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Page B6 • Th~ Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 15,2004

www .mydailysentii1el.com

Prep

.

Note~ook .

'Does·

Offenses were in charge
when Girard met Warren JFK
BY RusTY MIUER

Associated Press
Def~nse has the edge over offense early in

2.172 yard s and 20 TDs rust season, has .
passed for more than 800 yards and I0 touchdowns in three wins; James . Copus of
McComb has thrown for 1,005 yards and 12
TDs in three games; Bluffton's Jarod Davies
.• an d 5 TD s 10
· a game
passe d 1·or 39 5 yarus
earlier this season and has 997 yards passing
in three games; a~d Upper Sandusky's Greg
Michel.i, Ohio's ,Divi.sion IV defensive player of the year in 2003, completed 17 of 22
passes for 350 y~rds and 5 TDs in a 49-12
win over Wynford.
LANDMARK: Woodsfield Monroe
Central's Jay Cirtosta set an Ohio Valley
Athletic Cqnference career record with his
247th career coaching win,, passing St.
Clairsville's George Strager, in a 35-8 win
over Hannibal River.
BITTERSWEET: .Monroeville coach
Steve Ringholz collected career win 200
Friday in a 42-20 victory over Seneca East.
But the milestone was dampened for the 27year coaching veteran when it was learned
one of his former players - Jason Sparks, a
2003 graduate _ had been killed in Iraq.
STREAKING: For the third time in four

'
the season. right 0 .
Apparently no one told Girard and Warren
JFK·that.
They combined for 19 touchdowns. 12 6
points and more than 1, 100 yards in total
offense in the highest scoring game in
Trumbull County history.
JFK running back Tony Elzy rushed for
442 yards and sco.red seven touchdow~s and that was in a losing cause.
Girard quarterback Bobby Ovesny completed 32 of 44 passes for 451 yards and four
touchdowns in a 64-62 victory in regulation.
Ovesny also rushed for three TDs.
BIG GAINERS: Dariu~ Lewis ran 2!
times for 233 and ·two touchdowns as Ironton
beat Gallipolis for the lOth straight time. 300; Sandusky St. Mary's Spencer Dye and
Delta's Nate Kmic have each scored · 12 TDs
in the first three games; Greenville's Daniel
Fee ran 35 times for 239 yards and three TDs ·
in a 35-29 victory over Hamilton Badi'n;
Ashland Crest-view's Ryan O'Dell has rushed years Tiffin Columbian returned the season's
for 712 yards in three games, including 349 opening kickqff for a touchdown, Justin
yards on just 16 carries in the season opener; Reinbolt going 99 yards in a 42-0 win over
twins Justin and Josh Fraley combined for Toledo Whitmer; Warren Harding pushed its
327 rushing yards in Bellville Clear Fork 's regular-season win streak to 24 games and
30-13 win over Ontario. the former totaling its home field string to 30; defending Div. I
182 yards and the latter 145;
state champ Cincinnati Elder led 50-0 a! the
Kenton Sneetl rushed for 284 vards as half in beating Western Hills 64-6, the
Fairfield beat Middletown 23-1 0; QB Dane biggest margin ever in a series dating to
Romero rushed for 263 yards and 3 TDs as 1929; Maria Stein Marion Local , with three
Lakota West beat Milford 48-25; David state_ championship am1earances in four
Hobson of Madison ran for 201 y&lt;)rds on 2 l years. is 0-3 after c&lt;fach Tim Goodwin
carries and scored on a 46-yard run in a 45. 7 entered the year with a career mark of 60-12;
victory over Ashtabula Edgewood; single- and Dola Hardin Northern scored 41 points
wing QB Ty Parks started the ~eason with in the second quarter and 71 in the opening
three 200-plus yard rushing games for half of a 78-7 win pver Vanlue Friday.
NAME GAME: AP Division I No. I
Minster and coach Whit Parks, also his dad;
and Ohio's offensiYe player of the year in Cincinnati Colerain beat Princeton 45,12'
Division VI last year who led Columbm behind the 178 yards rushing and three TDs
Grove to a 15-0 record and the state champi- of Mister Simpson. That's right, Mister
onsh,ip, Blaihe Maag. rushed for 201 yards Simpson.
and 2 TDs and had 78 yards and 2 TDs
NOTEWORTHY: Delphos St. J'ohn's and
receiving in a 56-21 win over Ada.
Rockford Parkway combined for 23 penalAIR FREIGHT: Michael Hill completed ties accounting for 222 yards in St. John's
29 of 44 passes for 532 yards and six touch- 42-6 'win; New Philadelphia's A,rthur
downs and also ran for 102 yards and a score Zurcher kicked a school record 46-yard field
as he. 'rallied Proctorville Fairland to a wild goal in a 38-7 · win over Cleveland
47-44 win over Sheldon Clark (Ky.): Collinwood; and · North Baltimore beat
Beallsville's Aaron . Harper, an All-Ohio Holgate 8-0 in a game in which nine passes
·
receiver last year, passed for 401 yards and were intercepted.
three TDs in a 37-34 win over St. Mary's
Finally, it's the season for .fresh starts.
(W.Va.); Hunting Yaney University School's
Bowerston Conotton Valley lost to
Bryant Milligan caught two TD passes' in an Newcomerstown 98-0 during the 2000 seaovertime loss to Chardon Notre Dame- son. From 2000 . through last year, the
Cathedral Latin, increasing his total to eight Rockets won a total of three games.
. TO catches in three games; Caleb Dettra
Yet Conotton Valley,: behind running back
picked off three passes in Mount Gilead's 19- · Morgan Lloyd who has scoroo II toucha win over Sparta Highland:
downs, is a perfect 3-0 for the first time
Westlake's Jon Brown, who threw for since 1\195.

and ·chelsea Young added
four and one points respec. tively.
The EHS junior varsity
from Page B1
team did salvage a split on
Casey Smith had seven the evening with. a 25-16,
points, with Jennifer Armes 23-25. 15-6 victory:

Eagles

from Page B1
the Tornado defense.
Alexander went on to win
the second game 25-1 0 and
the fmale 25- 14.

Richt
from Page B1
playing tin1e comes from a
plan des igned before the
game.
"The only purpose I have
is to play," Shockley said
after Tuesday's practice.
·'Tve been through a lot of
different twists, but the bottom line is I just want to
play. l(s hard to sit on the
sideline when you can't help
your team.''
Richt said he didn't want
to pull Greene out of the
South Carolina game after a
sluggish start because of the
potential for ereating a quarterback controversy. With
Greene completing 19 of 38
passes for 213 yards. two
touchdowns and an interception, Georgia rallied
from a 16-0 deficit to win

Weather
from Page B1
The Buckeyes (2-0) have
never encountered anything
quite like a hurricane,
although weather has frequently made for memorable
games. ·
The 1950 Ohio StateMichigan "Snow Bowl" is
one of the most famous
games in school history.
Heavy winds, .several inches
of snow and ,zero visibility
turned the annual showdown
into a fiasco. Despite not having a first down, misfiring on
all nine of its passes and
punting 24 . times, Michigan
won the game 9-3 when an
errant Ohio State punt snap
was recovered in the end
zone for a touchdown.
During the 1990 season,
No.. 15 Ohio State lost to No.
18 Southern California 35-26
·in a gan\e that was prematurely ended by heavy rain

Southern.'s
Kristiina
Williams was 18-22 passing,
12- 14 spiking, and 2-2 setting.
Brooke Kiser was 21-21 setting with two for aces with
two kills.
Bethany ~iftle was 27-27
setting with one set for a
score. also posting good slats
in passing and spiking. Jordan

In spite ·o f separation
from family, Holmes

Neigler had a kill and Ashl_ey
Roush was 8-17 passmg w1th
a 6-6 night serving.
Southern won the first game
of the match in the reserve
game 15-14, but fell in the last
two 12-125 and 10-15. Adelle
Rice had eleven points for
Southern and .Bethany Vance
added eight.
·

staying at

the ¥ame .
do anything about it, I'm
"I ve been around this QB going to let him ride it out.':
Shockley said, "Next year
thing long enough to know
if we would have made a is still a long way away.
move sometime during that We'.re still trying to get a
game it c6uld have caused grasp on this year.''
some problems we don't
The friendship between
want to be dealing with," Greene and Shockley has
Richt said.
helped to keep a two-quar'To me, it's easier to ·put terback system from becomShockley in if Greene is ing a controversy the last
playing well."'
two seasons. even as Riehl
Already
proclaiming has VJavered between having
Shockley, a junior, the .a set plan for using
starter in 2005 , Richt said he Shockley or letting game
apologized for not using conditions determine the
both quarterbacks at South playing time.
Carolina.
''I' don't want to ever be
"I did te!l Shockley ' I' m perceived that we're in 4
sorry you didn't play,· panic mode or 'we're 'thinkwhich I was," Riehl said. "I ing Greene is not playing
told him 'When it's your good enough to win," Richt
day, you'll receive that same · said. "But if it's ·preset that
courtesy, that same. belief' at this series Shockley is in
because I do believe in him. _ the game, then that's just
He will be the starter next part of the plan. No one can
year, and if he struggles I'm misconstrue it as a lack of
not going to be too quick to confidence in Greene."
and lighu{ing with 2 1/2 min"It's w'et for you and wei
utes left. Buckeyes coach . for them," he said. "You bet- ·
John Cooper agreed to permit' ter be on your. fee.t and not be
the game to be called off after the guy that slips. The offi-.
his team lost a late onside cials do a good job of keepkick. Many fans called him a ing the balls dry. I assume
quitter for the decision.
they tarp their field and all
Ohio State hopes to tly by those kinds of tl)ings, so if
private charter to Raleigh on . you play through a driving
Friday afternoon, although rainstorm, you do. Whoever
.those plans 1nay be disrupted holds on to the ball better or
by weather reports over the makes the least mistakes is ·
next two or three days.
still going to win.'' .
"We're waiting to see if
Ohio
State
remained
there's any travel issues:" unbeaten. last week despite
fourth-quarter
Tressel said. "That doesn't three
change our preparation for turnovers, thanks to Mike
the game. It doesn't change Nugent's · ·ss-yard field goal
anythin~ other than printing as time e'xpired that gave the
out the Itineraries."
Buckeyes a 24-21 win ov~r
A year ago. Ohio State MarshalL
weathered three overtimes
Nugent said he didn't mind
before safety Will Allen sloppy weather as long as
stopped Wolfpack tailback there. wasn't gusting winds.
T.A McLendon inches short
"I don't mind wind as long
'
of the g9al line on the final as it's straight," he said.
play to preserve a 44-38 vicHawk said he didn't think a
·tory.
.
storm's powerful winds
Tressel said if bad weather would affect Nugent.
strikes during the game, both
"Nooge could probably
teams will just have to deal kick it through a hurricane,"
with it.
Hawk said. "''d trust him.''

Greeri seems to have
outrun past, Bt

osu, Bt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,tll('\(0..,•\td

11

,1)

111\l~'-.ll\\.~II'JJ\)J;(I(Ih

I

'OtiJ

'

SPORTS

Edwards makes secret visit to Mult?eny cOmmunity Center

· • Meigs beats Blue
Angels, falls to River Valley.
See Page 81 ·

bers of the national media.
enthusiastically. telling him
Among others, Ijdwards the GOP stood for "Grand On
spoke with Lenora Leifheit, Promises" but "Grounded On
POMEROY. Democratic parish nurse, Rev. Bob Performance';'' and that
vice-presidential candidate Robinson, Dolores Will and 'America should ·:carry Kerry
Sen.. John Edwards visited the ,young Laudermilt broth- Cause Kerry Cares."
the Mulberry Community ers, Roy, Ricky and Rusty.
The senator laughed and said,
Center
in ·
[&gt;omeroy
Edwards said he served on "hey, you' re a slog&lt;m writer."
Wednesday, 'but very few the board of an urban minWill
proudly showed
people knew about it.
istries project in hi~ home Edwards one of the blankets
The event was closed to the state of North Carolina, made by The Comfort Club . .
public, and occurred between which he said was similar to
"How many have you
Edwards' campaign stops in Coopera\ive Parish here in made so far?" he asked.
[&gt;arkersburg and Athens:
Meigs County.
"That's what I was going to
·"Tell JTle what you're going
"We did a lot of the same tell you," Will said. "!'his mornto do here," Edwards asked things your ministry is doing, .. ing, we .finished our 530th."
Rev. Keith Rader, who along Edwards said. "It's hard, and
"Good for you," Edwards said.
with his wife, Dee, welcomed you folks know that." .
Roy Laudermilt, ,14, told
the senator to the center.
Leifheit told Edwards that Edwards that God's Net is
Rader gave Edwards a brief government progr.uns are great, always there when he is hun-. · Democratic vice-presidential candidate Sen. John Edwards enters
tour of the Mulberry center, but do not meet all of the need. gry, needs clothing, supplies the Mulberry Community Center in Pomeroy Wednesday at about
which filled for 15-20 minutes
"It's a big job," Edwards said.
5:30 p.m. The senator made a secret visit here between tamPlease
see
Secret.
AS
paign stops in Parkersburg and Athens. (Tim Maloney/ photo]
with about two dozen memRobinson greeted Edwards
BY TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL'cOM

10

OBITUARIES

. ..

.

Page AS
·• Loretta Meier Beegle
~ Nancy J. VanMeter

'

..

INSIDE
• New Orleans offiCials
._J.Irge_geQpl&amp;.to prep for Ivan.
See Page A2
"' '

Democratic vice president candidate Sen. John ~dwards greets
a crowd Wednesday at West Virginia University-Parkersburg,
during the launch of his two-day Appalachia tour. Edwards. who.
is the running mate of presidential candidate John Kerry,
toured Parkersburg, W.Va. , Ravenswood , W.Va., Marietta and
Pomeroy before finishing Wednesday at Athens. Today, ~dwards
will speak in Portsmouth. (Jeremy Schneider/Photo)

The Meigs Board of Education takes a shot at using a bow and arrow to hit a bullseye on the archery

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS .

range at Meigs Intermediate School. From the left, Dan Perl&lt;o, ODNR officer, assisting Mark
Rhonemus, Victor Young, Scott Walton, Randy Humphreys and Roger Abbott. (Charlene Hoeflichjphoio)

Archery being introduced
into Meigs Local curriculum

Subscribe today.

992-2155

WEATIIER

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH .
HOEFLICH®MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Year•• .

.'

.

'

\

· Hurry In • S e I e ·c t ion Limited

ae1
.DetalloonPoceA7

INDEX
2 SECilONS -16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

'

.A3
84-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby
Obituaries

A3
A4
As

. Places to go

AS

Editorials

Sports

B1

Weather

A7

.© 2004 Ohio v~ Publlobln&amp; eo.

§0d~~ ­

/SJ§4-2004

nr1r1nnr1
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-- --

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· 810•• DOWI/110•• MDI fa
II% llri&amp;ll'f'*

.

POMEROY - A program
called "Archery: On Target
for Life" geared to improving self-esteem, attendance ·
and academic performance of
students will soon be included in the Meigs Local physical education curriculum..
Meigs Intermediate School
has been selected by the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR.). Division
of Wildlife, as one of 17 '
schools in Ohio for a pilot
program in archery. Kevin
Dixon, ODNR shooting
sports coordinator, described
the archery program as being
based on "sound educational
principles."
He ·outlined the archery
program for the Meigs Local
Board of Education at its
Tuesday night 'meeting and
then invited members to participate in shooting.
Archery is the fastest growing sport in America, according to Dixon, who noted how
participation in Kentucky
schools since staning in 2002

\l .. .j, I.

1900 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS

'

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\ld· ·,,~,

I · " •,

I 1(,.;.!:!:::.! Toll

I I"' I,-,\

h1'l'

,Ill,\ ,, \ ._

1-1:77-111•-~21:2

MllLISStA RussELL
MRUSSEL&gt;@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
- Democratic vice presidential hopeful Sen. John
Edwards began his whirlwind
bus tour of Appalachia
Wednesday hoping to win
voters in the battle-ground
states of Ohio and West
Virgi'nia.
Edwards began his tour at
the West Virginia UniverSity's
Parkersliurg campus.
On more than one occasion.
Edwards. brought those in the

BY TtM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Archery instructor Rebecca Moore · takes Superintendent
William Buckley thro1,1gh archery orientation. (Charlene
Hoeflich/photo)
"has inspired and motivated school; a place where those
students and in many cases not involved in any or many
extra-curricular activities,
turned their lives around."
"This program builds con- can have success.
fidence, it m,oti vates, and it
Please see Archery, AS
gives students ·a niche in

packed auditorium to their
feet with thunderous applause
with his attacks on the Bush
administration 's policies.
'There is one thing Bush
said during the Republican
National Convention that I
actually agree with - he
w.ant"s to be judged on his
record, .. Edwards told the
crowd. ··Well. he heeds to be
judged on his record. We have
live million people who have
lost their health· care benefits
during 'his administration. we
have -four million people in
Please see Edwards, AS

RACINE - Racine has
been left out of more than $1
million in . Appalachian
Regional, Commission grants
announced by Ohio Gov. Bob
1'aft.
The village had applied for
a $300.000 gram to help pay
for a new $1.6 million water

. plant. which is long-overdue.
Racine
t:lerk-Trensurer
David Spencer said there will.
be a second round of ARC
funding · announced · in
October. tiut was very disap.. pointed th'e village was not
included in the first round.
'"It's really sad." Spencer
said . '"What do you do·&gt;
. Please see Snag. As .

In celebra~on of Women's Health Month; Holzer Medical Center Communily Heoltf, and Wellness is proud to present thel,r 7th Annual

Girls Time .
Out
.,.,._women

.. II .. 1 I .II'

Edwards makes
his way ·through
battleground states

Racine water project
hits funding snag ·

An ....,, frw mclllet s, dollflltren, grunJmor/len, aunls, sislen,
and oH olrbe
iri O&lt;Hii¥o.l

I "-' , , I·''

"\\t\111\d.lll\,,•!tlltllltlolll

Sunday, September 26
2:00PM· 3:00PM -.Program
3:00PM" 4:30 PM- Health Fair

Topics diocuued will include food disorders and nulrition. Several displays will be on·hond as well as free heollh
screenings including non-lasting cholesterol and glucose fcir girls ages 10 and above. A parenl musl be present for
girls under 18 to participate in lhe screenings.. • .For mont inlormalioli, toR (74{)} 446-5679M
,-.,-::E~D~I~C:-A.,....,l,.-C=E:-N,..,.,T='"=E~R
TJ.s ~ n ~ h, lfw Y.b!wJ '1 l"ldfl s..x.n

"""' 10i o/ HJ.M. 1'ttv!rolton flt&gt;d l r.. ~. Ql...,

..

'

~ r# ~. AJoK

J1'W ~ h GPf,o C:0...,. ~ 5c.:&gt;olly

•

'

'

�'
..·

\

Page.A2

NATION

· The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September't6,

Ivan bears down on Gulf Coast
Hurricane Ivan made a slight tum north on a path that could bring it
ashore early Thursday at the Ala~ma-Mississippi line, near Mobile,
Ala. However, forecasters said that the slightest change in the storm
·track could change where Ivan ~m~s ashore by
hu
ofmiles.

MO.

•

.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) Federal regulators pr~posc;,d
Wednesday that, ~tarung m
200_7; all. vehicles . be
' equ1ppedw1th warmng ~~g~ts
telling drivers when thetr t1re
·
pressure is low.
• The rule would require ·
vehicles to have a yellow .
light that would illuminate
when the pressure on any one
of. the four tires was underinflated by 25 _percent o~ more.
· The National H1ghway
Traffic Safety Administration
said the proposal would likely cost up to $69.89 per vehicle, or a total of $ L1 billion
for the industry. But the
·agency said the requirement
.
.

•

.

'\"";~

N.C. _::- 1 /

ARK.

/

All tiniss listed are EDT ·

Atlantic
Ocean

70 "W
0

ZOOmi

E -

_§

0 200km
.•

Gulfof ·

Mexico
....,~-..

would save as'much as $L7
bill.ion in fuel and vehicle
mamtenan~e C&lt;?Sts.
DanZ1eltnski, a$pokesman
forthe. Rubber ~anufacturers
AssocJallon, sa1d lire makers
will protest the proposal
because it disagrees with set·
ting a flat rat.e of 25 percent
underinflation.
"For one vehicle that .might
be fine.,For another, it mi9,hl
not be, Z1ehnski swd. If
you want to make .a system
that warns people~ · you
should warn people before
th'e):'re in danger."
,
NHTSA said approximately 4 million vehides already
have .tire pressure monitoring
.

- Hurricane warning
- Tropical s.torm warning

Thursday, September 16,

2004

. Couple~

self-diagnosis
didn't cure. their S. T.D.

Public meetings

3214 or 1-740-949-2601.
tour of duty in Iraq as a chapSaturday,.Sept. 18
lain . There will be .special
POMEROY
Star
music by the Zion Choir.
· ~onday,Sept.20
.
Grange
#778
and
Star
Junior
Saturday, Sept. 25
RACINE - A recessed
DEAR ABBY "Gary" ~nd
year-old daughter, I was
meeting of . Raci ne Village Grange #878 will hold their · HARRISONVILLE - T,lte
were married two months ·
physically . and 1:erbally
Council wi,ll .be held at 7 p.m. fun night , hay ride aad Walter (Squib) and Edna
wiener
roast
beginning
at
(Oiler)
Gilmore
reunion
will
ago
..
For
our
honeymoon,
we
.
abused
by bolh of Ill) parat the muntc1pal bui !ding.
6:30 p.m. Everyone is invited be held at the, Harrisonville wok a· crui se to the eastern
ents. I · no longer live with
.MIDDLEPORT- A speFire Department lunch at Caribbean.
.
them. However. I try to have
Cial meepng ~f Middleport to attend.
POMEROY - The Meigs noon family and friends welOne week afte r our return. I .
a good relation ship with
VIllage Counc1l will be held
Dear
of Commerce come.
came down .with a yeast
them. They are the on ly supat 4 p.m. Monday for the pur- Chamber
"Membership Picnic" has
Abby
infection that I treated with
port system I have .
pose of awardmg the bid for been
canceled for · today
an over-the-co&gt;unter medicaI have no one except my
street paving.
because of weather. It was to
tion. A few days later, Gary
parents to watch my child.
Thesday, Sept. 21
be held at Pomeroy Golf
got what \Ve thought was a ·
but
I see them starting to ye ll
CHESHIRE - The Gallia Course.
J.
'
riday,
_
S
ept.
17
·
urinary
tract
infection
,
which
.
.
at
he
r. When I mention that
Meigs Community Action
POMEROY- A Women 's.
Thesday, Sept. 21
we
treittetl
with
lots
of
water
hke
we
d1d.
CONTAMI. ye lling is not good· for my·
Agency Board of Direciors
. retreat weekend will be held
MIDDLEPORT
will meet at 5 p.m. in the Brooks-Grant ,Camp Sons of at the Ohio Valley Christian ,i}nd cranberry juice. When NATED IN OHIO
daughter. they accuse 111e of
neither
of
our
conditions
DEAR.
OHIO.
Thank
you
Cheshire office.
·
being "overly protective.··
Union Veterans of the Civil . Church camp at Darwin ,
spare .~th~rs Can you tell me how to .deal
RUTLAND Rutland . War and the Maj . Daniel Friday and Saturday, spon- improved, we went to the for wantmg
Village Council will meet in McCook Circle Ladies of the sored by the Churches of doctor, who diagnosed us your unfortu~ate expenence. with thi s'' I .am still trying to
·
After ~eadtng your letter, I overcome the temper I develthe Co.uncil room at the G.A.R. will sponsor a Civil Christ of Southeastern Ohio. both with chlamydia.
We
were
·
shocked!
Gary
co!J(acted
the .Centers for
Rutland
Ciyil
Center. war presentation at 7:30p.m. Banquet at 5:30. Marty
.
Dtsease Control NatiOnal oped whi.le li ving with them.
Meetings have been changed at .the Riverbend Arts Council Stittsworth will be the main and I had both tested negat1ve STD .and AIDS Hotline ( 1_ - IN A BIND IN BATON
to the third Tuesday of e11ch in
Middleport.
Gregg speaker, there will be special for all STDs before we were 800-342- '2437). 1 was told ROUGE
month.
Pittenger of Columbus will music, workshops and skits. m.a trt ?d The nurse asked tf that chlamydia is NOT trans· . DEAR IT\ A BIND: Under
Saturday; Sept. 25
speak and give a slide presen- For more information contact we had been tn a hot tub mitt!:d by sitting in or on the no circumstances should your
REEDSVILLE
A . tation on Andrew's Raid of Donna Hartson, 992-6168; rec~ ntly, al)d _we rephed that rim of a hot tub, nor by any parent&gt; baby-\it your ch ild .
hunters safety course .will be the Civil War, better known .Ann Lambert, 992-5950; or we .d spent man~ hours tn hot other inanimate object. It is It' s time for vou to find
held at the Forked Run .as the Great LoctJmotive Kathryn Johnson, 992-5195 . tubs on !he crutse sh1p. The transmitted through genital another habv siner' and to
Sportsmen Club, Sept. 25 and Chase which occurred in
build another stipport system.
POMEROY
John nurse tpen mlonned us that - contact.
26 . Hours p Saturday are Georgia and resulted in the Stephen Lee, a performing . chl am~dta 1s a bactena, and
Start
by reaching out to felTwo diseases that •'potenfrom 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on first Congressional Medal of songwriter, wi II be at bactena love warm, motst tially'' can be spread in and low church members . other
Sunday, 2 p.m . tQ 6 p.m. For Honor to be given to a Common (]round on Main envuonme~t s. - ltke hot around swimming pool s and single 'parents and wntempoaddrt.ional information, call Jackson County, Ohio sol- Street in Pomeroy for a pro- tubs. She sa1d 1t was the mast, hot tubs - although it has raries. You. could abo be nef1 t .
740-985-9817 after 5 p.m. dier. The meeting is open to -gram of couqtry gospel and ltkely source of th1 s d1 sease NOT been well.documented · by attending a paret1ting cl ass
The course is sponsored by the public.
·
blues at 8 p.m . Le s Hayman in our case.
. . - are trichomonia sis (a para- with other voung mothers.
the For-ked Run Sportsmen
We co ntacted the cnnse site) and molluscum c.onta- There you V.ill icarn about
is pastor. The doors open at 7
Club.
p.m.
line and told them that their giosum (a virus), which can child developme nt and meet
hot tubs were not clean and also be transmitted from other si ng!e parenh who are
Sunday, Sept. 19
RACINE
The asked them to reimburse us unclean towels or billhin·g struggling with issues similar
to yours.
Gracemen will be singing at for the cost of our prescnp- suits.
tions.
The
man
I
spoke
to
The
most
importa~t
thing
Dear Abby is written by
the
First
Baptist
Church
at
7
Saturday, Sept. 18 _
refused
and
accused
me
of
your
letter
illustrates
to
me
i.s
Van Buren , also
Abigail
RACINE - The Fin~ fam - p.m .
. Thursday, Sept. 16
lying.
how important it is for people · known as Jeanne Phillips,
ily reunion will be held at
R.ACINE -Racine Lodge noon at Star Mill Park,
I know you can't help me to be properly diagnosed, and was founded by her
164, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at the Racine .
with the cruise line, Abby, rather than treating them- mother, Pauline, Phillip~·.
.
hall. Work in the EA degree.
but I want to warn your read- selves with over-the-counter Write
Dear Abby at
F 'd S
17
Sunday, Sept. 19 ·
· . Refreshments.
RACINE- The Oscar and
rJ ay, ept.
ers about public hot tubs·. remedies.
www.DearAbby.
com or P.O.
LONG BOTTOM - A Perhaps it will save others
POMEROY - The Meigs Charles Reed Hysell reunion revival
DEAR
ABBY:
.
!
am
a
24Box 69440, Los AnJJ.eles~ CA
will be held at Mount
.
.
County Retired Teachers . will be held at 12:30. p.m. at Olive Church through Friday from contracting a disease year~old single mother of a 3- 90069.
. Association will 'meet for a Star Mill Park. Take a dessert
noon luncheon at the Trinity or covered dish. There will be beginning .at 7 p.m. nightly.
Evangelist David Crowell
Church. The state president white elephant sale after the from
Mich. will be preach- ·
of ORTA will speak on cur- dinner
·
Th
·11 b
· 1
rent issues for retirees. 'Also
POr-.:fEROY
Zion.;:,(~?;· in ere ~~
e spew!
there will be a program of Church on Harrisonville,
g g.
POMEROY - A report entrance to the fairgrounds. ha's ·had a sacred meaning .
music by the Treble Makers Route 143, will be celebratthat
Hemlock Grange had He also recognized Fair Other detail s · presented
of ing its annual homecoming. .
barbershop . quartet
taken first place on their Board xembers who helped included · that bees wings
· Gallipolis. Members are to Sunday. school is at 9:30 a.m.
exhibit
at the Meigs County with the prbject.
: bring in school supplies for worsh1p hour at 10:30 a.m.;
. Monday, Sept. 20
move 11.400 time s a minute,
:: donation to God:s Net Yout~ potluck dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Barbara
Sargent will Fair was given at the recent . It was announced that Utah is known as the Beehi ve
Ministries which will distrib- Tony Morris of the. Pomeroy observe her 85th birthday meeting of the group.
Pomona Grange will meet Stille, and in a hive In a hive
'" ute them to children. Guests Church of Christ will speak Monday. Cards may be sent
Thank you notes were sent Friday night at Racine. there is· a queen. drones and
· are welcome. Phone in reser- at 2 p.m. He will be showing to her at 39760 Sumner Road, to Fred Johnson , Scott Members reported iII were
50. to 60,000 worker bees.
vations to either 1-740-992- pictures and telling about his Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ·
Needs , and the family of Frances Goeglein and 1\1 uri
There was a qttiz on honey
Edna Clark. Master Rosalie Bradford.
and bees and to conclu&lt;Je her
Story installed the new offiKim · Romine, lecturer,
cers. and Roy Grueser gave used as her program for program. handout·s tll; honey
the legislative report. .
September "National Honey were given to everyone.
October's meeting will .be
Jim Fry thanked everyone Month." She said that bees
who helped . get the light' .go back to the 40th Century preceded by a chili ;md pota ·su'bsctibe today ··992-2155
.fixed ar. the springs near the B.C. and noted that honey to soup supper.

Homecomings/
Reunions

Revivals

.

Hemlock Grange takes first at fair

8"
·
arthdays

A man walks past the boarded-up Kringle's Christmas

&amp; Holiday ShorJPe in St. Pete Beach, Fla.;

Wednesday afternoon .. The plywood at the store contains a spray-paintlld sign bearing Santa's
naughty list, including Hwricane Charley and Hurricane Frances with Hurriance Ivan waiting to
.be checkflll off..(AP Photo/St. Petersburg Times, Dirk Shadd)

·

e.rve
g

·Ad,
. ve
.

Space

to be apal1 of
Community Health Proud
· your life. ···
Fair scheduled at
Holzer Wyngate
Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

GALLIIPOLIS
- A
Community Health Fair, in
observance of National
Assisted Living Week and
Women's Health Month, will
be held at Holzer Wyngate
Gallipolis, located at 300
Briarwood
Drive
. in
Gallipolis, on Saturday from
9 a.m: until 12 rioon.
Free and open to the public, t)te Fair will feature several displays and health screenings, including non-fasting
cholesterol and glucose,
blood pressure, bone density,
body fat analysis and _.electro
cardiograms.
Displays and representil·
tives from the community
.wiJl participate and have
information on subjects .such
as advanced directives, hearing, nutrition, therapy. stress,
dental health, cancer, h~art
health, tobacco, ·and home
CiU'e. A special display enti-

r
I

•

tied "Ask the Pharmacist"
will also be available; to assi st .
individuals who may have
questions concerning medications.
After the Health Fair, the
public is invited to attend an
Qle· Car Club Cruise-In starting at 2 p.m. and ending at 5
p.m. at Holzer Wyngate
Gallipolis. Country music
will be provided by "Blue
Lightening". Those who wish
to attend are reminded to
bring a lawn chair for the outside event.
The public is invited and
encouraged to attend this free
health fair. Refreshments will
be provided. for more infor'
mation, please call Holzer
Wyngate Gallipoli s at (740)
441-9633, or the Holzer
Medical Center Community
Health
and
.Wellne ss
Department at (140) 4465679.

Show appreciation to your fair buyer....
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
· ' Please see Dave or Brenda at The Daily Sentinel, 11fCourt Street, Pomeroy,
_or call992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
'

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2 Col. x 5"

$82.00
1 CQI. X 2" -

.Thank·YOU

2 Col. x 4"

'$65.60

1 Col. x 3" , $24.60

$16.40

Chester Daughters of America meet

j

•

systems.
•
The proposed rule tvould
require the systems when a
vehicle is first sold, but il
wouldn't require the s ' t
. n ems
to work when the t1res ~
later . replaced . .NHTSA sa1d
most systems w1ll conltf!ue to
work, but it's not possible for
automakers to anticipate the
vari'ety of replacement tires.
ihat owners would · put on
their vehicles.
Congress ordered NHTSA
tO require tire pressure moni,
tors as part of its response to
the Firestone tire recall,
which began in August 2000.

•

Community Calendar

-Clubs and
:organizations

Authority hasn't decided
whether the machine will be
allowed to operate anywhere
in the state.
The AWOL machine is
being marketed as low-calorie and low-carbohydrate,
and "It's not suph'osed .to give
r.ou a hangover,. Spano said.
'It's a panacea. Ex-cept that it
still gets you drunk if you
overdo it, and it's ·easy to do,
and it's being promoted in a
way that looks like 'they' re
trymg to entice young people
to use it."
Police
Chief · Joseph
Kfzeminski of the village of .
Port Chester· noted that the
AWOL Internet site call~ the
machine "the ultimate party
toy." .
The Westchester bill is similar to one intrOduced in
Suffolk County by Legislator
Jon Cooper, who said 'called
the AWOL machine "danger'
ous to a person's health.''
"It can lead to increased
drunken driving," he said,'
"and they' re clearly targeting '
a younger audience."

.

BY·THE BEND

:a

Government proposal would require tire ·
pressure indicators in all vehicles by 2007
I

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Page.A3

Church services

: Alcohol vaporizer too dangerous - or not dangerous enough
. WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. calories, carbs or much of a
. (AP) - These are not good hangover. · Th.e machine
days for the people who are pumps pressunzed oxygen
trying to sell New York on a through a hose over a small
mac~i~~ that lets yo~ in~ale. a amount of liquor iii a canister
. marum mstead of drinkmg 1t. held by, the customer, who
. . First, they had to use fruit sucks up the vapor.
juice. rather than plcohol at
. Baskinger said he ~nt back
the b1g debut at a Manhattan h1s $3,695 machme on
nightspot. Then officials in Monday, four days after it
two .suburban counties was delivered and be and his
announced they woulq try to staff eagerly tried it out. "I'm
ban it. But worst of all, the · a gadget guy, but you can't .
ftrst bar_.to buy tJ:le ma~hine ' get excited about this thing,."'
has sent 11 back, d1sappomted he sa1d.
·
: by the lack of a "buzz."
Over the weekend after
''They shouldn't ~aste charging people $10 ~ pop,
th~ir breath t11;!ng ~o outlaw he decided it wasn 't going to
th1s machme, sa1d Steve catch on.
· Baskinger, owner of Bask's
The bar owner spoke not
Bar and Grill, in West long
after Westchester
. Paterson, N.J. "Y?u can't get County Executive Andrew
~nk. Yo~ don t get a~y- · Spano unveiled a bill that
thmg fr~m 1t. It.takes 20 mm- would ban AWOL and anyutes .~o mhale a quarter of a thing like it.
·
shot...
In a county plagued· by
The alcohol without liquid underage drinking, "We don't
(AWOL) machine vaponzes need something else that gets
. - booze . so customer~ . ~an people drunk," said Spano at
:'lljnhale 1t rather than dnnk 11.
a news conference in the
The ma)l:~rs tout it as a way county seat of White, Plains.
to get a buzz without the The New York State Liquor ,

·I

2004

New Orleans officials urge ·people tQ prep for Ivan
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Ivan was centered about 125
With 135-mph Hurricane · miles south of the Alabama
Ivan'closing in with frighten- · coast and was moving north
ing intensity, this floOd-prone at 14 mph. The stonn has
city scrambled Wednesday to now killed at least 70 people·
get people out of harm's way, in all.
puttmg the frail and elderly in
Of the roughly 2 million
the cavernous Loui siana who fled the path of the
Superdome and urging others storm, often in .bumper-to·
to move to higher floors in · bumper caravans on high. tall buildings.
ways turned into one, way
Ivan made a slight turn evacuation routes. l.2million
north on a path that could were from greater New
.bring it. ashore early Orleans. a city particularly
Thursday at the Alabama- vulnerable to hurricanes
Mississippi line, near Mobile, befau se it sits below sea
Ala., but forecasters said level ,
between . the
everyone from New Orleans Mississippi River and Lake
to the Panhandle should be Pontchartrain .
w~rried. ~ven the tiniest
Ivan's II th-hour turn may
adjustment m the stonn track have spared this bowl-shaped
could, change where Ivan city a direct hit, but offic1als
H. Ivan
comes ashore by hundreds of . warned that the levees and
miles.
pumping stations tliat nor- tloor in a good hotel, with a
The effects from Ivan could mally hold back the water good bar."
Frail, elderly and sick resibe seen across the Gulf Coast may not be enough to protect
dents unable to get out were
several hours before the the city.
storm's expected arrival; The
"If we turn up dead ·tomor· moved to the 72,000-seat
churning surf, ominous row, it's my fault,". said Jane Loujsiana Superd9me, where
clouds, swaying traffic lights Allinder, who stayed stub- 200 cots supplanted the
and escalating winds were all bornly behind at her daugh- dome's us'ual tenant, the New
the reminders some p~ople ter 's . French Quarter doH Orleans Saints.
LuLinda Williams wept
needed to take cover. The · shop to keep an eye on her
after dropping off her bedridstonn also claimed its first ·cat.
deaths in the Unite\! States,
Police began clearing pea- . den grandmother, who is on
SJ?inning off tom~does that pie off the streets, enforcing a oxygen, at the Superdome.
Only one family member was
killed two peopltt m Flonda. 2 p.m. curfew.
Ot~ers were trapped inside . "I think it's safe to say we allowed to stay with each
·thetr damaged homes. ·
will have t1ooding in . this patient, so Williams left her
"We have a report from a · city," said Mayor Ray Nagin . daughter.
"I thought they'd let the
. \lepurx th~t it looks ,like a war However, he contradicted a
family
stay With them,"
zone, sa1d shenff s spokes- statement from .his emerWilliams
said. "Where are
gency preparedness director
. woman Ruth Sasser.
Hl!rricane-force
winds that the city needed at least the rest of us supposed to go
extended· out 105 miles from 10,000 body bags to handle ·now? How are we supposed
to know she's OK?"
the Category 4 storm, ·mean- possible drowning victims.
•
The city decided against
Thousands .of tourists were
ing a large swath of the Gulf
Coast could get slammed . believed stranded in New opening the Superdome to
with a storm surge of 10 to 16 Orleans. along with 100,000 able-bOdied people. The last
· feet and up to 15 inches of mostly inner-city residents time that happened, during
rain. After reaching land, without cars. The mayor Hurricane 'Georges in 1998,
Ivan threatened to stall over advised them to resort to the. 14,000 refugees nearly
the Sout~east a':'d southern ··'vertiCal · evacuations," suli- did more dan1age than the
~ppalachmns, wtth a patengesting they take shelter m storm itself. Countless televittal for as much as 20 inches buildings taller than two ·sto· sions, seat cushions and bar
of ram.
ries. If that is not possible, he stools were stolen, and work· Ivan's monster waves said, they should go into an ers spen( months cleaning
some up to 25 feet - were attic and take equipment with graffiti off the walls.
As the storm drew near,
already destroying homes them that would let allow
along the Florida coast them to cut ~rough the roof streets along Mississippi's
Gulf Coas\ were all but
Wednesday.
Twelve-foot and get out.
Rick Pfeifer, a salesman deserted, and · homes and
waves boomed ashore at Gulf
Shores, . Ala., eroding the from Washougal, Wash ., was businesses, including its 12
beach .. A buoy about 300 stuck in New Orleans with no floating casinos, were boardmil~s south of Panama City
flights out and no cars to rent ed up. Winds howled across
· reg1stered waves·over 34 feet . after arriving earlier this . Louisiana's bayous · with
· high.
. .. · .
. week for a National Safety enough force to topple trees
"We're leaving today. All Congress convention. His and knock out power.
this is going under," surfer storm rations included as . "We heard a loud par,. and
Chuck Myers said along the many chips, pretzels and bot- I thought, not already,' said
Harold Plaisance, who had
beach at Gulf Snores. "We tied water as he could buy.
· surfed it all day yesterday. It
"I'm going to ride it out in. been sitting on ·the porch
.
the high-ground area of the watchil}g the storm in the
was glorious."
At 5 p.m. EDT Wednesday, city," he said wryly. "Fourth fishing village' of Lafitte.

'
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·The paily Sentinel

t

·'

..

Dave. ·• ilftHida·
·:
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·

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Sentinel
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~---------~-----------------..1-.---~--~~~·~·-·~ --·· ~·-· ~-~-~·--~-· ..,,_-~ ·~y---~-.._.......,-

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CHESTER - At a recent alistic form with the pledges
meeting of Chester Council to 'the American and Christian
323 Daughters of America, flags, singing of the National
Charlotte Grant accepted her Anthe.m, and the Lord 's
'commission as deputy and Prayer.
Erma Cleland as trustee for
.The meeting was followed
one year.
with a tribute to grandparents
During the meeting con- with readings including "10
ducted by Deloris Wolfe,a· · Reasons for Grandparents,"
Tribute
for
report on the state session was "A
given by Esther Smith. It was Gralldma/Away With Words,"
noted
that
Charlotte "Grandparents Hair White,"
VanMeter has been hosptal- and
"Grandparents
are .
ized, and Margaret Amberger Forgotten." All were presentis now at th6 Overbrook ed cookies.
Those present were E'nna
Center in Middleport. Cards
were read from Mary Joo Cleland, Gary Holler, Opal
Barringer, Joann Ritchie and Hollow, Esther Smith, JoAnn
Helen and Chet Taylor.
Ritchie, Doris Grueser.
It w'as announced thai Charlotte Grant, Helen Wolf,
inspection will be held at the Mary Holter,. Laura Mae
first meeting, in October and Nice, Deloris Wolfe, Mary Jo
members were reminded to Barringer, Jean Welsh, Julie
wearwhite.Asilentauctionwill Flemming, Thelma White ,.
be held at the next meeting.
Sandy White, Inzy Newell,
Borders and Artwork
,. The ~eeting opened in ritu- Kathryn Bau'm.

'

"

2·Col. x 3"

$49.20

2 Col. x 2"

$32.80

&lt;

...................... _..... ..,""""'

�••

OPINION -

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

•

W'Nw.mydailysentlnel.com

'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

..

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich .
General Manager-News Editor
.

Congress shall make no /(uv respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
· people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
. the Govi!rnment for a ·redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

9/11
All we ask for us is peCl[£ ·
Dear Editor:
On Sept. II it was three .years since we were attacked by
terrorists. Over 2000 Americans died on 'that terrible day ;
Americans who were at peace with the world and did not want
or ask for what Iiappened to them. .
The terrorists brought death and war to us and our fellow
Americans. They did not bend or break us, cause us to be
· afra id, have fear, change our ways or lifestyle. .
Thev did ca use us to realize that there are those who hate
and fear us and are willing to die for what they want. They
have used their own faith in God to believe they have the
moral right to kill those that do. not agree with them.
By killing us they believe they will right their wrongs, both .
those that are real and those wrongs that they believe are real.
They hoped to fill our hearts, minds and souls1with such fear ·
that we would bow to the1r demands.
.
But, like others in our past they found out they were wrong,
that we will not quit, give up and we will not go away .from
what we know and believe to be right for us and the rest of the
world. They have found out that they can never and will never
kill our hopes and dreams.
We will fight and wage war with all those who caused 9/11
to happen. They will be caught and justly punished and no one
anywhere will' be above or beyond the law or justice. We will
' indeed find and punish those who helped and supported the
terrorists.
We did not want or ask for this. All we ask for us is peace.
We ask it for us and the rest of the world. The American peo- .
pie have always done so. Justice is what we have asked for
and justice we shall have.
All those who died on 9/11 and all those who've died in our
military forces are true American heroes. Let us ask God for a
quick end to this war and help all of us move forward into the
future filled with unending hope and peace.
May God grant that those things come true and may God
bless America and the American people.
David Edwards
Middleport

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
'

·. Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted,

-The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Poll.cy
Our main concern in all stortas is to be
accl1rate. tf you know of an error In a
slory, call the newsroom at (740) 992·
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Thursday, September 16,

2004

York Time,, the Kerry campaign passed out a memo to
reporters that said. ·The reason Iraq is an issue in this
campaign is NOT over the
question of whether it was
right to hold Saddam
.Hu ssein accountable . The
reason is because of the way
George Bush went to war.
making the wrong choices
and weakening the United
States al home and ov&lt;;rseas.'
I think one of the reasons
polls show that Bush leads
Kerry on issues of leadership
and on who's best to handle
Iraq - 53 percent to 37 percent in the latest Washington
Post/ ABC poll - is Kerry
has left it unclear whether he
would have fou ght the war at
all.
He has horribly confused
everyone- and suffered for
it - by saying last month
that, even knowing that
Hussei n lacke.;l weapons of
mass· destruction, he sti II
would have voted to authorize Bush to go to war in
October 2002.
Yet. he's also borrowed the
line from former riv~l Howard
pean, an opponent of the
2002 resolution, that it was
'the wrong war, in the wrong
place at the wrong time.'
Personally, I can't believe
Kerry would have voted for
the reso lution if he had
known WMD didn't exist.
He voted against the 1991
Gulf War, after all, when
Hu ssein had unmistakably
invaded Kuwait. His credibility suffers when he says
he would have voted with
Bush.
But almost certainly, he
would not actually have
gone to war, !?referring to
allow U.N. weapons inspec~
tors to wander around Iraq
for nionths. When · they
found nothing, he would
have pulled U.S. troops out
of the region - if, he'd put
them there at all.
And after that, .he would
have had a hard time resisting French, Russian and
Germ;m pressure to lift economic sanctions against Iraq

·Loretta Meier Beegl~

and remove inspectors. And
then, if Hussein wished, he
could have resumed his
WMD programs unimpeded
by anyone .
And then, if he wished,
Hussein could have passed
the weapons along to terrorist groups. •This, fundamen- · ·
tally, was the scenario outlined by Sen. John McCain,
R-Ari z., in his speech to the
GOP convention - a more
effective linking of Iraq to
terror than · even Bush has
put forward.
But whatever might have
happened 'in the past, what's
important is what each candictate would do in the
future.
Even thou gh Bush - mistakenly, I think- has resisted raising U.S. troop levels,
it's clear that hi s emphasis is
on seeing through a successful transfer of power to
. Iraqis and suppression of
resistance by insurgents.
· Kerry h,as said on some
occasions that he would
abide by the judgments ·or
U.S. military commanders
on troop levels.
But his emphasis' has more
often been on withdrawal. In
.May, he said he would withdraw troops 'sooner than
Bush would.' On Aug . 8, he
said .he would 'significantly'
reduce the number of troops
' within six months ' o( taking
office. On Aug. 9, he said he
hoped to begin withdrawals
'within a year.'
Lately, he's said, ' My goal
would be to try to get them
home in my first term' and to
begin withdrawing 'as soon
as possible.'
What's missing from
· Kerry 's speeches is any declaration that 'we've got to
win ihis war' or 'we'll stay
'til we prevail.' Americans
may be 'dubious about
whether the Iraq war was
'wonh it' - but they certainly don't want to lose it.
That's why they trust Bushmore than Kerry. .
(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call,
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

'My job tonight is an easy
one: to present to you one of
this
nation's
authentic
heroes, one of this party's
best-known . and greate.st
. leaders - and a good friend.
... (Sen.) John (K,erry) has
worked to strengthen our
military.'- Sen. Zell Miller,
D-Ga., March I, 200 I.
Evidently, I don't understand my country anymore.
In the America I knew, those
fools wearing Purple Heart
Band-Aids
during
the
Republican
convention
wouldn't simply have damaged their candidate's election · chances, they'd have
been lucky not to have some
veteran wipe the smirks off
their faces while the· cops
stood studiously by.
' They jest at scars,' wrote
Shakespeare; 'that never felt
a wound.'
But the Band-Aid bunch,
see, belonged, to th~ TV
Patriot Party, formerly
known as the GOP. ·whose
leaders hold that televised
symbolism trumps reality
every time. I doubt anybody
wore Band-Aids outside
Madison Square Garden .
Party leaders ordered them
· removed, Even so, they
struck me as· symptomatic of
the Kerry campaign's pOOr
respOnse to the elaborately
financed· Republican propaganda machine. Will . they
ever quit acting surprised? .
In the worltl of facts, the
misnamed
Swift
Boat
Veterans for Truth smear
faili~d its first contact with
reality. Never mind their ties
to Texas Republicans who
have made false charges·
against Bush family oppOnents in past campaigns.
Most questioning Sen. John
Kerry's . vl!lor never served

·.

POMEROY- Lor~tta Meier Beegle, 95, Pomeroy, passed
away on Sept. 15, 2004, at Arlington Nursing Home in
Newark, Ohio.
·
Beegle was born on Feb. 17,1909, in Pomeroy, daughter of
the late Philip and Sophia Graber Meier. She was a graduate
of. Pomeroy High School, and
founding member of the
Meigs County Senior Center. She also worked at the Center
and was a member of its board. She was also member of the
Ohio Hist9rical Society, the Catholic Women's Club and
Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
·
· In addition to her parents, she' was· preceded in death by her
husband, Theodore Beegle; sisters, Frances Meier Gloeckner,
Kathryn Meier JGllinger, Lillian Meier Gress, and Elizabeth
Meier Hepp; brothers, Philip Meier Jr., Willard Meier,. Joseph
Meier and Anthony Meier; granddaughter, Julia Ann Fisher;
and sons-in-law, Paul Huston and John Fisher.
.
She is survived by daughters Shirley Huston of Syracuse
and Rita Fisher of Hebron; and a son Theodore "Ted" (Linda)
Beegle II, of Worthington. Also surviving are a grandaughter,
Aimee Carmin ; grandsons, Daniel Huston, David Hu ston,
Douglas Huston, Theodore Beegle III, Nathaniel Bet;gle,
Carson Beegle and John Christopher Fisher; great-grandchildren,. Jonathan and Rachael Carmin, Owen aeegle and Taitlyn
Beegle; and several nieces and nephews .
Services will be held at II a.m. on Friday, Sept. 17, 2004, at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Officiating will be Rev. Father
Walter Heinz, and burial will follow in Sacred . Heart
Cemetery. Frienos may call on Thursday, Sept. 16, from 2-4
p.m'. and 6-9 p.m. al Fisher .Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Vigil
and rosary service will be held at 8:30p.m.
.
Memorial contributions may be made to: Hospice of Central
Ohio, 1985 Coffman Road, Newark, Ohio, 43055, or Sacred
Heart Building Fund, 161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio, ·
45769.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.ti sherfuneralhomes.com.

a

'

CLIFTON- Nancy J. VanMeter, 83 of Clifton. W.Va. died
Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2004 at the Pleaant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center.
Born on Sept. 12, 1921 at Hartford, she was the daughter of
the late Harley E. Powell, Sr. and Dorothy Chapman Powell.
She was a housewife, and a member of the Clifton United
Methodist Church, the Order of Eastern Star, Mason Chapter
157 •.and the American Legion Auxiliary, Smith-Capehart Post
· 140, New Haven.
·
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her
hu sband, Elmer " Potsie" Van Meter, and bro.thers, Bruce
Marshall Powell and Harley E. Powell, Jr.
·
Survivors incluide . sons. and daughers-in-law. Elmer E. Jr:
and Barbara Van Meter, Leesage, W.Va.; Randy and Narsa .
VanMeter of Point Pleasant; a daughter and son-in-law,
Jennifer and Edward Harris, Gallipolis ; and sisters and hroth- .
ers-in-law, Oeorgianna and Harold Escue of Teays V11lley,
W.Va. and Isabella and Robert Greer of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Funeral servives will be held at II a.m. Friday at the
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home with the Rev. Doreen
Adkins officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens near Point Pleasant, W. Va. Friends may call at the
funeral home 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday.

Local Briefs
Tractor pull set ·

TUPPERS PLAINS - A chicken dinner will P,e served at
the VFW in Tuppers Plains starting ~t noon Sunday. The cost
is $6.50 for adults, and $3.50 for chtldren. Carryout ts avmlable.

.Homecoming canceled
. POMEROY-"A homecoming at the Old Bethel Free Will
Baptist Church scheduled for Sunday has been pOStponed
until a later date. That date wtll be announced.

·. For the record
Sentenced
POMeROY - Robert H. Knaggs II of Pomeroy was sentenced in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to a year m pnson
for grand theft. He also mus~ pay $1 ,000 restitution to his victim.
Thomas Eugene King of Pomeroy was sentenced to five
years' probation after pleading guilty to two counts of break·
ing and entering. A sentence of two years m pnson was suspended. King must complete the SEPTA program at
·Nelsonville, pay $500 restitution, and complete 500 hours of
. community service.

[)issolutions ·

-

--·

~

-~ ·

- •

~··

POMEROY - A number of marriages were dissolved. in
Meigs County Co~mon Pleas Sourt: Ch~lotte L. Gibbs of
MiddlepOrt from Rtchard E. Gtbbs of MtddlepOrt; Janet F.
McClelland of Rutland from Roger D. McClelland of
Rutland; Sarah Renae Marcinko from Shawn Amos Marcinko
of Reedsville ; Carl Michael Teagarden of Albany from Ruth
Judieth Teagarden of Athens; and Brya~ K. . Holley of
Middleport from Karen D. Holley of Reedsvtlle.
..
Also, Vanessa Kay Jacks of MiddlepOrt has filed 11 petitiOn
for dissolution of marriage to Charle~ V. Jacks Sr. of Pomeroy.

from Page A1

Suggested skate park a
positive idea, officials said

Archery

Edwards

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses have been granted in
Meigs County Probate Court to Patrick D!lvis Magee, 29,
Albany, and Sheila Lynn Turner, 34, Albany; Nick Roscoe
Blackburn Jr., 21, Long Bottom, and Crystal Dawn Lockhart.
19, Long Bottom; and Maithew Adam Metheney, 24, Rutland,
.
and Heather Michelle Ferrell, 22, Rutland.

coming. So we had kind of a
crash day to . get thin~;s
ready."
Secret serv icem·en went
through the building twice
bei'ore the senator arrived, '
and Mulberry Avenue was
blocked by Ohio Highway
Patrol cars during the visit.
Edwards arrived at about
5:30 p.m .. and then "l'as out
of .the building .by. 6 p.m.
Then , his campaign bus silt
out front for about an hour. as
he . sat inside and was inter· viewed by members of the
• national media.
"'We got a littl e national
publicity,"
Rader
said.
"That's all right."
over into better attendance
and other aspects of education-:"
"It provides another opportunity for students," added
Rusty
Bookman .
Intermediate school princi . pal.
. The matter of safety precautions in place was pointed
out repeatedly during the presentation by .Dixon and other
. ODNA officers attending the
!Jleeting. It was also noted
. thai instructor training is
required for teachers and that
a few In Meigs Local have .
completed the training and
several others are now taking
it.
Donated
·, to
the
lnrermediate School to get
the archery program underway have been II bow s, 5
bullseye targets, a supply of
arrows, and an arrow-resistant net placed behind the targets. The range , set up as a
ponion of the 9lass time.
requires use of half of the
gym.

'

Celebratiiln spedo/
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I

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Serving yo·u since 1946 with
Quality Prescription ·Service
at Competitive Prices.
We Honor -Most Third Party
Prescription Plans

Tuppers Plains Fire Department, Inc.
4:00 - 8:00 p.m. September 25, 20~4
at the Fire House on Main Street

••

four grams to cover the $1.6
million construction cost.
One already is in place : a
$375,000 hsue 2 grant from
the Ohio Public Works
Commission .
Spencer said the vi II age is
willing to borrow a portitm of
rhe money. but needs granh
to pay for a majority of it.
Otherwise. Racine ·resident '
will he paying astronomical
water·bi li s.
'·We're r~ady to. starl construction,'' he said. "All we
need is the money."
·
The Racine project is althe
lop of the priority li't of the
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development Distri\=t. The
district has a good record of
attaining funds. and Spencer
said when Racine wa., placed
at the top of the list. he
expected the ARC gran I to Qe
approved.
. In stead. four other communities were awarded: Coal
Grove in Lawrence Cou nty
got $183.000 for a sewer
plant improvements. Martins
Ferry in Belmont County got
$200.000 for a new surgical
center, Marietta got $415.665
·for equipmen t for a new surgical center, and Beaver in
Pike County ot $300.000 to
install a new water storage .
tank.

for school, "or just somebody
to talk to."
" It helps to have somebody
to talk to, doesn't it""
·Edwards,.said.
"Yes. it does." Laudermilt
Justin McCoy, 13, jumps off of the ledge, over make-s hift said.
wooden stairs while his friends watch Tuesday at the vacant lot
Rader found out Tuesday
on Court Street. (ian McNemar/photo)
afternoon that Edwards
might be visiting. '
"They called at 2 p.m., and
. by 6 p.m. they called back
and sa'id it was canceled.
Then, at 2 p.m. today, they
called and said they were
park will be handled by. CIA
IAN McNEMAR
.IMCNEMAR®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
(Concrete In America), a skate
park construction company
'GALLIPOLIS More based in Meigs county. Bruce
than a I 00 residents, skaters Martin, owner .o f CIA · and
from PageA1
and parents
met with Skatopia skate park in Meigs,
Gallipolis City Parks and came to the meeting, held at the
Recreation officials Monday GallipOlis Municipal Building, ' "This is the greatest thing
.evening to discuss the possi- to meet officials and parents to happen in schools for a
bility of building a skate park and to speak about the project.
long time. It brings a sense of
for local s·katers. Officials
The project can be paid for in belonging, a venue suitable
welcomed the proposal and
four
installments, which will for all students, where they
plan to donate land for the
allow
funds to be met more · don't have to be an athlete to
skate park as long as funding
conveniently,or.ganiz~rs accomplish because all stuneeds are met.
explained.
The
project
will total dents can shoot this bow."
"It's a J?OSitive thing," said
between
$100,000
$150;000.
Dixon gave the history of
Bill Jenkms, GallipOlis City
Residents. skaters and par- the archery program in
Manager. "Organization of
their plan for funding the pro- ents will be working together Kentucky schools and told of
in the coming months to devel- the success which fed up to
ject is important now."
op
a plan for the funding. the biggest school archery
The site for the proposed skate
Anyone
interested in helping event in the country, an
park will be near the GallipOlis
with the project, contact Lenny Olympic-style competition.
City Pool, ofticials said. .
Construction of . the skate Poage at (740) 441-9630.
"Once this program gets
started here, the enthusiasm
Health aare is another hotly for archery · will spread like
debated issue, and Edwards wildfire," said Dixon.
,
Dr. John Costanzo. supersaid he and Kerry want qual,
intendent
of the Athensfrom PageA1
ity ·health care available to
Meigs
Educational
.Service.every single American, espeCenter,
concurred
with
poverty and tax breaks for cially veterans.
Dixon's
appraisal.
"This
"Best I cari tell , the
big corporations that outoffers every child a chance
source jobs to other coun- President's health care plan for success and that carries
for the past four years is
tries /'
·
The outsourcing of jobs 'pray you don't get sick.'" he
·
was a hot topic for Edwards, said.
who spoke with many in the · At his next stop, Edwards
crowd who had lost their jobs spoke briefly with Marietta
to foreign workers, including residents who have lost their
some who were forced to jobs, some after serving those
train their replacements.
corporations for more than
"What about these folks?" 30 years.
. he said, · gesturing at former
"It's beyond me why peoworkers from AT&amp;T in ple in Ohio would rehire a
Charleston and several president that has cost them
Parkersburg-area plants that 230,000 jobs," Edwards said
have recently announced layat his third stop, a union hall
offs.
in Ravenswood, W.Va. where
Edwards said since· Bush
tpok office, 1.5 million pri- . he spoke to more than 200
vate sector jobs have been people from the bed of a,
lost. If Kerry is elected, he pick-up truck. "We know we
-will eliminate Bush adminls' can do better."
Edwards wrapped up his
tration tax credits to compatour
at Ohio University in
nies that ship jobs overseas
Athens.
Today, he will speak
and give tax credits to companies that keep. jobs in in Portsmouth. where Bush
spOke l~st week.
America, Edwards added.

POMEROY - A judgment has been' entered in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court in favor of Home National Bank .
of Racine against Alexander J. Buckallew, formerly of
Portland. The judgment was entered in three separate counts.
for a total of $746,000.

·-

,.

Secret

Hos Roast

1-

from Page A1

. started two years ago by We're not quitting. We'll ju'st
keep working ."
SJE!'KINS@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM Wamsley and Donnie Sergent
Racine's w~ter plant was
Jr.,
hts
co-author
on
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va_ "Mothman: The Facts Behind built in the 1950s and never
- · Remnants of Hurricane the Legend," and Carolin has been upgraded . Its life
Ivan may cause some prob- Harri s, operator of Harris. expectancy expired a long
lems thi s ,weekend for visitors Steak House . The festival has time ago, Spencer said.
to the Mothman Festival.
since grow n and this year
To make matters worse. the
Aside from the musical tal- expanded into two days facility must remain in operaent and the hay ride around instead of one. More events tion 24 hours a day to meet a
the TNT area, most of the fes- have ·been planned for daily demand of 4 million
tival ·events are · inside at the Sunday, such as more guest gallons, more than double
Lowe Hotel on Main Stree1. speakers and live music.
what it treated less than a
Jeff Wamsley, director of the
Saturday's events start at I 0 decade ago.
Mothman Festival, said a.m. and will include guest
Spencer said the water
everything depends on what speakers, live music, and
plant
could fail at any timethe weather is like.
book signing s by various
happen s if the plant
"What
"I can't real! y say for. sure paranormal authors. In addi.
fails
and
we have no water?"
who will be there and who tion ,
"The
Mothman
won't," Wamsley said. "It Prophecies" will be shown at he said. "What happens if the
may rain and pour all day, or 5:30p.m. at the State Theater school doesn 't have any
it may just ram a little . It all on Main Street. Tickets are $4 water? I can see the people
-depends." ·
·for adults and $2 for kids lining up outside our ·office
now, sayi ng 'why didn't you
Wamsley said a few more under age 10.
-~
guest speakers had signed on
'Weather permitting, the hay do anything about this?"
·:we've been working on
to be at the festival. There ride will be sin at S p.m. at .the
will be. a schedule of events West Virgmia State Farm this for years. We· ve been
under one of the Ients set up Museum. Tickets are $5 for worried about thi5rfor 'years.''
adults and $3 for kids under
on Main Street.
A design already has been
The Mothmap Festival was age 10.
approved
by
the
Environmental Protection
Agency to build a new water
plant on the property of the
Meig s County Library in
Racine.
The village has applied for

Judgment entered

I
-&gt;• - · · - ---- - - · . . ._

Snag

BY STEPHANIE JENKINS

Nancy J. VanMeter

Chicken dinner set

earn it he did. Even so, there defending.' lr\ fact, in his
are always people who aon- Boston acceptance speech,
fuse dissent with treason; Kerry unequivocally stated
one reason demagogues 'Let there be no mistake .... I
everywhere love war.
will never give any nation or
But the Democrats' biggest any .institution a veto over
Gene
is that ordinary peo- our naiional security.'
problem
Lyons
ple have trouble believing
Miller cited a laundry list
the depths of mendacity to of weapon systems Kerry
which their opponents have supposedly voted against as
sunk. Consider Georgia Sen. a senator, ignoring the fact
with him at all; many tiever Zell Miller's ranting keynote that then-President George
· met him. Among the few address last week. How H.W. Bush and Defense
who had, most n·o' longer crazy was it?.,Well, at one Secretary Dick Cheney prospeak with reporters, some point, the turncoat Democrat posed cutbacks in precisely
because Navy records docu- · inveighed against democra- the same weapon systems ment that they, too, earned . cy itself.
the B-2 bomber, the F-14
medals in firefights they
' At the same time . young Tomcat, etc. - as part of the
claim never happened; oth- Americans are dying· in the so-calleo peace benefit after
ers because they'd publicly sands of Iraq and the moun- the Soviet Union collapsed
endorsed Kerry in 1996; and tains of Afghanistan,' he in 1990.
still
others
seemingly thundered, 'our nation is
That proved too rriuch for
because veterans of the same being tom apart and made the normally compliant souls
engagements shamed them weaker because of the · on CNN. When pressed by
by coming forward to defend Democrats' manic obsession Wolf Blitzer, Judy Woodruff
their own, if not Kerry's, to bring down our comman. and Jeff Greenfield after his
honor.
der-in-chief.'
speech, the irascible old .
But by then, see, the Swift
People. it's called a presi- faker had no answers. Truth
Boaters had moved on to the dential '
election. is, Miller is anybody's dog
. second phony smear: that in Furthermore, virtually all who will hunt, as people say .
I 971 Senate · testimony, Democrats .
supported in the South. Ju~t drop the
Kerry supposedly accused George
W.
Bush
in tailgate and old Zell will
all Vietnam veterans of Afghanistan; they criticize jump right in.
,
atrocities. I think even a him for shifting to Iraq withIt"s ·no use waiting for a
glance at the transcript out fini shing the job.
timid press corps to do its
reveals that he did not. That
Most voted to g!ve him the 'job. · Smears, brazen falseAmerican soldiers ccimmit:· authority to use force if nec- hoods and character assassited terrible crimes in essary against Saddam nation are what this adminisVietnam nobody can deny. Hussein.
tration and its hired media
By the time Kerry testified,
It's his catastrophic misuse accomplices do; it's how
Lt. William (:alley had of that authority they ·dis- contemporary Republicans ·
already been convicted in ~ pute.
operate. If they want to quit
the 1968 My Lai massacre.
·~otivated more by partiplaying defense all the time,
Retired Gen . ' Tommy ~an politics than by national Democrats like Kerry are
Franks recently disappOinted security,' Miller alleged, going to have to start warnFOX News host Sean 'today 's Democratic leaders ing voters ahead of time.
H~nnity by commenting that
see America as an occupier,
(Arkansas
Democrat' the things that Senator not a liberator.' In fact, Bush Gazette columnist Gene
Kerry said are undeniable himself has referred to · the Lyons is a natiotull magazine
about activities in Vietnam.' U.S. 'occupation' numerous awqrd winner and co-author
As an American citizen, times.
of 'The Huming of the
Kerry didn't need to earn the
Miller laughably charged President' ISt. Martin's Press,
right to dissent against the that 'Kerry would let Paris 2IXJO}. You can e-mail Lyons
war after he came home. Yet decide when America needs at genelyons2@cs.com.)

Rain threat won't stop
Moth man Festival'
··
wt

.

POMEROY - An antique tractor pull and show will bli
held at the Rocksprings Fairgrounds ·adt I ip.m. Saturday. ·
weather permitting . The event, sponsored by the Btg Bend
Antique·Club, is free.

Anybody's dog

The Daily Sentinel • Page 'As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Mat exactly would Ke~ry do in Iraq?
Democratic nominee John
Kerry's harsh new attacks on
President Bush's Iraq policy
beg a vital unanswered question: OK. Mr. Kerry, what
would you do?
Morton
Kerry has been all over the
Kondracke
place oh the Iraq war - so
much so th&amp;t we can't be sure
whether ~e would have
fought it in the first place
(probably not) and whether. theme of his recent . stump
his future strategy rests on speeches was that Bush 's
wj.nning the contlic1 or get- policies in Iraq have been
ting U.S. troops out as ·cat~ stroph ic.'
quickly as possible.
Evidently, Kerry strateWhat we do know for sure gists - reinforced by new
about Kerry's ltaq policy is recruits from previous Bill
that he would try to enlist Cl.inton campaigns - have
other- countries to share the decided that voters haven't
burden. But suppose they rejected Bush after 'all and
refuse, as seems likely ? that they need to be remindDoes President Kerry 'stay · ed of his failings.
So Kerry tells audiences
the course,' as Bush says he
will. or find a way to with- th at, because Bush 'went it
draw?
alone, we are bearing the
Americans ai'e not the only burden and paying almost
ones who deserve a thorough any price alone. Almost all
answer. On the National of the military casualties are
Public Radio . program 'To the sons and daughters of
the Point,' Washington Post America. And 90 percent of
Baghdad reporter Jacl\ie the costs are being met by
Spinner said that Iraqi lead- Americans - the total so
ers are afraid that Kerry will far. S200 billion and ri sing
be elected and pull U.S. · · every day ...
troops out, leaving them to
'That's $200 billion we're
not investing in homeland
face insurgents alone.
With most U.S. polls now_ security to keep cops on the
showing that Kerry trails street, to protect our airports,
Bush by a deci sive margin our subways. ... Wrong
- and officials in both cam- choices, wrong direction ,
leadership
for
paigns agreeing that, B'ush is wrong
ahead - Kerry's atta!lks on · P&gt;merica.' Sometimes, he
Iraq seem to represent a shift says the money ·could be
in strategy.
·
spent on health care or afterDuring the Democratic school programs.
But that raises the quesconvention, aides to Kerry .
said they were satisfied that tion: How much would
most voters had decided they Kerry spend on Iraq? And,
didn't want Bush to continue mbre importantly, . what
in office, so their job was would he do to correct 'the
simply to make Kerry appear mess' he says the Bush polito be an acceptable altema- cy has produced?
In . his recent speeches,
live.
Even during the GOP eon- Kerry has been saying, 'It's
vention, Kerry aides said not that I would have done .
that Kerry would concen- one· thing differently in Iraq.
trate this fall on positive · I ·would have done almost
messages. about the econo- everything differently ..It was
my and health care.
wrong to rush to war without
His ·ads" in battleground a plan to win the peace. It
states do emphasize the was wrong not to build a
economy, though they also strong international coalition
exhibit a strong anti-Bush of our allies.'
edge'. Still , the dominant
According to The New

.

Thursday, September 16,2004

&amp;.

Music

OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday - Closed

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~ Roasted Hog. Baked Beans.

Cole Slaw, Roll And Drinks
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·BY·THE BEND

:The Daily Serttinel
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PageA6
Thursday, September 16, 2004

The Daily Sentinel

·,O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital
.
opens new rehab center
allow for expanded wound
care as well as manual and
orthopedic treatment. a bal. ATHENS. O'Bieness ance clinic, wmnen's health
·Memorial Hospital's physical services, sensory integration,
· therapy department and Ohio and the only vestibular rehaUniversity
Therapy bilitation program in the area.
Associates (OUTA~ have Vestibular rehabilftation is
consolidated services in the the assessment and treatment
hospital's new rehabilitation of patients experiencing
}:enter.
dizz iness and balance probThe 0' Blencss Memorial' lems.
·
Hospital
Rehabilitation
'"The addition of services
Center is conveniently locat- will allow for more compreed on the first floor of the hensive management of all of
11£lspital 's new outpatient and our patients. but particularly
medical oftice complex at 75 those who have suffered a
Hospital Drive, Athens. The neurological event such as a
. center opened for patients at stroke or brain , injury.'' said
the new location on Sept . 8.
Trotta.
The expanded center for
Speech therapy and occ urehabilitative services is pational therapy are planned
designed to facilitate and for the future .
consolidate service s and
The new center wi ll proimprove continuity of care.
vide patieHts with acce ss to ·
"We've needed more space the latest equipment to assist
for over 20 years," said in their treatment and recovStephen Trotta, M.S., P.T. , ery. Funds contributed to the
G.C.S..
director .
of hospital's 200 I Anmm l
O' Bleness' physical therapy Giving Campaign wi ll be
· dep~ment and manager of used to purchase equipment
OUTA. 'With the expansion, and furnishin gs for expanded
we have the much-needed rehabilitative services.
.
room to offer more rehabiliOUTA, a practice · of the
. tative services in· an School of Physical Therapy
improved clinic atmosJlhere," at Ohio Univ~rs ity, has bee n
The increased space for providing physical therapy
rehabilitative services will and clini~:;i\ education to the
STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

southeastern Ohio area sinee
1984. OUTA has provided
physical therapy services· at
O'Bieness
Memorial
Hospi!&lt;ll consistently since
1994. The clinic operated by
OUTA on Columbus Road
since 200 I has dosed but
will bring all programs to
consolidme services at the
new rehabilitation center.
Several therapists will p10vide services to patients at
the new center. Trotta is a
geriatric clinical specialist in
phys ical therapy and has had
advanced training in manual
therapy. Anna Bu sic. P.T. ,
performs the ,women's health
physi~al therapy services.
Colleen Cobey, P.T., and
Chris · Rettos, P.T. , have
advanced skills. and training
in orthopedic and manual
therapy. Sim Simons, P.T, is
certified in balance and
ve.,tibular
rehabilitation ,
Matt Brickner. P.TA., Rich
Ozn1un , P.T. , and . Jessica
Wingett, P.T. aide, will p'erform therapy services on a
part -lime b!lsis.
.
For more information or to
schedule an appointment for
rehabilitative services, call
the 0' Bleness Memorial
Hospital
Rehabilitation
Center at (740) 592-9326.

.

'

Kim Cowdery, all of Long
Bottom; Bob and Mari]ynn
Trussell, Deidra and Robert
Cross, Cassie Patterson,
Jason. Natasha and Abbie
Ridenour; all of Reedsville;
Rob and Melanie Cowdery of
Thornville; Steve and· Janice
Weber, Jim and Sally
Caldwell, all of Racine; Jeff
and Alisa . Caldwell of
Jackson;! Charles Caldwell of
Columbus; Richard and
Sandra Kerns of Belpre;
Denny, Kathy and Jeremy

PhiJiip and Louise Schutter of
Alma, Kan. Paternal grandparents are Ron. and Joyce
Eric and Laura (Schutter) Hill
of Pomeroy, and Connie
Hill of Alma, Kan; announce
1
: the birth of a son, Teagan
. Blayne, born on Aug. 15 at
; Mercy Regional Health parents are Jim and Henrietta
· Cen1er in Manhattan, Kan. He (\ubert of St. Marys, 'Kan.
Eric HiJI, fo rmerly of
. · weighed 8 r,ounds 13 ounces.
, The coup e also have a Pomeroy, is· a Sgt. jn the US
daughter, Alexis, 2.
Army and is currently serving
Maternal grandparents are in
Operation
Enduring

•

~~7:}' ~0::er~:J ~~:~;r~~~~

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assisting with the free annual prostate

scre~n ing

on Sept 25 at Holzer Clinic's main branch.

GALLIPOLIS . - A free
prostate screening. sponsored
by the Holzer Medical Center
Comm unity
Health ' and
Well ness Department and
Holzer Clinic, will be conducted Satu(day, Sept. 25 ,
from 8:30 a.m. until noon at
the Urology Department on
the second tloor at· Holzer
Clm1c, loc~ted_ on Jackson
P1ke Ill Galhpoi1s. .
.
The screemng IS . bemg
offered in observance of
Prostate .Health Month.
Dean of Lakewood; lloyd
Physicians who will conduct
Dean of Rocky ~i ver; and the screenings include, Restituto
Jerry and Janet Carter of Alonro, MD; Nicolette Jones,
Rocky Mount, N.C.
MD; Vijiacliand Sand, MD,
Shrikant
K. Vaidya, MD: and
Tlle oldest member present
was Lloyd Dean and the Lawrence Yodlowski, MD.
Assisting will be She\ Dawson,
. was
Abbie
youngest
BSN, CUNP, certified urology
Ridenour. Bob and Marilynn nurse practitioner at Holzer
Trussell had the most family Clinic. Dawson is one of only
members present. Traveling 23 certified urology nurse practhe farthest to attend was titioners in the country, and is
JerriY and Janet Carter of the only one among Ohio, West
Virginia and Kentucky.
Rocky Mount, N. c. .
Prostate cancer is a malignant tumor that most ofien
begins in the outer part of the
prostate and· may spread to
the inner part. This type of.
Freedom i~ Afghaniswn.
cancer is the most common
cancer among men and the
second leading 'cause of cancer death in men.
.

Baker

~~:

LONG
BOTTOM
;,-:
· Scotty and Deborah Baker of
Long Bottom announce . the
b1rth of a ·daughter, Mad1son
Ehzabeth, born on Sept. 5 at .· ••
O' Blenes.s Memorial Hospital •••
in Athens.
a

Among African-Americans,
the disease is more prevalent.
In this year alan.:;, 40,000 men
will die from p'rostate cancer.
Fortunately, it can often be
cured when deteCted early and
eftecuve]y treated dunng !Is
advanced stages.
Treatmeni options . for
prostatecancer mclude watchful wa1tmg. hormonal therapy,
rad1at1on . brachytherapy and
surgery. Prosrnte health can be
maintained with regular checkups, healthy lifestyle and
dietary supplements. · .
TheAmericanCancerSoc1ety,
the
American
Urological
Association and the ~ational
Camp.re.hensive Cancer Network
th lh
f
d0 ""'!
""'teve at e· rnaJonty 0
available evidence, though not
conclus1ve, supports the vtew that
prostate cancer screenmg can
save lives. ,
·
MeQ who are 50 years of
age, or over should receive an
annual prostate examination,
which includes a digit&lt;~! rectal
examination and a prostate
specific antigen blood test.
Men who have ·a family history of p~osrnte cancer or who
are. Afncan-Amencan .should
m1tmte annual screenmgs at
the age of 40.
· Those interested in partici'paling in Holzer 's free screen-

ing1 mu st have no .personal
history of prostate cancer;
have no prostate surgery within one year; and be 50 years
of age ,or older,
·
· Additional qualifications
could include individuals 40
or older with the following
risk factors: family history of
prostate cancer; African- '
American; or previous abnor- ·
mal prostate exam or PSA
blood test.
To schedule an appointment
for a free screening, caJI Pam
Lyons in · the marketing
department at Holzer Medical
Center, at (740) 446-5055,
Monday through Friday, 9
·
a.m.
unt1 1 4 :30
p.m.
Registration is limited to the
first 100 eligible men, and
registration
deadlil)e
is
Thursday, Sept. 23 a.t 4 p.m.
For more information on the
screening,
caJI
Bonnie
McFarland, RN, BSN, director, HMC Communjty Healtn
and WeJiness at (740) 4465679, or log onto HMC's
website at www.holzer.org.
For general information on
prosrnte cancer, .conrnct the
American
Foundation
for
Urological Disease at 1-888-2379004, log onto www.afudorg, or
www.prostatehealth.com.

Weather -forecast

Local Stocks

yA:.f '''-v:.f •_:•tA\f ,..... :.f ,,.,. :.f,.;!

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en ar

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. (AP) Farmers ~ccustomed to
dusty :fields and the clatt~r of
combmes have chosen the ron-. .
cert .hall and sweet strams. ·at
the ~ymp hony to tell the story
of life on the fann to city folk .1
Fariners will snap photos OVt,'f
the next yeararotmd their weste~l
Ohio farms for a slide show to
Thursday, September 16 begin
near
2:OOpm. predicting mo.derate ram, shown next tall during a cJa,sica
Temperatures will stay near but watch out for a brief concert by the.. Springtield
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
There is &lt;! slim chance 76 with tqday's high of 78 . but locally heavy downpour. Symphony OrchestrJ.
One reason for the ptoject
that it could rain. The low occurring around 5:00pm. The rain cou ld reach 0.29
Winds
wtll
be
5
MPH
from
inches
by
this
overnight
in
funded
by a federal grant is to
for today of 64 wi Jl occur
early th1s: morning as . tem- the southwest turning from some spots. Temperatures lielp urbanites understand agri. . peratures rise to 74 by the south as the afternoon will linger at 70. Winds will culture as cities expand into
be 5 MPH from the south.
fann country, organizers say.
9:00am. The · temperature progresses.
· wi II then drop baok down to Evening (7 .p.m.cMiJnight)
Friday, September 17
"To us it:s important when
· 73 late thi' morning. Skies
lt .should remain humid and
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
a Jot 9ft he folk s from the city
will range from partly cloudy. Some rain 'is likely.
A wet, humid and cloudy are coming out to live ·in the
cloudy to cloudy w1th 5 Temperatures will hold steady morning. Light rain is fore: · country that they understand
· MPH winds from the south. around . 72. Winds will be 5 casted, but some nearby areas what' it's all about," farmer
Aftemooll (1-6 p.m.)
MPH from the southeast could see heavier embedded Karen Neer said.
It will be a humid and turning tram the south as the showers. The rain ~ould reach
Ohio has lost about onecloudy afternoon . There evening progresses.
0.16 inches by this morniJll? third of its farmland since
could be some drizzle and
Overnight (1·6 a.m.)
in some spots. Temperatures 1950 - fro m 21 million acres
fo j; from time to time. The
It should continue to be will hover at 7 I. Wmds will to 14 million - as cities and
ra1nfall is expected to humid and cloudy. ~e are be 5 MPH from the south.
suburbs spread out into rJo~ral
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - areas. Former city dwellers
sometimes complain about
the manure smell, noisy farm
equipment and slow-moving
tractors on roads.
Neer, whose family farms
Premier9.06
Federal Mogul - .2250
ACI - 33.83
2,500
acres near South
GanneH - 86.31
Rocky Boots - t 7.28
AEP -32.56
Vienna
in
central Ohio, hopes
General Electric - 33.53
AD Shell - 51 .68 .
Akzo - 34.39
to submit photos of her chi!GKNLY- 4.1
Rockwell- 39.67
Ashland Inc. - '54 .32
Harley
Davidson
61
.55
dren
taking naps on trdctor
Sears
40.29
8BT- 40.00
JPMorgan
(formerly
Bank
One)
SBC-26.06
seats,
her doing the books in
8U ..:...12.74
'39.08
AT&amp;T
-15.29
front
of
a computer and her
Bob Evans- 26.89
· Kmarl- 88.05
USB..:...
29
.01
family picnicking in the fields
BorgWarner - 42 .73
Kroger- 15.70
· Wendy's - 3EI.08
of corn, soybeans and wheat.
City Holding - 32.10
Ltd- 2t .45
Wai·Mart- 52.91
. "I'm hoping those kinds of
Champion - 3.70
NSC- 28.81
Worthington - 20.65
thin~s show what our ltfe
Charming Shops- 7.17
Oak Hill Financial- 34.49
Dally alock reporla are the 4 p.m.
entails,"
she said. "I am not a
Col-.36.19
, OVBC- 31 .50
doalng quotes of the. previous day's
photographer.
But my dau~hDuPont- 43 .02
Peoples - 25.95
transactions, provided · by Smith
ter
does
have
a new digttal
Partners at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.
· DG-20.t6
PepSico - 49.50
cainera. I'm going to see

·:r.

Lancaster, officially assumed
the position today (Sunday).
Shuttleworth and his wife,
Andrea, have an infant son,
Ewin.

.:

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' : David Baker of Phoenix, Ariz.
: ·. will be the speaker at gospel
·: meeting will be held Sunday
through Sept. 24 at the
: ·•
: :, Church of Christ, Children's
~~
home Road, Pomeroy.
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.

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
· The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

••

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Today in the Sen\inel...

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Please send or bring this e~by form along with your photo to

-~ ®allipphi ]!Bailp
••, · m:rtbune

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"Pet Calendar'"
825 Third Avenue

t}otnt t}leaiant
l\egtiter
"Pet calendar'"
200 Main St.

~
Daily Sentinel :•
"Pet calendar'" ~
111 Court St.

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what I can do w1th that.
Songs will mclude Aaron
. The show wi II try to help Copi:md 's "Appalachian Sprin(
Ianners overcome the "'Old,; and ·.~ymphony to the Prdll1e
MacDonald-Had-a-Farm
Farm. wnncn by Mmneapolis
im ;1ge they still fac-e , said composer Steve Heitzeg, who
Denny Hull. who helped grew up on u dairy lllim.
write the grant proposal.
"We're dealing with two
··we' re not trying to do some endangered species- the symcookie-cutter agriculture pro- phony orchestra and the indipagandu thing. We want this to . vidual family farm," Westwater
be a genuine expression of said. ''By joining .forces they
local farm families," said Hall , can help each other.''
.
special assistant to the dean at
Westwater produced a simOhio
State
University's ilar show in October 2002
Col lege of Food, Agriculture · with the De s Moines
and Environmental Services.
Symphony usmg farm photos
The
$104.500
U.S. from around Iowa taken by
Department of Agriculture members of 4-H clubs. farm
grant will pay for project equipment was used as percoordinators, hall rental and cuss1on mstruments .
other.e xpenses. The agency's
Des Moines Symphony
sustainable
agriculture · spokeswoman
Cami
research and educ!ltion divi- Brazelton said the two consion has funded about 2.500 certs nearly sold out.
grants since 1988. Other pro· Organizers
of
the
jects involved weed n1anage- Springtield concert hope to
ment' and controlling pests.
take the production on tour
"We have not funded m~ny arytl plan to use the photos to
projects like that," spokes- ptoduce a DVD documentary.
woman Valerie Berton said of
David Deitrich, the archesthe symphony pri:lduction. tra's executive director, said
One grant did involve taking the concert will be a chance
farmers ' portraits. she said.
for the symphon y to draw a
James Westwater, a photo- 'wi~e,r audience.
..
.
choreographer who has · pro'
' It s two commumt1es, 1n
duced shows with orchestras terms of agric ulture and the ,
around the country, will_use 350 arts, you da~:t normally think
to 450 photos for the display at . of together. De11nch . sa1d.
the "Our Fields, Farms and "There is an opponumty to
Families" concert. in November reach out to people who might
in Springfield, about 40 miles not normally consider coming
west of Columbus.
to a symphony concert."
The ph~tos will be project- . Trudy. Faber. ~ Wittenberg
ed on a gtant screen suspend· Umverstty mus1c professor.
ed above the orchestra and regularly attends Springfield
will blend. fade and flash on symphony concerts and said
screen in coordination with she was surprised when she
the music.
heard about the project.

Governor warns of consequences
of·growing Medicaid costs ·

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

I.

Gov. Taft

Agriculture at the symphony:
Farmers hope to reach city
dweHers thro,ugh cl~ssical music

Holzer offers free prostate screenings

Send us a
I
photo or ·
your .
favorite
·;Baker to speak at gospel meeting :f.
pet and
.'
~:
they
..
1.
-··-··.
:f. might be ·---=~~~~
~: voted into our
..
2005
...
Pet Calendar!
•••
. RUTLAND - The Rev.
The church pastor Ronald
Brian Shuttleworth is the new _Heath
announced
that
• minister of youth at the Shuttlewnrth,
· formerly
:: Rutland Church of God in · active in youth ministry at the
;.: Rutland.
Victor Hill Church of God in

Governor
Taft .
a
Republi can, helped to present
artifacts from Pres ident Taft's
life. ihcluding a figurine commemorating the first pitch at a
professional base ball game
by an American president.
Pres ident Taft was also
credited wit h inventing the
seventh in ning stre tch when
he inadve rtentl y caused a stadium full of fa ns to follow his
lead when he stood up to
stretch during a ga me,
Governor Taft said.
The Capital Square Review and
Advisol&gt;' Board has been renam. ing several Statehouse hearing
roonl~ in honor' of the country's
eight president~ lrom Ohio.

. Dr. Nicolette ·Jones , left, and Dr. Lawrence Yodlowski are two of the physicians who will be

-Rutland Church welcomes youth minister \
•
•

Thursday, September 16,2004

COLUMBUS lAP)
William Howard Taft loved
his job as chief justice of the
U.S. Supreme Court so much '
that he claimed in later years
to scarcely remember another
job he held - \he presidency:
Cincinnati
politicians.
including Taft's great-grandson , Ohio Gov. Bob Taft ,
remembered the 27th president Wednesday by dedicating · a room at the Ohio
Statehouse in hi s honor.
Taft, who Y/ US president from
I909 to I913 , was later
appointed chief justice of the
U.S. Supreme Court and served
from 1921 to 1930. He is the
only person to hold both jobs.

I

Birth announcements

..Hill

,

OHiO

Governor dedicates hearing·room
honoring William Howard Taft

·Caldwells hold family reunion
LONG
BOTOM
Descendants of the late Clyde
I and Lola (Baker) Caldwell
held a reunion Sept. 5 at the
Long Bottom Methodist
Church.
'1
Attending were Sarah
Caldwell, Ben and Doris
Ewing, Roberta Ridenour, all
of
Pomeroy;
Mildred
Caldwell,
Howard
and.
. Marvene Caldwell, Ken and
. Sue Caldwell, all of Tuppers
Plains; Ronnie and Mary
Grace Cowdery, Larry and

PageA7

·,

l

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio faces catastrophic consequences ·affecting all
state-funded pro grams if
changes aren' t· made to the
way nursing homes are
funded, Gov. Bob Taft said
Wednesday · in a speech
warning of out-of-control
Medicaid spending.
·Medicaid , a joint ~tate­
federal program for poor
children and families, now
accounts for almost 40 percent of spending in the
state's an'nual budget, which
is about $24 billion, Taft
said. The figure was 30 percent in 1999, Taft's office
said.
"Ohio pays for nursing
homes through a formula
that is locked into Ohio )aw
and not based on' supply and
demand,"
Taft
said.
"Because. of this outdated
formula , Medicaid spending
for nursing homes· has risen ·
by more than 40 percent in
the last eigh\ years even
though the number of people
served in nursing homes has
declined by more than
4,600."
. He said the current system
reimburses nursing home
owners for thousands of
empty beds. Taft also called ·
on lawmaliers to retain a
limit on how much nursing
homes could be reimbursed.
"If that ceiling is removed
; in the next budget, and if the
formula remains unchanged,
the consequences will be
catastrophic for all other
state programs,"
Taft said.
,

He
wo.u ldn't
give
specifics, saying it was too .
early in the budget process,
which begins formally in
January.
In 2001, the state spent
about
$7
billion
on
Medicaid, compared with
more than $10.5 billion this
year, according to the
Department of Job and
Family Services.
. Lawmakers appeared cool
to Taft's caJI for change.
"Unfortunately, the issue
is way more complicated
than that," said Rep. Shawn
Webster;· a
Cinciimati
Republican and chairman of
a .committee studying state
spending on nursing homes.
· Nursing home populations
are declining in part because
more · healthy people are
choosing state-funded home
care. As a result, the patients
who end up in · nursing
homes are often far sicker
than in the past, ·Webster
said .
"If you're treating multipie pmblems, it's going to
cost a Jot. more money," he
said·.
Taft said he will ask for
additional money to increase
programs that . allow the
elderly to Jive at home or in
assisted-living
facilities,
both of which are Jess
expensive than nursing
homes.
'
"It is unacceptable that_at
a time when 'dem;md for
home and community 7 based
services are growing. we are
,

spending more and more
money to serve fewer people
in nursing homes," he said.
Taft said unrestrained
Medicaid spending could
lead to declining funding for
schools ..
· Taft's prop,osals are in line
with
recommendations
being debated by the Ohio
Commission to Reform
Medicaid, a committee ereated by lawmakers to study
Medicaid, said· executive
director Jen Carlson . ·
The incoming Senate president said lawmakers tried
two years ago to balance ihe
go;&gt;als ofc reducing nursing
home spending while keeping control of the method ror
spending that money.
"We' JI continue to nave
that discussion and try to
work it out ," Sen . Bill
Harri s,
an
Ashland
Republican,
said
Wednesday.
Taft, a Republican. left
open 1he question of
whether he will seek to keep
a temp&lt;&gt;rary one-penny &gt;ales
rnx increase lawmakers used
to balance the current twoyear budget.
During his speech, he·
referred to the money provided by that increase as
~' dollars that will not. be
available next time around."
Afterward. he said it was
too early· to say either way.
· "We' re not even there yet,
we're not evtn,close to making those decisions," Taft
said.
•

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�Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 16, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

INSIDE

•

Bl

The·Daily Sentinel

BGSU player dies after practlc;e, Page B2
Ph lilies blast Reds, 9-1, Page 82 ·
Stop the Puck! NHL In lookout,'Page 83
Alou wants 8ondato get respect, Page 84

G

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Thursday, September 16, 2004
'

· Prep Sche~ule

,.

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·41st Em•ncipation Day celebration
'GALLIPOLIS
The
Emancipation Day . Committee
, will
host
the
annual
Emancipation Day Ce.lebration ,
This year represents the 141 st
.
year of the celebration.
.. The, celebt&lt;~tion will 'bc held
, Sept. 16, and 19 at the Gallia
; County fairground . lt will feaColonel Charles McGee, a
•
!'!"'!'!'!
. """'!'!!'

.

former Tuskegee }\.irman, as th e
keynote speaker.
The program will . includ e
Civil War re-enactors President
Abe Lincoln and Mrs . Mary
Todd Lin coln; the 5th United
Stat~s ColoreJ Troop fro m
C leveland, Ohio will encamp on
the fairgrounds along with our
local Sons . of the Union .

Veterans.
In addition, Matt Garrett, a
provider of children's entertainment and historical facts will be
speaking. And Dr. Joyce Beatty
State Representative for the
Ohio's 27th district will be
speaking on Sunday. ;'&gt;unday
morning features a great ch\lrch
servi ce and special musi·c.

.

Andr~

Gilmore, president and Glenn Miller, vice president of the annual Emancipation
Comf11ittee.
accepts ·11 check from A.EP Corporat.lons representative Rob Osbcirn, Gavin Plant Mana~r.

.

'

'

J

..
. ~ · A performlutce by renowned Dobbs · with guitarist, Leo Welch
· :." pianist, David Curtin, at 8 p.m. un Oct. 20.
·•
:;;onScp!.. l8. wilJ.JcickofftheAriel All performances in the great
· ' TbCIItre's "great artist:' benefit
.
.
.
.
: 'se
" n" s tb's
e~·
arttsts' benefit senes w1ll begm at
1
' An
e openi11g
Y "'· night reception
•
8 p.m. ttc
· k et~ · are Just
·
$25 ~,o~ th.e
:· •r
: ~MI~d by tl_le. frem;h Art Cof~.ny..i' complet~~es or $10 for mdt:.
· ~ tmri!nmediately follow .the con- Vidual -concerts and · are on sale
'; , ~ ·
. ::
·
·
· now at the Ariel, located at 42(;
'Pte series will inchfde a con· Second Ave.; for more informa'!JI...bY nationally known marim· tion, clill the ::Morris &amp; Do.rothy""'
, . st, Linda Maxey and the galaxy
l,1.p ,;rtussio!l trio on Oct. 12 qnd a Haskins Ariel Theatre at (740)·
· petfomuui~e by flutist Wendell 446-ARTS (2787).

t

~n

-

1

Bojs of Alabama
•

"

Thursday's Games

·sky-divers to

entertd-in

•

oA

..

· MCARTHUR - If you like to Huelsman, and Emerson Steward.
see people ju.m p out of airplan,es •. Radio controlled aircraft, includJike to see airplanes doing . dare- ing a helicopter and hopefully a
devil maneuvers over the top and j ~t, will pe~form ~t different times
upside down, . enjoy 'looking at d11ring, the · afternoon . . Several
'a irplanes or riding in them, you . ultralight aircraft are expected to
will . want to vi·sit the• Vinton fly in from Leon, W.Va. and will
C&lt;lunty Airport Sunday, Sep't. 19. be flown d 11 ~ing the day.
Not only will you see air•
In pa1t years, many airplanes
planes, you can Jake a ride in one have flown in for the event and
following the show. But before will be .parked on each side of the
· you take a ~1de, ~ake sure to eat runway where they can be seen
one ofthe . atr~ort s famous barbe- . by onlookers. Some unusual aircue chtcken dt~ners.
..
craft' are . expected to make the
·for the k1ds &lt; there w1ll be a
.
.
. h.
·
d ' · 1 t: ll
tnp to Vmton County t IS year.
cal) d Y ·d rop tmme tate Y 0 owAdmission to the air show is
mg the atr show and. then those f
b
d · ··
•
k' ·
.
.. k, .
k
h
·
ree, ut a onatton ror par mg
h o ld mg
t1c ets can ta e to t e a1r
. 11 b
d Th y ·
..
e requeste
e dmton
m
p 1anes 'pt'1o t ed b y v·m t on wt
.
·..
fi
1
County
Pilot.s
&amp;
Booster~ C?unty Auport ts ocat~
tve
Association pilots.
mtles north of McArthur JUSt off
The · air show will begin at 1 St. Rt. 93 on Atrport Road. Ptlots
P.M. but chicken ·d inners will be can fly to 2~1. but get there early
serv;d beginning at 11 a.m. Sky since the ~irport will be closed to
divers will 'operi the show and all traffic JU St prtor to the begm:.
then a variety of performances ning of the show.
.
follow. 1
For more information, call Nick
Some of tbe aerqbatic perform- Rupert. at ' 740-384-2649 or the .
e'r s are Har?ld Johnson, Darrel Vinton County Airport at 740Mo~tgomery, Billy Burns, Brad 596-2588 ·and leave a message.

Saturday's Gama
Football

Southern at Ports. Notre Dame

Eagles first at
~ine Hills, lead
Hocki.ng cha$e

.The Kings

•

"The Kins-" fium Hocking County
will be appearing in special concert at
Rodney United Methodist Church's
annUal homecoming service on Sept. 19
at the church.
The concert will be held at 10 a.m.,
followed by morning worship at 11 a.nL ·
with .·Pastor Jar Nesselroad bringing the

message:
"The ~" have won several musical ·
aw:uds, including Instrumentalist of the
Year 2001 fium Ohio's Gospel Music
Association and first place as a group at
. Renfro Valley Kentucky's Gospel Talent
Search. .Sarah and Jonathan have . won·
nwnerous trophies and ribbons for .both
.cla$s'ical violin and fiddle-style playing
and jonathan won an award for banjo.

~~®tal ·m©lrr~®~ ~~.Ul)~u~~~®u

GAHANNA - finding the perfect event, nostalgic' and unique, taking ,
treasure is a fun-filled, lon~-standing place annually for almost 40 years. · ·
tradition in Gahanna, thanks to' the
The ·Gahaima Historical Socie_ty
folks at the Gahanqa Historical will' offer several qew culinary herb
. ,
'·
Society. ·
Visitors· to the 39th annual Galunna blends, a sought-after item for fol~
Aea Markt:&gt;t to ·be held Sunday, Sept. visiting the Herb Capital of Ohio.
19, fiom 9 to 5 p.m., -can experience At,tendee~. from all over the 'Midwest
the joy of finding the ideal collectible have made the Gahanna flea Market a'.
or antique while creating . treasured "must do~ everlt for many y~ars.
memories. "·
.
With more than 225 crafts, artisans
IJeld 'On )\.1ill Street· in Olde and aiuique vendor$, finding a ireaGahanna. ·the Gahanna Flea Market sure is often a reality at his well,fea,tures antiques, handmade crafts and known event.
collectibles , from both local and
For info~mation about the Gahanna
natio~ artisans, as well. as food and ·. Flea . Market, contact the Gaharina
entertamment.
. H'
. al So .
614 475 2509
•dditt'ons t o· · thi s year,s event · tstortc
at
- ·. .'
n
. c1ety
.
.
for addmonal ,mformanon on all
include a children's activity area with
face paintmg and a host of,entertain- there is to see and do in Gahanna,
ing o~ons for little ones, as well as contact the Gahanna Convention &amp;
pertonpances by a local barber shop Visitors Bureau at 1-866-6/I.HANquartet. It's described as a family NA or www.Visitgahanna.com.

Br;das

" p ....

wv 25280

'PIIOM (304) 77W323

2400 f slsm Ave. ·
• (AcroM 1ro1n r'r1)
a
ajJs, GNo 11111
441-1711

*"

•

Meigs at Warren
Eastern at Green

'

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••

, .

Friday's Games
· Football ·

will

.,

Volleyball

1,\thens at Gallia Academy ·
River Valley at South Point
Meigs at Wellstpn
Miller at Eastern
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallia
·waterford at Southern ·
Soccer
South Point at Gallia Academy
.
Golf
·
TVC Hocking at Federal Hocking

at air show

~~~~©rr~©®~ ~©t~®~ §)~©l~Ul)~

NELSOiwluE - Blind Boys of Alabama will present a concert on Oct. 2 at the Hocking College.
111e multJ.Gnlmmy Winners .snd legendary Contemporary gospel and blues singers Will appe11r as a part
Of 1111 ~ Bunyan Concert Series. People Magazine says, "They sing with passion and spirit that will
lllll!atl'toWIIIIOM!elleverl say hallelujah." For ticket. information. call U377-HOCKING, extenlllon 2651.

.

I
j

I

POMEROY
The
Eastern golf team came up
with a big first place finish
in the TVC Hocking match
held at Pine Hill s on
Tuesday. The win moved the
Eagles into.first in the overall season chase for the
Hockirig crown.
Eastern finished the day
:ovith a team score of I 63,
finishing four strokes ahead
of Federal Hocking (167),
Southern was third with a
score of 169, with former
Hocking leader ' Trimble
placing fourth with a 172.
Miller
( 189)
defeated
Waterford ( 195) for fifth
place.
·
. Brad Crouch of Southern
was the medalist with a low
round of 38.• followed by a
trio of players with a · score
of 40. The trio was Evan
Dunn (EHS), Dana Vales
(SHS) and Mait Dixon
(THS).
James
Will,
Nathan
Cozart and· Michael Owen
each shot a 41 for Eastern.
while Ryan Nave and Jacob
Warner rounded out the
Eagles day with scores of 44
and 46 respectively.
Pat Johnson and Jacob
Hunter followed' Crouch
with rounds of 42 arid 44.
while Josh Smith and Matt
Thaxton rounded out the
Tornadoes' scoring with a
45-and 46 .
With three matches to
play, Eastern holds a 28-27
lead over Trimble in the
Hocking race. Southern is
third with 23 points. The ·
next match is today at
Arrowhead
Pines
m
Beverly.

Meigs second at
Brass Ring
LOGAN - The, Meigs
golf team finished second
at · the TVC Ohio match
field at Brass Ring on
Wednesday. ·
.
Belpre extended its sea'on lead to seven in the
chase for the Ohio title by
claiming a 17 stroke win at
Brass Ring.
The Eagles posted a team
5core of I 59, while Meigs
posted a 176. · Vinton
County .was third with a
'87, while Wellston was
fourth
with
a
198 .
Nelsonville- York .
(217)
beat Alexander (224) for
fifth position.
; A pair of Eagles posted
Jbe low score \)f the day, as
:Ricky Drain and Da,n
Cooper each .shot a oneover par '37 .
: Dan Bookman guided ·
Meigs with a _39, while
Steven Stewart posted a 43.
)ake Venoy and Kirk Legar
each had a 47, while Josh
:Venoy shot a 48. Kris
Ginther · roundetl out the
r.tarauders scoring with a
51.
Belpre leads the season
series o:vei Meigs by a
score o( 39-32. No other .
team has accumulated 20 .
points . •
The next TVC Ohio
• match takes place is at
Forest Hills on Monday and
Alexander will be the host
school.
·

'

Eagles face must-win s.cenario Mara~·ders ready
·with Franklin. Furnace
Green
.
·to battle Warriors
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailyregister.com
TUPPERS PLAINS - It
was not long ago that teams
looked forward to playing
Green - it usually meant a
win.
The Bobcats bucked ' that
'reputation somewhat after a
pair of wins to open the season, the small Scioto
County school plays host to
Eastern Friday in .Franklin
Furnace . Kick-off is slated
for 7:30p.m.
Green , which went 1-9
last season, has already
doubled its win total from

2003 after
defeating
Southern
and South
Galli a.
"They are
very well ·
coac .hed ,
they
play
really · hard
and a real
Newland
scrappy
type of team," Eastern
coach Pat Newland said.
Green is under the direc·
tion of first-year coach
Kevin Sheridan, his crew
tasted defeat for the fi'rst
time last week against

Waterford by a slii:Ji 14-9
count. Eastern ·(1-2). on the
other hand, is , looking to
snap a twq-game losing
streak after losses to Zane
Trace and Wahama .
"Anytime you go through
a couple to~gh losses in a
row, it effects your confidence and team morale,".
Newland admitted . "This
week is going to be a huge
week ... I consider this like ·
a must ~ win game for us ."
Green relies on a ball control type of offense, led by
230-po und bruising full-

· Please see Eagles; 1.4

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs football team travels
to Vincent thi s week to take
on the Warrior:; in a critical
week four match up.
·
The Marauders (2- 1) are
comin~ off their first road
win of the season. a 36-15
victory over River Valley.
Warren { 1-2) is also headed into Friday's tilt with
some momentum, as the
Warriors defeated Fort Frye
by a count of 21-6. The win
was the first .gridiron celebration that Warren has
enjoyed since Oct. 26 , 200 I ,
a span of 22 games that
dates back to a 56,8 victory
over River Valley.

Mei gs
couch
Mike
Chancey
is
expect ing
Warren to be ready for two
straig ht.
_•
"Wr; are expecting a very
competitive ball game and
the y hove some really good
skilled players," commented
Chancey. "They me very talented and have &gt;ome kid s
thin' ca n sco re anytime th~k
touch the ball . Overall as a
footba)I team. we are going
to have our work cut out fo~
us against Warren."
WHS trailed Fort Frye 6-0
at halftime and proceeded to
score three times in the third

.

Please see Meigs. Bl

Prep Volleyball

'

.

Meigs beats Blue Angels, falls to River Valley
f

kills respectively.
sports@ mydailytribune .com
The third and final contest of the evening went to
: - - , RVHS with
ROCKSPRINGS - The
closely
a
River Valley volleyball ·
conteste·d
team improved its overall
28·26, 22record to 7 •2 on the season
25,
15 - 11
with a pair of wins over
victory over
Galli a Academy and · Meigs
t
h
e
in a tri-match Wednesday.
. Marauders .
The Raiders watched as
Payne led
the Marauders (3-4, 2-3
the Raiders
TVC) defeated the Lady
with 10 kills
Angels in the first match by
and was 39Cole
a score of 22-25, 25-23, 15of-43 at the
3.
service line,
Meigs was led in that vicw h i 1 e
tory by Samantha Cole 's
Tracewe.ll
11-of-11 serving perforand Godwin
mance, along with five kills
added seven
and eight blocks. Emily
.and
two
Ashley added 16-of-17 at
kills respecthe line, while Renee
tively.
Bailey and Megan Garnes
Mallory
had nine and six k,ills
Darst was
respectively. Joey Haning
16-of- 19 at
had 17 assists for the · Hanllll
the line and
Marauders in their win over
had
three
GAHS..
, kills in the win .
Fehc1a, Close l~d GAHS
Meigs was · 54-of-61 col-'
W:tth 10 pomts and three lectively from the line . with
k11ls, w~1le Ashley Jones Cole adding 15 solo blocks
a.nd Sa~ah CochraR added in the final · match. Bailey
f1ve potnts_ each. Jones had Jed the Marauders with six
four k1lls m the setback to kills Cole had five and
the Marauders. ·
Ashley and Garnes ' each
In the . ~econd contest of had three in the loss.
the eventng, . RVHS (3-0
After the game, River
OVC) made short .wQrk of Valley
coach
Sharon
the Blue Angels w1th a 25- Vannoy was impressed with
16 · 25 - 11 VIctory:
her team's effort.
.Lmdsey Godwm led the
"The kid's played very
Rat.ders with 12 pomts. well tonight ," said Vannoy.
whtle B.eth . Payn? added "This was a pair of really
seven pomts and was. 16-of- great wins for the team."
17 at the serv1ce hne . en
All three schools· return to
route to the vtc~ory. Ntckt league action today, as
Tracewell l.e d R1ver V~lley River Valley is at South
With m~e kll!s, whtle Payne Point,
while
Galli a
ad~ed stx sptJces.
.
Academy returns home to
Jo~es
and
Whttney host Athens and Meigs trav- Meigs senior Justine Dowler. above. receives a serve against Gallia Academy on Wednesday.
Larkms paced GAHS (4-5, els to Wellston to play the
The Marauders defeated the Lady Angels in. .three games, 22-25, 2~23 . 15-3. (Bryan Walters)
3-~ SEOAL) agamst the Roc"ets . .
f"
Ra1ders wtth four and three
BY BRYAN WALTERS

,. . . , . . . . , ,.....,=.,.,

In spite of.separation from
·Green seems to
family, Holmes stayin,g at.OSU have o~.:~trun PttSt
.

.

BY. RusTY MIUER
Associated Press

COLUMBUS - · · Wide
receiver Santonio Holmes .
feels a strong pull to jump to
the NFL early to support bis
young family, but says he
and his parents have decided
he will stay with Ohio State
for at least another year.
"I'm really not focused .o n
that right now," the redshirt
sophomore said of the lure of
~ NFL. "My focus is to
l!!ad our charge, lead a group
of receivers', lead our team, to
another national championship, if that's possible. I
talked to my parents about it
and we kind of senled it
down to stay another year
and get everything out of it
. as much as possible."
Holmes has by far been the
top offensive weapon for the
ninth-ranked Buckeyes (20), who play at North
Carolina State on Saturday.
Part of the reason behmd
his fast s.tart is his dedica,tion
to Ohio State's summer con·

ditioning program. He chose
not to go home to Aorida to
see his girlfriend and two
young sons because . of his
commitment to improving
an'd proving himself.
"I called them (family
members) up and I told
them, ' Hey, I won't be comin~ home, maybe onlr once
thts summer because I m try·
ing to stay focused on this,'"
Holmes said earlier this
week. "1' m trying to become
the best receiver here at Ohio
State . I had-to put my family
second for a change."
He certainly has been Ohio
State's top receiver, with 14
catches for three touchdowns

in two games while averaging 22.5 yards a catch.
, He had career-highs with
10 receptions for 218 yards
and touchdowns of 80 and 47
yards in Saturday' s last-play,
24-21 victory over MaryhalL
And he did it despite missing
the third quarter with leg
cramps. Trainers pLil an IV
drip mto each ann to rehydrate Holmes, who returned
to make two crucial catches
on the final drive that set up
Mike Nugent's game-winning 55-yard field goal.
"He had one and a half
bags of intravenous fluid
during the third quart!!r. so
he had a big day." said
Tressel, who joked he was
glad that Holmes stayed on
the field at the end instead of
going to the locker room to
go to the bathroom because
of all the fluids. "Santonio
continues to make big plays
for us. Maybe most' important. he continues to do· a
good job of leading the

PI•--Hoi•••·B4 ·
••

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-----

BY

TOM

WITHERS

Associated Press

•

BEREA- Williain Green ·
had two choices : run out of
bounds and settle for a good
gain or fight for extra
yardage and maybe a first
down .
On a simple swing pass
last
Sunday
against
L
bo h
Baltimore. Green made a career. ast year. 1 were
·decision .sy mbolizing the a ~~s~as s,uspended for failCleve!and running back' s ing the league\ substanceongoing NFL comebad abuse policy and missed the
· from a personal nightmare: • final eight ga mes. In addiGneen elected to stay on
the field _ one he never tion. Green sel'\'ed a thrreday jail sente nce for a DUI
wants to leave again.
conviction . · wem thrpugh
"N inety-nine percent . of alcohol rehab and was
the time 3 back will get hit involved in a domestic incilike that on the sideline and dent in which he was·
just kind of step out." ·said
Browns left guard Paul stabbed by the mother of his
two daughters.
Zukauskas. " But he made a
So
Sunday 's
opener
· negative imo a posi tive, and
. agai nst the ·Ravens . was
that' s. what he 's been doing ." much more. than just his first
For months now. Green
has been milking the right regular:season game since
Pl ..ie Me G-., Bl ·
decisions iibout hi s life and
••

'

,.

�Thursday, September 16, 2004
ThurSday, September 16, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Pa~e B2

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

The OVP

Marshall coach won't be reprimanded after Bowling.Green
·apologizing for using term 'Mandingos'
player dies ·after
•

I

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(AP) - Marshall coach Bob
Pruett will not be reprimanded for calling the Ohio State
football team "a bunch of
Mandingo s," a comme l)t
some thought could be
offensive to bl acks.
"I profusely apologize if I
offended anyone,'.' Pruett
said We~nesday. "That's the
last thin g in the world I
wanted to do. As. I understand the term, I was trying
to be complimentary." • ·
P.ruett said he used th e
term to mean ·:superior ·ability, . s uperior strength, boldness and courage."
. Pruett made the ori ginal
comment in his wee kly news

conference leading up to last
Saturday's game aga in st
Ohio State . .
"We think coach Pruett 's
apology is sufficient and I
think • he stated everything
very 've l! ," athl etic di rector
Bob
Marc um
sa id
Wednesday.
.
,
Charles Farrell , director of
Rainbow Sports, a divi sion
of the Rev. Jesse Jackson "s
Rainbow/ PUSH coalition ,
said Pruett 's remark s could
be o ffen sive to so me
because the Mandingos of
West Africa were used as
slaves .
Farrell said he also was
sati sfi ed with Pruett 's apolo-

" Wh at I
was. · hopi)l ~ is ihat
the athletic
director or
the uni versity pres ident woul d
pull
the
c o a c h
aside and
Pruett
s a. y ,
' Wheth e r
you meant to or not there
were so me people who we re
offend ed by the use of the
term Mandi go, "' · Farrell
said. "Any coach need s tounderstand that your word s
and acti ons refle ct upon that
unive rs ity."

.gy.

Jame s Tolbert. who ove rsees th e Wes t Virginia
branch of the NAACP, said
the co mm ent "smac ks of
some racism."
But Sy lvi a Ridge way.
presiden t of the NAAC P ' s
Huntington -Cabe ll branch,
said Pruett 's comments may
·have been the res ult of "a
poor choice of words."
.
"I have neve r, eve r heardhim make raci al remarks
before, whic h leads me to
believe it was an indication
of how he felt about strength
and boldness, not anything
negative," she said. ·
Ohio : State
defeated
Marshall 24-2 1 with a field
goal as time expired.

illness in practice

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK ' S M·ATCH UPS

said Wood County corone r
Dohglas He ss. ·
.
Ri chardson. a nati ve o f
Sandusky in northern O,hio .
was parti c ipat ing in his fir ~a
prac tice as a non-rec rui ted
walk-on,' Campbell said .
Campbe ll didn ' t kn ow
what •Ri cha rdson was doing ·
when he got sick.
.
"The un iversi ty is reviewin g the . ci rcum stances surrounding Aaron's passin g,"
said I;:d W hipple, Bowlin g
Gree n's v ice president for
studetll affa irs.
·

BOWLING GREEN (AP)
- A Bow ling Green football
pl aye r di ed at a hospital
Wednesday after beco min g
ill during the first I 0 minures
of practice, sc hoo l offic ials
said.
Aaron Richard so n, a fre shman , was tak e n to Wood
· Count y Hos pital, where he
died, athl eti c de partment
spokes man J.D. Ca mpbell
said.
Th e re was no o bvious
cause of death and an autop-·
sy was plann ed ·fo r Thu rsday.

How They Fared
1. Ironton (3-D),
DEF. GALLIA A CADEMY,

2. Jackson (3·01
'

30·0

OEF. VI NTON COUNTY, .29-'6

3. Parkersburg South (3·01
DEF. W ESTLAND, 70 -0

4. Cabell Midland (2·0)
DE F. G . WA SHINGTON, 17·0

5. Huntington, W.Va. (3·01
DEF. RIPLEY, 4d-0

5. Portsmouth (2·1 1
LO ST TO CHILLICOTH E, 26M14

7. Nelaonvl!te-York (2·11
LOSTTO FAIRFIELD UNION, 17· 13

8. Wlllla111stow~· (3-QI

CINCINNATI (AP)
The Red s stored their
only run without a hit in the
Brett Myers beat the
third . Claussen and . Freel
Cincinnati Reds with his
.drew back-to-back walks to
arm and his bat.
start the inning. Clau ssen
Myers pitched six solid
moved to third on Felipe
innings and drove in the goLopez's fielder' s choice
ahead run, helping . the
grounder to Bell at third and
Philadelphia Phillies salscored on Sean Ca sey' s
vage the finale of a threefielder's choice grounder to
game series with a 9-1 win
shortstop
Jimmy Rollins.
Wednesday.
Dave Miley said .
Burrell made it 3-1 with
"Pitching is repetitious,"
Myers snapped a 1-1 , tie
Philadelphia manager Larry · by driving in David Bell his homer off reliever Juap
and
Placido
Bowa said. "He's only 24 . from second with a two-out Padilla,
When he does it right, he's a . single in the fourth. Myers ' Polanco drove in Marlon
very good big league pitch- first RBI in 48 at-bats this Byrd from third with a fielder."
, season came on a t~o-strike er's choice grounder off
Pat Burrell hit his 23rd fastball
from
starter Mike Matthews in the sev. homer in the sixth, his sec- Brandon Claussen. Bell led enth for a 4- 1 lead .
The Phillies added four
ond of the series, then added off t.he inning with a single
an RBI single in 'the eighth and moved to second on runs in the ninth on a two. run double by Michael s off
to help the Phillies avoid Burrell ' s one-out walk.
being swept in a three-game
"It was a situation where Aaron Myette and a two-run
· series in Cincinnati for.. the he had him 0-2 and jammed single by Doug Glanville
off Todd Van Poppe!.
first time since Aug. 4-6, him, but the kid still got
Michaels had his second
1995. Jason Michaels added hit," Miley said. "You ' ve
four hits.
got to bounce it t,here. four-hit game on the I 0Myers (9-9) matched his That ' s
something game road trip. ·
Notes : Phillies IB Jim
season high with five walks, (Claussen) will learn and
Thome and C Todd Pratt left
·but he gave up only one run get better at."
and four hits. He struc'k out
Claussen (2-5) gave up in the first inning after Pratt
four, improving to 4- I in his five hits and two runs. one backed into Thome while he
catching
Lopez 's
last nine starts. He gave up a earned, with two walks and was
. leadoff triple to Ryan Freel five strikeouts in five popup. Thome came out
immediately with a bruised
. in the first but escaped with innings.
: no damag~.
"I made one mistake;" he chest. Pratt left after one
. "You never like to get in said . . "It was elevated. It pitch to the next batter with
· those situations because it should've been down. He a bruised left shoulder. . :.
· takes a lot of pitches to get was aggressive and found a A.J. Hinch made his Phillies
out of t.hem," Myers said. "I hole."
.
debut as Pratt ' s repla!!e2B D' Angelo
could've gone longer if I
The Phillies got consecu- ment.
: hadn't gotten into that situa- tive singles from Ryan Jimenez batted cleanup for
: tion, but !'definitely didn't Howard, Bell and Michaels the first time in his two sea: want them to score in the to take a I -0 lead in the sec- sons with Cincinnati. .. .
• first. I worked out of it, ·but ond. Michaels did not get After striking out with Freel .
it took a lot out of me."
credit for an RBI on his sin- on third and one out in the
Rhea!
Cormier,
Tim gle to center after Reds first , Casey could be heard
repeatedly
on
: Worrell and Billy Wagner catcher Corky Miller was· banging
: combined for three hitless charged with an error for something in the tunnel
: innings to finish it.
failing to catch center field- leading from the Reds'
. · "You figure it's not going er Wily 1\,lo Pena' s short- dugout to their clubhouse .
to be your day when you get hop .throw on what would "I think it used to be a trash
a 11eadoff triple and can't get have been a close play at the can," Miiey said.
him in,': Reds manager plate.

a

I

I

Meigs
from Page 81
.
quarter,en route to the Vlcto-

· • ry.
Th~

·

, leaders
of the
Wamors charge was quarterback Josh Beebe and halfback TYler Schaad. .
Beebe had 14 rushes for 82
yards and threw · for I 14

more, along with returning a
punt (70 yards) · for a touchdown last week. Schaad had
132 yards on the ~round on
23 carries, incl udmg a 15yard scamper that gave WHS
. a 7-6 lead against the Cadets.
The Warriors also have
weapons at the wideout spot
in Chris Peckens and Zach
'Mills. Peckens had five
catches for 64 yards and .a
touchdown while Mills had
·, two grab; for 12 yards.

CINCINNATI - Nobody
in the Bengals locker room
sees much point in speculating about how Carson
Palmer will handle hi s s&amp;ond start as an NFL quarterback.
The first one was so convincing.
. Palmer proved to everyone
around him that he won't be
a weak link in an bffense
that can do a lot of things . If
anything, he makes it even
more dangerous.
Palmer made every type of
throw and handled e.very
type of pressure during a 3 I24 loss to the New York Jets
on Sunday. His only glaring
mistake was a throw into
coverage that was intercepted 'in. the closing minutes,
ending Cincinnati's chance
to tie.
Otherwise, he was as good
as any young quarterback
can be. ·
·"He controlled the huddle.'' · offensive ·tackle Willie
Anderson said Wednesday.
. "He didn' t panic. He managed the game we II . He kept
his composure .
.
"If he hadn't done that at
crucial pans of the 'game, we
probably would have gotten
blown out. A young quanerback has to keep hi s composure and by him doing that,
it kept the rest of the team
calm. It was like having
(Jon) Kitna in there, and we
kept rolling. We didn ' t miss
a beat."
f'or six months, Bengals
coaches and veterans talked
about doing more to relieve

Garrett Proctor an~ Zack ing to limit turnovers thi s
Bollinger el\(Jh added a catch .weekend, as they surrendered
for 24 and II yards, respec- three fumbles in last week·s
tively.
WID.
The Warren defense held
And witli the lingering
FFHS to 156 yards on 37 car- affects of' Hurricane Ivan
ries and limited th~ Cadets to expected to surface Friday in
227 yards of total offense. Ohio, keeping control of the
They did allow Tyler Engle to ball m'ay, prove to be another
rush for 123 yards on 17 key ·factor in the outcome of
totes, but gave up less than a this game.
hundred to the rest of the · Kickoff
of
the
squad.
Warren/Meigs contest is slatThe Warriors are also look- ed for 7:30 p.m. in Vincent.

Green

&gt;

•

His return ·has inspired cia! first down.
out on the field, prove people
teammates, who have never
'That was big," Davis said; wrong and show he can still
wavered in their suppon of "He made three linebackers play the position."
the 24-year-old.
miss, including Ray Lewis.
Following Sunday's win,
from PageB1
"You can't help but. respect We w~re cheering on the Green was visited in ..the lock• . Oct. 18, It was another begin- . a guy like that, a guy who has bench . We all loved to see er room by Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown, in
ning for Green, a former a lot of pressure on his shoui- that."
Garcia wasn ' t surprised. town as part of a weekend
Bostori Colli:ge star wh.ose ders and he comes in and
Since
signing as a free agent celebration for the Browns'
parents both died of J\IDS holds his head up every day,"
when he was growing u~
linebacker Andra Davis. " He · in Cleveland, he has been 1964 NFL championship
,
"It was a g~ feeling just answers questions with impressed with Gieeii 's drive team. •
.
to'·
stay
sober
and
focused
on
"I'm
proud
of
you,'., Brown
to get back out there," Green actions. He takes ·the critisaid, grabbing Green 's hand.
said. "Bull really don't lhiJili: cism that fans and opposing football and family.
"He
has
had
to
overcome
Green smiled at the praise,
about that (past) stuff. 1think teams deliver, and he goes on
some
tremendous
difficulties
words
he had longed to hear
abou ·11 '"·- 0 K Ibis 15
·
about his business."
'
my
With the Browns clinging in life," Garcia said. "What again.
t ...... '
job, Ibis what I got to go do.' to a 10-3 lead in the tl;tird I've seen in him is not reflec• "It was a great feeling,"
I'm not looking back into the
tive
.of
some
of
the
decisions
Green
said.
.
past I'm looking forward."
quarter on Sunday; . Green's
And after the recent disorStarting in place of the determination on a second- he has made."
Garcia
can
relate
to.
der
in Greenis life, it's a feel injured Lee Suggs, Green and-7 play helped
a ernGreen's personal plight. In ing he and his teammates
rushed for 6S yards on 22 . cial drive alive.
.
carries and made four,reccpSwinging out of the back- March, the quarterback want to see him hold on to.
'The .situation he went
lions for 27 in Cleveland's field, Green caught a pass pleaded guilty to a : DUI
surprising 20.3 win.
from Jeff Garcia and as he chaig~. was senteneed to a · through made him stronger,",
· Green's numben weren't heac!ed up field, the 6-foot•l , work-release program and Davis said. "We always talk,
~ flashy, but they hardly mat- · 21 S-pounder made three had some drivmg privileges our daughters were born on
the same day, and before the
temf. He was back doing Baltimore defenders grab at !Jiken away.
"It's
just
like
me.
I
don't
•
gainc
we 're always : talkin11
what be does· best. making air.
feel
4ood
ab9ut
some
of
the
that
we
have another mouth
I.lnebacken miss with a~· . He was nearly knocked
awivel, poweriDJ throu
. onto the Ravens' sideline, but decis1ons I've made.-becau5e to feed. lbat we have to 110
·
defensive linemen or s • Oreen kept .his balance, they are not reflective of who out and make it happen.
"He went out
~ it
arming an oncotl)ing comer· backpedalled and staggered I ,am," Garcia said. "He is
back.
·
for more yardage and a cru- someone who wants to get happen."

keep

and

t

'.

~

'.

LOST TO MAGNOLIA,

Palmer tries to build
on impressive debut
Bv JoE KAY .
Associated Press

1

Butch Cooper
Spo rr&lt;&gt; Writer
R ecord: 2 1-9

Brad Sherman
Sports Wr it~r
Record: 2:2 -R

· Spo rts Wr iter

Last Wee k: 6- +

Lasr Week : 7- 3

(Pick in i&gt;lllil)

(Pick in hlllil) '

LaH Wt't' k : 5-5
(Pi ck in l!!!!J!)

Point Pleasant .u ·

Pojm Pleaunc .n

Gallia Academ,y ·

GJlJiJ Acad\·•ny

DEF. BELPRE 44 -6

9. Point Pleasant,{2-1 1

·Phillies blast Cincinnati, 9-1

Wednesday. " It is -good to
ha ve it out o f the way.".
The onl y major ·surpri se
invol ved the clock . Palmer
hadn ' t pla yed a complete
game since hi s final season
at Southern Cal , where he
won th e He isman Trophy.
On ·Sunday, he was gasping for breath after an II yard run in the third quarter.
the pressure on Palmer, who
''I' ve got to get in a little
didn ' ttake a snap last season better shape," he said. "I was
as a rookie. The idea w·a s to · huffing and puffing , a little
make things as easy as pos- bit last w eek. It's a long
sible on the kid.
gmne . NFL games seem like
Instead, he made thing s they take forever:"
easier for them.
In the bi g scheme , it 's
Palmer was so good that small stuff.' His bigger chal the Bengals opened up the lenge is · to get ready for a
offense as the game . went diffe rent ty pe of defen se
along. He completed 18-of- each w·eek.
27 for 248 yards and two
The Mi ami Dolphins (0- 1)
touchdowns, including a 53- are likely to blitz him more
yard pass to Ch ad Johnson often ori Sunday night.
that took the offense into allowin g their agg re ssive
another dimension . ·
. defen sive backs to take
Kitna has an average arm advantage of any mistake s ·
that limited the offen se. that Palmer make s under
Palmer has the · ability to pressure. ·
accurately throw the ball far
It would help if the
down the field - his pass to Be n gal s g et their running
Johnson floated 60 yards in game going . •Rudi Johnson
the air, giving the receiv er had only 70 yards on 24
time to outrun the secondary attempts against the Jets, a
and make a diving catch in 2.9-yard average that won ' t
the end zone.
win many games.
They couldn't have uone · Al so, a battered ·offensive
that last season.
line would like to give
"It makes us ' a lot more Palmer a little more time. He
dangerous," .John son said. ~ as sacked once and pres"We threw the ball deep last sured repeatedly by the Jets.
year and were very success" I don ' t want to get into
ful at it, but they ' re empha- making him a messiah ,''
sizing it more this year."
Anderson said . " We just
The main emphasis in the need for him to do his pan
opener was to make Palmer and the re st of the guy s on
comfortable in hi s long- the field to do their part.
awaited debut. It worked out
"On Sunday, he did his
just'fine.
job. It' s going to be on the
" It really w a~n ' t that big of rest of the guys to do their
a
de ~ l,"
Palmer said jobs better."

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8 3

- www.mydailysentinel.com

10. Wheelersburg (2,11

21·0

·1 0. Wlnlleld (3-G) .

-

DEF. S ISSONVILLE, 13· 3

Prep Football

ovc
QllC

Wah.una .....,.
Trjmble

Wah a rna
a t Tnmble

. Mri&amp;l :il

DEF. LUCASVILLE VALLEY, 24·0

' Ie.am

Jt

All

Coal Grove
o-o 2-1
Chesapeake
o-o 1-2
FaiHand
o-o 1-2
River Valley
o-o 1-2.
Rock Hill ·
0-0
1-2
. South Point
o-o 0-3
Friday's Games
River Valley at Alexander
Lucasville Valley at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Sciotovitte
Fairland at Totsia
Rock Hill at Portsmouth West
· South Point at Greenup Co. (Ky.)

Bryan Walters
Rl'cord: 2: 1-9

M;u la g;l l l ~

R t"conl : 15- i 3
L1~t

All

Jackson .
o-o 3-0
0 -0
1-2
Gatr .Academy
0-0
1-2
Ma~ etta
·
'
Warren
0-0
1-2
Athens
0-0
0-3
Logan
0-0
0-3
Friday's Games
Point Pleasant at Gallia Academy
Wave~y at Athens
. Jackson at London ·
, Zanesville at Logan
. Marietta at Parkersburg South
Meigs at Warren

Wl·t' k: ..f. -h

(P kk in b o ld)
Ga m a

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Wahama

W&lt;J ir J III ,L

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Previous Champions- 200 I: Butc h Coope r --- 2002: Butch Cooper --- 2003: Bra(! Sherman..

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.
!11• Eattlrn Inane (St. lt. 7) ~ OalllpoUa, Ohio
. (740), .

• (740) 448-2484

SEOAL
SEQ

Editor

Po int P le.J\.IIll .11

\V~r r tn

Suud1ern

j eremy S'c hheider

,.......

AIIIU1111

SHENNIU

FARMHAND
. . 41,

,..,..4...,

Stop the.puck! NHL locks out players

NHL management claims
teams combined to lose $273
million in 2002-03 and $224
million last· season . Bellman
NEW YORK - No shots, said the union 's proposal·s
no saves, no goals. The would do little for owners, and
National Hockey League said the six offers rejected by
locked · out
its
players the union would lower the
Thursday, threatening to keep average player salary from
the spon off the ice for the $1.8 million to $1.3 million:
Goodenow said players had
entire 2004-05 season and ptrhaps beyond in an. effon by offered more than $100 million
management to gain, massive in annual concessions.
economic change.
.
"The notion that we don't
Ohio Division
After the long-expected dect- have com[lCtilive balance is
Illk All si~m was approved unanimous- absurd," srud Vancouver center
ly Wednesday b)' NHL owners, Trevor Linden, the union's
Alexander
0-0 · 2-1 . commissioner Gary Bellman president.
1 o-o
Belpre
2-1
repeatedly belittled the union's
Bettman made clear that
Q-0 2- 1 bargaining ·position, talked declaring an impasse under
Meigs
about' the possibility the con- U.S. labor law and imposing
Nelsonville..York
o-o. 2-1 frontation could extend into the new work . rules unilaterally
Vinton County
o-o 2-1 2005-06 season and said the was an option, but said it had
· Wellston
o-o 2-1 conflict has jeopardized the not yet been considered.
NHL's participation in the
"I think it's pretty fair to s;~y
. Hocking Division
2006 Winter Olympics.
that we ' re at an impasse right
IBm
Illk All
"When we ultimately make now, and my guess 1s that
Trlmllle
o-o 3-0 thedealthathastobemade, we we've probabfy been at
will then see whether or not impasse for months, .if not a
Eastern
0-0 1•2 there i·s time for a season or year," he said. "At some point
Southam
0-0 1-2 some semblance of a season," when we 're at impasse, we
, Waterford
o-o 1-2 he said. "If there is, great.• and could simply say, 'We' re going
•
o-o o-3 if there isn't, then we' ll deal to open, and here are the terms
: Federal Hocking
with the next lleason when it . and conditions. Let's go.' It's
; Miller
o-o D-3 comes along."
that simple ."
.
Friday's Gamee
Bettman claimed teams had
Goodenow said attempting
combined to lose more than to .impo&gt;e terms would be a
: Meigs at Warren
$ I. 8 billi'on over I o ye&lt;US, and "very, very ill-advised strate•
: Eastern at Green
said management will not gy" and predicted "the results
Valley at Alexander , ·
a~ to a labor deal that does- of it could be. catastrophic."
• Belpre at Federal Hocking
n t include a defined relation- Bettman said the use of
: Portsmouth at Nelsoillliii&amp;-York
ship between revenue and replacement players is not con: Minford at VintOn County
salaries.
templated.
Wellston at Oak Hill
"Until he gets off the salaryThe 30 teams - 24 in the
; Wahama atTrimbiEi
cap issue, there 's .not a chance United States , and six i.n
for us to get an agreement," Canada -. had been set to start
: Waterford at Fort Frye
:
Saturday's Gamee
union head Bob Goodenow opening training camps on
• SoUthern at Ports. Notre Dame·
said in Toronto, adding that Thursday. the day after the
: Miller at Bishop Ro6eaane
players "are not prepared to expiration of the current labor
entertain a salary cap jn an_r contract. The deal ~as first
.•
way, shape, measure or form.
agreed to in 1995 and extended
Cilrdlnel
aoi
Far apart on both philosophY. two ye&lt;US later through Sept.
. -1!111
and finimces, the sides haven t 15, 2004. Bellman termed the
: Wflf'IS
. Hl 3-0 . banlained since last Thursday extension "a mistake, in hind1-0 3-0 and'say they
entrenched for . si~t. ••
.
• Wtnfield
'It of kind stinks, packing uP.
1-0 2_1 the long run, echoing words of
.: fUll Pleasant
baseball players
owners at and moving out of here, ·
1-2 1·2 ·the stan of their disastrous 7 Philadelphia right win~ Tony
: Sissonville
. D-1
D-3
1/2-month labor war of 1994- Amonte said at his tearn·.s pracllarbert Hoover
0-3
95Th
. . . aim t
h
Lice rink. "I can',t . say. they
D-1
: FUa
ere 1s
os no c ance weren't preparing ~ s for it.' '
Ftfdav's GameS
the season will start as sched,
Some players are expected to
: Point~ at Gallia Academy uled on Oct. 13, and Benm:w sign with European leagues.
.told ,teams 1,0 release their are- and others could joi n a 'ix·: FUaatOakHitl
nas·for other events for the next team, four-on-fou r c ircuit
: Wayne at Wtnfield
.
~ 30 days. Bettman ~d the sea- called the Original Stars
: Herbert l-kxM3r at Bluefield
son can't extend past June, ~d Hockey League, which is set to
the lockout threatens to w1pe start play Friday in Barrie .
. out the ~tanley Cup final for Ontano. Others could go to a
All the fustume smce f919, when revived
World
Hoc key
3-0
die
senes
between
Montreal
.
Association,
which
plans
to
: Ironton
and
Seattle
was
stopped
after
open
Ocl.
29
wtth
c1ght
teams
_
21
: Symmes VaJei
~ve games. due a Spam sh playing 76 games apiece.
: Wahama
2-1
influenza
ep1dem1c.
. ·
Bettmaft said more than I00
•
1-2
''The·union
is
trying
!O
win
a
emplo.yees
from. the N HL's
Oak.Hil
0-3
fi~t, . hopmg that ~ owners central staff of aoout 225 wi ll
Haman
will gtve up. That will tum out be terminated. · most on
• South Galia
to be a terrible error in, judg- :0.1onday.
·
•
•
'l'rtclllly'a Gar.ment.,"
Benman
~d. "They
The
stoppage
is
the
tirst for a
•
are
apparently.
convmced
that
North
American
major
league
: South Gala at Symmes Valet
come
some
pmnt
m
the
season,
since
·
the
1998-99
NBA
lock• Wahama a1 Trimbte
owners'
resolve
will
waver.
out
canceled
464
games.
cuh
the
- Burt:h at Haman
'
and
I'm
telling
you
..
that
ts
ting
each
cl
uti's
regular-season
Bojd Comly (Ky.) at Ironton
wrong, wrong, ~rong.
schedule from 82 games to 50.
• V/slls•Jn at Oak H!l
BY RONALD BLUM

Associated Press

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Nationa l Hockey t eague commissioner Gary Bettman gestures wh tle speakmg du nng a news
confe rence Wed nesday in New York. The NHL said it was imposing a locko ut of the playe rs association. effe ctive Thursday the day (lfter the expiration .of the current collective ba rgaining
agreement. (AP)

�-

.
Thursday, September 16, 2004

..The Daily Sentinel
. .
• Page 84

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Suggs
back .at
practice

.Aiou· wants Bonds to get more respect
0

ES PN.
If Bonds doesn' t do it in
Mi lwaukee, he'll get th e
c hance to hi t his hi storic
homer where he has most of
them, at SBC Park, where
tiis· shots often splash into
McCovey Cove in San
Francisco Bay.
The Giants start a nine·
ga me homestand Friday
nig ht aga inst the San Diego
Padres, his favo rite vic tims.
h h' 78 h
· ff
Bonds as 11
omers 0
Pad res pitc hers, more th an
any other opponent.
Despi te hi s powe r, Bonds
is far fro m a beloved player.
He's bee n bedeviled by his
oft e n tanta nkerous dispos ition and. in rece nt ye ars,
sterotd suspicio ns.
Alou pl ayed witj1 Aaron.
and would like 1 ~ see Bonds
respected in the same man-

MILWAU KEE - Felipe
Alou wants Barry Bond s to
get some res pect, and not the
kind that pitchers and managers show by wa lking him
all the time.
The San Francisco Gia nts
manager said he hopes the
pub lic's percepti on of the'
surly slugger will change
when Bonds jo~1s Babe Ru th
and Hank Aaron in the 700 _
homer clUb.
.
.. Some of the great things
that thi s man does wo ul d be
finally and trul y recog·
nized,'' Alo u sa id.
Bonds nearly joi ned 'the
dub Wednesday nigh t, send·
ing the first pitch he saw 'to
the right-fie ld warning .track.
He we nt . httles&lt; ·or the
. h
'h
net.
.
secon d stra tg t ga me. ow·
·:Hank was a gy,h.- who was
ever. go ing &lt;Hor-4 wit h a 11 0 1 Mr. anything. He was
walk m tile Gtant's 8- 1 win Mr. Gentlem an ,'' Alou said .
over the Brewers that ke pt
h' d h • h
. San
Franc isco one-hal f "Even to t 15 ay e 5 o!Jg,une ahead of the C hicago ing th at somebod y would
Cubs in the NL wild card brea k his record. But not
·
ev eryon e' s the same.
race .
.. .
.
. . · People come from different
Alou Is avers~ to .g ivmg environments.
B~nds a day .off W I,t~ the
"I don 't know why Barry
Gtants tn the playoft race. so is the way he is or why Hank
h1s le~t fte lder will. play was the way he was. And it
Thursda.y afternoo n 1,11 the would be impossible to
se n es tmale, whtc h ~Ill be make everybody likable to
broadcast natiOnall y by

the public."
wa ll before Brady Clark eraMil waukee manager Ned died the ball a few fee t in
Yost can' t fat ho m why the front.
'T m sure he' d like to hit
public doesn't embrace
Bonds but said, .. I think boo- one a little farther for hi s
ing in a visiting· park is a 700th instead of sneakin g
great form of respect."
o ne ' o ut . o n
me,"
But what abo ut walking O ber muelier said. "When a
Bonds, is that a great form of guy takes a hack like that
respect?
ant! it's that high. you just
Yost doesn' t think so. He' cross your fin gers."
,
Bonds grounded ball s to
ordered hi s'pitc hers to challenge Bonds whenever pos· the ri'ght side of th e infield
sible th is wee k.
four times in the fi rst two
"My whole philosoph y is games of the se ri es, but
if he's going to hurt you to a Obermueller wasn' t about to
poin t where you can't recov- say Bonds might be getting
er. then you can ' t .pitch to an xious.
hi ni:" Yos t said . "Just le t
"You talk to him about
common sense rul e. In rea li - th at," Obermueller said.
ty, 6.25 times out of 10, he's "We' re just tryi ng· no t to
go ing to ma ke an out. give in to him..:·
Statistics say that."
For th e second straig ht
Stati stics al so say he' ll hit game, !3onds had nothing to
a home run arlee every e ight say about hi s chase for 700
at-bats whenever ·he sees ho me run s.
strikes.
After th e game, Bonds
Right- hander
Wes slouched on a green leath er
Obermueller tho ught fo r a sofa in the clubho use,
moment he was Bonds' vic· wat chin g the Dodgers·
tim for No. 700 when he left Padres game on a big-screen
a two-seam fa stball right TV and keeping. to himself.
.'over the plate in 'the top of
Although Bonds didn ' t go
the second .
deep, J.T.· Snow connected
With the rouf closed to for a three-run homer folkeep o~t the rai n but .with lowing yet another walk to
winds swirling through the · th e San Francisco slugger,
open
outfield
panel s, then added a two- run double
Obermueller thought it in the ninth. Deivi Cruz al so
mi ght ca rry 360 feet over the homered to back Brett

Holmes and King were expecting
Santo.nio III just as he was preparmg to
come to Ohio State as a freshman recruit in

Holmes
from Page 81

2002.

"It was very difficult because I wanted to
be
a part of his life from the very begin·
receiver corps .... He is a special player."
ning," Holmes said. " My parents kept talk·
Ho lmes' 2 18 yards were the most by an
ing to me, telling me to go off to ~chool and
Ohi o State receiver since Terry Glenn hac;! just do what you have to do because in three
253 yards at Pittsburgh in 1995. The 80-yard or four years it ' ll be all over and you'll still
TO reception matched the thi[d-longest in
get to li ve your life a nd you can take care of
school history.
them then."
" My confide nce is hi gh right now and I'm
The separation makes life hard on every ·
-glad m y coaches and the quarterback believe llody.
in me," Holmes said.
"It is (difficult), but knowing that I can
A week earli er, he totaled four receptions
talk to my oldest son on the phone kind of
(or 9 1 yards including a clinching 23-yard
gives me a sense that he's here at all times,"
touchdown in a 27-6 win over Cincinnati.
Holmes said. " He encoura~es me a lot to go
. Ho lmes and his high school sweetheart,
Nicole Kin g, have a 2-year-old named out and finish what I'm domg. So it all pays
off in the long run. I talked to my girl before
Santo nio III and a toddler named Nicori .·
the game and she told me to go out and score
They li ve in. Florida. ·not far from where he two touchdowns for them and make a few
and Nicole met at Belle Glade Central High catches for her. That kind of· inspired me,
School when they were juniors.
too."
·

Tomko ( 10-6), who p1tched
a four-hitter.
Wi th a run ner on fi rst and
one out .in the sixth . Bonds
walked· for the 206th time
th is season. Snow then sent a
1-0 pitch from t;?ber mueller
(5 - 8) int o
the Gia nts'
bu llpen for his II th ho me
ru n and a 3-0 lead.
Since Au g. 4, Giants batter s ,immed iately following
Bonds' walks have hi t .396
( 19-for-48) with 20 RBis.
B o nds reac hed o n an error
in the 11int h inn ing, disappo inting the small crowd of
22.228 tha t cheered wildly
whe n Edgardo Alfo nzo drew
a two-out walk. Bonds took
a b ig cut at a 3-0 pitch fro m
'ri'gh t-hander Pedro Li ria no,
and the ball we nt thro ugh
fi rs t . 6aseman
Ly le
Ove rbay's legs.
B o nds was replaced by
pin c h-runner Dustan Mohr ·
an d received a standing ovalion as fan s ru shed for the
ex its .
Some of th em might ha ve
been headin g for the tic ket
win dow.
The Brewers a nnoun ced
there , were still plenty of
seats av.ail a ble in the rigbtfi e Ld
bl eac he rs
for
Th ursday's noon start, whic h
was moved up an hour to
accommoda te TV.

Eagles
from Page 81
back Mark Castro a nd
speedy tailback Jos h Moore.
Castro ra n for 85 yards and
touchdown last week and
gained 189 yards in a win
over so uth Gallia in week
two.
" He's definit ely their go·
to guy, anytime_ they need
yards, they just hand him the
ball." Ne wland said of
Castro . "What we have to do
is tackle low and keep our
feet moving, becau se if we
don ' t, we''ll just bounce off
of him like Ping- Pong
balls."
Eastern allowed more tha n

m::rtbune - Sentinel - l\e iste-r
CLASSIFIED

BEREA - Wearing a neck
collar fo r added protec tion,
Brow ns runn ing back .Lee
Suggs returned to practice
Wednesday and was listeq as
questionable for this weeke nd's game at Dallas,
Suggs has been bothered by
a neck stinger for two weeks
and missed the season opener
against Baltimore. He took
part in · team drill s on ,
Wednesday. but didn't work
on blocking.
"We kept him out of the
liigh contact and blitz-drill
stuff." said coach Butch
Dav is, who added that it's still
too early to determine if Suggs
will ~lay Sunday.
"It s truly day to day," he
said. " If he comes through
OK, we' ll give him a little
more to do tomorrow."
Suggs· was not available in
the locker room for interviews
before practice.
For the second time this.
week, Davis ~mpted to clar·
ify Suggs' medical condition.
On Monday, Davis denied a
report that said the Browns
were being extra cautious with
Suggs because he has stenosis
- · a narrowing of the spinal
column.

4 00 yard s on the ground last
w eek aga inst Wahama ..
" We 'v ~ bee n working real
h ard in practice on tackling
and gettin g a lot of guys to
the ball ," Newl and noted.
While the power runn ing
game is its weapon of
c hoice , G reen al so employs
the use o f a change-of-pace
b ack in M oore.
"They' ll pound you inside
w ith their fu llback, and then
t h ey' ll run some qu ick
pitches
with (Moore) ,"
N ewland
ex pl a ined .
" They' ll run a counter and
sometimes they' ll let the
fullback lead bl ock for him.
H e's a really fast; shifty run·

n er."
Moore g ained 79 yard s in
l as t week 's lo ss and 129

ln·One ·week With Us
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To Place
t!tribune
l\egt~ter
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Your Ad, (740) 446·2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
Oead'lfir~
Monday thru Friday
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smce September 3rd Male
Beagle mi x, Reddish b rown ,
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area. Family pet, please
return no questions asked.
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bng hl and wonderlul future Rd. Call (740 )367-7287

against the Rebels.
Friday's game could be a
sloppy one, as remnants of
Hurricane Ivan are ex pected
to move through the are a . .
" I think th eir coach feel s
the same way I do, thi s is
foo tb all and hi gh sc hool ·
football is supposed to b6
played Friday ni ght under
the li ghts." stated the
Eas tern mento r. " Foot,ball
games are tough sometimes,
to ugh peopl e play football.
we: re going to play th ro ugh
the we ather."

·~

PUIJLiC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that , · on
Salurday, September
18, 2004, at 10: 00
a.m., a public sale will
.be held at ~11 W

1

1FTDF7865VNA85412
1998 C H E V Y
MALIBU
1G1ND52M7WY11469
8
2001 PONTIAC
GRANDAM
1G2NW52E61 C28455

an Interest In the raat
eatata
described
below:
INS T ~U MEN T
200100000057
OR
Book 118 Page 110
Situated In the
Second St, Pomeroy,
VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio. The · Farmers 5 "
County ol Melga and
Bank and Savings
211111 DODGE State ol Ohio:
Company Is selling DURANGO
PARCEL NO. 1:
for cash In hand or 184HS28Z41F566198
Beginning North 21
certified check the
THE
HOME deg. 57' wes~ 76.15
NATIONAL
BANK teet from an Iron pin
following collateral:
RESERVES
THE located at lhe aoulh1999 DODGE CARSW RIGHT TO REJECT ealterly corner altha
AVAN
IB4FP2534XR388809
ANY AND
McD. Brlcklea .262
1998 PONTIAC SUN- ALL BIDS. ALL VEHI- acre tot which aald
FIRE SE 2D SFS . I CLES ARE SOLD" AS Iron pin Ia located on
G2JB1248W7504529
IS WHERE IS" WITH the Northerly Una ol
NO
W A R ... Grant llreel In the
The Farmara Bank
and
Savings R M N T I E S VIllage ol Mlddllport,
EXPRESSED
OR Qhlo; thence North
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the IMPL!EO. FOR AN 20 &lt;lag. 28'weat81.10
right to bid at Ibis APPOINTMENT TO teet to a point, !lienee
aale, and to withdraw SEE, CALL 948-2210, north 36 deg 55'37.15; thence north
the above collateral · ASK FOR SHEILA.
53 &lt;lag., 5' east 135.8
prior to aall. Further, 'Sincerely,
The Farmers Bank
Sheila Buchanan
feet ta t(1e public
road; thence south 38
and
Savings Home National Bank
dag. 3'eall117.5teet;
Company renrv~s tl(15,18,17
lhance lOUD\ 37 &lt;lag
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
XI' - t 113.5 teet to
M.D. Brlcldea llna;
The
above
Public Notice
thence north 13 dag.
des::rlbed collateral
a• well 28.4 teet to the
will be sold " II to- LEGAL NOTICE
M.D. Elljcldaa corner;
where Ia''. with no
expreNed or lmP.(IId
Tha
Unknown lhance lOUD\ 40 dag.
Helra,
~Devl...a,
waiTIInty given.
31' 80.38 teet to
For further lnfor- L e g a l a e s , the p i - of begin·
m•Uon, or for an Admlnlstratora, nlng.
appointment
to Exocutora
Bave and except
and
Inspect
collateral , Aaalg'na ol Robart T. the coal, which 11M
-n
prior lo aall lime can- Southern, Dec:u- heretofore
~ Diane Rector or
whoae tall place ol rnaro.t and aubject
Randy Haya at 992· ,..lclence and whDM to all 1 1 1 1 - and
2131.
of
preMnl pi- ol JMI. rlghta-ol·way
11115,18,17
dance Ia unknown -.~.
The
· above
wtll tau· IICIIIw tNt
on Nowmber 7, 2003 deecrlbed -1 .....
Public Notice · 0
1:48
p.m., wtll ... daslgnatad ..
Mortgage EIIC!ronlc Lot No.10 on • plat ol
THE HOME NATION- ' Reglatrallan
Fairland SUbdlvtalon,
AL BANK WILL AUc- Syatama, Inc., Its auc- which will aubMTIO,. THE FOUOW- ceaaors and Malgne, quantty ... fllld with
INGITEMS~
••
nomlnM
lor the llalga County
SATURDAY SEPTEM- HouMhold Finance Alca•dll ..
BER 18, 2004, AT Cooporatkwl, Ita ......
· Toge- with a
10:00 A.M. AT THE ceaora and •ae'gtll rfght-oi....,Y the
BANK'S
Iliad Ita Complaint In
public road IMdlng to
PARKING LOT:
c ... No. 03CV·128 ..... _.ty, which
1994 J E E P - o n May 5, 2004 0
wtH be clecllcated H a
CHEROKEE
12:28 p.m. ftted Ita
I atr.t when
lallledf'
.
1J4F~L118122
,S u p p I 1 m a n ta I
1995
BUICK RIY· Complaint tn lhe
ELN0. 2:
IERA
, Court ol Common
Also, the following
IG4HD2219S4702667
...... Maiga CoUnty,
-~-•
1996 FORD F150
Ohio alllglng that the deecrlbed
altvetlod In the VHt-ue
1FTEX14N6TKA3885
of Middleport. County
5
party. Delendantta) of tllelga Stale of
19117 FORO F150
·h8ve or claim to h8ve · Ohio, boundecl and

---

&amp;

,...

•

deecribed a8 lotlowt:
Begl~nlng at the
southeasterly corner
ol Parcel No. 1 at a
point which will be at
the boundary of th~
street contained on
the plat which Is
referred to above
which will hereafter
be filed In iha office
ol the lllelga County
Recorder; thence In 8
weeterty direction 60
filet; lheooe North 53
deg. 5' East to he
public road; thence
following the south
tine ol the public road
to
the
weaterly
boundary of Parcel
No. 1; thence south 1
53 dag. 5' weal to the 1
placa of beginning,
containing approxlmataty 0.15 acre.
Save and except
the ·coal which has
-n
heretofore
reMrved and subject
to all aa~~m~nta and
of
righta-ol·way ·
record.
Further excepting
and r...rvlng the
grantora aulllclent
,..1 - • along the
-toconatrUcta
two-car
garage,
together with tha
right IC! make euch
axcavaUon and to .
upon the pram._ lor the purpose
of conatructlng aald
garage. Said gar-a-,
If conatruclad, ahell
be conatructad of
cooiCI.ata or con..,...
blacka with • concreta roof and aald
rool ...... be ..,.,...
with soli eo u · to
mau the surface .
above the garage ·
coo dorm lo the genar·
11 , aurl- of tha
...,.lnlng portion ol
the lot conveyed
hereby.
It being
unclaratood that the
tll•lloil , . . _ the
' - almpta ownerahlp
of the percet of -~

___

...,.

by.
' Howe•ar, the
Grant- are grantad

.,

1ment to main-

tain the aurfaCI of the
area mrerved above
the ga!'llll. provldecl

THE DEFENDANT($)
NAMED ABovE .ARE
REQUIRED
TO
ANSWER ON OR
BEFORE
THE Oct. 21 DAY OF ,
2004:
BY:
REIMER ;
LORBER
&amp;
ARNOVITZ CO., L.P.A.
FldelltyJHounhotd
Edward G. Bohnert,
Attorney at Law
Attorney for Plalntlfl·

r

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS. ·
S11bscribe today. ·
992-2155
'

Pat111oner
P.O. Box968
TWtnaburg,,OH 44087

Sept. 19, 2004 · Noon
VFW Tuppers Plains. OH
$6.50 Adults- $3.50 Children
Carryout Available

Perennials, herbs &amp; Shrubs
60% off now through Sept. 30th.

A TOUCH OF THYME
.Rt. 62, Hartford
Tuppers Plains
VFW Auxiliary
CHICKEN' DINNER
Carryouts Available
12:00 noon Sunday, Sept. 19
$6.50 adults • $3.50 children

·For,
ANew Home?
TrY the ·
. "f" dS"•• .
Cl aSSIIe

~~
iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiioo_.l

KIT &amp;

CARLYLE

. 110

r---------~-----T------~~
lwrlght@lc.net

,~.,..0

MY

Oikml's ltiJre Rarl
•

Shuatlona Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent... ..........................................480
Sporting Gooda...........................................520
SUV'a for Sale..............................................720
Trucka lor Sale ................................. ,.......... 715
Upholstery .............................................. :.... 870
Vans For Sate...............................................730
Wantad to Buy .............................................090
Wanted to Buy- Farm,Supptlea ........... :...... $20
Wantad To Do .............................................. 180
Wantad to Rent ............................................470
Vard Safe.. Galllpcitla ..............................:.....072
Yard Safe..Pornero;&gt;y1Middle .........................074
Vlrd Safe..Pt Pleaaant ................................ 076

•

----

RADIOLOGY
TECiiNOLOGIST CT
PO~nON

or

(304)937·2705
Absolute Ttlp Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Co1n s.
Proofsets, Gold Rinb(s, U.S.
Currency,-M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151
Second
~venue ,

Seektng AA RT registered

technologist fo r full time
position Primarily for CT
Wilh opportunity to war ~ In
Gallipolis, 74()-446·2842.
MAl or Ultraso und . as well.
Expenence preferred but
River lot with water &amp; elec- employer w1U prov1de train·
tric availabl e. Box trailer for ing toward cer!Hicalion.
storage. Call Ron (740)446· Great opportuni ty working
7885
with new equipment 1n a
I \ 11'1 I 1\ \I I \ l
hospital-based
rad iology
department. Fnendly team\ I ll\ It I "&gt;
oriented atmosphere that
supports
independence,
continued educatio n, and
professional deVel op ment.
Interested
candidates,
An Excellent way to · eam pleas.e inquire at (740)592·
money. The New Avon.
9483 and send resume to:
Call Marl~n 304-882·2845
Radiology Associates of
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Sell, Shl~ey Spears, ·304-

675·1 429.

Athens

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Athans, OH 45701
FaJI' (7ol0)592·9396

BFI Waatt Systems is hiring

STNA'S NEEDED

location . Appl icants mu st
have a valk:l Class A or B
COL wHh air brakes &amp; clean Holzer Senior C81a Center,
MVR. Experience required . a 70 bed long-term nursing
Apply a t: Point Pleasant' facil ity has openings for Full·
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Employment Agency, Ohio II providing qual ity clue in a
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ext 115 friendly, home-like atmoa·
_ • •
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ph ere Is what yo u're k:loki ng
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6688 or (7ol0)339-1
Delivefy!Warehouse person
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opening, must have excellent drjving record, apply at
lifestyle Furniture, 856 '3rd.
Overbrook Aehabilltat1on
Ave . Gallipolis, 9-5 no phOne
Cemer
is currenUy accepting
· calls please
applications for a Night Sl'lltt
Hiring cashier &amp; cooks . ~7p·7a) AN Supervisor If
5:30am·2Pm. Apply within, you are lnt,erested, please
Tudors Biswit World, State come in and 1111 ou1 an appli·
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Mldeleport EOE
Mart. (7&lt;W)446-7282.

--

..

·

f~C&gt;

C&gt;t SH.

0
0
0

"

HOMf~~

FUR SALE

DESIRED
QUALIFICATION S

Hl!J..p WAN'IED

Forty Hours a week
$7·S8ihour
Call tor major Non-Protil
organizations or Help
Protect your Gun RightS!
PrOfessional work environ·
mant, Paid vacations every
tlx months, Ful1 benellta
~ge aher ninety dayl!
Schedule you r\ Interview
now to earn a

$200 Sign on Bonuol
1·877-483-8247

ext 24!56

- - - - -loading

The qualified candid ate Will
complete
operations,
Inspection , and ma1nte·
nance of all equipment and
systems, Internal and e~tter·
nal, to meet dispatch
requireme nts and attain
..
optimal plant performance
as dii'ected and defined by
management
Addilional
responsibili ties
include
actively engaging In plant
systems and functional
assignment
stewardship
program , completJng all
asaoctated record1, regula·
tory, planning, budget1, pre·
ventWe, correctl\1'1 and capl·

•v•·

actlvelr panlcipatlng In
the self-directing work team
program . safety program.
training and development
program.

commumcatlon &amp;kilts

~itt

at (7oW)985-3329

•Preform repetittve and nonrepetitive physical duties
requiring Hfting, push/pull.
stretching, bending, cltmb-ing, an&lt;l working In award
postUons. Lifting, pushing.

-~- ·-·----

MB 5263

= '

r---~~--.-,

related degree

Cash' Cash! 3K·350K any
~urpose Good/Bad credit
Th1s position oller a compel· 1.a6S·306· 1337
lt1ve base salary and bonus i:!:~~~;;;..--....,
opportumty, pl us benefits/
PROF'f.SSIONAt

401(k) package. To apply for

SERVIU.S

"---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO.._.I

thiS posttlo n, ptease viSit our
website at www dynegy coro
and cltck on caree r!? hnk.
refer io reqUisition #2490,
job t1tl e O&amp;M Techmc1an .
Dynegy
ts
an
Equal
Opportunity Employer

. TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL S~CURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1-888·582-3345
Rl \I I 'I \II

Informed that an
dwelling• advertlled In
thll newspaper are
Bllallable on an equal
oppartunlty basal.

0% Down Payment a\len
•Nith less than perfect cr'ed1t
Easy qualifying. Own don't
LOca l
company Homes l rom
rent
$10 0001,
Mortgage LOC!ltors 740· Forclosure, VA Hud for list·
992·7321
ing ~-800·749·8~06 ex 1709

Galllpolll CarHr College

,

readers are hereby

toR SALE

(Ca ree rs Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367.
' 1-800·2 14·0452 ,
www giRrpoll~et~reercollege.com

Act~edlted Member Accrediting
Council lor lnoep.ndln! ~egn
and Schooll 127,.a

ii0sl
s
po!l;111":1W""'"-VVIm'lfipo
ible on thl~ 3 bedroom,
ath, modern home. on 1
cres. newly refinished 1
OOi, central air. hea
ump, basement, conVlent
y located 1.5 m1les of
oute 50 &amp; only 5 m1nute
rom
Tuppers
Plains
pproximttely 1850.
anthly paym•nt. Cal
hrls
or
Robbie
a

Shotokan Karate Classes
Monday &amp; Thursday begmnlng September 13th, 6 00
PM.
Carl eton
School,
Syracuse, Ohio.for mfot matlon contact, Kenny Tolii'Ver ' r.,7~4~0~7:..:·~
304
~1_ _ __.

(740)985·3994 .

Steve

Kempton (7.(0)667·3039

~

All real estate ad vertising
In thi s new1paper Is
aubfect lo the Federal
Fair Ho~o~aing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
adv•rt• se " any
pr11farance, limitat ion or
dlac:rlmlnatlon baNd on
race, color, reh g1on, sex
familial s tat~o~ a or national
orlgi n1 or any Intention to
make any such
pteferen c;e, limitat ion or
dl sc:rimlnatlon."
Thll newapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlsemenls for rolil
ettate which Ia In
viol ation of the law Our

HoMF.s

We Believe In People
www.DYNEGY.COM

I

House 3 Bedroom 1 112
Bath Heat Pump, new
Carpet, Windows &amp; Roof.
River 1ew 12 Smith St No
Money Down to quallty 1ng
B ~o~yer $42fr/month why Rent
(304)675-2749

v

New Listing lor sale or rent
tn Mason wv manufactured
1560 sq . FT on 80x200
fenced lot 3br, 2batn , LA,
DR. Kit, 3 ' se asoned glass

porch.
568,500
or
3 bedroom brick front $425/month plus last month
F\anch Newer roof, vinyl , ran1, no pets, Ae1 requtrV\1
~

.

heat
pump,
Smithl (304)773-9181 or (304)773·
Cabinets, 1 car garage, pri· S040
'Vate lane off SR 160. 1.8
High
School
Juntors, acre s. (740)388·8676
Ranch sty le home 1 112
from Rio Grande on
Senlore and Prio r Servlci 3 bedroom, lull basement miles
en erry AICIQe Ad Ca11
unu can f1 1l vacant positions
1 -garage, appro)!: 1 acre of (740)245 510~ 1
1n the· West VIrginia Army land, 5 miles rrom town on
•

n

r-;;;orn..-.-o.;u:.,

FIND A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

'

~

:~~~::::~•:gng~:e:r::::: ~r---~-ioliNiil~liyN;.,_.I

National Guard. If ~ are
between the ages of,.17-35
or have prior military S6rv·
Ice, you won't want to pasa
•High school Diplom a or this up. For Opportunities in
Equtvalent requi red
~·r area caH · 304 675
·
·
·
•Minimum of two years •·5837 .
.
tall ntrots (hi h
tnstrumen
co
PIOPLI
ly prelerred). electrical or Wfllnlll
We
PayYoul
mecha~lc experience .
SCASH REWAAOS$
•Proflctent computer skills ..
For the Wetght you Lose
•Must pouoss and maintain
tn 30 Days
a valid dnver's license
Call Tracy 74Qo44 1· 1982
•Promote and work With oth(6001201·0632
era in a team environment.
www famousnutritiOn .com
•Competent oral and written

a.

us:

110

•Power plant ma int~nance
HIO VAL LEY PUBLISH
experience 1ncludtng mam- lNG CO. recommends tha
tenance skills, troublesh oot·
ou do busmess w1th pao
1ng, pre'o'entatlve ma1nt ele you know, and NOT t
nance, and predlcttve ma1nend money th rough th
tenance programs.
ail until you ha'o'e ln\lestl
•Developed mstrument a·
ated the offe rm·
tiO ns and electronic control

1170
Ill pro)ICII for aulgntd
tei'Tll and functions u well

aa

UNITED SECURITY
MORT(\AGE
, ·800·370·4965
·CALL TOOAV
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

Carpel. Full 'easement 1/2
acre lot $41 ,900 (304)6752933

I

O&amp;M LEVEL2

Eastern High 5&lt;:hoo' is con·
Sldenng
applicants ' for
Varsity Gtrlt Basketball
Coach. Conlact Ihe princi·
pal , Jon Lindner, or the
Athletic
Director,
Pam

NEW PURCHASES/
REFINANCES
SO DOWN/ SO DOWN
CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT/ BANKRUPTC IES
WELCOME I

~~~O~PI'O:~RllJN=~~m~·~

Dynegy provide s electncity
natural gas and natural gas
hquids
lo
customers
throughou t
the
United
States. We are seeking to ftll
the following position in our
Aoll1ng Hills Genemting LLP
Powe rplant in Wilkesville·
Township, Ohio

AEOUIAED
QUALIFICATIONS

I.

e1C per1ence, Instr umental/
co ntrols, electrtcal and/or '
mechanic:al experiences.

DYNEGY

NOW HIR ING· A
provider to lncttviduall , wt1h
mental retardatlon and
Mvelopmentat disabilities Ia
looki ng for dlrkt care staff ln .
Gallipoli s. No experience
necessary. Paid training. It
yOU would like to }Oin our
te am to help Individuals
achieve their lul1et1 potentie!, ap ply in per so n at
Mid dleton Estates. 8204
Cfa11a Drive, Gallipolis, OH .
An ' Equal
Opportumty
Emptoyer. FfM/0/V. ,

A'rrEN TJ 0:\'!
GETVOUA LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOMEI
"FREE" APPROVED ·
HOME LOANSt

By Owner US 35 1n Mason
County. 5 Rooms &amp; Bath (2
Bedrooms)
Larg e SunRoom 12x32, all new

-------~- Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

Now Hlrtngl

7080

~
• Mm1mum one ye ar related - - - e:.penence.
1!1~-~----.,"
• Power plant operational i10
RUSIN~

Hl!J..p WArmD

Rocksprin gs Rehabilitation
SASSY SCISSORS
Center ts looking tor dedicat·
Stylist wanted, Salary!'
eel compass tonate State
' Tested Nurs1ng Assistants. Comml sston 740·441-1880
or 740·256·6336.
Compet1t1 ve wages, health ·
and dental benefits. and ~~-----­
Experienced Roofi ng Crews
401K avai lable We take needed
Florida's
10
pnde in our home and res1· Hurr lea ne Area ~.op Pay Ca 11
dents and need great team David @ 1_772 _567 _0559
players to jom Us U you have
these qualiflcattons please Make 50% selling Avon.
apply
to. ·Rocksprings L1 m1t ed
lime
ONLY
Re habilitatiOn Center, 36759 {740)448·3358. F1rst 5 to call
Ro'cksprings
,Road, receives a gift
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Full Ume position at Rob's
Extendtcare
Health
Services, Inc. is an equal Billiards. Call 208-8622 ask
opporlumty empl oyer that for Rob or stop in.
enco urages
workplace Param edics
&amp;
EMT 's
dt'Ve rsity. MIF ON
needed . Apply al 1354
Farmers Bank IS seeking a
lend er fo r the Galllpohs market auahlied applicant will
have an associate degree or
a m1n1mum of three years
lending experi ence or equiValen t co mbination of educa·
tlon and experience. Must
be highl y motivated and
possess good verbal and
written
commumcation.
ski lls. Competitive salary
and benefits package commensurat e with expenence.
Interested fndtvlduals send
re sume to PO Box 808;
Gallipolis, OH
45631 .
Member FDIC and Equal
Opportuntty Employer

5 bedroom , 11 12 batl1
house lor sale Pome10y, 3/4
acre, 3/4 remodeled . 0° o
down poSSible, payment
aoprox . $425 00 month. no
land contract (740)208·

CARE
..__ _lllliiiiiiiiio--'
'
Accepting applicat ions lor
care of elderly in my home
Pr1vate rooms, nutnttous
meat planmng, 24 hour care
wilh 20 years of exper1ence.·
Bam-3PM
740-446·7855

•Train oti1B r employees In
effi cient and safe operatiOn
ollacility.
•All o\ller duties as
assigned

PO Box 2608

Ortvers for the Gallipolis, OH

Schoola lnatructlon.....................................150
Sled , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850

170
.1
ML•iCELI.ANEOUS

Hq.l' WAN'IID

and/or p lhng reqwres a WOitK ~OM HOME
mtntmum abtl1ly of 50
Home Based Bus1ness
pounds
Earn $200·$500 PIT
•Work rotat tng sh1fts. week·
Earn $2 000 and up F1T
Paid Vacat10ns, Bonuses
ends, be on-call , accept ca ll·
outs and work overt1me.
740·441·1964
888-540-8097
•Prov ide coverage and ·
www.wor!(atcasa com
share on call duty for other
operating technicians
•Abilty to read and Interpret
Wo\NIID
techmc al manuals and drawIngs and detect, diagnose
To Do
and repair equipment mal·
functi ons.
DRYWALl.
•Understand ca use and
Ins tall. Fin 1sh Painttng,
effect 1n plant processes and
Carpen t entr~ . Bathrooms.
· pred1c11ve plant ma1nteRestdenlial, Commercial ,
nance.
INSURED
•Must be multi· task Oriented
NOTHING TO SMALL
wtth abihty to make expedl·
Flat Pnces
t 1ous apPropriate deGISIOns
Steve· 740 388·8731
to non-roulme plant oper at·
1ng situ atiOns ·
CHJuNELDF..RLY

11"''7 A NIOW Fo)( !lfl?'rwo~
~~L-1,-'f SHoW. 6'AC.rl WE'S'jo:::.
ON~ oF tlt6M. 4EfS VoT6b

wv

Hens (304)937·3348

Protaulonal S.rvlcea .........: .......................230
Radio, TV t. CB Repalr ...............................160
Rial Estate Wantad .....................................380

"'"'P"I"'I

m..tlng IOE lblnd•rct.. We wlll not knowingly acctpt •n'fadvenialngln violatiOn ot the law.

5 Cochan Hens &amp; 5 Silky

ror Salt ................................................ seo .
Plumbing a Heating ....................................820

of rhriri-

•

POUCIES: Ohio Vttley Publlthlng rtMrvet tht right to edit, reject, or ctnce l tny ad 11 tny tlme. ErTort must be repo rted on t he flrt t dey of publlc aUon tnd
Trlbune-S...tlnei· Regleter will be r"pontlblt for no more thtn t~ cott of the ·~ occupied by the error 11'\d only the fl r1t in1ertlon. W• •h•ll not be !l.ble
any 1oM or expen.. that NIUII.Io from tM publlc..tlon or omlhiM ot an ldvertiM ment. Correction w411 be mede In the fi r1t lvell•ble &lt;edition. • Box numb«
are alway• confidential. • Cumnt rate card appllta. • All real u tate advet'llllmtnta are aubject to th1 Federal Fait Hauling Act of 1968. • Thi•

i

Pall

fJ;. .

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
""'
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

• All ads must be prepaid*

6
1·
L,.-oioi-iliiiiilliliii_.I

Personele ..................................................... 005

Seft 19th ID Z4th

ltreix Mzooa

Publication
Sunday Dlaplay : 1 :00 p.m.
Thuraday for Sunday•

I'

a

~Is l)n;d &amp;lka',

In Next Day ' s Pap'e r
Sunday_ In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sundays Paper

Fnday (9/ 17), 9am-5pm ,
Saturday (9/18), 9am·1pm.
178
Brentw ood
Dnve
Furniture, tools, play station,
karaoke machine car, motorcycle, flatbed trailer, ca noe,
cloth es. kitchen Items, toys
and more.

Cards of Thanks ................:. .......................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrleai/Refrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent..................................... 480
Excavatlng .................~................................. 830
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610
Farms lor Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Leaae ... .................................................. 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Tracla ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetable. ....................:................ 580
Furnlahad Rooma........................................450
General Haullng...........................................aso
Glveaway......................................................040
Happy Ada ................................. :..................050
Hay &amp; Graln..................................................840
Help Wented .................................................110
Home lmprovementa: .................................. 81 0
Homee for Sala .........:...............................:.. 310
Houaehold Gooda .....:................................. S10
Houaaalor Rent ................................, ......... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden ~ulpmant ........................·680
uveatoek.............: ........................................830
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lola Acraage ............................................ 350
MI1Ctllanaoua................ :............................. 17b
MIICtllanaoua Merchandlu....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr.....................: .............. 860
Mobile Hilmll for Rent ............................... 420 ·
Mobile Homes far Sate ................................320
Money 10 Loan .............................................220
Mororeyct.. .&amp; 4 Whaelera..........................740
Mualcilllnatrumanta ................................... 570

A Touch of Thyme
in the fall ,
will give you a beautiful
spring garden .
Mums $3.99 each or 3/$10

-~t ail&gt;

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneae D•v• Prior To

r
r

'GJspel MeetJng
""hur.l"h

Dally In-Column : ' 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Inaertlon

El(penses paid. Call toll free Lost W hite Spitz since
Garage Sale: S e ptemb~H
1·866·731·7825. Barbara Sunday on Hambn ck Ad. 13·18 8AM·4PM. 3 miles up
1
iii'n::;d~M~I;;;
ch.;;•;;;•;..- - - . . . . , $50 Reward (3041576·2292 #143 oH #7. lot s of baby gi rl
clothes, toys . other clothi ng
GIVF.AWAY
LoSI· black &amp; tan miniature
ani:! lots more. Ram o r
~~-------r· Pmcher, mate, in Crew Rd. shme,. Watch fo r s1gns
area, Sept. , st, black co llar
1 year old female Black Lab. wl tags, answers to Duke,
Torches, bikes, toys, boy
Call (740)245-5466
Reward, (740)992·7005
clothes girls dresses: lg.
3 cute &amp; cudd ly kittens 6 Lost· fe male mllC ed bred dog women clothes and more
weeks old. Black/white long· missing
from goodies. On Route 7 South
hair Lttter trained. (740)446· R ocks p rln gs/ F I atw oo ds' where 4-lane turns mto 2Friday 17th an d
7484 or (7401645·0891.
are a, answers to Sheba, lane
Saturday
18th from 8.00 to
Go lden Re tnever-German Reward. (740)992·5 120
i.OO.
Shephe rd leroale puppy
YARD SALE
needs' a cou ntry home Very
Yard &amp; Bake Sale- Thurs .
lovmg, beautiful &amp; smart
Fn ., Sa t. , Sept. 16, 17, 18,
@ 2004
NEA , Inc.
(740)388·8655.
lrom 9am ·? at the Long
Bottom Co mmunity Building
Half Australian Shepherd
half Brittany puppies to give
Yard Sale- Sept. 17·18·19,
away to good home only.
9am·6pm , 35650 Texas
(740)44 6·831 8. (740 )446· 4 family 29l) Roush Lane. Road AT 7 north le1t on
1865
Cheshire Sept 16·17· 18 Flatwoods to Te~t as Road
,.:c:.:___ _ _ _ _ Rain or Shine. Baby, house- turn right house is 112 mile Due to our recent A gency
e)(pan s1o n, Med1 Home
on the nght
To good home female pet rat hold Item s: etc.
304·576·3080
Health Agency; Inc IS seek·
YARD SAID
mg both a fuU·t1me AN Ca.s~
P1: PLEASANT
Manag er and a tull·tJme AN
Patient Care Coordin alor
.....
4x4'a For Sale ..............................:............... 725
Estate Yard Sale 34 Stewart pos 111o n in the Gal lipolis,
· Announcement ............................................ 030
Foi/Sat Ohio and surrounding area
Cll"on.
Sl
•1
lOam-? everything must be Duties indude establishing
Antlques .............................. :........................530
and ma1ntammg open lines
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
1
"]oc~;;~;-1
ot
communiCation w1th area
Auction and Flea Market.. ...........................080
phy sicia ns and he alth care
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
tactllties 1n the dehvery of
Auto Repalr .................................................. 770
Home Health ser vices Must
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
be
licensed in both Ohi o and
RIVER SIDE
AUCTIQN
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .......................... ... 750
BARN At. 7 South, 5 m1les West V1rg1nta. We offer a
Building Supplles .. ~ .................................... 550
below the . Dam EVERY com petitive salary, benelits
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
SATURDAY
@
6pm package and 401K. E 0 E
Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Please send resume to 352
740 256·6989.
Business Tralnlng ................) ..................... 140
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
WANIFJ)
OH .4563 1 Attn· Bnan ~ 1ng.
·campers &amp; Motor Homee........................... 790
roBuv
AN.
Camping Equipment ................................... 780

Pll.Ibll c N•:»lllc e s ·, . , N e _ . s p a p c rs .
Delivered Rl11hll llo y,.,.,.., .. o~-.. r­

that they shall not in (330) 425-4201
their use Interfere 8119,26
with ouch garage.
912,9,16,23
As currently set
forth In deed book
Volume 79 at page
. Publ!c Notice
255 and recorded 12· . _ ; - - - ' - - - - 4-98. Also commonly PROBATE COI,JRT OF
known
as :
124 MEIGS
COUNTY,
Fairland, Middleport, OHIO
OH
IN THE MATTER OF
Parcel No. 15-01294 THE ADOPTION OF
and 15-01293.
DUSTIN RAY BURNS
The Patltloner fur· (Name alter edoptlon)
ther alleges that by CASE NO. 33141
reaaon· ol default ol PUBLICATION
the Defandant(a) In NOTICE
the payment - of a TO:
TIMOTHY
promlaao;&gt;rY
note, MARC REED
oceordlng to Ita tenor,
Last Known Address:
tha conditions of a
924 Elizabeth Drive
concurrent mortgage Lancaatar, OH·43130 ,
deed gl\'111 to aacure A
Petition
for
the payment of uld
Adoption ol Duatln
note and convaylng
Ray Mower haa been
the
premises flied wllh the M'alg&amp;
daocrlbed, have been County
Probate
broken, and the aame Court,
Can
No.
haa
become 33t41 . It Ia alleged
absolute.
you have felted to
The
Petitioner communicate with or
prays
that
tha aupport the minor
~fendant(a) named
child lor more than
above til required to one yMr. A haertng
answer and HI up on the petition will be
their lntereat ln. aafd held
on
Friday,
raal eatata or be for· October 15, 2004 11
evar barred from 8:15 a.m. If you
aanrtlng the same, · ob]ect, you should
for foreclosure of appear and Inform
aald mortgage, the the Court. The Court
marshaling of ony Ia locatad In tha
IIana, and the· aata of Melga
County
aald raal eatata, and CourthouM at the
the pJOCMda of aald comer of Court StrMt
aate applied lo the and ,Sacond S - In
payment
ol Pomeroy, Ohio, on tht
Patltloner'a Claim In Sacond Floor o1 aald
the proper order ol Ita courthouae.
priority, and lor ouch
other and further Probata JudgeiC'-'11 .
(8) 27, (9) 2, 9, 16, 23,
relief u Ia lust aqultsbll.
30 (10) 7

Display Ads

.......

0

Kfllo~~

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Descrlpl:ton e Indude A Price e Avoid Abbreviations
• lllclude Phone Number And Addreu When Need~ed
• 4dt Should Run 1 Days

CLASSIFIED INDEX

.RI~eht. It~

MC'IIP C:O\Inly. OH

BY ToM' WtTHERS
Associated Press

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Vuu.r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

•

'•

BY ARNIE STAPLETON
Associated Press

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, September 16, 2004

SFI 7 0 FJVe Points, call
7 ~ 16-Q768 or 304·882·
2299
.- - - - - - - 3 Bedroom , Hud Home .
$14 .000 Won't last! more
Homes available\ tor 11sttngs
800-366-9783 ex 1797

r

MOIIILE
. FOR SH
ALEO!IIES

I

2000 Cla•.:.on 16x8o. 3 br.
2ba . Air Mu'at See .$14 ,900
(304)590·1321 or (304)636·
3812

3BFI. 2BA. 5 129 acres, For ,ale or rent· 2 bedroom
Green Township close to mob1te home&amp; sta rtmg at
schOol Priced to sell More S270 per month Call 74Q·
992·2161
info (7&lt;W)446-73n.

---

3br, Brk;t.; Home. SunrQOm Make 2 payments, mqve in 4
&amp; extra large 2 Car Garage, years on note (304)736·
Full Basement, s11 on acre _;!409
lot in New Haven Hetghts 1n
New Haven (304)882·2230 New Oakwood mega stOre
featunng
Horne•
by
A AffordaOie 2·Bedroom OakwoOd, Fleetwood &amp;
Home. Eve&lt;y1h •nQ new Giles. One stop shopping
PoSSible no Money down to only at Oakwood Homes of
1674 Barbou&lt;oVlHe WV (30')736·

~~~~fyong

Buyers (:!04

•

3409.

.,

�•

'.
I

www.mydailysentinel.com

,.

Thursday, September 16, 2004
ALLEY OOP
-Next to new 2000 Rodman Mobile

no~e
tor rent
16X80 , 3 bedroo!TVll bath, $350.00. (740)742·0703
vinyl ald1n(&gt;'slngfo roof fuHy
loadea. $27.900.00 Can
A11Ym11ENrs
tUR RFNI' '
1) alp with delivery. Ask for

r

( -N:-,-Ikk_i..:.(7_4li_:)..:.38..:.5·..:.9948......::._
· __
, ~VE-SAVE-SAVE

' .StOCk models at old prices.
: 2005 models arriving Now.
• Cote's Mobile Homes.
: ,15266 U.S. 50 East , Athens,
• Ohio 45701 , (7~0)592·1972 .
:;'Where You Get Your
..._
·;...unay's
Wonh"

r

B~

i

AND Bun..oJNGS

Looking tor 2to3 Bedroom AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab
House for rent Between Pt puppies. Shots. wormed &amp;
Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis Ferry ctew claws removed . $300$350 (740)441-0130.

1.,~------_.J
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. starting
at $290/month , deposir
requireti. No pets . WD
hookup.-(.740}441·'1 184 ·
d
1 an 2 bedroom apart·
ments. furnished and .unlur·
r')ished , securrty depost!

·1 22 18.
Vine St., (740)446·7&gt;98
. :1:.._b_e_d-ro_o_m_a_p_t_u_1,-1&lt;-ie-s

included. $450 month . $300 Good uSed Stain M aster
For Sale: Established PizZa deposit. Call (740)992·2274 . ca rpet &amp; pad. Aprox 60 ydS.
&amp; Drive In business .in the
Call (740)68.2-7060.
'C hesapeake. Ohio area' 1BR partially·turnished: aH' - - - - , - - - - - new, suitable lor .1 persotT or Mollohan Carpet . 202 Clark
..Call . 740 388·9327.
a couple ..no pets. 7 minutes Otlapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
from town and RIO Grande (740)446-7444 t -877-830··
ACRF.AGE
$575/month. all utili t1e s 9 162. Free Estimates, Easy
incl uded .
740-245-1984 finan c1ng. 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ MAster Card.
0.97 acre building lot on 740 --645-4848.
Grandview Ave near County t br.- Studio Apt. very clean, Drive- 'a- linle save alol.
FBirgrounds. Nice neighbor·
furnished S325. t Deposit Thompsons App lia nce &amp;
hood, all utilities except (31l4)675·2970
RE!pair-675-7388 . FOr sale,
sewer $10,000 (304}4~9·
re-conditi oned· automatic
2 bedroom apts. 10 minutes
1363
from
Holzer
Hospital. washers &amp; dryers, refrigeragi:is and electric;
1 acre of land with septic, $460/month . Pets allowed, tors,
electric and water on storgage umts available. ranges , air condl!ior"~ers. and
·shepherd Lan e. Vinton . (740}44 1· 1184 or (740)441· wringer wa,shers. Will do
repairs on major. brands in
(740}388-a3 18.
01'94 .
shop or at your home .
For ~ le : Acreage. Meigs 2 bedroom . stoYe, refngeraCounty. 82 acres. woods tbrfurnished. $150 deposit.
ANTIQt iE'i
and .hillside. Great tor rocre· $275 rent. 34 1/2 SmitMrs
ation
and
hunting Street. Call (740)446-3870
: $99 ,500 .00 Call (740 ~ 74 2Buy or sell. . Riverine
2 or 3 bedroom apartment in
2637
Ant1ques. 1124 . East Main
Middleporl,
no
pe ts :
. on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
. Nice level lot 50)( 190 on (140}992·5858
; High St. In Middleport All ::...::.:cc::c:::..:..____ 992·25~6 . Russ Moor e,

r

: hOokups, out of flood P.lain.
~rice

Applications
taken for
clean being
1 bedroom
1n
reduced to $22.Cjf. very

Prime lot. 5 Wooded acres
on Buckeye·. Hills. Great
homesite, $27 ,500 . Ca ll
. 740·645·2950 or 740·388·
• 9649.

IH \I \I ._,

HOUSES
FOR

RENT

. 0% Down Payment e11en
: with less than perfect cred it.
• Easy qualifying . Own don't
·
L
1
'
• rent. _. _oca
company.
Mortg'age Locat_ors. 740·
992·7321
bedroom·

house

In

. Gallipolis
$350/monlh
deposit required. (740)441 1184.
2 bedroOm, Pomeroy, $400

a

month

plus

·~=~~~~~~~]

· coun try se11 lng ye t c fose to

·_Phone (7 40)992·2762. · ·

l~tO

1

deposit,

(740)992·0175

2br. house
tor
rent,
$350/month, water and
trash paid, no pets; Deposit
and relerence required.
(740)388·1 100

3 bedroom on SA 160, close
to· hospital, $5001mo. dep &amp;
reference . r- Redecorated
inside. ,
4 bedroom ' tarrTI house on
Rt 35 with bulldlngs,
,$500/mo. de~ . &amp; reference.
Call after 5pm (740)645·
.6157

A Foreclosed Home
Only $8,9001 This Home
·, Must Sell i"for listings call1 ·
'
· ~386-9783 ex b838
•Beautiful Downtown 3-bed: rocim, 1-bath, storegeroom .
. Close
to . everything.
• $810/month.
No
pets.
' Deposit required . Call Kelly
(740)446-9961.
.HOUSE FOR RENT : 3
bdrm, 1 bath, LA w/FP, 2-car
carport, quiet location, edge
-of town·. $550/mo &amp; .$550
sec.- dep. You pay all utililles.
Call (740)446·3644-lor Info.

lM~~~
2 bedroom, like new, central
air. (740)446·2003
~3

. be;droom
trailer in
Syracuae No pets. No amok·
In~ :· No alcohol (740}992-

. 5888

3 bedroom , 1-1/2 bath , CIA,
' 14x70 with ' _expando, no
pets. $450 month + deposit.
(740)44&amp;4824,

"·

BeaQI'e pups. tri-color. 10
weeks old , 1st shots. Call
(740}256· 1859.
CKC Jack Russe ll Terriers,
$125 each. (740)256·1652.
Jack Russell puppy, male, 8 ·
weeks. old ha's 1st shots
been' wormed . tai l dQCked.
Pure bred. No papers,
$175 .00 (740\698·0475

.

'

St. Rt .68 I

Darwin.

Rat Terrier puppies. born
August ·3rd. all female , very
cure. shots, dew _
c laws
removed. (740)742-17 03
Schnauzer. mrnia tu re AKC
· male puppies. Salt &amp; /pep1per oll150.00 each. hellies
B
puppies AKC male- lue
Merle,
$150.00
each.

s

(740)696-1085
M
.
'RlfStCAI..

IN

OH

740-992-70 I 3 or 740-992-55~3 ·
Re.itocking Ia te ,\kKfel Sa huge
afl!l .4/l£-r :lilrkef flarts

Last Thursday of
every month .
All pack

See Bren t or Brian Whaley

$5.00 '

Bring this coupon , ·

8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
M - Fri

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

Sun. Closed

'-'-------------.:::;..,_,_,J

S FREE

75 2

QJ

·875-2457

Early birds start

6:30

09-J6-!Jol

Henderson, WV

Sunday
,
Doors Open 4:30 ,

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

MONTY

~~~~~tO~-~A-U1U'i-•
, -....,

r

4x4

Fo~ SAUl

I

~L--..;'•'OiiRiiSiiAiiiii..E0.-,..11 1996 Suzuki S1de Kick. Auto,
$500!

Police Impounds!
Cars/Trucks/SUV's
from
$500 Honda's, Chevys.
Jeeps 8 more! for-listings
800-366-9813 e)( V717

1997 F •1so La-riat Step
S1d&amp;, ext cab. I07,000 miles.
r9d. Asking $12 ,000. Call
1992
Mercury
Grand (740) 367·7762 or (740}367·
Marques, loaded, all power, 7272.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI
Let me do it for you'

s

Lo--\•'t;;;:Giii•iio:liio~iiHiiiLiiiEiiioS~

~~i!OO:OO

+

rL---------.J

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per .
month

IJ&lt;.

South

DbI.
, I r!o
'\

i

I

f714

Lo-------·

4:~~4

FRANK

t.

SIN~

For Sale; Poplar Lumber
sheeti ng boards .45 per
board ft. Hardwood mulct) •
1994·ChEWrotet Suburban. $20. per Bkt (740)992·5965
Three seats, all feather.
· Fix
It,
Home
Equipped for trailer towirm . Mr.
Repairs,
Can be seen at 1.36 First Remodeling ,
&amp;
Painting
Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio. Phone Rooting ,
(740)448·256 1.
. (304 )675·3733

R&gt;KSALE

fflOM YOUfl
MISTAKE$1. INOyll
.
. .
~

FfEL AwEP
IN Ttlf PflfSfNC.f
OF fO MUGtl
fi&gt;UGATION!

~

..

•

I CAN

PARSON !!

(304) 273-5321

!4nnette S
1

;J{ouse Ckaning Service
'
No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs , Mason,
'Gallia &amp; Athens Co.
'

THE BORN LOSER
P'

.
'"&lt;l
~\,POP I ~OW W~ WORK. 7

J.\ I&gt;\I&gt; t'\~ t-IOSE, TO Tf\E.
'"&lt;l
C.R\t-IC&gt;!:&gt;TOl-lE 1\LL C&gt;r\,'1', ~I

P' t

1·740·843:5382

0

Crossword

0

New Homes •

VinY.I

Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45711
740+19-2217

· Windows • Roofing

PEANUTS
'{00 6LOCK~EAD! VOU STRUCK
OOT. AND WE LOST lliE LAST
6AM£ OF THE SEASON!

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
South Church St.

I T~OU6~T 8EJN6
IN LOVE WA5
·sUPPOSED TO .

't'OU WERE 5TANDIN6 THERE
TI-IINKIN6 ABOUT '/OUR NEW
61RLFRIEND. WEREN'T 't'OO?

MAKE 'I'OU 1-WPV.. .

BETTY

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

d8Dfllll
.d.E
..IIIBWICE
dElllEU

Puzzle

Advertise
in this
space
for
·$50 per
month

-4

(j..

1\
~

Cl-

J:_
• 'l

J .

l

.
•~
I

f

. . .__.~~~'~...;~t-,-lt:::~;__:!!'!!!!!~~:::~---...J
0

R.. idtntial

Free Estimates
740-667-6080

The year ahead could be a more active
an d prosperous one lor you because
chances are you ;u find yourself getting
involved In a number ol successlul professional and social pursuits that you 've
neyer tried before .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept_ 22) Just
because others may have sutfereg some
adverse results, do not be overly intlu·
anced by them . You'll have excellent
chances today Ot succeeding in situalions
where they fell flat.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) .- Challenges
awaken your resou rceft~l riess .is well as
other fine qualities today,- so don't shirk
those thlngs that are large in scope. You'll
be at your best ~?~hen you have tO prove
yoursell.
·,·
SCORPIO (Oct. k4-Nov. 22) - Your lriend·
lirless. warm th and en thuslasm will penetrate even the hardest of hearts today and
all sour laces will disappear when you turn
on the charm. No wondei- y ou're so popular. •
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1} - You
have greater luck gomg"lor you )oday than
you may be aware of, y'et that won 't ~e the
on ly ingredient you 'll use to achieve success. PerseVerance and oPilmisill will ba
th_e otr~er factors.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - Have
conlidence •in your ability as a negotia tor
today when trying to iron oul an agree·
ment You have the competence to be both
firm and falr. and are able to get others ·to
be reasonable as well.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Benefits
thai' you do not detiberat.ely seek can cdme
your way today in situations where you are
sincerely attempting to be of service to
· others without though ts of what's in it for

'

I
I

10 Winter
festival
14 ,TiJuana Ms.
15 V· - engine
17 Rose Bowl

36 Not speaklng clearly
39 Green pods
43 Was in debt
44 Ski ·

site

equipment

19 Fat cats
45 Quick cut
20 Where Asia 46 Comes

begins
22 Hamster's

down with
47 Bear,

digs
24 Timetable
Info
25 Dupe
26 Ac1or
- Hawke
27 Connery
' of " Dr . No"

in old Rome
49 Barnyard
sound
51 Part
of RSVP
52 Ancient
Tokyo
53 Make
a seam

29 "- Te
Ching"
34 Like prunes

CELESRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Crpher cryptograms are created from quotatons by tarr.ous peop~ . oas1 al'ld ptesent
Eadlle~er in tha ciltler slan~s for another
.

Today's clue : H equals C

"NPJ.

HSKKPA

ZVALPJA

.ALSK

SKN

DXYJDAV

Np J

ZVALP~A

U S V A L.

FX

L ·S

LS F X

HSK

CPOX

CPAVPK

CPFXCXKA. "

RSALONK

RJLOCSK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"As long as you are curious, you defeal age ."
- Burt Lancaster .
"Being ~Yenty is na t a sin ." - Golda Meir

'~~~:~:~' · sealdkod
~c.tllA~ £~s·
CLAY
'OLLAN

WOlD
GAM I

~.

R•orronge leH•rs of
0 fo!Jr
scrambled words

low

10 form four

rht
b~

words

HYLOWL

F H F WI

I

r

III
T HcHA

I

jf

As

t I I .~

to

I I IS k I

. _.iL_J__J
L-.1.-..-.L....I..

decrde

on a

career,

A col -

leoe counselor told me that it
was be st not to do wha~ you like

-rY--;ErT....,:-D...:A,..:S-.--J.,

.

a youth I found rt difficult

bul t o

11ke · - -- yq~ - -

O Cbo\' m1o111e1e
m~
r

rh~ thLJc~le
iro

th e·

.Qu:lle-d
""'o·ds

rn•S1 ti"Q

you d~veloo lrcrr· ~tep No ~ be iow

PR rN r NUMBERED lETTERS
iHfSE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS, ANSWERS 9 -1 &lt;- o"
Effect- Rusty - Image.- PeDsi n- PUT IT
I know for sure thai I c an 't have everything In lhe first
pl,ace I have no where to
JTf
·

PUT

ARLO &amp; JANIS

you.

BITTER

•Replacemeni ·windows
•Koofs
·
Commen:ial and

The finesse is such a common card-play
· 1echniq1.1..e that many players attempt one
whenever an opportunitY arises. They
believe that it gives tMem a 50-50 chance
either to avoid a lose r or to genera te an
e.11tra trick. But some finessing positions
are not wh at they seem to be at first
glance.
·
This deal is _
an example. You are South,
the declarer 'In lour . spadeS. West," who
opened one .club, leads the club ace.
cashes the club king, and cOntinues wi th
a third club to his partner's queen. After
iuffing, how would you co ntinue ?_
South's sequence, a tfikeout double followed by a new:suit rebid opposite a minimum advance, show~ a very strong hand
with 17·20 points. North , therefore, rises
in his might and leaps to game.
At irick four, declarer crossed to the
board with a spade, then finessed tbe
diamond queen . However, West won with
thB king and returned a trump. South too k
·it In hand, c~s he4;1 the diamond ace: went
to dummy with a spade, and pitched one
heart on the diamond jack. but he still
had to lose a heart trick: down one .
West, for his opening bi d, is sure to have
finesse is
the diamond king - the _
doom~d . So, deClarer should' play the ·ace
al'ld another diamond. (Or immediately'
lead his low diamond, al~houg~ th1s
would cost a Irick when West has the sin: ·
gleton ki!'Jg.) West will shift to the heart
six, but South can win with the ace, draw
trumps en~inQ in the dummy, and pitch
his two low hearts on dummy's queenjack ot diamonds .
Use the bid ding to Place missing key
cards.

Friday, Sept 17, 2004
. By Bernice Bede Oaol

IMPO.TS
Athens

WRITESEl

..COmpletr RemodeUng

A

-...~ :

HOWARD l.

• PMt Frame

Pas~;

.All pass

4r!o

40 Pakistan
neighbor
1 What Poe's 41 Squid 's
raven did
defense
6 Robust
42 Boy
11 Ms. Laudar 43 Make a
12 Formal
choice
farewell
46 Prepare
13 Discourages
(2 wds.)
from
48 Oosed the
proceeding
dog
15 Shiny paint 50 Comes up
16 Like a slo1h c54 Economist
18 Gradation
. - Janeway
. of a color
55 Rudely
19 Tint
sarcastic
21 . Follow
56 Floor
closely
models
22 John
57 Radiant
Dickson DOWN
23 " Off the
Court "
authOr
1 Theorem
25 Legal
ender
2 Function
maHer
28 Nautical
3 Slugger
·
Mef command
30 Courtroom 4 Wobbles
fig.
5 ·Knight,
31 Monsieur's
often
summer
6 Ranch
32 Toothpaste
worker
choice
7 Oklahoma
33 Supplement
tOwn
~5 - Cantaurl
8 Frosty
37 Snake
coating
shape
9 Antler
38 Hydrox rival
wearer

, \~ . Graph

Pomeroy, Ohio

•Lo&amp;Homes

Pass

I+

'GAstro-

RESIOENTIAL

JOyeanuperleoce
•New Homes

~. Pass

East

Avoid a finesse
with finesse

L~AflNEP

LIVE WJF
THAT,

COMMERCIAL and

Barnhart
Builders

.

Pass

North
Pa:;s

&amp; EARNEST

BARNEY

33795 Hiland Rd.

740-992-5232

l.

West

.. Opening l ead: "'

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

~~~ BISSEll
BUILDERS InC.
High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

6

A 6

Dealer: West
Vulnerable : Both

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

...--....,

LO H 7 4

South
41\ AQ J0 98
¥ AK43

740-843-.....

air, covt. hard top, excellent
condition. tow miles. $4.000.
(7 40) 256·6890.

t

+Q92

... 6 3'

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

Lo-------·

r.

.r!o 7 5 2
"'' .1 9 8

WV Contractors Lie.. #003506

Box 189
Middleport
~~.~;;. 45760:'

For a1a Old
· ht P1ano.
. uppg
(740)992·5888
·
--------- ·
Student Saxophone lor sale.
lOr more information
ce ll
(740)441-189.2 .

:~~5°

East

r!o 6 3
" Q 10 6
K g 2

... AK854

.,.,.,•• Bllglna

r

West

'+

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

and Financial Services

II{\ '\SI'Oil: I\ 110\

53

J I0 7

Rocky Hupp Insurance

new c/d/slereo. tires &amp; 1997 Ford F-150 4:114 Lariat
brakes.
$2300 · OBO. 114K , black, leather interior, ·
'cld player. S9.200 060, ·
{·740)985·381 0
(740)992·2932
1994 Pontiac Firebird 6cyl.
93 Nissan Pa.thfind9r needs
rljns &amp; look s good, 53,500
'i::"i!-;.;.;.~;.;;~"!"--. 1304)675 . 6986
transmi ssion, $1 ,500.00; 96
r.
FRUtl'S &amp;
Toyota
4-Runner
nice
1998 Chevy S-10 Blazer LS ..
Call (740)9 92•
.
"-Loaded, 4.3 Automatic ~:r---':':'
Potatoes.
50#
$.10.00. 80,000miJ. $6,800.(304)675·
30
VANS
:=~~~~~~~
Kenebec and Red Pontiac. 582 8
FOR SAU:
1
Monday- Saturd ay 8:00AM· - - - - - - - - 5:00PM. 6500.2' State Route 1999
Bonneville
68K
2001
Dodg~
Caravan, ·
124 Reedsville.
Rir:.:;;=;:;::.:::~---., $5,295; 1997 GMC 1500 SL ·101 ,700 mil es. $5,900.00
pick-up, 135K $3,895: 1995
FoR SALI~
Grand-Am 20 99K $1,995.3 Calf 740 992-2136
Wi D H ook-up Ref. Dep. No pection
C
Fridays_.
monlhs/3000 rTi il e war·
40 Mmo~CYCLF.'Y'
Pets (304)675-5162
~at~.r~ays and Sundays.
ranties.
4 WHEELERS
CONVENIENTLY LO,CAT6061922·7185.
Firewood for sa le, $30 pickCOOK MOTORS
up or $50 delivered , in most
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
328 JACKSON PIKE
HP Pavilion MX 70. Monitor
'02 Suzuki Savage 650
DeliVery
s1arts
(740}446-0103
Townhouse
apartments, with Speakers. HP OeskJet areas.
motorcycle,
low
miles,
•
and/or small houses FOR 845C · Printer
HP
$2 400 ; treadmill, $ 150;
I \R\1 Sl 1' 1'1 II S
2000 Ford E:~~j) loi'tl r exc. (7 40)992-6084
RENT. Gall (740)441 - 1111 . DeskWr iter. 600 Keyboard
,\ II\ I 'o l(l( ,,
condition, black/grey interior,
for application &amp; lnformati~n. (304)675-6633
4 whe'31drive. 98,000 miles. 1985 Honda Shadow 590.
Furnished small 1 bedroom
$9,950. (740}446·6754.
greal condition, new tires .
JET
FARM
Apt. No pets. No Smoking
$1,800. (740}379-2601 .
AERATION MOTORS
EQuiPMENT
+
Electric
$295.00
2002 Buick Cen,tury only
Aeferen'ces.
$200.00 Repaired, New &amp; Rebui lt In
5 ,100 miles, gB.rage kept. . 1995 Harley Davidson Ultra
Stock.
Call
.Ron)
Evans
.
1Deposit (304 }675·2651
6 11. grass fin ish mower,
Classic. E)(cellent condition,
Just like new, $10,000. Call
800-537·9528.
Meavy duty. Srand new. Call
e:~~tras,
low
mileage,
Gracious living. 1 and 2- bed·
1:120 Easl M;,tin St.
(740)441 ·0541
(740)367·7927 leave mes· (740}446:3992 ; (740}446· $12,000 .
room ·apartments at Vit[age
9839.
Pomeroy '
saga
alter 5pm.
Manor
and,' Riversi de NEW AND USED STEEL
beside Larry's Fruit Stand
Apartments in Middleport. Ste~l Beams, . Pipe Rebar Ford 600 ·series, new paint, 89 Chrysler Lebaron GT. 1999 Red Honda Fo'reman
Warranty Repair •
From $295·$444. €all 740~ . For
Concrete,
Angle . gauges, tack, changed to 12 $1?00 (304)882 -2644
450S 4x4 Adult Ridden. E)CC .- · Lawn Tractor &amp; Push
992·5064 . Equal Housing Channel , Flat Bar, Steel vo lt, runs good, $3.200, - ' - - - - - - - - - · Condition $3,300 (304-)773· ·
MowCrs, Chain Saws.
Opportunities.
Grating
For
· Drain s, (740}949·2700
92 Buick Regaj, $1,000.00; _51_03
----~-Chain Sharpened
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L~ L
2000 Poritiac Grand AM SE,
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone Scrap Metals Open Monday. J. 2030, oeutz-8006, Fo.ur $6 ,700 _00 call (740 )9 g2 . 2002 Yamaha Road Star
&amp; Parts
New General Standby
(740)446·3736.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;- Bottom Plow, NH Hay· Head 2136
Warrior 1700cc $7,5 00
Generating System s· and
1304)882·8290
New 2 bedroom No petS, Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed HayWagon , NH HayBfne, JO
Rol· .~ _ir Air Compressors
$400.00 a month $375.00 Thursday, Saturday &amp; 48 ·Loader,
JD-Mower
FOR SALE
BoATS &amp; MaroRS
Open 8:J0.6:00 M-F;
deposit (740}992·4 119 ask Sunday. (740)448-7300
(304)882-3459
2002 Buick Century-Specie!
I'OR SALE:
Sat. 8:~-2:00 992-1033
lor Marge
Pick-up and deli very servi ce
Pole Barn 30:~~50x10FT Model 782 . New Holland Edition Color-Light Sanddrift
Mileage-52 ·000 ' 98 Basestream boat, 99 Now servicin Keiosene Heaters
New 2 · bedroom with $5,995 InCludes Painted Forage Harvester with 36" 2 Metallic.
attached
garage. Metal , Plans. Instruction row corn head. Modei770W . miles. Interior-cloth seats, Mercury 150 HP motor 97
has c~ye r.
$400/monlh,
no
pets, Book, Slider, Free Delivery Hay hfad. New Holland crop loaded-concert . sound sys· Aquat;aller,
Ca rrier 8 silag8 wagon &amp; tem .. ll. Exceptlona.lly clean $8 900.00 740 992·2136
deposit
&amp;
reference s (937}559· 8385
car. Call Mike .' Brown ji'~:O:::~;;ij;;;::~;;:;:~
required. (740}446· 2801.
CAMPERS
Gehl silage wagon.All are In (.7401446 _0925 _
matUpgraded queen-size
good condition &amp; field ready.
M&lt;YIOR HOMES
One bedroom apartment .. · tress tq r a camper. $50,
(740}245·5047 .
Sale 1986 Samurai Suzuki · '-llliioiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii....
Pomeroy, {740)742·2321
no pets, in
4-WD 27 mpg . very good 1978 Yello~ Stone 241t
(740)992·5858
WHITES'S METAL
UvEsrucK
condition . S, ,ooo.oo. 1986 good condition , new tir,es.
One bedroom garage apart·
DETECTORS
Dodge Ram 250 Van . 31 B $2,500. (740}379: 2S01.
ment, kitchen fu.rnished,
Ron Aliison
Syrs
Old
Morgan/Quarter
automatic,
very Qood condi·
$400, (740}992·3823
588 Watson Road
Horsa. black, broke to ride &amp; tion. $400.00 (740) 742-1123 2002 Hornet 27' :. 2003
Starcraft
29';
1978
Bidwell, Ohio
Twin Rivers Tower is accepttraffic sale $750
·
TRUCKS
• - ~ YellpWStone
24';
2002
(740)446·4336
ing applications for wailing
Yearling Palomino Stud Colt, 1
FOR SALE
Hornet 35'; 1992 Coleman
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
Reg. Quarter Horse, gentle
BUILDING
Pop·up. (740}446·0800.
apartrrient, call 675-6679
SUPI'LIES
EHO
old Bay Mare Pony, . 1980 Ch ev.
3/4 ton
._, I H\ It I . _,
broke to ride $450 (304)773 _ Crate Motor, very low miles,
Block, brick, sewer pipes, 5103
AIC 3,200 (304)576·2927
HOME
windows, liritels, etc. Claude
IMfROVEMENTS
Winters, Rio Grande. OH AlPine Bu ck Kid , 4 112 1996 3/4.. Ton Dodge Ram
Camper tots for rent. River Calf 740·245·5121 .
months old, greEd sire 2500 SLT, S.tainless ' Trim
BASEMENT
Park: permanent hook-up. 3 .,-~-------:­ prospact $75
(304)675· Package, Ext Cab. 8Ft bed,
WATERPROOFING
small niob.lle hoi'ne or Garage door. overMBd , 1808 .
360 V8 , Auto 6-inch Sky
camper Iota, $125.00/mo. 1 12'Wx10'H . Metal
Call
Jacker Suspension Uft, Tilt Unconditional lifetime gUar• office building. $30Cl00/mo (740)256-1267
evenings For
Sale:
Miniature Wheel, Cruise, Cass. PW, antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Donkeys. (740)446-1 158. , Power Loaded.
(614)876·1 681
aHer 7pm.
·
Ranch King 14.5 HP 42· Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Mower '0870, Rogers Basement
Inch,
Aiding
Waterproofing.
(304}882-3108

$TV 's 1rom $1·0'. DVD·
Players.
Video-Ga me s:
Computers, Ecll now ava.i lable~ for into call B00-36Qing . 740·446·2205 or 740- 9850
Olo.
ex M655
.
k
6
V
8
lo
44 -95 5 as
r 1rginia.
1998 Weber Horse Trailer
BEAUTIFUL
APART. 38 . w/showtime conve rsion.
MENTS · AT
BUDGET 3 horse !railer w/full· f&lt;Ving,
PRICES AT JACKSON quarters. Excell enl cond1·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood tion. $25,995.00 call Harold
Drive from $344 to $442. (740)385·767 1
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call fri.!~~~~"""""'"'l!!l"ii
740 -446-2568.
Equal II Hot Tub Olscounn:rutteL
Housing Opportunily ·
Grand Opening Sale
_c_...::.....:.:....,_....:...-,-- op qua lily, .warranties,
Clean Ground Floor' 2br, ~~ltori, wv. Flaa Markel

MYERS PAVING

&amp;

Labrador Retriever pups.
AKC. excellent hunters,
$250-black , $350-y.ellow.
ww w steele pointing Ia bs .com
(740}256·6172.

L,.--·S'IIiiiiUII~IiitENTSiii!ii';,.,.J

town. Washer. dryer. stove,
lridge l!'lcluded . Water and
=""-' T olal alec·
garbage.inclucteo.""'
tric witH' AC. Tenant pay elec!ric. $300 deposit. $375 per
month . No pets. No smok·

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

Whaley's Auto
•
Parts

~&lt;'gistered

Collie Puppit.-s F'o.re-rlt on ~itP
11slo. ing $!SO (304 )6 75~88 98

NEA

'

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

AKC Great Dane puppy.
Good Used: Appliances . Female 4 months old,. $300.
Reconditioned
and Calf (740)446·0 184.
Guaranteed.
Washers ,
Dryers ,
Ranges ,
and
Refrigerators. S~me start at
AK C
required , no pets, 740·992· $ 95 _Skaggs Appliances . 76

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ijRIDGE

AKC Blond Lab pup's . Shots,
wormed . (740)441-0013 or
(740)441-7333. -

LoTs&amp;

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

YOUNG'S

- ...

• Patio Md Porch o.cu

c$Ul('\\\'Cl:t I '"d:lU ~

tl*\'T

'(al ?'

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

V.C. 'YOUNG Ill

140-tB2-1m

992-6215

Stop &amp; Compare

Pomoroy, Olllo
22Y-Loaf

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~~NCE,

• New Homes

We do H all e&lt;cepl

fumece worlc

LEO (July
; 22) .a,
-Although
oome
would
n8\le23-Aug
~u believe
protlt Ia n.,....,
a
dirty word when hOnorably mi.cte '11 oppor·
tunltlea prennt tne.,ntvel !Oday 10 ref"
reuonable returnt, go for lt.
'

.

.• AI.Dt' ABOUT

•lloOm Addllfono I

• Electrbl,l Plu~
• Rooting &amp; Gutter•
• VInyl Siding I Painting

,

.GRIZZWELLS

CARPENTER
. SERVICE

•NowO.-

-

PISCES (Feb. 2()-..March 20) - Put your
shyness on hold today because · it ·
behooves you to gel involved in the sacral ·
swim al this time. Go lo l&lt;!'flilra r places
where you kn~ you'll find conipanions
whose company you enjoy
ARIES (March 21-Aprrl 19) - Take the·
tiine to put ';Ourself out a bil today to make
things more pleasant tor members of your
family. Artend to their needs flrst anti they'll
make sure all youi" needs are taken care
of.
_.
.
,
TAURUS (April 20•May 20)'- If possible .
steer dear of any down-in-the-mouth people today because they wOuld adversely
anec't your mood and outlook Conversely.
bright. happy types wrll makf! you feel
Cheerful.
'
GEMINI (May 2hJUne 20) - Whereas
yesterday things r'nlght not have gone too
·smoothly for vo.:r in llnanc?rat areas, today
wlll ,be another story. Give prrorlty to mattarS that could enhance your materral wei~
being.
CANCER '(June 21-..luly 22) - Good
things are in store fof you t~ wnen yOu
shoot tor things tnat pre large In scope . so
don't waste your time on th e insignifiCant.
-Grow your garden while the sun Is shrning
on your lleld.
·

•

\

•

�Pase B8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September l6, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Buckeyes bring
•
uncanny success m
close gameS, B2

IIC Ttl STANDINGS
Big Ten A\\ Top 15 PF
1-0 0-0 110
0·0
·
1-0
0-0 100
Minnesota ~ 0-0
71
Indiana
0-0
2-0 1-0
2-0 Q-0
56
o-b
Iowa
51
0-0
1-0 0-0
Wisconsin
0-0
1-0 0-0
.51
Ohio State
0-0
1-1 0-0
69
fllinois
0-0
1-1
0-0
63
Midrlgan
I -1
o-o 55
· Penn State 0-0
1-1 0-0 ~ 38
Michigan St. 0-0
Northwestern 0-0
0-2 0-0
66
Purdue

PA
7
41
34
17

9
27
48
38
31
13
78

GAME OF

370.5
351.0
280.0
253.0

Minhesota .. , . . . . . • ... . . · .. 247.5

Michigan State ._.
. .. · ...... 231.0
Penn State ........ .... ... 223.5
RUSiiiNG on'a\ISE
·Minnesota . . . . .. , ... : .. . .. 359.0

lllinois ........... '.. ..... 252.0
Purdue ......... . ...... . 134.0
Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211.5
Wisconsin . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . 187.5
Northwestern • • . . . . . .. .. .. . 179.5

Indiana . .... ·. . . . . .. . .. " . 165.0

LNS&amp;

Minnesota .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 606.5

Purdue . . .' ..... :.. ...... . 585.0
Northwestern . . . .. . • .' . . . . . . 550.0

· nunois .. . .· .. ·... ... : .... 505.0
Penn State . . . , . ·. , • • ... : .. 436.0

·Ohio State... . .•· .. ' ......... 419.5
Michigan State .. . ..... .. ... 382.5
PILSANG DEi LNSE
Wisconsin . .. .. . . . . . . .. . . . . 139.5

Purdue ........ . ... . . ... 141.5
Iowa ......... .. ... . ... 146.5
Ohio State ........ • ... . ... 151.0
Michigan State ..... ... . . . ... 167.0
Michigan . .. . ............ 197.5
P!nnState .. . ............ 211.0
BIWiiiG DU ENS£
Iowa ..... .. ............ 26.5
Purdue ..... ·: . ·........... 55.5

Jon Beutjer. fllinois ........... 187.0
lack Mills, .Penn State ......... 181.0
•W*'P"C YUD&amp;GE
Lawence Maroney, Minnesota . . . . . 124.5

Lydell Ross, Ohio State .. : ...... 115.5
. Marion Barber m. Minnesota ...... 113.5
Noah Herron. Northwestern .... - . . 99.5
Pierre Thomas, nlinois . . : ... .. . .. 96.0
BenJamu Green-Ellis, Indiana ... _ .. 94.0

A

'state t-1 overall (0-0 Big Ten). 11 Series: Notre Dame leads
42-24- I. a-Coaches: Notre Dame's Tyrone Willingham
(60-47-1): Michigan State's John L. Smith (119-66). • Kickoff;. 7
p.m. ET Saturday. a fV: ES PN .
Key for Notre D&amp;Dle: Attack the quarterback . Until Michigan
State can show any sort of consistency at the position. the Spartans
will be vulnerable.

Key for Michigan State: Con trol the perimeter on defense.
Notre Dame spread rhe field on offense and surprised Michigan .

Tony Hunt, Penn State . .- ........ 89.0
*U

8 . . . . . . ~aaDAGJ:

Santonio Holmes, Ohio Stat~ . . . . , . 154.S

Jonathan Fields, Northwestern .....
Mark Philmore, Northwestern. . . . . .
Braylon Edwards, Michigan .......
Kendrick Jones. lltinois .. .... : ...
Tay\01 Stubblefield, Purdue . . . ·. . . .

117.0
11 I .0
110.0
105.5
104.5

'l'lae Rest Of tbe ~tcbaps
Ohio State 'at N.C. State

·• R«ords: Ohio State 2-0 (0-0 Big Ten); N.C. State 1-0 (0-0
ACC). Series: Ohio State leads 1-0. • Coaches: Ohio State's
Jim Tressel ( t64-69-2): N.C. State's Chuc~ Amato {35-17).
io Kickoff: 3:30p.m. ET Saturday. • TV: ABC .
Key for Qhio State: Stop Wolfpack running back T.A.
·
Jared Ellerson, Minnesota . . . . . · . . . 101.0
McLendon . He is a driving force in N.C. State's plans.
TOTU.Oiia:ws&amp;
Key for N.C. State: Co,er WR Santonio Holmes. Holmes
Brett Basa.nez, Northwestern . . .

~

. . 403.0

Eyle Orton, Pwdue ... .... · ....
Justin Zwick, Ohio State ........
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota . . . . . • . .
Zaclr Mills, Penn State . . . . . . • . .
Drew Tate, Iowa. _ . _ . . . . . . - . .
Jon Beutjer, lllinois. . . . . . . . • . .

they did see a positive sign from the
quarterback position. Sixth-year senior
Cl20Q.4 Longwing Publications Inc.
Jon Beu):jer was knocked out of the game
with a rib injury late in the first half.
THE WEEK
for&gt;ing redshirt freshman Brad Bower
into action. Bowerill\pressed, going
11-fm-15 for 102 yards and running for 39
yards in the game.
-.a:::I.JANA One of the reasons for
1111""""'
Indiana's surprising
early success has been its ability to get
the lead early and keep it. In their first
two games, 'the Hoosiers have outscored
their opponents 43-3 in the first lialf,
including a 23-0 lead last Saturday en
route to a 30-24 defeat of Oregon in ·
Eugene.
...W'A. The Hawkeyes beat in-state
...,....... rival Iowa State 17·10,
ending a three-game losing streak at
home against the Cyclones, but for a
second consecutive game the Hawkeyes ·
lost a backup rusher to injury.In their
opener against Kent State, Mucus
Schnoor was forced to leave with an
injury to his anterior eructate ligament.
Against Iowa State. backup Albert Young
left with a sprained knee. ·
liMU'HJGAN ·In Ann Arbor,
IIIII'"""'
national
championship talk is a yearly ritual. But
an early road loss seems to be the same.
When the Wolverines lost to unranked
-Notre Dame 28-20 last Saturday, it became -:...
the fifth 'consecuti~e season that they lost
their opening road contest. Twice that has
come in South Bend, with the others
coming at the hands of Pac-10 teams
Washington, Oregon and UCLA. The game
also marked the third consecutive time
that Michigan has lost at Notre Dame. The
last win came in 1994.
nlustration by Bruce Plante Cl 2004
liMU'HJGAN ST The quarterback
IIIII'"""' 1
•
carousel
continued to spin Saturday when the
Spartans decided to bench senior Damon
Dowdell and start redshiit ~shman
Stephen Reaves. Reaves was decent, but
10) . • Series: Tied 1-1. • Coaches: Iowa's Kirk Feren!z (46-10);
Arizona State's Dirk Koetter (45-30). • Kickoff: 9 p.m. cr
dldn't separate himself from Dowdell or
Drew Stanton, who saw the field in the
Saturday. • TV: None.
Key for Iowa: Disrupt QB Andrew Walter. The senior can pick fourth quarter. breaking one long run and
completing one of three passes.
apart defenses if given enough time .
Key for Arizona State: Find offensive balance with the run.lf
-.u.t.J'NESOT.'A The
two-pronged
rhe passing game is disrupted, the Sun Devils need another option.
.....,..
attack of runnmg
backs Laurence Maroney and Marion
Wisconsba at Arizona ·
Barber mhasn't disappointed. Each ran
• Records: Wisconsin ·2-0 (0-0 Big Ten); Ariwna·0-1 (0-0 Pacfor more than 100 yards. and the team
10). • Series: Wi sconsin lel!(ls J-Oe• Coaches: Wisconsin 's
rushed for303 yards. in a 37-21 victory
Barry Alvarez (101-67-4); Arizona's Mike Stoops (0-1).
over nlinois State. Maroney had 141 yards
• ICickoff: 3 p.m. Cf Saiurday. • TV: Fox Spons Net.
on 18 carries while Barber finished with
ICey for Wisconsin: Keep RB Booker Stanley in the game.
149'yards on 18 carries.
After losing its top two running backs (Dwayne Smith. Anthony
11Mao'I'U1Air"STERN For the
Davis). Wisconsin will depend on Sian ley to carry the load.
.,..n. Inn u
second
· Key for Arizona: Disrupt Wisconsin QB John Slocco. He is
consecutive week, Northwestern
still green. and a Stoops-coached defense could play with his ·
outgained its opponent. And for the
mind.
second straight week. the Wildcats lost. In
their 30-21loss to Arizona State. the
San Diego State at Michigan
Wildcats gained 463 yards to the Sun
• Records: San Diego State 1-0 (0-0 Mountain West); Michigan
Devils' 431. In the opening 48-45loss to
1-1 (0-0 Big Ten). • Series: Fint meeting. • Coaches: San Diego TCU, the Wildcats outgained their
· State's Tom Craft (11-\5); Michigan's Lloyd Carr (86-27i.
opponents 637-525.
a iCickoff: t2 noon E.T.• TV: ~PN.
·
-....un ST.IA~ Close games have
Key for SaD Diego State: PreSsure the quarterback .
IJIIIIftiU
n&amp; c. become the norm
Michi gan' s QB Chad Henne showed vulnerability last week.
· .for the Buckeyes. In typical fashion, their
Key for Michigan: Esiablish the run . RB David Underwood
24-2I .victory over Marshall came down to
needs to get his yardage behind a strong offensive line .
the final play. Kicker Mike Nugent hit a
55-yard field goal as time expired fgr
Central Florida at Penn State
another win in Columbus. The Buckeye~
• Records: Central Florida 0:2 (0-0 MAC); Penn State 1-1 (0-0
haye won 13 of the past 14 games in
-~ Big Ten). • Series: Penn State leads 1-0. • Coaches: Central
which the outcome has been dr:cided by a
Florida's George O'Leary (52-35); Penn State's Joe P:itemo
touchdown or less.
(340- 1\0-3).• JCickoff: 12 noon ET Saturday.• TV: ESPN
~ E!'I'A~ Senior QB Zack
'Regional.
_...,..-.n iUn&amp; u MIUJ is the leader
. :Key for Central Florida: Contain QB/RB Michael Robinson.
of the Nittany tions and, like his team,
He can attack from many positions.
fell flat in a 21-7loss to Boston College.
:Key for Penn State: Sticlr. with the pass. QB Zack Mills
Mills completed 23 passes for 254 yards ,
struggled in a 21-7 loss to Boston College, but he is the senior
and a touchdown, \mt was intercepted
leader of this team and its main hope :
!ow lilttes. l'eru! State also lost fumble.
-.mnUE Senior QB Kyle Orton
Kansas at Northwestern
....-nu
. has finally emerged from
• Records: Kansas 2-0 (0-0 Big 12): Northwestern 0-2 co-a Big
the shadow of former Purdue star
Ten). • Series: Nortl\westem leads 1-0.• Coaches: Kansas•
quarterback Drew llreel. In a 59-7 win
Mark Mangino (10-17); Northwestern's Randy Walker (84-71 -5). .over Ball State, Orton threw for a.career• Kidroff: I p.m. Cf Saturday .• TV: None.
'
-high five touchdown passes and ran for
:Key for Jan•at"Stop the run. RB Noah Herron will be
another. Mastering coach Joe rtller's
looking for a breakout game.
spread offense. the fifth-year senior
:Key for Northwestern: Remain patient. After two
completed his first 15 passes for 329 yards
hoartwrenching losses, the Wildcats must avoid early panic. '
in two quarters of action.
Western )Ji(higan at flUnois
-....u!CO.NSIN After missing most
......,.
of last season with
• llecords: Western Michigan· I-I (0-0 MAC); Illinois 1-1(0-0 ~
an ankle injwy. RB Anthoay lima is set
Big Ten ).• Sedea: Dtin&lt;iis leads 1-0.• Coaches: Western
to
miss time again, ilfter being poked in
Michigan's Gary DarneD (46-37); Ulinois' Ron Turner (40-54).
the
right eye following a long secondII JCickoff: I p.m. Cf SaiWday .• TV: None.
quarter
run in the Badgers' opener againat
:Key for Wntem Mfd!lpn· Stop the
If given space, RB
Central Florida. He is expected to miss two
EB.Halsey can altal:k wi:aknesses.
more games with the injury.lloobr
:Key for IUfnois: Stop lhe pass. Bronco WR Justin Jennings is
SWilq will run in his place.

.

Irish
face
old
nemesis
.

fter making itself a factor in the national picture with a hUg~
28-20 upset of Michigan last weekend, Notre Dame face's a
team that has been a thorn in its side over the past decade .
Penn State . . . . . . . . . . . , ... 100.5
Michigan State. The Spartans have won six. of the past seve n
Minnesota . .. . ... ..... , ..•. 101.0
meet ings.
·
..
Ohio State .. _ . ...... .... .. 113.0
While Michigan State .Struggled out of the ~ate, losing a
heartbreake{ at Rutgers . the Spartans and their fans are always
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS ·
ex.cited
about a night game at home . ·
P 1551*G .,AIIDAG&amp;
·
Dating back to the classic 10- \0 tie game between the then topBrett Basanez. Northwestern . . . . . . 370.5
ranked teams in 1966, tpis is one of those games that cOllege
Eyle Orton, Purdue . . , . . . . . . . . 308.0 football fans circ le on their schedule s at the beginning of the year.
Juatin Zwick. Ohio State .. ..... . 265.5
· The Spartans have used thret: quarterbacks so far this season,
Bryan Cupito, Minnes!Jta .. . . . 1• • • 241.5
but they hope. to narrow it down to one before this rivalry game .
Chad Henne, Michigan .. .. . .... 191.0
r Records: Notre Dame 1-1overall (independent); Michigan
Wisconsin ... .' . . . . • . • . . . . . 62.5
Michigan : . . . . . . , .••. . . , ,. . 84.0

t

Notl'e Dam.e at Michigan State ·

.

ftn~AL 01 I

from the other side
for first time, ~2

-.,u J The ntini (ell to UCLA
..,....NO S 35-17 last Saturday, but

TEAM LEADERS
PASSING OJTaiSE
Northwestern . . . . ........ .
Purdue .. ·... ...... . .....
Ohio State.... ·.. ' . .... . .. ..
lllinois ...... .. - ....... ··

Cafu.po facing Cowboys

scored two touchdowns on 218 yards receiving in last week"s 24-

330.5
2.1 victory over MIDha! I.
256.0 .
243.5
Indiana at Kentucky
190.5 ll Records: Indiana 2-0 (0-() Big Ten); Kentucky 0-1 (0-0 SEC).
188.0 ' • Series: Indiana leads 17- 15-\. • Coaches: Indiana·s Gerry
186.0
DiNardo (58-68-1 ); Kentucky's Rich Bro&lt;iks (95- 118-4).
Kickoff: 6 p.m. Cf Saturday. • TV_: None
nnas
Key fo~ lf!diana: q ntroJ the ball. RB Benlarvus Green-Ellis
Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue .... , .. 15.0
can
run all over this WiJdcat defense .
Marion Barber m. Minnesota. . . . . . . 12.0
Key
for Kentuck)r.Keep the Hoosiers off the board early.
Ben Jones,Pwdue .. . . . ... ·.. .. 10.0
They
won
after running to a 23-0 halftime lead at Oregon .
Garrett Rivas, Michigan _ ..... _ ... 9.5
5antonio Holmes. Ohio'Sute ...•... 9.0
Minnesota at Colorado State
Jonathan Fields, Northwestern ... . : . 9.0
" IMords: MinnejOta 2-()' (0-0 Big Ten); Colorado State Q-2 (0-0
lloah Herron, Northwestern .... - . - . 9.0 1
Mountain West). lli Series: Fir.t meeting. • Coaches:
Ernie Wheelwright. Minnesoti. . . - . . . 9.0
Minnesota's Glen Mason ( 1'05-104-1 ); Colorado State's Sonny
Laurence Maroney. Minnesota . . . - . . . · 9. 0 Lubick (91-46) .• 1(1ckoff: 8 p.m. MT Saturday .• TV: ESPN2.
E.B. Halsey, Dlinois - - ... . .. - . .. 9.0
:Key for Minllesota: Stick with the run. Despite a 37-21
. Dii&amp;am'IEIIW
setback l"st week against Division 1-AA Ulinois State. the
Gophers need to continue pounding the football.
Markul CUrty, Michigan . . . . . • - . .. 1.5
:Key for Colorado State: Contain Minnesota RB Laurence
Ttaey Porter, Incliona • . . . . . . - . .. 1.0
Maroney.
The sophomore ha&lt; game-breaking speed.
. Anwar Pbillips, Penn'State . . . . - . . . 1.0
Chad Greenny, Iowa . . . . . : . - . . . I.0
Iowa at Arizona State
le\Yin Haydon, Dlinois ... . . . • . . . 1.0
• Records: Iowa 2-0 (0-0 Big Ten); Arizona State 2-0 (0-0 Pac!lyon Mundy, Michigan ; .....•... 1.0

••

SPORTS • Eastern grounds Lady
Falcon~. See Page 81

..

a game breaker.

'THIS PAGE .PROUDLY SPONSORED BY THE FOLLOWING BUSINESSES:
~----~--------------~~r---~----------------~
&gt;

I

I

-r......--

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH ®MYDAtLYSENTINELCOM
--'
TUpPERS PLAINS - A building
a nd lo t which has stood vacant ~long
S.R. 7 in the eastern section of Meigs
County for several years has been
purcha sed by the · Ohio Departme-nt
of Transportatiorr _( ODOT) Divi sion
10.
.

which mean s a quicker re sponse lime
for clearing .the highway s. ODOT' s
number o ne priority is to maintain
highway safety. Thi s allows us to do
it more efficiently." .
The facility will serve as an .equip·
men! storage site mainl y for ODOT' s
Athens County workforce, replac in g
the previou sly used Coolville outpost, according to Filson.
ODOT bou ght the former Bibbee
ODOT is currently co nstru cting a
Auto Sales property earlier thi s year new salt dome that will hold approxat a cost of $400,000, and will be im ately 2,500 tons of sail on site.
using it as a new garage outpost.
This material will be available for
"The building an.d surrounding . use by ODOT crews from Athens
area will be used as a s10rage facility and Me!gs Counties, as needed , she
for ODOT snow and ice equipment added.
and
material s,"
said
ODOT
"The new Tuppers Plain s Outpo st
spokesperson Stephanie Filson .
provides better storage and salt
'Thi s provides a much better oper- capacity than the Coolville facility
ational set-up. During snow and ice did ," explains Filson . "We needed
events, employees that reside nearby room for growth, and 1his property
will report directly to the outpost allows us that.'"

·

A new ODOT District 10 outpost is being developed on the former Bibbee Auto
Sales property near Tuppers Pla ins. This new salt dome now under const ruction will hold approx imate ly 2,500 tons of salt for use in controlling ice and
snow on the highways. (Beth Sergent; photo)

.Docks Dredged in Time
.for Sternwheel ·Riverfest

OBITUARIES

....,.,Page AS.
.
· • Dustin Ray Musser
• Frederick Goebel
• James R~chie
• Mattie J. Keiser
Sprouse Ball
• Carl Basham

BY TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Preparations for -next week's
Sternwheel Riverfest reached
an induslrial scale Thursday.
as Jaymar Inc. of ·Cheshire
us-ed a large crane and bucket
to dredge the river near the
south end of the docks .
The dredging will make the
entire 360-foot length of the
docks usable for the festival.
"With the sedime nt co min g
in. it had gotten so thai under
normal oo ndi lions· the end of
it had become unusable,'' said
Larry Ba nks, owner of Ban ks
Construction Company of
Pomeroy, who buiiJ the docks
just in time for the 2002
Slernwheel Riverfest.

LO'ITERIFS
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 4-5-0
Pick 4 day: 8·2..(}.3
Pick_3 night: 8-9-3
Pick 4 night: 5-3-3-5
Buckeye 5:·1Q-12-27-28-35

..

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 5-2-Q
Dally 4: 3-5-4-7
Cash 25: 4-7-12-14-19-22

As many liS a dozen sternwheelers and I 00 pleasure
boals arc expected 10 use th e
docks during the fest ival.
according to Mayo r John
· Mu sser. He credi ted both
Banks and John T homas,
membe r of the Sternwheel
Riverfest committee. fo r ge l. ting the dredging work done.
" They've done all the work
and I certain ly wou ld g ive
them all !he cred it.'' Musser
said.
·
Banks
and
Thomas
arranged for Jay mar to do the
dredging and fi lied ou1 the
permit applicat ion wi th the
U.S.
Army
Corps . of
Engineers .
''I can't1say enough about

Please see Docks, AS

Democratic
Headquarters opens
..

WEATIIER

a

run.

ODOT purchases former auto sales lot for new outpost

'

.

Workers from Dynamic Installations out of Columbus assemble new playground equipment at
the Meigs Elementary SchooL The playground is expected to -be ready for students by the end
Qf September. (Beth Sergent/ photo)

Meigs playground nearing completion
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
:&amp; SECnONS -

16 PAGI'.S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

84-6

Comics
,Dear Abby

B7

A3
A4

Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies

A2

NASCAR

BS

As

Obituaries
Sports.
Weather
-~ -

. As
B1
AS
•

Oblo Valley PuhiLddnc eo.

POMEROY The Sl!J·
d~nts at Me1gs Elemel'itary
w!IJ soon have new playgro_unds on which to spend
lhelr reces_ses. ·
.
Dynamic
Installations
from Columbus began work
lhis week assembling equipment lhat will be spread out
over three ·separate · playgr?unds behind - ~he sch~l.
Kmdergarten c h!ldren w11l
have lheir o~n specific
playground while the olher
two playgrounds will be
diyided up between the
remainder of the students.
Money for lhe equipment
came from a $90.000

allowance from the Ohio . gy on a fully functioning
School
Facilitates . playground wilh new equipCommission wilh lhe bal- mem will translate into stua_n ce to be paid from Meigs • dent s who are perked up
Local money set aside from a nd ready to Jearn in their
· the sale of contents of the afternoon classes:
b.uildings vacated when the
Students liave been folnew schools opened.
lowing the playground's
Since school began this progress from their classyear, studenls have had room windows and are anxsmall, designated .'lfeas ious to break in the new
where lhey spent their equipment,
said
Ac ree.
recesses. These areas are ..They are so excited to get
located in the lots in_ front out and play."
of lhe building and the
Among olher feature ~ the
asphalt basketball court playgrounds will have two
located ai lhe side of lhe large climbing structure s
building.
similar to ihe one in the
Kristen Acre.e, principal' Minersville's park . The
of grades K-2 . at Meigs playground is expected to be
Primary said she hopes that open and ready for business
. recesses spent burning ener- by the end of September.

The Meigs County. Democratic Headquarters opened for business on Thursday. The ir hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
- Friday; lO a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturdays. Pictured are (front
row) Tom Lowrey. candidate for County Recorder; Chnstina
· Gater. candidate for County Treasurer; Christi Lynch. representative of U.S. Congressman Ted Stricklan: S~e Maison.
Meigs County Democrat Pa rty Chair; Pat Lang, candidate for
State Representative. 92nd District: Terry Anderson . candidate for State Senator, 20tn District: Jeff Miller. candidate for
Sheriff; Paul Carter. candidate for Me igs County Commission ;
Mick Davenport, Meigs County Commtssioner. Not "pictured
were Jeff Thornton, Me igs County ·Commissioner running for
re-election. and Douglas Bennett. candidate for 4th District
Court of Ap~als . (Beth Sergentjphoto)

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS

In celebration of National Assisted living Week and Women's H_ealth Month, Holzer Medical Center
·
Community Health and Wellness and Holzer Wyngate Gallipolis will sponsor a

UFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZAJION

Community Health 'F air

PLEASANT
.
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
'

*fiiTSICIIIISt'• ~-

992-3381

Saturday, September 18 • 9 AM - 12 Noon
Holzer Wyngate Gal_lipolis - 300 Briarwood Drive'
FREE Screenings • FREE H~lth Information • Refreshments
Ole Car Club Cruise-In from 2 PM - 5 .PM·and
c&lt;M:'ntry music from Blue Lighlning - bring your lawn chairs!
more

•

'

.

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