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                  <text>Honaker's·Quick
Lube opens, As

Career Day
celebration, A6

,.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
•" I I '\ IS • \ ol. ,, ·, . '\o . :•, ,

SPORTS
• Marauders down Southern
.In b.Jr. See Page 81

I I I S(l \'

Sf I' II \1 Bl ({ ~·H , :.- no 1

""" ·"'"l.oif\ •, o·uto"• ·l • "'"

Council gives CIC option to match bids on Pomeroy High School
the asbestos falls on them which may Councilwoman Mary Mci.\ngus.
mean financial catastrophe.
Councilman Jackie Welker sug·The Community Improvement gested about the situation ''Let the
POMEROY - The main topic of· Corporation (CIC) offered to take CIC take on all the headaches."
conversation for the Pomeroy Vi II age over the cost of removing the asbestos
Village · Attorney. Chris Tenoglia.
Council Monday night was once if the buildir.~g was given to them.
called the old high school an ··albaagain what to do with the old
The CIC improves communities tross" as it stands.
Pomeroy High School building.
through commercial yentures and
Tenaglia introduced a contract to
The village owes approximately creating infrastructure. If the CIC the council that authorizes Mayor
$20,000 on the building that has been were ever to sell the old Pomeroy Musser to enter into a contract with
found to contain asbestos. Reputable High School, any profits they make the CIC not to buy the building. but to
estimates for removing the a~bestos after recouping their initial invest- . allow the CIC the option to match ariy
range from $140,000 to $160,000. If ment would revert back to the village. bids the counci l receives on sellingthe village decides to sell or remodel . "I can't see 'giving it away when 'the property.
the building the burden of removing we still owe money on it," said
"The village can't lose with this
Bv BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT®r.,YDAILYSENTINEI..CDM

contract." &gt;:Jid Tenaglia. "This contract doe' not tie your hands in selling
the property."
A motion \\'a' gi ven to :.~ccept the
contract and \\ '" unanimously accepted al'ter. some initial reluctance and
debate from 'ome member' or council.
John Ander.-.on. director of ·the villa!!c \ water and sewer worh said thai
the new lilter 'tatinn 'hould be finished
by Nov. 7. The filter &gt;tation will remove
iron and other deposit!&gt; in city water.
Anderson ·
also
addressed

Please see Bids, AS

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Mattie J. Keiser
Sprouse Ball
.• Carolyn Bechde
:• J.P. Rogers

Don Myer from Mick's Barber Shop 01 1 Main Street welcomes Major
Steve Reischman into his barber chair for a hair cut. Reischman
and his soldiers from the 416th Engineering Grqup· out of Toledo
have accomplished their mission of helping with the clean up in
Meigs County and are leaving on Tuesday. (Beth Sergentjphoto)

.
Clean up continues on Main Street

W'I'fERIFS
Rev. Bob Robinson and Rev. Keith Rader prepare drinking water for distribution at the Mulberry
Community Center. The center is serving as a starting point for thos~ seeking financial and
other assistance for flood damage. (Brian J. Reed / photo)

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 7-9-8
Pick 4 day: 4-4-4-3
Pick 3 night: 8-7-5
Pick 4 night: 7-6:4-2
Buckeye 5: 3-12-17-32-25

Fund drive underway for flooding victims ·
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

West Vll'ginia
Dally 3: 6-1-2
Dally 4: 2-5-0-2
Cash 25: 6-13-15-18-19-23

POMEROY
- Area '
churches are joining together
to provide flood relief
through
the
Mulberry
Community Center, and
funds have been established
at three local banks for donations for those hardest hit by
the Sept. 18 flood .
Those funds have been set
up at Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Home National
Bank and Peoples Bank,
according to Rev. Keith
Rader, the director of the
Co9perative Parish; and Donna Coffman of Portland lost many personal belongings in
those who wish to contribute last week's flooding, and applied for assistance through the
to this local flood relief effort Meigs Ministerial AssoCiation at the Mulberry Community
may do so at any of the bank . Center on Monday. Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz of Sacred Heart
offices. The funds will be Catholic Church , who greeted applicants. at the center. represents the many denominations involved in assisting local flood
· Please see Victims, AS
victims. (Brian J. Reed/ photo)
·

WEATIIER

INDEX

Mayor: Watch speed in Middleport

2 SECilONS- 12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Class~fieds

B3-4

~cs

Bs

Dear Abby

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

Editorials

~ 2004

Ohio Vlllley Publishin&amp; Co.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Mayor
Sandy
lannarelli
urged
·motorists ,in Middleport to
obse·rve the posted speed
limit throughout the village
- but particularly on Mill
Street entering town.
Meeting jn regular session
on
Monday
evening,
lannarelli said two ambulances were called to an accident on Middleport Hill earlier yesterday, and that speed

was likely to blame.
"I hear excuses in Mayor's
Court week after week about
speeding on the hill. but it
will be enforced.'' lannarelli
said. "The pos_ted speed .limit
throughout the vi llage is 25 ,
but cases of speed of 40 miles
an hour or more on
Middleport Hill are common.
That's just too fast to be driving on that dangerous hill."
lannarelli thanked those
who assisted during the
recent flooding.
"We were lucky that we '

weren't hit as hard as other
commumues.
including
Pomeroy, and I've offered
any · assistance on behalf of
the village we can to help."
she said.
According to lannarelli, the
Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department has assisted with
street cleanup in Pomeroy..
Councilman Jeff Peckham
discussed preparation of the
lagoon area for the Sleepy
Hollow Halloween hayride.

Ple•se see Speed, AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- Walking up
and down Main Street in
,Pomeroy on Monday w:.~'
amazing considering it was
underwater only a week earlier. Life does go on.
Mayor John Musser is
very happy with the work the ·
street, fire and police departmerit did (and are still doing)
to clean up the city after the
tlooding. He is also cautiously opti111istic that the walking

p:.~th

l

may be clear for the
Sternwhecl Festival.
Workers · at . Swisher and
Lohse were plea&gt;ed with the
way Main Street W:JS looking
too considering all the debris
and mud that had invaded
Pomeroy after the water
receded.
The workers were proud
of ha\ ing their store open for
bus ines' by Wednesday of
.last week. Emplqyee Becky
Roush said customers were

Please see Main, AS

A leadership team of Beth Shaver. director. sea~ed . and Darla
Hawley, assistant director, has been named for the Meigs
County Council on Aging. (Charlene Hoeflich/ photo)
·

Personnel to. lead Senior .

Citizens program$ n~med
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Beth A.
Shaver has been named
director and Darla J.
Hawley. as~i~tant director.
of the Meigs Countv
Council on Aging by the

Board of Tru'&gt;tee~ .
Announcement of the
appointment&gt; of the leadership team wa~ made today
by Paul Reed. board presi- .
dent. Since June 9. Shaver

Please see Personnel, AS

�•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION-. WORLD

Tuesday·, September 28,

2004

Virgin boss·announces plans for commercial space service
Bv JILL LAWLESS

gers.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
"Virgin has been in talks
with Paul Allen and Bun
LONDON - Airline mogul throughout this year, and in
and adventurer Richard th~ early hours of Saturday
Branson announced plans signed a hi storical deal to
Monday to boldly go where license SpaceS hipOne's \ec hno private transpon company nology to build the world's
has gone before- into space. first private spaceship to go
·Branson 's Virgin Group into commercial operating
said · it would offer commer- service," Branson told a news
cia! space flights by 2007, conference in London . . ,
with Branson himself joining
SpaceShipOne cracked the
the inaugural journey.
banier to manned commercial
The bid is a natural for space flight in June by taking
Branson, a high-school a 90-minute !light almost 62
dropout turned flamboyant miles above Eanh, just over
tycoon who has made several the distance scientists widely
failed attempts to circle the . consideF to be the boundary of
world by hot-air balloon.
. space.
"It's just the kind of thing
Virgin said iis agreement
he absolutely loves, because it with Mojave Aerospace could
. gets him maximum publicity," · be wonh up to $25 rnillion
said David Learmount, opera- over the next 15 years,
tions and safety editor of depending on the number of
Flight International magazine. spaceships it builds.
"But the technology is there,
J'he company said it planned
-~ it's plausible."
to begin construction of the
Branson, 54, announced a first vessel, VSS Enterprise,
deal to license technology next year and to offer flights
from . Mojave Aerospace by 2007. It will invest about
Ventures, the firm owned by $108 million in spaceships and
Microsoft co-founder Paul ground infrastructure for the
Allen that bankrolled June's venture, it said.
historic 90-minute · spaoe
The new service will be
flight by the aircraft called Virgin Galactic and
SpaceShipOne.
expects · to fly 3,000 new
. The Virgin craft will ·be astronauts in its first five
based on Burt Rutan's design years. · Fares will start at
for SpaceShipOne, a stubby $208,000 for a two- to threerocket-plane capable of carry- hour suborbital flight, including a pilot and two passen- ing three days' .training.

"I hope with the launch of
Virgin Galactic and the building of our fleet of spacecraft
that one day children around
the world will wonder why
we ever thought that space
travel was a dream we read
about in books," Branson
said.
The only space touri sts to
date are U.S. business man
Dennis Tito and South
African millionaire Mark
Shuttleworth, who each paid
$20 million for journeys to
the
International
Space
Station on a Russian rocket
The firm that arranged
those trips, Space Advent~re s,
also hopes to begin ticketed
suborbital flights within. a few
years.
Branso~ ; who began ,his
career as a teenage newspaper
publisher and record peddler,
is now worth $2.2 billion,
according to a Forbes magazine estimate.
His Virgin Group began as a
record label , and now sells SpaceShipOne, a privately developed manned rocket created by aviation designer Burt Rutan
every thing from soft drinks to · and funded by billionaire Paul Allen, is shown in this undated promotional photo. British
bridal gowns, and runs a train entrepreneur Richard Branson announced 'Monday that his Virgin company plans to launch
service and mobile phone net- commercial space flights over the next few years in London, Monday. The Virgin transport,
work.
'
entertainment and communications group has signed an agreement with pioneering aviation
It operates several airlines des igner Burt Rutan to build an aircraft based on Rutan's SpaceShipOne vessel, Branson
·
British-based · Virgin said. (AP Photo/Scaled Composites)
Atlantic and budget carriers publicity with his aeronautical cessful attempts to be the first made a 22-mile crossing of
Virgin Express in Europe and adventures.
,
balloonist to circumnavigate the. English ' Channel by
Virgin Blue in Australia He was the first person to the world without stopping.
and plans to launch a low- cross both the Atlantic and
Other feats include setting a amphibious vessel in one
budget U.S. carrier next year. Pacific oceans by hot-air bal- trans-Atlantic · speedboat hour, 40 minut~s . .6 seconds.
Branson has won extensive loon and made several unsuc- record in 1986. In June, · he setting a new record.

Recovery begin~ anew after .Fiorida's fourth hurricane
VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- People lined up for more
than a half-mile for food .and
water, while others searched
in vain for g~nerators in the.
sweltering heat Monday as
Florida residents began
cleaning up aU over again,
demoralized by the founh
hurricane in six weeks to bat. ter the state.
Hurricane Jeanne, with
slashing winds reaching 120
mph, claimed at least six
lives in Florida over the
weekend as it plowed
through vinually the same
area that was bashed by
.Hurricane Frances earlier this
month .
Together,
Hurricanes
Charley, Frances, Ivan and
Jeanne have generated the
biggest relief effort ever
undenaken .by the ·Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency.
"I've stopped trying to.
assess which storm IS worse
than the other," said Gov. Jeb
Bush. "They are all powerful,
they all wreaked havoc in .our
state find they all stink. They
are all pasnhe threshold of
bad."

Florida is the first state to
get pounded by four humcanes in one· season since
Texas in 1886. TWo months
· · remain in the 2004 hunicane
season.
·At the only Home Depot in
this coastal town, 75 people
broiled uhder a cloudless sky
in.
temperatures
that
approached 90 as they waited
for turps, gas cans and other
supplies t~ begin repairs. I~ a
separate bne; 25 people watt·
ed for generators.
"My wife kicked me out
until I came back with a generator,'' said Wayne Keller,
who had a generator for
Frances, bui sold it once
power was restored. "She

•
wants to kill me. She's not in "two hours and 18 minutes." reportedly flipped cars and heading north at 13 mph and
a laughing mood."
Bob Gilmore, a mechanical toppled trees and power lines; was expected to move over
The store did not have any. engineer, stacked aluminum according · to the Moore the Carolinas. ·
~eller had been waiting four siding in front of his home County
: .Sheriff's
Insured losses from Jeanne
hours on the promise that a and tried to figure out how to Department.
were estimated at $5 billion
shipment df 300 was on the get water out of the ceiling.
Flooding remained a con- to $9 billion, insurance
way.
His screen porch disap- cern along the Peace River in expens said.
The store itself was in need peared.
in west-central Florida.
About 2.3 million people in
of repairs, had ·no air condi"The house stinks right Officials ordered evacuations Florida had no ·· electricity
tioning and was running on now. It's going to be a miser- for about 400 families in low- because of Jeanne. Nearly
generator power. Only five able time," he said.
lying areas near the river. '47,000 people in the
people were allowed in at a
Jeanne also inflicted more Many of the families had not Panhandle were still without
time, and buckets placed damage on two industri.es yet returned to their homes power in the area hit by Ivan.
throughout caught water as it hugely important to Florida:
because of damage from
Charley
hammered
dripped from the ceiling.
citrus and tourism.
Charley
and
Frances.
Florida's
southwest
coast
In Fort Pierce's histori c
Florida citrus growers lost
At 5 p.m. EDT,_ Jeanne ')Vas Aug. 13; Frances blanketed
downtown area, power lines about half of their grapefruit
a
tropical
depression centered much of the petnnsula as 1t
dangled and flooded roads · crop during f'rances. And
were closed. Greg and Cindy with the ground soaked from north of Macon, Ga. It was crawled through Labor Day
Rosslow checked on the previous storms, trees top,:• &amp;...... .,. ,:e -&amp; I• ,:•
women's clothing store that pled more easily this time. •• •• -&amp;I•
"~""'"""
has been in his family for two Fruit was scattered throughgenerations. The store lost its out groves.
roof during Frances and still
"It's a new layer of fruit on
had not reopened. Jeanne , the ground. It couldn't be any·
smashed the front window.
worse." said grower Cody
"You get a little dishean- Estes.
ened," Greg Rosslow said.
Orlando's theme parks
President Bush on Monday closed for the third time this
asked Congress for more than season during Jeanne, and
$7 ..J billion to help Florida many hotels along the
and other Southeastern states Atlantic coast were hlfllvily
recover.
damaged.
. .
The unprecedented relief
Earlier, Jeanne caused I
effon includes more than flooding in Haiti that 'killed
5,000 FEMA workers spread more than 1,500 people. The
ov.er 15 states. Nearly 3,800 storm weakened after plowNational · Guardsmen ·were ing across Florida, but ·
providing security, directing brought heavy rain and fierce
traffic, distributing supplies wind to the already-soggy
and keeping gas lines orderly. South.
In Florida ·atone, relief
Iii Georgia, the . storm's
workers have handed out at remnants toppled trees,
least 16 million meals• 9 mil- washed out dozens of roads
lion gallons of water and and left more. than 76,000
nearly 59 million pounds . of residents without power at its
ice over the course of the four height. A handful of coffins
storms, state officials said.
also were washed up in
But for some, it was not Folkston, when flooding hit a
being distributed fast enough. cemetery there.
·
"T:his is just too much. This
Tornadoes spawned by the
is just unbelievable," said storm also destroyed buildGladys Caldwell, · who knew ings in South Carolina, and in
just how long she· had waited . Nonh Carolina, a windstorm
for water and ice at a Fort in Southern Pines damaged
Pierce distribution station more than I00 buildings and

••• •:

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•••••

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•••••

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weekend: and Ivan blasted
the Panhandle when it hit
SepL 16. The three storms
caused billions of dollars in
damage and kil e'd 73 people
in Florida aIon .
De spite th ' destruction,
some residen s just see the
string of stti ms as . simply
something th t comes with
living in Flori ~a .
"I've lived in Florida all
my Iife ." Chri. Cole saicj.
"We've gone _t h~JUgh a few
ol these . ThiS · ts JUSt one
mory

'

:•
•• ·•
·~

1.

en ar

••

•••

Send us a
photo ~f
your
favorite
pet and
they
"
might be----.::::~~~
voted into our

Rates rise in Treasury bill auction
WASHINGTON (AP) percent for a six-month bill
.Interest rates on shon-term selling for $9,901.42.
In a separate repon, the
Treasury securities rose in
Reserve
said
Federal
Monday's auction.
Monday
that
the
average
The Treasury Depanment
sold $19 billion in three- yield for one-year. constant
month bills at a dis.:ount
rate of 1.710 · percent, u'p
from 1.685 percent last
week. An additional $17 billion was sold in six-month
bills at a rate of 1.950 per. cent, up from 1.870 percent.
The three-month rate was
the highest since June 10,
2002, when the bills sold
for 1.720 percent. The sixmonth rate was the highest
since April 8, 2002, when
the rate was I. 975.
The new discount rates
understate the actual return
to investors 1.741 percent for three-month · bills
with a $10,000 bill selling
fdr $9,956.78 and 1.997

maturity Treasury bills, a
popular index for making
changes in adjustable rate
mortgages, rose to 2.14 percent last week · from 2.09
percent the previous week.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ~:.

:f.
!:

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

Name~p~:

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... Your Name:
: Address:

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"G})(k~ t~ ~ f? •s ·~alltpoli~
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m:rtbune
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Phone:

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Please send or bring this entry fonn along with your photo to

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·------------------------------------·-···----,
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floint ~Ieasant
l\.egtster ·

"Pet calendar"'
"Pet calendar"'
8l5'1hird Avenue
100 Main St.
;!Gallipolis, OH 45631 Pt Pleasant. WV 25550

.

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~

Daily Sentinel ...

L

·Pet calendar"
111 Court St.
1'
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~·

•····································

Prayer meeting at 7 p.m. with
se rvices to continuing each
last Wednesday of each
Wednesday, Sept. 29
month
. Public panicipation,
POMEROY - FEMA will
communal prayer, testimonimeet with County and
als, si ngers and instrumentalVillage officials only at 9
ists invited, · anything to
a.m. at the Courthouse
share . Choirs; ministers, misAnnex , Individual s with
sio naries, everyone invited.
nood ing concerns will be
Sunday, Oct. 2 ·
addressed at a later date.
PORTER - Song fest .will
Thursday, Sept. 30
be
held at 7 p.m. at the Clark
ALFRED - The Orange
.Chape
l Church on Clark
Town sl]ip Tru stees will hold
Chapel Road in Porter. Four
their October meeting on
differei.lt gro ups. Pastor
Sept. 30at 7:30 p.m. at the
Sunday,
Oct.
3
Clyde
FerrelL For informahome of the clerk, Osie
POMEROY
Hemlock
Follrod.
tion call 740-388-8075.
Grove Christian Church will
Friday, Oct. I
POMEROY
- Meigs observe its homecoming with
County PERl #74 meets at a 9:30 a.m. church service
Meigs County Multipurpose · and Sunday school following.
Thesday, Sept. 28
Senior Center, with luncheon A potluck dinner will be hel~
POMEROY .- Calvery
at noon and meeting to fol- at 12:30 p.m . at the Grange Pilgrim Chapel on RT 143
low. Reports on state meet- Hall. Take a covered dish . will host a revival at 10 a.m.
ing, upcoming elections and The homecoming service will and 7 p.m. through Oct. 3. All
appointment of nominating beg in at 2 p.m.· with special
· ·other serv ices a·re · at 7:30
committee for new officers. · music by Scott Brown.
p.m. Rev. Ken Thompson
Sunday, Oct. 10
Saturday, Oct. 2
POMEROY
The from MO and singers. Rev.
PORTLAND
The
Lebanon Township Trustees Carleton · Church of County Charles McKenzie, pastor.
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Road 18, Pomeroy will have
its annual homeco ming with
township building.
dinner at noon and specia l
services at I :30 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 30 ·
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Adult Basic Literacy
Education program plans
Tuesday, Sept. 28
Wednesday, Sept. 29
open houses at its Middleport
RACINE - Regular meetPOMEROY - Enterprise and Bradbury ABLE centers,
ing
of
Racine
Area Un ited Methodist Church from 9 a.m. until noon at
Community Orgapization will be hosting a Communi ty Middleport Library and

Bradbury Learning Center.
Meet instructors, view learning materials and classrooms
and ask question of staff.
Information is available by
calling 99i.!-6930 or 992·
5808.
Saturday, Oct. 9
SYRACUSE
The
School/Meigs
Carleton
Industries will be sponsoring
their 2nd Annual Community
Olympic s from 8:30a.m. to 4
p.m. It is a fund raiser for
Marvin Cooper who is bat tUng cancer. Call 1-740-9926681 to register a team by
Oct. L

Homecomings/
Reunions

Revivals

Support Groups
'

Tuesday, Sept. 211
ATHENS - O' Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athen s
will offer a breastfeeding
class for expectant mothers
from I:30.to 3:30p.m .. at the
Birth Center in the lower
leve l conferen ce room .
Michele Biddlestone, board
certified lactali(ln consultant,
. will lead the class in topic s
including advantages of
breastfeeding for mother and
child, anatomy of the breast,
physiology of beastfeeding,
and maintenance and ·man agement advice for working
mothers. The class is free .
For more information call
592-9364.

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

Church services

TIME OUR FOR TIPS
What should you do with
clothing that has been in a
flood? Here are some things
to keep in mind that will
insure that the clothing is safe
to wear.
Clothes should be cleaned
as soon as possible. Wear
rubber gloves when handling
and cleaning flood-soaked
clothing. While waiting for
wash loads to ,be completed,
remaining laundry should be
hung on a line or spread out
to dry to help reduce mildew mg.
Dr. Joyce Smith, retired
Clothing Specialist with Ohio
State University Extension,
says clothing that has been in .
a flood should be thoroughly
cleaned and disinfected to
kill any bacteria. But first, it .

· After a thorough rinsing,
·clothing should be washed in
the hottest water and for the
longest ag itation period that
the fab ric can withstand . .
Don't crowd the clothing, .
Becky
and use plenty of detergent
Baer
and the highest water level
possible. A disinfectant is
also necessary.
. Dr. Smith says that people
may noi realize that they
shou ld be rinsed 10 cold should use a disinfectant
water to remove as much when washing clothing thai
mud and surface dirt as possi- has been in a flood.
ble. Rinsing in hot .water , Floodwater commonly carcould cause permanent rust- ries sewage waste or other
colored siains if the nood bacteria . that aren 't killed in
water contained red or yeilow hot water and detergent.
Liquid chlorine bleach is
clay. An enzyme-based prt:·
soak product, such as Biz or the most common and cheapAxion, could be helpful at est of disinfectants. ·Only two
tableSIJOOns are needed to
this stage .

disinfect a load of laundry,
and should be used whenever
there's a sickness in the ramlly or even when using a
coin-operated washer when
you are unsure who else has
used the machine. At this
concentration, most fabrics
and colors won't be affected.
But even if some ·are, that is
better than taking the risk thai
some bacteria may remain on
the clothing.
H0wever,. wool , silk and
spandex are damaged by
bleach. Dry-clean wool and
silk items instead of laundering them in water that contains bleach . Leather and
suede. items should have
excess mud or dirt shaken
otf, then taken to the cleaners
as soon as possible.

'~ ii¥''t.t. iiAw,,~ . .... ,~ iiAw !.i ~-·· ·:.,

~

.

2004

Locking kids in bedroom
can open door to danger
DEAR ABBY: ·I read with
concern the letter from
"Sleeping Beauty's Motherin-Law," whose son locks hi s
5- year-old daughter i'n her
bedroom when he leave s for
work so hi s wife can continue
sleeping.
When I was a. child ,. it was
my job to lock my younger
brother in hi s bedroom after
he had eaten breakfast and
before I left for schooL 1 did
it because my mother alql
wanted to continue to sleep.
Unbeknownst to me or my
mother, my brother had found
a &lt;;igarctte lighter. He had it
in hi s room ~ne morning
when 1 locked him in: To
make a long story shan. he
started a tire in hi s room that
resulted in his death. 1 have
lived with the £u ilt of this
tragedy for nearl' y 20 years.
de spitt; years of therap y.
The grandmother who
wrote that letter ha s good reason 1tob be concerned f&lt;lr the
wel - eing of her grandchi ld.
Please remind your readers
that chi ldren are not a convenience . They require the
supervision of re sponsible
reople who wi ll care for them
unselfishly. FLORIDA
PAMILY THERAPIST
DEAR FLORIDA THERA PIST: Please accept my deepest sympathy for your fittl e
brother's death . It was not
your fault . The responsibility
was your mother's. You were
only a child yourself. and
obeyin g her orders. ·
If it's forgiveness you are
!!Joking for, I forgive you.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: The letter
from that grandmother gave
me chills. My daughter-in · law .gave birth to. two chi!dren , but had only one when
she n1et my son: The other
had been locked in hi s room
while she slept Somehow he
got tangled in the cords on
the blinds while he was play ing and strangled. Whe1i she
awoke, she found her son
dead.
My daughter-in-law lives
every day with · the know!edge that her son died as a
result of her negligence.

Dear
Abby

No chifd - or adult. fo r
that matler - ,hould be
locked in a room. Wi1hou1
supervision. chi ldren often do
thin g:' they' re not al lcl\\cd to
do - ' uch as jump on the
beds and perhap' bounce to
Ihe tl oor. hitting the corner of
a piece of furniture on the ,
way and_gettii)g injured. Jus1
knowing yo u are locked in
and unable 10 ge t out
(trapped) can also be P".·cho-

~t~~i{R f~~cl's~A-

.

MARIETTA - Peoples
Bancorp (Nasdaq: PEBO)
anno unced that one of its
subsidiarie s, Peoples Bank,
has signed an agreement to
acquire two full-seivice
banking offices in the
Ashland, Ky. area, from
Advantage Bank, a subsidiary of Cameo Financial ·
Corporation (Nasdaq: CAFI).
"We are pleased to
announce plans to enhance
our business in the Ashland
area," said Mark F. Bradley,

Peoples Bancorp's President
and Chief Operating Officer,
"We believe we can leverage our recent expansion in
nonheastern Kentucky. and
we look forward · to serving
all of the financial needs of
our new customers."
The offices are located at
1640 Carter Avenue in dqwntown Ashland and 660 I US
Route 60 just outside of the
city. Under th e terms of the
agreement, Peoples has
agreed to pay a I0.21 % pre-

mium, or approximately $6.6
million in cash, for the $65
million of deposits, plus
. acquire the fixed assets and
approximately $45 million of
loan s at book value.
Peoples expects the acquisition to be accretive to earnings per share in the first full
year after completion of the
transaction, which is subject
to regulatory approval and is
antioipated to be completed
.in the fourth quarter of 2004.

YOUR

CHOICE

Teresa Lemons reported a She explained some of the
new book had been pur- things United Methodist
chased for the church lending Women groups are involved
library. A brass ·plate for the in on the local , national and
bookcase has been installed. international level s. She also
' Plans. were discussed by shared literature that mem JoAnna Weaver for sending bers and guests were free to
cards and gifts to soldiers in look at and could a;;k ques ..
Iraq and elsewhere. It was lions.
decided to send cards first and
A hymn and prayer by ·
later organize and assemble Beattie dosed the meeting.
gift packages.
Attending
were
Shelly
A birthday card was signed Caldwell, Grace Stout, Barb
for Laura McGee. Kennedy 'Roush .' Connie ·Rankin.
read a invitation to member- Glenna Sanders. Mildred
ship to the open house guest. Caldwell, JoAnna Weaver,
Cheviler,
Teresa
Pastor Jane Beattie presented ·Betty
a video and a ·program cele- Lemons, Terri Soulsby, Anna
brating 135 years of United . Rice, Judy Kennedy, Sharon
Methodist Women Mission . Louks and Beattie.
1

~$599''
PMIEK
Rocher Hcdiner

Monthly community prayer meetings planned
POMEROY Starting United Methodist Church
Wednesday, Enterprise United ·choir will sing, and a'ny other
Methodist Church will be choir is invited. Ministers,
hosting a community prayer
meeting at 7 p.m. on the last
Wednesday of each month. ·
This will be a time to share
in open prayer concerns and
updates on answered prayers.
The public is invited to participate by leading the group
in a prayer, adding to-a com- ·
munal prayer, praying silently, giving a testimony to the
group, . making a prayer
request, presenting a song or
instrumental music (piano,
organ; and karaoke machine
available), sharing a favorite
Bible passage, poem, or story.
Members of the Enterprise

mi ssionaries, and all other
peopl e are welCome to lead a
prayer.

. DREA.IIfU\'ER OR IIKI~G
ROCKER IIE(Ll~ER

YOUR

CHOICE

Ce/ebroting spedlll
.days With you!

0'/, INTEREST*

FUiNITUiE PLUS

740-992-2155 .

'

'•
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-·-

.

-

.

...

~-..-·--,·-

........

I,

810.00 DOWN/810.00 MONTH

The Daily Senti*:

~·

.. L

A

DEAR READER: It ~ue'
without sayi n~ that a care~£iY er should be awake
and capable of supervising tile chi ld.
A h' 1 · h'ld
b
ny.\ Ing e's "c 1 a use.
Wheth er
"'Slccpmg
Beauty,"' the m.other in · lhe
original letter. suller.' from
mental illness. depres sion or
substance abuse . ali interven tion is called for. Becau;e the
parent s seem obli,ious tu the
danger, 1 advised the writer to
notifv Child Prot ec tive
Service s. While some readers
felt this was drastic. it is bet ter to take action and ensure
t~e child' s safety than to do
nothing and reg ret it forever.
DEAR ABBY: If a woman
proposes to . a man . who
should buy the ring? - DEB
IN KNOXVILLE .
DEAR DEB: Ca ll me old fashioned. but if the 1nan is a
gentleman he shoul!l buy the ·
ring. And if he refuses. the
· woman should enter into that
marriage with her eyes wide
open art'd no illu sions about
what her future will be.
Dear Ahbv is written bv
Abigail Va;1 Buren. also
known as Jeann e Phillips. and
was founded by her mother.
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O . Box 6\1440. Los
Angeles..CA 90069.

r-------------------~

Peoples Bank to acquire. two new offices

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
!50th anniversary of the
National United Methodist
Women was observed at a
recent meeting of the TupJ?t!rS
Plains
· Plains Umted
Methodist Women.
An open house was held in
conjunction with . a membership drive. Judy Kennedy,
president, p~esided and Barb
Roush gave prayer. The group
sang "What A Friend ·We
Have In Jesus." The UMW
Litany and purpose was read,
and officers of the group were
introduced.
THe upcoming church
cookbook was discussed and
is ready to go to the prin~ers.

Pe.t Calendar!

Deadline for entries is: November 15 2004

will be held at 6:30 p.m.
Members and special guests
will meet at Gino's in Mason,
W Va.
Saturday, Oct. 2
HARRISONVILLE
Harri sonville Lodge 411 will
meet at 7:30 p.m. _at the
Masonic
Temple.
Refreshments.

Tuesday, September 28,

Local UMW celebrate national anniversary

2005.

:'.
••

Community Calendar
Public meetings

PageA3

BY'THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

�I

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News
Editor
,.,
.

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tile press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition .
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

.Answer
·VVhy hate Bush?
Dear Editor:
I am wondering why the Democratic left hates President
. Bush so much. I am wondering why Hillary Clinton said she
wonders how you could go to ch urch and be a Republican. I
am wondering why John Ken'y said the eight years of the
Reagan Administration was the darkest years of American
history. I am wondering why this administration is blamed for
a recession that started before it even bcg:m. I am wondering
why this administration is blam~d l~&gt;r NAFfA when the previotiS administration began the sc ll -otll of American industry.
I hear terrible things about this man, and I wonder why. I
think I might know. When asked who his hero is, 'George W.
Bush replied that his hero is Jesus Christ. The Democratic left
cannot handle this: Hollywood cannot handle this: and many
more cannot as well.
Glad that a righteous man wil l stand up and fight the good
fight. ,
Todd Bissell
Long Bottom

.Moderately Confused

infrastructure. It has been
slow to spend , appropriated
funds. It has exaggerated
progress in training Iraqi
security forces.
Morton
Jush'~ Iraq performance
Konda!t:ke led one sman Republican I
know to say. "There's no
question in my · m\i1d that
Bush deserves to be fired.
undertaking and he has made But would you hire Kerry to
the achievement of our replace him? Jhere's no way
objective - a · stable Iraq. I'd do that."
secure within its borders,
Indeed, Kerry does not
inspire
confidence as a
with a representative government
harder to replacement manager of the
achieve."
Iraq enterprise. For one
Let's parse that sentence in thing, his · ~trategic aim
But he still insists that, pteces.
"Misled?"
It's remains unclear. He says
knowing that Hussein pos- become gospel among that his purpose is 10 "suesessed no weapons of mass Democrats that Bush know- ceed'' and that .his "objecdestruction, he still would ingly deceived the country tive" is a stable Iraq.
have voted to give Bush' the into war - that he phonied · But he also has established
authority to go to war. up intelligence on WMD and what amounts to a deadline
Hussein needed to be "held · connections with AI Qaeda for beginning U.S. troop
accountable," he says.
and concocted an "imminent withdrawals (six months)
But for what? !f&gt;Iussein threat" to the United States. .and fo&lt; total U.S. withdrawhad no WMD and everyone
But the whole world, al (four years). There's a disknew it, surely very few in including France. and most · tinct flavor of "Aikenism"
Congress would have sup- members of the Senate and about his pronouncements.
ported threatening war. ·
House Intelligence commitDuring the depths of the
Kerry who voted tees believed that Iraq had Vietnam · War in 1966. Sen.
against the 1991 Gulf War WMD.
Indeed,
some George .Aiken,
R- Vt. ,
when Hussein invaded Democrats argued that it famously advised that . the
Kuwait and who was run- would be used against U.S. United States "declare victoning for president in 2003 in forces.
ry and withdraw" whether
a party that generally tilted
"Miscalculated'!" Here. the mission was accomagainst the war - almost Kerry is on solid ground. plished or not.
cert4inly would have voted Bush &amp; Co. assumed that
It would be a tragedy "No:" Why can't he just say Americans would be cheered for the United States, the
so? Undoubtedly, because it as liberators. They ignored Iraqi s and the world- if the
would look like another "flip State Department warnings Un ited Slates pulled out preflop." But it doesn'.t help his of a probable insurgency.
maturely and left chaos
credibility to. stick to an
They also dismissed Army behind.
incoherent story.
estimates of the number of
Bush has said. that his
Still, inatiy of Kerry 's crit- troops it would take to paci- objective· in Iraq_is to "preicisms of Bush's policy are fy the country. And they vail." Since .he regards Iraq
on target. The ratcheting-up· underestimated the cost of as the "central front in the
of his rhetoric also indicates the war 'in lives and money.
war on terrorism," and since
that polls showing him trailSuch things happen in war. his goal is to "w in" that war,
ing Bush have only made But, as Kerry charges, Bush he seems more likely to perhim determined to fight also has "mismanaged" the severe than Kerry is.
harder.
Kerry's NYU speech conaftermath of the war. The
At New York University, United States failed to get taincd a four-point "plan" for
he declared that Bush "mis- Iraqis em'ployed rebuilding Iraq, which Bush declared
. led, miscalculated and mis- their country. It didn't ade- that he's already been pursumanaged every aspect of this quately guard the country's ing: seeking help from allies,
Democrat John Kerry's
sharpened
attacks
on
President Bush's Iraq policy will undoubtedly cheer ·
his worried supporters and
may even sway some
fence-sitters. But he's still
left hanging several major
questiQns about what he'd
do in Iraq .
Kerry has finally answered
the ·seminal question: Would
he have waged war to topple
Sa&lt;)dam
Hussein? · His·
answer. made clear only on
the "Late Show" with David
·Letterman of all piaces, is

IN ANY
OF YOUR

C(ASSE5.

One of George W. Bush's ,f ·
.. ~
strengths is what you see is
~
what you get -unlike John
Kerry's expensively attired
shifting personae. But civil
liberties concerns ring in
Nat
Bush's tin ear, as reflected by
Hentoff
his enthusiastic support of
John Ashcroft and the·Patriot
,I...
I
Act. A recent example is his
executive order establishing . Office, says of the presithe President's Board on dent's venture into civil libSafeguarding . Americans' erties: "While we appreciate
Civil Liberties - . following the president's attention to
the recommendation of the these crucial matters; we
Sept. 1 I Commission.
fear this may be an attempt
For such a watchdog. to be to avoid doing something
credible, its members have real."
to be independent and biparThat's a polite way of saytisan, as . the Sept. II ing that the growing numCommission was. Instead, as bers of civil liberties'
Richard Ben-Veniste, former defenders in · Congress member of the Sept. I I especially energized by the
Commission; and Penn State conservative Republican liblaw professor Lance Cole ertarians" among them pointed out in a Sept'. 7 New will have no trouble seeing
York Times op-ed:
through this illusion of a
"All its members are from presidential board. Can the
within government and government safeguard the
almost all are from the very Fourth Amendment (a peragencies and departments son's right to be secure
whose actions are likely to against unreasonable searchbe the subject of civil liber- es), when it's often charged
ties ·challenges and, com- with abusing it, as well as
plaints." Adding to this . other civil liberties?
Potemkin village, the board
Also justly skeptical, to
is based on Ashcroft's say the least, will be citiJustice Department!
zens il) 356 towns and cities
The president should' be - across the demographic
reminded
that
our and political · ~ pectrum Constitution, the fundamen- that have passed Bill of
tal law of the land, was fully . Rights defense resolutions
effectuated iti 1791 when the urging their members of
first I 0 amendments (the Congress to remedy the
Bill ofo Rights) were ratified civil liberties abuses by
by nine states. Those amend- some of the very governments were mandated to pro- ment departments repretect the liberties of individ- . sen ted on the President's
ual Americans from the · Board on Safeguarding
national government.
Americans'. Civil Liberties .
As Laura Murphy, director Four state legislatures
of the American Civil (Alaska, Hawaii, Main and
Liberties
Union's Vermont) have also passed
· Washington
Legislative similar resolutions to pro0

~·~~~··~. ~
~

''

Inc.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

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· &lt;;:orrectlon Polley

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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speeding the reconstruction
· and the training of Iraqi
forces, and planning elec- ·
tions to transfer full savereignty to the Iraqis.
At the United Nations.
French President Jacques
Chirac madt; it clear that
France will supply no
troops, regardless of who
wins the election. Kerry says
that more troops are needed
· to prevent Islamic terrorists
from entering Iraq.
So who will provide them?
It would he fair to charge. as
some critics of Bush have,
that ·the United States needs
more troops in Iraq. But
Kerry has gone out of his
way to say that, while he'd
increase the overall size of
the U.S. Armed Forces, they
would not go to Iraq.
· 'Kerry . has also criticized
Bush for spending $200 billion on Iraq - money that
could be used for health care
and e.ducation. But how
much would he budget'? He
.doesn't say.
Nor has he explained how
he would handle .the escalating insurgency in Sunni
areas that are likely to make
holding elections difficult.
Would ·he launch an all-out
offensive, as Bush seems to
be planning? Or would he
hang back, as Bush has done
so far~
The situation in Iraq is
clearly getting worse. The
Islamic savages beheading ·
Westerners and killing U.S.
soldiers clearly want to force
the United States out and
score a strategic victory for
terrorism. Who'd be the better commander in chief to
stop them·J Kerry still has
not made the case that he's
the one.
(Morton Kondm cke is
executive editor of Roll Call.
the newspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

Can government be_its own~ watchdog?.

rmGLAD
J:MNoT
•

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

teet the Bill of Rights.
We are engaged in World
War lll against international
terrorists: and as the president has said, we are fighting tq protect who we are.
For more than 200 years, we
have defined ourselves
through the values of the
Constitution. Note U.S.
Supreme Court Associate
Justice Thurgood Marshall's
famous r.emi_nder: "The true
miracle was not the birth of
· lhe Constitution, but its life,
a life nurtured through two
. turbulent centuries of our
own making."
This is now our severest
test as to wpether we can be
both a safe and free people.
Obviously, government is
responsiole for securing our
safety; but we are responsible for keeping our government within the bounds of
the Constitution.
There have already been
suggestions from critics to
make the presidential civil
liberties board nonpartisan,
with more members from
outside the government. And
Richard Ben-Veniste an~
Lance Cole, in the Sept. 7
New York Times, urge that
· any such board must "disclose its findings to the publie .. .. To that end, any panel
should be required to pro·vide quarterly reports of its
. findings to Congress and the
·public." Furthermore, there
must be public hearings on
its findings. ·
· But the president has
already decided on the composition and scope of this
watchdog board. Now, however, that Congress has
awakened to its -own responsibility to be accountable for.
safeguarding our liberties,
Congress should -. as the

.•.
.

ACLU says .- , "move
immediately to create its
own ci vii liberties watchdog
(that) should be fully independent from the executive ·
branch, have full subpoena
powers, be composed of
experts in'both security policy and constitutional law
and .
be
adequately
resourced." Sens: Joseph
Lieberman (D-Conn~ ) arid
John McCain (R-Ariz.) have
submitted such a bill. This
administration can't be the
watchdog of our civil liberties.
The challenge to Congress
is to commend George W.
Bush ·for recognizing the ·
vital importance of this ini-·
tiative. But then, Congress
can make the concept work
by acting quickly ,on the
Liebennan-McCain bill.
In an ; 1858 speech,
Abraham Lincoln said that
"it is not our frowning battlements, our bristling sea .
coasts, the guns ·of our war
steamers, or the strength of
our gallant and disciplined
army. These are not our
reliance' against a resumption of tyranny in our fair
land .... Our reliance is in the
love of liberty."
· More and more Americans
are recgonizing that the
guarantees of the Bill of
Rights are not self-executing
or self-sustaining. They need
our vigilance to protect
them, so that they, in turn,
protect our freedoms.
(Nat.Hemoff is a nationally renowned authori,Y 011 the
First Amendment and the
· Bill of Rights and author of
several books, including
"The War 011 the Bill of
·Rights and the Gathering
Resistance" (Seven Stories
Press, 2003). '

'

•

The Daily Sentinel ~ Pqe As

www.mydailysentinel.co,m

Obituaries

Kerry still hasn't made case on .Iraq·strategy

The Daily Sentinel

READER ·'S

PageA4

OPINION·

The Daily Sentinel

•'

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

Mattie J. Keiser
Sprouse Bal
R TLAND - Mattie J.
Keiser Sprouse Ball. 87. of
Rutland went home to be
with the Lord on Sept. 16,

200l.

.

Mattie

was born in
oo1 Dec. 29. 1916.
dayghter of the late Jacob and
Lilly (Bonnett) Keiser.
She is sur\'ived by a son.
William (Maria) Sprouse.
Wallingford. Conn.: ;md two
daughters. Barbara Sprouse
of Middleport and Linda
(Jeft) Workman of Rutland.
where she made her home:
and two .,tep-childrenand
their spouses. Rita and
Robert
Matthews
and
Edward and Hazel Ball.
Also sun·iving · are 14
grandchildreil. · James A.
(Sharon) Sprouse. Jr. of East
Haven. Conn.: Alison Soto of
Meriden: Conn.: James A.
Sprouse of Meriden. Conn.:
Charles T. Sprouse. III of
Nelsonville:
Susanne
Sprouse. of Racine: Melissa
Sprouse of Athens: Kim
(Max ) Wilson of Pomeroy:
William Sprouse. Jr. of
Wallingford. Conn.: Sharon
Pomero~·

·
·
·

·

of
(Eddie)
Dropalus
Friends called at the Acree
Wallingford, Conn.: Tunothy Funeral Home in Middlepon
Kern of Pomeroy: Rhonda on Saturday, Sept. 18. and for
DePue of Portland; Carol one hour prior to the service
(Ron) Roberts of Eylria: at the church.
Stahl
of
Michelle
Middleport: Tammi (Jamie)
Adarnson of Gallipolis: and
srtep grandchldren and tl)ier
MIDDLEPORT
. _
spouses. Tom and Debbie
Carolyn Jean Bechtle. 59.
pall. Robert and Tammy Ball.
away ~ 11
and Matlrk and Amellia Middleport. passed
2/V\'
"7
Lewis: . 17 great-grandchil- Monday, Sept. _ . UV'&lt;. at
dren. three step-great-grand- Holzer Medical Cemer . i,n
· -~
children; one lifetime friend. Gallipolis.
She
was
born
on
Oct.
18.
Ruby Burnside of Pomeroy.
numerous nieces. nephews . 19.:1-1. in Middleport. daughter of the late Clarence R.'and
and friends .
.
Besides her parents she Ruth M. Daniels Gilkey. She
was precede(! ill death by her was a graduate of the Class of
first husband. Charles T. 1963 of Middleport High
Sprouse. Sr.. her second hus- School.
In addition to her parents.
band. Allen Ball. her son.
she
was preceded in death by
James A. Sprouse. her son.
her
infant. sister, Marv Ann
Charles T. Sprouse. Jr.. h ~r
daughter. Wanda F. Sprouse Gilkey: her brother. joseph
Sellers. a grandson and a R. Gilkey. Sr.: her father-.inlaw, John W. Bechtle: and her
great-granddaughter.
Mrs. Ball was a lifelong brother-in-law, Mike Powell.
resident of Meigs County and . Surviving are her husband.
the first honorary member of David L. Bechtle. whom she
married on Jan. I. 1966: a
· Hillside Baptist Church .
Funeral services were held son, John David Bechtle of
at 2 p.m. Sunday. Sept. 19. at · Middleport: two brothers.
the Hillside Baptist Church . Earl (Nanc y) Gilkey of
Dr. James R. Acree, Sr. offici- Pomeroy and· Kenn_eth L.
ated and burial was in the Gilkey of Columbus: three
si&lt;ters: Kathy Powell of
Rocksprings Cemetery.

.Deaths
J.P. Rogers
WELLSTON
-J.P.
Rogers. 60. Wellston, died
Sunday. Sept. 26. 2004. .at

Middlepon, Jane Ann (Jerry)
Hawley of Pomeroy, and
Judy Gilkey of Pomeroy: her
mother-in-law.
Euvetta
Bechtle of Midilleport: a sister-in-law and brother-in-law.
Sarah and Russ Klontz of
Lancaster: a brother-in-law.
John A. (Ruby) Bechtle of
Columbus : eight nieces: 10
neph(w.,, five great nieces
and four great nephews: sevd
~~·· 1 aunts.
unc 1es · an
cousins: a special friend, Joe
Cus ter of Pomeroy: and a
' 'ery special pet and friend.
Mollv Jean Bechtle.
Honaker's Quick Lube recently opened for business at
Services will be held at I Honaker's Auto Sales. The business offers a variety of serp.m. on Thursday. Sept. 30.
vices including starter repair. brake service, transmission ser2004, at Fisher Funeral vice, diesel oil changes. shocks. check engine light. alternator
Home in Middleport with
Lamar O'Bryant officiating. service· and minor tune ups. They also .sell Castrol Oil and
Burial will follow at Gmvel' Interstate Batteries. Hours of operation are M1m .-Fri. 8:30
a.m. to 5 p.m.: Sal. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Their phone number is 1Hill Cemeiery in Cheshire.
740.667-3177.
The business is locally owned by Dwight and
Friends may call from 2 to
4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Eula Honaker. Zack Kisner is the manager. Pictured is Dwight
Wednesday at the funeral Honaker. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
home.
Bill Gilkey, Christopher
S2.lXXJ. for contract services. and
Gilkey. Russ Klontz. Joseph
5212.18 for police opm1tions.
Gilkey. Jr.. Shaun Baker.
• Voted unanimouslv to
David Hoffman, Bruce Swift
excuse
Roger Manley frOm the
from PageA1
and Scott Curl will be pallmeeting due to a family death..
bearers.
~
and
excused Laurie Reed from
Friends may send online According to Peckham. elec- .
the
meeting.
with Councilman
condolences to www.fisher- trical wirjng has be.en comStephen Houchins votiing in
funeralhomes.com:
pleted·at the site. but the vil- opposition.
lage need ~ to &lt;1ddress a mos• Approved payment of
.quito infestation there,
· bills in the amount of
. Council also:
523.711.11.
• Apprul'ed an amended .· • Authorized a· training
appropriation tor the police ·
Rogers Funeral Home. 120 department. representing jail rev- course for Fiscal Officer
Jeanette Beers.
West Broadway St .. Wellston. enue, in the amount of $3.378.
Also present were Council
Cremeens Funeral Chapel
• Approved appropriation members Robert Robinson
of Gallipolb is in charge of adjustments in the amount of and Kathy Scott.
arrangements.

.Speed

Holzer Medical Center m
Gallipolis.
Services will be held at I
p.m. on Wednesday, a_t Wills
Ch&lt;Jpel Church in Wellston

with Rev: A.B. Maloy officiating. Burial 'wiII follow at
Ridgewood
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 to 9
p.m. on Tuesday . at the J.P.

know that we have to
evolve as the population
changes and we have three
pnmary goals - to stay
fi scally sound. to improve
the work environment to
better motivate employees.
and to provide services thai
exceed seniors' expectations."
The two agree that with
the growing elderly population , preparations have to
,be made now for the next
I 0 or 15 years. They also
agree that they must
become more familiar with
the duties of each other and
that they must take the
agency forward to a place
of s trength, stability and
continuity through cross-

trainipg supervi sors.
Council on Aging. she was
Shaver began employ- a consultant and billin g
men.t at the Center in 1987 speciali st.
·
as a respite aide and coorHawley has been with the
dinator for Alzheimer's agency since 1990 having
di sease and relatecl disor- worked as the mental
ders. In 1988 _ she \Vas health case manager until
1995 when she became the
appointed mental health a d 111 i n i s 1 r a t i v e
case manager, working Ill assistant/c lient advocate. In
that position. unti I 1991 2000 she was named execuwhen she became the com- tive assistant and human
munity services director.
resource director.
She was named assoc iate
In that role she handled
director of the Council on . perspnnel matters, inductAging in 1993 and served 1ng qrientation of new
until 2000, leaving . the employees,
monitoring,
agency , to join Access' to rev1ew1ng and updating
Human
Resource policies and procedures,
Development in Gallia and handling areas involv County. For' the two years ing insurance and workprior to returning to the men 's compensation.

,

Personnel
'

from Page A1

I

has been serv ing as the
agency's inleri m director.
The two were described
as a "good match" with
Shaver versed in vital operaiion:il functions of the
agency including finances,
while Hawley has strong
sk ill s' in personnel and program policies and areas of
human resources .'
" We work really well
together, have for a long
time. and we share the
same goals (or the program
here." - said Shaver. "We

amount of work being done high since 1964. They also
to clean up downtown remarked favorably upon the
Pomeroy. "Whoever is in clean up efforts around rown.
"It looks as good as it can
from Page A1
charge of all this is doing a
look," said Kit Neal of
wonderful job."
Although the Democratic Middleport.
calling ·for their prescriptions
Headquarters
lost their carpet
"Better than last week,"
while water and mLtd was still
in the store. The store lost a and suffered damage to politi- added Larry Bruce of New
, pop cooler and magazine cal signs, volunteers wer:e back Haven, W. Va,
Both men expre~sed their
rack, but ironically none of .to the business of politics.
Down the street at Mick's · thanks to members of the
their ice cream.
Up the ,street at the Barber Shop gentlemen wait- National Guard, motioning
Democratic Headquarters, ed to get their hair trimmed towards
s·teve ·
Major
volunteer Rita Slavin said and remarked on how they Fleischman who waited for
she was impressed with the . hadn ' t seen the water that his haircut in another · cha·ir

Main

Bids
from Page A1.
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun 's
concerns about large drains in
town that became clogged
with debris such as. tires during the floo(ling. He said some
grates were missing and he
would replace them as well as
make sure the entrance to the
drains were cleaned,' calling
the problem more of a nuisance than unsafe.
Musser and the · council
commended the fire, street
and police department for
their . fine work during the
floodin g.
Musser remarked on witnessing three village workers
in .waist deep water on
Mulberry last Friday as they
removed debris from the road.
"Everybody did a great
job," he added

across the room ..
Fleischman along with his
unit t\le 416th Engineering
Group out of Toledo is headed
home on Tuesday. He commended his fellow soldiers
who have spent their days in
the mud and lilth. He felt the
clean up went as good as
could be expected and "you
got:to do what you got to do."
A . sentiment shared by
many along Main Street and
in Meigs County as the clean
up .continues.

Pomeroy Police Chief have any figures and added, had them over and they pretMark Profitt asked and "There wasn't much time to ty much laughed at us.". ·
Council also approved a
received from council $600 do anything but survive last
request
from Secretary Kathy
. to have tires replaced on two, week."
cruisers. Profitt also asked
Musser also mentioned Hysell and coun_c ilwoman
and received permission to· that the National Guard had McAngus to attend a Fair
look for a new, full-time dis- emptied three dumpsters in a Labor Standards conference
patcher .to replace one that gated area near the fire · in Marietta at a cost of $35
had quit, .and avoid overtime department. He noted that per person.
Musser asked for volunpay.
people have been illegally
teers
on the council to give
Resolution 21.04 was climbing the fence and taking
passed transferring $10,000 items from the dt~mpsters out surveys during the
Festival
to
from the General to Street such as chairs and other items Sternwheel
Pomeroy
residents
only.
The
of imerest.
Fund, and bills were paid.
Council also unanimously
"One of the guardsmen survey along with local meetpassed Musser's request to said people were taking it out ings with residents will help
clean up Sugar Run Park. of lhe dumpsters faster than determine what projects and
Musser's plan would clean they .could put i~ in," said areas might see a portion of a
$300,000 grant the village
off, level and then pack the Musser.
park down with dirt at a cost . Councilwoman . Spaun has applied for.
The grant is not for Main
of $20()0.
voiced her concern abo~t
"We need to do it," said Charter Cable ra1smg their Street but for residenti al
Musser.
rates $3.95 a month begin- areas for beautification purDuring open discussion, ning in the October billing poses such as sidewalks,
Welker a·sked if the village cycle., She asked if there was removal of dilapidated prophad any estimates on proper- anything the council could erty and paving. The first of 3
or 4 meetings will be held
ty damage from the recent do.
"Not a thing,'' Musser Oct. 28 at an undetermined
tlooding .
Musser said he did not replied. "We've called them, location to discuss the grant.

USY PIYIENT PW*

S1111WI- $10 PEIIIITI FOR 0111 YEAR
. . . . . . 1111111

-Victims

vided for flood victims'
immediate needs."
Rader said the parish is
from Page A1
also accepting donated items
which may be of practical use
to
those suffering tlood dam used to assist the parish in
providing long-term recovery age. such · as appliances.
for those who lost food. dressers. bed&gt; and bedding
clothing. furnishings and and. other essential home furother belongings in the after- nishings. Dehumidifiers and
fans in good working order
math of Hurricane Ivan .
The center is now accept- are also needed. but clothes
ing applications for cash detinitely ate not. Rader said.
The center will also proassistance from 9 :t m. to 3.
vide
flood clean-up kits from
p.m. each day, but Cflsh will
the
American
Red Cross. and
not !ike'ly be available for
another month, after a local refer the victims the Red
assessment team determines Cross Disaster Relief Center
the needs of each applicant. in Middleport and other
That assessment could begin \lgencies making assistance
as early as Tuesday. accord- available.
"There are so many sepering to Rader.
ministries
working
''Ours is an elt'ort to pro- ate
vide long-term assistance for together. ·all under the
un-met needs." Rader said. Cooperative Parish," Meigs.
Association
"We are looking at providing Ministerial
whatever might be needed Secretary Dee Rader said
after other agencies have pro- Monday.

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

JIBE YOU Jl RESIDBNf' DF
MEIBS t:BUNf'Y?
In order to vote in the Nove'llber 2, 2004 General
Election you must be registered by October 4, 2004.
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at
the hoard on Election l)ay by changing your .
address (if you have moved within the county) or if
you have changed your name, by updating your
registration by October 4, 2004.
The board of elections will be open from 8:30 a.m • .
· until 9:00p.m. on Monday,October 4, 20Q4.
You may also' register at the following locations:
Meigs County Department ofllumanServices,.
Meigs County WIC Office, License Bureau, Board
of MRIDD, Pomeroy Public Library, Middleport
Public Library, Eastern Library, Meigs County
Treasurers Office, and all area high schools• .
For imy additional information,. call 992-2697; or
stop by our office located at 117 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Meigs County Courthouse Annex.

..

�PageA6

OHIO'

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

I SK 'Fun Wall&lt; to

promote heart-healthy lifestyle

BY BElli SERGENT

County General Health servings of fruits and vegetables per day, avoiding eating
District.
Brumtield hopes that the fried foods and limiting the
walk will eventually lead to a amount of red meat.
To fight off a sedentary
walking class. The classes
lifestyle
it is recommended
will co.ntinue over a span of
six weeks beginning Oct. 5. you be physically active 3-5
They .w ill be held every times per week and be physiTuesday and · Thursday at cally active for at least 30
4:30 p.m .. at the parking lQt minutes each exercise sesend of the Pomeroy walking sion. Your breathing should
· increase as you exercise, but
path.
At the start of each class you should still be able to
there will be a short presenta- c~rry on a coiwersation.
· Sponsors for the walk are
tion on subjects such as target
heart rates. intensity of exer- . Meigs County Tobacco
cise, how often to exercise, Prevention Coalition, Meigs
Heart
Healthy
duration of exercise time , and County
Coalition, Meigs County
proper w~lking shoes.
Brumfield said when it Tourism Office and the
County
Health
comes to heart disease in Meigs
Meigs . County the two Department.
The event will take place
biggest risk factors are sedentary lifestyl,es and unhealthy rain or shine, and only in the
event of lightening will it, be
diets.
·
A heart healthy diet is canceled. For any questions,
defined as taking in under 20 or to register early call l· 740- ,
grams of fat per day, 5-9 992-6626.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Heart
Disease is the number one
killer of Americans. and it is
preventable. .
ln Meigs County 44% of
al l deaths are cardiovascular
deaths . To · a.lleviate these
numbers, the Meigs· County '
Health Department is sponsoring a 5K "Fun Walk\' to
promote a 'heart-healthy
lifestyle. The event will .take .
place 'at II a.m. Saturday at
the parking lot end of the'
Pomeroy walking path .
Registration begins at I0 a.m.
The first I 00 to ·register
will receive a free T-shirt.
Stress balls will be given out ·
while supplies last a.nd free
water wi II be passed oul'lo all
participants.
. ·
Besides promoting ihe
walking path, the event is
meant to raise awareness
about the benetits of being
physically active and is open
to anyone wishing to Ji,ve
healthier.
"We want people to
. actively take an interest in
their own health," said
Andrew
Brumfield,
Cardiovascular
Health
Coordinator for the Meigs

NewsChannel

will be 5 to I0 MPH from
the~ northeast turning from
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
A cloudy morning . There the north as the after'noon
is a g09d chance we could progresses.
Evening (7 p.m~ ·Midnigllt)
see some rain. Temperatures
It will remain cloudy.
will stay near 65. Winds will
be I0. MPH. from the north Temperatures will drop from
· turning from the northeast 70 ea~l y this evening to 61.
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
as the morning progres s~s.
from
the north.
Afterrwon (1-6 p.m.)
Ovemigllt (1-6 a.m.)
It will continue to be
Temperatures will fall
cloudy. Temperatures will
· rise from 67 early after- from 59 ro today's low ·or
noon to the high for the 53 by 6:00am. Skies will be
day of 74 at 3:00pm as mostly clear to partly
they drop back ·down to 71 cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
later this afternoon. Winds winds from the north turn-

Temperatures will rise
from 52 to 63 by late this
· morning. Skies will , range
from mostly sunny to partly
cloudy with 5 to I0 MPH
winds from the northeast.
Temperature s will hold
steady around 68. Skies will
be sunny to mostly · sunny
with 5 MPH winds from the
northeast.

Career Day celebration

'
ZIU
Zc.S$

,

04 " .
Ext
04 a.ahydli R~. Cab Z--85
04 Canyon.EXt Cab Z-85 SLf.
04 ~ado 4x4, Regular Cab, wr
,
04 Silverado IS Ext Cab, 4x4
d4 Olevy SSR Super Sport Roadster, (Red} ,
04':Silverado IS 2500 HD 4x4, Ext Cab
'•

'

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04~ 1sooz-7t,4x4

04 Stttria 1500 2WD, Ext Cab, SLf.
04 Sierra 1500 4WD, O:e~t~ Cab, SLT
04 Slc!;rra 2500 HD, 4WD, Reg. Cab, 15W
. "' Silhouette GIS fWD, Pas9~

34.70

AEP- 32.35
Akzo- 34.91
Ashland Inc. - 55.06
BBT -38.96

oJOldslnobJte

BLI - 12.42
Bob Evans - 26.51
BorgWarner- 41.49
City Holding - 32. 15
Champion - 3.79
' Charming Shops - 7.00
• Col ..,.- 36.02
DuPont - 41.57
DG - 20.08
Federal Mogul - .1900

•

Pepsico - 48.m
Premier -

9.25

Rocky Boots - 18.31
RD Shell - 51.26
Rofkwell - 37.60
Sears - 39.60
SBC- 25.97
AT&amp;T- 14.27 '
USB- 28.45
Wend y's- 32.90
Wai-Mart - 52.52
Worthington - 2();35
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes of the previous day's
· transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advestlnc. of Gallipolis.

'

'

·..Coming Thlirsoi:w in the Sentinel ...

"&lt;Ffae~ f, ·&lt;(;,

·~JJ. f,,JP~"
.

'

'

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04A~4DOor·
04 hn""
_·· . l:l
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_n 11J:t, CtuJse; CD;.•'" '--~ ;..
-- -~ ,:.·.,
04 ~COnVertible ' ''l.:emtans: 'Blue ';'
04 Gr
Am Sedan SINer:
~-

Ganncll ~ 84.00
General Electri c - 33.12
GKNLY - l850
Harley David,on - 59.45
IPMorgan (fonncrly Bank One)
- 39.n
Kmart - 85.~6
Kroger - IS.50
Ltd - 21.90
NSC - 28.69
'
Oak Hill Financial- 34.98
OVBC - 31.56
Peoples - 24.80

i

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WELLSTON - The Eastern volleyball team improved to 7-2 in TVC
play this season with a three-game .
sweep of Wellston on Monday by a'
score of 25·12, 25-7, 25-20.
The Eagles (9-3 overall) were 67l'or-73 at the service line and were led
by Jenn ifer Armes' · team-high 12
points, including' a perfect I 2-of-12

: !l.t&gt;'

,~J.~
l
... .... .
.

\~

.... _..,.. ·'-t'

""""'·, ''' ,f

.;

Armes

.from the line. ,
Casey Smith and
Morgan Weber each
added II points in
the victory, with
Weber chipping in a
team-high
seven
kills.
Brittany Bissell
had six points and
was I 1-11 at the servtce
lim;.
with

Smith

thre~

Jennifer
Hayman
contribLtting eight
points and a pair of
blocks to the Eagles'
cause.
D a r. c y
Winebrenner
hail
four kills for Eastern.
while Erin Weber
added three , points
and three blocks.
The Eastern junior

M. Weber

games
varsity team also
picked up a victory
on Monday with a
14-25. 25-19 . 15-4
victory over the
Golden Rockets.
Trimble comes to
HIS today for a
TVC
Hocking
niatch-up and is
scheduled to start at
6 p m.

Prep Volleyball
.

'

l'rfdly'o-

I

f

Team results:
1, Jackson (J) 227. 2. lronlon (I) 235, 3.
Trimble (T) 238, 4. Meigs (MJ 249 , 5,
Southern (S) 253, 6. F'olnt Pleasant, W.Va.
(PP)253, 7. Gallla Academy IGA) 257, 8.
Hunt. St. Joe, W.Va. (HSJ) 258, 9. Eastern
(E) 259, 10. Athens (A) 259, 11. River
Valley (RV) 281. 12. Warren (WAR) 264.
. 13. Wahama, W.Va. (WAH) 272, 14. Nels1ork (NY) 274. 15. Wellston (W)278 , 16.
~atertord (WATER) 320.

Ajternoo11 (1-6 p.m.)

.

Eagles ground Golden Rockets in

Today's g.,.,..

11th Annual Rlve,.lde Golf Invitational
at Rlvaralde Golf Couraa

Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)

Local·
. Stocks

Prep Volleyball

11th annual
Riverside
lnv. results

Wednesday, September 29

'

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

.

ing from the northeast ·as
the overnight progresses.

Children In Darla Kennedy's first-grade class at Meigs Primary School learn from Anthony
Shadwick of Playground Engineers when their new playground will be ready. Shadwick was par·
ticlpating with 12 other "grown·ups " in the first annual Meigs Primary Career Day Celebration.
Among other careers. the kids learned about being a nurse, prosecuting attorney -and banker.
Shadwick playfully told the children their playground would be done by Chnstmas, whtch eltctted' a collective·moan.. "Just. kidding," he said. "It's almost. ready now." (Tim Maloney/ photo)

Hamm argues to keep gold medal, Page 82
New group plans to push NASCAR, Page B6 ,

'
1'4etwl
W&lt;lll&amp;1oi1 at Mwo. 7:30 p.m.
.
lHrnble at e....-n. 7:30p.m. 3-t ••
Fed!nl Hocldrlg Ill , Southern,&gt;7:30

The Daily Sentinel
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The Daily Sentinel_

'

Bengela need to avoid getting run over, Page 82

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE

Weather forecast
Thesday, September 28

INSIDE

Individual· results
(par 52: 30 front, 22 back)
. 1. Bradley WUson (J):
32·21 -53
2. Dennis Gagai (1):
33·22- 55
3. Bill Amrhein (HSJ):
32·24- 56
T4. Nick Boggess (I) :
35·22- 57
T4 . Brandon Loudermilk (J): 33-24-57
T4. Ross Anderson {J):
34·23 .:.-57
T4 ."Jake Venoy (M):
33-24-57
TS . Selh Christian (i):
33-25-58
TB. Ty Barrett (T) :
35·23 ~58
T8. Matt Dixon (T):
34-24- 58
Tit . Juslin Lee (PP):
35·24- 59
T11 . Julie Trace (T):
34-25- 59
T13. Michael Owen (E) :
35·25 -60
Tl3. Tyler Knechi(ISJ):
33·27- 60
T13. Ry8n Sollars {J):
33-27-60
T16. Ryan Young (PF'):
36-25-61
T16.BradCrouch (S):
35·26-61
T16. Eric Anderson (WAR): 37·24 -6 1
T19. Matt Crabtree (A)·
41-21-62
· Tt9 . Greg Russell (GA) :
38·26- 62
1"19. S1eve Stewart (M) :
32·30- 62
119. Randall Sharron (RV)• 38·24 -62
'f19. Josh Smilh (S):
35-27-62
119. Zacn Warden (WARJ :
38·24-62
T25 . James Will (E)•
39-23- 63
T25. Brian Metcall (T):•
38·25- 63
127. Shay Brooks (A):
36-28 - 64 ·
T27 . Matt Wiseman (GA):
37-27 - 64
T27 . Tra\liS Stout (GA) :
36·28- 64
T27 . Jared Bunting (NY) :
37·27- 64
T27 . Jake Hunter (S):
43·21 - 64
T27. Jon Slaten (W):
36-28 - 64
T33. Braddock Caesar (A): 40-25 - 65
T33. Gavin Harbott (1):
39·26 - 65
T33. Grant Mhur (J)•
39-26 - 65
T33. Kirk Lagar (M):
35-30 - 65
T33. Josh Venoy (M):
40-25 - 65
T33. Scott Kittle (NY):
38-27- 65
T33 . Donny Roush (WAH)•
41·24-65
T40. C&lt;XIy Davidson (M) :
37·27 -6,6
Uo. Will Garrison (PP)•
39·Z7- 66
T 40. Justin Nolan (AV):
38·28 - 66
f 40. Joe Hager (AV):
40-26 - 66
T40. Patrick Johnson ($):
40-26 - 66
T40. Heath Stanley (WAH): 38·28 -66
T 40. Alex Milliken (W):
40-26 - 66
T 47. Jacob Warner (E):
42-25 - 67
T47. Andy Noe (GA) :
39·26- 67
147. Chria ·Long (PP)•
38-29- 67
T47. Craig Jagers (AV):
40-V- 67
151 : Brandon Williams (A): 37·31 -88
1"51 . Darren Reese (WAH): 41 ·27- 68
'tst. Steven Hunter (WAR): 39:29- 88
54. Matt Thaxton (S):
42·27 - 69 .
ts~ . Evan Dunn (E):
41·29- 70
T55. Jay Rudmann (I) :
43·Z7 -70
155. D.J. McCollister (NY)•
41·29 -70
T58. Tyler Houck (G A):
42·29- 71
T58. Cody Barebo (HSJ):
40-31 -71
T58. Ben Roogera (HSJ)•
43-28- 71 •
T58. David Herman (W):
47·24 -'-71
62. Craig Barker (RV):
42·30- 72
T63. Ryan Nave (E):
44-29 - 73
163. Garrett Kaylor (WAH) : 45-28 -73
T63. Mike Bates (WAR):
46-27 - 73
66. Ke~h Thieman (WATER): 43·31 -74
ffT. Brian Donnelly (NV):
46-29- 75
i68. Kyle Kruinet 1111:
45-31 - 76
T68. AIOJ&lt; Owen (T):
43-38 - 76

i?o.Justin Arnold (WAH):

48·29- _n

T70. Seth Deem (WATER):
't70. Andy Derrow (W) :
73. Caaey Mollnan (W):
74. Juslln We~h (WATER):
75. Julllln Duckworth (PP):
76. Scott Huck (WATER)•
Tr. Chaae Perry (HSJ):
76. Woa Zollet (WAR):
79~ Jooh Bartletl (NY):
80. Jardan Tuten (WATER):

44-33- 77
43-34-77
50·29 - 79
47-35-82
47·36- 83
54-33- 87
59·30 - 89
56-34 - 90
511-38-97
63-35-98

Pra¥~

'

Chomplono:
2000- Jackoon (31 8), 2002- Jackacn
(Jt4), 2001- Athena (309). 2000-Atnono (301), · 19911-- Wahama [316).
ill98- GoUla Academy (296). 1997Mtlgo (320), 1996- llama Academy
(165), 1995- Meigs (:i29!, 1994Aiexander (329).
I

Marauders -down Southern in four
BY SCOTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

ROCKSPRINGS - The
Meigs Lady
Marauders
downed the Southern Lady
Tornadoes in four tough
games Monday night in interdivisional varsity volleyball
play in the Tri-Valley
Conference.
Meigs is now 6-3 in the
league and 7-4 overall.
Southern falls to 3-6 and 5-6
overall.
Meigs had many heroes in
getting the win. The first
game was tied three times
before Meigs' Renee Bailey
broke a 7· 7 tie and pushed the
hosts to a 9-7 advantage.
From that point on Meigs held
the lead, however, Southern
was right there battling it out
to the fmish.
Coach Rick Ash's Lady
Marauders dominated the net
because of their edge in size.
Samantha Cole and Megan
Games had several momen. tum kills in each game, but
•Was outstanding at the net
with ten solo blocks, a statistic
that· is truly dominant in high
school volleyball. Renee
Bailey also turned up the heat
in the first two contests with
12 kills overall. .
Many Meigs spikes were
turned away by Soutllem ·s
Jenny Warner. \YhO had nine
kills on the night for Southern
and six blocks in a 50-57 spiking night. Warner was also· 16·
20 passing.
Cole, Garnes, and· Bailey
benefited from the set-up
game of Joey Haning who
was the swingman for ·several
Meigs scores. Meigs ended up
claiming the first contest. 2521.
.
Meigs took the lead in the
second contest and slowly
pulled away. Leading 9-5 ,

Meigs pushed ahead to a 15-7
tally on six Bailey serves.
Garnes, Lee, and Ashley set
the stage for Bailey's game
..-----,--.,....., point and the ·
25-15 win. ·
Southern
was not to be
shut out in
three games
without
a
fight.
Meigs took
the lead at 20 in the first
Cole
game, . but
Southern's
J or d·a n
Neigler put
r
h
e
Tornadoes up
· 4-2
before
single points
from Ashley
and Cole tied
the score at
4-4 .
.w i t h
Games
n u me ro us
exciting volleys the lead
either changed hands or was
tied numerous times until
Kristiina Williams gave SHS
a I 0-8 le.lld. Games came
back for Meigs to give the
Lady Marauders a 12-10
advantage. Later Meigs led
15-12. but Southem was still
hanging in there.
A sting of seven straight
points from junior Jenny
Warner allowed Southern to
retake the lead at 19-15 . The
momentum was enough to get
SHS over the hump and the
Tornadoes held on for the 2519 win.
Meigs went up 16-12 in the
fourth and final game , but
Southern tied it at 16-16 on
four points and an ace by Tex
Williams. Ashley then took
control for Meigs, leading her Kristiina Williams of Southern. above, comes up with a dig against Meigs on Monday. The
club to a 21-16 advantage and Tornadoes lost in four games to the Marauders by a score of 25-21. 25-15. 19-25. 25-19.
(Bryan Walters/photo)
Pluse See Meigs, B&amp;
•

Browns not trus~ing, not winning Lack of offensive
ToM WITIIERS
Associated Ptess

BY

The way
BEREA Cleveland coach Butch
· Davis sees it, a lack of trust
among his players is preventing the Browns from
winning.
FranlUy, coach, it's a little
deeper than that.
A tall!nt upgrade would
, help. So would fewer penalties and dropped passes.
Better pass protection would
be a bonus. And, a few more
healthy ~odies would be
nice.
Davis harped on a theme
of team trust during his
weekly news conference
Monday, one day after the
Browns (1-2) bumbled their
way to a 27- 10 loss to the '
New York Giants. .
Decimated by injuries to
seven ,starters, the Browns
players who were healthy
enough to dress did little to
conv1itce .anyone that this
season is headed toward a
happy ending.
The offense made costly
turnovers and drive-killing
penalties. The defense gave
Giants quarterback Kurt
Warner too much time and
too many extra chances.
And' Cleveland's special
teams were again rath~r
ordinary. ·

However, Davis, in his
never-ending quest to put a
positive spin on his team 's
failings, summed up the
problems by saying his
players needed to be able to
count on each other individually and collectively.
"Guys have to do their job
and 'not worry about somebody else, not worry about
try,ing to compensate...
Davi s said. '"Just do your
job the best you can and let
the other guy do the best he ·
can.'
·
"We've got to do a better
job of worrying about the
Cleveland Browns and
doing what we do best, and
nul wont what the other
team is doing. or worrying
about how the other team is
playing."
In addition to suffering
their second straight defeat,
the Browns lost another
starter as strongside linebacker Ben Taylor suffered
a torn tendon m his chest.

I .

-- -

--

He will mi ss the rest of the
season.
Taylor will have the tendon reattached to his lefl
pectoral mu scle in surgerv
on Tuesday at the Cleveland
Clinic. The team said he'll
need· four-to.-six months lo
recover.
Unfortunately. the Browns
don't · have nearly as much
ume to mend thetr many
problems.
.
.
.
"We haye the guys 10 thts
locker room ·to do it.'' said
safety Earl Little, one of just
three starter&gt; to meet with
the media . "We're not going
to make any excuses about
the injuries or anything like
that. We've just got to get it
done.''
For the third time in three
weeks. Cleveland's offense
failed to score a touchd'o"·n
in the first half and didn ' t
come up with enough big
plays after it finally woke up
after halftime.
Quarterback Jeff Garcia
improved on his 0.0 passer
ratmg from a week earlier.
finishing 21-of-31 for 180
yards - a 80.0 rating and threw a TO pass in the
fourth quarter.
·
But Garcia and center Jeff
Paine failed to complete a
simple snap i'n the third
quarter, turning the ball

Please see a-s. 81

punch may-·mean·
changes for OSU
BY RUSTY MIU£R

Associated Press
COLUMBCS - Coach
Jim Tressel has some words of
waming for his playel" who
think everything . is. OK
because No. 7 Ohto State 1s.
unbeaten.
"We· \'e had some pro!!re&gt;S.
but that's all we'ye llad.''
Tressel said. "We're ju't 3.{).
We need a lot more progres.s:·
Tiuit is panicularl); true of
the offense. which ha&gt; done
just enough right to keeJl"{he
Buckeyes unbeaten - and
just enoul!h wrong to cause.
heart palpitations for the
Buckeyes fans heading' into
the Big Ten opener Sarurday
aJ NO!thwestem.
Heading into 'their bye
week, Ohio' State was worse
than all but two teams in the
confm:nce in running the baiL
a'·eraging just 12 I yards a
game, and was a distant se,·_
entll in tola.l offen.o;e.
Unbeaten or JlOl. those are
troubling signs for a team thai
used to pride itself on its efficiency and effeai ' ·eness will\

the ball.
\ ·ocal fans ha\'e blistered
tailback Lvdell R(}S,. the featured back in Tressel\ plea&gt;e·

don · I - t urn-the- ball-o\' er
offense that relies. so 1Jea,·il~'
on tJ\e defem.e and k:ickm.
One lener to the editor in
Sunday's edition of The
Columbus. Dispatch be~llled
Tressel's "dog eats the firstdown .,Ja,·book." Another
accuse &gt;Ports writers of
being too chununy with the
team and malting alibis for the
poor effort and produciion.
Still another ,aid that with the
te,am 3.{) no one w311,1\ to disCU&gt;&gt; the "elephant in the living

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysendnel.com
.
'

Bengals need to avoid gening run

1heAPTop25

Bv

Tha Top 25 teamS In The Associated Press COllege football
poll. with first-place wtes in parentheses, records through
Sept. 25, total points based oo 25 points tor a first-place wte
through one point tor a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking:
Record

·2. Otdahoma (18)
4. Miaml

5. Texas
6. West Virginia

7. Ohio St
8. Auburn

4
5

1,365
1,176
., '113
1,093
1,074
1,033

2-0
3-0
4.(1
3-1

10. Tennessee
12. Vlrg'infa
13. LSU
14. Utah
15. Purdue
iS. Florida
17. Fresno St.
18. Minnesota
19. Michigan
20. Wisconsin
21 . Arizona St.
22. Louisville
23. Boise St.
24. Maryland
25. Oktahoma St.

3

1.452
1.435

4-0
2-1

9. Florida SJ.
~ 0. california

Pvo
1
2

1,605
1,570

3.(1
3.(1
3.(1
3.(1
4.(1
3.(1

3. Georgia' (1)

Pto

6
7
9

8
10

1,033

11
12

927

13
14
15
t6
t7
19 •
18 •

842
784
669
654
. 531

4-0
3-0

2-1
3-0

501
498

4.(1

3-1
4.(1

4.(1

3'0
4-0

380
293

20.

265

24
2t
23
25

3-1

264 .
212

3-o

135

22

Others receiving votM: Notre Dame 121, Mwlsas 26, Kansas
St. 2'4, Southern Miss. 23, Colorado 20, Missoun 11 , S!anbrd 10,
N.C. S1are 2, SOuth Garolina 2, Navy 1, Texas TeCh 1.

MAC Stand~ngs
EAST DIVISION
MAC
1 0
,
0
1
1

Miami {Ohto)
Akron

Ohio
Marshall
Central Florida
Kent State
Buffalo

0
0
0

0
0
,

0

2

Pet

Overall
2 1
t
3

Pcl.1.000
1.000
.500
.000
.000
.000
.000

.667
.250

2
0
0

2
3
3

.500

1

3

.250

0

.000
.000

4

.000

WEST DIVISION
MAC
1 0
1 0

Northam Illinois

Toledo
Ball Slate
Eastet'n Michigan

1
1

C&amp;ntral Michigan

0
1
0
1

0
0
0

Bowling Green
WOII8rn Michigan

t

Soturdoy'•-!lo

_

Ohk&gt; 34, Buffalo 0
Ball 51.41, W. Michigan 14
Toledo 45, Temple 17
E. Illinois 31 , E. Michigan
28

_.....,.•

Miami(Ohlo) 81 MlliShall

Pcl.1.000
1.000
1.000

.500

Overall
2 2
2 2
1 3 .
1 3

.000
.000
.000

t
t
t

Pel.
.500
.500
.250

.250 .

2
2

.333
.333
.250

3

Sotunloy'o Go'""
Kent St. at Cent. Michigan

Ohio Northern .
Wilmington
John Carroit

Otterbein
Haidelberg ·
Muskingum

W L

Pet.

W L

Pet.

2
2
2

0
0
0

1.000
1.000
UlOO

3

0

'3

0

1
1
1
1.

1 . .500
1 .500
1 .500
1 .500

1,000
1.000
1.000
.667
.667

0
0·

2
2
2

··o

.000
.000

.ooo

0
t

I
2
2
2
3
3

.333
.333
.333
.000
.000

North Coast
Athletic Conference
Confw•IICe

Overoll

W L

Pet.

W 'L

Pet.

1
0

0
0

3 0
3 0

t .OOO
t.OOO

0
0

0
0

~
Keoyoo

()

0

Hiram

0

0

0

0

1.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000
.000

Wabash

Wooslor
Dorison

Wil1eub"'ll

. 0

Obof1jn

0

Ohio Wesleyan

0

0

EaAham

0

1

2
2
1

1
1
2

.&amp;rl

.667

.333
.000

0 2
0 3

.100

0
0
1

.000
.000
.250

3
3
3

Great' Lakes
Intercollegiate Conf.
co. .........
W L

4 ·o

Noolhwood

4
4

0
0

•
3

1
1

2
2

2
3

1
1

3
3

1
1

•
•

0

5

1.000
1.000
UlOO
.800

.75CI
.5110 .
.«10
250
250
.200·
.200
.000

a-.11

W L

Pet.

5 0
4 0
4 0

1.000

•

1

3

1

3 2
2

3'

2
1

3
3

1.000
1.000
.800
.750
.600
.«10
.400
250
.200

1

4

1

•

.200

0

5

.000

Mid-States
Football Association

Coc-·-

W L . 1'1:1.

--

SailJ-.

0

Ind.

UIOil
UIOO
.000 .
.000
.000
.000

-

W L

Pet.

3 0

1.000
.75CI

1

0

Tartor

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

Urbana
Ohio Ounililican

0

0

.000

0

4

0

2

.000

0

3

Sl-

o' o

.000
.000
0
0
.000
0 . .000
0 .000
0 .000
0
.000
0 .000

3
,3

0
0

Malone

aunc:,, IL

TJ:Dty llllelllafl

O liWIISolnl~

IOIR"f' *l••
SoirtfQncio,a

-Penn

.0
0

0
()
0

0
0

3
2

1
1

2

2

1
0

2
3

2

1

2

'2

2

2

1 3
1
1

3
3

B67

.5110
'333
.000

.000
.000
1.000
1.000
.667

WL-

........

-·
~

HlnMr
D fi u
.... d

0
0
0
0

0
.000
0 . .000
0
.!JQ!l
0
.000

o o· .ooo
0

0

0

0

Oomogio-

·ca.n

..

Ohi:ogo

.000
.000

W L

-

3

0

2
2
2
1
0

1
2
2

'.000
.667

0 •

WUIIiltif\ilin.Mo.

.500

.500
.250
.000
.000

'

t

'

1'1:1.

W L

0

.000
.000
.000

2 2 . .500

0

.000

1'1:1.

2

2

.500

1
1

2 ,
3

.333
250

t

CAGE

Associated Press

LAUSANNE, Switzerland Paul Hamm fought to keep his
Olympic gymnastics gold medal
Monday during an II 1/2-hour
hearing before the sports world's
hi11hest court, and the panel
adjourned without making a
decision.
Three CAS arbitrators convened to hear the appeal from a
South Korean who lost the gold
medal in the allcaround at the
Athens Olympics after a scoring
error by the judges.
. CAS
general
secretary
Matthieu Reeb said the arbitra. tors - from Germany, Kenya
and Britain - hoped to make a
decision within the next two
weeks.
Yang Tae·young wants the
coun to order international gymnastics officials to change the
rankings and give him the gold
and Hamm the silver. Hamm and
the U.S. Olympic Committee
spent the hearing fighting
Yang' s appeal.
"I thought everything went
very smoothly," Hamm said in a
teleconference after the hearing.
"It was a very fair hearing and
everyone got the chance to say
what they though.!."
.
Yang, who finished with a
bronze, was mislakenly docked
. 0 . 10 points on the start value of
' his next-to-last routine, the par-

allel bars. ' He finished third,
0.049 points behind Hamm, who
became the first American man
to win gymnastics' biggest prize.
With the extra 0.100, Yang
would have finished 0.051
points ahead of Hamm. That,
however, assumes everything 'in
the final rotation would have
played out the same way.
"The issue is whether this
(mistake) affected the result,"
Reeb said.
South
Korean
officials
declined comment following the
hearing.
The USOC's lead attorney,
Jeff Benz, said he argued three
points:
- That the coun could not
make decisions on "field-ofplay" issues - in oiher words,
on judgment calls made by officials during the competition.
- That the South Koreans
didn;t protest in time for there to
be any change in th~ results.
- That simply adding 0.1
points io Yang \ score wouldn't
give an accurate reflection of the
results because there was another event to go after the disputed

parallel bars, and nobody knows the South Korean's plea for a
what would have happened had duplicate gold medal and is
the scores b.een - different head- spending about $300,000 to
inli in .
defend Hamm.
'We are confident we were
"We're extremely proud of:
able to express ourselves to arbi- what
Paul
accomplished," ·
trators to the fullest extent possi- . USOC spokesman Darryl Seibel
ble in way they understood," said.
.
Benz said.
International
Olympic
The International Gymnastics Committee president Jacques ·.
Federation, known as FIG, Rogge also rejected an appeal.
acknowledged the scoring error fr?.m the South Koreans .
_·
and suspended three JUdges for
Our posttton 1s extremely
the . rest of the games. It said simple. The FIG has c~rtified thl:
repeatedly h won't change the result of the gymnastics compe~
results because the South · titian. The IOC has awarded the"
Koreans didn't file a protest in medals according to the cenified
time.
results," Rogge said last month. ·
FIG president Bruno Grandi "Paul Hamm was declared the ·
confused the is sue, however, winner and therefore he has ·
when he sent a letter to Hamm received the gold medal, and for
asking him to surrender the us that is final."
.
. .
medal voluntarily. In the letter,
FIG announced Fnday n 1s
Grandi wrote, "The true winner 'recommending new rules in .
of the all-around competition is response to the gold medal deba~
Yang Tae-young."
·"
cle, including the immediate~
USA Gymnastics president suspension of up to four years:
·Bob Colarossi said the competi- for judges who make scoring :
tion should have been consid- mistake s. FIG also wants tO
ered closed· .the moment the revise its code of points .. an
results were published.
extensive guide to the difficulty :
"It's a bad precedent to look at value assigned to every move field-of-play calls in court." he and combination ofmoves .
.
''The code of pmnts must be .
said . ."There's a human element
in span. There are always going totally revised.". FIG spokesman ·
to be some thinj!S tliat happen Philippe Silacci told Thi:
that on review m1ght have gone Assoctated Press on Monday.
USA Gymnastics will recomdifferently."
CAS traditionally does not mend the use of video replay iii:
involve itself in "field-of-play" the review of start values. The.
decisions, but Yang had nowhere proposals will be considered by:
else to go. The USOC rejected FIG next month in Turkey.

Redmen baseball team
takes two from alumni
RIO GRANDE - The University of
Rio Grande Redmen baseball team took
a pair of games from former Redmen
plilyels in their yearl match-up with the
alumni Rio won 2~and S-Oon Sunday
afternoon at Robert Evans Freid
· The aurent R...tmen used six pitchers
to no-hit the alums in game one, 2-0.
Junior leftbaoder Brent Watlersoo started the game and pitdJed two innings,
· strikin out liRe. Junior newcomer
1 Bany \oe picked up.the win in relief.·
Roe pitched a scoreless third ~
fanning two. Freshman closer Ouis
Brown pilehed the seventh to record the

save.
Moraleswas2-for-3withadoubleanda
run baaed in. Duke transfer Mike
Golom was 1-for-3 with a pair of stolen

WL
0
0
0.

BY SAM

250
250
.250

-

•3
2

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

·c L A S S I F I E D

Marvin Lewis is starting t&lt;)
wonder whether some of hi~
players are truly dedicated to
bringing down the guy with the
ball .
" A little bit of it is a want-tel
and a desire," he said. "Yes; we
have to take a critical look ai
that, no question about it. Wheri
you 're there and you don ' t make
(a tackle), now you're telling me
so mething , too."
So are those numbers .
Notes; Lewis was noncommittal about whether he'll move
Hardy or OLB Brian Simmons
insi(le to replace Webster. Botll
have · played in the middle ....
J_.ewis expects C Rjch Braham.
(bruised knee) and S Kim
Herring (sprained foot) to miss
next
Sunday' s'
game
1il
Pittsburgh. The Bengals theO
have their bye, which waul~ ·
give them ·two weeks to heal. :··
WR Peter Warrick. who left 111 .
the first quarter against . the
Ravens because of a brutsed·
shin, is listed as doubtful forth!;
Steelers game. LT Lev1 Jones 1~
questionable with a so re knee,
Jones had to lea ve the game 111
the second half on Sunday.

Hamm argues·to keep gymnastics~:
gold before sports' highest court .•

Junior C31Cher Jorge Morales had the
big bat at the plate for the Redmen.

University
.
Athletic Association
0
0
0

to earth on Sunday, piling up
254 yards overall on the ground
with an astot~nding average of
7.5 yards per carry.
In their last seven· games, the
Bengals have given up an average Of 186 yards on the ground
and 5.6 yards every time the
opponent hands off. By comparison, NFL defenses last season
gave up an average of 118 yards
per game.
The Bengals are starting to
wonder if 'it' s a lack of de sire
more than a lack of talent.
"Defense is an attitude," outside linebacker Kevin Hardy
said Monilay. "You have to want
to make the play. Once you ' re in
position, you have to make il.
That's what it comes down to."
Things could get more difficult in the short-term. Middle
Ji.nebacker Nate Webster had
surgery Monday for a torn tendon in his knee, and is expected '
to be placed on injured reserve
later in the week.
The problems aren't confin~d
to the linebacker spot. The
defensive line has been pushed
around, a11d , the secondary has
repeatedly missed tackles.

&gt;:

Browns
hum Page81
back over to the
Giants, who were on Iy
leading I 0-0 at the

time.
The

Browns then
compounded
the
turnover wben safety
Roben Griffith was
caUed for unnecessary
rouldmess with New
Yorl: backed up to its
own goal line.

Warner capped a 9.5yard scoring drive with
1-yaro ID run. giv!~a
the Giants a 17-0 I

a

bases.
'
In game two, the Redmen had an easier time, blanking the alums 8-0. Junior
Jake Kennedy weni 2-for-3 with an RBI
to lead the Redmen offense. Sopbomone
Bobby Jones was 1-for-2 witli an RBI
double and _jl!Dior JonJan Baker
(Orillicuthe, UH) was 1-ful'-4 with a

\!r:rthune

To Place

with two strikeouts in two mniogs.
Sopbomore Nick Merola struck out the
si4 in order in the fourth inning, his
only wl)rk of the afternoon_
Rio will close 0111 the fall exhibilioo
season, Oct3, versus 'Miami-Hamilton
a1 Evans F~eld Game one i.s slated to
·begin at I p.m.

Oftfee ,tic,~~

.
said, the Browns will
continue to malfunction.
"Jeff Gan:ia · has to
trust that the offensive
line is going to do the
best job it can." he
said. "Robert Griffith
has to trust that the corners are goi~J.g to jam.
The linebackers have
to trust the defensive
line. Everybody has to
trust that they are
going to,play as hard as
they can.
"Everyone is going
to make mistakes. If
you mak.e
mistake
going full speed. we
will OVert::OQ!e iL" ·
Or hit a brick wall

a

r

N

Sate October 1st. lOam 8pm Krodel Club-House.
Pt _Pteasant,
Jewelry,
Baskets,
Indian
·Decorations. Fabric, Toys,
Pictures.
Chnstmas
Decorations . . Flowers &amp;
much Mis c.

~r:;:p;.:;:;;;;;.____...,.
~

GIVEAWAY

1

-

YARI) S,\I.E-

r

Found small black dog on
Uilioo Campground Rd. has
Nad1neiJason in Harlloro on
collar 13041882-3461
GolDen Ret(l ever toun(j 1n
tne Pt. Pleasant, GaJhpol1s
Ferry area (304)675-6023
Aeddtsh
brown
mat~
Dachshund ,
112 yrs
oldJast seen 1o Mile Ad.
j304)695-189Q
Reward
1304)674-5592

Test

,.,.

~:
·.·.
...

let us show you how
COtt\)elitive our, rates are.
CaRns ... Stop by.__
it's your dloice!

•
....
=M:ec•
-&lt;·(-

'·

'

~.

Ohio

CI,..ASSIFIED INDEX

414.'o For Sale .............................................. 725
Announeement .............................................. 030

Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
AucliQn and Flea Market ...... ,......................llSO
Auto Parts &amp; ~ccasorles .......................... 760
Auto Repooir .................................................. no
Autoa lor Sale ..................:........................... 7 t 0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supptla ........................................ 550
Buolneu and Buildings .....,..: .................... 340
Buolness Opportunity ................................. 2t o
Builiness Training ........ c.............................. t 40
Campen &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ,.................................. 7~
Cants of Thanks ..........................................01 0
Child1Eider1y C.,., ...: ................................... 190
Elec!rlcaiiRelrlgeration ......... _, ................... 840
Equipment lor RenL ..................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
I;Jwm Equipment ..........................................61 0
Fenno lor Rent. ...........................................430
Farms lor Sale ................ , ......... --·--· ............. 330
F.or Leau ..................................................... 490
For Sale '"--·-------""".'"'"" ....... '""'"'" ........ ' 585
For Sale or r..-.........................................590
Fruits.&amp; Vege..bles ....... - ............................580
Almished R®ms ........................................450
Gerwal H•Jiing...........................................aso

___ , ______, _______ , .. ______....a1o

"'*"PI

•

575-4132

•

r: r

ide.

HouMa
lor Rent
410
In
-..n.m
.......------------------------..
,,,________,,________-----------..
, __________ 020
lnsuranc:e ................., ...,_,_,_______________ 1JO
Garden Equipmefil,____________ , __,__ ,660
..-ociL..- .........__, ________________________630
Lost- Found ........... ,.... _____________ , ______ ,,,060

Uwn.

-•I-

lola I AciWIJi ...---------...-····.. ·----.. - 350
~------------ .. -- .. ·----.. ---"""" 170
Mi.c lllaneouallerch8ndi•.......- •••.•••;...... 540
- l e - ~----------------·----1110
lor
-le
lieN•• lor
llloney to u., _____ ~-------·---220
MolooCfCles I 4 WI' II II S----------..........740
, . , _ . ________________________________ ,.005
Pels fot ·Sale
____________;________ 580

Put tlonal Senlces------·-···-·---~·- 230

.,..;.... TV 1o CB f'"v..,
. ---·-...--·----110
.
- e . - Wa110ld.. ------------------310
School• ~---·--...------·------------150
-Sllu!lllons
.-, - _______-~------·----------150
, ___________ .:_ ___ 120
S,..lor ...... ___________________, _________ 41(1
~

w.nt.~

uos... s.a..~

~

Ht:LP \V.\ror."Jl:()

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lwright~ic.net

HOMK~

1/iAr~ (HE:

.MAfl.t:: OF AN

AMAlE Ufl-. .
A CA'f Y/clUI.P
NtV~fl.

lsjwtat,
·
"''""'""'"'"'""1'"520
SIN's for-e. _________
, ___, ___, _______ no

Sale----------------·..----llphal.-y______
v...

Trucks lor
715
-------- 110
For $a!e __:_ __________ , _________ ,,,730

W.•IICI

·----------------·090

to Buy
'loulldta
Buy- F..., &amp;oppn- ____c_ ..... 820

11Jsnw To Do------------·----··- 180
* - ... Rent .
---,------~--470

•ta.- ----

Vail &amp;.a. Gdllp
YadSIJie Pom•orllilidllto .. ___
Y.nl' 'n PL P'a•Mt-.

NAr

A ME'At--

.

0

..
-. •

i- 1-8

G

© 2004 by

·LP
..

Jonn s

3 bedroom, lull basement,
garage. approx 1 &lt;Jere of
land, 5 miles from town on
SA 7 @ Five Pomts, call
740-416-0766 or 304-882-

www.eomics.com

L,t.lO-•H•I•:JJ'-W•,•'N"-11•~•',.I .li.to-•ll•t.• W••"N"Il-•~•1.,.~llt/0
. .
lillie

C•tgo, Selea ...

Mis&lt;.ll.IANIXll.JS

2299
5 bedroom hcuse. Pomeroy
(town). 314 acre, new-roof.
. windows. c/a, furnace, sid·
ing, porch, insulation .3/4

Seeklna: 39 People
Locally

----072
074

----071

wv

· 25550.

I

CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROyEMENTS. NO
CAE OtT/ BANKRUPTCIES
WELCOME!

UNITED SECURITY

MORTGAGE
1-100-371).4965

CALL YODAY
STAFFED BY U.S.
VETERANS

(31/')67s-6134

IOQ. For IIPP'abOnl &amp; frH
111
tnloCisiOf'l
Management
JOb ftlo. cal
Corp. " &lt;utTon!ly occepmg Amoncon Assoc. o4 LabOr
appltcattons tor Fu tf. Time · 1-ill-599 80«2. 24 ttts
DayoM1 pos;IOII {lla-511)
olnp MOV .
Ouo!Oiod ._
.. should
bo .·h&lt;ghly _ . . , PTilPN or Uedlcl,hon
ON.h'ed.
"1"' [IOOd 00111- Tec:hnioan

IJOW+•••••t

w. ,...,

municalion lkilil..
a
full bonolrtt pockogo and
401K. No prwvioul PI*'"
enoa ..,.
•'Y· w. .,. lhe
p#Oioslonlll dltlelence .,
11:1111 iriCiel and neec:l gJUt
• IUm ~rs~ to JOtO us!

tnllfesUKI
pleUe

cal

Reqwed.
lnleletled A.potcantl Mlliy
Ajlply lliOy, Man.-Fti. ,..._
Spm , Ravenswood care
Censer, 1 113 wast'ungton
FaedMIItj

St.

Ravenswood.

Reterencea

canchdmes. EOE
1-an~47

ext , 90 t or apply orW'Ie

' WWW·nloc!:uon g:zm
MAIN SffiEET JEWELRY

-Mu5t be
... 8saJ.ea
oOgl&gt;iltOflented
-

Smal n.:un,oeut
2418 .

'

{7~)7-Q-

MB 5263
8uaine11

Opporlunlly-

Three rental propoerttes lOt'

~~-. eacr. "'lh 3
.,....._..
BIR L.JA, Dffi. K•tdlen. Balh
&amp; Porch. Hous&amp;-3 BfR, L!R.
r~- 6/R •
Kdchen. Bath. ........,.-Y"'Kllchen , Bath.
Renta l
income lor aM ttuee-App.-011:
S1 000 ·per month. Pnce for
~II thfee --$75.000 as •s.
L~ 104-106 7ltl Sllaet
"""" Pleasant 1304)675sale

So1001s,
1911 Om.n'FJJ•:RI.I'
--~-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii._r' L_ __;:C:;,:A~RF.:::-;·;.-..J 2495 aheo 6:00
Gallpal!o c.- eotloge Aoc:opiOtg applicatk&gt;ns loo ·

t.,.

(Cat'""' Close To ' - )
Coli Today! 7 - 7.
1-2t4-0452.

WY.

Requ•red •

1176

Mr&lt;al!A."i£.01.5

care ~ elcJiltly ;, trf1J hOme.
Priwete roomo, nutrtiiOUI
mNI plaw•IQ. 24 hour care
WCh 20 )'NfS ol . . . . . . ..
740-446-7855
...... JPM

~
_1o . . -

....... _ _ ..,.....ng

Ir10~ ....... -.,
.
•'*

5&lt;;ttOOI

can t•andvacam

Sentors
~

·
po:libonl

'" tho WHI Vogno "'"'1
National Guatc1 tf yOu ....

- I W - o l 1 1-35
01 ~\he ptiOr

108.

mlbry ..V·

you .,.,, ..... to

pall

..... 10 For ()pportUI'IIbH. .,
your ....... cal; 3(144755837
Rap~~

18.18,

OM mtitilbrliwJ"" tor
9fHI

1304)87~1811

01~))(1\ "TIY

..

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--·_...,_
..............
.
.... . _
..... ........

O.al

..

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG

co. IWOJiilt•dllha

NOT- o
""'""--~
~=~
b.ltld
... ;.;...,.,,

f,iO,... .._ -

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FIND AJ BIN THE t
___ __

St:Jn~

~DOWt!l OH

soaAL IECUfi1Tl' /SSI?
No ~ l.JnleSs w. w.n•
18M512-~

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Profrll
k"iternet

-~. . .\)JIIifJddf
1700. .,.,..
{304)67~1181

CLASSIFIED ADS

,..-.K4. lftMtdou or
11
rUe • Meed on
r.c., c:olor. relltglan, • •
WNIIIII .-..... or ftllllonoM
origin., or eny tnllntiOn to

... d

I

In

..,.,....on., .....

Commercia l tluildmg plus
1 5 acres m Green Twp.
Cen tral heal &amp; a1r, bath and
comple ie kiiChBn . $1 65 .000.
Call Clt tford Realtors 740-

446-7702.
For Sale : Acreage. Me1gs
County. 82 acres . woods
and hillside. Grea t fo r recre·

allan
and
hunting.
$99.500.00 Call (740)742 ·
2637

land on McCormiCk Ro . 2
large lots 1/2 acre each
(rT.ore Of tess) Electnc and
water on one SUitable lor
but lding or mob1 te hOme
(740)367-7886
IU. NHI -~

Blacktop dr t\leway. many
~10
HOt lSI:~
extras $129,000 ·,•.nth .713
lOR RI:~T
acre lot. or $159.000 w1th an
a'Cid1t1onat 3 485 acres otllat
ground. Very close to toWn. oc,., Down Paymenr and
on Spr uc e St. extenSIOn. linan ctng ava tlable Wtlh
Call F40)59t·0437 anyl1me. approved cred1t.
Average
·cred •l qualiftes you . II down
House in Kanauga, Old payment nas kepi you trom
Farmers Rd . Gallipolis, Oh. buy.ng, th 1s 1s your chance
£40,000. 2 !railers. Krodel to own your own home. II

~::.;slm~~ ·~~~ w':u~ ,!.":0:::.':::
down

we alter low
paymenT
programs also Great 1nter·
esl ra_res ' Local company
Mortgage
Locators .
(7401992 ·732 1.
-------1 bedroom nouse $250/mo.
2 bedroom house $350/mo.
4 bedroom house $450/mo.
Oepos1ts negotiable.
14x65 mobile home FN&amp;ry·
\h 1ng •r.c luded exce llent
cond1t1on. S4 .000 (740)446·
48S4 .
IJedr oom

house

•n

S350/month
depoSit requned (740)441 ·

Galhpohs
1184

1989 3 bedroom. 2 oatn 2 storv Coloma! 3 bOFm 1
t4M70, Completely remod· DaU'l. Gas heat Cnlfl AJC
eled .nstde . 740-2.56-1526 or S600 mo (7 40)4 46·3481
740-645 -0446 .
3 bedroom
nome
1ft
1992 Southern E111e Mo~ le ~ 1ddleport . $.400 00/monlh ,
Home 16ll70. 2 bedroom. 2 plus oepos1t and u1 11111es.
reqUited
bath , some appliances. R~ i erenceS
$9.900. Calll740)949-201t . (740)992-6154
1993
Mans1on
Uob1le
Home--t4X60 2 beOroom. 1
bath. tolal e tectr •c . gOOd
conchhon, central a11. slqve ,
refrigerator and miCrowave
included
S8500 00
(740)949-9016

3 bedroom house 4 m11es
from Holler $400 mo pius
sec_deposll and reter8nces
No petS 740-446-6865 or
740-446-6189
3 bedroom house lor rem tn

Pomeroy HUD approved.
S500/month plus depos1t
For sate or rent· 2 DedrOOf'T'I Caiii 740)38S.Q435
mobile homes starttng a1
S270 per month_ Can 740· 3 bedroom .h ouse Water lurn•shed. no ~ts . $450
992·2167
month. $400 depoSit. Ca ll
Malle 2 paymeniS. ~ in 4 (7,40)245·5064
years on note {304·) 7363 Dedroom . 1 bat, , Mason.
3409..
WV RemoAded, gas heat.
New Oa'WOCjld mega stofe C!A , $450 .00/ month plus
( 740~98- 7002
tSatunng
HomeS
by dePOs•t
Oakwood. Fl&amp;etwooo &amp; ( 7401590·41 2.3

Gjtes ' One Slop ShoPP'I'IQ 3 br 120 Howaro S1 New
only at Oakwood Homes ol Haven WV $350 monttl •
Baobou....,lle
1304)736- depoSit Rental appbcat.on &amp;

wv

3409.

lo

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

BlS!:\lN'i

High

House 3 Bedr oom 1 1J2
B""ath Heat Pump. new
Carpet, Wmd ows &amp; Root.
R•ver V•ew 12 Smith St . No
Money Down Ia quallly1ng

7080
Both
tra ilers
535.000 .
- - - - - - - - (740)441·5725
A Allordable 2-B edroom · - - - - - - - H orne , Every th'•ng new One now custom bu"l
" home
Pos.s1b68 no Money ®wn to 28x56 on 4.5 acres m/1.
QUahty;ng Buyers (304)674- $85,000. One 1 1f2 story
5111
home &amp; 3 bay garage With
an apartment above Both
lor
S 115,000
OBO
ATI'Ei'STION!
17 40)388-8273
GETYOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
Molin.!- Ho111:~
YOUR HOME!
HIR S.\t.t:
"FREE" APPROVED
HOME LOANS~
1987 14x 70 mob1te home 3
bedroom
, 2 bath, some fur·
NEW PURCHASES!
Mure &amp; appliances. $8.500
REFINANCES .
Call(7401245-9040
$0 DOWN/ $0 DOWN

lnthleacw; ;

POSTAl. JOBS
SJ&lt; 62-S20:!12mr. hii-

--------

For Sale or Rent. New 4
bedroom. 2 bath home on
14 .4 acres 25 mtnutes !rom
Athens .
Pomeroy
or
Gallipolis . Ale)(ander or
Me 1gs Schools . $115 ,000.
'(7401698·3504

;,::~~~~7.=E=%g . ;~~~O~'g~~7':)';~~: =:;~/mo:h

J:;o

oa., Sen'"""·

1740)698-3504.

Buyer $425/month why Rent
3 bedroom brick front .
)
.
1304 675 27 49
RanCh . Newer rool. vinyl.
heat
~mp,
Smiths House tor sate by owner: 4+
Cab•nets. 1 car garage, pn- bedrooms. 2 5 baths. large
vate lane off SA 160, 1.6 country kitChen . 1 5 story. 2·
acres. $92.000. (740}388· car attached garage, plus
8616
1wo large
outbu ildings.

•

w~ NEA, Inc.

I

0% Down Payme nt and
financing availaOie with
approved cred1t. Average
credit Qualifies you. If down
payment ha.s kept you lrom
tiuy1ng, thiS is your cllanse
to own your own nome . ll
you have a down pavment
but would like to conserve it,
we offer low di:Min payment
programs alsO. Great inter·
est rates! Local company.
Mortgage
Localors.
(740)992-732t .

t)v~N4

Full tame Fron1 Qesk Clerk Part tKJ18 lax PfeparBrs
Apply in person Holidir,• trm needed tor busy lal: ottc:e.
5n s.. AI . rn No ~ Pomeroy locabOn. We will
1ra1n.
Computer
skills
cals .......
requ11Bd. Send resume ID:
Fulllpartame Paramed.CS,
The
FP 11ot&lt;
S91hr.. parl-tme EMT-S's . 729-13 Pomeroy, Ohio
S7Jhr, tor 12 and 2-t-hr. 45769

Pau~t.

Lms&amp;
AI'HI:,\f:l:

For Sale or Rent: New 3 0.97 acre bwldtng .tot on
bedroom, 2 bath home on Grandvtew Ave near County
(2) 3 bedroom houses tor 2.86 acres. 25 mtnules from Fa1rgrOunds N1 ce neighborsalo . 2 balMs , ftreplaces. on Athens.
Pomeroy
or hood . all utilitieS e:.:cept
acreage. Call (740)709· GallipOliS . AleMander or sewer $!0 ,000 _
(304 )489·
1166.
Me•gs Schools. $93.000. 1363

wv

34

Hom"
I'OR SA I.E

I'OR S.IU:

1-en

EMS. PO

tO

Hl\ll."'il\ll-.

Deh/castlier. Taking appiica(740)441·1982 .
hons Mon-Fr~ at LocaiiOI'I .
Would you like to be recogFREE.SAMPLES
WWW.Iamousnutrilion .oom
Carpenters
wanted set _ _ _ _ __:__ __ nized as a professional
Posls &amp; Trusses for Pole Make 50 % selling Avon . salesperson in 6ne of the
country·s highest paid occuBarns, spme Travel reqwred l•m•led
WANll:D
time
ONLY.
patiOfls?
call (937)718-1471
To On
(740)446-3358. F•rst Sto can
r8001ves a gilt .
, Database Coordinator
II so, our salespeople earn
Beg1nning Adult - Children
an excellent income and
Piilno
Leaaons.
~oro
Noeo
a
job?
Outle"s involve keving
en,oy tho benefits of working
lnlormatton {3041675-1 038
We are hlf.ngi .
reltilt price Information
wllh a successful and pro·
You coukf earn up to
Into
a
d1t1baae.
greSSive dealership.
For all your Home Projects
SB/hr piUS IXlnUS0211.
lnformelion includes mer·
and Aepa•rs. Earty, late, big
dllndln untt price, Item We alSo otter paid tra.n11"1Q , tt you're serfous about a new Of small, calllhe Handyman
h&lt;*days. and vacahons .
description, quanHiy, pur·
career and are looking lor C304)593-3611 .
· Full or pan tii'T18 shltts
the training and guidance .:__:__ _ _ _ _ __
chase
ordera,
d1ta
available
chang••· n.. vendor
that are essential lor Jong- Georges Portable Sawmill,
Call Today!
Information. llutt have
term success- we 'd like to don, haul your -~ lo the
-463-6247 ext. 2454
good vl1ual 1nd mentlll
talk to you.
mUI just calf 304.&amp;75-1957.
coordln•tion . be 1ble to
.
Housecleaning S10. a Hr.
My eccurately and wtth Nurs•ng Asststant Classes Please, slop in ...._
- , an tnler- (
740 ~ 3385 _
production speed, have beginn•ng October 4, 20. view.
working knowledge of 2004 lhtu Oclober 20. 20()4 ,
, Jim's Carpentry &amp; Small
Mk:rosoh
Wotd
and tt you enjoy elderly peop&amp;e
.Norrit Northup Dodge
Landst:ap;ng. Calll7401446MICro.on Oflictf. Send and want to become a memChryaiM Jeep
2506
rnuma · end
••lary ber of OUf" health care team, .,.--'-'- - - : - - - requirement• 10: TSC-24 please stop by Rockspnngs Substitute RNILPN wanted Will dean house . $8Jhc)ur.
200 Main. St., Pl P._tant, Rehatut 1tahon Center ·ar lor lhe MeigS County Board References
avaotable .
25550
36759 Aocksprmgs Road. ot Mental retardatiOn and Preferably in tow n or
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and hH Developmental Disabilities. Galljpolis
area.
Call
E..m S600 WEEKLY or
out an apphcallon tor the Houl"!! 9am-3prn. Mus!: haw {740)446-~n .
more. Proc:e~r in g our
curreOt RN license ., the . : _ _ : _ _ - ' - - - - - W•ll
811
w1th
e1oerty.
1N111 from home. Genuine dasses.
Extend!Care
Heallh State of Ohio. Prefer experiupportunily. FREE supence
·
~--N....,
0ayhi9Jl
Weekdays/wee~&lt;•
., .,...._
·--~ ends. Have references.
plleo.
FT/PT.
100'Jio SerYICOS, Inc tS an equal
opportunity employer that ardlor ~ W'llh children Many )'83rs ott experience.
SaUtfaction gue,..ntead. ~ura~s
wor1......~,.ce and adutts with OEM!Iopnene
C.l 1(702)933-4666 (24 drversrty.
· - •~
(740)949-2543
MJF ON
tal dlsallilities. Send r8$(mfl .:_...:._________
Jtouro)
.
bv"Fnday Se!Jtamber Jro to : Wood's Extra Care for ,your
MCBt.4RDD. 1310 Carleton Loved one_ PrNate roomE-&gt;enoo&lt;l Aoolng Coews ParamediCS
&amp;
EMl's
307 . bath, 3 hoi meals. Phone
need&amp;d
in
Ftorida's needed Apply a1 1354 Street. PO Bo•
Syracuse. Oh ~5779
(740}388-0118.
HL.Wrieano Area Top Pay Call Jackson Pike. Gatl~s.
Dawd o t-n2-567-Cl559

....... -......,.,Co.
Aent----------..
-----420
Boa
Point
Sale.----'------------320

Plwnblngl ttuung _________ , _______ &amp;:IO

-

I

675·1429.

.. _ -------·------570

WI' I 'HilL
HIISSf! I

' POLICIES: Ohio V1Uey Publishing r...rve1 tt.. right to edit. reject, or cancel lny IKIIt any time. Errors must be reportel:l on ihe llr5l dey of publlcltion
Trlbune-Sentln.l-Aegllllr will be respon1lble tor rlO more then the coal of the spliCe oc:cupt.cl by the error and only the llratlnaertlon. We lhlllll not De ,llllobht to•
.ny lo•• or e1pente thlt results from the publk:ellon or omi11lon olen advertiMmenl. Correction will be. made lh tile first available edlllon. • Box
ere elw1y1 confidential. • Cur,..nt rete c1rd appllts. • All real e1111e adv1H11Mnwnll ere 1ubj~l to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1e68. • Thl1 oewopot,.•l
accepts only help wenl.cl itds meeting EOE etenderda. We wilt not knowlnt;ly ecceptany .ctvortlslng In vlols"Uon of the lll'w.

Centenary, now accepting
applications lor the followmg Are you looking lor a new
posi110ns: Full time experi· career with arl unhm 1ted
enced De l~ Clerk; Full 11me opportunity for adyance2nd .
Dave/BeCk•
Ball
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Cash1er;
Pari
time ment?
Broadway Slreet. Racme . Sell
Shirley Spears. 304·

t - . l o r Sale------··-----..---·---------------·---310

Shopping?
Drive Our Rates.

t..-------,.J
110

341
Rut land . Street ,
Middleport, somethin~;~ lor
everyone.
' An E)(cettenl way to earn
Moving Sale. Friday, October n\oney. The New Avon.
151 and Saturday, October Call Ma11lyn 304-882·2645

ltoulli!hofd ~·----------··----------:............. 510

Car

• Att ads must be prepaid• ·

W.wn-:u
·m Bt 'Y

Absol ute Top Dollar · U.S .
Silver and Gold Coms,
Proofsets. Gold Rings. U.S .
5 fam•ly yard sale, Sept. 29- Cuuency,· M T.S . Co1n ShOp.
Avenue ,
0ct 1. 362 t 6 Roekspr•ngs 151 . Second
Ad., table &amp; ch"a~rs, 1nside Gallipohs. 740-446-2842.
doors. all SIZe c lo!~'"g &amp; . Land 1n Gall 1a County.
m•sc
Woods and hills fine. W•ll do
- - - - -- - - - doze• work for property.
Depot Street. Autland, Sept
27 through Oct 1st. baby to (740)368·8228.
adult
clothing.
nice
f \11'1.0\ \II.\ r
Christmas gifts.
St.H\ I( IS
~

{p

All Dlapl•v: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Day• Pilor To
Publication
Sunday Dl•playl 1:00 p .m.
Thur•day for Sunday• Paper-.. ,

YARil S.IU:·
Po~ti:ROI'IMIIHltJ-:

Fal. cloanout
one
day
only,
Oct. 1st. satera•n or
shine,

VISA

Now you can .have borders and graphics .
.11.-11
added to your classified ads
~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
.
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally In -C olumn: 1:00 p . m.
Monday·Fr-ld•y f9r lnaertlon
In Next Day'• PaperSunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
. Fr-Iday For Sundaya Paper

5 Saturday 9·2. Toys, books,
lw-..iGiil'lil"iil"lli-l;,;I'O!~.I;,;S_,.I videos . boys clothes 8-12,
girls 5·8, 1'1ouseh01d, crafts,
1.2 miles out Route 216. adult clothes. 101 Holly
Sept. 29·30. Oct. 1·2.
Lane. near Meigs C~n ic
..:._:__ _.:.__ _ __
Big yard sale. Sat. Oct. 2. 8·
AU&lt;..:I"I()N ANU
5, 520 Ball Run Rd . oil
FLI:.
A MARKH
Skidmore Ad . Toots, d1shes,
some antiques. lots of r_nisc .
RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
Huge sale 4 tamilv. Sept. 29· BARN At. 7 South, s m1tes.
30-1 Oct. Good clothing all Delow , the Dam. EVERY
sizes. household items. fur- . SATURDAY
@
6pm
n•ture . 9-4, 101 ~ti ani Ave. (740)256·6989

L....._.•••K.~.n._..~ 74
.
10

lCD.

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

October 1st &amp; 2nd Friday 9-

LoVable Kinens to a good
nome, 1 Bobtail, r'ni)(ed vari·
etv 1304)67&amp;-4317 after 5pm Yard Sate Oct. 1. Toddler
lA:~T ANJ)
clothing , car seals. miSC. 9· 7
1 mile out 218 @ Haner's
F

....,.~mprvvemen~s

COr.1PETITIVE AUTO RATES

YMm SAJ.t:PoMt:Rov/M 11&gt;111 ..:

H8y &amp; Grain.... _______________________ , _______ ... - ........640
Help wanted .............__, ___________, ________,, ...... 11 o

3n:l oonual Punt, Pass and Kick competition
Bob Roberts field pictured are the wiriners and their age
group. Picutred in front is Josiah Bella (8-9). Standing in back from
left is Jimmer Soulsby (Sideliners President), Jay w..ner (10-11/.
Ry.I1 Chapma1 (14-15), Settt Perry (12-13), Tony Hawk (Sideliners'
Trustee). Wtmers now are eligible to participate in sectional competitio~ 1 at Gallipolis on ~ 2nd at 12 p.m.

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Sl'lould Run i Day•

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

n

CHARGE IT!

.GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to ~:00 p.m.

ANNOUNCt:MINIS

JUST SAY

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

.....,.c_a_n__T_o_d_a_y._._··_·__o;_r_F.;,;;ax-ro (740) 44611i-3moom;;s,_._ _ _o_r_Fa;_x_l_o~...:...;.s.:..s2_-2_1_s7__,m!!!l

..........................
-...........................oso
040
a.ppy _____________
, __________________________________

~gs Sideliners held its

3Regi1)ter

Sentinel
'

Your Ad,

~-·•v

double.
Six Rio pitdlers allowed only three
hits in geuing the shntOUL Junior ri~
Dustin GibbS S1lllttJd and gaveUJ? Olll': hit

moments after they
nearly had their lead
trimmed
to
three
points.
·
":We had tbe opportunities," Linle sa11l "We
just dido 't mal:e the ,
plays."
Davis lamented that
'":1he swing of events,"
a holding penalty
against wide m:eivec
Andre' Davis that nullified a TO run and
t:hree dropped interceplions as- keys to the
loss.
But be also blamed a
lade of IJUSt on both
sides of the ball as
being
detrimental
Without trust, Davis
I

Meigs PP&amp;K winners:

M• las Counl y, O H

We Cove
M•lgs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

In· One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,00.0 PROSPECTS
PLUS VOUR .AD NOW ONLINE

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

.500
.500

Heartland Conference
CUe•===
lla.Sl.loooph

KAY

CINCINNATI - Jamal Lewis,
180 yards. Marshall Faulk, 121.
Lee Suggs, 186. Curtis Martin,
196. Lewis again, this time for
·.
.
186.
A, the names and numbers
attest, the Bengals have a big
problem.
.
Sure, Carson Palmer is making
his share ·of rookie mistakes as a
It's not a new trend.
first-year . quarterback,
but
The Bengals fell out of playoff
Cincinnrui's biggest problem con tentioh
last
December
runs inuch deeper. Its defense · because their defense got run
can't stop the run .
over. Jamal Lewis, Faulk and
Lewis' 186-yard effort Sunday Suggs had their big games, and
during Baltimore 's 23-9 victorY: the Bengal s lost three of their
was only the latest in a long-rune last four to finish at 8-8.
•
ning series.
Marvin Lewis spe n! the offc
"It's not acceptable," coach season revamping the defense.
Marvin Lewis said Monday. " It's . The result: new players, saine
disappointing. We ' ve got to get problem .
it corrected. We ' ve got to ' go
Martin ran for 196 yards in the
make the plays, get the guy on Jet s' opening win. A week later,
.
· the struggling Dolphins manthe ground."
Usually, it 's the Bengals ( 1-2) aged only 25 yards on 20 carries,
who wind · up on the ground, giving the Bengals a sense that
scattered about like so many top- the worst was behind them.
· pled bowling pins, ready to get
wrang.
:
k
d
d
racked up and tiocke
own
The Ravens brought them back
agam.

Ball St. at Toledo
Idaho at E. Michigan
Bowtlng Green at Temple
Ohio 81 KaniUd&lt;y

3
2
2
1
1
1
0
0

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!rribune - Sentinel -·3Re i1)ter

ove~

Akron at N. IIHnois

0....11

Capital
Mount Union
Marietta

JoE

Associated Press

cent. Florida aJIM1alo

Ohio Athletic Cont.
Baldwin-Wallace

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

•

·College football

1. Southern Cal(o16) 4-()

Tuesday, September 28, 2oo4

Next to new 2000 Reoman
16X80 • 3 bedr0tJr't\12 bath.
V'ltlyf Std..-.g/s.ngle rool fully
loade&lt;l . $27.900 00 Can
hell " rtn oo ~Ye~y Ask tor
N.tdu (740)385·99"8

ret •equ•red 1·yr mm 6ease
1304)4 ' 5.(1585

Condo 3 bdrm· 2 belhs

wl

basement Vtew ol nll8r
Cn1rl
AJC $700 ruo .
Gallipolis Fe rry (7-40)4-'6-

348 t

Na 14X52. SA FiemJng, 2 HOUSE FOR RENT 3
bedl00111 , shlf98 roo( Lot bdrm , t"'bath. LA w!FP. 2-aw
1OOKt 20
in
SyraCYM carpon . qu18110cahon. «&lt;goe

1740)11112-5888
SAV£-SAVE-SAVE

"' UMn. -

•

-

'f'bu pay all uhllhH
Calll740'--3640 to&lt;HC dep

Stodl; n'IOdolttl at del l)n(:eS. Na Muse· 3 BR , 1.5 baths.
2005 modetl ~ Now. Good roc.tiOf'l. CtoM to hol-eo..·a Mobtte Homes. l)lt.at $650 ren1 wl$650 sec
1~ U.S. 50 Eut. Attwns. dep You pay all utllil 1et.
•5701 . (740)592·1972. RalataN»s
requtrecl
"Where vl u ~ Get Yovr (J.a)U6 -36AA

or-.o

l.lonoy's _..,.

!\loom.&gt;. HU\1~
Small Vndalo Mobole Home ,
ITIR R!-:O.T
l"'e8ds Hoar reoaned &amp; t:af - ..__ _ioiiiiiiiiiiioiioo_,..
pet. RHI 01 rona ., good
14•70 .3 badtoom: 1.5 bath.
Homes lfam $ 10 .0001. · condihon. New watar hNIIH".
C I A , no pets. $£50 &amp;
· VA Hull "" .... l'n&lt;» 52.500 (304)67~3000 Oeposll Ca• C740).446-4824.
ing 1-8()1)-749-1 I 06 . . 1 70i LHY8 Me55a!iJB

.

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

'

www.mydallysentinel.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

Tuesday, September 28, 2004
ALLEY OOP

Help Wanted

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

NEA Crosswqrd Puzzle

BRIDGE
1Bedroom Trailer in letart,

wv.

s-miles

Job ·l'osting

from

Mountaineer-Pla nt ~
Furnished. all ulilities pa1d,
$350/month, $350/d&amp;POSI\
1304)882·2858

t•o.~ition:

neighbor

J9quired. No pets. 740-446-

l•riman· Counselor

l\linimum Quali(kuliOr\S:

Hach~lor"s

AI'AKIMt:N"IS
mH Rt:~r
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt. starting

at $290/month, deposit
requir,d. No pets. WO
hook up. (740)441 ·1184

1 and 2 bedroom apart ments, turn1shed and untL.Jr-

depos•t

, reqUired, no p'91S. 740-992-

SEPTA

_2218.

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

See Brenl or Brian Whaley

6:30

Lusl Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Huy $5.00
Honanza Gel
5 FREE

!I. I~' I{'~ II:~ I);

Help Wanted

F&lt;lll. Rt:~r

furnished $325 . + Depos•t
(304)675 -2970

10

bd. and 3 bd. Applications

be
ac cepted
on
Tuesday's only from 9·3 at
501 Shawnee Trail. Pt.
Pleasant, WV
675·4900
Equal Housing Opportunity

Pl&lt;asant Valley Hospilal Home Medical
E4uirm1cnt is currently accepting reSume s for

·2 bedroom. stove. relr1gera·
tor furnished. $150 deposit, ·Tw1n Rivers Tower is accept:
$275 rent. 34 t/2 Smilhers 1ng applications for waiting

ur

Streel. Call (740)446·9061 .

a graduate

full time. Day shift, Respirulory Therupist.

list lor Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment, call 675·6679
- 2 or 3 bedroom apartment In EHO
· Middleport.
no
pets.
· (740)992·5858
SI,Act;

c~rtified

Boat &amp; Camper Storage
Mason County Fair·Grounds
58.00/per·Foot. Sat &amp; Mon
during Oct 9am-5pm other
tlmas by Appl . (304 )675 ·
5463

HOliSEIIOUl

r

Ml"'iC.:U.ANl&lt;.:OUS
MmcnANmsF.

r

Huna clean, 3 bedroom,
·
SI'OKilNG
-·bath, dming. stOfage, aprox.
GtX&gt;US
2,500 sq. h. No petslsmok· .__ _ _ _ _ _ __,
with

quiver and arrows. Great

(740)3~9·

$200.

2601 .

One bedroom apartment. Set of new Golf clubs with
no pets. in Pomeroy, carry1ng case . 040)388·
(740)992·5856
8188.

One bedroom garage apart-

~r--_,

ment kitchen furnished . ~

A~llQUI:S

$400. (740)992·3823
Ar,tique Botlle Show. West
Pleasant Valley Apartment VIrginia Stat6 Farm, Fall
Are now taking Applications Festival. Po1nt Pleasant,
tor 2BR . . 3BR &amp; 4BR., Oct. 2; 10-3. 2004, Into.
Applications are
taken (740)99?·5088
Monday thru Friday, trom ::.::::.::......:.______
9:00 A _M.-4 P_M. ()tfice 1s . Buy
or
sell . Rivetine
Located al 1151 E\18rQreen Antiques. 1124 East Mal'l
Drive Poiru Pleasant, WV on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740Phone No is (304)675-5806. 992-2526. Russ Moore.
E.H.O
owner.
- - - - - - - - - .,.,.._,_ _ _ _ _ _.,
Tara
Townnouse
MISOlJANF.OlS
llparlments. Very Spaoous.
MD&lt;OIANDN:
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
.
112 Balli. Newly Carpeled. 1976
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Motor Home. $3.90(1:
1974 Ford Bucket 5725
trudt,
PatiO, Start $385/Mo.. No .,:,
.
..,.900. ean (740)441·.
.
Pets. Lease Ptus Secunty
[)eposd Requ ired . Oays: O.shwasher$150.1ikenew.
740-446·3481 ; Even1ng" 83Siazer. 4-drNe. Asl&lt;
74().367.()502.
lor Jr. (7401256-1102.

r

Pt-:as
mR S.~LE

AKC Black &amp; Yellow Lab
puppies. Shots, wormed &amp;
dew clawa removed . $300·
$350. (740)441 ·0130.

TY, OHIO

and cannot be rea·

Aegla
Mortgagt
Corporation
d/b/a

aonable diligence bot
uc:ertalned, will taka
notice that on tha
17th day ol June,
2004, Alogia MortgCorporallon
d/b/a ·
UCLendlng llled Ita
Complaint In tha

Oatenct.•te

........:FNIIW.C....W
Nollce In Sull for
FCMKI08UI'Il
ol

Mo 'a a

---•a.wlloM
--.SJ

Iala
1UIIut-ryA.._,
~ov.

OH 45761.
•ncl the unknown
......... ,
,lege-

'-·
••ecutors.
admlnlelratore ,

-and a..- unlcnowll
.-igna

gUMdlana ol mlno~
andiOI Incompetent
...,. o1 ._well..

I

Pa~s

Pass

denCM are unknown

Common

0013 or 1740)441-7333.
AKC L.abradOf Retrievers.
Parents
field/waterfowl
trained. Very lamlly oriented.
Shots &amp; wormed. 740-988·
408.1
ultilab@mail.ohio·

'

I;)
YOU,
~~/

out of PAINTING!

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

Let me do it for ycul

LAST

T&gt;i'"-VE.&gt; '1-28

BARNEY
HAVE MERCY,
YOUNG-UN!!
PICK ALREADY !!

Hv.y 160 N
17 40)446-6865

:?P

AJC:

95 Geo Metro. Looks geat
need motor. 43 mpg ~ $550
JET
puppies tor sate, $200. Call OBO. Call (740)645-6018.
AERATION"MOTORS
(740)379·2605.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
98 Dodge Caravan, air, runs
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· Labrador Aetrfever pups. good, $2,300 OBO. Call
AKC, excellent hunters,
)
_
t.
600 •537 •9528 .
1740 256 903
$250-btack,
S350·yellow. ~;;::::;:;.;:;~---.,
www.steelepolnlinglabs.coin F1~
TRucKs
(740)256-6172.
..
,
1-"'0R SAu:

--------Pole Barn 30K50x~OFT
· led
$6395 . 1·nc1 ud es pa1n
Metal , Plans. Instruction
Book, Slider, "Free Delivery
1937)559-8385

Bun~

. SUPPIJf~

__

BlocK. brk:k, sewer

1
•
pipes,

windows.~.etc. Claude

Winters. Rio Grande. OH
Caii74Q.245-5121 .
'

1991 BMW KlT 100, 1,000

CC less than 25,000 actual

Wf\(&gt;,,\

1(.1 t-ID

.

"'l

OF CR,_:Z.'( GI&gt;JII.E.
I~ Ti-\i::l?

miles, 55.200. 1740)256·
6796.
2000
Har~y
Davison
Sportster 883 ~,Y9ger. Lot&amp;
of extras. Days 740·645-

0;;,.;;_;,:.;,;,;.,;,;;.;..__.,
MUSICAL
.
l~iRUMF.NTS 1 1990

Chev. 1

SeH•Storage

Siding .• New Garages
Replacement
Windows ; Roofing

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

740-992-5232

0

..

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bastian .Road

•

45771

I

PEANUTS

740-94!1-2217

GUESS WHAT~ I'VE
DECIDED TO RUN FOR
CLASS PRESIDENT~
I'M 601N6 ON THE
OLr CAMPA16N
TRAIl !
=,..

FREE ESTIMATES

74&lt;1-992-7599

48::·_ _ _....._ __
ton pick up. 04
:~

Clean &amp; niCe truck. can 740- 2003 Wolverine 4x4, Brand
Alveraz 6 string Bass brand 441.0941 Of 740-645·5946. New.. Ramps
included
new condfUon. (740 )446 •
$4.000 (304)675-3613
.
1996 Chevy SiiYaJCJdQ club
9709
.._IIH HI ..,
- - - - - - - - - cab: Lealher, 93K, $7,200
Gulbtansen
Mastertone OBO. (740)245-5697.
HOME
Uprog
· hi Piano for sate. $600.
1999 Chevy 1 ton with t 1 n.
(740)44G-8t 92 .
I~II'ROVt:Mt:NlS
utitiry bed, wekler, air comStory &amp; Clark PW.O. $850. pressor. 74().2545-1526 or
BASEMENT
Lowery Organ (electric) wilh 7~5-0446.
WATEAPROOANG
Gonia $250. 740-245-5428.
............... Dako
95......,.,
Ia, K~ Cab, Uncondihonal lifetime guar·
Wurlitzer Piano. Excellent 4K4 ~ckup lrudl;. Cart antee . .~ocal Jelerences fur·
condition
$900.
Call (740)379-2409. Good condi· nished. Established 1975.
(740)"46·268'.
tion.
Call 24 Hn1. (740) 446;;,;,:.::=;..:;,;;;::.;:.,-"::11~-,:--r-:;;:-:-:=o:;:o:=:-..:, 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

EVER HAVE THE
FEELIN&amp; Tt1AT YOlJRE
BEING WATCHED ?

BEG.IN.

Racine, Ohio _,.

'fOU LOOK
MORE LIKE
·'I'OU JUST 60T
OFF Tj.jE OLD
(j.j ISj.jOLM
TRAIL!

cJ').....IltJ'

I

SHOP LASSIFIEDS
·

For SaJe; Poplar Lumber
sheeting boards .45 per
board k. Hardwood mulcll ·
S2Q. peiljl&lt;i . (140)992·5965

Deau Hill

SUNSHINE CLUB

New&amp;: Used

4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

HOWARDL
WRITESfl
diDI
dill
IIIDEWCE
.SUIlESS

EVE.R .S.Ii\1(£ Hli 1URI\l£P E.IGHTV
Ht:•s BE£~ BUYIIJG (ALE.J\lDARS
OOE. MOtJ1l.\ PiT A 11 M£

1-800·822-0417
·w.v·s Ml

Chevy.

Pontiac. Buick. Olds

&amp;Custom

Van

IITTU.

................
949-1405 .
'

.

P-

Court

"=

~'!..~::..

real . .tate to wit:
, . _ , ty Add .....:

165 Mylbeny Avenue,
OH45789

and being ............
tlcularly -rlbed In
.I

Recorder•• Office.

ol the above
named clel.,.danta
.,.
required
to
an._ within - t y ·
llight (211 ..,. last
publication,
""lch .. ...., be pubo
All

§::

SJ

~

jl

..0
~
YoJ

GRIZZWELLS

RIIERT ·

Builders

.ll ynn apb law•
· •Ntw HOIIMS
L

Sentinel

Clnclnn8U, Oh -45201·

•LoJH..,...
•Pos1Fnm1
oCompldo ll&lt;moddlna
•Rt'plannwnt Windows
•Roofs

Com....m.lond
Raidaotlal '

5410

(5131241-3100
attyemaiiOI-.com

Fl'ft Estimates
740-667-60110

(8)7, 14, 21, 21, (1015,

\

HAVE A COUPON fOR A
fREE. CHE.f5f.BURGfRI

~

arn

At-•

··~

.,

Advertise
in this.
space
for
$50 per
month

plaintiff's mortgage
rec:Qrdecl In MortBook 104, .,_ 7113,
or
thla
County

,.,- "~

._,........,.
·-~
A

' 54

..,..,. -a,_.
• Roollng • Gunln.

---

• , . . . .lid II'CIIdl Dec:b

BISSELL
CIIISTIICTI.
• New Homes

Remodeli'!&amp;

v.c. YOUNG Ill

lQ-112-lm
Stop &amp; Compoie

(

to fireworks
35 Hurricane
5
center
"' "Bananas"" 29 Leaf
36 or guys
6 --recall ...
juncture
37 Ax cousin
7 Ginza
30 Goofball

J

38 Dlslress
call

money

31 Munch

8 Softly lit

36 Rover's

n, lek:Jdiaua

54 Grazing
area

~~~~:t:;y S©tt4U1A-!Gt~Se

WOlD
GAM!

EJittd ~r ClAY II , rOLLAN

l"Jt C:PT .A~'I' SAl) f£t:\.IN6

....__· AMTI ~'I'

Sept. 29, 2004
By Bornlce Bade Oaol
In the year ahead, joint vontures could
prove to be quite successful tor you, pro·
vided you don't form any partnerShips
with those with whom you pal around.
Keep seriqus buSiness associates separate from lriendships.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Someone
Who has assisted you in the past may
request a favor of you today. Rega rdless
of tt"le inconvenience, comp ly wilh the
request. Excuses. no matter how good ,
will make you look bad.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24 -Nov. 22) Obstacles wllti which you may have 10
contend ·today could be more mental
than actual. When you find yourself lal' tering, vigorously press lorward and
you'll achieve !he success you desire.
SAG ITTARIU S {Nov. 23·Dec, 21) There's nothing Wrong with being your
usua't iriend ty and open sell. bul be careful today of whal you say and to whom
you speak. The wrong person could turn
an innocent remark into something ugly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ~9 ) ..,...
Something on whiCh you are bank1ng
may slarl showing s1gns of we~mn9 th1n
today. However. if you use your abll1t1es
to transform the outmoded. it &lt;;an be
brought back to fife.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -In situa·
lions where your associates' objectives
are 1n harmony with yours, all should go
line tOday. Bul when it comes to inatcor1 ·
tent s, .they could be responsible far
bteakinQ your stride.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) ...- Make a
concerted efforl lo keep your financial
affairs heallhy and 1n balance today. II
you allow your expenditures to exceed
YDl,tt 1ncome. 1t could start eating you
alive before the day is oul.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19) - II you'd
like to get better cooperation today hom
those who do your _bidding. try a little
, sugarcoating of your commands . Tough
or unpleasant jobs are more "palatable
when sweetened.
'
TAURUS (April 20,May 20 ) -Your initial
assessments of most things could tend
to be a bil more on the negaiive side
loday. However, .il you take some l1me lo
have a SEtCOf"'d look . you could find rea·
sons lo be encouraged
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - All lmancial matters must be treated realistically
today or you'll run the nsk of putt1ng yoUr·
seH in p. delk1t position . Hpping that you 'll
be able to make up the shortage laler 1s
tanci1ullh1nk1ng .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Your pos&amp;lbili.ties of gaming cooperation lrom
assoc1ates to accompHsfl your goals
today are good, Out don"t Yield lo lemptatK&gt;ns to use tactics that may be under·
handed or threatening.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Ma1nla1n a
pl"ulosophical anitude today. espec1a11y
when conditions get tough. The right oultook can 0\'ercome adverse siluat1ons
.and help put you On the nghl track when
looking for solutions:
VIA GO {Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - Your intel·
tedual and anatyhcat tacutt1es w11! be
partiCularly sharp today. bul rl you use
them to take advantage of you·r assoc•ate"s . friends or fami t"y. they'll work
against you instead of for you.

&amp;\ PRitli NUMBERED tEllERS 1

'IIIII£ s..(oUl...P "J'"IJ.S r

·e"'

U"IC~AMSlf

·SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS 3•2 1- 0 ,

Fomenl- Ensue- Droll- Unfold. OFF lhe SOUND
Our minds are like. a television set If 11 goes blan&lt;:.
it's smar1 to turn OFF lhe SOUND I

ARLO .&amp; JANIS

~

~

~- ~;-;~ r~~
~,1 ~ -,

0

0

¥/HAT DO Wf- OCW .
WrfH ALL 1110"£ CAe&gt;ll.lEi6~

a""" WH\~,

Rd(~ .. T~

• LCST" MeR~

lEilERS 10

G£1 ANSIV[l

~£: W:JR.U)s NOT

Sta::k

5

f.:JI IN lHf\f S!Ju•R!S

SOUP TO NUTZ

O&lt;.IT•..

W.doKdoa'!"(il

3
4

Wodneeday,

Nil""
aLL .a""
L"T Gop ,.,.,,.

• Garages
• Complete

Pass

1

2

product
45 Radiate
46 Actress
- Freeman
48 Turns left
49 Mike
problem
50 Organ valve
52 Hog1sabode
53 Belin,

-.r&lt;JII~:

T URN YoUR. TEST
OVER, ANNNND... .

~~~~~~~~·I

2"'
Pass

AstroGraph

5~EET5

High Bl Dry

2¥

44 Maple~tree

bOth hands! (Sadly, the declarer at the
other table did not test Benito Garozzo)
Some people thought that the_ declarer of
this deal would have been a more
deserving winner.
East's opening sh,awed a weak two-bid in
either major. South's double pro mtsed a
Qood hand , and North 's three"-spade cuebid indicated a maximum ~ass.
Against tour hearts. West led the spade
jack. South looked destined to lose two
tricks in each major, but
he carefully
covered with dummy's queen. Otherwise,
three rounds of spades, with West pitch·
ing a minor-suit card, would have defeat- .
ed the contraCt . East won with the spade
king , cashed the· spade ace (leading a
low spade to West's 10 doesn't help), and
shifted to a club to declarer's ace.
Luis Campos
Si«ing South was Tony Prid ay, playing for
Celebrity Cil)heJ cryprogrims are created from QllltBI.o ns b)ltamous ~ . piS I !ll'ltl ptesan1 .
Each letter 1nthe ~ner a!aMs lor ancittw
Brita in against Finland . He cashed the
· Toooy·s Clue : E equals 8
club king, then led the heart jack: queen,
king, spade three. Declarer took three
"H W EWJOWAW
FGMF
FL
WZZ
OP
diamond trlc~s ending in the dummy and
ruffed a club in hand.
GIN MY .
FL
EJMNW
OF
L. Y
It was trick 10. Dummy had the A·5·4 of
hearts and club nine , West held the 9·8·
WJPW
DP
OLJDFDTP .
7-3 of hearts, and South retained the 10· PLNWLYW
6 at hearts, spade nine and diamond
GIEWZF
G.
GINOGZWK
jack. Declarer ted his spade, West ruffed
with the heart seven, and. dummy's club
w~s discarded. West cou ldn !t take aneth·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "How to sltake hands.' - Bellina Bunge, on what
er trick.
she learned from Martina Navratilova after losing to her numerous times

BIG NATE

BISSEll

--,

3248. owningo aher 6:30pm
lovable, shaggy dogs. first 1978 Dodge Truck, uses no ~7_:
40.:_:2::56:.::658=9::..- - - shot &amp; wormed. price 5250. Oil, new Transmission, runs 200 ~ Honda 400 EX.
call (7401985 .9823
great, ' Topper included E~tce ltont condition. Call
_St.27S (304)674-Q092
.
• 525 Of 740-645·
740 256 1

r

Sunday. (740)446-7300

r

4 Wu1:.:u:RS

Old English sheepdog pups.

Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Dosed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

....

1·740·843·5382

fWIII' fii.fJJJlJJA.

"24.•..

32 Nostalgic
time
33 Misfortunes
34 Reaction

composer

20 Mortar
troughs
DOWN
22 Court eases
23 Aptitude
Fal fiddle
24 Dell breads
Beige
25 Vacillale
Lalor on
.
(hyph.)
Earth, .
26 Greek
to Pliny
war god
Char1o1te- 28 Earthen lar

plane!
37 Roadie geao
41 Gorp eater
43 Yeggs '
targels

_ ·by

No Job to Big or Small
Serving: Meigs, Mason,
Gallia &amp; Athens Co.

Athei!S

network
F.ast

9 fence pert
10 Good·
natured
14 "-Girls "
19 British

CELEBRITY CIPHER

THE BORN LOSER

2003 Dodge Neon . 4 cyl. Ga!lipolis Daily Tribune. For ._N:o:.-:""::
·ic:in:=K:'"""":
·:::H:cal::c:~~
auto. 11 ,000 miJes, cruise, more
information
call • r
r-~'"!"~~~~'"!"""'1
WI.
$7.000. (740)44(. 740446·2342asklorPaul.
~
0337 or (740)645 -6153.
40 Marot!LYUJ-N

CKC Registered Golden
Ret ri evers. 6 weeks old,
$250 female. $200 mare.
C
all (740)388-0435.
Full blooded St. Bernard

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steer Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle.
Channel. flat Bar, Steel
Grating
F&lt;lr
Drains,
Oriwways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

_qnnettes
1fouse Ckaning Service

IMPORTS

SoH meas .

Yesterday, t gave the declarer-play that
won the Bois Brilliancy Prize at ,the 1979
European Championships. It caused
some controversy because the declarer
dlctn 't do anything brilliant He read the
cards correctly, giving, East a chance to
make an error, and EaSt-gfasped it witll

WOtlt&gt;S W~ftf:
''tiH. wATCti
TtiiS[''

Ravenswood
iropractic
Center

29 " Selnleld"

A worthy winner
came second

TO.O? ···IT'S
AMAZING
tiOw MANY

P~OPLf!
Ta~e the PAIN

North

Opening"iead: "'

r.

hills.net
::.:::.:.::.:.:_ _ _ _ __
AKC Min. Dachshund pup&amp;
Tan,
pies,
Black
male/female. 1st shots &amp;
wormed by Vel. (304)8953;;:99 .

of Melga County, Ohio · lllhed once a In c - No. 04CV074, for ala consecutive
on the of lha - . or they might
be donled a '-lngln
thla-.
ol ""lch pleJdlng Ia
to - - the llan Lern«, S.mpaon •
ol plalnllft'a mortu.e Rothftl8&amp;
(I
...:onled upon the Allom.yw for Plalnllfl
following dellCrlbed . P.O. Boil 5410

PotneroJ,

••

Box 1!39
Middleport
,··~ 45760

GARFIELD

all of • whole rest·

C.. No.: 04CV074

Pass

.,..,,.• en,m••

AKC Blond Lab pupa. ShOll,
wormed SJOO. (740)4~1·

Hot· ub U1scount uuttet.
Grand Opening Sale
quality, · warranties,
Milton, WV. Fl(·a Marke
Section
c. Fridays
;.,~tSulridays
and
Sundays
P•
606 922 - 7185 ·

I

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUN-

r..n.-la, .tal

Pass

Pass

· B &amp;. D Auto Sales

NOTICES
,..

Obi.

$950

IC

i&gt;lelnllll

and Financial Services

West

abbr.
42

fare

Dealer: Nonh
Vulnerable: Both
Pass
Pass
3 •

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

FOR BARGAINS

UCLAndlng

•

Rocky Hupp Insurance

1999
N1s san
Ouest.
Excellent c:ondilion, auto.
CD. 5 disc changer, AJC, lac·
IOfy power sunroof. new 1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4, 5
tires, power seals, $7,500. speed, 100K, excellent con·
di!lon.
$6.700
080
(740)388-8228.
(740)245·5697
2000 Dodge N"9on, air.
57,000 miles. $2,600 080. 1997 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat,
11 4K, black, leather interior,
(740)256· I 233.
c/d player, ' 59.200 080,
2000 Ford EJCplorer exc. (740)992-2932
condition. black/grey interior,
1997 Ford F-150 L~riat. ext.
4 wheat dr1ve, 98.000 miles.
cab. step-side, exc. condiU9So.(740)446·6754,
tion . 4·whee! drive. $12,000.
2001 Dodge Caravan Sport 740·367-7762 or 740·367·
miles· 72,960, $7,500; 2001 7272.
Chev. Cav. LS 4 door 2000 F350 Super Duty 7.~
82U East M&lt;tin St.
$5,900, miles- 053.007; 99 Diesel, 43 ,000 miles. Dually,
l,omcroy
Ponliac Montana ext Van. 4:.4, extra Clean. Stainless bcsiJI! Lallis Fruit Stand
miles· 097,927, $6,295, Steer Brush Guard &amp; Nurf
Wammly Rep::~ir •
Nice!; 98 Chov. Blazer LT
Bars. set up fOf Goose Neck
L1wn
Tr::~ctor &amp; Push
4114, miles 101,357. $6,295:
Hitch
$25,000
Firm
Mowers. Ch,ain Saws,
99 Olds Alero · 4 door, miles·
13041576·3259
Chain Sharpcn&lt;.-d
103.463 S4.500; 96 Chev.
:ll
V•NS
&amp; Pans
.
Silverado ext. cab Z· 71, 4x4,
"
New .General Sti.lndby
350 automatiC: high mites,
....._.;F,;&lt;.;;lHioioiSoi"ii'"ilt:-_.11 Gcncruting Sysl~ms am.l
$5.995.
~
Roi-Air Air Compressors
Southem Auto Sares
1995 Dodge Ram Van. 3/4
Open 8:30-6:00 1\1-t';
Second Ave.
lon. 130,450 miles. $1.000 Sot. 8:30·2:00 992·1033
Ph: (740)446·8554
as is. Can be seen at the l'id·up alld \kliYcry sen' icc

5 AKC Beagles, trained rab·
bit dogs, 2 started pups,
excellent
blooCI ' line.
(740)742·2728

Processor
Free Printer
Carrying Case and Software
wlpurchase $300 call 458 •
1997 for mOfe information

tors. gas and electric
ranges. a1r conditiooers, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on rT\ajor brands in
sflop or at your home.

New t bedroom apt. Phone shape.

"-AK

273-5321

~;=(=====A=A~/·E;O;E;:;:=:::;;::==::,

Coffee table with 2 end
tables. glass lops. Very nice .
$ '75
{- · Ph · 740 -245 · 5428 ·

Crossbow

South
"' 982
¥ J IU6 2
t A K J 3

South

Chev. Lumina van "as is"

1988 Lincoln Mark VII,
100,000 miles, BJCcetlent
condition. Carr !740)256·
1.135. $1 ,500.

(3().1) 675·4340

"----G&lt;ioiiiMiilliiolSiooooo-r'

Kelly Horton

AlTIUS
t"llll. SAt.t'

2520 Vull_cy brivc
Poinl Ple•sunt. WV 25550

Thompson s Appliance· &amp;
(740)446-348 I .
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
Gracious livmg. 1 and 2 bed· re-conditioned automatic
room apartments at VIllage washers &amp; dryers. retrigera-

i7401-·3736.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

AK7543

.• 8 6 5
... Q 8 7 3

10 6

u

G1bson refrigerator 31" wide,
1998 Weber HOrse Trailer
$100. Call 38' w/showtime conversion
BEAUTIFUL
APART· 62~ high,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET &lt;7401388 · 8788 ·
3 horse trailer wtrull living
PRICES . AT JACKSON Good Used Appliances. quarters. E11certent condi·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Reconditioned
and lion. $25.995.00 call Harold
Drive hom $3A4 to $442. Guaranteed.
W~shers, (740)385·767 1
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call Dryers.
Ranges.
and
740-446-2568 .
EQual Retr1gerators. Some start Bl
Hous1ng 0ppcH"turuty.
$95. Skaggs Appl 1ances, 76 EKercise Bike S15. Like new
Smitfl Corona Deville 700
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Vine St. . (740)446·7398
Erectnc Typewriter $20 ,
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Mollohan· Carpel , 202 Clark Texas Instrument Scientific
.
Townhouse
apartments. Chape I Roa d. Porter, ()h IO.
Calculator $20. Compaq
and/Of small houses FOR (740)446-7444 1-877·830· Presario
1270
Laptop
RENT. Call (7 40)441-1111 9162 Free Estimates, Easy Computer, Windows 98, 2
tor application &amp; information fmanc1ng, 90 days same as . Hard Drives: C: 2.82GB, 0 :
Garage Apt. 1 bdrm. 1 bath. cash . Visa! Master Card . 120GB McAfee Virus Scan,
160 .0 MB ol Ram 30
Gas
heat
$275
mo. Drive- a-lillie sav9 atot.

ing, $610 .
Call
(740)446-9961 .

'

Pleasant Vulle)' Huspilal
% Hun1an Resources

(740)446-3644.

Manor
and
Riverside
Apartmenls in Middleport .
From $295·$444. Call 740992-5064. ·Equal Housing
Oppottunmes.

Respiratory

VJ~Jtion. long - 1~rtn disability and .-ctircmcnt.
Scot • resumes lo:

Inc. $300 deposit, $375 per
monlh. No pets. No smok·
·ing. 740·446-2205 or 740· .,.,,..._ _ _ _ _ _.,

eo. ,

upp_rovc~

of an

Thcmpist program .. Must he registered ~rul
lii.:c nscd i-n the states of WV and Ohio. One or
·two years ofcxpericncc is prcfcrTcU .
Ex.ccllcnl salary. holidays. hcnlth insurance
singlc/furnily pfun. dental plan, life insurance.

J..--..;•.;.n;;K;.,R~EiiN",1;·--'

10

Respiratory Therapist Must he

•

.}ARI\-a
EQt III'MI:NT

2000 GMC J1mmy Blazer
$6.500: 2000 Chev ·S·10
B laze~ $6,500; 99 Dodge
8N Ford w/Grater 5 tt blade Durango $7,200: 2000 Chev.
$2.800. 9N Ford w/ 5 II . S-10 eJt. cab $5,500; 98
Brush Hog, $2 ,800; Ford Olds Bravada $3,900;95 ·
800 wf 5 ft . Brush hog Dodge ex. cab PU $2,500;
$4.500. Ph.(740)446-8554 . 96 Dodge work van $850: 00
Dodge Neon $2.600; 99
II{\ '\'-!I''IJN I \ 1111'\
Mazda $2,500; 98 Ford
Explorer ~as is~ $2,800; 96
10

w~ l

.

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

Til. l iC KS
toR SALt:

&amp;IIH,HtlK

in

. ·2 bedroom apts. 10 minutes Mason has openings for 2

Basemen!
Apt · Bulavdle Pk.
2
bath.
$600/mo . ..
$600 sec. dep.' Ut ilitieS
included
except
!rash.
Reterences
reqwred .

•'

•

A K 54

East

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

...

·Help Wanted
• \IHI St 1'1'111·."'1

The Valley Apts. lOcated

446-9565 ask lor V1rg1nia.

plea
41 Paycheck

11 Berlin
44 Tumpike
pr6noun
•rumblers
12 Slacken off 47 Hearth
13 Devers or
debris
Sheehy
51 On a
15 Pay din
rampage
16 Curb
52 Type of
17 Queue
interut
18 Some
·'" 55 Quil stalling
eclipses
56 Languish
20 Contains
57 Nesting site
21 Squea!"on
58 Which
23 Wrecker's
person
59 Roo1er"s
lob
24 Pitcher
goo
Nolan60 Fans' cries
27 Thorough· 61 Bribe

• Q 10 9
... !I 5 4 2

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

an E~ual
l'oslint.: da.te Septembrr 21, 2004

1bf'. Studio Apt. very clean,

•

875-2487

Is a Uru~.:·Frte Workplatl't tmd
Opportunity Employer• .

depos•t. Call 1740)992 -2274

"'Q6

Henderson, WV

Corn.•ctionull0atdlity

1 bedroom apt. utlhhes
n1ctude0. $450 month. $300

'·Appticahons be 1ng laken lor
~ery cfean 1 bedroom 1n
country sett1ng yel close to
town . Washer, dryer, slo ve.
lridge included . Water and
garbage included. Total electric with AC. Tenant pay elec·

MYERS

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds slart

Hrlng lhis coupon

M-Fri 8:30·5:00
Sat. 8:30-Nnnn

Spet· ializt~l Skills and 1\.nowltd~e: lias working knoM·Iedge and uperience
uith indi\ iduala~nd ~roup counselitl~. and l'U.'it' management or tnrrectional
p•lpUIUiillOS includin~ knnwll'flge or n;'lt'\'HDI correelionall'OUnseliR2, thfO·
ries, asst&gt;ss-ml'nli1Htls. specific le\'t'ls or corredion~l supen·ision rererral
sy~tem.~. :tnd se n ke deli,ery models of such.

Eagles

HINGOll71

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-'1'12-5553
Rl'Htockfrr,g fn It• Morll'l S11 flll.lJl'
"rtd Arll'r Mil rkl'l f'lu·IH

degret" in sudul M'Ork, psycbology, or
dnst;l_,. rt'lutt•d lil·ld. AtlelHit one year of su«essful work txl)ttitnce In menral
hculth, !'U hstu nc:e abuse', cnrrections. a rthtled neld within the til."'t five ~·ears.
Linm"u rc in guml standing. froHI the Ohio Coun:,elor und Social Worker ·
Unurd, Clhiu l)t'Jlnrtml'nt nr Akohol and llru1.1 Addiction Stonkes, or rt&gt;hlled
...nodcntialing huard prcfl•rn·d.l\tust hU\'e a vulid Ohio drh·er's license and~
J.:tlcM"i c1ri,·inR n ·c:ord.

or 740·446·6189.

Pomeroy

Whaley's Auto
Parts .

\\'ork Schedule: ;l'uesd11'' through Saturday· 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
llm1rl .~ sa lnr~· : $I VB 1m hour
·

-Mobile home lor rent in
Vinton. Reference! depos•t

Holzer
Hospital
!rom
$460/month. Pels allowed,
storgage un1ts ava1lable
(740)44 1-1 184 or (740)441 ·
0194 .

39 Comedian
-King
40 Kinen 's

8 Tax.

•nsie1e pets, (740)992·3194
:or 740-416-1354.

secur~t y

I Zoo staffer
4 Busboy 's
load

Alder

Applit•urlons may he ohrwintd from and reiUrned to SEPT!\ 8:00 a.m. lo
-1:00 P·"'·· l\londuy through Friday. or by visiting our 'ltehslte Ml
"" w.wptucbcf.org A complete job desuiplion is available for ~view.
The dt'udline rur I.IJlJtlicution ror tht~ posting Is Frlda~y Orrober 22, 2004.

Street, S350 plus depoSll, no

rushed,

Phillip

Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

"2 bedroom . remodeled
mobile home, all· electnc m
. Middleport. 645 Broaoway

686~

ACROSS

Correctional Facility
7 West 29 Drive

SEPTA

ro tl

�.

'

'
Page B6 • Th~ Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September.28, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.eom

MarsbaJJ hoping_ ·
to avoid first 0-4
start in 35 years, Bt

New group plans to push NASCAR toward diversity
BY MIKE HARRIS
Associated Press
An organization calling
itself the National Association
for Minority Race Fans has
set up a web site and is apparently planning protests at
some NASCAR Nextel Cup
races before the end of the
season.
The NAMRF has nulde
inqumes to officials in
Hampton, Ga., the home of
Atlanta Motor Speedway.
about the possibility of staging a protest during the week
of the Oct. 31 Bass Pro Shops
MBNA 500. There were also

indication&gt; the group might
hold a protest before the EA
Sports 500 at Talladega
Superspecdway on Sunday.
Bud Smith. chief of police
in Hampton. confi rmed the
NAMRF had contacted \he
city but said a permit for sllch
a protest would not be necessary. He said the orgunitatiun
wollld only need to register
with the cit y.
The .
web
si te .
www.namri'.C()Ill, i~ currently
for members only but will he
opened to the public on Oct.
I. The home page features a
clock counti ng down to its
public or~ning at midnight

Thursday. Behind the clock is
what is de&gt;nibed on the site
as a mission statement which
says the group's purpose is to
··create a safe race track environment wh'ile pursuing the
political. sol'ial &lt;\nd economic
eqllality of minority groups
and citizens who desire to
enjoy NASC AR events without racial bigotry."
."We strive to remove the
barriers of racial di ;crimination permitted hy NASCAR,
its sponsors and race teams,"
it &gt;ilitl ..
The home page also
includes
images ·of a
Confederate tlag. a person

wearing a white hood and
robe and a burning cro;s with
a car in the background, all
with titles like ''Entitled to
Damages" and "What We' re
Up Against" superimposed
over them.
There is also l)lention of a
documentary . film
and
NASCAR officials
said
Monday a film crew has
shown up unannounced at the
corporate headquarters of several team sponsors, asking to
speak with company officials.
A newspaper in· Clayton
County, Ga .. carried a story
last week about the planned
protest at Atlanta Motor

Speedway and quoteq a
Dallas attorney, Phillip W.
Offill Jr., as the group's
spokesman. A call to Offill by
The Associated Press on
Monday was not returned.
NASCAR
spokesm'\m
Ramsey Poston said Monday
the NAMRF has not contacted the stock car sanctioning
organization , which is currently involved in two major
efforts to foster diversity in
the sport..
·
"NASCAR represents 75
million fans from all across
America and we don't think
that fan base can be painted
with any one broad brush,"

Poston said. "We think we
have shown that we want to
make the sport more diverse
off and on. the track and we
are ready and willing to speak
to anyone on the issue of
diversity." _
Poston acknowledged that
there are· Confederate flags
often displayed in and around
the tracks where NAS CAR
races, but noted that" such
things are a "fre~ speech
issue."
.
"What we can say is that
you won't see one in any area
controlled by NASCAR," he
said. " .. . I can't take the flags
out of people's hands.

Walker, Cubs blast Reds, 12-5 Tribe crowns Royals, 6-1
BY NANCY ARMOUR
Associated Press
CHICAGO - Todd Walker
loves playing pressure bas~ball
this time of year.
Walker went 3-for-4 with a
walk, a two-run homer and four
RBis on Monday night, helpin,g
the Chicago Cubs extend the1r
slim lead in the NL wild-card
race with a 12-5 victory oyer
the Cincinnati Reds.
· "This is a lot of fun tor me:
For everybody, really," Walker
said. 'The playoff atmosRhere
brings out the best in you.
With six games left, Chicago
is a game ahead of San
Francisco in the wild-card
standings. Houston, which beat
St. Louts 10-3 Monday. is I 1/2
b"5~e'd feel a lot better if San
Francisco and Houston were
abo11t five games back," Walker
said. "The good thing is we
don't have to worry about what
theY. do. lf :-ve wi~ these next six
games, we re m.
·
·Corey Patterson, Derrek Lee
. and Jose Maeias also connected, and Nomar Garciaparra was
3-for-3 with a walk and a pair of
RBls. Carlos Zarnbnmo ( 16-8)
won his fourth straight decision,
allowing one run and five hits
while striking out seven in 6 13 innings.
The . Reds tagged Todd
Wellemeyer for four runs in the
ei~th. including Adam Dunn's
4:frd homer. Dunn also struck
out in the first inning, leavin&amp;
him four shy of Bobby Bonds
single-season mark of 189.

Walker made the playoffs for
the tirst time in his nine-year
career last season, coming up
big tot the Boston Red So.x as
thev took the New York
Yankees to seven games in the
AL championship selies. He hit
.349 in the playoffs and became
the tirst Boston player to hit five
homers in a postseason.
Walke~ enjoyed the playoffs
so much he passed on startm~
jobs elsewhere to sign wit
Ch1cago. Now the Cubs are
hoping he' ll help them in their
quest for their tirst back-to-buck
postseason appearances smce
190~ _ the last time they won.
a World Series.
To get there, the Cubs are
going to need more nights like
tl1is fmm their offense. Alter
mana~ing just seven mn' in
· their mree-game series with the
Mets, the Cubs jumped on
Brandon Claussen (2-7) early:
. Garciaparra got it staned with
a two-run double off the wall in
center in the first, tmd the Cubs
chased Claussen with live runs
in the founh. Walker stroked an
RBI single up the middle. and
Michael Barrett made it 4-1 on
a fielder's choioe. Two batters
later, Patterson hit a two-run
homer to right. Lee followed

with a solo homer into the bush-· •
es in center, gi ving Chicago a 7· runs in a 7-41oss.
BY Douo TUCKER
1 lead.
"Like I said last time. tlie
Associated Press
"I diun 't think the pitch to
bullpen has beeh great for
Pauerson was that bad a pitch."
"
me all year," said Greinke,
Claussen said. "He .must have
KANSAS CITY, Mo.
who threw I 00 pitches.
been looking . middle-in. But
Casey Blake figured luck
''I'm more confident in
that pitch to Lee. anyone could
came to the Cleveland
them coming in than .in me
have hit that pitch out.''
Indi ans twice Monday
staying in."
After Claussen walked
night.
·
Cleveland . added four
Aramis Ramirez, John Riedling
break
was
getrun
s in th e ninth off Jeremy
Their
first
relieved and finally ended the
Zack
Greinke
out
of
Affeldt
on run-scoring sinting
inning, retiring M01ses Alou on
. the game after the rookie
•
gles by .Omar Vizquel, Ben
a popup. Claussen gave up
had shut them out for seven
Jaime
Cerda l ( l-3 i Broussard and Blake, and a
severi tuns and seven hits, last· inning s. The s'e cond was relieved Greinke with a 1-0 double by Martinez.
ing just 3 2-3 innings as he lost
his fourth straight decision.
Kansas City (57-99) must
Blake's two-run single off lead in the eighth, and
The Cubs weren't done,
· D.J. Carrasco in the eighth Cleveland loaded the bases win its final six games to
either. Walker hit a two-run
that triggered a come-from- when Grady Sizemore sin- avoided tying the franchise
homer in the lifth and singled to
behind 6-1 victory over the gled, Omar Vizquel walked record of 100 losses, set
drive in another run in the sixth.
and Victor Martinez was· two years ago.
Kansas City Royal s.
The four RBls were a season
- "Greinke was tough. He hit by a pitch. Carrasco
Greinke gave up four
high for Walker, one shy of his
changes
speeds
real
well,"
then
relieved
and
Blake
hits
; struck out five and
career best.
Blake said. " We were glad singled for a 2-1 lead.
walked two. He has one
"When you jump out to a lead
to see him get out of the
" It was a slider down. It more start to become the
like that, it's nice to keep piling
on the runs." Walker said.
ga me.''
probably wasn't a strike , _first Kansa s City rookie
While the Cubs were beating
Jake Westbrook (14-9) but thank God he threw me since 1992 with nine wins.
up on Cincinnati's pitchers,
" I will noi pitch this kid .
gave up Of!e run and five a slider," Blake said. "He
Zambrano was shutting down
hits in seven innings for the dropped down· and threw a too many ptiches, there 's
the Reds' hitters. He gave up
Indians, lowering hi s ERA 93-mile-an-hour sinker and no way I'm going to
onlv one extra-base hit and
to 3.28, third in the I barely got a piece of it, change- right now so late in
retired seven straight at one
·.American
League behind just enough to knock it out the season," said Royals
point. Cincinnati got its only
Minnesota's
Johari Santana of the catcher 's glove. You . manager Tany p ena. · "I
run off him in the fourth, when
(2.62) and Boston 's Curt get lucky in thi s game from . want to count on thi s kid
D'Angelo Jimenez scored from
Schilling (3.26).
time to time ."
for next year and many
first on Austin Kearns' double
to deep left -center.
"That' s very good comIt 's the fourth time the years to come."
Bartelt almost got Jimenez ·at
Pany,'' sai d Westbrook, 20-year-old Greinke . has
DeJe sus , recalled from
the plate, but Garciaparra's
who matched Greinke until been removed while pitch- Triple-A Omaha to be th.e
relay throw bounced at least
David, DeJesus homered ina a shutout. The Royal s everyd·ay center fielde.r
twice and Jimenez barreled
leading off the · sixth. " It's . ha~e their prized rookie on after
All-Star
Carlos
over Barrett, knocking the ball'
nice
to
be
mentioned
in
the
a
strict
pitch
limit.
In
his
Beltran
was
traded
on
June
free.
sa me breath With those previous start at Tampa,. he . 24, ha s scored 22 run s in
"One dow11, six to go," Cubs
guys.
It 's an honor to be left with a 4-2-read only to hi s last 29 games.
manager Dusty Baker said. "A
there
."
see the bullpen give up five
right
very good game."

'

and 14 kills; Cassie Lee was se~:en kiUs arid two blocks in a
8-10 serving with 5 .poims; 32-37 night spiking. Williams
Samantha Cole was 11 - 12 also had four aces, and a great
from Dage 81
'fith 4 points. and · 14 kills, ·passing game for Southern . .
with ten solo blocks.
The Southern reserves fell
Renee
Bailey
was
1717
to
Meigs in two .sets 25-10
on to a 25-19 triumph.
· Justine Dowler the Meigs serving with 10 points, and 12 and 25-1 7. Meigs is 11-1
Libero, played a great back kills. Joey Haning . had 29 overall at the· reserve level. A.
row and was credited with assists; Erin Cullums was 9- Barr led Meigs with 17 points, ·
outstanding defense. Dowler 11 serving with five points L. Preece · had nine , for the
had many digs that took the and 9 assists. while Brittany winners, and Vining had
sting out of near-perfect Hysell had 4 kills, and six seven. For Southern. Adelle
·
Rice had five, · Stephanie
Southern serves. Meghan blocks.
Overall, Meigs had 47 kills Cundiff seven; and Amber
Leslie also played a great
· Hill six. ·
and
16 blocks.
back· row, along with teamIn
setting,
Southern's
Meigs, goes to Vinton
mate Whitney Thoene, who
was credited with outstanding Bethany Riffle was 32-37 County Tuesday and to
with two aces and was 13-15 Eastern Thursday.
defense.
On October 23 at Wellston,
The Meigs serving was out- passing. Ashley Roush' was
:?6-32
passing
with
a
block;
Meigs
plays Marietta in the
_standing, as the Marauders
A
pounded out · 86-92 serves Brooke Kiser was 29-32 pass- Sectional Tournament.
Meigs
win
would
pit
ing
and
50-52
setting
with
two
the
~verall to keep Southern on its ·
toes throughout the contests. sets for kilh: and Jordan Marauders against the winner
Emily- Ashley was 21-21 Neigler was 20-20 spiking of the Athens-Northwest
game.
serving, with 13 points, and 3 with five blocks ..
Kristiina Williams led th.e
Souihern . hosts Federal
kills; Megan Games was 20Southern
spiking
core
·with
Hocking
Tuesday.
~1 serving, with 13 pointS,
'
'

Meigs

.

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
}ttll'\1"•\ol

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County...

'

SPORTS
• Reds hamper Cubs. See
. Page 81

.

Meigs Band qualifies for state finals

.

. OBITUARIES
·Page A5
·
:• Mildred J. Jacobs
.• William Fox

LoTI'ERIES
Ohio

West Vu:ginia

gency declaration applies
only to public property."
The declaration from Gov.
POMEROY - ·A puhlic Boh Taft made last week
damage asse ssment team qualifies local governments
from the Federal Emergency for a 50-percent match for
Management Agency will repairs from. the Clhio
meet with township trustees Etnergency
Management
and village · officials on Agency. but does not assist
Wednesday to begin the homeowners or small busiprocess of assessing and · ness owners in repairing their
repairing damage from the homes or replacing inventory
Sept. 18 flood .
lost in the tlood . Byer said he
The meeting will be held at 9 expects a state of emergency
a.m. at the Meigs County declaration lrom President
Counhouse Annex, according
George W. Bush. which
to Emergency Management wou ld make assistance availDiretor Robert Byer. A tour of
areas affected by the flooding able to private property ownwill follow. Byer said reported ers who suffered losses. .
damage to public roads, · A . tede ra l declaratiOn
bridges, 'culverts &lt;Uld inf(astruc- __would also l,~ssen the burden
ture has exceeded $1 million. A of re~mr costs to townshtps
repon outlining damage from and VIllages. Several count1es
local governments was submit- aflected by both Hurrtcanes
ted to the state on Friday he Frances and Ivan have been
said, but the estimates are only declared federal dtsaster
preliminary, and may go higher areas. Byer smd. .
as the assessment begins.
Byer said at least45 homes
"That doesn' t co unt . any sustained "major damage" in
damage to private property," the flood, and at least .six
Byer said. "The state emer- · were destroyed.

Dally 3: 7-5-0
Dally 4: 1-Q-5-6

cash 2s: 1-2-5-9-18-21

WEATHER

Kathy Goble, LS.W. (right) employee at the Meigs Senior Genter
discusses. heating assistance programs with Jean Thomas of
Pomeroy. Goble assists residents of all ages in property filling out
forms for energy assistance programs offered through the Ohio
Department of Development. (Beth Sergentjphoto)

Calend;us

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6
B7

Dear Abby

.A3

Editorials

Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

B1

Weather

AB

© 2004 Ohto Volley Publishing Co.

Assistance available
for heating your home
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM
POMEROY
With
autumn's arrival comes the
changing
of
leaves ,
Thanksgiving dinner and
higher utility bills.
Many people dread cooler
weathe( because of the added
expense of heating their
homes. Individuals on a fixed

income ·suc h as the elderly.
lind it difficult tO stay warm
without running out of
money to pay the utility company. However, if you meet
certain income requirement s
there is help out there. ·
The Ohio Department of
Development offers several programs to help low-income
Please see Heatins. AS

. The Meigs Marauder Band directed by Toney Dingess returned fr-om competition at Logan Elm
near Circlevil le with three large trophies and w:ns enough to qualify for state finals. The percussion section took a first while band and flag guard took second places. Th is Saturday ,at
noon the band will compete in the Athens contest. (Charlene Hoeflich /photo)

-------

Foundation an·nounces Meigs'High
School scholarship recipients
POMEROY
Three
Meigs High School graduates
have been selected as the first
reCipients
of
Bachtel
Scholarships awarded from a
$700,000 endowed fund established with the Foundation
For Appalachian Ohio by the
late Dr. Harry Keig.
The scholarship' will be
given annually to graduates
of Meigs High School. Dr.
Keig established the endowment to recognize the teachers who influenced his life.
Thi s year's scholarship
recipients are Jayne Davi s, a
freshman at Ohio Valley
College; Oayton Stone. a
freshman at the University of
Rio Grande ; and Erica Poole,
a freshman at the University"
o'f Cincinnati.
Keig set aside S500,000 of
the ovemll bequest to create this
scholarship fund in honor of
Forest, Bachtel , his teacher·and
coach when he was a student at
Middleport High School.
He grew up to be a successfu l surgeon ·in Nebraska, but
he never forgot Bachtel's
dedication as a teacher and
hi s strength in livin g with
Lou Gherig 's disease for
more than 20 years.
This fund represents the
largest private scholarship gift
ever designated to benefit gr'dduates of Meigs High School. ·
"It just doe sn't happen
every day." said principal ,
Dennis Eichinger. He recognized the benefit of Keig's
·affiliation to hi s home region.
"We were very fortunate to
have someone with such a
strong feeling about his high
school and the people in it,"

'

'

·I

~all~l~ Dailp Otribune
'

I

·• ~oint- -lt•ant l\tut•ttr
• the·Daily Sentinel

446-2342
. 675-1333
992-2155
I

Advertising Deadline- Sept. 30. 2004

..

.shopping with local vendors. particularly in light of the November closing
of the Pomeroy Kroger store.
The loss · in sales tax collections.
along with a freeze in state and local
grwernrnent revenue and the collection of pe rsonal property tax from the
Southern Oh io Coal Company's
Meig s Mine.1 . which closed in 2000,
forced commissioners to impose two
acros s-t he-board cu·ts in annual
appropnations to county offices.

BY BRIAN J. REED
'BREED@MYDAtlYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

'·

cent sales tax, but tor the ftrst time siuce
Local officials have interpreted the
March , saw a decline in collections this · upward w il ed ion trend as a sign of
month. This month's payment was better times ahead. Except for
POMEROY - Meigs County's sur- $101.924.06, compared to $120.775.8~ September, only January anu March
plus in sales tax collections for 2004 last September. Collections of sales tax showed sales tax collect ion qeficits
took a $20.000 cut in September, tun two months behind.
when compared to 2003 figures .
according to figures released by the
According to the state. June collecCounty Economic Developm'l!nt
Ohio Depanment of Taxation. The tions reflected im increase in collec- Director Perry Varnadoe said in June
reduction in collections compared to a tion of back sales tax which was the increase in tax revenue is likely
year ago \.eaves the county $30,500 recovered due to a new electron ic col- the sign of an improvi ng national
above collections last year.
lection s process . In June, the county economy, but also a sign of an
The county has enjoyed a live-month collected nearly $30.000 more than it iiKrcase in visitors to the county and
inc\ease in collections of its one-per- had in June. 2003.
a new awareness of the importance of ·

with ·local officials

2 SECI'IONS- 16 PAGES

Senior Citizens'""'
up 65% of the tott.u.,
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contactyour
Advertising
.
Repr(!sentative.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

INDEX

Odoher 8, 2004 .

\\\\\\.111\(l.tih-.t·••luu·l.tottt

Sales tax collections down in September

FEMA to meet

DeUHa on Pa&amp;o AB

,

\\l · ll'\1~1)\\ . SII'II\IBIR:.!II».:.!OOf

l.l. '\o . .!h

Plek 3 day: 2-8-1
Plek 4 clay: 4-8-8-3
Plc:k 3 night: 6-3-4
Pick 4 night: 6-4-:8·6
Buckeye 5: 4-12-14-2Q-33 ·

·sucks

but don't end with rookie quar- became clear that Tressel was
terback Justin Zwick. The just trying to hang on offensophomore has hit on some big · "sively as the clock ·melted
plays - 80-, 47- and 20-y&lt;!fd away.
from Page 81
scoring paS&gt;es while throwing
"We wanted to seize the
lor 318 yards ag&lt;Jinst Marshall momentum and the tempo of
room"- the Buckeyes' inabil- - but ha~ also been erratic in the game," Tressel said. "But
ity to move the ball.
both his passing and hi~ deci- when you're in a slugging'
Some of that criticism is sion-makmg.
·
match against a good team.
borne out by !he numbers. Ross
"It's definiteJy frustrating," establishing the tield position
gained 141 yards on 17 carries Zwick said. "You want to be of a championship bout is
m the opener agamst able to move the ball up and important. I felt we did a fairly
Cincinnati. In the two games down the tield every game but decent job of that."
since, he has matched that 141 you know it's not always going
Zwick has a solid grip on the
&gt;"ards - on 49 carries.
to happen that way so you take quarterback job even though
: Ohio State enters Big .Ten the good with the bad."
Troy Smith ha' not really had a
play ranked 84th of the 117 . At some point, the lack of fair chance to feature his tal·feams in Division 1-A in rush- production cannot be justified ents. The Buckeyes figure to
ing, 80th in total offense and by another narrow win. That's improve at fullback as Branden
tied for 92nd in turnover mar- the point Tressel wa' making in Joe recovers from an ankle
his "just" 3-0 comment. The injury.
ginNick Man&amp;old is literally the right instep of kicker Mike
Ro~s. however, may soon be
i:enter of Oh10 State's offense, Nugent and the Buckeyes' · splitting time with someone,
llO he has some ~rspecti ve on rock.-hard defense can only be possibly freshman Antonio
What's Wrong Wtth the anemic expected to carry the team so Pittman. There are some rumiunning ~arne.
blings that Pittman might be
far.
.
: "I don t think you can blame
So much for "Just win, doing_ more than sharing the
it on one thing - either the baby." . .
pos1t1on.
running back or the offensive
Some point the blame at the
Pittman has been schooled in
line or the play calling," he coaches. They say the the offense since graduating
said. "It's just one little thing Buckeyes arc far too pre- early from Akron Buchtel to
that didn't happen the right dictable on offense (then aeain, join the Buckeyes tor spling
way that really hinders you as that's a common comr.laint · practice. He has shown a
you try to run the baiL Not hav- whenever the team doesn t win propensity for breaking tackles
mg that one thing kills the play. every game by, oh, I 00 points). &lt;UJd finding daylight - skills
It's a group thing. You can t put
lh the 22-14 win over North that Ross' critics say he does
it all on one guy."
· Carolina State ·on Sept. 18. it not have on his resume.
Ohio State's struggles start

Wmslowout ·
for season, B4

•

+.

Clayton Stone

he said . 'The scholarship creates an opportunity for 'tudents to continue their ed ucation and have hope ."
According to Eichinger.
Keig's generosity also had a
significant impact on the
teachers at the high schooL "I
think all. e ucators are in this
professi
c~use they want .
to help eople." he said.
"This is t e perfect examp le
of somco e who felt stron gly
about
educators. It gives
all .us hope that we can and
d make a difference ."
..es lie Lilly, President and
C 0 of the Foundation for
A alachian Ohio. agreed,
say ng that the Foundation is
pie- sed to work with donors
to elp make these scholarsh· s poss ible for local students. "Increasing access to ·
higher education is a key issue
in our region," she said. "Dr.
Keig's generosity is making '
cullege a more attainable reality for students at Meigs High
School, both now and many _

Jayne Davis

years into the futu re."
Thi's year. two of tlie schol arship&gt; were given in recognition of athletic accomplishments and one for academic
excellence. Each scholarship
recipient received $2.500
toward college expenses at
the i1htitution in which he or
Please ,see Melp. AS

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