2 _1 other discernrng observer.~­
and ranked No. 8 in the coun- the Buckeyes are downnght
t
d
·
th
. lu..:ky to still be on the nat lOll·
ry_ - an are JUS 1 a ree- al radar with the way their
pomt loss to No.2 Texas from
..
.
h' k ·r
ollense has been bumblmg.
.
.
h
b emg
rn
t e t 1c o t 11e
.
national championship pic"Th" past.. --:eckcnd. we
ture
wer~ ternblc. Go1ualct. s;ud
·
of Ohio State ·, ~asy 27-6 win
However, · the stati"ics ·o,cr San Die~o State.
show that the· offense hasn ., "There ·s no w;~y getting
been holding up its e nd of the aroun d ·11 . we were aw ,.u 1....
bargain .
Given the opportuni ties (we
A rock-hard def&lt;;nsc has not had) and the fact that the
only prevented the oth er team defense was so outstanding. ·
from sco ring but has consis- you look at the score and we
tently giv~n the offe nse tc rrif- really didn't do that much ...
ic tield position. Meanwhile.
Ohio State's defe nse gave
the offense ' has been plagued the offense the ball in Sait
by bad decisions. fumbles, Diego State territory four
dropped passes and missed times including once
block s.
inside the I :__ rest~lting in
· 'Tm a perfectionist." wide three touchdown s and a field
receiver Anthony Gonzalez goa l. In th e I 0 times the·

Buckeyes
took over
on their
half of the
field , they
tu r ne d
those passess ion s
Notebook
into one
field -goal
and turned the ball over
twice.
Asked if th e offense took a
s_tep forward last week. center
Nick Mangold said .. " It wasn 't a giant step. It was probably one of my little sister's
steps. heca use it was only
about a foot long." he sa id.
"She' s 6."
Ohio State ranks last in the
Big Ten in r)lshing, pass effi.
ciency. total offen se and scaring. Of the 117 1-A teams in
the nation , the Buckeyes are
S I st in total otlense and tied
for 53rd ih scoring.
" We 're not · ranked really
high in the offensive categories, but we're always try-

ing to get better." offensive
tackle Doug Datish sa id.
"Some· things are going right
.and some things aren't going
right. We haven ' t been able to
put it ~II together."
.
Some publications trumpeted wide receiver/kick returner Ted Ginn Jr. ils a Heisman
Trophy
, dark
horse.
· Quarterback Troy Smith led
the Buckeyes to a 4-1 record
down the stretch las t year
before the NCAA hit him
with a two-game suspension
for accepting money from a
team booster.
And s antonio Holmes,
Sundance Kid to Ginn's
Butch Cassidy, is a proven
big-play receiver who was
coming o ff a 55-catch season.
Ohio Staie also returned a
veteran line and . promising
backs from an offense that
racked up more than 400
yards in its last two games of
2004, blowout wins over No.
7 Michigan and Oklahoma
State.

PrEp VollEyball -

"What I think is missing is
probably continuity," Smith
said of the hot-and-cold
offense. "I was absent for a
while, that 's one big reason.
Now everything is back.
There's no e~cuses now.
We'll put it together oow."
Yet multitude of concerns
remarn:
-No long drives. Over the
last two games, the Buckeyes
have produced only I0 'points
off drives of longer than 45
yards.
- Red -zo ne blues. This
season, they 've made 14 trips
inside the opposing 20 and
have scored live touchdown s,
while settling for six field
goals.
- No big plays. Ginn was
the most exciting player this
side of USC ' s -Reggie Bush a
year ago. He averaged 9.4
yards on his 13 carries i'n
2004, scoring twice. This
year, he's lost almost as many
yards (II) as he's gained (13)
in five carries. He's caught 10

passes. but dropped about
half that many.
In their three games, the
Buckeyes have only two ·
gains of more than 25 yards.
San Diego State had given up
nine plays covering at least
22 yards before meeting Ohio
State, yet the Buckeyes managed just a 25-yard pass to
Holmes and a 23-yard completion to Ginn.
- Three yards, etc. The
running attack has been all
but invisible. Ohio State is
averaging 3.8 yards per canry,
despite th,e elusive Smith carrying 27 times the past two
weeks.
·
A lot of people are scratching their heads over the lack
of production.
" I feel like we have so
many weapons we have no .
rea son not to be putting up
insane amounts of points," .
Gonzalez said. "But for whatever reason. it's jllst not happening."

Gal/ia County roundup

Angels still flying high, RVHS avoid~ disaster
Freshman Alexis Geiger came
through with some key kills and
blocks in the final two games and
helped the Angels finish off the
match.
Brittany Logan paced Jackson with
14 kills and Jennilynn Martin handed
out 33 assists.
Jackson won the junior varsity contest , while the freshmen Angels
picked up a 25-20, 25-18 win. Brooke
Willis the Gallia Academy's leading
scorer.
,
Gallia Academy plays ·host to
Vinton Comity Wednesday.

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

JACKSO~ Gallia Academy vol.
leyball coa
esley Roberts doesn't
like to talk a out winning streaks.
Sorry coach, but when your team is
playing this well, it's hard not to talk
about it.
Gallia Academy won its sixth
straight, and also stayed within striking distance of the league leaders, by
defeating Jackson in four games 2518 , 20-25, 25-20, 25-20-on Thursday.
The Blue Angels. now owners 'o f a
I 0-2 record. improved to 5-2 in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
- · two games back of unbeaten
Warren, which visits the 01' French
City Thursday.
Jackson (7-6). despite playing most
teams close. 'fell t&lt;i 2-5 in the
SEOAL.
Heather Withee ' served up 15 points
to pace the winners followed by
Felicia Close with 14. Close also tied
· for team-high honors in kills with
Kay Ia Perry as both had I 0; the. two
also had 38 and 32 digs respectively.
Ryann Leslie added four kills and
28 dig s while Katie Taylor led the'
way with II assists; Withee handed
out nine helpers.

Bryan Walters/photo

r-..

.

Southern
from Page 81
an early 5-2 lead. then
Southern stormed back to a
6-5 advantage. Nip-and-tuck
all the way Southern held a
22-20 lead going down the
stretch. Walton .scored four
straight for Trimble. but lost
game point (24-22 ) to push
the sco re to 24-23. Southem
failed to score and Trimble
gained a second chance, but
also failed to score. The rally
scoring format pushed the
score to 24-24.
SHS went ·up one on a
Warner serve. then Abby
Withem tied the game at 2525.
. The Trimble s ide out put
SHS up 26-25 and Williams

·
CHESHIRE· The first day of
autumn almost marked the fall of a
winning steak- almost.
River Valley survived a major scare
from visiting Rock Hill and won a
five-game nailbiter to keep its 25•
game Ohio Valley Conference winning .streak alive on Thursday.
The Lady Raiders' 21-25, 25-20.
25-20, 22-25, 15-12 win upped their
record to 6-0 in the conference as
they appear to be closing in on a
fourth straight championship. It also
evened River Valley's record at 6-6

~··~·-·-··-·:- ~·-

Southern's .Ashley Robie (11) slams a kill during Thursday's
25-19 , 25-17, 27-25 win over Trimb le. ·
added the game point for the
match win.
The se tting and pass ing
firm of Riffle and Rirtle went
37-42 and 20-22 for Whitney
. with Bethahy goi ng 36-4 2
and .21-27. Whitney Riftle
also had three dinks. Warner
\\\&lt;IS 19-20 sp iking with a,kill
an J 19 -20 pass in g. while
Will iams was 18-20 spiking
with four kills and a dink.
and 3R-43 passing. Eylem
Gurbuzer was 25-.\0 spiking
· wi th six kills and ln-18 passing, while Kasie Seller had
nine blocks .
Trimble won the reserve
game 25-20 and 27-25.
Sarah Eddy had ten poillls.
ten.
· Kaylyn . Spradling
Chelsea Pape seve n. and
Stephanie Cundiff had &gt;even.
Southern · hosts
South
Gallia Monday.

Raiders win in five

overall.
After dropping the opening game,
the Lady Raiders responded by taking
the next two to seize control. Coach
Sharon Vannoy 's club then jumped
out to an 8-0 edge in the fourth contest, only to watch Rock Hill claw its
way back to win a dose 25-22 decision.
River Valley sco red the first seven
points of the occiding game, which
only goes to 15, and then held off the
scrappy Redladies.
Carman Waugh scored 20 points
and Brooke Taylor added a dozen for
the winners. Beth Payne and Lauren
Bing each scored nine, Kirsten Carter
had seven and Kari McFann one.
Payne also had a busy night hitting
and was good on 51-of-65 spikes with
17 kill s. Andrea Flint had six kills
followed by Taylor and Carter with
four. Bing chipped in two and
McFann one.
Andrea Mullins scored eight points
while !Iiana Corfias and Sam
Simmons added five each as the
River Valley's junior varsity· won '2523, 25-22. The JV Raiders are •5- l in
the OVC and 6-3 overall.
River Valtey is at Fairland on
. Tuesday.

I
I
I
••

•

••

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
·Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
.The Tri-County .Marketplace!
'

•

A huge THANK YOU to all our sponsors who
contributed to making the Meigs County
Fish &amp; Game 2005 Kid Fishing Derby
a great success.
•

• Ohio Valley Trading Exchange of Nelsonville
• DE~ RON" fence Builders
• P•zza Hut of Pomeroy

• Subway of Pomeroy

• McOonalds of Pomeroy
• Powell's Food Fair
• McClure's Restaurant

• Auto Zon e
• Fisher Funeral Home
•Fraterna l Order of Eagles #2171
• Bernard v , Fultz · Attorney At Law
•Chnstopher E. Tenaglia· Attorney At law

:,,_..

-

• Little Sheets and Warner LLN ·Attorney At Law

• Summerf1eld;s Restaurant

• Bing's Auto Repair
• Kenneth A. Utt

• Superior Auto Body

• Dottie Turner Realty ·
1 Mark's Plumbing &amp; Heating
1 Marlene Harnsan- Clerk of Courts
1 The Appliance Man
•
1 F.O.E. Ladies Auxiliary 2 121
·
1 Insurance Agencies Plus Inc.
- ~
·
• Forest Run Ready Mix
• McCullough &amp; Ai"le (Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy)

• Manley's Recycling

• Brogan Warner Insurance
• Valley Lumber
• Jeff Warner Insurance

• K&amp;C Jewelers Inc,
• Meigs Carpet &amp; Decorating Center
• Family Dollar Store #f581
• Locker 219
• King Ace Hardware
• H D. Brown D.D S. Inc.
• Peoples Bank of Pomeroy

®allipoh~ llailp mrtbune

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

·.

Submitted photo

Greg Sauvage. left, of Pomeroy, was named the 2005 Modified Track Champion. He is shown
with Derek Casto , who is representing Kanaw.ha Valley Dragway.
·
·

Point season wraps up at
~anawha Valley Dragway
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

SOUTHSIDE. W.Va . After a tough 18-wcek point
season, the Track Champions
and Bracket Finals Team have
been . named at Kanawha
Valley Dragway.
The team members will
. attend Summit Team Finals in
Norwak Sept. 22-25th, to
co mpete with other racers
from the northeastern United
Swtes for Championship titles
in Top/Pro, Modified, Street,

and Junior Dragster.
Derek Baum of Pomeroy
finished . second in the Pro
Division by only a slim 33
point margin behind Ray
Livingston of Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va. Baum and crew chief
(an·d Dad) Tim had an e~cellent 2005 season with eight
tina! round appearances.
Meanwhile Greg Sauvage,
also of Pomeroy, captured his
third
Modified
Track
Championship by a very slim
seven-point margin over
Steve Williams of Rutland.

Williams made it to the tina!
round Sept. I0, but needed to
ta.ke the win in order to ·take
tAe Championship. In an
exciti1!g and close final round.
Jeff. Belcher of McArthur
rook the win putting Williams
· in second for the event and
the season.
Other loc;ll racers 1~ho have
qualified and will be attending Bracket. Finals with
Baum. Sauvage, William s.
and Belcher include Tyler
French of Middl eport and
Johnny Adkins of Shade.

Meigs Fishing Derby winners

The·Daily ~entinel ~oint l9lea~ant l\egis-ter
l._.;,_,\~!.~:.~~·-··-··-··-·~~.?2!~.~~·-··-··~··-~~. ill.:~.lli._.,_J

'

Chad Johnson is more than mouth

.

I

RALPH D. RUSSO

to Tul sa.
sturdy concrete structure, is
Maggard couldn't find any made unusable by the storm.
· buses in Texas - "That ha s
"That stadium's been ther_,
. With_Tulane's plight fresh been amazing to me," he said 55 .. years, it 's P.robably the
111 thetr miDPS, Umvers1ty uf Thursday
ni ght but most seGure place in town,"
Houston offic~als told , the secured four in Tulsa. The he said. "That (thing ) is not
football team to pack for · a Cougars expected to be on goin'g anywhere.··
lengthy trip with Hurri cane the road Friday morning. '
Ri ce was able to res~hed"
Rita bearing down on the
The Cougars play Tulane'- ule it; Satu rday game with
Texas Gulf Coast.
·
in Lafay ette, La. , the followr . Navy for 0\:t. 22. when botb
The Cougars were ready to ing week, before their next teams have an open date. '
go but unsure early Thursday sc hedul ed home game at
Houston' .,
game
witb
where they were headed and Robertson Stadium against Southern Mi &gt;s wil l be made
how they would be getting Memphis on Oct.
15. up either Nov. 12 or 13. To
there.
Houston 's
home
game do so, Conference USA had
The second hurricane in against Southern Miss issi ppi to mo ve th e SMU-Huuston
less than a month ha s college scheduled . tor ~aturday . was game. originally sc hedule~
spo~ts teams scrambhng . postponed on Wedn esday for Nov. 12, to Nov. 19.
agam to rearrange schedul es because of Ri ta.
·
Southern Mi " and Tulane
- and in some cases - to
When Tulane evacuated already had their Sept. · 4
relocate teams. No. 3 LSU · New Orleans for Katrina last game postpo11ed to :-Jov. 26.
had its ho!11e '?pener delayed month , the football team first the
Satu rday
after
lor the th1rd tune. when the moved to Jack son .. Mtss.. Thanksg iving.
Soulheastern
Conference only to be relocated to Dallas
"We' re run nin g o ut of
dec tded to push back the before eventually setting up o pen dates in football. '.'
T1gers' game aga1nst No. 10 shop in Ruston. La. , on the Banowsky said.
,
Tenn essee. two day s to campu s of Louisiana Tech.
Tulane still does no t know
Monday mght.. ,
Most Green Wave players where it will play three other
Hou ston 's lllltlal plan ~as hadn't packed for such an "home" football games.
to bus the football team: ex tended trip. some not even
Elsewhere in Louisiana·.
coaches and support staff bringing alo1ig a change of Nicholl s State. McNeese
. about 125 people to clothes. Houston wanted to State and North western State
-Sheppard Air Force Base in make sure nothing like that canceled their Saturday foot.
W1ch1ta Falls, Texas. about a happened to the Cougars, but ball
2ames .
becaus~
st_x_- hottr dnve m normal con- athletic department officials Hurri cane Rita.
dlltons, far longer w1th much st'ill found themselves makIt' s th e seco nd game
of wutheast T~xas tleei_ng ing late adjustments.
McNeese State. in Lake
the hkely desttnatton of a
Conference USA• commis- Charles. La .. has had to cait;
powerful hurrican e.
.
s ioner Britton Banowsky eel because of severe weath•
That plan fell through late said le ssons were learned er. Havin g its opener againsi
Wednesday night when the from Hurricane Katrina.
Southern
ca1Ke led
by
state would not authorize the
''The more movino around Katrina probably cost th~
team's move to the base, you do . the Jess s~ble the school about $150.000,
~ccordi~g to Houston athlet- human
experience spokesman Loui ., Bonnette
1c d1rector Dave Maggard.
becomes ," Banowsky said.
said.
And then the Cougars lost
Houston' s crosstown rival.
Sam Hou ston State .iq
their ride when the bus com-. Rice, decided not to move at Hunstville. Texas. also carP
pany informed then: that all. The Owls po stponed celled . its Saturday football•
t~ey · had no dnvers tor the their game against Navy on game aguinst Missouri State:
live buses the school h~red, Saturday and have told the
NHRA
a nn ounced
Magprd said.
.
students they were free to go Wednesday that it had post"lt s left us m a real be with their families or stay paned its event at the Texas
quandary." Maggard said _in in the school's dorms. Many Motorple x in Ennis. Texas;
a telephone. mterv1ew w1th of Rice's students are from and re sc hedul ed it for Oct. 6•
The Assocrated Press on the Houston area.
9.
·
Thursday.
Rice is also on the road the
As
for the
Housto1i
· After having no luck find- next two ·weeks. Athletic Cougars. Rita is about to
ing a charter plane to take the department spokesman Bill provide some serious bond:
Cougars to Tulsa, Okla.. Cousins .saic! the university ing time.
where they play football next had not discussed any long''Maybe this will pull
Saturday. the team decided term plans on where to play everybody
t ogether.'~
· to bus it the nearly 500 m1le s games if Rice Stadium. a Maggard said.
BY

~

••

'

Another hurricane forcing . teams~
to scramble, change schedules

. - . -··-·-.. . - . _. _. _. _. _. _l _

Beach 3 Coun·ties .

=

The Daily s6)tinel • Page..P~

Submitted photo

Pictured above are the winners of the 2005 Meigs County Fis'h and Game Assoc iation annual ·
fishing derby, In front is K-tayona Garnes . In back from left are Bo-dara Powell, Joshua Riffle ,
Leslie Frank, Jess Roseberry and Ben Hudson. Hudson and Garnes caught the biggest fish .
wh ile Roseberry and Powell had the smallest. Riffle and Frank caught the most fish.
.

'

Horse dies after racing
in 60th Little Brown Jug
.

'

DELAWARE (AP) - The
· people celebrating P-FortySeven's victory in the 60th
Little Brown Jug didn't
know the horse that fini s hed
last had died on the track.
Trainer Kelly O ' Donnell
said the winning party didn · t learn of Dream fair
Kogel 's death until after
-they were honored before
th e crowd of 5.,2.696 at
Delaware
County
Fairgrounds on Thursday.
"When they were pulling
up to the paddock he fell ,"
0 ' Donnell said. " L,.thought
he just stumbled."
An autopsy was scheduled
at
nearby
Ohio
State
University, race officials
sa id .
" I knew something was
wrong at the quarter pole
·when the lines were s lack."
trainer Wa y ne Preszcator
· told_,"_Jhe -~ColYmbus
Dispatch. '· He wasn't keeping up ."
, p.Forty -Seven held off
Vi'llagc Jolt and favorit e
Rocknrol l Ha nover to give
·driver Dave Palone and
o·Donnell .their first wins in
the second le g of the Triple
Crown for 3-year-old pacers .. They also prevented
Brett Pelling. trainer of the
runners -up. from hi s fifth
]\1g win since 1996.
Starting from the second
post position in the third
elimination and the rail 111
the final. P-Forty-Seven
didn't take the lead in either
heat until the stretc h. It

helped that he ilad le ss
ground to cove r be ing
i~ s ide , Palone sa id. ·
" If there's one knock on
the horse. and how can you
knock .a horse that's been as
great as he ha s today, he's
not the quicke st in the first
four or fiv~ steps off the
gate and that's so critical at .
Delaware," Palone said . .
Palone qualified thre e
horses for the Jug final by
finishing third with Up
Front Jerry in the first elimination and then winning the
next two heat s with Up
Front Tornado and P-Forty···
Sev'e n.
He chose P-Forty -Seven
for the final and the duo
won · by three-fourth s of a
le ngth with their late' ru sh
past Village Jolt and Ron
Pierce, last year's winner
with Timesareachanging.
. "What a credit to thi s
horse as ' iuird as I spent him
in the firs! heat to come
back and run the other horse
down, " Palone said. ''At the
top of the stre tc h, I thought
if I could keep him straight
he would win ."
Pierce said he didn'' t have
a large enough lead arter the
final turn.
" I wanted to get as much
room ·as pDssible between
me and Paloqe becaus.e I
knew he would be coming. I
just got beat by a betler
horse." Pierce said.
Rocknro ll Han over and
Brian Sears rai1 to the early
lead from 'the fifth pos t

position but falt ered near
the finish to place third .
" My horse ju st got a little
tired · down the stre tch ...
Sears said . .
O'Donnell and Pelling
each had three hor ses
among the nine in the final
of the $569.032 Ju g.
•· Jt's th e grea te·s t ra ce I
could win bei'n g from Ohio
and I' ve been doing this all
my life," O'Donnell said.
Pelting. with Pierce dri ving, won the first e limination with Village Jolt and
got
hi s
best
horse.
Rocknroll Hanover. into th e
final on the strength of a
second-place fini sh in the
third elimination .
The top three finishers in
each of the three eli mina tions advance to the second
heat. If one of the e limination winners does not win
the seco nd heat . the four
winners come back in a
race-off to determine the
Jug champion.
That
wasn"t
need.ed
because · P-Forty -Sel'cn won
the last elimination and then
took the fina l mile -long race
in
I :52
1-5.
ea'rmng
$195, 177
for
owners
O'Donnell. Mark Maynard
and C. Ed Mullinax .
Palone said he sensed victorv as he made th e final
' ·
turn.
" When I go t to Ronnie
(Pierce) at the head of the
stret ch he was working pret ty hard and hi s horse looked
s pen.t." P;~lone said . ·

.

CINCINNATI (AP) secondary Bismol to Browns defen sive
Carson Palmer wa s recountwith a 70- back s. then had one of hi s
yard touch- worst games.
.
ing some fans ' reaction to
the Bengals' impressive
down on the
His brazenne ss .drew th~
stan when he spied Chad
second play. anger of Lewi s a nd some
Johnson listening behind
At game's teammates. who felt he wa;
the semicircle of reporters
e n d
unnece ssarily riling oppo'
- an unexpected chance
J o h n son nents' and .prom oiin g him- .
for some fun at the receiv· walked over self. At Lewis' in sistence.
er's expense.
and gave a· Johnson is mu ch more care are excited.
w a r m ful in what he says this sea" People
Everybody wants Chad
Johnson
embrace to son. Teammates now underJohnson's
autograph." .
the be,a ten stand that the trash wlk . is
Palmer said, sounding seri- Vikings cornerback.
all in fun . and a hig pan of
ous. "They keep giving me
The
Vikin gs
kn ew what he's abou t.
stuff to bring in here and John son was motivated for
"Chad 's .self-mll!i,·:rting
give to Chad. and I keep a big game, but they could- beca use he knows l1c can't ·
turnin g them down."
n't do anything to stop it.
have all th e ;rntic' and not
Unwilling to let someone
"There's a lot of guys in practi ce
hard...
said
e lse have the last word, the leag ue that are fa st and Anderson. " ·ho disagre~d
Johnson cut in with a· ques- are good players. but they with John,on \ "in ~ua r an­
tion: Is there any ~hance he don·t work at it." Palmer tees. "As Jon~ as Yl~l praccould get 20catches against said . "And Chad trul y ti ce hard and do •\ our job.
the Bears this week 0 Palmer works at hi s ga me . phy s i' Chad can do whale\ cr he
thought for a moment.
cally and mentally . He wants to dll. I d&lt;Ht 't care." .
" I think you've got your watches film. he underCincinnati fans arc used
work c ut out for you, but it stands the game and he' s to flamho\·ant sporr, figur~'
· can happen." Palmer said.
always tryi ng to run a better - · Boomer E&gt;iason. Pete
quarterback 's route. to ge t quicker off the Rose - and ha,·e embraced
. The
response was part jest. part ball , trying tn get a better John son's way s. Hi, jerse~
tribute - a perfect fit for a release.
is one of the mo't cc, mmnn receiver who can run · his
'The main thing that sep- ly seen arouml the city.
mouth with , the l;&gt;est of arates him from the rest of
Thai mean s a lot to the
them. then catch passes as the group is dedication to second- round picJ.. from
. well as any of them.
the game." ·
Oregon State. When a caller
The Pro Bowl receiver
Johnson has always spent to · hi s radio show said hi&gt;
known for guaranteeing a lot of time watching fi lm touchdown
thcatri~ ~
wins. shipping antacids and and figuring out how cor- showed a la,·k &lt;lf ,·las,. ~
driving coac h Marvin Lewis nerbacks will play him . He stung John so n p romi,eJ to
nut s is much more than the picked Deio1l Sanders brain · keep 'it low-key "n his 1~e~t
mouth . When he' s away one
offseason
and score . He kept hi' \H&gt;rd on
from the cameras. he 's approached Jerry Rice a t the 70-yard play again~t
learning what it take s to be halftime of a game. trying Minne sota .
·
counted among the NFL's to learn"their secrets.
. "I wa, huri." .h&gt;hnson sa[d
e lite.
F;inally. he figured it out. of the ca llers commen t.
Johnson started . running ·-rm ·the type that I want
" I say to Chad : every
great player in every sport all of his pass routes full - e\·eryonc t&lt;&gt; like me "':'-'
tries to figure out what a speed in practice . Ouring a · what I Jo. I JC1n I want ;111yteam is going to try w ·.d oto summer m111icalilp. he dived body If) haw an' doubt- tn
him ."' Pro Bowl tackle for one throw. landin g hard ' anything"th:tt I do ... · - - -~
Willie Anderson said.
on his shoulder. He began
Make no 'mistake. IT&lt;'
Every team gears its approaching 'ewry practice plans to keep talkin~ .
defense to try ta conta in play like th e real thing .
" My mouth pus,he, Ill&lt;'
him. So far. no' one has fi g"That's the ('lne good because I'm chal1cnging
ured out how to do it con- thing about Chad ... Lewi s &gt;omcone in frnnt of me.
sistently.
sa id . · "He understands his sometimes the" h&lt;&gt;k team;"
John son's 16 catche~ in · job. It 's not what you talk John son sa id . " \h mnu~1
wins over Cleveland and about. It's what vou ~o out gets me in trouble p,• cau~
Minnesota were the seco nd and do. and kno.;·ing e'cry- everyone·, tr) in g tn ki ll me.
most in the NFL. He had body's oti the same page. &gt;O therefore I ha'e to nwve
139 yards during a 37-8 That 's where confidence at a faster pace than nerytiashing of the Viking s last come, from :"
one else. That'' wl1at it is ::·
Sunday that measured his
Earlier in his career.
Would he he "' ~ond or:a
progress:
Johnson ,~· as desperate fur recei,·er "ithout tli'e talk '.' : ,
The fifth -year receiver recognition . Three times. he
··:-&lt;o." .lohn ,on 'aiJ . ~ I
challenged 'cornerback Fred guar7mteed win&gt;: he' s 2-1 in .would be \en· h&lt;&gt;rin~ . The(e
Smoot - \luring . the week. that depart me pt. Last year. would be lllithing to push
then trashed the Viking s· he· sent hott les of Pepll'· me .

�•

' '

: Page 84 • Th,e Daily Sentinel

Standina:s
New 'York
Boston
Toronto
Balttmore

Tampa Bay

88 84

1

75 77
70 82
64 89

493
.461
.41 8

14
19
25 'It

Central DivisiOn
WL
Pet
·Chicago

GB

91 61

.599

Cleveland

90 63

.588

1 '!,

Minnesota

78 74

513

13

DetroJt

67 85

.441

24

100 . ~2
w..t Division

39

~2

·Kansas City

WL

Pet

GB

os Angeles
Oakland

85 65
84 68

570
.553

2

TaMas

75 77

493

11

Seante

66 87

431

21

:~

'h

Thursday's Gtm. .

N Y Yankees 7, Baltimore 6
Toronto 7, Seattle 5
• 'TWins 4, Chic White SoK 1, 11 Innings
Cleveland 11. Kansas City 6
Texas Bl L A Angels , late
·
Frlday'e Gamet

ronto (lllly 9·10) at N.Y Yankees

pm

tchacon 5-3) . 7"05

~eattle (A Franklm 6·15) at Detro1t

QJouglass 5-4), 7 05 p.m.
ioston (Arroyo 13-9) at Baltimore
' tcabrera 10-11 ), 7.35 p.m.
£\innesota {Lohs'e 9-12) at Chk;ago
Wh ite Sox (Con treras 13-7). 8 05 p m
Clevatamt (Saba"th1a 14·10) at Kansas
C1ty (l1ma 5-16), 8·10 p m
Tex as (Rogers 13· 7) at Oakland
(Haren 13-11). 1005pm
Tampa Bay (Fossum a 11) at l A
Angels (Byrd 12·10). 10·05 p m.

League

National

East Division
W L
Pet
Atlanta
86 67
562
Ph1l adelph1a
82 71
536
Florida
73
523
Washmgton
78 75
5 10
New York
75 77 493

eo

Centr111 Division
W L Pet

'

)1- St lOUIS
Houston
Milwaukee
Ch1cago
CmcmncU1
Pittsburgh

96

58

GB

4
6
8
10

24
33

W l

Pet

GB

76

500

77

75
75

78
7 1 81
62 91

'I.

GB

623
549
493
490
467
405

84 69

11 \
20

20 .,

h

Welt Dlvltlon
San D1ego
San Francisco
Anzona
l:.os Angeles
Colorado
)I -

76
81

71

83

70
67

85

63 89

467
458
441
414

5
6
9

2005

1
11

13

Clinched dl\IISIOn

Thursday's Games
Houston 2, Pittsburgh 1
. Philadelphia 4, Atlanta 0
...,. Ch1cago Cubs 3, Milwaukee 0
Colorado 4, San D1ego 2
Wasll1ngton 2. San Franc1sco 0
FtoMa 2, N Y Mets 1
CnFcmnatl 6 St louts 2
Ar1zona 7, l A Dodgers 4. 12 mnings
Friday 's Gamaa
· Houston (Rodriguez 10·8) at Cllicago
Cubs (Rusch 7 -8} 3 20 p m
N Y. Mets
(Trachsel
1-3)
at
Washington (Loa1za 11 -10), 7 05 p m
Phi la delphia (Pad1lla 8-12)
at
Cinc1nnat1 (Harang 10-13), 7 10 p.m
Ftonda (Beckett 15-8) at Atlanta
(Smaltz 14·7). 7.35 p m
San Franclsco (K mney 2-0) at
Colorado (Franc1s 13-12), 8"05 p m
St
Lou1s (Carpenter 21 -4) at
Milwaukee (Capuano 17- 10), 8 05
pm.
San 01ego {P.Astaclo 2·2) at Arizona
(Vargas 9-8), 9·40 p.m
P11tsburgh (Maholm 2-0) at L.A.
Codgers (Houlton 5·9), 10.40 p.m .

KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP)
- Losing a 5-1 lead on one
swing hardly fazed the honest
team in the maJor leagues.
The Cleveland Indians
weren't. affected by Mark
Teahen's grand slam. A tworun homer by Coco Crisp put
them back ahead and they
rolled to an 11-6 vtctory over
the Kansas ~ity Royals on
Thursda~ nfght, tnmmmg
Chicago s once-commanding
lead m the AL Central to I I/2
games.
"That's the way we' ve been
all year." said center fielder
Grady Sizemore, who was 5for-6 . "This isn't a team that
panics."
Travis Hafner walked with
the bases loaded and hit a
three-run homer, hrs sixth in
tive games for the lndtans,
who have won 15 of their last
17 games.

The Indians trailed the
White Sox by 15 gaQles on
Aug. L They have not been
this close smce April II , when
they were one game behind
and then lost to the White Sox.
While the lndians were
handing the Royals their l OOth
loss, the White Sox were losing '4-l to Minnesota m II
innings, their I Oth setback in
14 games.
But Chicago\ rapidly dwindling lead was the last thing
the businesslike Indians wanted to discu ss.
"We're controlling what we
can control, and that\ playmg
Kansas City," manager Eric
Wedge said. ''It was a long.
hard-fought game tonight and
we'll exr.ect another one
tomorrow.
A less-than-sharp Chtl Lee
(18-4) won his ninth straight
decision. allowing six runs

and a seasonhigh 10 hits in
6 2-3 innings,
"I was pretty
lucky , out
lhere,"
said
Lee, who hasn't . lost si nce
the New . York Yankees beat
him 5-4 on July 8. "We got off
to a pretty quick lead and I had
some cushmn to work with
and I just gave it right back to
them. '
Lee 's winning percentage of
.818 leads the American
League.
"The credit tomght definitely goes to the hitters," he said.
Hafner. who hit two home
runs in an 8-0 victory over the
White Sox on Wednesday.
co nnected off Runelvys
Hernandez in the third, his
31 st of the year that put the
Indians ahead 4-l. He walked

It ,

It was the third grand slam

Lee has given up in what has
been a breakthrough season
for the left-hander.
Sizemore greeted Andrew
Sisco (2-4) wtth a leadoff' single in the seventh. Crisp then
hit a 3-2 pitch over the wall in
center to make it 7-6,

CINCINNATI (AP) - An
uncharac.teristtc loss didn' t stop
St. Louts from improving its
chances in the playoffs.
Edwm Encarnacion's basesloaded double completed a
ftve-run rally in the eighth
mmng that gave the Cincinnati
Reds a 6-2 victory over the
Cardinals on Thursday night
Despite the loss, the NL
Central champions clinched
home-field advantage throughout the National League playoffs when Atlanta lost earher in
the day, The Cardinals are trymg to make it back to the World
Senes, where they were swept
by Boston last year. "It's not that big of a deal,"
said starter Mall Morris, who
gave up One htl in six innings,
"With two weeks left or however much time, we're not
going to jump up apd down
over that We knew the goal
was attainable.''
Morris was on the verge of
snapping his four-game losing
streak, the longest of his career,
and the Cardinals were within
five outs of their 97th victory
when their bullpen let a 2-l
lead get away.
Ryan Freel doubled for the
Reds' only hit againsl Morris,
Freel doubled again off Brad
Thompson for the Reds· second

hit in the e1ghth to start the
comeback.
Felipe Lopez's smgle off Ray
King (4-4) tied it, and the Reds
loaded the bases with one out
The Catdinals tned to tum a
double play on Austin Kearns'
grounder up the middle, but the
relay by shortstop David
Eckstein pulled first baseman
Albert Pujols off the bag, letting in the go-ahead run.
Encarnacion wrapped it up
with his three-run double off
Julian Tavares.
The Reds lead the NL with
206 homers, relying on them
too much at times for the bulk
of thetr offense. They ~round
this one out by jusl puttmg the
ball in play.
"We played all-around gQOd
baseball today.' ' Freel said.
"That 's what happens when
you do the little things. This is
something to build on. We
played small-ball today. The little things have to happen for 'us
to win.' 1

Todd Coffey (4-0) pitched
one inning lor the Reds, who
are 10-22 against St. Louis over
the last two seasons.
The bullpen's failure prevented Moms from becoming
the fourth Cardinals starter to
reach 15 wins. joining Chtis
Carpenter, Mark Mulder and

Jetf Suppan. The Cardtnals'
rotation leads the majors with
80 wins, tour more than last
year,
Morns gave up Ken Griftey
Jr.'s SOOth homer at Busch
Stadium on June 20, 2004.
Before the game Thursday,
Griffey decided to end his season because of a sore foot
He'll have minor knee surgery
next week.
King. a let\-hander who ustially pitches late in games, also
got the loss in the first game of
the series. He hit ·a batter and
gave up two hits in the seventh
innmg of Cincinnati's 6-5 victory on Tuesday.
"It was rough," manager
Tony La Russa said. "It's not
good enough. He's working on
it, but the reality is you either
do or you don' t He's gol to figure it out He's got to get back
to what he did for us when he
was efficient"
Left-hander
Brandon
Claussen failed in his attempt to
become the first Reds pitcher to
get ll wins. He gave up Yadier
Molina's RBI sin\&gt;le in the second inning and Jtm Edmonds'
two-out, run-scoring double in
the tifth. Claussen escaped furthcr damage by retiring Reggie
Sanders on a grounder wttlt the
bases loaded in the tifth.

Sanders, who returned frOm a
broken bone m h1s leg on Sep,t
12, played two games in the
series and went 0-for-8.
Pujols went 0-for-3, cfropping
hts average to .335, two points
behind the Cubs' Derrek Lee
for the NL lead.
.
Notes: Ken Griffey Jr. is finishing another season prematurely because of injury. This
time. it's an upbeat ending.
The Cincinnati Reds center
tielder decided Thursday to
give up his attempt to overcome a foot sprain and play
again thi s season. Instead, he'll
have a minor knee operation
that has been anticipated for
weeks, giving him a head-start
on rehabilitation.
"I think overall in the' situation we're in, it's probably the
smartest thing to (jo," Griffey
said, a day after the Reds were
officially eliminated from playoff contention. "If it were the
playoffs and we had a chance.
then we'd be doing something
different But we're not, and it's
time that I cart get my hamstring closed up for good and
my knee fixed:
He'll have surgery Monday
to clean out a knee that has
bOthcred,him occasionally over
the last three years, Doctors
also will treat the troublesome

incision from his hamstring
surgery a year ago.
The 35-year-old Gnffey tore
the hamstring loose in August
2004 and had it reattached to
the bone with three titanium
screws, a rare operation ihat
required months of difficult
rehabilitation. Part of the incision nev~r fully healed.
Although it's another premature finish. this one is a lot more
upbeat Griffey met his goal of
playing into September, overcommg four years of careerthreatening mjuries.
"He was really excited after
that game on Aug. 31 and he
was playing in September,"
interim manager Jerry Narron
said, "He was talking about
that He was really excited
about being able to go into
September playing.''
Not just playing - playing
very welL
He batted JO l with 35
homers and 92 RB!s in 128
games. his highest total since
he joined his hometown team in
a 2000 trade with Seattle, He
also climbed up the career
homer ltst, joining Mickey
Mantle in 12th place with 536.
Homer by homer and catch
by catch, the All-Century outfielder proved he wasn't
washed up,

Bank

present

address

unknown, and Tina L.
Boothe aka Tina
Boothe aka Tina Lynn
Boothe , whose last
known address is
32390 Bailey Run
Road , Pomeroy, OH
-45769,
' present
address
unknown,
and John Doe, the
llnknow'n spouse, if
any, of nria L, Boothe
aka Tina Boothe aka
Tina Lynn Boothe,
address unknown You
are hereby notified
that you have been
named Defendants in
tbe action entitfed
Home NatiOnal Bank,
Platntiff, vs. Dennis 0 .
boothe.
et
al.,
Defendants.
This
action
has
been
8ss•gned Case No.
05·CV·88 and is pend·
ing in the Court of
Common' Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio.
The

object

of

tile

complatnt demands
judgmen1 against the
Defendants, Dennis
0 . Boothe aka Dennis
Boothe and Tina L.
Boothe aka
Tina
Boothe aka Tina Lynn
Boothe. in the sum of
$16,040.20, plus interest at a rate of $4.993
per day from August
23 , 2005, in order to
foreclose upon ·a
mortgage upon real
estate and security
interest In a 1964
V~rginia mObile home,
ID~FDCEXBMV3691 ,

Ohio Certtlicate of
Title
•5300114540,
located at
25671
McNitkles
Road ,
Racine, OH 45n1 ,

'

which real estate Is
mO&lt;e fully described
in deed recorded in
Volume 122, Page
256, Meigs County
Official Records, and
costs of this action:
that lhe mortgage be
foreclosed and that
the liens and/or Interests in or on said
property, If any, be
marshaled and the
real estate IIIIa quieted and said ~'
both real and persona
at, sold in the forectosure action and all
amounts due Plaintiff
be paid from the proceeds of the sate.
You are required to
answer the Complaint
wllhln twenty-eight
(28) days after the last
publlcalion of this
Notice, which witt be
published once each
week for six (6) successive weeks. nM
last publication will
be made on the 28th
day of Oclober, 2005,
and
the
lwentyeighl(28) days for
answer will com~
mence on that day. In
the case of , your fall·
ure to answer or otha
· erwlse respond as
requested by lhe Ohio
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure, judgment
by default will be ren·
dared against you
and for t~e relief
demanded In
the
Complaint.
Doted lhls 21 Sl day of
Se~tember, ,2005,
Marlene
Harrison,
Cieri&lt; of Courts
By Deputy Cieri&lt;.
(9) 23, 30, (10) 7, 14,
21,28

, Public Notice

'
TlJPPERS PLAINSCHESTER
WATER
DISTRICT (TPCWD)
39561 BAR 30 ROAD,
REEDSVILLE, OHIO
45772
Separate sealed Bids
for the construction
of the Phase VI
Improvements Project

which

Includes

Contract t1 (1 A, lB
and 1C}- Woter Line
Dlatrlbutton Syatem:
Conlract 12 (2A and
2B)· Wetar Storage
and
Facllltlaa:
Contract
13
Telemetry System will
be ' received
by
TPCWD, •al
their
District Office, local·
ed II 39561 Bar 30
Road,
Reedsvllta,
Ohio 45772 until
10:00 a.m. (Local
Thursday,
Time)
October 20, 2005, and
then at sold office
publicly opened and
read aloud.
The
Contract
Documents may be
examined et the fol·
lowing tocattono:
Dodge Reports In
Columbus, Ohto and
St. Albans, · Wosl
Vtrglnta;
Bulldara
Exchange
In
Cleveland, Ohio; M-E
Companies at 399
Lincoln Park Drive,
Sutto
B,
Now
Lexington, Ohio: and
TPCWD's Olflco In
Reedevtlte, Ohio.
Copies
of
the
Contract
Documents may be
obtained
at
the
Issuing Office, M-E
Companies,
Inc.,
located
at
635
Brooksodgt
Blvd:,
Weotarvttta,
Dhto
43081 upon paymenl
of $250 IO&lt; Conlracl
11; $100 for Contract
t2; and $75 for
Conlract 13,
The Engineer's eoll·
mate lOt' Contract t1 A
Is
· $1 ,430,000;
Contract
t1B
to
$1 ,220,000; Cohtrocl
11C ts $2,650,000;
Contract
t2A
Is
$245,000 ; Contract
•2B is $210,000; and
Contract
t3
Ia
$160,000,
By order of the
Tuppers
Plolna·
Chester
Water
District, 39561 Bar 30
Road,
Reedsville,
Ohio 45772. County of
Metga, this 22nd day
of September.
(9) 23, 25, 30, (10) 7, 9

Help Wanted

Attention Local Craftmen
Southern Elementary Fall
Cam1vat invites you to attend
Oct.' 8, 5-9pm 8' space $20.00
(supply own table) lor more 1nfo
949-4222 ext t 129

\E\\ SI'\PFR (;ROll'
S \LES REI'

N~::."';''l:;l
\our RIRhllo Know. IJt:llnftd W.lghlto
Puhlk NoCK61n

Plaintiff vs Dennis D.
Boothe Aka Dennis
el
at
Boothe,
Defendants Case NO.
05CV88 Notice By
Publication
To:
Oenms D. Boothe aka
Dennis
Boothe,
whose last known
address Is 32390
• Batley Run Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

c ..m. (:nun lr OH

you have been successful in tl
~ newspaper and/or broadcast tl
HAd
. . sa1es we have an tl·~
~
verttsmg
~opportunity for you.
tl
~ If

H

H

H
·~

K
·~

tl Regional sales territory for tl
~ four

daily Newspapers in tl
H
H
~ Southern and Southeastern::
~ Ohio is being created. Existing tl
clients and large potential forE
H new clients will be your basic tl
~ sales list.
tl

a
H
H
H

H
H
H

slot
moves
to tl
I
.
·~
comm1ssnm as sa es ,ncrease. tl
~ Full
behetits,
mileage t:
~reimbursement and potential~
H
,
H
~for career growth 1f you're thet:
~fit we are looking for.
~
~ Salaried

H
~

•

•

H

Debbie's Flowers N' More
for
If

12,500 OBO

interested please call
(304) 882-3279

Your Ad,

Sat. 9/24/05

OH-KAN COIN CLUB

Early Birds start
at 5:00 Reg . .
Bingo first 2 Packs
FREE
$5.00 each pack after
First eighty people
enter for door prize.

'

Sunday,
October 2 2005
1

Hours: 9 am - 4 pm
Holiday Inn At 7 North

Gallipolis,. Ohio
Free Admission

Jim Fl'ftland at

~

tl

~
H

H
M

or via fax tt-740-44t-0578);
Or CtifForresl at
cfurrest @h&lt;artlandpubtications,rom
'
or via fax (i-740·3~J-7280l
to schedule inleniew, All inquirieo held

,
, ron lid
m stnct
1 ence.

110

Y'&lt;\Hil S,\1 -~-

8 Da;;;.•k._-:-:~---,
\-\'A~TEll

mllul

$500 00 cash reward tor
mformatiOn lead1ng to arrest
of persons that broKe InTO
my home 1n Mason on n1gh!
of Sunday, August 30th or
early
morning
Monday
August 31st and stole a collection ot framed lnd1an
Arrowhead s.
a
bounty
hunter metal detector a
hO'melile XL chatn saw and
other 1tems Oav1d Dudi£Jy
304-773-6130.
Benefit Golf Outing

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Co1ns,
Proofsets Gold A1ngs Pre,1935
US
Currency.
Sol1ta1re 0 1amonds· M T 5
Com Shop. 15 t Second
Avenue. Galllpohs, 740-4462842
Pomeroy High School Year
Book s 1964·65·66 wt11 pay,
(740)592-2636
buy
Junk
Will
(304 )773-5004

I \11'1 0' \II \1

For

Chuck Rtlch1e to help pay
med 1cat e)(peQses
Sept

oo

24th at 9
A M Pme Hills
Goll Collrse Trophies lor
1st 2nd and 3rtl place and

Gt\EA\\A\

old mate Golden Aetnevers
to good home
Phone
(7 40)645-3589

4 cute kiHens. Yery lovable.
black/black
&amp;
(740}441-4846

white

To good home 3 k1ttens Call
(740)388-9325

t

Found. Set ot appro)( 8 keys
&amp; garage ooor opener
Add1son Pike VICinity To
clarm call (740)446-46 17

H~o:u• WANilll

~~~~~~~~~

r

11'2.

Y•RII S•U:·
G•tJJI'OIJS

TO
DRIVE
' NO

UPEAIEo'fCE NECE&amp;S AAY
• FU.L ·li \ 1E a.ASSES
' COL TFIAINING

~
~

Chlldrens clothmg , 1oo1s
antiques. eollect•~s wood
crafts, furniture lots of m1sc

H

H

H

~--·····················:::·:::·•~
~·········~·············
&amp; &amp;&amp;4

0
0

LOOking For
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

HAS ,
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

• .J0a PLACEMENT

www comics .corq

e 200s

~f
I . .

'

pbarker@mydailytn.__ _bune.com
_ _ _ _ __.

•40 cpm ALL MILES
•No forced NYC
•95% No lauch freight
•Paid vacation after year
•Hospltallzatton &amp; 401 k

Interested part1es w11h 2 yrs
OTR expenence

' ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TR ACTOR· TRAILER
TRAINING CEN TERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-BDD-334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts.
wood tlems
To $480/wl(
Mater1ats prov1ded
FreP. tn!ormatton pkg 24Hr
801-428-4649
Am outelte Dnvers Oh1o's
largest EMS system 1s cur
rently seek1ng non -emergency wlleel cha1r transporte•s lor Manetta and the
surround1ng areas
Great
expenence for those Interested 1n purswng a career 1n
the med1cal held Must have
valtd dnvers license w•th
clean dw...ng recora and be
21 years of age or older
Employmenl 1s contingent
upoo stale mandated cr~mtna l background
check
E)(Cellent benelil package
t~se mlerested please sub·
m•t resume to. AmbUiette
0 1VIS!On. 1647 Southeast
AW! Ste 2. Taltmadge. Oh10
44 278

BanenderrWa1tress Tra1n1ng
Available. Apply al Jef'lCho
Inn. (304 )675-4167

Cook needed Apply 1n P,Sr-

Inn

please

COUNSE L OR
~EEDEO AT
AREA AGENCY

YARIISALE-

"

tJ

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualne•• Day5 Prior To
Publh:::atlon
Sunday Dl•play; 1;00 p.m.
Thur•day f~r Sundays

POI..ICIES· Ohio \lllllay Publllhlng rftHf"VII the right to acllt, reject, or canc•l any ad et any lime Errora muat be tepon&amp;d on the tlrat day of
Trtbune-Sentlnei-Reglater will be reeponalble lor no more than the coat of thelpACI!I occupied by the error end only tha f1rat 1naenlon We
any toea or e»::penae thllt rHUita from the pubiiCiidon or omluton of an advertl ..mant Correction will be made in lha tlrat availflble edition
•:::':,:.~::1
ere alw•ya confidential. • Current rate card appllea. • AU real eata1e advflrtlaementa ere aubjeet to the Federal Fa1r Houa1ng Act of 1968 • Th•a r
accepta only
ada ma-ting EOE atandlr!;le We will
accept any advflrtlalng In violation of the taw

r·o
,

Rt~

HoMI'li

HOME'i

HotJSF.~

· MnlliU. Ho~ tiS

0PPOR11JNffi'

FOR SALE

FOH SuE

fUHRFNr

FOH RENT

oNOTICEo

www.orv .com

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO rocommends tha
ou do bus•ness w1th peo
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
all unl1l you have 1nvesh
aled the otlen .

Harne Listings.
L1st your home by catlmg
(740)446-3620

MONEY

roLOAN

RecepiiOI11 SI needed lor
Off1ce
Send
Dental
Rasume to PO 80)( 45 P01nt
Pleasant. WV 25550

'FINAOCING ,t,VAILA!lJ..F

Thurs , Fn , &amp; Sat ~ m1les
OUt 218 from At 7 Boys
Person w1th pos•· liE' alii
ctothes. s1ze 6-B. cha1rs .
udf' &amp; £'H(&gt;IIE'Ilt W::lf
yard swtng. muctl more
'
tl"'•c Abil1 l y to &lt;tpply
Yard sale• 130 Bas118nt D1 sates &lt;~nd Sf'fllltP tN'h
Saturday &amp; Sunday. 9am- n1ques Trl£'pr ::~ nt• &amp; .::om
o4pm CJothes. furnitUre, toys put£'! s~ 1~ ' €' Ql Pred Mus
be able I; 1-.. rr ~ ,.,p w1lh
Power Wheels. miSC
c••enls 1 &lt;n~ ' .S. ,· 0mt=' l&lt;'t
Yard sale· Clay Townhouse
mt, lt l-l&lt;lSk S ~ &lt;J .::\ f'S!&gt;Iui y
Fri. 23«1 . Sal 2-ttt'l
, 1th :1t1en~'or t:J d~&gt; la•
i1'1nlJill
~~ aqc
H.::&gt;urly
r'l r r 1
r (' , . 1t'l\
w.:h
PuMU&lt;OYIMtlllllE
II' a '11 tonus .
•n c rPase
berw ht!oo wogra11 4(11 '· k '·
Sept 23 &amp; 24 College
St&gt;nO resumf' IC Cl
Road. Syr.acuse
Baby
5~8
Bo•
' 0 Ga ll• po •S.
Items. matermry clothes,
r1bunc
PO
Bo• .!16~.
Kenmore Vacuum golf clubs
allipolis OH J56J•
&amp; bag, Tupperware
Npw H1ong Safe Dnvers
Yard Sate- Sepl 23•d &amp; Apply 1n Person at your local
2-tth. 3 miles out 143 on 7. Domtno s Must be over 18
9.D0-4'00, ra1n cancels

4

Aesponslbllites inc lud
ecrw1t119 and tratmng o
Rmers customer serv1c
nd meet1ng sales goals l
OU have a pOSitiVe att1
ude, are a sell-starter,
nd a team player. w
uld hke to talk lo you .
ust be dependable an
ave reltable transporta
1on Pos1t1on otters al
ompany benef1ls 1nclud
ng hea lth, dental , v1ston
ndhle msurance, 401 k
a•d vacattOn and person
I' days Ple ase sen
esume to
Paul Barker
Circulation Manager

availabkt

J family yard sale 656 State Galhpoks No phOne calls
Rt 850 FndaY-Sa~urday

~

AppltcahorYS Are
8e1ng Accepted For A PT.
Fill -In LPN
Competitive
Wages Pa1d Vacat1on Pa1d
Meals Heallh Insurance
Interested
Available
Appl1cants May Apply Daily
9-4
Ravenswood Care
Cenler. 111 3 Washtngton
Street Ravenswood , WV
(304)273·9236
Fa)(
Relerences Reqw red _ , ,

$500 SIGN ON BONUS

LEARN

son at the Hokday

H

P~

Dnve

lost- lema.le dark yellow
Lab, skinny face &amp; recently
had pupp1es. weanng a flea An E»::ceuent way to earn
COllar, 9 wk otel pup rs money. The New Avon
female , blacK &amp; with ller
Call Mar1lyn 30-4-882·2645
740-992-9784 or 740.992·
AVONI AU Areasl To Buy or
0490
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304675-1429
YARJJSALE

~

....
_
__..1'
' 110
- _
HEl"V
W~NlHl
1

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or emalllo

110

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to y9ur classified ads
~
rn
Borders $3.00/per ad
&lt;;iraphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid'

Hn .P \VAN1Hi

Ohio Valley Publishing
825 Third Ave

s 1 tn u 1 "

other
pnzes
awarded
Refreshments
served ,
Come out and Help
. Mason County An.mal
league Inc
1965 Fa1rground Road
Pt Pleasant
Shelter Clean-Up Day
Saturday 912 4
9am-3pm Ram o r Shme
Yard Sale, Bake Sale and
Hot Oog Sale
Get your Dogs
nails cltpped lor 55
Basket Raffles and Free
Balloons lor the K1ds'
To Volunteer. please call
(304) 675-6458

Cars

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

pjsplay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p .m.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
friday For Sundays Paper

Yard Sale Fn &amp; Sat Sa ndh1ll
Ad Letart watch lor Signs

~ jwf,.,land @heartlandpubtications,com ::

H

76

1'1: PtEASA~T

3yr old lemale and 1 1'2 yr

by sending letter oftl KIT &amp; CARLYLE
H'mtrod uc t'ton an d resume to H
H
H
H
H
t:either
~

t:

Items

992-2157

Oeacltiru-

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Indude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Ads

1 solid white kttten 7 wks
old (740)446 0129

H
H

word Ads

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

\'\ \ 01 \1 '1 \II \I'

Or Fax To

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

Monday 'thru Friday

r

H

H
H
~ Apply

or Fax To (740) 446·3oos

Offtee 1/r;~~
WRITE AN AD

l\egister

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call Today...

leather
Anyone l1 nd rt
please call (304)882-32BO

BINGO

rltrtbune

To Pl.a ce

My Purse was stolen Bre&lt;~k
m week ago Tan Straw with

American Legion
Post 128

COIN SHOW

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

•

Cincinnati drops Cardinals, Griffey·done for season

Help Wanted

Nattonal

www.mydailysentinel.com

rltrtbune- Sentinel- l\e
C L A S S I -F I E D

The Royals' bullpen had not
allowed a run in 17 innings,
Sisco pitched one inning
and allowed two runs and
three hits,
The Royals snapped the 5-5
tie in the sixth when Justin
Huber led off wilh a high fly
which popped out of short slop
Jhonny Peralta's glove in shallow left-center and was ruled a
double. Huber went to third on
Teahen's single and scored on
Andres Blanco's sacrifice fly.
The Indians , who have
homeced in all but three of
their last 29 games, tied il 1-all
on Ronme Belliard's RBI single in the second.
Hernandez gave up five runs
and seven hits.
The Royals loadeq the bases
with no outs in the first but got
only one rtin on a double-play
grounder by Stairs.

with the bases loaded in the
eighth.
After Sizemore's RBI double put Cleve laM ahead 5-l in
the fourth. Lee began the bottom of the inning by giving up
singles to Matt Stairs, Angel
Berroa and John Buck.
Then Teahen hit Lee's tirst
pitch 441 feet for his first
career grand slam:
'
"That might have been the
tirst home run that I've ever
been able to watch," Teahen
satd, "He gave me a good
pitch
to hit and I jumped on
,.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

hi the Common Pleas
C::ourt
of
Me.i gs
County, Ohio Home

· Friday, September 23, 2005

Indians crown Kansas City, -gain ground on Chicago

GB

58e
.579

89 63

Friday, September 23.

,

Major League Baseball

American League
E11t 01¥1olon
WL
Pet

www.mydailysentinfl.com

Aecpi!OQISVFJII-In ACtiVIty
Asst
Recpt1omst Needed
For Fast-Paced Facll1ty. 4
Days Per Week Fnendly,
Team Onented, Flex1ble
Applicants May Apply Sk1lls
Requ1 red
Extremely
Orgamzed,
Able
To
Accomp lish
Tasks
Independently
Encom passes
Good
Judgment &amp; Reasomng
Ab1l11tes Entoys FJeopte &amp;
Tho Elderly
Must Be
Punctual &amp; Dependable
Interested Applicants May
Send
A
Resume
To
Recp t1on•st/Ftllln Act 1v1ty
Asst .
PO
Box
307 ,
rl avenswood. WV 26164
111terv1ews
To
Begtn ,
September 26. 2005

, 50

SCHOOLS

1

B00-652-2362

1.,-·INSTR--tlicil:nliONiiill_.l

EMT pos1tmns ava1 lable 111
Hunltngton.
WV
area
FT.'PT
Star t1ng
pay
$8 50/ hr
Contact Mtke
Matheny at {304)526 57aO

C&lt;lncealed P1stol Class
October 8 9 00 am VFW
Mason WV Ph (7.40)8435555. Cell (740)4 16-3329

or (304)526·5936

Gallipolis career College

Fuel Onver, CDL &amp; Hazard
Matenal SEind Re sume to
C1ty Ice &amp; Fuel PO Bo»:: 1 27
Pt Pleasant. WV 25550

Fair Hau•lng Act ol1968
which make• II Ulegal to
adnrttae " any
pr'1erenee, Umllatlon or
dl•erlmlnallon b11ed on
race, color, religion, ••x
famutel statua or national
arlgln, or any intention to
make any such
JKaferance, limitation or
dlaerlmlnatlon.:·
Thll newapeper will not
knowingly accept
advar11..menlllor teat
estate which lain
violation of the taw. Our
raadtrs .... tlareby
Informed that all
dwellings adver1lud In
lhl• new•peper are
avaltabh!l on an equal

opportunity baaea.
Foreclosure 7BA, 5BA only
$18,000 For ltstmgs call
800-391-522B ext F254 .

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nt
H!Bl!-582-3345
R l \I I ' I \ II

HoMES
FORSAI.E

E)(peri enced Sewmg and
(Careers Close To Home)
Ourltmg Person needed to Call Today' 740-446-4367,
work Full T1me call after Spm
1 SD0-214-0452
(.304 )593-0505 No calls a her . WV&lt;No gan•pouscarc~uoolle9£' com
7pm No Expemmce needed Accroll•led MemDer ~c•OOIIII"'IJ
to apply
CO&lt;JIICtl tof 1~roent Colleges
~rod Sctioals 1:2?48

All real ntala aMrti1lng
In thla newapaper 18
subf.ct to the Fedet'al

Horse
lo11ers
paradise
apprmumately 70 acres
wl new log home 3br 2ba.
16x32 inground pool, 24x40
garage, 156)(66 ll orse barn ,
42x80 barn. wl40x100 shed.
28x50 barn, wlall new fence
Approximate income of
$10,000 per month on a
SI.RI , $463 000. (740)645·
0870•

NEW

3 BADM $1299
DOWN
$229 00 MONTH
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES
NITRO. WV 304-755·5a85

1995 Doublewide 3br, 2ba
wl anached
Garage,
Breezeway. &amp; Barn.
1.56
New all bnck 2BR 2BA 2
acres. Sandhill Rd $72 .000
car
garage m A10 Grande
(304)895-3068
Ca ll
(740)446-2927
or
(740)339-0365
2 BR/1 Bath Farmhouse •n
Country w! 10 acres. su1table
NEW BANK REPOS
to bUild ,, 3 mites I rom
ONLY 3 LEFT
Hartford
$49.500 ASSUME LOW MONTHLY
Homestead
Realty
PAYMENTS
(304)882-2405, (304)675·
OWNER FINANCI NG

ShotoKan Karate Starting
new Class Sept 26. 2005 at
Carleton
School
every
Monday and Thursday 6 00
Full-t1me BabySitter needed PM to 7 00 P.M 740.9855540
m my Home Barton Cnapel 3994 or 740-667-3039
AVAILABLEi
Road Mason County No
304-755-5566
3 bedroom 2 bath, Ranch
W\NJHl
Students apply (304)576 1100
style house. newly remod- New loghome 3Br. 2Ba.
3353
eled 81dwell area Reduced w/ 16x32 t,nground pool
-----To $65,000 Call (7.W)441 - 24x40 garage on appro.: 1 5
Help Wanted
FULLTlME
Alter L1fe---LapTop Sales &amp; 1528 or (740)709-5952 after
acres, $269 .oo6 (740)645~ Overbrook Center
ServiCe PC &amp; Mac Repa~r &amp; 4pm
0870
1s curren tly accepMg apphServiCe 740-992-1525
cat10ns for tu11-11me STNA s
3BR. 2BA House on Taylor No Down Payment loss
11 you are mterested , please
Rd
m Pomt Plea sant than perfect crectlt 0 K F1ve
Complete yard work and
come 1n and ftll out an apphmmutes
from
Holzer
home repa[r 2o years SAP ,(304)895-3129
catton a1 333 Page Street.
Hospl'lal 'Three BedroomsRei (740)446-3682
Middleport OH 45760 No
4 year old Coloruat on 3 -One Bath level lot Newly
3
·Phone Calls Please EOE
Computer
Repa 1r
and acres. Approx l ,900sq t1 " modeled 740-416-3130
bedroom . 2 baths. 2 car '"----~--Troubleshoot
Web
Des1gn,
lPN
needed,
fu 1l·l1me,
garage Master bedroom tS
OAKWOOD HOMES OF
Mooday·fnday~ day shift no Network1ng . Programm1ng,
2Bx24 w1th a 1acuzzi tub
NITRO. WV
weelcends , no holtda ys Bu1ld New Syslems Restore
$ 120000 (740)446-7029
SUPERSTORE
V1rus Removal.
Apply a1 936 St At 160. Wwidows
OFFERING CLAYTON
Ph one~7 40 - 992 -7 903
Gallipolis (740),.46·9620
FLEETWOOD, GILES, MHE
hltp /.'www geocl'ltes comlho
AND OAKWOOD
,
Med1 Home Hecilth Agency.
tdamn32934/ Ematl hotLOWES I PRICES, BEST
Inc · seektng a full-l•me RN damn32934@yahoo.com
SERVICE GUARANTEED
Patten! Care Coordtnator lor
DRIVE A UTILE ·SAVE A
Gallipolis. Ohto an d surFor all your llome repa1rs
LOT
rounding
area
Dulles
and 1ns1allabons at afford· •yrs old. 3br, 2ba with 1•re)()4-755-5885
mclude estabhsh1ng and able rateS Call one number
ptace on 1 5 acres tn Gatlia
mam ta 1n11'Q open hnes of
(3041593-3611 .
Co SB9,900 (740)709 - Two House's One Wlth. lull
commun1cat•on wnh area
SIZe basement &amp; 3 • oa r
1166
physiCians and health care Gentleman Will srt with the
garage Garage has 1 sta lll
fac1tities tn the del/V8fV ot elderly 1n thEtlr home or tn
AHentlonl
With mecllamc pit Olher
Home Health Sef'lteeS We the hp!ijMtal. They ' can call Local company Offenng "NO
house Rental house w1th
otter a oornpet•t•ve salary (740)256-1869 or (740)645- DOWN PAYMENr prolarge deck All natural gas,
and beneht pacllage lor lull 6911 a any 11~
grams tor you to buy your central atr Approx 5 acres
t1me E 0 E Please send
home tnstead o1 ren11ng.
All deared With white p1ne &amp;
resume' to Audrey Farley, S 1ate -Cer llfled . L 1 n k • 1 ~ finanong
blue spruce ,ptnes Plus 2 out
352 approved ch1ldc•re has • Less than pertect credit
CliniCal
Mat)ager
AU St35 000
buildingS,
Second Avenue Galhpohs. 1mmed1ate openings for a0Cepted
740-378-6+!5
OH 45631
ages 6- weeks&amp; up call • Payment could be the

To Do

.

Shelly 304- 675-2343 for same as rent
Locators
more oet&amp;ls
Mortgage
(740)367-0000
Wt11 care tor Elderty Day
N.gh1 o r Weekends
Exp Three Rental Propen~es tor
and References (304 1675- Sale DupleX, each with 3
M&lt; LJR. 0/R. K;o;t,en . bath
7961
&amp; port;h. House- 3 BIR, LJR,
I I'\\'\ ! I \!
KI1Chen. Bath Cottlge·BIR,
K1tchen Bath
Rental
&lt;5779
Bllill'o~
Income for aU three-Approx.
-Pa_r_a_m_ed
_..:_s--&amp;--E-M-T's --.
OPPotm_:~Tn
51 .000/per rT,tOOttl Pnoe tor
all ttuee·-$70,000 a locate·
needed Apply ai 1354
Make FREE Phone Calls to 104-106 7th Street Po1nl
Jackson P1ke, Gall•pol•s
(30.t )675· 2495
any phone and make big Pleasant
Someone to ca re lor 88 yr , money gtvmg away Free affer 7 00 pm
old actiV6 1ema!e on week- long
D1stance
PhOne
F ull Basement Fm1shed
ends S6 00 .pe r hour AU ServiC€ 1Vrslt
ta)r es will be deduc ted www M AdCa lls com/21550 Attx:, New Windows. Central
A1r Detached 2 Car Garage
References IS a must Call
y
and
(304)882-3246 or (304)882between
9am-5pm
W'WYII AdCalls ~1550
2371
(740)446-3496 ask for Ltsa

Me 1gs IndustrieS Inc IS
H1nng Crewleaders
lor
Janttonal /CustOdial Work
Prefe rred Must hal,.e a Vahd
Oh•o Dnvors l1cense and
H1gh School D1ploma or
GED Send Resume to
MetgS lndustnes. Inc PO
Sol! 307 SyJacu se Oh10

ito ,

www,

HOME.com

ook1ng tor a home ~n th
n-county area? Checkou
ts local s1te piCtures
ptJOnS &amp; owner'con

act I
Ust your home lor

'

V1ew ph otos11nlo onlme
It's a Steal I! 4 bedroom 2
ath, 2 car garage New
a'.len WV. Code 6505 dr
all (304)882-3368

1 mile down 7south beauttlut nverfront Newly remod eled. 2BR. 1bat h home
screen porch overlookmg
r1 ver, separate two-story
gara9e w1th workbench
large
yard
prtvate
References $650/ monlh ...
depOSit
(740)446-4922
even~ngs

Beaut1lul nver v1ew tn
Kanauga Ideal for t -2 peo ple
No oets
olease
Appl1 cat•ons bemg taken
Call (740)441 -0 181
For rent 2 bedroom mob~e
home at 402 Polecat Ad
$425/m onth S425 fdepoSII
relerence
reqUi red
(740)446-4107

2 Bedroom House, Newly
Remodele d Kmeon Ave. Mob1le home lor rent Must
GalllpOitS
$550/mo have depoSI1 1ent 3 re t ~r ­
(740)441·1 184 (740)441· ences. No pets 17 40)3677B66
0194
lr\
2 bedrooms washer &amp; dryer MObile hOme Si tes
Country
Homes
Shade
hook up. Ref No pets
5130 mo (7 40)365-4019
{740)446-4491

MOBILE HoMlll
FOHSALE

3-4 BR . 2 baths. hardwood
floo rs. mce hOme located on
Eastern Ave 600 sq 11
(740)446-7425

1973 2 Bedroom Academy
12' X 56' Call after 2 30 4 bdrm hOuse- Add1so n
P 1ke- 1 bath· garage $575
740 992-3772 "'
month!$575 sec dep you
1996 doublew1de 24x52 on pay ultli!les Relerences
112 acre, 3BR 2 balh, large required Call (740}446
LR. new carpeVhnoleum. 3644
n~w 50 yr old rool, 3 large
5 rooms &amp; bath stove &amp;
storage bwlding Too many
refnge rator no pets 50
amentt1es to hst Must see to
located
m Ol1ve Sl $350 month
appreciate
(740)446 -3945
Fa1rland or Gall1a Co. school
d1stnct $97.500 (740)256·
AHenllonl
1426
Local company olfe.nng -No
DOWN PAYMENT" pro 1996. 16x80 Fleetwood
grams lor you to buy your
Spruce R1dge Supreme
home Instead of renhng
38A, 2BA. v1nyl S1d1ng Sllln' 100"/Q hnanc•ng
gled roof. and heat pump All
• Less than periect cred1 t
k1tcllen appliances Included'
accepted
Very N1cat Will need mo11ed
• Payme nt cou ld be the
Asking
S22 000 '
Call
same as rent
(740)441 ·5862 leave mesMortgage
locators
sage
(740)36 7.()()()()
2002 3BR, 2 bath Oakwood
Beautiful 3 bedroom home
mobile home Good condl·
m
country
C/A
t1on .
$28,500
080
washer !dryer llookup. large
Aellnancmg available Call
yard (61 4) 595-7773 or 800·
(740)245-0 13 1
798-4666
5 Homes under S10 000
For rent 2 bedroo m house
1udeliver (740}385-7671
1549 Ate 7 N (740)446·
Due to DIVORCE Sellmg 9 177

w

flO

APAHTMEI&lt;I&gt;;
FOR RJ.NI'

1 and 2 bedroom apart- .
ments lurmshed ana unlur·
n1shed
secunty deoos1t
reqwred no pets 740-992 2216
1 BDR lfl·level apl , Owte
locat1on close to hosprtal
Ph (740)446-2957
1BR WiD hookup electriC or
gas no pel s $290 plu s
(740)441-1 184
depo s11
(740 )441 0 194
2 bedroom 1 bath, water
pa1d , $350 month $350
secur1ty
depos1t
Ciltl
(740 )446 3481
2 BR wa sher dryer hookup,
heat pump/AC
1 BR cabm heat pump also
storag e bwld1ng (74 0l286·
2240 or (74(})44 t -0 11 7
3 &amp; 2 BR apts Close 10
Holzer
hOSpital
W' D
hookups
water sewe1
mcluded
Star t1n g
at
$450/month
depo s11 ;
requi red No pets (740\44 11184 f740l441 0 1g4

3 rooms and oath All u!l l1 11e s
pa1d Downsta1rs , no pel s
2002
mobile
home
S450' mo
46 0\i'o'e St
For rent 1 bedroom, 1 bat h.
Excellent cond1t10n, mc.e
(740\446-3945,
fully renovated all appltscreened front porch. house
ances.
$500/month
type guners, shmgled roar, S5001depcislt Ca!l (7 40)446- 3 rooms. tvrn1shed 1 bedroom oood tocat1on Apply
lleat pump. vmyl Sldmg:
3481
at
105B F11st Ave · s•de door
$29,000 00 740-949-2543
(740
)446·226 7
Home tor Rent 1n Glenwood
or 740·992·3176
3br, 2ba detached Garage Apa rtme nt a'.la ll able nO\'•
Greiu Used 1994 t4x70 3
$400/mon tll
plus depos11 R1 veroend Apts New Haven
Bedroom. 2 Bath Includes (3041743-8584
WV Now acce~tmg apphcaheat pump Call (740)385·
iOn s lo r Huo-SubS tdlzea
l
Homes
lr om
57 000
2434
Foreclosures VA . HUD For one Bedroom Apts Ut11t11es
New 3 BR Home Only hsllngs 800· 391 -5228 ext 1ncluded Ba sed un 30° ~ o'
S1891mo. lncludes ale. deliv- 1709
adJusted Incom e
CJI ~
ery and set up (740)385·
(304 1882·3121 a'.lat lable to·
House for Rent PI Pleasant SeniO r ana O•sab ed Pebp1e
4367
$375
(304 )675·5540 or EHO
NICe
U sed
14:'164
2 (304 )675- 4024
ask lor
Bedroom Only $4995 -Call Na n~y Homes tead Realtv BEAUTIFUL
APART·
(740)385 -0698
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Broker
PRICES AT JACKSON
Used 1984 14X70 Nashua S~mg reliable long-lerm
ESTATES . 52 Westwood
trader, 3 Bedroom . 1 Bath tennant. super clean 3 beCIOn'.le !rom $344 to $4..12
$5,000 OBO Call 740-742- room t b31h 110rne 20 m1n
Wa lk to shOp &amp; mo~ e s Call
2801
to Gathpohs 'R•o Grande 740-446 ~ 5 6 8
Eq ua ~
large pn~ate back yard No Hous1ng O~portu fllty
smo~ 1 ng
no mooor pets
$400/mo 1nctuoes wa1er CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFOROABLE 1 •
(7 40)379-9465
2 65 acres 3,1oo sq tt
Townhouse
aoa rtmen:s
Totally remodeled
barn C1ty wate r etectnc
and 'or sm.iill houses FQR
lnterlar 1
seP11c c1f)' schools 2 m1les
RENT Call (740)441 ·11t1
south of Galhpohs on At 3 bedroom house. central lor ap phcat1on &amp; 1ntormatton
216 Pnme locatiOn wont heal &amp; a1r, washer/dryer
tast
Reduced-$4B 000 hook-up fenceel yard stor F01 ,rent 2 beCi roorr apl 1n
Kanauga S425 per mo S4 ~b
senous
mqu1r1es
only age bldg S475 pe1 month
oepostt refe re nce reowre d.
rent 1740)441-1111
(740)441-7333
174 01446-41 07
Moon£ H&lt;l\IES
For sale t '2 acre tot Gas
F..Jrn1shed upsta11 s 3 rooms
lllfl RL'T
water. sewer Call lor deta1ts
8. oat h Clean re-' &amp; .Jep
{740)446·3487
roqwred No pe ts 174014J6t4x7o 2 oearoOm . 2 tull
1519
RfALF.'iHll,
bath 5450 mo &amp; $450 dep
W"'&lt;llJI
Pets outs1de only (7J.0)37 9· Gr a CIO~.&gt; S liv1rog 1 and 2 bPd
2254
room apartme•1ts al V1llagt:
Real-Estate Wanted -loca l
M anor
and
R1ve rS1 dE'
person lookmg for a horne to 2 bedroom •n Porter Water Apar tments H' M•ddlepoll
sewage
pa1d
buy AH caSh. Me1gs or trash
From S295-S4J4 Call 74.()
pets
Gatha No double-Wide or Washe r'dryer. no
992 5064 Equal Housu'lg
S450 mo.
S45()J aep
mcidular 740--.4 16-3130
Oo oort unrtres
•
(740)388·9325
Hof"' eysucJo;le H1l s Af;·s.
2 bedroom mobile home m
loc ated C' n C.:oton• al Dr
M+ddleoort all electriC. S375
beh1nd H1gh"'a" Patrol Pos:
plus CiepoSlt M ms10e pets
on Jad(son P1ke 2 o~ •oorn
n~ ...
t740)992 -3194
now ava11aole Rent sta rls
FOH "'"-"
2 ooaroom 2 bath- 1·h70 S290 r xnth l ow S. moder·
1 bedroom house. 11 new Cleek ,. 5 mm 1rom ate •f'lCOme l?qua1 Hous1'l9
Gart1eiCI Ave
GallipoliS Gav1n &amp; Kv ge1 Cr eek Plants Opponunlty f7 40f446 3344
401 441 01 94 t74Q'f446...t234 or (740)208- TDD 1-800-75Q-0750

r

I""'

....-..~
~~~u~·~-9W~monlh~~~·L1.o...-".~
740

1·9320

· SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR I
-BARQAINS

~;:;~ ;1~

7861

2

3 bedr oom Tr atler tn le1art

8@droo m
Home
S3751month References &amp;
Depo~1 reqwred (304)67 55578

M1ddlep or t North Fourth
Avenue 2 room effiC•ency
WV lor Rent Atl ElectriC no pets Depos11 &amp; orev1ous
$~50 fT1(ln lt\ S250 deposit rent al refe,enct:!s ut1htres
pa•d 740· 992·0165.
(3041862-2858

�)

Page B&amp; • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

· Friday, September' 23, 2005

·/

Friday, September
. 23,
. 2005
COP

10

r'-.·

.AP.ooMI;ms.;;lllR-Rmr--·· '

r ~ I~.,r._ ~.uros.SALE--,.J

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

• ••

JET

..

Modern 1 bedroom apt.

1996 Chevy Beretta, V6 ,
automatic, AJC, runs, looks
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In good, good gas mileage,
New 2BR apls. in town. A.ll Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- $2,200 OBO. {740)4 41·
etectric. waler/sewerltrash 800·537·9528.
0914.

!74())446-()390

Phillip
Alder

1996 Nissan Sentra 135.000
{740)441 · Kitchen cabinets. 11 pieces, miles, 2 owners, good condi·
0194
great Condi tion. Priced on tion, $2,800 firm . (740)388sile. Call (740)446-1721 .
8128.
~ew big 2 bedroom apt.

1);40)441·1164,

Sleet Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grati11g
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap M.l.ls· Open Monday·
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446- 7300

Pleasant Valley Apartment
.Are now taKing Applications
for 2BR . 3BR &amp; 48 R ..
Applications
are
taken
Monday lhru Friday, 4rom
9:00 A.MA P.M Office is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No. is (304)675 5806. E.H.O
ta ra
Townhouse

Table . 4 chairs , padded
seats. rollers. couch almost
new, 4 padded chairs. 1 very
old padded chair, all good
condition. (740)992- 7489
- - - - ' - - - ' - - - -- Westerns Will Trade or
Apartments. Very Spacious, Exchange (3p4)675-5884
2 Bedrooms, CIA. 1 112
Balh, AdlJit Pool &amp; Baby
BuU.UING
Pool , Patio, Start $385/Mo
SUPI'IJ''~
''
No Pots. Lease Plus

Security Deposit Reqwed . Block, brtck. sewer pipes.
{740)367-7086.
windows. lintels. etc. Claude
Winters,
Rio Grande, OH
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptlrlg applications for waiting Call 740-245-5121 .
Tjst tor Hud-subsize d. 1· br,
apartment, call 675-6679

..

I

~wntown

Otlice Space- 5
fQom suite $650/rT\o: 1 room
ZHica- $225/mo.~ 2 room
sUite $250/mo. Security
deposit reQUired. You pay
ut1li!ies, All spaces very nice .

t

1 male Poidte. 1 female Pit
Bull. obey exc9nent, both
!Oi appointment
·
AKC , price negotiable
For Lease: Office or retail {740)367-7429.
~paces in very good conditiOn. Downtown Gallipolis . 8 wk. Golden Retriever pupblooded. no
~pprox . 1600 sq. 11. each . 1 pies. Full
or 2 ba th s. Lease price papers. parents on premisnegoliable to encourage es, $100. Phone (740)645·
new
business
Call 3589
(L40)446-4425 or {740)446AKC Lab puppies. Yellow or
Sli36.
Chocolate. 8 wl&lt;s old, shots
Gallipolis AetaiiiOffiC€ blJild- &amp; wormed , $300 each.
ing, beautiful country set- (740)256-6733.
ling; 4.000 sq.f!. (finished):
heat and water included.$ AKC Lab pups. Vet chedled,
negotiable: (740)367-7435. chocolate &amp; black. $250. Call
(740)256-6463.
Qlficei Apartment--3 Story
Bu ildmg w1th garage. locat- CKC Jack RLJssell Terrier
ed in downtown Pomeroy. puppies. 2 male, 2 female.
Call .for Details. 740-992- $1,25. (7 40)256-1652.
7851
CKC Reg istered Golden
Private mobile home space Retriever puppies for sale.
in centena ry. Some reStric- Have had first 'ShOts and
tions apply. $125 per month. WormOO. All female, $2.50.
{740)368-8965
(740)446-4053.
Elevator Call (740)446-3644

.

Hot!SF.HOIJI

Gooo;

Warehouse

R.pair-675· 7388. For sale,
I \I{ \I ' l 1'1'1 '11'
r~condltloned
automalic
w~shers &amp; dryers, refrigera·' 11\1 ... 1()("
IOIS , gas and electric ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;
ranges. air conditioners. and
10
FAN.:\1
wrmger washers. Will do
EQun•MENr

repa~ts on major brands in "---~----.,.i
shop oral your home.
Ford tractor 3600 356
hours. excellent condition.
Finish mower boom, blade
mark. plow. old horse 1ra11er.
Call (7"0)446-7693 !tter
Antrques 1Oth Annual Wast s·OOpm
Virgm1a An tique &amp; Bottle
Sale , Oct 1 at the West
POLE BUILDINGS
v.,g,nra Slate Farm Museum ·Any Style
'Any Size
P:all Festival , Pomt Pleasant.
'Custom Buill to fit your

A~cnQLlS

9 to

JPM. FREE admiSsion
and
appratsals. Dealer
space "vallable. INFO: 740-

----- r

992-5066

~- or
~ntiques.
Buy

Riverine

HAY
&amp;
GRAIN

WiN'i'l:li
S'i'OiilGE

OF BOATS;
CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
OCT. 8, 2005
9:00 AM· 12:00

"

Cui f.SoiO!r

Adria 1'11&lt;MI

1·,.,. Soiibrr

•ndU....IMiiiJI

lldf:on!Aiocilo

lldSemur.

llldS..U~

Iru~HII&lt;!iiJr.

~liamlHm.

- crK~&gt;..

c-

c.o..r

c.o.~~r

170 I

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Point Pleasant, WV
(304)675-2630 ~
t:='l

Let me do 1t for y~ul

It's the Auto/Home Discounl wi1h special
reduced rates if both car and home are
insured with State Aulo. Find out how
much your sav ings can be.
Th e Wiseman Agency. Inc.
451 Sct.:und Avenue

P.O. Bn.11. .159

•

A"

~ illltf'O'

~:,:';';;

Gnll ir0lis. OH 45h3 1-o:l5Y """""'""
Ph: M00-3~2 - 1209 or 740-446-:0643
www. w i sc ma nagc ncy.~.:om

TRUCKS

01 green Ford F1 50 XLT 4dr,
auto. 2wd, 5.4L, V8, bedcov er. 6CD player , sunroof,
good condillon. 69,900
080.
miles,
$14 ,500
(304)266·3335.

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

f'~ll;~~~~
·Cona:ete w,rliil
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
ln.~u rt'd

Free Eslim11tes
40 MaroRCYCLfSI

4WHFUERS
~ 985 Ford truck Ft 50 6
cylin der, automatic, good
body, runs. $900. (740)446- 2001 Grizzly 600. auto,
green. less tha n 300 miles.
9742.
$4.500. (740)742·4011
1995 Ford F· 150, 302, V-8,
Auto 4X4 , 167 ,000 miles
$5,000 080 {304)675-4060 2002 HO Soltall Deuce.
many extras rncllJding wide
1998 Chevy Z71 . e~~:tended tire. chrome. Python Pipes
Cab, wllh trd door. tully 7,000 miles. (740)446-2S15
loaded, Tahoe cover and
spray 1n liner $11 ,500 call
2002 Honda Recon ES
(304)75 1-7376
25Dcc. ATV, ex cellent condiDon't buy a big gas hoQ, like tion S2200 (304)675-1444
new 2001 Chevy S-i O.
20.800 miles. eJCtended cab,
2004 H.D. Superglide. fuel
cost new $20,622, sell for
mjecled, only 2300 miles
$8.900. 1740)388 -01 40 or
S12.000. Oayt1me ~740)446{740)339·0948.
9416, evening (740)44·1For sale. 1984 Ford F250 1724.
4•4 flat bed with goose neck
ball , trailer brake controlle r, 650 Yamaha v Star Custom
overloat;J springs, 300 6 cyl .. s,JOO miles. $ 3,200 OBO.
4 speed . lock out hubs. (740)256 -1618 or (740)256·
$1,200. Phone: (740)4 41 - 6200 ·
7999.

r

~

4X4

97 Suzuki RM-80. complete
rebuild motor. piSton. rings,
crank, rod bearrngs only

-

"'""'7;::40:.~:2;:06:::;:·7,::11{;~1;__
v~

__,

740-446-9777

Storage
Phone
(740) 992-5232

SxiO, IOx_IO,

_•111!1ell'r~5p•m-~~--.,

.

BoATS &amp; MOTORS

•---oiiiiiiiiiio-_.1. "-••oiFoiORiiiiSII.O."ii.E0 ..-1 "-••oiFOR.iiii
' iiSiiiA;;l,;;.E;.,_.J

mpg-

"-••,;I,;;UII;;;,;Siiiiiiiiio
AI.E.

SJ.soo oeo.

5o

riO

K&amp;K EXCAVATING

10x30

Danny 740-590-3702

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRAOING
• Prompt&amp; quality

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742·2293
' Leave a message

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
. 45771
740-949-2217
6la8 t5•v1 o•.' ";

•:J.J ~

~- '

tci:;;f!~~~ftt~.

~)i!'!J;~;( ,~~

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM
:m:o :"'~

!=====':":":'
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

•HtwGaragea

~

• Electrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters

• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio •nd Porch Decka
We do It all .except
rumacework

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 """"

Pomeroy, Ohio

~;25~Y~IO~IS;l~oca~l; ; ; ;
I

SElf STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

~

'1-2~
-~-

{Commercial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, flouses . Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Stdewalks, Gas Statron Awnmgs, Degreastng of
"""
'
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
...,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your de,ck
•
or log home, Aluminum brightening. '
. •
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Compames.;

BARNEY
.... .......

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commercial dnd Residential)
1
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilizatiof\•
Spr~ying of fence lines. Leaf Removal, as well as small 1
lafldscaping jobs such as planting and murching.
FREE ESTIMATES • CiUARANTEED LOWEST PRI(ES

WINDOW SUPER SALE .
Vinyl Double Hung

$219
INSTALLED ·

to tOt Ul

~E.Tf\E.i:L~OS?

IIYUS 1111 SUVICI
Insured
Free J: st1mates
SeniOr Crt1zen OlstOUnt
30 Yrs. Expene~e
740-992-2621 or
740-416-4902

[K~O\-L~\l

t&gt;lt&gt;t&gt;l'l Wt--t&gt;~i 1o

swe:.p.._IZ!

__.....11-\1&gt;--1 ISt-1'11-\0W
I~~ PIZ01--10Ut-IC(tl 1

,.r.,you in
anew car

I At'!
+i OW YOU TO

OKAY, GUYS.

WARM WITH
C.OLD ICE
ON FA.CE ~

ME UP!

PEANUTS

'""·"'".""""'
'110.•1
1\!n~. t.~lptl

(lee~ ••

.(304)675-3400

Gene Anns/Owner·
Operalor 740-992-3174
•Weekly Trash Sen' ice
4 yrs of Rel iable Service
(Keep Your Money locillf
G&amp; R SANITATI0:-1
D56l Baile y Run Rd ..
Pomem , OH

Cornerstone
llecblcal
Service
• FOR All YOUR
ELECTRICAl NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

{7411)446-7619

Gallipolis, OH
David Siders
Gemologist
{740) 446-3283

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRUcnON
·• New

Homes

·Garages
'Complete
Remodeling

140·992-lm
Stop &amp; Compore

-·-

Diane McVey
)U.CCC·A

JACKSON

A111ENS .

l32Hurm$md

ZiSWatUtii!IIStmt

llhl'......, ..,. ~ ~ ~..

~~lolo!l. · l'ri.~ :.!O-.Ip!l

~T-n . ~.i.Tb.n.t».,

~llril)~Al'\))lllll!nl

{740) Jll6.14ll

0401594-JS7J

GOOD GRIEF!

W~Ar'ABOUT M'(

WASAN't'ONE

006? 15 HE
ALL RI6!-IT~

HURT?

SOMEBOP'(
SAID HE WAS

THE HERO..

I'M HANDLING

ALL THE

LAW5lliT5..

coat of

17·17·17 • $275 ton (bulk only)
12%Triumph 12% sweet horse leed
. $5.50150 lb. bag
.
48% Soybean Meal #13.25/100 lb
Cob Meal with T.M. Salt
$6.50/100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)

SUNSHINE C.LUB .
AIJD &amp;IJ.l6 AEU TO AffORD A
(AB liAS 1D &amp;. 1\XJAI\&amp;R -nuJ

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 SJ Rt 7 N ¥ Pomero~. Ohio 45769

740·367,0544
740·367-0536

'(lARFIELD

PW. adopt from the
Meigs Co111ty [)oq Po111d
111d IMkt o(riendror lift.

eoo

RING&amp;!

740-992-3779

'

· Nonwegion elk hwd

· Ycl~w ~bs &amp;rttr~itl'
Call B.D. Coosl.

mixes

for 1111 your homr
repair needs. roofing.
slding•.add.ons.

· Walker coon iloood

AlA~sat~~

n"Diodeling etl' .,
free cstimatCl'i

1740) 992-2?79
leave m
e

·GRIZZWELLS

Scorpion 'Tractors•

MAl WTE.WAW CE.
COmplete Home Repairs
&amp;Remldellng
OH 35926

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

BAlJl\1 LUl\IBER

HO.M f

'NV 035067

ADVERTISE

Now Available At

WOLFE

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

(7 40) 992-0167

3•

Pass
Rcdbl.

19 Ravine

"Taki11g Tl1e Sting 0111 Of
!19rd Work!"
.
Mid-Size 4Wheel DriYe Tractor
with 301jp &amp; 40hp Kuhota E;ngines

BAUM LUMBER .
St. Rl . 124 Chc.s ter 9!15-330t

member

21 Ball port&lt; fig. 61 Barely
22 Hassle
make It
a deblor
23 Juan'a
DOWN
lather
26 Humble
1 Hack 'a
29 Cool oil

11 Pinch oil 40 Vast
18 Uh-huh
42 Glasa
container
(2 wda.)
44 Stair part
20 Whereto
eam adeg. 45 "- &amp;
Clark"
22 Hideaways
46 Mexican
23 Jewelry
Hem
pot
·
24 Rolalds
47 High note~
48 Eggplant
large!
color
25 Hockey
!oint
49 Mr. Estrada
26 Kvetch
50 Appoint
27 Verdi opus 51 Textile

customer

East
Pass

Pass

Dbl.

All pass

container

3 Grammar

rival

4 Reporter's

class

34 Roebok

36 Polson-Ivy
angle
symplom
5 MaoTse- 38 Mo1her
6 Gary's st ..
rabbit
7 Sci-fi- 28 Far Easl
39 Cleric
land
[2--)
41 Humiliate . 8 long
31 Forehead
43 Barn
33 Majors or
hairpiece
habllant
Romick
9 Spectacular
44 Marciano
10 Chicken
35 Per capita
stat
wire '
37 Cod kin

colorer
54 Sean

Lennon's

mom

It can be fun to browse through old .magazines and tournamenl books, comparing
styles between t~ en and now. T~is deal,
from t~ e 1950 Vanderbilt Knockout
Teams, features sOme bidding that is
bizarre lo modern eyes.
East's 'fi rst pass was highly debatable.
Many would overcall one no-trump, and
some would make a takeout double. In
contrast. North's three-spade rebid was
impeccable. East's penalty double of fou r
spades was even · worse. And North's
redouble was optimistic, but fully justified
by the result.
Helen Sobel was sittinQ South anO B.J.
Becker was North. Declarer trumped the
diamond lead on the board, took lhe club
ace, ruffed a club in her hand, trumped
another diamond, ruffed a second club,
and trumped a third diamond. bringing
down East's ace. It was time lo play
spadeS, South losing only two tricks there
for a score of 1,430. (It would be 1,480
today because of th~ 100 bonus for making a1redoubled contracl.)
At tQe otller taDie, East doubled over
by Luis Campos
North's one-club opefling. South passed, ,
Celel:rtlyCipher cr,p!ograms are created from qiX!Ia\101\9 by famous peoole. past eM PI~
presumably playing th at a "free bid"
l!ach lefter In tile ci9he~ slarw:!s 101 ano11lef.
required at least 10 points. Nowadays he
Today's clue: Yequals P
would automatically bid one spade. After
West advanced one diamond • .North
·'"XJB
AWXXWV
XE
DHSW
ZESWI
guessed to bid one spade, instead of
making his own takeout double. South
HCI
IJSEVRWI
XDHC
CWSWV
XE
caught up by jumping to four spades, ·
whic~ was passed out. This Eas,t should
DHSW
DHI
HCG
Y N A Z J R J X G H ~have doubled becallse he started the
defense witll three rounds of spades, givHZ Z . "
HSH
FHVICWV
ing North no chance. Oeleating four
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - '(Aulumn) The Sabbalh ollhe year." - John Logan
spades gave the Sobel team another 100
·season of mist and mellow 1ruitfulness." - John Kea1s
·
points tor what was then 10 international
match points. (It would be 17 imps now.)

""l

'::i:~:~' S@ttot\lA~r.zr,~·
.y ,OWJI

AstroGraph ·o
lavr

' ' ~\Gt\\1•.

: ; ~Y
.::n~

, filE
'

"'.,
••

DO YOU

SUPPOSE

&amp;HE I~'T
. HOME?!

14i1o~

WOIJ
UMI

CI.A Y l .

Rearrange !ltters of the

~&lt;n~mbltd wordt be·
low to form favr tlmr&gt;ft wordt.

-.r&lt;JIIrlhcllly:

Saturday, Sept. 24. 2005
By Bernice Bode Oaol
11 Isn't likely to be the average run-ollhe·m lll year ror you In the year ahead.
.A number ot oppoi-turilties to better
your lot .ln. hie are com ing your way,
but be discerning EIS to which you get
Involved in and which you turn down.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Avoid
going shopping today unless you realty have to get some things. and th en
· have· a list ready. Othe rwise you could
have a tendency to purchase a lot of
useless items you'll never use .
SCORPIO .(Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - W atch
your P 's and Q's l odey when 11 co mes
to diplomacy with others.r tl you're not
on guard you co uld though tlessly
make a law; pas that wo uld leave your
image in shreds.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) As an archer you 're a lways on the
hunt to r interesting situ ations, but
today take care not to stumble into a
clandestine affair. When exposed, and ·
It will be, It'll cause you a heap of trou~

I

Unless you plan yOur day wisely
today, you could me.ander all over the
place a nd become engaged in a lot of
frivolous actlvl11es, yielding you llnte to
~ show for your lime
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) Gening involved in some kind of futuristlc endeavor today .may be quite
anractive to you, but take care that
you don't -waste a lot or precious time
on a dream that holds empty promises.
.
P ISCES (Feb. 20 -March 20) - That
marvelous imaginaUon you have may
not be so wonderful today If yo u use II
to be suspicious of everyone and
everything. Have a little · more faith if1
people that they moan well
ARI ES (Mflrch 21-April 19) -Trouble
is' in the offing for you loday it you
allow money to become an Issue witt1 '
friends. II there iS some confusion as
to who pays for what, cough up the
amount that's in contention
TAURU S (April 20·M ay 20) - When
working togel her wi1h a co lleague
today. make sure there's harmony of
purpose before you start the Job. It'll
be easier to lay out 1he ground rules
first than when in the mid~! of things.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - I'm sure
you ca."n think. up "-II kinds of QKCUSfl'S
as to why you should not do a dista steful JOb today. but you'll save yoursell a lot o1 energy and grief il you
simply get it over with .
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)- Treat
your business affairs with the serious·
ness they deserve end your social
Interaction as footloose as you 'd like. II
won't work to aHempt to mix the IWO
together today.
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) II you're
planning to make some changes
around the house today, be ' lhey cos'm&amp;tlc or have to do With relationships .
betler get the consensus of ott)ar
members flrert to epare youraelf • fight .
VIRGO (Aug: 23·Sept 22} - Oon '1
make essumpUons that others will let
you know what the gang Is planning
on doing today. Check with them or
when you're rea~ to get together with
them. no one may be a~und .

SOUP TO NUtz

GULJEG

. . - - - - - - - - , .,
Q
~

U0 T

8

'

When I was starting my first
I
I
I
.
,
.
.
M
•-J-I..J-..t......JL....J.,' jOb my om told me that . Ajob

i-..,.;:....:;....,.;:....:.--1
~
I'1
.,

is onty work unless you -........

I I uI I I I Io
B

D ·I N N

1 -~::_:;..:.,,.:...:,r.::..,--1
:•
5
•
•
•
.
•
.

wh

at you do.'
Complete th! chucklt gvcttd
by filling tn t~e m•ninQ words

'fOil develop from Jlep No. 3 be

NIJMBEt£D lHTERS
TH£Sf $QuAlE$

'11
oiN
.
..,
.,

C
A PRICORN !Doc. 22-Jan. 19) ble.

RIPAIRS
• CARPENTRY
• ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38244

• Ger1Mn shepard'&amp;collie

Pa.ss
Pass

G

·BIG NATE.

. 4..\5 ~, Sttobd AYr11Ue

'

Seii-Stora~·

-

&gt;\[&gt;..J\IE-,OOYOU K~&lt;OiJ
/~'-r"" CII.PI\"-l: Of lfl.E.

Op11onal Upgrades Available;
Argon G11s &amp;Heat Mirror

GALUPOI.IS
Main SJreel
Pt. Pleasanl, WV
JoAnne Siders

Pass

,...

Nort h

45 Highland
lakeo
1 Sllcky IN~ 48 ~
4 e.clta
52
yoll
8 Notmaoc. 53 Wry 11 Pow locale 55 Stllllow
12 Conturlon·o
contalmoon
56 All. on.the
13 Gorlllo or
Seine
chimp
57 Quechua
14 Mldoal!
speaker
counlry
58 Comenl
15 Mr. Warhol
component
16 Fleur-de· - 59 Eur. airline
17 On hold
60 Sorority

CELEBRITY CIPHER

DILES HEARING CENTER

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only

H
~

m1xes

MUlEY'S

~NOC~- §
ICNO(,t:
JO~~.f'! ~~

Office: (740) 992· 2804 Cell: (740) 517-688)
POWER WASHING
•

work

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

o

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Mini Excavator Work
Call

Janet JetTer~
33795 Hiland Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio

DOtS'

Dozer - Skidsteer

lOx IS, !Ox20,

West

Old-time deals
feature offbeat bids

~;

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800•291·5600 740-992-4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

O i&amp;&gt;ar ;,

Blgb and Dry

'

FoR SAlE

'

30 Poet's black 2 John,
32 Mini·
In Russia

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

TRI -STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

2150 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

-

Opening lead: t J

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Sales • Parts • Service

Jeff

Pass

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

JIM'S FIRM EQUIPMENT, INC.

Barry
Hamm

I •

Tree Service

--

frenchcltyhomes.com

4.

EJ

State J\ uto offers
something spct'ial

A 10 9 7

Vulnerable: North-South

/

Jeff"'"'" Blvd.

•

tJH:J-65

Dealer: North

Y~5 ••• tl~

"""'111M'"" """"'I""'""'.

740-985-4372

11 24 East Main
an SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740- Hay tor sale 800# round ~92 -2526 R~ss Moore. bales $!2.00 each. 200 10 1995 PlymOU1h Voyage SE 1977 Searay 22ft. with
van. 130K miles. 25 mpg cuddy cabin 351 Mercruiser
own;•;'·------------~
with 85 outdrive. runs good'.
$2,400 OBO
MLSUlJ .\~!lll5
1994 Plymouth Voyage van $2 700 OBO. (740)446MI:R!lH~lll'il':
125K miles. 25
52.200 2923 '
Auros
080. Both 1n gOod condtCA.\IPf:RS &amp;
1- used natural gas furnace• r tion. (7401441 -1417
904- elfictency 80.000 BTU MmUK Homs
~eil 1- used natural g~s t - 1990 Cadillac DeVille, 1997
Plymouth
Grand
water heate• Used !umber &amp; wrecfced 1n front. 4 chrome Voyager. Wh ite 2 sl, drs .. 1995 Starcraft lightweight
~ ichng lor sale. Cell phOne aluminum mag wheels. Sell good cond .. runs good.
truclo; camper Used 4 limes.
i;J 40)441-2667
parts or all. Call (740)44 1·
can (740) «1 - $4.500. (740)245-9109 or
0712.
2667
(7 40)441 ·76~2 .
10'x16 'x7 ' Green House .
.
whrte piastre srdes. tleer On 1941 Chevy Coupe Street 1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
roo!. e•baust fan · &amp; some Rod Project Lots of new ES. White. Tan leather. quad 1996 Coleman Cheyenne
l!ieclflc. St .SOO. (740)742- parts
$9,500 Invested. seats. rear AIC. New IIH~s . Popup Camper, K1ng &amp; Full
401 1
loaded,
$5.500
080. size beds, very-clean. e:ccel$6.()()0. (7401446-3005
1740)441 -01 35
lent
condition
$2 .000
Car!von glasses 250 1986 Jaguar XKS . V· 12 _ ___:___ _ _ _ _ _ . (3041675-5752
1940's &amp; 1950's Postcards. engine (yes V-12 ) 2 door 1999 Chevrolet Venture
r;.ordte·Tradl. hke new S25 sports car. bladol. tan Interi- E¥tended Van; blue 82,CXXl
2000 Aewr•te
Slide out.
1999
Starcraft
Truclo; or, auto, runs wow! needs miles; great condibon: one
Fulty eqpt. All ( HttCh eqpt)
Camper, Ex. Coo , Sellers exhaust &amp; m1nor attn . wlH owner ; $8.500; (7-40)367·
$6900. 740-992·5963.
K+tcnen Cabrnets wl'lh !'Our trade 60's or 70's GM , 7•35; (74())339-3955.
bin. Phone (304)675-4062
$3500 OBO. (740)416-0918
" I I{\ H I ..,
t999 Dodge Grand Caravan
Elec triC Aechnerll rft Char. 1989
Celebrity
station SE, excellent condition. f\8W
Hff.\fE
S15D_
Large
Sears
wagon 2.8 L. V6 . runs goOd. MIC?flellin tires. AM/FWCO.
hlPRO\'E\tJ:'l\TS
Microwave S25
Good
$250 080
oil ~h ang e every 3.000 •"-•iiiiitiiitioiiliiiiiiiiio,.J
Cono1t1on {304}675· 7442
1992 Dodge Sp1rrt,. 4 cy1 miles. I have reparr recetpts
BASEMENT
F'ar sale ·3 5 HP Bnggs &amp; runs' good needs minor 140K mites. S3,r495 080
WATERPROOFING
StraMor hon zonlal 'shalt reparrs S250 (740) 44 6- (740 )4-4 ~2
Uncond1tronal 1tfet1me guareng.re t6r QO cart or? $95 ~923
For sale. 1995 Dodge an:ee Local references fur·
Phone (7 4014.11 -79$
1~:\ r.r~ dtll a c OeVrlle. 4 g. Caravan 3 3V6. luggage rl1shed Es1ab l1 shert t li S
Ltke new 1nvacare fotctmQ V8. 59 000 mrles. aU rack. clean •nstda and out. Call 24 Hrs (7 40) 446wheelch3u 20x18 seat- wt. opiJOns. leather ne'fl 11res. good trres. 156.000 miles 0870, Roge rs . Basement
S!J 000
frrm $1 .200 Phone (740)441 · Wa!Bfproohng
cao 2501b Cost 5545. sell maroon
$2 50 •740)AA6· 4561
{740)64 5-0626
7999

''

iOOir1 Ll'lllti!OO II

Ta~e

For more Into. call

95 Camero Z-2a. 350. auto,
T-Tops, leather, great shape,
$5,500; 92 Corsica. V-6,
auto, 4dr, lots of new parts,
nice car, $1 ,600: (74 0)742·
401 ~

I·

.,.,,_,;..;.;;,;;;;,;;,;;;;;;;;___,

sell.

8ANc BURKE 740-698-6809

run about
20-hours
2001 Chevy Tahoe, 4x4. been
with rebu'ld
1 · Good Shape
69,500 mrles- One owner
MUST SEE!! (740)446-4234 $1,500 (304)593-2420 cal!

needs.
"FREE Estimates
740-596·2909

" When Quali(J.Compassiv" And l Rtrgrily ('(}me 1iJg£1her"

Designed 10 Heal Your Home
and Your HOI Water'

92 Chevy Z-71 $4,800.
(740)339-0368 or (740)367·
0627.

r i~

r

r

OUTSIDE
WOOD BURNING
FURNACE

QJ

.. .

JONES' .

r&lt;W I0.1AI&lt;)

Home Grown Toma to es.
tOR S.&lt;\LE
Field Run , S8 per bucket or .__ _ _ _ _ _ _...

you pick $5 per bucket.
{740)379·9110
in - Heriderson. WV. Preowned applicanes start1ng at Home Growr-1 To ma toes.
$75 &amp; up all urider warranty, Field Run , you pick $5 per
we do service work on all bocket. (740)379-9110
Make and Models (304)675McKean Farm
7999
Large assortment pumpkins,
Movir;'! Q sa.le- Washers $95: g~Jards. Indian corn. iodder,
dryers $95, GE electric hay bales .. (740)446-~42 ,
range $125: Frigidaire refrig- '556
Centen ary
Road,
erator a1mond in color $150: Gallipolis
Kenmore upright treeier
$175: chest freezer $175;
FoR SAI"E
couch $75; table &amp; Chairs
$100, table &amp; chmrs $40
Skaggs Appliances
For Sale or Lease Storage
as of Oct. 1
warehouse cost $40,000,
1216 East'ern Ave.
zoned B-3. for Sal e Lot on
(740)446· 739a
6th Stree.t cost $15.000 call
Tl'lompsons Appl1ance &amp; days (3o4 )6~5- 11 60 nights

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

740·667·0700 • 740-843-5264:

68 white Sundance, 65,000
miles, runs good, A/C,
$1, 100. (740)256-1652 . .

White 1994 Chrysler LHS,
auto. V6, $ 1,200 bBO.
(740)256- 1233.

Appliance

Racine, OH
740-949-1183

. Colo.-.
lo Lisl!

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

2002 Mitsubishi Lancer. 5
speed, loaded. adull driven,
rebuilt title, $6,500 . • Call
\740)256-6936.

1998
Plymouth
Grey
Breeze, air, auto, 4 cyl,
Doberman Pups Black 7
$1,600 OBO. {740)256Tan $200 (304}675-8196
1233.
after 5pm

Vu;t:'IAI!Lf!;

5044 7 Tornado Rd.

457~3

411

South

2000 Kia Sephia. 4 door,
automatic. 27mpg. 72 .000
miles, good co ndition. $800
in brakes, fiHers. tires. beHs
etc. tuneup. Will take trade.
$4,000
OBO.
Asking
(740)44 1-9378.

95 . Honda Accord, $700.
lmpounds/Aepos from $500
Listin gs 800·391 -5227 EJCt
AKC
C548. ·
each.

Fiwm; &amp;

1,, Muny

1

2000 ' Chevrolet Impala 4dr,
loaded, one owner, always
kept in garage, never
wrecked. 30 miles per gallon, 146,000 miles, $4500.
(740)44 1:8299 or (740)4415472

1'1:~&gt;&lt;
HlRSAI,E

Tcailer lot tor rent . (740)949, Da l ma~ian
Pups
2.237
. Registefed $200
{304)937·2929
\Ill(( II \\Hhl

405 Pearl Street • Middleport, OH
Phone (740) 992-3471
Fax (740) 992-5976

COOK MOTORS

'18 Colors
'30yr. warranty in wntmg
'Professional Installation
• Free Estimates
740-596-2909

Mums 4-$10.00 or $3.00 Each ·
'lled &lt;.Rose areentwuse

Catering Selections

1999 Sunflre $3,995; two
1999
Saturns
$3,495,
$3,695: 1995 S· 10 $2.495
oU1ers
instock.
3
mon1h s/3,000 mil e warranty.
32a J&amp;ckson Pike
(740)446-()103 '

·-

~~T~u~ppers Plains, OH

Deli &amp;. Full Service

.

7.

•

.. AJ1072
West
East
• A K 8
., 5 4 2
• Q J 6 3
t JI0967 3
t A54
... Q 8 • •
... K 9 3
South
. 1 096432
• K 8
t K Q6 2

41800 SR #7

by
Hometown Market

1997 Camaro.. Metallic
green . 1owner/adult owned,
less than 64,000miles, V6,
automatic, air,CD, excellenl
and
sharp
$6,800.
1740)446-()369.
--------1997
MercLJry
Gt and
Marquis. excellent condition,
one owner, \',lalker tor sale.
Local cell phone (304)962·
8911
--------1998 ExplOrer, ~ddie ~auer,
loaded, runs &amp; looks great.
Books $6 ,200 will sell
$4,000/0BO {304)576-2607

DAVIDSON METAL
ROOFING

EHO
SJ~Kl:
IUR RENT

Excelle'nt Condition , Very
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9/23105

�""
www.mydailysentinel.com

B8 • The D~ily se'ntinel

Friday, September 23, 2005

•

An inside.look at this week's game
BIG TEN STANDINGS
Big Ten

Teams

Overall

W L Pet. W t

Indiana
Mich. State
Minnesota
Penn State
Wisconsin
Purdue
Ohio State
IllinOIS
Iowa
· · Michigan
N'~efTl

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

0

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

.000 3
.000 3
.000 3
.000 3
.000 3
.000 2
.000 2
.000 2
.000 , 2
.000 2
.000 2

Pet.

0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1

1.000
1.000
1.000
1.000
1.000
1.000
0.667
0.667
0.667
1 0.667
1 0.667

NC)UND THE BIG TEN
No. 14 Michigan
at Wisconsin

No.ll Purdue

at Minnesota
Minnesota (3-0) ninks No. 1 in
the t:ountry in rushing (335 yards a ·
game) and Purdue is No. 1 in the
country in rushing defense (16
yards a game).
Maybe there should be a note of
caution attached to those statistics,
though. Minnesota and its standout
tailback Laurence Maroney (481
yards) played Tulsa, Colorado State
and Florida AtlaQtic in its first three
games. And l'lllle Purdue (2-0) is
tough against the run, rt has allowed
324 yards a game pass1ng_
Purdu·e quarterback Br~ndon
Kirsch has completec 58 percent of
his passes. Minnesota's-Bryan Cu pito has been on target 52 percent
of the time. The Gophers' other key
to 1ts running game IS All-American
center Greg Eslinger.

Other games
Saturday
Penn State at Nor1tlv.eitem
Michigan State at Illinois
Indiana ttte

• OSU TEAM WDERS
lntereeptlons
Passing Yards
Three
tied with'1
Zwick . 268
Rushing Yards
Tackles
Pittman
233 Hawk
30
Receptioi&gt;S
Tackles for loss
Holmes 131189 Tw tied with 5

s

Hawk

Miam&gt; (Ohio)
Texas
San Diego St
SATURDAY IOWA
Ott. 1
BYE WEEK
Oct 8
@ Penn St.
Oct 15
Michigan St.
Oct. 22
@ Indiana
. Oct 29
@ Minnesota
Nov. 5
Illinois
Nov. 12
Norltlwestern
Nov. 19
@ MIChigan

This led to many assump.
tions, including: (a.) Ohio
State would build its offense

After scoring from 49, 51
and 60 yards on his first three
touches, he had only five
plays of 49 yards or longer in ;
. his next 590 touches.
Maybe that means the previous regime at Ohio State
didn't know how to use
speed, either.
·:
Maybe Ginn will take it to ,
the end zone two or three
..
times Saturday agaiilst Iowa·
and the questions will all be ..
forgotten.
But it's also possible Ginn's
career path could be similar
to Wiley 's.

THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT: IOWA

•

•

I·

•

season. Maybe the question should be \'tly
Holmes isn't getting the ball more instead
of why Ted Ginn Jr. isn't seeing it more. The
answer could be balance. Holmes and Roy
Quartemacks
Hall had foUr catches against San Diego
lflroy Smith lookf;d rusty and a lrttle
State and Ginn, Anthony GontZalez and
nervous in his first start of the season
· Ryan Hamby all had three.
against San Diego State last week, it's
Iowa has two very gJod wide receivers in
probably because he was,
Clinton Solomon (eight catches, 154
Smrth was 14-of-26 passing for 149
yards, three TDsl and Ed Hinkel (10
yards and ran for 87 yards and two touchcatches, 104 yard$). Tight end Scott
downs in a 27-6 win. Ohio State's offense
Chandler also has 10 catches.
ranks last in the Big Ten in yards gained and
Advantage: E\1811
points scored.
·
Offe11siwt line
OSU coach J1m Tressel hopes the offense
Ohio State experimented with playing
will improve as Smrth settles in. "I don't
eight
or nine different linemen last week.
th1nk I've seen Troy totally relaxed and in
Obviously,
at a Big Ten-low 337 yards a
command yet. To me, that's the biggest
game
total
offense, there are problems
task he has to tackle," Tressel said.
• "across the board" in Tressel's words. ·we
Iowa junior Drew Tate tormented Ohio
need to get better fast because l'tlen you
State in a 33-7 Iowa win last season,
start playing against Big Ten defenses,
throwing for three touchdowns and runyards
and points are even more difficult to
ning for aPnther. The first-team All-Big Ten
get," the OSU coach said.
choice has completed 74 percent of his
, Center Brian Ferentt, guard Mike Elgjn
passes this year and has shoWed no ef·
and tackle Mike Jones are all returning
fects fium a concussion he suffered two
starters for the Hawl&lt;eyes. IoWa ranks sixth
weeks ago against Iowa State.
in the Big Ten in rushing offense and
Advantage: Iowa
eighth in passing offense.
Rlnlq backs
Advantage: Even .
Ohio State's ~nd game has been solid Defellliwe lne .
but uninspiring_ The Buckeyes' longest runGraduation M Iowa's defensive line
ning play is 17 yards and their short-yard'* hard but the Hawl&lt;eyes still are limiting
game doesn't strike fear into defenses. Anopponents to 108 yards rushing a
tonio Prttman leads the way, averaging 77.6 game with four new starters. The line
yards a game. Freshman Maurice Wells gJt has seven of Iowa's eight sacks, led
more carries (nine) against San Die@ State by end Mike Follett wrth three.
than he had in the first two games comOhio State allows only 57 yards a
bined. He could become more of a factor
game rushing but the defensive line has
the rest of the season.
··
just two of the team's 11 sacks, both
Sophomore running back Albert 'rtlung
of them by Mike Kudla. Unebadu!r
(99.9 yards a game) gives Iowa a running
Bobby Carpenter lllCNed up to play rush
threat rt didn't have last season. The
end most of the San Dieg:J State game.
Hawkeyes were 1,16\h out of 117 NCAA DiAdvantage: Even
vision 1-A teams at runmng the ball in 2004
1
lJnebachers
l'tlen injuries sidelined their top four tailtt's a game wrthin the game. Whose linebacks for the season. \tlung is bouncing
backers
are better? Ohio State's AJ. Hawk.
back from two injuries - knee surgery last
Bobby
Carpenter
and Anthony Schlegel
year and a broken leg in 2003.
have
often
been
called
the best linebacl&lt;ing
Advantage: E~
@'CUP 1n the country. Iowa's Olad GreenReoefters
.way, Abdul Hodge and Edmond Miles are
Santonio Holmes has caught at least two nl1)n tlhere wrth \hem.
passes in his last 21 games and has had
·Hawk and Carpenter rank 1-2 in tacl!les
four or roore catches in 15 of those
for Ohio State and Greenway and Hodge
games. The junior wide receiver has 13
are the top two tacklers for Iowa.
catches, including two for touchdOWT1s, th1s
Altm:ltage. E~

~

en

I

8 ·10

A look at the key matchups in the game
between No. 8 Ohio State and No. 211owa
on Saturday at Ohio Stadium:

.•.••
•

~

Defensive backs

Special teams

Stopping Tate from dcing what he did
last year 1s the No. 1 task for Ohio State.
"He killed us, h(! was running all over the
place,' safety Nate Salley said.
·
Salley, safety Donte Whitner and comerback Ashton 'rtluboty lead OSU's defensive
backfield. Freshman Malcolm Jenkins has
emerged as a·significant contributor
off the bench.
Iowa's corners, Jol.oo John·
son and Antwan Allen, have
/{
lettered three times. Allen
seM!d a one-game sus•
pension ea~ier this season after being found
g).Jilty of assau~ in a
fight in Iowa City.

OSU's Josh Huston is 9 of 10 on field !
goals and has had touchbacks on 12 of ••
his 20 kickoffs. Punter A.J. Trapasso is av::·
eraging 40.4 yards a kick. Iowa's Kyle
,
Schlicher is 2 of 2 on field goals and has ~
had touchbacks on 8 of 18 Nckoffs.
Punter John Gallery is averaging 42.6
yards a kick
· ·
Advar¢alle: Ohio Slate

~

~

Advald d : _.;
Olio Stale

Santonlo Holmes
klads all Ohio
.
state I'8CIIiwlls
with 13 receptions :
for 189 yards and .

two touchdowns. :

3

W34-14
L 25-22
W27-6

Weekly Buckeye_

Jim Naveau's
Player of the Y.'eek

Brain Busters

TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA

.,

Say what?
.

· What Iowa player~! a touchdown pass
as time ran 01ut to ·
H~ a 29-27
win r:Ner Oh
te in 1987?

NOON

·~t (c) 2005 11'e I.Jrna N€'14 At!, production or all or any jX)rtJorl of tniS rna. !eM ,. prohibited 'Mti"&lt;IUt express consent·

.

have come true.-Ginn has
exists. Maybe, ·like Wiley, he
touched the football only 27
will be a very good player, but
Jim
times in the Buckeyes' first
not the unstoppable force of
Naveau
three games and only one of . nature he looked like at first.
those produce&lt;~ a touchdown.
In WJ.!ey's first college
The Uma News
Some critics say the problem game, he scored three touch·
jnaveau@limanews.com
is that Ohio State coach Jini
downs on a 49-yard reverse
419-993-2087
Tressel can't break out of his
and pass-receptions of 51
around getting the ball to the
conservative offensive mold
. yards and 60 yards in a 70-7
6-foot, 175-pound sophomore, and turn Ginn loose. Othets • · win over Rice. The Califoriria
(b.) that he was a Heisman
point the finger at quarter·
burner was a good player the
Trophy candidate, and (c.)
next three years, rushing for
back Troy Smith.
that he was going to make it . And others speculate oppos· 1,274 yards as a junior and
look just as easy this season as ing defensive coordinators
952 as a senior.
he did his rookie year.
are designing schemes to .
But the long strikes didn't
Three games into this seaever
come as frequently as 'they
frustrate Ginn.
son, none ofthose predictions
Maybe one·other possibility did in that brilliant beginning.

Sacks

OSU SCHEDULE

Sept 3 ,
Sept 10
Sept 17

COLUMBUS- He arrived
in a burst of brilliance.
He was the fastest player
Ohio State had seen in a long
time. Tacklers slid off him as
if he had drizzled lOW-30 on
his jersey before taking the
field.
Ted Ginn Jr. last season?
No. Michael Wiley in 1996.
Ginn scored eight touchdowns in just 59 touches of
the football as a freshman in

2004.

· Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez
gets one last chance to beat a team
that has had his number.
The Badgers (3·0) are playing
the Wolverines (2-1) for the ' first
time since 2002. In nine previous
games against Michigan, Alvarez's
teams have won only twice. Michigan coach Uoyd Carr is 6-0 against
Wisconsin.
Michigan has stabillled its ques. t1onable defense but inJuries have
created new quest1on marks on offense. Tailback Mike Hart's status is
uncertain because of a pulled hamstnng he suffered against Notre
Dame two weeks agJ. Offensive linemen Jake Long a'nd M1ke I'DiodzeJ
and tight end Tim Massaquoi will be
out because of injuries.
The InJuries haven't helped Carr's
mood. "I didn't finish my medical
degree, I can't tell you," he sa1d
·earlier this wee,k, l'tlen asked If Hart
would play.
Tailback Bnan .Calhoun has
gained 4 71 yards and scored eight
touchdowns for the Badgers. Depth
on the defensive line is a ·concern ..
for Wisconsin after defensive end
Jamal COOper injured a knee iri a
14-5 win over North Carolina last
week and defensive end Kurt Ware
· caught chicken pox.

Touchdowns
Three bed wrth 2

What will the future hold for Ted Ginn? =

"'fbudon't
get beat
handily and

have It be

Chris Spielman an~usineau share the
Ohio State record for
t tackles in a game.
'· .
How man
ey have?
.

polntln~r

Answers: 1. Marv Cook 2. Spielman and
Cousineau had 29 tackles 3. Mike Vrabel With 36

- Ohio State center Nick
Mangold when ask~d if a 33-7
loss to Iowa was the low
point of last season .

·· Michigan vs. :
. Ohio State :i

a medium

season."

DE - Mike Kudla
l'&lt;.ldla had two tackles for loss and a
qualterback sack in a 27 -6\Wl ~San
Die@ State. Ohio State's defense t'eld the
Aztecs to 13 yards rushing on 19 attempts.

days.until kickoff

'·

'

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