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                  <text>•

Volcano gets a big
crowd, but no one kriows
when it'll blow, A2

e

Library to auction four
RockWell paintings, A5
~·

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.SPORTS
• Mayle delivers as
Bobcats stun Kentucky.
See Page 81

FE·MA begins approving Meigs assistance
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYOAILYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY , The Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency is considering at least
34 applications for home
repairs since Meigs Cou nty
was added to a federal disaster declaration on Thursday.
FEMA announced the
approval of $4.589 in housing
assistunce gmnts to 13 Meigs
Coumy applicants on Friday.

Those grants will be used to
provide repairs to flood-damaged and uninsmed home s
and for H!mporary disaster
rental assistance.
Meigs '
Emergency
Management Director Roben
Byer said last week six homes
were totally destroyed in the
flash tloocling which deves[at·
ed areas of Meigs County on
Sept. 18 and 19. FEMAadded
Meigs to a li st of 18 Ohio
counties eli gible for individ-

ual flood damage a"islancc.
making flood victims eligib le
fnr cash f{Jr hom&lt;' rcpai.rs and
other tlood -relaled nee ds ,
incltJding n1edical and dental
expenses, per,onal property
repair and unemployment
benefits .
FEMA has awarded ~6 mi llion lo tluud victim' aero""
'southern Ohio who have lo't
propeny as the resuli of fl ooding from Hurricane\ Charley.
France s and Ivan. including

more than $1 million 'in
Bclmom County and $1 million in Washington County.
Athens. Ga llia and Vinton
Counties are also in cluded in
tile declaration.
Byer said at lea't 46 Meig'
County homes suffered sumc
de gree of damage in the flood.
Small business owner' who
suffered property damage and
lost inventory in the flood will
also qualify for loan funds
through the Small Busine"

Adminiqration because of the
federal declaration.
Dwnage to pub I ic roads,
bridge1 and infrastructure in
the flood h'"· topped $2 mil·
Iron according to preliminary
estimates. Bver 'aid. The
federal disasier declaration
11 ill increase the reimburse·
rnent to ihe county. town&gt;hip
and 1·illagcs to 75 percent,
and
Meigs
C!Junty

!

•

Please see FEMA. AS

Gilmore finds big suprise left by flood Kennedy Day Dinner
1

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOE FUC H@MYDA ILY~ ENTJ NEL _COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
•Ira Eblin
• James Fisher

Page 32

Pomeroy • ·Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Bob Evans Farm Festival

Your family depends on you.
·You ;d epend on your vehicle.
And you can depend on us to ...

•

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Get Genuine Ford and Lincoln Mercury Parts and
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INSIDE
• VA: Ex-POWs with heart
attacks, strokes no longer
must prove link to captivity
to get coverage.
See Page A2
• O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital to offer health
screenings.
See Page A3
• State's lowest paid
workers don't qualify for
unemployment
See Page AS

POMEROY - Did you
lose a log·'
Jim Gilmore is looking for
the ow ner of a huge log
which floated in with tile
recent flood and now occu·
pies space in a lot across
from his home on Laurel
C liff Road.
It \ reall y big - like more
than 4 feet in diameter. and
about 15 feet long. It has no
branches anJ appears to have
been readied by someboJy to
be spl it into boards. It arrived
on Gilmore\ lot with the
hi gh wa!er from Willow
Creek apparently ha•v ing
trave led Jownstream with the
swifi cu rrent.
A surprise to Gilmore wa.s

Please see Log. AS

_

..

Jim Gilmore stands beside the ~uge log which came in with the
infamous flood of 2004 (Charlene Hoefiic h/photol

Men's health screening
held at health department

Pat Lang of Albany. Democratic cand1date for the Ohio House
of Representatives. chats w1th David. Jessie and Clarence
Might, all of Middleport, and Democratic Party Chairman Sue
Maison, far right at Saturday's Kennedy Day D1nner. Lang was
one of several Democratic candidates who spoke at the din·
ner. where Chlllico;he Mayor Joe Sulzer spoke on behalf oi the
Kerry;Edwards trcket. 1Bri~n J. Re(!d/photo)

Riverfest attracts crowd making event a success

'i~lij
~_:

WEATHER

. Connie Litt le, R.N. from the Meigs County Health De partm ent
goes ove r the results of Jack Shiftlet's exam ination during the
Men's Hea lth Screening. The screening is held once a year for
men of every income. (8eth Sergent;photo)
BY BETH SERGENT

$

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~FREE Multi-point Inspection

Oil and
filter change

I

Systems/components inspected include:

Up to five quarts of genuine Motorcraft" oil. Taxes, disposal fees and diesel
vehicles extra. If applicable. See Service Advisor !or·details. Offer valid with
coupon. Expires 11 ·30·04.
.·

1
1

See Service Advisor for details. Offer valid with coupon. Expires 11·30·04.

..... • ..... • .. • ............... _: ....... - ... .. ............... - ............................ L ............... • ...... .., .. ............. • ................... - ....................... ..

"

Buy 3 tires and get the 4th one FREE!:
Mounting,

halann~s

and taxes extra.

Free offer valid on select Dealer-installed, retail pur(hased
General tires only, limit one per (Ustomer. • Ameri•G4S
Pl05/65RI5, maxi'!'um rebate of $46.95 by mail:· Ameri:GS60
P21$/70R15, maxtmum rebate of $59.95 by mall • Amentra(
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.
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I

$

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12

Calendars

• Tire Depth
• Brake system
• Exhaust system
• Fluid levels
• Engine cooling syst~m hoses and clamps

.95 Oil and
filter change

,
.
: • Genuine Motorcraft· oil and filter (hange ; Rotate and
: in sped all four tires • Inspect brake system • Test battery
1 • Che(k air and (abin air filters • Top off aU fluids.
•
'1
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.

BSERGENT@M'TOAILYSENTlNEL .COM

Classifieds

POMEROY ·- Tl1e Meigs
County Health De.partrnent
PALF.S
its annual health screen"
A3 held
ing last week for men of all
B3-4· income level;. · including
those with and wi th out insur-

Bs
A3
A4
As

Comics

ance. ·

The screening included
prostate exams complete with
correspondin g blood work to
Editorials
measure PSA levels . There
were also colo-rectal cancer
Obituaries
screening"' anU eU u c~tLiunal
material' provided on variou'
B1 . cancers
Sports
that :!ITect men .
Bonni
e McFarland of
Weather
A6 Holzer Medical
Center and
r{) 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Andy
Brumfield.

Dear Abby

.......

•

Cardrovasculm
Car~
Coordinator at the Meig,
County Health Department·
abo did body fat ana ly, i.s and
Boats of every size ·and shape dropped anchor at the Pomeroy R1 verfront for Riverfest. •
body mass indexes.
(seth
Sergent( photo)
· The
· Men's
HeHith
Screening has become an
BY BETH SERGENT
Cheryl Thomas and Jane , 1ng lot's ga1ebos knowing
annual evcnt"- at the Meig:-.
BS£RGENT@~WSDAILYSEt~.TlN£L.CQM
Bank.., nf S\'racu..,e \\Or~t&gt;d that I\\ u ''' eek.·~ ago it was
Heath Department. This year
: the
Pomei·ov
Ri1·crfe,1 alrn&lt;ht .:ompletely Sl\·allowed .
40 men signed up for the
POMEROY A !Jr~e Committee leni se l lin~ tiL'keh whole I" the Ohio River.
screening and 40 men showed crowd ~athered a l on~ die fp r the stern\\heekr~ 'cruiscs
Mu,,·n and Counc'ilman
up to create a 100'/r turnout riverfrorli as a te,lamcnt to and ,·omrnemoratiw ·T-slrirts . Geor~e Wri!!ht helped· collect
accordin'g to Courtney Sims. both
the
con ununity\ The) both agrc'Cd tl1at ·the the "inning rubber ducks
Meig'
County
Heal th resiliency after the 11oocL and crowd ,ecmed ,tcadicr than fr,,m the ' Rubber Ducky
Department
Assistant someth ing to do in Pomeroy las t year ancl thai th~ ·c1·en1 D~rh\ srmhored b) the
Administra tor.
· on a Saturda' ni~lll .
had · ~one smot&gt;th .
Pomero\
\1erchant' s
Dr. James Witherell from I Fr(Hll the ·rowd ine.ss of the
PomeroY 1\1:1\or Johil .A.:-. . . oci.ttion .
Holzer Clinic. and Dr. Men·, Se" Lee conte~t to till' VltL'Ser al~o "har~Li the "so · Firs! pltll·e "ent to Dennis
Douglas Hunter who is in pri - llrcworb pL·oplc nrrn~d out to far. "' ~ood" &gt;entime nL D' ,.\ngelo. a S~OO l '. S. savvate practice in Racine. han .. enjoy \\hat the Stern\\ heel ~1u;,er said he"'" arn a1cd lo
· see Screen Ing, AS
Fe&gt;tival had to oiler.
slanu in frnn t of nne I he p;ul PI ease
.

Please see Rlverfest, A6 '

Bring -Home More Bacon!

Up to five quarts uf genuine Motorcraft• oil. Taxes and '-·
• See Service
i for details. Offer valid with

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sav1ngs Company

Certific,te of Deposit Rates

"'

MERCURY .

'

IS Month CD: Z.6SCM. • Z.69Mt AP'f
40 Mo11th CD: J.9SCM. • 4.0~ APY

mum of S J 0.000 to open the Mrount and Obtifin the dnnuifl pchentllge y1t'ld (AP'r'l wh1Ch rJ &lt;4CCur.tte &lt;15 of Octobt•r I , 1~ SubstttntJit/
petMity for f'&lt;ftly wlthc1rifw;tl. Advt&gt;rtfn.•d Mte is rn'itlli!bk''unrtl the t"nd of buflf)C.H d&lt;ty Ocrobcv 15 1004

-~·------

•

·-·

.__

J

+

blr Bank {M/i# ...
•
•
•
•

P9meroy 992.2136
Mason 773.6400
Tuppers Plains 6~:3161
Gallipolis · 4462265

• www.fbsc.com

.~ ·
· Member FDIC.

..

�'
.

•

The Daily Sentinel

AROUND' THE NATION

Volcano gets a big crowd, but no one knows when it'll blow
DAVID AMMONS
ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER

'

MOUNT ST. HELENS
NATIONAL MONUMENT,
Wash. ( AP) - Mount St.
Helens stewed in volcanic
gases and low-level earthquakes Sunday. with crowds
of eager tourists hoping to
glimpse an eruption that scientists said could hap'pen
immediately or take a few
weeks.
A second long tremor
early
Sunday
and
an

PageA2

VA: Ex-POWs with .

Community Calendar

heart attacks, strokes no
longer must prove link to
captivity to get coverage

Public meetings

.

....

SpaceShipOne a flight away
from claiming $10 million XPrize

.

Page 1\.;3

BYTHE BEND

Monday, October 4,

\

Tuesday, Oct. 5
CHESTER
Cbester
Council #323, Daughters 9f
America, will have a regular
meeting and inspection at 7
p.m. on Tuesday at the hall.
Members are to wear white.
MIDDLEPORT
- T)le
Middleport
Community
Assocation will meet at 8:30
a.m. at People' s Bank.
- MlDOLEPORT
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#163, F&amp;AM, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. at temple. All
Master Mason s invited.

Monday, Oct. 4
RACINE- Racine Village
Council will meet at 7 p.m. at
the municipal building.
LETART- FALLS- Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
office buildi.ng.
POMEROY
Meig s
County Board of Elections.
regular monthly meeting.
8:30 a.m., board office.
Columbia
ALBANY Township Trustee&amp;, regular
meeting,
, 7:30
p.m. ,
Town ship
ColuJllbia
Wednesday, Oct. 6
Firehouse .
_
MIDDLEPORT
The
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustee' will meet Middleport Literary Club will
at 7 p.m. at Syracuse village meet at 2 p.m . at the home of
Leah Ord. Gay Perri,n will
hall.
review "Four Spirits" by
Sena
Jeter Naslund.
Wednesday, Oct. 6
PAGpVILLE
- The
Scipio Township Trustees
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
Pageville town hall.
Sunday, Od. I 0
POMEROY
The
Thursday, Oct. 7
c
1
Ch h · c
POMEROY
-. Public ar eton
urc ot ounty
·
d'
h . ·.
Road 18. Pomeroy' will have
.~eetmg to_ tscuss t e. lnttta- its annual homecoming with
ttve pet1t1on campa1gn to, d.
.
. d . .· 1
brin full h , lth ..
t0 . 11 1nn~r .at noon: an . spec1a
. .g
ea . care
a · serv1c es at I: 30 p.m.
ltvmg and workmg m Oh10
RUTLAND
The
and bnng E.R. and med1cal R 1 d Ch h 0 f Ch . t . 11
transportation services to
ut an
. urc _
ns .WI
Meig s C~ty, 7 p.m .. celebrat~ 1ts 17,5th anmverPomeroy Liqrary. Contact sary :vuh a homecomm!l.
Bob Smiddie, 698J34!5 or Worsh1p and commumon will
Linda Dye, 698-6050.
begm at 9:30a.m., a carry-m
dmner will be held at noon,
and afternoon services will
follow at 2 p.m. with special
music by the Gabriel Quartet.

Homecomings

Clubs and
organizations

Church services

Monday, Oct. 4
POMEROY - A meeting
Tuesday, Oct. 5
of · Meigs County Garden
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
Club members will be held at
7 p.m. in the meeting room at services will be held at 7:30
p.m. nightly through OcL 10
the Pomeroy Library.

•

Qther events

at the Middleport Wesleyan
Bible Hoi iness Church, 75
Pearl St.. Middleport. The
Saturday, Oct. 9
Rev. Tom Bell will be the
SYRACUSE
Tbe
speaker and there will be specia l sing ing each night. 1\&gt;r CarletoQ . . Schooi/Meig;
more informaton call Rev. Industries will be spon,oring
rRck Bourne, 992-2001.
their 2nd· Annual Community
, Olympics from 8:.30 a.m. to 4
• Friday, Oct. 7 ·
p_m. It is a fundraiser for.
CARPENTER - Revival . Marvin Cooper who is batservi ces will be conducted at iling cancer. Call 992-6681 to
6:30 p.m. through Oct. I0 at register a team by Oct. I.
th e Union Baptist Ghurch
near Carpenter. Dr. David
Tuesday, Oct. 5
Rahamut, founder of World .....
Christian
Outreach
POMEROY -Evening
Ministries and pastor of the . clinic._ at Meig s County
End-Time Har~est Church in Health Department. 4 to 7
Jackson will be preaching. p.m., otfering childhood and
Formerly of .Trinidad, Dr. adult immunizutions from I
Rah~mut . was converted .to- to 7 p.m .. blood pressure
Chnstlamty
from . the mew.urements. WIC, parental
Mosiem f~llh. There w11! be services and vital statist ics
spec 1al s1ngers. · Pastor IS information , head lice screenDavid Wiseman, 742-2568.
ing' and eradication education, environm~ntal health
Friday, Oct. 8
COOLVILLE
Fall awointments. answers to
at
Carthage other general health-releated
revival
Community Church. 7 p.m. questions. ' Information at
Friday and Saturday. . Pastor 992-6626.
David Fields and Builders
Quartet on Friday, Pastor
Sam Anderson and 16 yearold accordian and piano
Monday, Oct. 4
player Andrew Prather on
POMEROY
- Holzer
Saturday. Information at
667-3593 or 667-0606. Center of Comprehensive
Church located on U.S. 50 Weight Loss support group
W., six miles from Cool Spot will meet from 6:30 to 7:30
570-A.
p.m. in Holzer Medical
Center
Education
and
,
Sunday, Oct. 10
Conference Center room&gt;
BIDWELL - A special AB. For more information
service will be held at the
Poplar Ridg,e Free Will cull, 446-5825.
Baptist. Church, 2 p.tn with
Friday, Oct. 8
Sincere of Huntington. W.
POMEROY Widow 's
Va. to provide the music .
For more information, call Fellow ship meets at noon at
KFC/Long John Sil.ver's.
John Elswick. 593 -7390.

.Babysitting grandma
discovers her son may
be playing around

DEAR ABBY: My slln.
'Will.'' is marri cJ 11 ith
three beautiful \: hildrcn .
One evening a fcv. wcc~s
ago. I baby -sc1l my grandchildren at their house . A
Dear
strange car ke[lt ' topping in
Abby
front of the h()u,c. and
when I wc11l to the winuow. it would drive off.
Will and hi s wife. "Eve:·
both work . He returned
before she did. and 1 left. do with a' ,h·e ( &lt;&gt;I he I
However.' 1 \\il"' ~u . . picioll~ . v. i~he . . . The que..,tinn )Oll
so 1 drove up the ,treet must a'k yotlrsclf is. 11 h1ch
and parked in a dark area. is worth more to ) ,ou A !Cw minute' later. the the friend,llip or the je,wcl,·an an'" c·r
car pu lied up again. aod ry'' On I)' ·mu
1ily son ran out of the that.
hou~e and got into the car. · DEAR ABflY:· Referring
I drove slowl y hv the car !O the wo.man who 1s
and saw my son and a rcce1\ mg ..:hccb from her
strange &gt;yoman taJk,ing.
elder!) Aunt Millie.
Should 1 tell Eve \, hat
would suggc't that ;he
saw'! A few '):&gt;eople haYe contact Millie\ children or
told me to butt out. 1 someone who is in\ol,ed
strongl y suspect that he is Ill her da\·lo-dav lii'c
having an affair with this before cashing theni . Aunt
woman. What shou ld 1 do'' Millie ma\ not rem.:mher
WORRIED MOM IN that she ll c11 already sent a
MISSOURI '
. check. or ,he may bf arhi DEAR WORRIED MOM : trarily sending checks •u
Talk to your son. Give him numerous people and chari a chance to explain. Warn tie, .
·
him about how much he
Sonieone closer ma) he
has to Iose if he " able _to tell the \Hiler tu
in volved
with
another relax. enjoy the monc: and
v..oman nr doing something just thank Annt !\lillie . m
illegal. But do NOT carry appreciate . being alerted to
tales to your daughter-in- monitor he r chcckbuok &gt;l nd
law wi thout first talk i'l12 to keep an eye uu t for uther
prob]tms . that ma: need to
vnnr son - if then. '
· . DEAR ABBY: About four be addressed .
Gill-gi"ving " often a
year~
ago. a. woman I
\Vay
of ~ t aying in touch or
know. "Cathy:· gave me a
heaut iful matching rin g and :-.eeking more L'Ulltad ThL'
bracelet.. She told me at th~ niece and her children
time that she wuldn't wear might write. call or 1isit
them because the y were Aunt Millie more often anJ
too ' mall . Cathv 'aid she give her the gift of their
SYBLE
time .
variety of other life experi- knew I lo,·ed jewelry and ,&lt;;OLOMO:si. GERO:\TOLences," Van Horn said. wanted me to have t_he set OGY DEPART\1E:'\T l '\ 1"Maybe they've just been because she didn't know VERSITY
OF
~ORTH
through a divorce. lost a job anyone else who would CAROU:-JA AT GREENSa11d hope . are having financial enjo) it as much as I BORO
difficulties. lost their home would . I accepted the items
DEAR · SYBLE: Than~
and possessions. moved to an and wear them frequcnily. l
)
ou
for pn(nting t~i.lt thal
unfamiliar place or have a love them .
Cath\ ha ' 'ince had gas- what 1 C&lt;llhiJercd t&lt;' he
serious illne ss or injury."
Tho se who participate ·in tric h) pass 1urgery and lo st genero,ity might in,tead he
the support group will learn nearly 150 pounds. She a sign of dementia 111 Aunt
more about grief and how to recently came into the Millie. If )Oll are correc·t. '
deal . with it - effe cti\·elv. office where l work and contacting ~omconc r lo . . e to
During the sess ion . pa11ic.i- told me that since she has her could a\wt a hig mes; .
Dear Abby is written b1·
pants will learn the various lost so much weight. she
Abigail
l-ai1 · Buren, alsiJ
stages of grieL iLkn t i f~ where wants the jewelry back as_
known as }e01111e P!rillips,
they ar~ in the griev ing ~he l·an now wear it. ·
and
was j(umded by ilu
proce ss . seek ways .to re,.Jlve
Should I return the rin~
grieving is sues. hav&lt;\_the · and hracelet'' Ui'iDE: mother, Pauline Pili/lips.
opportunity to · share their CIDED IN ALABA\1A
Write
Dear .-l.hby
at
·grief experiences · with the
www.DearAhbv.com
or
P.O.
DEAR
UNDECIDED:
group (if they choose 1. and On~e u gift is i.!iH~n. it Box 69440, 'Los Angeln,
provide support and encourCA 90069.
agement to others going belongs to the recipient tn
through the grieving process.
For more inform atio n. call
Paul Van Horn at t740) 5929383.

Support Groups

Morgan gets recognition Grief support group
COOLVILLE
Judy
Morgan was the weekly and
monthly best loser and presented certificates and a
fruit basket at a recent meeting of Tops # 2013 held at
the Torch Baptist Church.
The group enjoyed a
Chinese auction as a fund
raiser. The fall rally was
announced for Saturday at
Lancaster High School with
a county fair to be used.

Leader Pat Snedden told
the group about the Ohio
State
Queen
Connie
Rankin 's photo in The Tops
news magazine . Tops meets
every Tuesday night at the
Torch Baptist Church, weigh
in begins at 5:15 p.m. with
a short meeting beginning at
6:30 p.m . Anyone interested
should wntact Pat Snedden
at 662-2633 or attend a free
meeting.

·to meet at o·eleness·

ATHENS O'Biencss
Memorial Hospital's grief
support . gro up. Good Grief.
will offer its next session
Monday from 7to 8 p.m. in
O'Bleness' temporary lower
level conference room B-1 0.
The free grief support session is open to the public.
Anyone who is struggling to
bring orde'- to his or her life
during a v~ry stress-filled.
diffiqtlt period of adjustment
or change is encouraged to
merly of Trinidad. having attend. The support group is
been
converted
to designed to provide help.
Christianity
from
the comfort and encourage11]ent.
Moslem faith.
Paul Van Horn. director of
His outreach accompli shes pastoral care at O'Bieness, is
missions work in several the founder of Good Grief.
countries around the world. Van Horn said the gruup is
There will be special singers not only for those who have
each night of the revival. lost a loved one.
Pastor David Wiseman can
"A lthough the death of a
be contacted at 740-742- lo,·ed one is one of the most
2568 fur more information.
common causes of grief, people often go through the
grieving process because of a

Revival services announced
CARPENTER - Revival
Service s will be conducted
at the ML Union Baptist
Church ncar Carpenter. · at
6:30 pm nightly Oct. 7
through Oct . I0. Rev.
Dr.
David
Rahamut,
founder of World Christian
Outreach Ministries and the
pastor of End-Time Harvest ·
Church Jackson , will be
preaching. Rahamut is for-

.O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
to offer health screenings
ATHENS O'Bleness
in
Memorial
Hospital
Athen s will offer blood
pressure screening as weH
as cholesterol and glucose
screening Wednesday
The free blood pressure
screening will be open to
the public from 10 a.m.
until noon and from 2 p.m .
until 4 p.m. in the hospital's patient entrance lobby.
· The · cholesterol and glucose
screening, which will be
offered for a $5 fe·e, will
be available at the same
location · by appointment
only · from 10 a.m . . until
noon and from 2 p.m. until
4 p.m.
To make. an appointment.
call , O'Bieness' community .
at
relation s department
(740) •
592-9300.
Appointments are limited.
Free colon-rectal cancer
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entrances.
Cholesterol levels typically do not ci)ange dramatically in one month so individual s may want to wait
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2004
,•.

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) be absorbed in the veterans'
- All former U.S. prisoners health care budget. Principi
a
of war who suffer from heart said.
John
Ray
Lemons
, an 84disease or stroke will receive
government health care ben- year-old World War II pilot
efits without having to prove who was shot down in
the ailments were linked to Germany and held captive
their . captivity, Veterajls for a year. has only had parincrease in "volcanic gases
Affairs Secretary Anthony tial coverage after two recent
strongly suggest magma is
Principi said Saturday night. heart attacks. But now he
moving inside. researchers
He announced the benefits plans to file more paperwork.
from thi: U.S. Geological
"There are more things I
while addressin g the annual
· ~~urvey s\iid. The mountain's
. alert wa\; "1-llised tu Level J.
convention . of the American can do that I haven 't done:·
. the highest possible. after a
Ex-Prisoners of War, an he said.
Some 35,900 American ex- volcanic tremor was detected
Arlington-based group with
' Saturday for the first time
about
21.000
members POWs were still alive as of
si nce before the mountain's
January, including more than
nationwide .
1980 eruption.
POWs
had 33.000 from World War II,
Former
"I don't think anyone now
received coverage if th"y 2,100 from the Korean War
thinks this will stop with
600 from
could prove their heart yis- and .nearly
steam explosions:· geologist
ease or stroke was cm1sed by Vietnam. according to the
Willie Scott said Sunday at
deprivation and brutality VA.
the Geeipgical Survey's
More than 21.000 exwhile imprisoned decades
Volcano
Cascades •
ago. But proving that link POWs receive compensation ·
Observatorv in Vancouver.
was ditlicult despite studies benefits, which range from
Wash .. about 50 miles south.
that have shown stress in $ 106 to $2.239 monthly
But Scott said scientists
captivity leads to such dis- depending on their level of
discussed lowering their
di sability.
ease~. Principi said.
alert from a Level 3 "volAll ex-POWs are eligible
cano advisory.'' which indi·'These are the men and
cates eruption is imminent.
some women who endured for benefits covering several
to LeYel 2 ·•volcanic unrest.'' Mount St. Helens looms over Spirit Lake, still full of debris. seen at center right. from the vol- the most brutal of hardships illne»es. including psywhich indicates an erupti9n cano's 1980 eruption in Washinton state . A second long tremor early Sunday and an increase in captivity:· Principi said. chosis. any anxiety state and
is possible. They needed in volcanic gases strongly suggest magma is moving inside Mount St. Helens. researchers from 'Their stories are what it post-traumatic arthritis.
more data before making the U.S. Geological Survey said. The mountain's alert was raised to Level 3, the highest pos- means to be an .American:·
Former soldiers held capany change. he said.
sible. after a volcan ic tremor was detected Saturday for the first time since before the mountive
for at least 30 days are
Some
20.000
former
"What we have n't gotten tain's 1980 eruption. (AP Photo/Don Ryan )
POW s are expected to eligible for health-care· covback today yet is a lot of
rccei ve the new benefits . erage of several illnes ses,
field
meilsurements
and coffee to people camped tile vokano's 600-foot-deep
Scientists also detected which will go into effect including cirrhosis of the
there's a gas llight going on. along the side of the road in glacier and trigg er debris elevated level s of carbon
a tlight io use thermal imag- lawn chairs and pickup beds. rlows to the barren pum1ce dioxide and other volcanic Thursday and do not require liver. irritable bowel syncongressional approval. The drome. peptic ulcer disease,
ing to look at the (lava )
''It'd be neat if it spews plain at the foot of the ~ase .,. includin~ the rotten benefits. will cost at least $26 swelling of the leg s or Ceet
dome. GPS data needs to be something over and out.'' lllOUiltain.
egg smell Of llydrogcn SUIdownloaded:· Scot.! said said Chris Sawyer. 40. of
The I no blast obliterated fide. that reflect changes · in miHio·n the first year •ind will and malnmrition.
Sunday. "There ·s a lot of Dundee. Ore. , who had a the top I JOO feet .of the .tile volume of magma 'rising
work that needs .to be done. large camera set up on a tri- volcano. devastated mile' of within the mountain.
. That will ~ccur overnight pod at the Coldwater Ridge forest and buried the North
Gas-sampling !lights conand tomorrow morning:·
Visitors Center.
Fork of the Toutle Ri ver in tinucd Sunday. and acm~&lt;tic
Scientists said they do not
Hundreds of people were deb ri s and ash as much as eq uipment had hee n placed
·•
expect anything cl~&gt;sc to the cleared from a popular · 600 feet deep.
around the crater. DoLens of
devastation of the May IR. observatory closer to th e
This
time.
scientists globa l positioning satel:itc
1980.
explosion.
which peak Saturdny follow ing H expected populated areas to ~lation s - to alel1 "ientists
. killed 57 people and coated tremor and brief release of get little ash if the lighk._Lu changes in ground forma much of the Northwest with steam.
west-northwest wind holds-:- tion - have been placed on
ash.
The mountain was out- The closest ..:ommunity is the
mountain·.
though
"Of course the volcano wardly quiet at midday. Tolltle. 30 miles wc&gt;t near Friday· s
ste am
blast
reserves the right to change Clouds of dust rose occa- the entrance to the park in destroyed equipment on the
its mind.'' said monument sionally, &lt;.:auscd by rockfall the Gitlord Pin..:hot :-Jational 1.000-foot lava dome .
scientist Peter Frenzen with from the towering canyon Fore st about I 00 miles south
Most of tile action has
the U.S. Fore&gt;t Service. walls. But earthqu•ikes were of Seattle.
occurred beneath the dome.
which operates the p&lt;v'k.
occurring "niultiplc times
The main concern was a which ha' been building up
Some experts had said per minute:· Steele said, significant ash plume carry- on the nater floor and SpaceShipOne lands following 1ts suborbital flight as the
Saturday that an explosion peaking every few minutes ing gritty pulveriled rock essent ia lly serves as a plug Mojave Aerospace Ventures Team attempts to win the Ansari
would probably happen at mag nitude &gt; as h1gh as 3. and silica that cou ld damage for mauma. or molten rock.
X Prize in MoJave. Calif. on Sept. 29. The $10 million do llar
within 24 hours. But as the
Seismic activity became aircraft engines and the sur- The dorne is filkd with lava
hours passed. others cau- more sporadic over the day. fac es of c;7rs and homes.
that came up durin g 199R prize goes to the first team to launch the weight equ ivalent of
tioned that the timing is dif- said
seismologist
Tony
Steele said the mountain earthquakes but never sur- three people 1nto suborbital space twice within a two week
ficult to predict.
Qamar at the University of took scienti sts on a "roller- faced . i'iew lava may be period. (AP Photo/ Laura Rauch )
"No one is predicting it as Washington's · seismic lab in coaster ride" early Sunday coming up as well.
a sure · thing." said Bill Seattle.
when instruments detected
Roberta Miller: 62, said
Steele at the University of
Scientists were un sure the second extended vol- there was an "amazing enerWashington's seismology lab how . explosive the eruption canic vibration in two days gy" among those gathered at
in Seattle. "This could be may be ; depending ·on the - 25 minutes long com- the Coldwater observatory,
going on for weeks."
gas · content of the· magma pared to Saturday 's 50- where
the
wraparound
MOJAVE, Calif. ( AP) The spacecraft rolled so
Crowds gathered along a and conditions, it could minute vibration.
veranda was jammed with
SpaceShipOne is one flight often because the rolls startpark road at what was said range from a passive emis"lt died off and quickly people in lawn cnairs:
to be a safe di.stance - sian to an explosion that became a non-i ssue . But had
She said she was living in a way from clinching the ed as it was nearing the edge
about 8.5 miles from the throw s up a column of ash, it been as long as the one Yakima in 1980, when "tlie Ansari X Prize, a $10 mil- . of the atmosphere and
following that little steam mountain came to us" in the lion a1~ard for the first pri- Melvill could not dampen
mountain - to see what Scott . said.
Besides
lava
flows,
ash
burst yesterday, we could be form of heavy ashfall. This vately developed manned the motions with the aerodyhappens next. Barbecues
were fired up. and entrepre- and rock-throwing, an erup- moving to an eruption pretty til)le, she said, "We came to rocket to reach space tw1ce namic controls, according to
the mountain."
neurs were selling hot dogs tion could cause melting of quickly,'' Steele said.
wtthm 14 ~ays.
Rutan . Since aerodynamic
SpaceSh1pOne was sched- controls don 't work in space',
uled to be launched Monday SpaceShipOne is equipped
m . an .attempt to reach an with a reaction control svsaltllude of at least 328.000 tem that uses jets of a co-mfeet, or JUSt over. 62 mtles, pressed gas to control movetor the second ttme smce ments.
Sept. 29. .
. .
Melvill used the system to
The chmce ot ,,pilot ,for the successfully stop the roBing
illght rem~m~ ed _a s.ecret 011 before reaching the peak
NEW YORK (A PJ
The mayor of Princeton. N.J ..
t~e e;e ol launch. as 11 dtd altitude. Rutan sai d.
Merci beaucoup. Frederic .
Colmar's si&gt;ter city. noted that
•
last v.ee~.
.
"While we did not plan the
The Statue of Liberty host- &gt;orne of the founding fathers
. That fl1ght and a test lltght rolls w d'd
. , bl
•
ed a party Sunday honoring who enshrined liberty in the
IIllO space on June 21 were
·.- e 1 get va 1ua e
•
its creator. sculptor Frederic Constitution owned slaves.
llown by Michael Meivill. engmccnng data on how
' who has been awarded the well our ..RCS system works
Auguste Bartholdi. for the
"When the people of France
IOOth anniversary of hi s made their magnificent gift to
nation's fi 'rst commercial 111 space. l)e sa1d.
.
astronaut wmgs by the
The St. LoUis-based Ansari
death .
the United States, it wa,. in
Federal
Aviation X Prize was founded' in 1996 ·
The ceremony com memo- part. a recognition that we had
Adminisiration.
to kickst;u't private-sector
rating France's most famous finally abolished slavery,"
Mel viii is one of four development of rocket ships.
gift to the United States also Mayor Joseph O'Neill said.
was a celebration of Franco- . "But even as the Statue of
pilot' who have underoone
Founder Peter Diamandis
special training 10 "'lly hoped the multimillion-dolAmerican friendship. which Liberty was being erected,
dege nerated into name-call- Jim Crow laws were being
SpaceStiipOne. He had diffi -. lar incentive would have the .
ing and "freedom frie s·· after enacted tu humiliate and discu lt y controlling the ship same effect on space travel
during the June flight but as the Orteig Prize had on
France declined to '&gt;Upport the enfran chise the newly freed
U.S.-Ied war in Iraq.
African slaves.
still reached 62 miles. Last air travel. Charles Lindbergh
Richard Riehm. the deputy
"Liberty then was at most a
week. he tlew a perfect tra- claimed 'that $25.000 prize in
mayor of Colmar. the · city in hope. at best a work in
jectory to an altitude of 1927 after making his solo
France's Alsace region where progress. This statue before us
337. 600 feet. or nearly 64 trans-Atlantic l'light.
Bartholdi was born . said the hecame an icon of what we
milc 1. . but the ship hegan
M&lt;uor funding came from ...
Statue of Liberty reminds would wish ourselves to be.
rolling as it neared space.
the Ansari family of Dalla,. :
people of the Uoited States And it shamed us when ou r
. After a safety analysis, More than two dozen teams :
contribution to liberty world- deeds fe ll so far short of our
SpaceShipOne desi gner Burt around the world arc trying :
wide.
words ...
Rutan posted preliminary to win the X Prize. but only
" In the shadow of Miss
Bartholdi was born on April
inforniation about the roll s SpaccShipOne has reache_d
Liberty:· Riehm sa id . '· we 2. ]g34. and died of tuberc_uon hi s Web site this weekend space.
cannot forget what we owe to losis in Pari,, on Oct. 4. 1904.
lli address what he called the
Funded by Microsoft cothe American soldiers who Other Banholdi works erected
Paul
Allen,:
"incorrect .rumors" that have founder
gave us back our freedom on in the United States indude
.circulateu.
S.paceShipOne was dcvel ··:
two occasions. 191 7 and the Barthuldi Fountain in
.The first roll o_ccurred at a oped in secret ;tt Rutan·s ·
1944. 60 years ago...
·' Washington. D.C.. the ange lk Andre Ferrara, a French war veteran born in .Marseil(es. holds hi gh spccu. abo ut Mach 2.7, Mojave Airport-based. Scaled
The ceremony took place trumpeters on the corners of the American flag during a commemoration of the 100th but aerodynamic· lo.~ds on Compo,ites LLC Ul]lil it was
on Libert y Island. where the the tower of the First Baptist anniversary of the death of Statue pf Liberty sculptor Frederi'c the spacecraft wc 1e low · an~ unveiled in April 2003. Allen
statue was reopened to visi· Church in Boston and the Auguste 'Bartholdi at the Statue of Liberty 111 New York. uec..,.easing rapid I) · "so the has not .said exact ly how
tors two months ago after the Lafayette Statue and the Bertholdi was born 111 Colmar. in the Atsace reg1on of France. sh ip ncrcr saw ;my signifi - much he has put into the·
Sept I I. 2001. terror attacks Lafaye tte and Washin gton Sunday's celebration recogn1zed Alsatia~ French culture. cant strllctural stre"es:· he project. but has characterized:
forced it to close.
Monument in New York,
includmg food. wine and music. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens )
said .
it as murc· than $20 mil1ion.

Statue of Liberty is celebrated on eve of
.1OOth anniversa.ry of sculpto.r's death ·

-

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, ·october 4, 2004

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Jim Freeland
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,. Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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Congress sltall make n.o law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tlu press; or the right of the
people peaceabl}' to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
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READER'S

VIEW

Bush

•

.AdmiKistration dark days
Dear Editor:

I am disgusted with the• recent letters I have read. but l know
that eve ryone is entitled to their own opinion. Now. I would
like to voice mine. This ri ghteous man, President Bush, has
started a war in which over 1~00 you11g American soldiers
have been ki)led. They have lost their lives in search of the

•

Monday, October 4, 2004 -

Monday, October 4, 2004

George W. Bush's hometown weekly The Lone Star
, Iconoclast has endorsed
John Kerry for president.
This peep of editorial sound
and fury prompted numerous yeelia-folksy features
from the campaign trail "'rl)ey Don't Call It the
'Iconoclast' for Nothin"' a
New York Times article
wrote - but it signifies not
much.
Or does it'l The Iconoclast
is not the first newspaper to
tout Kerry. According to the
Jerusalem Post, an Aug. 4
editorial in the Syria Times
exhorted Arab-Americans
not to make the sa[lle mi stake they made in 2000 by
throwing their support in
2004 to George W. Bush.
This time around, declared
the state-run organ·of Bashar
Assact;_s Baathist dictatorship. a vote for John Kerry
would be "a wise one." And
from the nuke-mad mullahocracy in termr-central Iran
comes the Good Hezbollah
seal of approval: "Kerry," the
Tehran Times declared this
summer, "is exactly what the
U,S. needs right now."
This is not to say that an
endorsement
from
the
Tehran Times is exact! y
what Kerry needs right now.
Nor do l mean to imply that
The Lone Star Iconoclast is
anything but, well, iconoclastic. At the same time, it's
a mistake to ignore what can
only be described as a surge
for Kerry in axis-of-evil and
just-plain-evil
nations.

Diana
West

Indeed. one of the weirder
outposts of Kerry support is
in North Korea. There,
Radio Pyongya ng, the radio
network of the Stalinist
state. was actually• broadcasting Kerry's campaign
speeche', earli er thi s year,
and repo rting· them. as the
Financial Time s p.ut it. in
"glow ing" .term s. As , for
Bush, Pyongyang's "diplomatic spokestl)tin" recently
called the pre sident "an
idiot. an ignora~t. a tyrant .
and a man -killer" - and, on
top of everything else, a
"bad guy." As Kenneih
Quinones, a former U.S.
diplomat who recently visited Pyongyang, told The
New York Times, "The
North Koreans made· it very
clear. politely, that they want
Mr. Kerry to win ." Politely?
Kerry supporters ignore
the implications that
America's enemies would
unanimously vote their candidate into the Oval Office
over George W_ Bu"sh:
Indeed, they suppress the
implications. The New York
Times recently and hmly
editorialized that "it · is
absolutely not all right" to

tai&gt;e.)hat logical next step
arl&lt;i "suggest that Mr. Kerry
is the favored candidate of
the terrori sts." In some basic
·way, thou gh, foreign policy
comes down to a tally of
. friends and enemies. Very
simply put. Kerry doesn't
care enough about our
friends - stalwarts such as
Britain and Australia and
Italy and Poland and South
Korea and free Iraq - and
he is uncomfortably wellliked by ,our enemies. Even
ones who nurture and abet
tile jihadist networks that
want us dead.
Why'? Maybe because he:s
the kinJ · of man who would
refer tD granddaddy-terrorkin~pin Yasir AraLtt, as he
dfd' in a 1997 book, as a
"statesman ." Or defend
ivloqtada ai -Sadr as a "legitimate voke in Iraq, " a' he did
in April after coalition forces
shut dn\\'n the terror leader's
newspaper when it urged
violence against U.S. troops.
("WelL let me ... change that
term legitimate. " he quickly
amended himself during an
interv iew with National
Public Radio. The newspaper "belongs to a voice.") Or
call fqr a "more sensitive" .
war on terror, as he did this
summer. Or promise a
"grand bargain" with Iran, as
he did last month, offering to
allow the rogue-state' to
retain its nuclear power
plants in exchange for its
promise not to make WMD.
Or pl an to exit Iraq - a "distraction" from the war on

'
Islamic terror, he absurdly
insists -ASAP.
The Ke;;ry Doctrine wou)d
begin not w(th a bang, but
with an apology. "In the first
hundred days in office,"
Kerry vowed last winter, "I •
will go to the United Nations
- I will go in the tirst weeks
- and I will travel to our
.traditional aiJi~s" .- guess
who - "to affirp1 that the
United States htis rejoined
the c;ommunit y of nations."
Such a · mea-culpish· jaunt.
more appropriate for a
Libya. "' a Cuba someday,
might lll&gt;t make the flag
wave. hu t it's sure to make
jihadis &gt;mile .
Former New York mayor
Ed Koch explained it this
way: "Just as I and millions
of Americans believe Kerry
and Bu sh differ in their
approaches to international
terrorism ," he. wrote this
week. "you can be certain
that bin Laden. al -Zarqawi
and other Islamic terrorists
recognize these differences.
Surely they know which
presidenlial candidate would
be more likely to wage war
against them and the courtries that harbor them, with
. or withou( United Nations
support, and pursue them
until they are defeated."
Koch. a liberal Democrat, is
voting for Bush.
As will anyone else serious about victory.
(Diana West is a columnist
Jor The Washington Times.
She can be contacted 1·ia
dianawest @veri:on.net.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

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Iconoclast, or just foolish?

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

PageA4

Ira Eblin

State's lowest paid workers
don't qualify for unemployment

POMEROY - Ira Eblin, 81, of Karr Street in Syracuse,
passed away on Sunday, Oct. 3, 2004. in Sunbury following
an extended illne".
'
He was born on Oct. I, 1923, in Pomeroy, son of the late
CLEVELAND (APJ -An that is adjusted each year "'
Steve and Mary Bolin Eblin . He was a retired laborer for Ohioan who works 35 hours wages go up.
Bucke~eSteel and Casting.
.
Workers who lose a job
a week year-round, but at
Survtvmg are a daughter, Diana (Bob) Brush of Centerburg; minimum wage or close to through no fault or thei r own
a son, Roger (Karen) Ebltn ot Columbus; three sisters: Edith it, would not be eligible to qualify for unemployment
Barton, Myrtle Grover and Madeline Pendleton , . all of co llect unemployment in benefits if they make at least
Pomeroy; a special fr iend. Ruth Bowles of Columbus; five .Ohio - the only 'state with 27.5 percent of that amount
grandcluldren and a great grandchild.
·
for 20 ·weeks or more over
such a pol icy.
Besides hi s parents. he was preceded in death by his wife,
Low-wage and part-time 12 months. In 2004, that
Hope_~blin; two brothers. Benjamin Eblin and Henry Eblin; workers have grad ually been required an average of at
two ststers , Mary Ann Spurrier and Louise West: and an infant sq ueezed out of qualifying least $ 181 a week.
brother.
because of how the state set
Most states don't use averServices will be held at-tf a.m.. on Wednesday, Oct. 6. 2004.
up its unemployment com- age weekiy wages to judge
at ~wmg Funeral Hom ~ in Pomeroy. with Rev. Steve Tomik
two· eligibility. The few that do
pensation
system
offtcmtmg. Bunal Will follow at Rocksprings Cemetery.
decades
ago,
according
to don ' t require people to earn
Fnends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral
Ri ck McHugh, a stall as high a perc~tage of the
home.
lawyer
at the National average to collect unemployMemorial contributions may be made to Hospice at Grady
Employment
l aw Project in ment checks, McHugh said.
Memonal Hosp ital m Delaware. Ohio.
New York.
The minimum wacre went
"I don't see how you un changed in the 19SOs and
defend that from a policy . has risen orrly four times
perspective," said McHugh, since then, most ,recently in
co-author of a report released 1997 to $5.15 an hour.
State Sen . . Marc Dann, a
last week on the state 's
unemployment compensation Youngstown Democrat, sits
system. :.
. .
on
the . Unemployment
MIDDLEPORT - James Fisher, Middleport, died Sunday,
Ehg1biltty 1s ned to the Compcnsatton
Advi sory
Oct. 3. 2004 at the Holzer Medical Center. Arrangements will average weekly wage of all Council. which has been
be annou need by Fisher Funeral home in Middleport.
workers statewide, a number working on possible changes

Deaths

James Fisher

to the Ohio formub.L
• the 'un : or&lt; you ' re nnt going
"It really i&gt; a law 'et up to ha\'C any job&lt;. he 'aid .
for a different era ," he 'aid .
Jame' Brady. 69. found
"We definitely have to lind thut ·decade&gt;· or '(cady work
a way. and do it quickly, to meant noihing when he
address the unfairness for finally turned to the 'ystem
low-wage and part-time for help .
workers."
Rather than seeking unemBut Andrew Doehrel , ployment in 1997 when he lo't
president of . the Ohio · an 18-ye:tr joh at a 'tamping
Chamber of Commerce and plant. the Cleveland man
a co-chairman of the adv i- signed up for work through a
sory counci l, &gt;aid lowering temporary agency. He wa.,hed
eligibility . would increase dishes at a re,taurant. loaded a
th e burden on employers cconveyor belt at a heat treating
and, hUrt Ohio's competi- plant and packed cookware tor
·
tiveness.
shipment .
He would like to see other
He ran out of steady
changes. such as eliminating assignment' last year and
what he call s an unfair pro- &lt;•pplied for · compe nsation .
vision for hi gher benefits to Wage recon], ,howed his
un employed workers with ;t ver;~ge weekl y pay as a
children. That 'discriminates temp wa&gt; $151 .77 in&gt;tead of
against single workers doing the required 5&gt; 181
the same job for the same
"Now I ·have v.orked. And
pay, Doehrel said.
you, get laid oil," Brady.
"You just ca n't continue to · said . ""And I'm paying int o
make the pie bigger and that unemployment. And
compensate everything unde c then you can't get it.""

School News

URG Women•s Club hosted special
luncheon to honor students

0

infamous weapons of mass destruction . Middle class earnings
'

are down, while the ·gas price holds steady, rarely ever drop-

~AHlfR
anumevl

DON'T GIVE
ME.TIIOSE
6EOR6E BUSH

ping a cent. This. my friend. is all thanks to the Bush admin' istration. I persoliallyfcel that the four years that George W.

~

o~S~M~&lt; .

""'4'

-'--

PURSED LIPS.

Bush has held the posi tion of Commander in Chief have been
the darkest days some of us have seen in our lifetime.
Just one more thing: I'm sure that George W. Bush is not t~e

Carl Spencer director of Wagnal ls Memorial Library falks about' the sale of four original Norman
Rockwell paintings in Lithopolis . The four original Norman Rockwell paintings wilt be sold to raise
money for the library whose finances have plummeted so abruptly that the Ohio attorney general IS investigatlllg the case. (AP Photo /Columbus Dispatch. Eric Albrecht )

only one to ever declare Jesu:; &lt;;: hrist his hero.

Jerry Hayman
Syracuse

Cash-strapped library to auction four Rockwell paintings

Bush

The Un ive rsity of Rio Grande Women's Club hosted a special luncheon to honor students award·
ed the University of Rio Grande Women's Club Scholarships. ReciPients pictured are. frorit.
Andrea Lotycz, Xiao Ping Zeng, and Matt Abbott: second row, Matt Boyles , Tracy Harmon, Kathy
Musser. Kristinia McManis. and El izabeth Mohr: back, Nate Hall. Gary Smith, and James Shaw.
Recipients not pictured are Kristen Chevalier, Amy Conn, Amanda Gardner, Dan Hepler. Amy
Lorenzin i, Melody Rose.

Vlilr is necessary
Dear Editor:
To set the record straight and call it as I see it. President
Truman was one of the greatest pr"idcnts in my 80 plus-year
lifeti'me. When he 'aid, .' .th~ htd 'tops here:· he really meant
0

it.

--'
Regan was another great president. He fought the Cold War
and won without bloodshed.
If President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Chamberlain of
England had put Hitler in his place in 1937. there wou ld not
have been a Wocld War II.
If President George W Bush. Prime Minister Blair and
other allies had not taken action to end the bloody regime of
Sadam Hu ssein and his sons. Hu"ein would have made Hi iter
look like a playboy iil a few years. Then , Hussein and other
terrorists would not ha ve been overseas, but 'at your front
door.
G.R. "Bob" Thompson
Pomero.y

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Pottcy
Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error 1n a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 9922156.

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Vattey Publishing Co.

Department extensions are:

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throug h Friday, ~ 11 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the
Onio Newspaper As~iation .
Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, 01'1io 45'{§,9

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•

Selected for awards

How the Internet ciffects our democr,acy
I am a Democrat who
hope s, quite fervently. for
George Bush's defeat in
November. Yet I found
myself defending the man at
a dinner party the other
night, an odd phenomenon
that has occurred on several
occa~ions in recent months.
On this eveni.ng. someone
said Bush knew in advance
about the World Trade
Center attacks and let them
happen ~o he could go into
Iraq and make his corporate
buddies like Halliburton
richer tha·n they already a're .
"That would be evil;" I
said, "and I don't believe
-George Bush i,h evil.
Misguided, wrong-headed,
narrow-minded , yes. Evil,
no."

The man raised one eyebrow and smiled, 'the way ·
my brother 'did when I
refused to believe our parents were Santa Claus. The
man said I could find the
documentation
on
the
Internet. 'No doubt I could.
just as I could find documentation that a terrorist attack
on the United States is'·more
likely if John Kerry becomes
president, or that Laura Bush
was once a drug dealer.
Reasoned , deliberative
discussions about politics
are becoming relics of
another era. Whyry Because
we each have our own perS0!1al ~w; outlets. Mass
media a~now served up in
individual portio11s. Web
'ites. cable . news channel's
and talk-radio .s hows are tai lored to our political tastes,
allowing us to create the
bubble in which we want to
live; with people who t.hink

COLUMBUS - . Tim Simpson, Kathy Hudson and Janice Haynes. all teachers at Meigs
High school, received the Governor 's Award_s for Excellence in Youth Science Opportunties
for their work during the 2003-2004 school year. The Ohio Department of Education will issue
special Governor's Award certificates.
The Ohio Academy of Science initiated the pro&amp;ram in cooperation of the governor's office
and the Ohio Department of Education to recogmze schools and teachers who stimulate student scientific research and who extend science education opportunities beyond the traditional classroom activities.

not. We loved it because it ·
reinforced a perception that
he was out of touch with the
common man. Same with •
ext remi~m .
"The Interne t increases ' tori e&gt; that. in Republican
participation in the political hands. d1aractcrizc Kerry a,,
prnce"." Schnur said . "But a tlip-flopp er. and . in
the downside is it splits the _Democratic hands paini him
country into a thousand little as a thinke r capahle of comcommunities that have noth- plexity .and nuan ce.
ing to do with each other."
"Tim ratin of straight talk
Democracy is huri in the to innuendo is not all that
long run. he says. When can- different: there's just a lot
dictates have spent the cam- more of both. 'ays Popkin.
paign appealing almost currently in residence at
exclusively to their ba&gt;e, Stanford's Ce nt er for the
Study
of
making sure they are ener- Ad va nced
gized enou gh to get out and Behavioral Science .' "People
vote on e'lection day, they still have to son out the oosare weaker leaders once in sip from the facts. and peooffi ce.
ple reall y do know the dif"They can't gove rn . How ference (between re li abl e
do you turn to the electorate news sources and unreliable
you've ignored ;md ask them news so urc es)."
to make sacrifices for the
The experts used to think
comnion good?" Schnur that th e more i)ivcrsity of
said.
information avai lable. the
Politi cal science professor better . equipped people
and political consultant Sam would be to reach reasoned
Popkin says the polarization conclusions about cJndiisn't about the Internet or dates and iss ues. Now we
ca ble TV. It is about human have to wonder if that is
nature. ' We have always true. Popkin is right in that
sought out information that the problem is not the
reinforces out opinions. Internet itsel f. The probleni
. New York. he recently dis- is our lazy, manipulative use
covered. had 170 ethnic of it. The technology that
new spa pers in the 1940s, . ·can, in ti1ere seconds, spread
allowing people then, ~.S arounq the glope a bit of·
they do today, to filter their juicy information can do
news throu gh reporters and ·something else that is equaleditors who shared their ly wondrous: Allow you,
with minimal effort, to veribasic worldview.
"There is a lot of stuff we fy it , preferably before hit- _
decide to helieve that has no ting ,the "forward'' button. ,
operational val ue but it feel s
(:Juan Rwm is a culunurist
good." he &gt;aid. &gt;Uc h as the Jiu· tile San Francisco
&gt;tory of George Bush Sr. Cltmnlcie. Semi m mlfit•llts
marveling at the 'upennar- talter in &lt;;are of this nell'spake t checkout scanner. It did- per or semi h~r e-mail at
n't matter if it . was true or joann an@ sfcl!ronichr.com. )
candidate' themse'ives can
be more highly charged, thus
fueling the polarization and

Joan
Ryan

the way we do, without ever
having to take into account
differin g points of view or
contradictory information.
· "For millions of people.
the Internet makes it easy to
live in echo chambers of
their OWJ.l devi sin g," says
Cass Sunstein, a law professor at th,e University of
Cpicago: He is the author of•
"Republic.com" (Princeton
University Press, 2002),
which raised a question that
is even more relevant today
as we slog through a prcsi"dential race that is as contemplative and reasoned a~" a '
World Wrestling Federation
marathon:
With . such fragmented.
personahLed ·and . to a great
exten t, •unreliabl e media .
does public discourse. imd
thus democracy. suffer '?
Dan Schnur, &lt;1 Republi can
political consultant . who
teache s a course in campaign
politic s at UC Berkeley, says
yes. In the old days, candi iiates reached the electorate
largely through direct mail.
The message, because it was
reaching a wide range of
people. had to be framed iti a
way that wouldn't alienate
middle-of-the-roaders. Now
~a ndid a tes can tailor th eir
messagc ·to
audiences
through targeted media. The

WOUB-TV received awards for prdoductions
ATHENS
The 13, at the Columbus College
Columbus International Fi'im of Art &amp; De sign.
&amp; Video Festival has
The
Moscow
Circus
announced its 2004 awards · brought the world premtcre
with WOUB-TV's Moscow of its sensational s ho~. A
Circus : A Winte r's Tale being Winter' s Tale, to a som-out
awarded a bronze plaque in Athens
audience
in
the Performing Arts ·catego- November of 2003. WOUBry-Keith Newman, video TV documented the experi..--flWlluc:er/'di' rector; Sash a and ences of the cast and crew as
na Vosk. producer/direc- they ad apted the show to
tor: and Eric Anderson allow ir to be peti"ormed on
videog rapher/editor.
the stage of the Templ etonThe awards will ·be pre- Blackburn Alumni Memorial
sented at the 52nd annual Auditorium on the Ohio
Columbus International Film Univ.ersity campus. For the
&amp; Videl) Festival Awards first 'time in its !50-year hisCeremony on Saturday. Nov. tory. The Moscow Circus

performed on a proscenium
stage. rather than in an
arena.

Close to 600 entri es were
submitted by indepen dent
and corporate producers .
agencies. and distributors for
the 2004 Awards.
The bronze plaq ue i&gt; presented to product ion s ot high
me rit. These programs are
considered us eful in the
future. and dedicated to their
specific subjects. To receive
this '!ward a production must
receive a rating of 6 out of
7. For more Information.
visit: www.chrisawards.org

·Company gets contract.extension for armored Humvees
.

FAIRFIELD (A Pl - The
Department of Defense has
awarded a $ 100 million contract exten&gt;io n for produ~ tion of ar mored Hum vees
that will result in 25 to 50
more jobs at a Dayton-area
comr&lt;iny. -' .
The work force &lt;II Fairfieldbased
O'Gara-Hess
&amp;
Eisenhardt. which ,hrouds the
ve hicles in armor. had already
more than doubled thi' year
to 500 'workers. up from 200.
O'Gara-Hes&gt;
·&amp;
Bisenhardt's parcm company
Armor Holding~ is the ,.,ok
. provider to the goveri1ment
nf armored Humvccs .
"Wc're very bulli&gt;h right

0

'

now,"
&gt;aid
Robert
F.
Mecredy. president of Arn1or
· Holdings'
Aewspace &amp;
Defense Group. "We're con. tinuing to hi1j(! people in
anticipation of potential
orders that we could actually
have to increase producti"(m."
He said the company aho
is adding a pttint booth at
th e ,O'Gara-Hes&gt; huitding.
In the la&gt;t two months.
Armor Holding' has been
a\\'ardcd delcth~ contracis
worth as much as S~l6 million.
Mccrcdy said the new litlkr
goc' b.:y&lt;&gt;nd tl1e $135 million
order ,umounceJ Sept. 15 and
create&gt; &lt;1 ledcmlly funLhl pmductitm ba&lt;'klog into 2lXl6.

LITHOPOLIS (AP)
Four
original
Norman
Rockwell painting s will be
auctioned in an attempt to
save a librarv that traces its
roots to the. Funk &amp; Wagnalls
Dictionary.
"It upsets me to even think
about losing these things .
There is a lot of sentimental
and historic value," Carl
Spencer, executive director of
the foundation that runs the
Wagnalls Memorial Libr~,
said as he looked at hts
favorite, "The Story of
Christmas ."
The foundation 's board of
trustees authorized the auction, with two perhaps as
early as December, to stabilize .a portfolio that 'has fallen
to about $3 million from $10
million in 1998 . Residents

have questioned. what hap~
pened to the money and Ohio
Attorney General i im Petro \
.
office is investigating.
The foundation hope s the
paintings will net $1.6 million to
$1.8 million and is negotiating
with a New York auction house
to handle the sale, Spencer said.
The Norman Rockwell
Museum in Stockbridge,
Mass., doesn ' t estimate the
value of his pieces. His
"Rosie the Riveter'' was sold
by Sotheby's in 2002 for
$4.95 million , the highest
amount paid for a Rockwell.
"The Watchmaker" sold in
1996 for $937,500, said
museum spokeswoman Ellen
Swan Mazzer..
The Tudor Gothic architecture of the Wagnalls library
dominat~s the landscape of

thi s village of (,()Q people
about 15 miles &gt;outhea't of
Columbu&gt;.
A new state subsidy allows
the library to stay ope n 38
hours a week. The founda-"
tion, which gave out 140
$ 1.000 sc holarships to local
student s last year, will hand
out only two this year.
Mabel Wagnall s Jones built
the library in 1925 and dedicated it to her parents, Adams
and Anna Wagnall s. who
grew up in LithOpolis . Her
father was co· publisher of the
dictionary.
The couple received the
paintings • as a gift from
Rockwell and displayed them
in their home in New York. The
paintings and most of the estate
of the ir daughter. who died in
1946. went to the foundation.

Log

conservation groups or somebody would have come right
in and taken it · awav. But
since it came to" re't ·on his
property. nobody want&gt; · to
touch it. As one person he
called told him. ""it\ \'OUr
problem."
·
The SU!!2:est ion wa~ e,·cn
made thatif he i, un&gt;ur.:eS&gt;ful in finding the owner. he
can alw~ys b'Urn it. ·
""We could ha\·e w iencr
JOasb every night fnr t\\\) ·
week&gt; if we did that ...
quipped Gilmore .
He contacted th e fire

department to ask if it would
be legal to hurn it and was
told &gt;ince it was on his property and he li,·e, in the country. he can Jo whtncvcr he
wanh tu \\ ith it.
Gilm,,re prder&gt; to find the
owner. l fthC~t faib h~'ll .:nme
up \,·ith '"nwt hing ~be . he
said.
~1e;umh i ,lc . he plan' to just
"t back and ''ai l and hnpe
that the O\\ ner of tW"Tog
L'Ome..., and· take-.. it &lt;1\\ a~ .
Know anyone that lost a ,

from Page A1
that it made it under th e
bridge across the road. Seems
the log is higger than hi s estimate of the space from the
bridge down to the ri\'erbed.
Now had the log lodged in
the creek bed. Gilillore would
not be facing the problem he
is today.
What to do \vith the log.
If it clogged up the creek.

FEMA

At · this pace. he · said. the
from Page A1
prodw:ing
company
is
armored Hunwees. at a rate of
said
450 to 5CXJ per month. almost Commissioners
etilircly lix th~ Army. he said. Thursday additio na l relie f to
Other&gt;. including the Air local government cou ld
Force. Navy ~nd. l_breign govemments. arc waiting in line.
He sai~l it\ · P"&gt;\iblc the
company could have to continue to prodttce \'(;hicks at
from Page A1
that rate thrnughout the fol lowi ng y~ar
to
meet
demand l'v!ecredy said thC~t' died the C.\am ination&gt;.
Jack Sh ift let or Rutland
'" pn idu r tlon k\ch ha\T
innea,,ed . the DcpC~rtmcnt of said he ba' hccn attendfng tile
Dcfcn,c nc~otiaicd a prirc . . neening~ fur the pa~t nin~
(cdurtion of · ahout I) per- year,. Thnugil h~ ila&gt; nn histo1') of rrostate cancer i"n hi.,
n~n t fDr the \chide"" th rnu::!h
' 200X. ·
famil~ Shiftlet hclicw' it wa'

Screening

c

lng'J

co me throug h Buck~ve Jam&lt;tge&gt; and to expedite the
Vallev completion or document&gt;
Hills/ Hock in g
Re gional
De,·elopm ent , needed to cnmplc1e damage
Di &gt;trict. A FEMA team "ill cl ~tinh .
Th~ Oh in Ri,·er cTe,icd at
return to Meig&gt; County Ltt~r
this week to meet with local -+2 feet Hl Puml' rny on Sept
offici'als in an crron to fur - llJ. the hi~hc't lc1el the river
ther investigate the c~tcnt of h;h rcac')led here since 196~ .
important to attend the "Tccn ing as a pre\'cntativc m~a&gt;urc .
Cecil Midkiff of J-lemlnd
Gro\'e admitted that if hi,
dau~hter had not coaxed him
into' it. he wou ld not haw
attend~d the snc~n 1 n~ . I k
... aid :2oiiu.~ Hl '~e tln~o.'hlf·, ;u 1d
Jenti~t.-..

are

lltll -...nnKth lll !l \\lll
v. ani "tn do. hut
c to
\1 idk ill \\ or.k s for l PS
and has h"calth insur&lt;IIICe . He
said that l 'PS u,Jd to pnn Ilk

II"'

,f(,:

a pro&gt;tatc exam fo~ their
cmp l o~ e~' hut ga\'e it up
atk r one ~ear. The health
department hilled Midkiff's
in,uran . .·e tnr

lhC' ... en

icc .

Hl&gt;l7c r Clinic UlHlatcd the
tim,· "I l'il lchotoml't Bev
\ &lt;k1 il' HPI'tcl Cl r;1 "' a),()
~~·n .ncJ lab 'suppl1e' along
i\ ith O"Bknc" Hmpital. atid
Pleasant \'aile) H'"Pital Jid
the urinah'l'• .

.'

.. .

�•

--~·-'"'·

The Daily Sentinel

EEL

STE

RFEST

PageA6

INSIDE

Monday, October 4, 2004
.. •
. .

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

.

Bengals lose, ~rowns win, Page 82
Astros earn final playoff spot, Page 86

{

•

Monday, October 4,~CZ004

'

nneI

•

Prep Football

•

•

Ohio 28, Kentucky 1~

Northwestern
ends ·33 years·
of frustration
. with victory

STANDINGs/RESULTS

ovc
Chesapeake
Coal Grove
South Point
Fairtand
River Valley
Rock Hill

QllC'

A!!

1·0
1-0
1·0

4·2
4-2
2·4

0-1
Q-1

1·5
1·5

Q-1

t-5

Friday's Result$

ARMOUR
Associated Press

Coal Grove 21. River Valley 14
Chesapeake 45 , Fairland 12
South Point 20, Rock Hilt 14

· BY NANCY

SEOAL
IHm
flood and cooler weather people still came out to attend the 2004
Ste,rn'tlthei!tllhlerfe!;t. (Beth Sergent;photo)

.t

'

~

.I

•

-,.,~.4t~" ~'

·,;r.rr. .. ·""'·:·
t

0111!1-.

·'•

'

1·0

6·0

1-0

3·3

1-0

2-4

0·1

1·5

Q-1

1·5

0-1

1·5

Monday, October 4
Mumi11g (7 a.m.-Noo/1)
Temperutures will nse from
-U to 63 by late thi s morning.
Skies will be sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 MPH winds
from. the southwest.
Aftemomr (I -6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 68 with today's
high of 70 occurring around
.HlOpm . Skies will ran ge
from mostly sunny to partly
cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
winds from the west.

Eveuing (7 p.m.-Mitluiglil)
A
c.Jouuy
evening.
Temperatures will drop from
61 early this evening to 50.
Winds will be 5 H\ 10 MPH
from the northwest turning
from the north ;rs the

evening progresses.
Ovemiglit (/-6 a.m.)
Temper~tures will fall from
48 to touay's low of 39 by
6:00;rrn. Skies will be mostly
clear to mostly cloudy with 5
to 10 MPH winds from the
north.

....,i~d~~!!. ~esults
Gallia Academy 27, Athens 12
Jackson 21, Logan 14
Marietta 35, Warren 13

Thesday, October 5
Mm;uing (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will drop
from Jg early this morning 10
37 by ·olli:;OOam then climb
back up to 52 late morning.
Skies will range from sunny
to mostly sunny with 5 to 10
MPH winds from the north
turning from the northeast as
the mornin g progresses.
Afterrwmr (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will ling~r at
55. Skies will be sunny with 5
MPH winds from th~ northeast.

Riverfest

U.S. savings bond .sponsored
by Brogan Warner Insurance .
Fourth place went to
from Pag~"'A 1
Nancy Ru ssell. a $75 U.S.
savings bond sponsored hy.
ings bond sponsored by . People's Bank.
Fifth place went to Shirley
Downing, Chi·lds Mullen
Mu sser Insurance. George Rockhold, a $50 U.S. savWrig ht. Bernard Fultz, Litile ings bond sponsored by City
National Bank.
Sheets and Warner.
Sixth place went to Steve
Second place went to
Dorothy Roach, a $200 U.S . Crist for a $50 US savings
savings bond sponsored by bond sponsored by Crow
Law Office.
Ohio Valley Bank.
Seventh place went to
Third place went to
Gemge G. Gum. Jr.. a $100 Linda Wamsley. a $50 U.S .

33

TVC
Ohio Division
TVC

A!!

Wellston
1·0
Belpre
1·0
Nelsonville-York
1-0
Meigs}'
0·1
Vinton County
0-1
Alexander
0-1
Hocking 'Division

5·1

illm

"

. 800 rubM(dlJckies were dumped into the Ohio River for the Rubber Ducky Derby sponsored by .
the Pomeroy Merchants Association . (Beth Sergentjphoto)
.

A!!

Jackson
Gallia Academy
Marietta
Athens
Logan
Warren 1

,, ~"

r

SEQ

savings bnnd sponsmed by
Fisher Funeral Home .
Eighth place went to
Ferman Moore. a $50 U.S.
savings bond sponsored by
The Vaughn Agency.
Ninth place went to Wanda
Bell for a $50 U.S. savings
· bond sponsored by Young ·s
Carpentry.
,
A total of 34 prizes donated by ·local merchant s awarded to ducky derby participants. There was 110 $25,000
winner in this year's derby.

IHm
Trimble
, Federal Hocking
Waterford
Eastern
Southern
Miller

4·2

3·3
4·2
4·2

3·3

TVC

All

1·0

5-1

1-0

2-4

1-0

2·4 •

Q-1

3-3

Q-1

2·4

Q-1

1·5

27

Kentucky's Eric Scott is surrounded by Ohio defenders, including Matt Muncy (50) and Rashad Butler
(16). after a small gain during the third quarte'r of Oh io 's 28-16 victory in Lexington. Ky. Sat~rd(ly. (AP )

Friday's Results

Mayle delivers as
Bobcats stun K~litucky

Wellston 31, Meigs 28
Trimble 53, Eastern 14 '
Federal Hocking 76, Southern 22
Belpre 43, Alexander 13
Waterford 33, Miller 21
Saturday's Result

Nelsonville-York 20. Vinton Co. 14

Coming Thursdaki~ the Sentinel .... .

Missing six starters,
Ohio's defense
dominates SEC foe

Others

"cpfae~ ffl ~. r3 fhm9r0 (fl.JP(J"

A!!

IHm

6·0

Ironton
Wahama
. Symmes Valley
Oak Hill
Hannan
South Gallia

5·1

STAFF REPORT
sports@ myda1lytribune .com

4·1

2·4
0·5
0·5

LEXINGTON. Ky. - For the
tirst time since 1971. the Ohio
University football team traveled
to Lexington and knocked off-the
Kentucky Wi ldc ats. '::!X-16.
Saturday in front of 61.51-l fans
at Commonwealth Stadium.
Ohio's , Scott Mayte ca ught
touchdown passes of 44 ;md X9
yards while the )3obcat defensive
unit forced five Kentucky ( 1-:1. OJ
Southeastern Con fr,rence)

Friday's Results •

Buffalo 43, South Gallia 6
Wahama 36, Calhoun County 8
Wirt County 52, Hannan 0
Ironton 41 , Lawrence Co. (Ky.) 6
Oak Hill 25, Ports. Notre Dame 21
Symmes Valley 41 , Green 13

The band Wtthout Papers is pictured performi ng the Crosby, Stills , Nash and You'ng song "Ohio"
in the amphitheater. (Beth Sergentjphoto) ··

Q%

•

J

.College Football

~ Financing·
...;.For Slx'Monlhs·
.

Medium Arm

'$349
-

""· pe. .. ..

'69

"" ...,.,. .. ...'99

Full set ....

239

'299

1Wlnset ....

1349

fultsot ......1 399

1Win ..... .. 1 399
fulloet .....

.•699

F. EE
Parking
This young man tests how fast he can pitch a baseball arm at one of Rivelfest's popular
games. (Beth Sergent/photo)

..,.

~---

11~:-.t~!.o

......... .

filiUHn .. ,

!Wlnsot . . . 1

Rec.Pts

1469

. .1 799

FLAIR. lilrlEl•
FREE

.Layaway

Tue·Sat 9to5
FURNITURE
Mon &amp; Friday 9·6
"
BRAND
NAME
FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES "
Closed Sunday to be
with family
Rte 2 , Gallipolis Ferry, .WV
1371

---

·-·

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-·--

•

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1-·-·

~:one OIH:e at!ain.

On the sixt h

play ur the clrive. Hawk caught
M&lt;iyle in stride down the leli si&lt;.lc
Please see Bobcat$, B&amp;

Rio Granite's Boyles wins at the 'Rio'

Pvs

BUTCH COOPER
bcooper@ mydai lytr,ibune .com
BY

RIO GRANDE - These days. it
ttl most seems to have a post season
feel 10 it.
•
,
With over 25 high schools. '1 ~
junior hig hs and nine colleges competing, . there was plenty of fierce
competition at Saturday's Rio
Invitational cross country meet.
The .highlight was Ri o Grande's
Matt Boyle s: · who won the men's

(O!Iege

di \ i ~iu n

individual &lt;:hampi nnship with a t im~
·of 2f&gt;: H. 99
Boyles beat out
the .Shawn ee State
dun
of
Brett
LeMa,te&lt; (2705.131
and Larr y Gardner
(27:09.73), who fin ished second and
Boyles
third respecti,cl) .
E\·en so. Shawnee
State. with _seve n runners in the top

I I. captured the men's team title
with 27 points . The Bear's .11crc l'ol lowed by Alderson-Broaddth 150).
Onerbein amt' Rio Grande. \\'ll ich
tied for thiru with 10-1 porms cas·h .
Bradley Gilders also earned a tc&gt;p
20 finish for Rio Grande with l
time of 28:4.1 ..17, guo&lt;.l enou gh fur
20th.
Also for the Red men in the top 50
were Dennis Hange (:29th I. Howard
Hotsington (.\.\ref), Cody Munchcl ,
(-12nd) and Couv Rochus (48th I.
Alderson-!lr&lt;iaddm·
Heather

\l..:Danicl ,·1 ~ : 00.65 1 finished first
and Katrina Jones ti9J 1.831 was
second, kadinu their school to the
\\omen\ team- s·hai11pionship with
4H roints.
Da11·n :'slagle 11 as the top finisher
fm the Rio 11·omen. comiftg in seventh with a time of 20 :08. 66.
..;.J,o in th e tt&gt;p 50 for the
Re.dwomen. which fini&gt;hed sixth
o",erall. .
Hope Jagodzinski
135th I. Jan a ~1ar,hall (39t h).
Shanm&gt;n s·oulsl11 t40thl and Billie
Robin;on 1-l&lt;lth I~

"'h

Vizquel to talk ,Monday with Indians about his·fu~fure
. .

'

·-

.JviiNNEAPOLIS tAP l -. lnuians shonstor Omar . ·~ Jon't walll h&gt; ' k~l\e that oflk~ bein~ n(&gt;t sure ...
"1 dnn·r knm' "here I'm ~'11n~ to be ." 'aid Vizquel.
Vitquel will meet .\\ith get!eral manager ~lark said Yitqud. a thrs·c~ti nw All-Star. "'I II &lt;till to knoll 11 hn elc·c·ted not to pla1 in Sumla\ 's linate a~ainst the
. Shapiro Monday to Jisc·u" the JX"'ibilit) nf returning 11h.u·, going Ill) . I kd optitilisti&lt;.' all th&lt; 11111&lt;'. I \1 ant \1umcsnta T11 111s "Just th0 las·t tll&lt;lt C\ervht.xh '; takto Cle\'clan,d nc~.l ' (:aSOil.
tu knn\\ where I "tdlld . I t\. ~\)!Ill! tP t. Lkl· . . umc timl'. 111~ 11!1 and ''L' ·n: 111H \..:1.\lll~ hl·-.cc ('acli nthCr for a
Vizqu~l h;r, a mulllal ~~million nptioni(&gt;r ne\1 ,ea- and I ju,t want hin11o l.no\1 lhat·l 11mi1J Il k II&gt; ,1;1\ ... ,dlik - llm,d-..c ' me rCall\ . . . . ;.h.\. ..
son that the club i• unliJ.tely to pil·k up. Either'' ay. tJ1e
:[hillrgh Sunda~ mig ht ha\e heen tbe end 'nr
\ itqrt&lt;' I. .17. •l1o11 cd he·; •1111 a rnxllrcti "&lt;' player by
ninB-timc Gold Glove winner wants thin g' settled ' Vi~ucl's ti1~1e \\ith the Indian,, the \Cieran shon,rnp hini ng 29 I " tth 'c' en l1omers .."&gt; RBl s, X2 nms 'and
-,ooner rather than later.
·
.
'' certa111 h~:.· lllx· plfJ~ 111~ ...lnncwhere nc'&lt;f..,cd ... lm
·I'I steals 111 )67 at-bats.for C'lc\l'land.
·
4

'

.'

.

Bobcats (3-2. 1-1 Mid-Ameri..:an
Conli.:rcnce) evened it up. Ohio
quancrback Ryan Hawk orchestrated an 11-play. 80-yard drive
that 'panned more than five minutes anJ resulted in a touchdown . •
On the drive's tina! play. Hawk
called his own number from.nine
Y&lt;u·ds out and dove towards the
pylon at the Wildcat goal line ti&gt;r
th e score.
The Wildcats went three-andout on th eir next dri,·e. punting
th e football aw'ay to Ohio.
Beginning with the ball &lt;m their
own 37. th e Bnbcah resoned to
the big play and found the end

Rio Invitational

1. Sovlhern Cal(48) 4-0 1,604 1
2. Oklahoma (15)
4·0 1,560 2
4-0 1.491 3
3. Ge0191a (2)
4.Miami
4-0 1,409 4
5. Texas
4·0 1,358 5
6. Auburn
5·0 1,3o5 6
7. California
3·0 1.180 10
8. Florida St
3-1 1,149 9
4-0 1.047 15 .
9. Purdue
4..() 1,036 12
10. ViJginia
5-0
937 14
tt .Utah
12. Florida
3-1 866 16
5-0 722 18
13. Minnesota
t4. Mk:higan ·
4·1 666 19
5-0 650 20
15.\jiisconsin
16. West Virginia
4-1 604 6
3·1 551 10
.17. Tennessee
3·1" 547 7
t8. Ohio Si.
5.&lt;J 507 21
19. Arizona Sl.
4.&lt;J 478 22
20. LOUIS'"Ik'
' 21 . Boise Sl.
' 5.{) 300 23
4.{) 360 25
22. Oklahoma Sl.
3·1 263 24
23. Maryla)ld
3·2 191 ' 13
24. LSU
4·1 60 . -;
25. South Carolina
Others receiv1ng votes: Southern MISs.
50. N.C. Stale 28, Missoun 24, Fresno
Si. 1·7 . Virginia Tech 17. Navy. 15,
Sianlord 15, Texas A&amp;M 12, Boston
College 5, Noire Dame 2, Kansas Sl. ·
1: Ne~raska 1, Texas Tech 1.

$449 s499
Perfect

Plllowtop

turnovers - four in the ltlllrth
qu;u1er - in the winning effort.
Mayle's 157 rereption yards
were the most by a Bobcat since
Chris Jenkins posted 175 yards in
JljljJ
"We talked about the moment
and whm it would be like in the
locker room:· said Ohio head
coach Brian Knorr. "and let me
tell you. it's a lot better than we
e\·en dreamed about. ..
In the early going. Kentucky
forced a Bobcat turnover and
made Ohio pay.
After recovering a fumble
inside the Ohio red zone. the
Wi Ideals·
Alex is.
Bwenge
pumped it in from a yard nut and ·
put Kentucky on the scoreboard
fur th e tirsttime.
Late in the tirst qu;u1er. the

1beAPTopl5

0.1\.C. ' .

EVANSTON. Ill. - It was bad enough when
Northwestern receiver Mark Philmore said Ohio State
was no better th~n the Wildcats. conveniently overlooking all that tradition and those four national titles.
Then defensive end Luis Castillo piled on, brazenly calling Ohio State's offense
"mediocre ...
What nerve. What gall .
What a game.
The Wildcats and their fans
partied into the wee hours, celebrating a stunning 33-27 overtime upset of the Buckeyes on
Saturday night that ended ge:t·
erations of frustration and elated
Northwestem fans across the
country. It was the Wildcats '
ti rst victorv over Ohio State
si~ce 1971: ending a 24-game
streak of ineptitude, and their
first win at home in the series
since 1'!5X.
It als&lt;&gt; was Northwestern's
first Yictory over a top- I0 tearri
since beating then-No. 7
Wisconsin in double overtime
in l\lbdison on Sept. 23, 2000.
™ The loss &lt;.lropped Ohio State
I 3-1 ) I I spots in the poll with
the loss. tul\o . 18.
. "It was the greatest feeling in
th e worlu." Castillo said. "What
lwerelthey'' No.7'' Ohio State'! '
Th iny-three ye;u·s'' Saturday night lights'' Prime-time
TV '' What else can you say'.'"
·
·
Nothing . Thei r play .said it all.
"It's an in&lt;.:redible feeling." sard Phil more. a native
of Reynoldsburg. Ohio. who had the first touchdown
catch of his career. "To look up and just see the
crowd. all I could say waS: 'Thank you."'
· The Wildcats controlled the Qame almost the entire
night. outgaining the · Buckey~s 444-308. confusing
their defense and m~kin g meumcre seem like a compliment for the Ohio St;lie offense. Ohio Swte rallied
for 10 points in the final nine minutes to force overtime. hut a 4Q-yard tield-goal attempt from the normally automatic Mike NLtgent sai led wide ri ght on the
first overtime posses;ion.
Nonhwesiem quickly made the most of its second
chance. On the .second play. quarterback Brett
Basanez scrambled tu the left and up the sideline for
[r 2 1-yard gain. Two plays later. :"ioah Herron bulldozed hi s way into the end zone for the winning
score. setting otf pandemonium at the stadium.
Players piled on top oLcach other in the end zone.
and students rushed the ticlu. turning it into a purple
mosh pit.
"It reminJ ed me of two great hca1-ywc ig(Us in 15th
round trading blows ... Nonlm estern coach Randy
Walker said. "We ~ot the last one in ...
The Buckeyes ,,-atchcd the purple party with disbelief. linally trudging off the tielu in si lence.
" It is tt1ugh tt; a(cept.''· Buckeye~ offensive tackle
Rob Sims said . "Not so much about the streak. but we
lost to a team 1\e didn't think \\C could lose to."
That might hm·e been Ohio State\ biggest problem. The 'Buckeyes haw been !lining with danger all
the way ba,·k to their national championship season in
::!!XJ~. Thineen of their last 24 uames have been decided b~ sc\'en points orbs. witl'i Ohio State winning all
but· tw o of them. The Bm:keves have had live overtime g~uns'S in that span. ·i nd ucting thei·r double OT
win OI'Cr Miami that ~ave them the ~001 national
tiole.
·

t

+

•

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Big Ben leads Steelers to win over Bengals
P.tlmer's former Southern Cal
roomn1.1te Tro) Pol.un,tlu . frn
tshed 11 ott wnh .1 26-)atd lntcrce pllon return lor ,, touc:hdnwn
PITTSB URGH
Th e
Jerom e Bettts h.t d gtv en the
Pittsburgh Steelers don t need Steelers a 21-17 lead wrt h JU"
quarterb.1ck Ben Roet hlt sbe rger to over mn e mmutes remmmm.! \4- Jth
wm games. JUSt to keep from los- htS second short-range toudtrn g them Wrth v~eto n es 111 two down
promtstng start s he s domg JUSt
Already. some Bcngals tans arc
fme
quest1011111g the deusron to benc h
Roethltsberger.
show tn g Jon Kuna . who threw 26 touchuncommon porse lor .t ru okre who down p.1sses I.tst season ,JS the
w.tsn't expec ted to play th1 s sea- NFL Comeback Pl.l)er ol the
son. twtc:e ralhed the Steelers (3 Year. a nd play Palmer
I ) and Duce Staley ran lnr 123
Tm not c;o nce rn ed wtlh wh.tt
y.trus m .1 28- 17 v1cto ry ·Sund.ty people say · P.tlmer s.t td
I'm
0\er th e Crncrnnatr Be nga ls ( 1-3) onl y wurqeu .tbout wh.11 th e
" You can JUst see h1111 com1ng coaches and pl.1yers thtnk I'm
Into hrs OW II' IVIU e teCCI\CI gm ng dbout m; bu..,Iness t 1} mg
Plax tco Burress sa1d 'He doesn t to get be tter from w~:ek to week
let anythrng bothet h1m .tnd th.n '
Roet hll'berger 1e pl .tung t l1e
what I ltke about h1111 "
IIIJltreu Tommv M.1udox " the
R oet hlrsber~ e r we nt 17 -ol -25 tr rst Stee lers rookrc quartet h.1ck,
tor 174 vard s- a touchdown and to Will ht s tu st two s t c~rl s .., lnl e
no rnterc: eptrons [o better C.trson Mt ke Kruczek won tune 111 a row
Palmer 111 a QB duel that may be 111 place ol the lllJUr ed Tell)
re peated lor years 111 the AFC Br.tdshaw 111 1976 The dttterenc c
North Palmer dro1 e th~ Ben gal s " th.lt Roethh sbergc r rsn"t herng
to touchdowns on therr openrng supportcu by arguably the best
dnve of each h.1lt but ended the detense rn NFL hts tot y
game wrtl\ conseLutrve mtercep
He s 2-0 and h ~ s on I) gorng to
uon s. gJVJng htm se\e n m tour get better. wtde teLetver Htne s
starts
'Ward s.ud " He 's st tll a rook re .tnd
BY ALAN ROBINSON
Assocrated Press

~

.

he sttll makes nmt.1kes Ovet,lll.
he 'makrng more good plays th.m
b.td plays ,md I th111k he's gettmg
more comtorli)hle •
I have not mastered th~&gt;
oltense
by
.my
me,ms ,
Roe thliSberger s.ud 'But the
thmg 1s we got the vtctory You
Ie.td the team when they need n
the most, you go dow n lhe !reid
and sco re "
P,tlmer. who was 20-o t-:n lor
164 y.trds wit h two mtercept10i1s ,
showed why the Beng.tls drafted
hun No • I last ye.tr and why he
sttll h.ts some matu11ng to do
Pa lmer went 4 lor-4 lur 37
)atds on thuu downs on a dn ve
ended by Rudt Joh nso n's 2-ya td
tOLrchuownru n, gl\rn g Cr ncr nn.1t r
,1 17-14 lead e.trly m the thud
Joh nson 1 ;111 lor 123 ya rd s m hts
It Ith c. 1r~cr I00-) "' d ga me .t nd
f11 st ol the seaso n
But wrth th e Beng.tls 111 pnsrtron
to bedt ,, wtnntn g- record tc.un on
th e ro.td lor the lust trme 111 42
ga mes. a strc,lk th,u dates to .t
becember 1990 1 1cto rv 111
Prttsbu rg h they coulun t ,,o re

We re m a postt1on we don t want
to hem"
Alter the Bengals tw1 c:e c:ouldn't score after .1dvancmg to at
least the Pittsb urgh 40. the
Steclers drove 89 yards fo t Bett1 s'
go ahead score The key play was
a 21-yard pass mterlerence call on
Tory James agamst Plaxtco
But ress, with TV replays appe.trmg to show httle cont.1ct by
J ~nn es

"Tory was JUSt play mg the ball
and he h,ts a nght to th e ball ,"
hnebacker Kev m Hardy satd
The Bengals couldn 't hold a 7-0
le.tu alte r Staley's first fumble led
to Jeremr John son's tou chdOWll
on ,1 2-yard p.tss mtdwa) th10ugh
the lu st qu.uter - the Cmc1nnat1
ollense·s ltrst touchdown 111 32
possessto ns over three games
The Steelers wtnnmg consecu!lvc g,unes tor th e I rrst tune srnce
Laptunng the u ftnal three to close
the 2002 regul.1r season , yutc:k))
answe red Ruethltsbe rge r's 30) ·" d cn mpl etlon to Burress se t up
Bcttts' 2-v.1rd tuuc:hdown run, and
Roethl"berger later lound Vet ron
~12:~un
.... We ve got to get 1t togeth e1 H.ty nes on dn It -yard pass play
last. wtde recetver Chad Johnson lor Ha)nes h rs t ca reer touchs.ud We te behtnd the 8-b&lt;lll down

Suggs returns to help Browns skin
BY TOM WITHERS
Assocrated flress

.... CLEVELAND

The pam
finally subsided 111 Lee Suggs nec k
long enough to take some hurt out
of Cleveland's brut&gt;ed season
Suggs. who sat out Cleveland s
frrst three games wnh a ne ck
stmger, rushed for 82 yards and
scored a touchdown m the tourth
quarter, leadmg the Browns to a
17-13 wm over the Washmgton
Redskms on Sunday
From h1s first carry of the season,
a 25-yard burst m the tirst quarter.
the speedy Suggs gave the Browns
(2-2 ) the spark the1r ground game
had been mtss mg
" Man rt's good to ha\e hrm
back,' sard tight end Aaron Shea
who had a 15-yard TD catch m the
th1rd quarter
The Browns who lost starters
Kellen Wmslow Jr and Courtney
Brown for the year. w1th mJunes
were 111 dunger of d1ggmg a deep
earl&gt; -season hole and desperate for
a\\111
And although 11 c:ertamly wasn ·,

a thmg of beauty, they got one
"We JUSt had to have thts, we
needed a "m.' satd defenstve end
Kenard Lang ' It's really btg Look
at me I m smrlmg now I'm JUSt
happ} that we won "
Jeff Garcra went 14-of-21 tor
195 yards and a TD tor the Browns.
who dtdn 't sec ure the wm unnl
Washtn gton 's Lave ranue s Coles
tumbled with 2 08 left
The Red,kt ns ( 1-3) can pm thetr
thtrd strmght loss on gomg JUSt 1tor-11 on thtrd downs. mental mtstakes and a co stly fumble by
Chnton Port rs on the first pia) after
hallltme that allowed Cleveland to
qutckly tre rt
··My fumble changed the
momentum · Poru s satd "All of a
sudden , we lost control of th e
game'
•
•
Mark Brunell couldn 't ge t 11 back
as W&lt;~ s hrngton s otfense sputtered
agam behmd ns ne w quarterback
Brunell tinrshed 17-of-:18 tor 192
yards, but was unable to gel mto
any rhythm because Cleveland s
defen se shut down Portts and the
W&lt;~ shrn g ton codch's he.1dsets .md
s1deltne phones \\ere m.tlfuncuon-

mg
"It made rt tough to communr cute , ' Brunell smd. "We had to go
to hand s1gnals But the headsets
d1dn't cause the fumbles or the
overthrown passes We made mtstakes "
Clmgmg to therr four-pomt lead,
the Browns faked a field goal. EJ.tt
holder Dernck Frost was stopped
short of a ftrst down Brunell then
completed a 13-yard pass to Coles.
who fumbled as he was bemg taken
down and Browns safety Earl Little
rec01ered
"I fumbled the game .lwdy tor
us.· Coles smd
G.trcta who played poorly m
Cle veland s two prevw us losses,
then on ly had to kneel down
bec,wse the Redskm s had used up
thetr ltmeouts. whrch .tlso was ,,
problem tn I.tst week's loss to
D.tll.ls
Other than hts 25 yarder the lrrst
trme he touched 11 Suggs wasn't
\ery llashy - )Ust elhctent
~ " He drd a great fOb ltndrn g
c re &lt;~se s usmg hts lullb.tck .tnd cre .1tmg postll\ e tuns G.uu.1 surd
' It s mce to lmall y have our h.tck -

Redskin~

held at lull strength "
W1th the Brown s down 13-10,
Suggs npped off a 14-yard run as
Cleveland drove for the go-ahead
score and Garcta completed a huge
th1rd-down pass to QutnC)
Morgan
A few play s later. Garc1a lofted a
26-yard pass to uncovered Andre '
Dav1s to the Washrngton 3 Suggs
then pushed m to make 1t 17-13, the
first ru shmg TD by a Cleveland
back thts season
Suggs. who had hts neck
wrench ed dunng, practtce . last
month , spent the' past three
Sundays watchmg and wattmg lor
hrs chance to help At last on the
field. Suggs had to prck up a blttzmg lmebackcr on h1s first play, a
moment that tested hts strength and
convmced hrm he could take a hrt
• It was good to get that out of the
way" he satd ' After that, I dtdn 't
even thmk about rt "
Trarlmg 10-3 the Browns were
booed as they left the field tor half
tunc Garcta )Ct to lead the dub to
" ltrst-halt TD. went JUSt 4-for-8
lor 6-:1 y.1rds - 37 on one play 111 the t trst 10 mmutes
f'

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Monday, October 4, 2004

Monday, October 4, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

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National Football

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3

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w
3
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2

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Houston
Tennessee
North

L
0
0
3

T
0
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4

0

South

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124
52
90
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PA
92
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PF

PA

W

L

T

P1ttsburgh
Baltimore
C leveland
C1nc1nnat1
West

3

1

0

2
2
1

I"
2
3

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Washmgton
Sout h
Atlanta
New Orlean$
Carolina
Tampa Bay
North

4

3
2
1

w
4
2

L
0

1

2
2

0

4

w
2
2

Detro t
Minnesota
Ch cago
Green Bay

East

L
0
1
1
3

T
0
0
0

0
T

0
0
0
0

750
667
250

PF
107
78
57
61

PA
55
62
65
68

Pel
1 000
500
333
000

PF
88
75
52
49

PA
49
107
68
72

Pel
1 000

3

0
0
0

3

0

L
0
2
3
4

T

Pet

PF

PA

0
0
0
0

I 000
500
250
000

65
83
59
60

13
86
56
109

T

To Place
Your Ad,
TOday...

Pel

W
3
2
1
0

PA
62
66
76
94

~----------.,Iroo ~~D

Ya rd Sa le Duncans Res

dog (740)256 1092

check 1t out

\\\01 \(I \II \IS

r

Sunday a Games
Houston 30 Oakland 17
Phlladelph a 19 Ch 1cago 9
N Y G1ants 14 Green Bay 7
Pittsburgh 28 Clncmnatt 17
New England 31 Buffalo 17
IndianapoliS 24 Ja cksonville 17
C leveland 17 Washmgton 13
A nzona 34 New Orleans 10
Atlanta 27, Carohna 10
NY Jets 17 Mtamt9
San Otego 38 Tennessee 17
Denver 16 Tampa Bay 13
St Louis 24 San Franc1sco 14
Open Seattle Dallas Detroit Mmneso ta

GM:AWA\

The Mergs County
Sub·Commtttee

for

Round 19 SCIP/LTP
ProJeCts

wtll

meet

Thursday October 7,
2004 at 10 00 A.M at
the Mergs County

Commissioners

Ollrce

rn

the

Courthouse
on
Second Street 1n
Pomeroy, Oh1o The
Commtttee IS com·
posed of one repre-

sentative appointed
by the vrllages of the
county, one represen-

talrve appoonted by
the
township
trustees one representative appomted
by the county com·
m1ss1oners one representattve appomted

by the county engl·

neer and a fifth mem·

ber selected by the

"The date set for
completion

of th1s

work shall be as set
forth rn the brddrng
proposal Plans and
Spectftcat1ons are on
f1le 1n the Department
of Transportation
Gordon Proctor
D1rector
of
Transportation

(9) 27, (tO) 4

Public Notrce
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Rev1sed Code, elec-

tions 3501 t1 (G)
5705 t9, 5705 25

Not1ce ts hereby

given that In pur
suance
of
a
Resolut1on

of

the

Board ' Of Township
Trustees
of
the
Townshtp of Orange,

rs to select the filth

Reedsvrlle

member.

passed on the 4th day

9/29
t014

of May 2004, there
witt be submrtted .to a

Columbus, Oh1o
Off1ce of contracts

Legal Copy Number
040539
UNIT PRICE CON·
TRACT Maihng Dale
0911712004
E033(059)
~
Sealed proposals w1ll

be accepted from all
pre-qual\1\ed brdders
at the Office of
Contracts of the Ohro

• Department

Ohro,

vote of the people of
sa1d subdiVISIOn at a
General Election to

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

of

Tranaportallon
Columbus, Ohio, until
tO·OO am
Wednaodoy, October
20,2004
For
Improving
Section MEG·7·0 00,
Stole Route 7 In
Mtlgt County, Ohio,
In occordonce with
plano and opeclllco·
tlono by grodlng,
planing and roaurlac·
lng with Aophalt

Chatrperson

Rrta 0 Smith
Dtrector

.,

Dated Sept 5, 2004
(10) 4 t1 , 18, 25

4 kittens to g1veaway call

be held rn the
Townshrp of Orange
Ohto, at
places
• theretn,
flay of

the regular
of
vottng
on the 2nd
November

2004 the questron at

levymg a tax m
excess of the ten mtll
llmttatton, for the benefit
of
Orange
•Townshtp for the pur·
pose of F1re protec·
tion

7

1/2

month

old

lar (Dog Pound) \740)992
3779

Chlhuahua/Coc~er

crate

Spamel

tramed

(740 )379

n

2306
Female dog 5 months old
m1xed breed mad large

Mondays Game

tan/black lace has shots
very hyper but tr endly

Kansas Ctty at Balt1more 9 p m

Sunday, Ocl 10

(740)441 0668

Detrott at Atlanta 1 p m
N Y G1ants at Dal las 1 p m

F1rewood Wood IS alrl)ildy
on ground You cut you fthul

Oakla nd at lnd1anapo1 s 1 p m
Mtnnesota at Houston 1 p m
M am at N ew Eng land 1 p m
C leveland at Ptttsburgh 1 pIll
Ta mpa Bay at N ew O rleans 1 p m
Buffalo at N Y Jets 4 05 p m

(740)446 3826
Free k1ttens very beautiful
Cal1co mostly bl ac k peach
&amp; cream
wo rmed

Jacksonville at San D ego 4 05 p m
St LOUIS at Seattle 4 15 p m
Anzona at San Franctsco 4 15 p m
Carolina at Denver 4 15 p m
Ballt more at W ash 1ngton 8 30 p m
Open Cmc1nnat1 Kansas C1ty Ph1!adelp h1a Ch1cago
Monday Oct 11
Tennessee at Green Bay 9 p m

I

Pubhc Notrce
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
lions 3501 t1 (G),
570519. 5705 25
Notice Is hereby
g1ven that m pur·
suance
of
a
Resolution of the

Boar« of Townsh1p
Trustees
of
the
Township
of
Columb1a,
Albany
Oh10 "'passed on the

7th day of June, 2004,
there will be submit
ted to a vote of the
people of sa1d subdiVISIOn at a General

Electron to be held m
the Township
of
Columbta Oh1o at the
regular placeS of vot
•ng therein , on the

2nd day of November,
2004 the question of
levytng a lax , In
excess of the ten m111
hm1tatton for the benefit
of
Columbia
TOwnship for the pur·
pose of Malntatnlng
and operating cemetenes

Sa1d tax being 2 An

add1t1onat tax of 1 mtll
at a rate not exceed·
1ng 1 mtll for each one
dollar of valuation ,
which amounts to ten

cents ($0 10) for each

renewal of a tax of 2
mills at a rate not

one hundred dollars
of valuation, for five

exceeding 2 mttts tor

(5) yaars The Polls for

each one dollar of

said

valuation,

open at 6 30 a m and
remain open unit\
7 30 o clock PM of
aatd day.
Br order of tha Board
o Eloctlono, of Metgo
County, Ohto
John N \hie
Cholrperoon
Rl18 D. Smith
Dlroctor
Dotod Sopt e. 2004
(tO) 4, 11 , 18, 25

amounts to twenty

canto (SO 20) for each
one hundred dottaro
of valuation, lor live
(5) yearo Tho Po\tolor
oald Eltctton wl\t
open at 8 30 a.m and
remoln open untl\
7.30 o'clock P.M of
oold doy.
By order ol tho Boord
or Etecttono, or Mttgo
County, Ohio

Ohto, passed on the

Elect1on

will

Resolution

subm11ted to a vote of
subd1vls1on
at
a
General Election to

of the

be held rn the Vrllage
of Racine, Ohio at the

Vtllage Council of the

Vrllage of Mtddleport,
Ohro, passed on the
2nd day of August,
2004 there wr\1 be

regular places of vat·
mg therem, on the

2nd day of November
2004, the questron of

submitted to a vote of

levymg a tax
m
excess of the ten mtll
hmtlahon, for lhe ben efit of Racane VIllage

the people of sard

subdiVISIOn
at
a
General Election to

be held rn the Vrllage
of Mrddleport, Ohro,
at the regular places

BASKET BINGO
Tue October 5 2004 6 oo p m
Brdwell Porter Elementary
Doors open at 5 00 pm
20 games for $20
(Sponsored by Gallia Co Democrats)

for the purpose of
Current

expenses

Sard lax berng

of vottng therem, on

A replacement of tax
of 3 m1lls at a rate not

the 2nd day of
November, 2004 the

exceeding 3 mrlls lor

question of levytng a
tax , tn excess of the
ten m111 1tm1tat1on, for
the
benefit
of

each one dollar of
valuation,
whiCh
amounts to th1rty

Republican Candtdate
Stgns can be ptcked-up
at Republican
Headquarters at the
1ntersect1on of
Route 7 and Un1on Ave
11 am -7 pm
Monday-Saturday

cents ISO 30) lor each

Middleport Village for
the purpose of
Current

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL MEETING
Tues Oct 19 7 00 PM
at Masonrc Lodge Mrddteport
Reservatrons mwst be made by
Oct 5
Adults S10 00 Chrtd $8 00
Entertarnment Brll Foley
Door Pnzes

the people of sard

one hundred dollars
of valuat1on for f1ve

expenses

Sard tax berng

(5) years The Polls for

A renewal of an existIng tax ol 1 mtll at a
rate not exceedmg 1
mill for each one dollar of valuatton, wh1eh
amounts to ten cents

sa1d Election Will
open at 6 30 a m and
rema1n open unttl

7 30 o clock PM of

hundred ~ollars of
valuation for ftve (5)
'{ears The Polls for
Said EleCtiOn Will
open at 6 30 a m and
rema1n open until

County, Ohro
John N thte

sa1d

day

By order of the Board
of Elections, of Metgs

($0 10) for each one

Pard for by Republrcan Party

Chairperson

R1ta 0 Smrth
Dtrector

Found on Bowmans Run Road
Large ma le black German
s hepherd Red collar Cali740-992-3779
Metgs Co Dog Pound

Dated Sept 5 2004
(10) 4 11 , t8, 25

7 30 o clock PM of
sa1d day

By order of the Board
of Elections, of Metgs
County Oh1o

on
SAVINGS

John N lhte
Chairperson

Rita 0 Smith

Director

'l:,;,T
A~r... .th•

Dated Sept 5, 2004
(10) 4, 11 , 18,25
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Rtvlltd Coda, eloC·
ttono 3501 1I (G),
5705 19, 5705 25

Shop
Classlfleds!
(

'"

• All ads must be prepatd'

POLICIES Ohio \la Ue~ Publiahmg reserves the nght to edrt reJect or cancel any ad at any trme Error1 mu11 be reported on 11"1e ftra! day of pubhcatron and
Trlbune•Sent•nel Reg ister will be reeponslblelor no more than the cost of the apace occup•ed by the eu or and only the l 1rst msertron We shall not be hable
any loaa or expense that reaulta lrom the publication or om11111on of an advertisement Correction Will be made 1n I he f rsl ava ilable ed1t1on • Box number
are always confidential. • Current rate card applies • All real estate adverttaements are aubJ ect to the Federa Fa1r Housmg Act ol 1968 • Thts rle&lt;"P'P'' I
acnpta on ly help wanted ada m-etmg EOE standards We w1!1 not knowingly accepl any advert111ng m v1olallon oi l he law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YARI&gt; SAlE·
GALt !POll~

Man Oct 4 Thu rs Oct 7
Turkey Run Rd Cheshi re
Bam 6pm follow pmk s1gns
Ra1n cancels.

'"4

SAt.FI'ulltEKO\/MJIJDJ.t

FOUNJ&gt;

••

I

Apartments lor Rent.
440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parte &amp; Accessories.
. 760
Auto Repair ..
no
Autos lor Sate
..... . ... 7t 0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale .
750
Building Supplies
. . 550
Business and Buildings .
340
Business Opportunity
.. 2t 0
Business Training....
t40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment.. .....
.... 780
Cards of Thanks ...
. Ot o
Child/Elderly Care
..... t90
Etactrlcai!Refrlgeratron.
. 840
Equipment lor Rent
480
Excavating ...
..... 830
Farm Equipment
610
Farms lor Rent
430
Farms lor Sala
330
For Lease
490
For Sate .....
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms
450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway...
040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Grain
640
Help wanted
11 o
Home Improvements..
810
Homes lor Sate . .
310
Household Goods
510
Houses lor Rent....
410
In Memoriam
020
Insurance...... ......... .....
130
Llwn &amp; Garden Equipment . .
660
Livestock . ..... ..... .....,... .
630
Loaund Found
060
Lola &amp; Acreage..
3SO
Miscellaneous...
. .~ ..................... t70
Miscellaneous Merchendl"''
540
Mobile Home R'apalr... . ...
860
Mobile Homes lor Rent
420
Mobile Homealor Sate.......
. 320
Money to Loan .
220
Motorcycteo &amp; 4 Wheelera.
...740
Musical lnotrumento .
570
Personals ...... ,.....
OOS
Pel8 tor Sale
580
Plumbing &amp; Healing...
. .......... .. 820
Proleoelonal Servlcel
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .. ..
... 160
Rnl Eotato Wanted...
360
Schooto tnatructton
...... t50
Seed , Plant I Ftrt\1\zer ........
650
Sltuattona Wanted ..
t20
Space lor Rent
460
Sporting Goode
S20
SUV'alor Seta
....720
Trucks lor Sale
715
Upholstery . .
870
Vans For Sale ..
730
Wanted to Buy
... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supptlao. ............ 620
Wanted To Do
t8D
Wan'-&lt;! to Rent . .... . ....
.................... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis .. ............ .. ................ 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard Solo-PI Pleaoant
076

110
©

110

www

2004 by NEA, Inc
110

L----···-·-_.1 '"------'"-··-·
Hll.l'w 'N'I~l&gt;

Par amediCS
&amp;
EMT s
needed
Apply at 1354
Jackson Ptke Gallipo!is

•

SHOP
CL~SSIFIEDS

'

com

11\\\C 1\1

10

BI ISJNF.'&gt;'l
OPt'Oll'ruNm

NRA Recrutters

www

~;:omtcs

Hit t•\"\"1}"')

SubSti tute AN/LPN wanted
lor the Me1gs County Board
ol Mental retardat1on and
Work to protec t our Gun
De velopmental Dlsablllles
Rtghts and get pa •d tor 111
H ours 9am 3pm Must have
W1th electtons rtght around current AN hcense m the
State of O h o Prefer expen
the corner now IS your
ence
m publiC health nurs1ng
oppor tunity 10 make a
and/or workmg With ch ldren
d fference'
and adults w1th developmen
d!sab1 hlies Send resume
tal
To schedule an 1n1erv1ew
by
Fnday Seplf:lmber 3rd to
call 1 877 463 6247 ext
Enterpns ng tndtvtduals to
MCBMRDD tj'10 Carleton
231
1
help establish health and
Street
PO
Box
307
wellness
bus ness
Nurs1ng Ass1stant C lasse s Syracuse Oh 45779
Successful candtdates w II
begmnmg October 4 20
possess excellent follow
Super 8 Motel 1s seektng an
through Sk:IIIS
n t 811Ve 2004 thr u October 20 2004
II you en1oy elderly people indiVIdUal WhO IS friendly
Interpersonal sk1lls and be a
and want to be!'come a mem energetiC and an early r ser
relat1onsh1p
and
team
of our health care team to be our Breakfast Bar
ber
bw lder Th1s untque oppo rru
pease stop by RocKsprmg s Attendant 4 6 days per
n1ly provtdes flextb le hours
Rehab litatton Center at week Please no phone
and a lucrative comm1ss10n
36759 Ao ckspnngs Road call s apply m person
based compensation plan
Pomeroy Oh10 45769 and 111 1 150
allowmg you to control ea rn
SotOOJ$
out an applicatton for the
mg potential Please call
)N.I\I'Rl1CflON
cLasses
740 379 9063 or 1 877 815
Health
Extend1care
4409
Se1v1ces Inc 1S an equa l Gal li polis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Full/p arttme
Para mediCS opportumly employer that
workplace Call Today' 740 446 4367
$9/hr
part t1 me EMT B s encourages
I 800 214 0452
$7/hr for 12 and 24 hr d1vers1ty M1F D'V
/Y'Nw g&lt;~ll pol sea eetcol ege com
sh1fts
Apply Mason Co
Overbrook Rehab Center IS Acc1ed ted Mcmoe1 Ace 0c111rg
EMS PO Box 34 Po1nt
currently accepttng apphca Coone I lor ndependen Co leges
Pleasant
WV
25550
anO Scnools 12749
liOns lor respons ble and
(3Q4)675 6134
canng LPN s AL,L SHIFTS
tntoC1s 1on
Management If you are mtereste Cj please
Corp ts currently accept ng come m and f II out an appl
apphcai!Ons at our Galhpohs cat1on at 333 Page Streel H1gh
Schoo
Jumors
locat1o n Ouahl1ed apph Middleport EOE
Semo rs and Pnor ServiCe
cants should be stabl e htgh
you can Ill vacant post! ens
POSTAL JOBS
ly moltva ted tnd1v duals Wtlh
n the West V~rg1 n1a Army
$ 14 62 $20 92/hr Now htr
good commun cat1on sk:tlls
NatiOnal Guard If you are
mg For appl cat1ons &amp; free
We offer a tull benefits pack
between the ages of 17 35
government JOb 1nlo call
age and 40 1K Several
or have pr~or m•htary servAmencan Assoc of Labor
schedultng optiOns c ava1l
ce you won t want to pass
t 9 135998042 24hrs
able No prevtous expen
th s up For Opportumt1es 1n
emp serv
ence IS necessary We are
your area ca ll
304 675
the professtonal diff erence Staff Development Nu rse 5837
m teteserv1ces and need LPN Overbrook Rehab
great team players to JOin us 1 Center 1s look ng for a self
seeking 39 People
Interested
candidates motiVated team player w1th a
Locally ,
please call 1 877 463~ 6247 htgh energy level to 101n our
who want to earn money
ext 2455 or apply onhne management . team Mu st Wh ile IOS!OQ We iQht ShOWing
mloc!sron com
en,oy workmg With people
others how
tra1mng and developmg staff
!740)441
1982
JOB OPPORTUNITY respondmg quickly to
FREE SAMPLE S
staffing neeas monltormg
www famousnutnt1on com
Oak
H il l Umon
Local employee
performance
SchOols 265 W Cross 1nservtc1ng and counseling
Street Oak H1ll Oh1b 740 employee Must possess
682 3431 Lib ra ry Med B Excellent
commun1cah0n
Spec tahst Must have cur and mterpersonal sk. ills
For all yo ur Home PrOJ8CI9
rent Ltbrary Media Specialist P resentation sk1lls and the
and Aepa rs Early late biQ
Certification
DEAOL!'NE ab1l ty to wo rk under pres
or small call tile Handyman
October 15 2004
sure Demonstrated plan (304)593 3611
nlng and organi zatiOnal
Make 50°o selling A~o n
SkillS Crt cal thmtc1ng and Georges Portable Savtmt ll
L1m1ted
11me
ONLY
problem soMng sk1lls The don t haul your logs to the
(740)446-3358 Fust 5 to call
ab1hty to fo!Jow through on miiiJUSI call 304 67!i 1957
rece 1ves a g1 1t
Qlven 1asks Tra1n the Tratner
1
Ma nager needed for mobtle and Human Aesource!Staff W111 clean house $8 h0ur
avatlab le
e:ttper1ence Refe rences
home park tn Shade send Deve lopment
1n town
or
resume to Count ry Pa k preferred out not required Preferabl)
area
Ca fl
Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh Please send resume With Gall •polts
cover letter to Overbrook {740)446 2977
43138
Renal;l Center c/o Michelle
Need n ght shllt donut Gilm019 RN 60Nf 333 W 1ll do housecleen•ng B g
maKer lor local ballery Exp Page St M ddleport Oh10 or Small jobs Call (7 40)446
1310
pref
not messy
B r~ng 45760 EOE
resume to 454 2nd Ave

HOI.'I-'&gt;
IOKRL'f

4 Bedroorn S600 month
5600 dep0511
f-lo
Pets
(304)675 5332
Condo 3 bdrM 2 balhs w
baserr ent V f:W o t r .,rer
Cnlrl
AC
5700
mo
Gal pols Ferry [740)446
3481
Home tor rent with ga age n
V ntcn Po area on 17 ac es
water pad (606 1286 2t48

Attordable 2 Bedroom
H ous e n Kanauga 0 d
20 Mon11 1 Ho'll·:'
Everyth1ng new
Farme•s Rd Gall pohs Oh
Poss ole no Money down 1c
lOR
S40 000 2 tratle rs Krodel
quahty.ng Buyers i304)6?4
Park
on
Ne a
Ad
5111
S675 mon th
twesl"lent t4X70 3 bedroom HUD
Both
tra1lers
S35 000 approved Nc Pets HUO
\1' 1 L:&gt;i 110:-i!
only t740J742 2714
1740)441·5725,
GET YOUR LOAN TO
2 bed10om 1 bath ~C star
BUY OR REFINANCE
[32!l ~ (01111 I 110111:~
age bu ld ng decll washer
YOUR HOME 1
IOK S I I.E
&amp; dryer Cemr:JII~ loca tca
'FREE APPROVE~
betwee" town hosp11a &amp;
HOME LOANS'
1990 S ngle Woe Tratlet
plants No pets 1"'40)446
3 bedroom
4234 or 17 40)208 786 1
NEW PURCHASES
2 lull stze baths
REFINANCES
NP I ria IP-n WV
2 bearoom 14)(70 nea1 Clay
SO DOWN Sf: DOWN
j
! 88 2 2J55
school Trasn and water
CASH OJT HOME
ncluded S350 month $350
IM PAOVEMEI&gt;~T)) r.Q
1992 Southe n Elite Mob1le
aepOSI! L740)256 1664
CREDIT BANKRLft:&gt;TCIES Home 16x 7r'l 2 bedroom 2
WELCO ME
bdth
s:Jrne appl a1 ce~ 2 bedroom Green sci"\Jot
59 :100 Ce~ I {7401949 201t
rj str C1 S300 1110 dep;:.s t ~

RE"

I \11'1 Ill \II \I
"iiiH HI "i

IMIT \ND

ro

A

•

An E11cellent way lo earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645

How.,
H&gt;KS'u

Home

\740)446 1874

r

1

Absolute Top Dollar US
S1 lver and Go ld Co1 ns
Prootsets Gold R1ngs U S
Currency M T S Co1n Shop
15 1
Second
Avenue
G II
I 740 446 2842

(740)742 2954

Red Bone Coon dog male
to good home (3041675
7185

r"M'&gt;trc.Ks

roBuv

YARI)

32984
SidGhill
Road
Pupp1es 1 Part St Bernard Rutland
Ram/ Shme
part
Ro ttwe11er
Cal October 9th &amp; 1Oth 9AM

1~ 1-t- HIM 1J.t AN~ .8tJT
.....,~·~i!-6" Nor ~GMt-y

INtO

310

38A 2BA 5 129 acres House lor sale by owner 4+
Green Townsh p close to bedroorTs 2 5 baths large
school Pnced to sell More coufltry k. tchen 1 5 ~t ory 2
mfo (740)446 7377
C!!lr attact ed ga age olus
1....,0
large
outbUI dmgs
::&gt; bedroo n house Por-erov BlacKtoo dnveway
n ar 1
(town) 314 ace new roof e)(lras S129 000 w1th 71 3
Windows c a furnace s1d acre lot or 5159 000 W1th an
ng porch •nsulal1on 3/4 add1t anal 3 r.l8 ... acres at al
remodeled no land co traq ground Very cwse 10 lown
$55 000 OBO (740)208 on Spruce S1 edrms or:
7080
Call (740)591 0 43 7 anyt1me

WANTEJ&gt;

Place
Lemley s Aucllon
Barn 6580 St Rt 588 T1me

HmtF~
IOK SA.ll

lwrtght@1c net

RIVER SIDE
AUCTION
BARN At 7 South 5 m1les
below the Da m EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm
740 256 6989

3 lam1ly yard sa le Oct '-4 5

9_a_m___:5P_m_ _ _ _ __

10

Enterprtse Rent a·Car

Vtllage Council of the

Not1ce 1s hereby
gtven that 1n pursuance
of
a

1:00 p.m •
For Sunday• Paper

Atx_110N ANil
Ft FA MARKEl

Sell
AVON Sh
All rley
Areas'
Spears
To Buy
304or
Commun1ty Sate Gu nvtlle &amp; 675 1429
Ca tn A dge Oct 7 8 From
Cell
Ph one
found
on
Pmnt Pleasant At 2 North to
Sandhtll Ad call to 1dent fy
Rt87 go 6 m1les follows gns Ma ne~~nt Tra1nee pos1
(304)675 6487
11&lt;fn ava1lable $25K year
96
ltollege degree preferred
Wilt tram 1n Spreadsheet
AnalysiS
Marketmg and
4x4's For Sale...
. .725 Sales Interested cand 1da1es
Announcenlant .............................................. 030 apply online www enter
Antiques
..... 530 pnse com EOE

Vflage of Racrne
2nd day of August
2004, there wrll be

In Next Days Paper

;.~,~~~:::~ In-Column:

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu51ness Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display• 1·00
Thursday for Sundays P;op,!X•J•

Pl. I'LI:ASANr

YARJlS,\1 E

male

m1)( 1st shots &amp; wormed

Resolution of the

trons 350t 11 (G),
5705 19, 5705 25

Sard tax berng 2 A

which

Public Nottce
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

YARD SAn-

(304)882 3210

Not1ce IS hereby
gtven that m pur
suance
of
a

Rev1sed Code, alec

Revtsed Code , elec

four appotnted representattves The pur·
pose of th1s meeting

Public Notice

John N thle

76

Now you con hove borders and graphics
"'-'
added to your closstfied ads
{!~.
!f1',
Borders $3 .00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Dally In-Column. 1.00 p.m
Monday-Friday for Insertion

.1

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oearllfiru

"--------~ Found
Bowmans Run Rd
-.
large older
male blac~ Corner 4th &amp; Roll1ns New
1 yr old male 'arge breed German Shepherd red col Haven Oct 5th 6th Come

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Concrete

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

446·3008

• Start Your Ads With A ICeyword • Include Complete
Description • Inc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre5s When Needed
• Ads ShOuld Run 7 Days

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Public Not1ce

Fax To

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

West
Seattle
St LOUIS
Arizona
San Franc1sco

t'it~r
JUST SAY
~ribune
Sentinel • :lt)errt'
~ ~ %.1 ~
CHARGE IT!
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 ,.

Word Ads

•

PF
667 61
667 78
250 68
250 72

L
1
I

MeV Ct&gt;uo 1o ()fl

•

750 78 71
667 56 42
500 59 62
250 66 95
7~

ister

· n

. .

AMERICAN
CONFERENCE
(
East

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Absolute
Goldmmet
60
vend1ng machmes 1 exce l
lentlocat1 ons aft for S1 0 995

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE

1 800 370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY US
VETERANS
MB 5263

\800)234 6982
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

[Oh10 Loans Only)

Stan a Second ncoma Very
little out ot pocket cost Free
COMPUTER 1 888 279
8322
EXT
77492
WWW ~a1ntree MoneyWays

com

"'

"'

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
au do bus tness w1th peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a1l unt1l you have mvest1
ated the offerm
You owe 11 to yourself' Cui
your taxes 1n ha I tnexpen
s ve Tax Sav ng 1nformat on
1 868 277 491 2 E)(l 77492
WWW Aatnt ree TaxWayz co

m

All real estate advertlsmg
In thi s newsp3per Is
subject to the Federa l
Fa ir Hou smO Act ol1968
whiCh makes 11 Illegal to
advertise any
preferen ce hm11atlon or
discrimi nation based on
race color religion sex
fami lial slatus or national
origin or any Intention 10
make any such
preference limitatiOn or
di!U'!r1m1nat1on

For sale o~ rent 2 oedroo""'
mobile homes starling at
5270 per month Call 740
9922167
Make 2 pay me nts move n 4
years on note {304)736

3409

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY !S SJ?
No Fee Unless We W1n

I 688 582 3345
Ill II IS II II

3409

SAVE SA'JE SAVE

10

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Sturdy well bu It 48R bath
i'UR S\I .E
and hall central a r heaut•
lui pme pane l ng &amp; t oars
(2 ) 3 bedroom houses for
Baseme nt large lot all
sale 2 baths ![replaces on
appl iances Read) to move
acreage Ca ll (740)709
nto 86 Garl eld Ave Pr ced
I 166
to sell at S69 000 (740)d46

llom:s

0°o Down Payme nt and
fmanc1ng ava lable w h
approved cred1t
Average
c red1t qua!ll es you If dOwn
payment has kept you from
tluymg thts IS your chance
to own your own nome If
you have a down payment
but would hke to conserve rt
we offer low down payme nt
programs also Great !'Iter
est rates 1 local company
Mort gage
Locators
(74CiCl9.? u1

u s so

s

Lo t' &amp;

,\( Kl 1(,1

2 acres on lr yal ~ Road

s 5 ooc

7

J O 245 01:! l

Land en McCormtc'&lt; Rd 2
large lots , 2 acre eacn
tmore or less! Electnc and
water 0'1 one suttable lor
ow a ng or motJ1Ie home
("''40l367 7886

Hot ·st-: '

3 bedroom 2 baths eat 1n
kitchen concrete palo and
tront por.cn S+ aoes car
port shed bafn on county
Woods ~JCtra Care for your black topped mad E11 tr a
Loved one Prtvate room mObile home lot B(!aut tully
bath 3 r)Qt meals Phone landsc aped
$85 000
(7 40)245 5157
(740)388 b t 18

A anch style home w11h l1n
shea oasemen1 3 bed
rooms 1 bat"' large I\ r-a
rOom a no d n n~
( or
k•tchen With 2 ca gatag~;
anach ed and a 30)(6C
garage and a 16.&gt;.24 sheiter
house 1 5 m•lec. Ju'f Cherry
Rtr1ge Ad or the rtgnl
(740 )245 5102

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt start ng
at
$290 month
depos t
No pets WD
requ red
hookuo (740)44 1 1184

1 B&lt;"aroorr furn s!"]ed Apt
Ut I e::. Pa 1d
Bas c TV
55~0 rnv \""
$500 OepOSII
No o~ s n or o v 30·H674
OOJ1

2 o 3 bed OOIT' apartme r 1n

r.t ddlef,: ort

~~4 0J g~2 51358

no

pets

C lose
to
town
wad;
ncluOed
Commetctal bu Ia ng pus
Dec c s1t Hequ,·eo (740)446
1 5 acres r G ee n Tw~
4-.6- a~l.. lot Faye or L1sa
Central heat &amp; a 1 bath d"ld
comp 1e1e k tchen S1te~ 000 3 r oo m~ &amp; DAtn stove refng
( 11 C 1\lo d Realtors ..,.40 erator dowr sta trs J ht es
4Jt' 7i02
oa•d S.4~0 nonlh No pets

For Sale or Rent New 3 t"10
bedrOOrT' 2 bath ho..,e on
I'OK Rl~l
2 86 ac as 25 m.nutes.irom
Ath ens
Pomeroy
or
0°o Dov.n Pa~~ent ana
Ga tl•pohs
Ale)(ander or
tmanc ng availab le w tt&gt;
Metgs Schools S93 000
approved cre~t
Aver age
(740)698 3504
cred•t Qualt1es you If OOwr'l
For Sale or Re nt New 4 payment 'ias k.ept you trom
bedroom 2 oatn home on buy ng t'l s s your chance
14 4 acres 25 m nutes trcm to ov.n yOLir own hOme f
Athe ns
Pomeroy
or you have a down payment
Gallipolis
Alexande r or but would 1ke to cons erve t
Me,cs Schoo ls $115 000 we olfe IOO\ down payment
Nograms nlso Greal nter
3 r ej "'"" tmc k lronl (7401696 3504
Ra nch ~ewe
oo t vmyl
est rate s Loca cornpany
!rom
$10000
heat
pump
Smtths Homes
Mortgage
Loc a10 rs
Fordosure VA Hud tor 1st ('' 40)992 7321
Cab1nets 1 car ga rage pr
vate lane oft SA 160 1 a .ng 1 BOO 749 8106 e~~: 1709
bedroom
house
n
acres $92 000 (740 )388
House 3 Bedroom 1 l 2
GallipOliS
$350 rmol)th
8676
Bath Haat Pump
new
depos t requtred (740)441
Carpet Wmdows &amp; Roof
3 bedroom 2 bath ltvmg
1184
Aver V1ew t2 Smtlt"l St No
room d nnmg room fur
Mone.')l Down to quality ng 2 story Coton,al 3 bdrm 1
n• shed
K tchen
2 car
Buyer $425Jmonth why Rent bath Gas heat Cnlrl A. C
ga rage 2 outbl.llld ngs 6
(.3041675 2749
S600 mo 1740 )446 348 1
plus acres close to scrOols
$94 000 (7401'4,2 7200

Hill RL~I

26R

$4 35 mv

2515

--

Ar"""''l"'

Stock mojels at o d P'J cs
2:)0., models ar-r v ng No&gt;,
Cole~
Mob1 e
Home~
' 5266
E 1st !\ he
oro JS~J, ! 741 :..J92 1q72 2 bPtlroom sto~e 1etr gera
hl'ele v., u Get Vol r tJr 1 J'11Shej 5150 deposit
S.275 rent 34 1 2 Sn1 t'ie ts
Mo t V" We •"
S11ee1 Calll-4 0 4-+6 9061

J50

opportumly bases

-

New Double W1de and 1
acre of land 578 000 (080) 1 and 2 beoroorn apart
call (304)675 7561
ments lJrn shed and un tur
ntsheJ
secur t~ oepos 1
New Oakwood mega store
reqwr"'Cl no pets 740 992
featurmg
Homes
bf 22 8
Oakwood
Fleetwo od &amp;
Gnes 0 1e stop shopp r g I bearoom recent!~ uDdat
only al Oa kwood Hcn1e~ cf ed HUD approved S2'80 00
Barboursv tie WV (30417 .J6 pe mont~! 8881514 0t92

ThiS newspaper w ll not

kn owmg ly accept
advertisements for real
est.!lle wh ch 1s 1n
violatiOn of the l aw Our
reader s are hereby
Informed that all
dwelhngs advert•sed m
th1 s newspaper are
avatlable on an equal

relerence 1740,367 0632

46 0 lVI': 51 (74 0 )446 3945
4 room &amp; bath apt Slo\e
retng wate r se~e1 tr~'l
$400 Porter On1o 740 3t1
-746 740 367

-ots

Applicattons oemg taller to t
very clean 1 bedrool1' .,
count y s.ett 1g yet c ose c
1Qwn Wasrer dye steve
tr dge mcluded Water i'I""~C
garbage ncluded Total e ec
tr c wtlh A.C Tenanl ony elec
tr c $300 depos11 S375 oer
'11onth No oats No sm u ~
ng 740 446 2205 01 "'4C
44 6 9585 as~ tor V~rg1n1a r

BEAUTIFUl.
MENTS

A.T

APA!itT
BUDGET

PRICES

AT
JACKSON
52 Westwood
Dnve ! rom $344 tc S442
Wa 1k to shoo &amp; movt es Cal
740 446 2568
Equa
HOUSing Opportunity
ESTATE~

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT

ED AAFFORDABLE'
Tcwn hoJse
apartme nts
ana or sma ll hO~ses FOR
RENT Call (7 40)441 t111
tol"8opllcat!on &amp; •nformat10n

Grac1ous livtng 1 ana 2 bea
roo[11 apa tments at V1llage
Ma nor
and
R •vers1d e
3 bedroom hOuse lor ani n Apartments 111 M•ddleport
Pr'lmeroy HIJD epo oved Cror $295 $444 Call 740
(;~ ,., ' 0'11" ~l ~ deP OS
qa2 5064 Equal HOl Stng
j 1Pr&lt; "'
Oooo•tun1t es

3 br 12C Howard St ~P\\ "luge clean 3 bed•oom 1
Haven WV 5350 montl'l • bath dtrung storage apro,
depos 1 Rent a apphcat1on 8. 2 500 so 't No pets smolr.
S610
Ca l
Kelly
ret reqUireCI 1 yr "''" lease ng
""40 446 9961
(304)415·0585

�•
Mor:-day, October 4, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com
I'J,']S

r

Dogs lor sale 99 Honda Shadow Ace.
(304)675-6231
Jess 6,200 miles. excellent condlHuffman
uon $4.300. (740)446-1948
nr--~----., call after 6:00pm.

76

MUSICAL

... ..,........
lr0l KUMENIS_

Ir Bo

&amp;M

A~ s~

URS

Twin Rivers Tower is

'"--------"
Buy or
sell.
Riverine
Antiques 1124 East Main
on SR 1 4 E Pomeroy 74o.
Russ M'oore,
992 . 2526
owner.
l

2

tion . $399. (740)446-3988. , ger. like new call (304)674·
.,...-----:.,...--- 010:2 or (004)882-2840
Gulbransen
Mastertone
uPright P1ano for sale. $600.
AA~~~
(740)446-8192.
......
~~...~~...-..u :.o
•

I \In I ..,I 1'1'1 II..,

--

Looking lor engine or transmission? Give me a call a!

~\ I I\ I "II II ''

1\ {L&gt;;CEU, \NWUS

accept-

I

r&amp;l

M .ERCHANilLSE ·

(740)446-0519.

ing applications for waiting ~.o.-----.
riO
FAR\1
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, 12 x20 building With aft. over- ~--oiEQuiiiiiiiPI\iioiiENTiiiio;..,..
apartment, call 675·6679
EHO
hang . Too many 1tems to list,
$2,500 Call alter Spm 740· Ford New Holland. 1920 4wheel drive, diesel tractor.
\II W II \'\111'1
44t-0131
2103 hours. New tires
1976 Motor Home. $3.900; approx 29 HP 12 speed
10
HOUSEHOW
1974 Ford Bucket true~ . transmission . V.G C.. Also
Gooo;
$3.900. Call (740)44\-,57?5. Ford New Holland TC-30, 48 padc:l~d church pews. 12ft. wheel drive with front end
$60 each . Buggy wheels. loader (this tractor is burnt)
$55 .each Ph · (740)'446- Both tractors lor $7.500.00 .
Call (7.40)949-2 11 5
7787 .

St. Rt.68 1 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Restreki'19 late .\Vdel So h:!19&lt;'
and Affc·r ,1-la·r kPi Part.-&lt;
See Bren ~or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8: 30-Noon
Sun. Closed

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references lurnlsNed . Established 1975.
Call :24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870. Rogers Basemen!
Waterproofing

flAy &amp;
GRAIN

I&gt;4U

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

North

Doors Open 4:30
Early ·birds ·s tart
6:30

87N4S7

Buy$5.00
Bonanza Gel
5 FREE

•

Henderson, WV

10·04-1)4

10 3

•

K 7

t

A

Q 10

"' K754Z
We~tl

MONTY

•

7 4 2

. 108654
• 7

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675-2457

•

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
' Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• R6ads • Slreets

10 9 8 6

East
. QJ9865
• Q9

t K632

oft A
Soulh
• AK
•

•

A J 3 2
J 9 54

"'Q J3

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Both

I.

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Sonth

West North

East

on2ndAvt

and Financial Services

I NT

Paso

All pass

Box 169
Middleport
....;.~~~~ 45760

Open Duil-1'. 10:00-l 00
Sun. 1-.00-4.00
Clo~ed Tuc ~.

992-5 152

'

Opening lead: • 2

Take your ninth
trick first

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

_r~l_

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
let me do 1t for you I
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In ~ 999 Ford Explorer
Stock. Call Ron Evans, I - Red, co: excellent
800-537·952B.
tion. 54,000 miles.

.

(740)367-7090.

3 NT

I

..::LJ

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

..

/0-"/-

••

'
'
FOLLERED
ME
AROUN' !!

Anower to Prevlouo Pu....,

mu.cles

50 Summer
hangout

52 Big oil

lhreadbere

supplier

12 Spellbound 54 Diamond 14 Den baby
55 Gone to lhe

15 Big laugh

a

Antiques
Midr.llt:port, Ohio
145N. Second Ave.

expert

reaor1

MYERS PAVING

Bring this coupon

Waollght lor
46 Mote's kin
1 Door opener
(hyph.)
5 IRS form
49 tummy

11 Become

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171 '
Every Thul"ldaY
&amp; Sunday

Last Tbu rsday of
. every month
All pack $5.00

44

8 luxury

Business Card ... $25.00/colurnn inch per month

Whaleyts. Auto
Pal'tS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I To place an ad Call 992-2156

~~7~40~I4_4_s_
-3-98_8_.--~ Epiphone Firebird VII guitar, ~
.
Tara
Townhouse IF
Apartments, Very Spacious.
red with gold hardware ..hard 2001 Caravella Interceptor.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
ANTIQUI:S
~hell case. Excellent condi- 21FT, 56/hours. 9 passen1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pat iO, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets . .-Lease Plus Security~
Deposit Require~. Days:
740-446-3481 : Evenings:
740-367-0502 .

The Daily Sentinel • Page 95

•

Business Services

4WIIDUliS

Squirrel

r

.,

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

_ M&lt;miRcr~

•.

FORSAU:
One bedroom apartment .. Horton
CrOssbow
With
no pets, in
Pomeroy. quiver and arroWs. Great
(740)992-5858
shape
$200
(740)3792601
One bedroom garage apartment, k1tchen furn1shed , Weight bench CompetitOr
343 With set of WBIQhts. $50.
$400, (740)992-3823

Monday, Octobc!r 4, 2004

Thomas Henry HuJCley, an English biOlogist, po1nted out: "Books are the money ol
Literature . but only the counters ot
Sc1ence."
M ~St top bridge plater_s lean toward the
sc1ences. not the ans, and all are good
counters.
How would you count to nine on this
deal? Againsl your contract of three notrum p, West leads the spade two: three,
eight, king. What next?
South could make a taKeout double on
the first round, but one no~trump accu·
rately descnbes the strength and nature
of the hand. Also, if North has appropriate ·
values. he can investigate a heart fit.
You have five top tricks: two spades. two
hearts and one diamond. lf the diamond
linesse were working, you would have no
problems. But you know from East's
opening bid that it must be !ailing.
(Simila rly. the heart finesse must be winning.) II you take the diamond finesse at
trick two, a spade will come !lying back
and you will have only eight tricks
It is better to campaign ori ·ctubs . If they
are 3·2. you must get home via two
spades, three hearts, one diamond and
four clubs. But with this layout you can not
alford to lead the club queen tram hand at
trick two. East VJill return a spade, leaving
you with only eight winners.
Instead, cross to dummy with a heart and
play a club toward your hand. Here,
East's ace falls on uempty space . " You
take two spades . three hearts, one diamond and four clubs. But if East could
play a low club , then, after winning with
vour queen, you would shift to diamonds.
collect1ng two spades. three hearts. three
diamonds and one club

bottom
(hyph.)
• 56 Berlin single
16 Washstand 57- Caddie's
it8m
oHering
17 Improve,
58 Pump fuel
as wine
59 Appraise
18 Ice hockey
·
21 Rapier
gear
DOWN
24 Wield
42
20 Engaged
an axe
43
in swordplay 1 Utility bill
25 Stein filler . 44
45
22 Have a
abbr.
26 Gridiron
snack
2 Tide type
org.
23 Mtg.
3 Diamond
27 Supennan"s 47

24 Convenient
2:T Wrinkle
29 Pixie

Head locate
4 P1opped up 28
5 Mountain
30

30 Kerosene
· top
burners
6 Rabbit's loot
34 Of royal
7 lrnpenionatod
blood (hypll.) 8 Hair
37 Furniture
foundation
wood
9 Seattle's
38 Napoleon's ,
S011nd
island
10 In the sack
39 Full ol jolts 13 Hooley player
41 Soften
19 Bandleader
43 Luggage
- Kyser

3t

32
33

35
36
39
40

41

of (au Ticket info
Cons
Sharp wit
OB .
-W!Hiams
La Scala
mother
highlight
Tavern
46 Desire
Tennis
51-- roll
stroke
53 Before
PC acronym
marriage
Doze off
Upper
atmosphere
Perchance
Censors
Make Illegal
Worse , as
the weather
Blake

6

~nnette's

Jfouse Ckaning Service
THE BORN LOSER •

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

17kOW WI\~ you~~'{, DEAR-? 17so-so1

.)UST 1-J..\Oif\E.~ ~
1\IJE:.'~AGE. DI\Y
f...iT fl.(. Ott IC.€ 7

'"'I

P'"

ji.,CTUN.LY, IT WI&gt;:::. E.IJ€1'&lt; f...

u rn..e:. Mo~ A.l/(.'~-f&gt;.L£ TAA~
U~Uf&gt;..L.I

1·740·843·5382
PETS
FUR SALt:

98 lsusu (S-10) 4 cyl. 5/sp.
AJC, AM-FM-cassette, 54K,
c:lean black,

you in
anewcar

Pomero~·

I:•:•:.Z"/'

be ~ ide · Larry's Fi-uit S1and

5 AKC Beagles, trained rab·
b1t dogs, 2 started pups,
eJCcellenl
blood
line.

..................
l!f.......
.........
....•••••.
.....
................•.....•....•...•.sa·
....
....
.....
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·.·.·.!?:Rii·
••••• ;,:-:
.
.
.......
...............•••••••
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.......
.................. .........
......
.......
..........

Warranl y Repair •

(740)742-2728

:·:··~·

Chain Sharpened
&amp; Parts

·~

Ne"' General Standby

In Memory

Generating Sy~1ems ~md

I

Rol-Air Air Compres~ors

0

of my Sister

.

(740)379-2605.

'13onna Sue
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4WHEELERS
2000
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Davison
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or extras. Days 740-645·
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or a .~ ~l·hcdult:d. Mu ~t have hig h sc: h no l

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Deadline l'or applicaniS· 1018/0 4 . Preemployment drug te~"it ing. Equa l Opportunity

2001 Honda Shadow motorcycle VT1tOO. Excellent
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rac~s. 740·446·8972 or 740·
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Employer.

~aUipnUfi

~nfnt

tllta,ant 3!egtster
The Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted

Job Posting
SEPTA Correctional Facility
7 West 29 Drive
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764
Applications may "be obtaiMd from and returned to SEPTA 8:00a.m. to
4:00p.m., Monday
www.-septacbcf.or~

The

rhrou~h

friday, or by v isiting our website at
A com plete job description is available for review.

deadline for application for this posting is Frida)· October 22, 2004.

&amp;unba!' tlttmt~ .:~entin:el ·
·------------------------------Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ _ __

Position: Primary .Counselor •
Work Schedule: 1\Jesday through Saturday· 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Hourly salary: $12.93 an hour
Minimum Qualifications: Bachelor's degree 10 social work, psychology, or
ci&lt;Mely related Reid. At least one year of successful work experience In mental
health, substance abuse, corrections, a related field within the paSt nve yean.
l,.lcensure in good standing,.from the Ohio Counselor and Social Worker
Board, Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services, or related
credentlallng bOard preferred. Must hne a valid Ohio drinr's license and a
good driving re&lt;ord.
··

Addrsss _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I

. Phone'--------~----

Specialized Skills and Knowledge: Has working knowledg~ and uperience
with individual and group counstling, and case management or correctional
populatio~~&amp; Including knowledge of relnant correctional counseling theories, assessment tools, specific levels of correctional supervision rererral

or

systems, and seM'Ice delivery models of su ch .
1

SEPTA Correctional Facility is a Drug·free Workplace and
an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Posting ~ate September 21, 2004

Jlailp Qr:ribune

Mail
drop all this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo ID to

: Ohio Valley Publishing ~. 0 . Bo• 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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c.ouu:&gt; "JU&amp;i
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by Luis Campos
Celfltlnty Cipher cryptograms ant c111Meo ~~om QuotatiOns bv tamou~ peopl4
Each lattelll'l !he CIPhtr stand! 101 anott'6

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l&lt;~orroMI.' ts
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K rc~bl etd wordJ
lo~ 10 f~;~•m fou: word1.

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My cousic. had JUSt ope~ec a
Jewelry repa:.- shop 1had a sig~
made f.x roiS Wi&gt;1dov•. It csac.
Kf--leie's o watcr1:.12ker who 1as
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'--'--J...-l.-..1-.._JL_..J y?u de,.ei('p tr6r-; ~·~::; 1 :'\c . J b~ l~ w .

PRit-.!i t\'VV,aEHO
:~
lti!EP.S !N SQUt.~~S

() '-'NSCRAMClE FOR
.4. N~WER - ,
,

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS I o- 1-

c,

Buna~- Da ce: · Grae1!- Fatten- GET UP
·Tr.e ~est wav to I&gt;Sad a ba lanced :~fe. a cu:1e !old ner
~a'. "1s to try to go to bee the dai befo;e iOJ GET UP!"
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lbDS"T\ .. I ~,.,. 8011ND IT
AND CH8SED IT fOR 'li::N
~I&lt;&gt;CI&lt;S ...

and

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "When I slarted out. I was always lhe guy behind
theguy behtnd the gun."- Humphrey Bogart

&lt;!bur 'lllrthda,y:

C11aUenges will be right up your alley in
the year ahead because competition w1ll
st1mulate your juices and bnng out the
best1n you. ThiS Will be espec1BIIy true in
areas where your wor~ or career is concerned
LIBRA {Se pt. 23-0ct. 23) - Favorable
influences are moving in today and could
bag1n to help enhance your material well·
being and. m turn . help another who IS
dependmg on you. Don t overdo the
spending, however.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24- Nov. 22) Even
though this is a good day lo launch a new
onterprise. make sure you have done the
proper spadework so that your venture
doesn't run into a roadblock before you
even gel started.
SAGITIA AIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - If
you want to remain lucky in the long run
today, let events run th eir own courses
mstead of trying lo make cha nges somewhere along the way tha t haven "! been
properly tested
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22:Jan . 19) - Be
ca reful what you wish lor today. ber::ause
your hopes and hankerings have good
chances of becoming realitieS. 11 you 're
smart. you'll de-emphasize any sellservmg desires
AQUARIUS (Ja n . 20-Feb. 19) - Today
you should be able to get a clearer idea
as to whether you've raised the sights on
your des1res e1ther too high or not h1gh
enough . Make adjustments. but don·l go
to extremes.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You are
now m a cycle where a postt1ve attitude
can work even greater 1n breedmg
191l1arkable results . D1ves t yourself of
• anythmg \hat hm1ts your thmkmg so that
negativity can· ! take hold.
ARIES {March 2 1·Aprll 19)- Thts IS a
good day td get together with that group
or 1nd1V1dua1 w1th whom You need to
agree to some k1nd ol consensus m
order to go forward with your plans Just
don-I get too aggressive.
.
TAURU S (Apnl 20- ~· 20) - There IS
ample room foi" 1m~vement m an ·'
mvolvement conce rn1ng your work or
career. but you mustn 't get impatient.
Take things slowly and advance your
cause one step at a l1me
GEM INI {May 21-June 20) - You could
be much more sensitiVe today to the
wor ld around you and able Ia effortlessly
ptck up on other peoples· moods and
blend your lhtnkmg to !hems. ~ust avoid
negat1ve cornmumrig .
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - There 's a ·
poss1b111ty today that some soc1al aHan or
rela!•Onshtp (whtch ·ts runntng smoothly I
could h1t a snag Keep your head and
emot1ons 1ntact and you can ofl sel ;my
mishap.
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) - You rnay have
to r9hnqU1sh an unproductiVe sttuat10n
and strike ou1 1n a fresh d1rect1on What
you can 't ach1eve one way can bo
ac compli shed m another fa""th ron rl yOlJ "re
preparEid to move on .
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) - Measllre's
can be ta~en today to strengthen your
re latlonshtps or dealings wtth ~eopte
who are Important to your present plans
Ta~e the ini.t1at1ve. but do so wrth your
· charm and wit.

pas~

Todays t!ue: wequals H

Graph

By Bernice Bede Osol

Hill's Se lf
Storage

BUILDERS IHC.

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Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2004

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0

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

EDT
League

'11.11 tq, Oct. 5
Mlnn810.. (SIIIltana 20-6) at ·
New'lbrti(MUS8ina 12-9), 8:19

.-v. Oct. 6

11:8} at
14-8), 7:09

..

.

or
p.m.
at

or

if

•••

=~Houston

~Jitlly, Oct. 6
Houston ';(~ns 18·4)

.
at
:Atlanta {~hi 15-8), 4:09
._p.m. ('i'..,~
•
~
.
• Oct. 7
Hous · · - a l t 20·10} at
Manti\ fl'liolnsan 14-8), 4:09

.. ..

.

I~\.''&gt;"

p.m.~~-~ t-'

.
...,.Ocl.9
: Atlani\i(~on 13-9} at
Houston" ..' · ,
~••Oct.10
Atlanta !ltl;·1-\W"iiton, if necessary !'";&lt;'~
K""""·-~f, !!{'
MO!Icfey, Oct. 11
·. Houston. at ' Adanta, if necessary

~ 1,.~

~.

Bobcats
from~eB1
for 44 yards and an Ohio
touchdown.
Before the half. Kentucky
would close the gap. The
Wildcats drove 52 yards in less
than five minutes before settling for a 29-ya¢ field goal off
the footofTaylor Begley. Ohio
still led 14-IO,Ii.owever. as both
teams went to the locker room .
On Kentucky1s second drive
of the tbird quarter, the Bobcat
defense forced its first turnover
of the evening. Ohio linebacker
Matron Church ·scooped up a
Wildcat fumble and gave the
Bobcats wssession at the
Kentucky 38;1',Wtth the ball in
Wildcat ~l't)hio attempted a 34-yliriMle'kl goal. Brooks
Rossrnail'~ • attempt
was
blocked by Lofinel Dewalt - his
third block of the season - as
the Wtldcats averted a potential

score.

~.

Early .in ,the fourth quarter,
KeniUCky- )breatened to touch
up the SCOJeboard once again.
The Wildcats drove deep into
the Ohio red.;wne but on third
dow
· n
· ,,.,_Matt
·
Muncy
picked
at the one-yard
line • ' ~ it out to the
nine, whi*~the Bobcats took
over with I0:56 remaining in
the contest
"You can't say enough for
that defCQSC," said Knorr. "We
had six SIIU:ten from game one
back in Athens a.nd the guys
who stepped up - the Mall
Muncys, the Rashad Butlers.
the Ralunlln Shavers - there in
the last fiye Minutes, tlit&gt;se guys
were playing on fumes."

Two car bombs rip
through Baghdad,
killing 21, wounding
more than too, Bt

Final Standings
Biggio. Jeff Bagwell
East Division
w. L
Pet
GB
and Carlos Beltran met in th~
x-Atlanta
96
66
.593
miuule of the fielu for hugs.
Philadelphia
86
76
.531
. 10
manag~r Phil Garner tippeu
Florida
83
.79
13
.512
his hat to the crowd and conNew
York
71
91
.438
25
fclli showered fans at Minute
Montreal
67
95
.414
29
Maid Park.
Central Division
I
Ama7ingly. the Hmtston
W
L
Pet
GB
Astros \\ere in the playoffs.
x-St. Louis
105
57
-.648
And when they won Sunday
92
70
y-Houslon
.568
13
89 . 73
to take the NL wild card. all
Chicago
.549
16
. 76
86
of the postseason pairings
Cincinnati
.469
29
Pittsburgh
72
89
.447
32 12
were set - no need for any
67
Milwaukee
94
.416
37 12
tiebreakers this year.
West Division
The fun begins Tuesday
W
L
Pet
GB
afternoon at Busch Stadium
x-Los
Angeles
93
69
.574
when Woody Williams starts
San Francisco
.562
2
91 • 71
for the St. Louis Cardinals
San. Diego
87
75
.537
6
against Los Angeles. Later.
Colorado
.420
25
68
' 94
Curt Schilling and the Boston
Arizona
42
51
111
.315
Red Sox visit Anaheim.
That night. the Minnesota
x-clinched division, y-cltnched wild card
Twins wi.ll be at Yankee
.American League
Stadium.
Final Standings
"We'll be ready to play."
East Division
New York manager Joe Torre
W
L
Pet
GB
said after wrapping up a
x-New York
101
61
.623
weekend at Toronto. ""These
y-Boston
98
64
.605
3
three days off did us some
Baltimore
78
84
.481
23
good after playing such an
Tampa Bay
70
91
30\
.435
intense month. We're readv to
Toronto
67
94
.416
33 ~
get back tu competition .'' ·
Central Division
On Wednesday, the other ·
W
L
Pet
GB
x-Minnesota
92
70
.568
series starts with Roger
Chicago .
83
79
.5 12
9
Clemens and the Astros playCleveland
80
82
.494
12
ing at Atlanta.
Detroit
72
90
.444
20
The final day of tht! regular
Kansas City
58
104
.358
34
season began with one playoff
West Division
spot open and all four
W
L
Pet
GB
matchups still to be deciued.
x-Anaheim
92
70
.568
But everything got firmeu up
Oakland
91
71
.562
1
in the AL once the Twins lost
Texas
.549
89
73
3
to Cleveland - there hall
Seattle
.389
63
99
29
been a chance Minnesota
x-clinched division, y-clinched wild card
wou-ld host Bo&lt;:!on.
The Astros eliminateu any· '----------------------,-..J
need for ·a one-game playoff Wright ( 15-8) in the opener. series. a fun series:· said
:11h Sa1_1_ Franmco lo; th~ Roy' Oswalt. the NL's only Williams, who f&lt;tces Odulis
tid . c.tru
by . be,~un, 20-gamc winner. pitches Perez in the opener. ""I look at
Colorado 5-3 .. Houston com- Game 2 for Houston.
their team and see :1 lot of us
pleted a startl111g turnaround
"" I think we've got them
in them. and them in us."
by wmmng tis ISth stratght riuht where we wam them."
In a rematch from the first
h~~ne game·
A~tros
owner
Drayton
round
last year. the Twins
People thought we were McLane. "I really want those
on the
Yankees.
dwead Ill . the . ",'vate r ~~~~d . we guys. We've done everything take
Minnesota
ace
Johun
Santana
orkeu ,til the_ •!Y b.tck and unconventional this vear. So
opposes
Mike
~han ged . that. Garner satd. maybe we 'II do it again in the I 20 -6 )
Muss ina.
Th" ts JUS I a great endmg to playoffs...
""It's going to be u lot of
what becu~e an nnpmbable
Wild-card teams have won
the last · two World Series pressure... Santana . said.
year for us.
Houston was 56-60 on Aug. titles. with Anaheim follow ed ""That's the way this game is.
14. about a month alter by Florida. Like the Astros. That's what we want. That's
G:p·ner replaced the I1reu the Red Sox ho e to make a what we-~ e ready fm ...
.lnny Willwm s. and trai-l.eu push fron1 the f~unh Ia · ff
Chtcu~n by seven gam es 111 spot.
P yo
,
the wtld-card race. The next
S h1II"
_,
_
day tl A t
11 · -• 1·
c lllg 1 1 61 st;trh
· · le . s ro' ra leu . or against the Anoeis' Jarr d
three runs 111 the 111nth 111111ng \V hb
· th "
tho
to heat Montreal 5-4.
as u.rn m e opener, . en
""Ho · t· II
.th
Pedro Marunez pllches Game
pe u Y- "-" 11 . use at 1 for the Red S ·
as a spr uwboaru lo r some
.. 1 d ·
hf.l\
b d
. 11.ke 1h·at. ..
on 1 1 111~
a ny o• -v
more k1. nd o' t· wms
..
B
wan 1s to p1ay us. oston 11rst
. ·d 1• 1 ·
G arner "II
a ter 11at vtct&lt;&gt;ry. b
. K . M"ll
.d
That's exactly what h&lt;tp- ascman C\"111 I ar sat .
.. , ,
The Cardmals posted the
Pelled • N&lt;)w• lh e, As.1ros. 1,1c
c .t b
d . h
.
familiar October opponent est_ recor Ill t e maJors '~
the Br:~ves beat Houston in !05 57. They v.ent -+-~
the first round in 1~'!7. l'llJ&lt;J ugamst the Dodgers. "'cepand 2001 .
tng_ them 111 a three-ga me
Clemens 11S--+i faces Jaret '"~:1cs Sept. 3-5 at St. Louts.
Cr~ig

BY JOE KAY

Associated Press •
Barry
CINCINNATI
Larkin said g.xJdbye to evety,
one, just in case.
The Reds captai n hugged
teammate.- on the . lield. bill
good luck to Joe Nuxhall in tlie
broadcast bqoth and even
kicked back with fans in the
stands for a half-inning.
Then. he left his hometown.
unsure if he was coming back.
Larkin played what might
have been hi s tina! game in a
Cinci nnati uniform on Sunday,
a 2-0 victory by the Pittsburgh
Pirate.s that was much more
than just the end of a season.
It became an impromptu
send-off for the 40-year-old
shottstop, who would like to
pl~y one more ·season in
Cincinnati but hasn't been
offered a contract.
"I don 't know if this is the
end, but 1 wanted ttl say thank
you," Lark in said. "This was
my way of doing it."
Larkin. who grew up in
Cincinnali and has played all
19 seasons with the Reds. came
out of the game atier three
innings so he could stan his
round of farewells.
He mixed in a pitch to come
back.
,
"Thank you all. and I hope to
see you next year:· he said over
the publi c address system. gettin g a loud cheer from the
30.854 fans .
So far. the Reds have given
no inuication they want him
back. The L"luh decided to not
ta lk about a contract extension
until ~ ·the season. an ominous s1gn.

""1 can only let my baseball
ability talk for me:· saiu
Larkii1. who hit .2K9 in Ill
games. ·'It \ like I"m runRing
l(lr political oflice. It 's a shame.
It 's like I have In politick to get
asked hack here. I don 't know
why it is. but 1t is what it is:·
Even the Pirates made sure to
say gond bye. Every player
httggecl him on the tield after
they congratulated each mher

over the 'eason-ending win.
"I hope things work out fat
Lloyd
Barry,"
·manager
McClendon said. "It would be
hard for me to see him in another unit(mn. He's a class act.
He's everything that's right
about the game of baseball."
The crowd was subdued fm
most of the game, which tcatured two runs and two emotional moments.
Oliver Perez ( 12-10) gave up
live hits and struck out nine in
six innings. tinishing as the
Pirates' top winner this season
with 1 a 2.98 ERA. Tony
Alvarez's founh-inning sacrifice tly off Brandon Claussen
(2-7) and Jose Castillo's solo
homer made the difference.
' Jose Mesa pitched the last
inning for his IOth consecutive
save, leaving him 43-for-48
overall.
The Pirates (72-89} completed their 12th straight losing season, matching Milwaukee for
the longest current streak of
futilitv. The Reds &lt;76-86) have
four ·consecutive losing seasons. their longest such slump
since the 1950s.
The Reds waited until the end
of the third inning to do what
everyone came to see.
Nuxhall. who is retiring after
his 38th year in the booth, got
an oval ion when he was ~hown
on the videoboard · between
innings while the Reds infielders wanned up.
Moments later. Anderson
Machado let\ the dugout and
headed for shonstop. hugging
Larkin before replacing him.
The rest of bis teammates
fanned a fare1vell line as the
crowd came to its feet.
''l"ve been trying tn put oft
!thinking ahout 1 B;my leaving
tor all these years:· said first
baseman Sean Casey. who
wrapped his arms tightly
around him . --rm sti ll trying to
put it otT. hut I did get a little
choked up.
"'The guy's played here for 19
years and if anyone on any
team ever shoulu be able to go
out on hi s terms. it\ Barry
Larkin::

. ...........
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••
t
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••••••
••

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•• • •

•

•••••

••••

•••••

Th1s

The Bobcats quick!) tumed
the turnover mto points. With
backup Auqe n Everson under
center. Mayle pulled in a slant
on tirst liown anu scampered 89
yards to the end zone for the
scure. The cffon . marked the
second longest play in the program's historv as the Bobcab
took a con1tmmding 21-10
advantage.
,
"Ryan (Hawk) got dinged a
little bit on the one dmw in the
third quarter and I don't know if
it was that. He seemed healthy
there at the end of the game but
we just felt right at that point
that we W&lt;UJted Austen to come
in and make some decisions."
Knorr said. ""Ryan wa., a little
groggy. Austen made a great
throw and nobody"s goi ng to
catch No. 82."
The Wildcats turned the ball
over on downs on their next
possession. giving the Bobcats
the football at the Kentucky 35.
Three plays and less than a
minute later.· running back
Kalvin McRae punched it in
from 12 yards out as the
Bobcats went ahead 28-10.
On the ensuing kickoff. the ·
Bobcat ,pecial team~ unit got
into the act. As the kick ~&gt; l ipped
past the Kentucky retum team.
Ohio\ Marcquis Parham
(Kent) picked up the footbal l
and was tackled at the Wi Ide at
four-yard line. Ohio attempted
a fake field goal but the emlrt
was unsuccessful.
Kentucky took ·o~er 'hut the
Bobcat de!Cme stntcl;.. a\lain.
Ohio\ Rahman Sha,cr\ ri~keu
off a P'"' ;mu returneu 1i to.)hc
Wildcat 40 with jl"l more th:in
four minutes left on the clock.
"You really need good things
to hapren and when vie ){lfccd

Spotlight shines
oBVP debate host
Cleveland, A6
I

"

National League

Associated Press

1

.

9

Monday, October 4, 2004

Astros earn final playoff. Goodbye
spot, all matchups set Larkin? Pirates
shut out Reds
..
BY BEN WALKER

a~lnneeota

p.m. (FOliO, •
W.dn ..

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

IS

gomg lobe a Lough

turnovers. guys just kept believing and believing:· said KtJorr.
"") was getfrng pretty nervous
there at the end. That was the
longest last live minutes T ve
ever been associated with' 'bot
the defensive guys just came up
with big play after big play and
we had a couple of good drives
there at the end.""
Ohio relin4uisheu possession
and · the Wildcat- tacked on
another score. A two-yard
touchuown to ss w1li !ailed twopoint conversion brought
Kentuckv to within 12 but the
Wildcats wnu lu get no closer.
Muncy paceu the Ohio
defense. recording nine tackles
in addition to his fourth-quarter
interception. Hawk tinished 7lor-15 tor 114 yarus and one
touchdown while Everson went
a pcti'cct 3- for-3 for I04 yards
anu one score in relief duties.
\1ayle rushed live times for
52 yards while McRae gained
34 yards on 18 carri~s for the·
Bobcah.
Kentucky qumterback Shane
Boyd completed 12 or 25 passes for 11 8 yards and two interceptions. Tony Dixon led the
Wildc:at&lt;o on the ground, picking
up 90 yards on 17 carries.
"Before t11is game. we satd
win. lose. draw·• whatever happens, '&amp;·e're going right away to
Marshall,'' Knorr said of ne xt
week\ opponent. "So '" much
a~ we'd love tflmorrow morning as coaches to break thi'
down and go over it. we·n~ !!CI-

ting right on Marshall.""
•
Ohio will return to conlcret]cc play lor the remainder of
the 200-+ campilign . Thi'
Saturday. the Bobcat ~ will play
host · to Marshall I p.m..
Saturd;~y.

!:

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•••••

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·•!:

~,.

2005

•••••

•••

•••

Send us a
photo of
your
favorite
pet and
they
might be ----==~~~~:
voted into our
~!'.

t

'!:

Pet Calen.d ar!

\

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

~-N~;;;~ ~-t-r~t:--

~:

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~.

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·~
A ress:
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.iO l 1 '\IS • \ ol. ;;;;. '\o. :10

• Reds can't emerge from
one of their deepest ruts.
See Page 81
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- County.
township and village officials
are encouraged to attend a
bri efin g Wednesday to fin alize the proce ss of filing
claim s for tlood damage to
public infrastructure.
Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Dire:etor. Robert Byer sa id
Monday~ficials from the
Ohio EM will auend the
meeting to ·stribute claims
packets and to explain the
process of seeking state reimbursement for tlood damage. _I
The meeting will be heldat 9 ·'
a.m. at the M~igs County

Courthouse Annex.
" Arrangements will also be
made with FEMA officials to
look at uamagecl sites and
assist in writing project work ..
order' tu repair damage:·
Byer ~a id .
Bycr ha s pl aced estimate\ ·
of 'tlt•od damage to infrastruclllre from the three-day
flood at over ~2 million .
Damaged infrastructure in
the count y includes roads . ·
bridges and culverts. '"'. well
as public property including
village property in Racin e
and
London
Pool
in
Syracuse. FEMA will pay for
debri s removal. emergency
services related to tlfe lloouing and severe storms. anu

""" ·"""·•il"•·ntin..J . ...,,.,

repatnng or replacing &lt;.lamaged roads, building .s and
utilities .
La&gt;! we~ federal emergency ucl"iai·ation for the
count y makes local governments avai lable for ·an
incrc~scu rei mbursement rate
for th'e wsts of tlood damage
repair tn X7.'i percent.
The mee ting docs not apply
to indil·i,lual llood damage
assistance. Those with home
all 19 years Arnold Priddy costumed as Santa has led the
floou damage must call Meigs Cou[\ty Bikers on their annual toy run. (Charlene
FEMA at (ROO ) 621-3362 to
register their uama ge and file . Hoeflich / photo)
a claim . Byer csl imates at
least si.x homes were totally
destroyed in the lloocl. and at
least SO otherc suffered some
extent of uamage .

Bikers stage toy run,
for needy children ·

LINE THROWING' CONTEST

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• James Fisher
• Eileen Polk
• James Edward Spaun

li sts of what they want from
Santa is provided by the
Department of Jobs and
POMEROY - Santa led Familv Services .
the pack as about 200 leatherFru;n that list gifts are
clad guys and gals climbeu bought by the bikers. nicely
ohto thei r motorcvcles and wrapped. and individually
roared off of the· Pomeroy tagged for each child before
parking lot Saturday for their the parents came by to pick
I&lt;Jth annu;d tny run.
them up JUSt before Christmas.
Ttte even t is a pu11 of the .
Meigs County Bikers' elfort to · When the bikers left the
raise monev for Christmas parking lot just atier noon they
gilts for needy children. The were kd by a police cruiser
bi kers cnntribute money which and Santa (Arnolu Priddy ) on
is used to buy toys fbr young- his purple bike. They traveled
Main
Street
to
stcrs who might otherwise down
where
they
have u bleak holiday. Their Miuuleport
ar
Wayne's
Place
for
a
stopped
goal thi' year was S6,000. a
and
then
moved
on
to
the
time.
thousand more than was raiseu
Tavern
near
Milway
during
lust year's toy run.
I
The n:uncs of children anu Harriso-nville for a party.
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

LO'l'l'ERIES

'

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-8-8
Pick 4 day: 7·0·4·7
Pick 3 night: 4· 7
Pick 4 night: 0-5-1·3
Rolling Cash 5: 13-15·26-28-31

.

-o

'
Line throwing lakes rea l ski ll
and several Meigs Countians
showed they knew l1ow to do
it in Saturday's events at the,
Sternwheel Rive rfest. The
winners (above) were. left to
nght, Paul Gibbs of
Middleport. first. $300 and a
trophy: Todd Smith of
Pomeroy. second. $175 and
a trophy. and. Kev1n Layne of
Racine. third, $150 and a ' '
trophy. Ann Layne. whose
The stone wall on the upper parkmg lot has been so damaged
late husband, Lee . had conby flood water that it is in danger of collapsing and Laking the
ducted the event since it
'
sidewalk
and gazebo w1th 1t. (Beth Sergent/ photo)
started at Sternwheel festi vals here. made the presentations. Smith (left ) shows
his te chnique of line throwmg
during the conipetition.
(Charlene Hoeflich jphotos )

West Virginia
Daily 3: 3-0-4
Dally 4: 5-4-4-6
Cash 25: 9-10-17-20-22-25

WEATHER

~

Parking lot wall in
danger of collapsing

rope off ce rt ain areas of the
wall anu river bank below to
protect the publ ic from lhe
P0\1EROY - The slllne ha7 ard.
To remedy thi' situation,
said tnappn,priate trea tment \\'all on the upper parking i&lt;ll
of those ,·isitor' D\ 'local has been ,o d:~maged hy ~1u;ser has rece11tly had both
deruti~ . . \tand~ to Ji . . ~'tiUrag.c fi&lt; HlU \\ atc'rs that it i' in the Arm) ,Corps of Engineers
'j..,Jtor . . '' lw 'i"il Skatopia imminent danger of collaps- and Repre&gt;entative Ted
•ui'u spenu n1l&gt;ney :11 lucal in~ accorJin!.! tn Pomt:i·o ,· Strickland 'iew the damage.
V(lla~e Mam ~. John \1us ser~
With no monev in their bud. re~taurar11\ and &lt;..tore:-..
In
the
1
.9)()",
part
of
the
gets appropriaiect for the proAc&lt;:oruinQ
to
Manin.
\anJstone
wall
collap,cd
anu
ject
bnth the Corps and
S~atnpi:~ i~· ""f:tntou' and
\\ orld-remm ncJ ... and" pop- I '"" replaced with conc-rete Stricklanu saiu ther~ ~as
ular dest-ination fur lucal ; by the Arm\ Cnrp' of nothing they could fiscally
teenager-. and a growing 1 Engineer' . Su ll. mn the do . Traditionally the Corps
car' .mJ thr&lt;'U!! h the tlnod' has ta~en cure of those types
ll lllllhcr ur out-of-~ounty \ i~­
the
. \\;Iter has .-ontinueJ to . of repair pr&lt;llel·ts . ·
itprs. He saiu he lim~' no t
wa"h
aWil\ the . . tnne.., frl11li
\1u,er estilmites that in
c·nmilllle a'n\ ille~al acti' it\
at Skatnpia 'cycn\,_ although the 'andst&lt;.llle p:~rt &lt;'f the 'i .111 ,,rder to properly repair and
he admitted :\'-att1pia ha' ,1 crc:.ning :! U:.m~cr&lt;'th 'itua- pre,~rw the wall it would
n»t Sll:i.CJOO . Although he is
n:putation cl' d '\Ta/). part) , IHlll .

INDEX

BY BRIAN J. REED
BR EED@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

'
12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

"Bl

Weather

A6

© :.&amp;004 Ohio Valle}- Publishing Co.

••

RUTLAND - The owner
of a skateboarding park near
Rutland said last week that
local sheriff's · deputies anp
police officers are profiling
visitors. performing inappropriate searches on ve hi cles
traveling there and gi\'in g ·
Meigs Countv "a had name ...
A' sheriff's uepartment
spokesman denies allegations
made bv Brewce Martin of
Skutopi;. and said law
enforcement act ivitv on
McCumber Hill Ro~d where the rural skateboard

park is locateu- and ncarhy
roilds is onh the result of
complaims n{auc by Martin's
neighhor,.
· Martin met '' ith \1eigs
Cou nt y Commissioners on
Thursdav to uiscUS\ .!Ji, cnmplaints . \1anin is a profe s-sional skate hoarder "hose
skateboarding how I \\·a,
recently featured on ~1TV
and i~ I)O\\' part Df a n~w
vitlco game based on \kate-

boarding . Martin saiu tlte
facility'~ rerutation a' a preIn i cr

~katehoardi n~

faci Iit\

draws ""thuu,;mus l;ron thou~and&lt; ' nf \'i..,itnr . . from a(ro~..,
the l'llUntr~ l'ttl'h )eilr. hut

Ill

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MY OAI LYSE NTI NEL.COM

Skateboarders allege police profiling·

I

Please see Allege. AS

)

Dangling rod"" anJ ~aping
hok"' haH' L'&lt;tLJ,L'd the' illagt:

Please see Wall, AS

Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 4th Annual

Respiratory_Fall

~ymposium

I

Please send or bring this entry form along with your "photo to

~oint fJirasant
l\rg1Strr

• : &lt;Ballipolis :t!l3aiiP

··~
I

4:
:!

[:ri~unr

Daily Sentinel

"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"
825 Third Avenue
200 Main st
G'allipolis, 011 456l'I Pt Pleasant, wv i5550

Friday, October .29 • 7:30 am - 4:00 pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center · Gallipolis

l~· ·

•
••

A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the opportunity to learn and review different aspects
and concepts in the respiratory field '
For more information , or to register, coli Sandy Moore at

"Pet Calendar" ,~ .
111 Court St.
1'
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~:

•........-·.. •....•: ......-·.. •........-· .......-·.. .•..

· ------------------------. ---------------·--------~

··~.w
···
. .

··~.w··

MEDICAL CENTER
nisnwcr: the Holzer D!tf'aence

www .holzer .org

(740) 446 .. 5919

(

'

l"t "I·.Sll.\\, O(TOBI-:1{ ;,, :!OO-t

FEMA to brief local officials

SPORTS

.,,: Phone: _______ ~-----------,----

:!

en tne

at

.

·-.----------------.------------- -~

~.. Your Name:

~

2 SECTIONS -

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

'

. ;... ..JI'.t'!±.il~

·~ ..

'

..

+
•

•

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