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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

TUesday, October 5,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

•

.NASCA A - Nextel Cup

Earnhardt's sliP.of
tongue Puts newfound
•n
J·eopardy
lead l
BY MtKE HARRIS

Associated Press
TALLADEGA. Ala. - Dale F.arnharot Jr.
was strangely subdued after hi ' late'! "icto~
ry at Talladega Superspeeoway.
Why'' Junior put hi&gt; newly acquired
points lead in jeopardy by &lt;:ursmg during an
interview with NBC. After dominating the
EA Sports 500 on Sunday to take the N'extel
Cup lead. Earnhardt erreo - in Victory
Lane. of all places.
"I'm worried abou t losing some poims."
said Earnhardt. who moved inro rhc saies
lead by 13 points ov.e r Kurt Busch. who fin ished fifth Sunday.
Asked about the significance of hi;.. fifth
victory at Talladega. Earnhardt said ... It
don't means--- right now. Daddy's won here
10 times:·
In February at Rockinghant NASCAR
president Mike Helton told drivers to v. atch
their language on radio and te le1·ision. Less
than a momh later, Johnn~ Saurer was fined
$25.000 and dockeu 25 point,' after cursing
during a radio intervie"'v following the
Busch Series race in Las Ve gas.
'·Johnny said it in a fit nl ,Inger. I said it in
Victory Lane. I hope they unuerstand that it
was in jubilation and I know me anu tho'e
other guys that got fined let ir slip. bur it's
two differenr circumstance '.
··1 r.hink that when you· re happy and joyous about something and ir happem. I think
it's different than being angry and cursing in
anger. Of course, we don·r want to promote
that. ..
NASCAR spokeswoman Deni'e Maloof
said Nextel Cup uirector John Darby and
vice president for competition Robin
Pemberton were --~ware of the &gt;ituation and
would address it on Tuesday or Wednesday.
That doesn't necessarily mean that he will
be fined or lose poim&gt; ...
The verbal sl ips took some of the eogc off
a very big day by Earnh~rdt.
"I'm a little worried about the~t. but I've
won fi"ve races this year ano I'm pretty
thrilled,'' Junior said. "I wasn·r expectin_!! to
have such a great sea . . on ...
Although he was ~~ or near th e front for
virtually the entire race. leauing a race-high
78 of the 188 laps. Earnharot need ro charge
from II th place over the last five laps to the
win the race. He fell behind when crew chief
Tony Eury Sr. decided to gamble on two
fresh right-side tires on his final pit stop.
Eury decided ro take advamagc of the fact
that Earnhardt was already on pit road for
hi s final stop when a yellow tl~g came out
for a crash involving Sterling Marlin and
Bobby Labonte.
Still, other .drivers got ahead of Earnhardt
by staying on the track or taking on ly fuel on
their final stops during the last of five cau~
tion periods. But it made little difference
once the green flag waved for lap 184.
"Those brand new rights just drove aruuml
the corners so much better than tho'e other

'

Rio Grande soccer blanks Houghton
);,

HMC to host FoUrth
Annual Respiratory
Fall Symposium, A2

~ussell

Ryan
was credited witlfan assist on
Hunters goal. .
Senior forward Simon Carey scored for the

STAFF REPORT

sports@mydatlytnbune.com

HouGHToN. N.Y _The. top . ranked
University of Rio Grande Redmen soccer team
remained unbeaten on the season after a 2-0 win
at Houghton on Saturday.
The Redmen moved their unbeaten streak 10
79 games (76-0-3).
Rio Grande (9-0) took a 1-0 lead to halftime
after a sluggish first half of play. Sophomore fd'
ward Ben Hunter put the Redmen on the scoreboard with a goal in the 17th minute. The goal
was the sixth of the season for Hunter and 28th
of his career in 34 games played.
As it turned out that was the only goal the
Redmen would need to get the win. Fre'shman

~~~n~~~~~~~~s~~!so~~~e~n~~~~~e~~~~~e~~
d
·
c
d

Redmen a 2-0 a vantage. Hunter fed arey an
picked up the assist on the play.
·
Freshman goalkeeper Andrew Moore notched
two s~ves and recorded his tifth shutout of the
season (tifth in the last six games).
Rio Grande out-shot the Highlanders 9-5.
Houghton falls to J-6-2 on the season with the
defeat.
The Redmen will return to American Mideast
Conference South Division action on
Wednesday when they entertain Cedarville.
Kick-offis sd for4 p.m. from Evan Davis Field.

guys with olo tires out ther"' " Earnhardt
said .."! wa,n't worried. They make the calls
in the pih ano I just drive the car"
Earnharut. who won four 'traight
Tallaoega race' before being beaten by
teammate Michael Waltrip here last fall.
came close again in April. He finisheo second to Jeff Gordon in a somewhat controversial finish . with NASCAR determining
that Gordon was leading when a yellow tlag
waved and froze the fie ld. The race finished
that way under caution to the displeasure of
the spectators.
·-r rn just glad to get back on top at
Talladega .." Earnhardt said. He drew a roar
from the partisan crowd when he addeo,
"This is my place:·
Gordon. who came into the race with a
one-point lead over Busch. finished 19th
and fell to third. 61 points behind after three
•
years and called it a calculated well as we'd like to, but that's
of the 10 races in NASCAR's new lO-man
BY JOE MtLICIA '
risk. Kicker Phil Dawson, who somethitig we're smart enough
Associated Press
pl~yoff-s tyle championship.
\
·
hasn ' t missed this season, to recognize," Butch Davis
It was a far . di tTerent atmosphere tllan--i.n
would
have been attempting a said. "We know there are some
April when the dis appointed fans booed and
BEREA - Browns coach 46-yarder into the winu.
areas we have to continue to
threw beer cans and trash onto the track as
Butch Davis acknowledges that
"If we had the chance to do it improve on and we' re trying to
Gordon rook the checkered llag.
Sunday's win wasn't pretty.
all over again, I would call it do that."
'After the green tlag waved for the final
But looks aren't important again tomotTow," said Davis.
The Browns did get a spark
restart Sunday. Earnhardt's red 1\o. 8
for the Browns, who are just who invited members of the on offense from Lee Suggs,
Chevrolet shot up and down the steeply
happy to get back to .500 and media into one of the Browns' who ran for 82 yards and the
bankeo track. passing cars on the outside
start
the 'eason 2-0 at home for film rooms Monday to watch game-winning touchdown after
and inside seemingly at will before finally
the
tirsttime
since 1995.
the play in slow moiion.
missi ng three games with a
moving past Kevin Harvick for the lead on
"When
you
win
that's
all
thar
The video showed that neck stinger. Suggs' return limlap IKo.
really matters," Davis said Gonzalez would have had a ited William Green to just four
Earnhardt then held off Harvick's
Monday. "You talk about goals sure touchdown. But the bot- carries.
Chevrolet. dri1·ing across the finish line
. anti objectives and statistics .... tom line is the trick play didn't
Green declined to talk to
0.117 'econd' - abou t two car-lengths The bottom line ' is in January work, and fortunately for the reporters on Monday.
ahead . It was his 14th career victory.
nobody 's going to care how Browns, their defense caused a
Butch Davis said the coaches
"I knew they were coming,.. said Harvick,
you did it. It's just. 'How many fumble on the Redskins' final will make sure Green knows
whose finish was a season best. "There wasdid you win?'"
possesSion.
he's still an important part of
n·r &lt;lnybody else in the field that was going
But it's still October, and the
Clevelano·s defense contin- the o!Tense .
'\
to get by me. They can JUSt do it when they '
ugliness of Cleveland's 17-13 ues to keep the Browns in
The Browns had one !other
want to at thi s·placc."
win over Washington is still games and has now helu both thing going for them - for the
Dale Jarrett finished third . followed by
fresh.
Clinton Portis and Jamal Lewis liN time in three weeks they
rookie Brendan 'Gaughan. Busch. title conPerhaps the most unsightly to less than 60 yards rushing.
dion·t lose any players for the
tender Tony Stewart and pole-starter Joe
mome.nt was holder Derrick
Linebacker Andra Davis said season to injury.
Nemechek.
Frost gelling smashed by two he doesn't mind the offense
So. 2-2 looks pretty good
. The last lap nirned out to be the wildest of
Redski ns defenders as he tried leaning on the defense.
right now.
the race. with Greg Biftle hitting the wall
to run on a fake lield goal late
"It's our job to do it week in •.. A win's a win no matter
and crashing into Kasey Kahne in the secin the fourth quarter.
what. It\ so hard to win a game
and week our." he said. ·
ond turn. far behind the leaders.
•
Fro'! was supposed to throw
The offense looked lost in the in this league:· center Jeff
!\ ASCAR kept the green !lag out and
it. but diun't see wide open
first half. just lil&gt;.e in the season- Faine said. "There are so many
Elliott sawe.r. who hat! a .spectacular tlip on
offensive tackle Joaquin
opening win against Baltimore. teams that are 0-4 right now. ·
the front st11ghta way in this race last year,
Gonzalez running toward the
did it again, ·sliding backward into the grass
Any time they built momen- For us to he sitting at 2-2 with a
end
zone.
and ooing a flip before landing on hi s
tum. it was blown on penalties chance to go 3-2 going to .
Davis said the Browns have and mistakes.
wheels as he crossed the finish line. He
Pittsburgh ... you can't ask for..
practiced the play for three
"We're not always playing as anything more but4-0."
wound up 22nd and fel l to eighth in the
standings, 166 points behind Earnhardt.
•• .~.· •• •• .&amp;...... ..... ••
•• •• .&amp;...... •• •• 1l' • • ...
Sadler was not injured.
• : ~# ••• ~· .........,
~~·
~· ~ ·~
in
Among the other contender'
NASCAR's playoff, defending series champion Matt Ken,eth finisheu 14th. followed
by Mark Martin and Ryan Newman. Jimmie
Johnson had an engine failure ano finished
37th. while Jeremy Mayfield was taken out
in a lour-car wreck on lap 148.
The results widened the gap .among the
contender&gt;. with Martin now Ill points
'
11.
behinu in fourth and Mayfield in lOth. 172
,.~
back.

National Football League

•••

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-..

e aen ar.

:f.
!:

;r.

1.

•·

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Send us a
:f. photo of
College Football
!: your
I
favorite
Ohio State victory already a
pet and
distant memory for Northwestern
they
·:f. might be----.:::::~~~
voted \into · our

Phil more. The junior receiver this Ohio State game and
Associated Press
grew up just outside of you could see we'd look
Columbus. and he know s good one series and then the
mo&gt;t of the Buckeyes. He next series not look good,"
EVANSTON.
Ill.
also had a huge game Philmore said. ·'Finally.
Northweyterri coach Randv Saturday night. including the offe nsive ly and defensively,
Walker got so many phone first touchdown catch of his we were able to go out and
calls and e-rnai\s after the
series after series and put out
Wildcats' stunning overtime career.
Yet Phil more isn't very a great effort."
upset of Ohio State. there\ no
imerested in rehashing the
Now the Wildcats have to
way he can return them all.
game anymore.
· prove they can do it agai n. '
Receiver Mark Philmore.
'· You have 12 games in a starting Saturday aga in st
an Ohio native, had 25 voice year," he said. '·You can't get Indiana .
·
mails Wjliting for him after
in one game.''
Though the Hoosiers are 2the game and another 12 stuck
There certain ly are things 3 and winless in the Big Ten. ·
when he woke up the next Northwestern (2-3) will take they pulled off their own
morning . .
. . .
from the big win. After shocker earlier th is year.
Yes., ev.erybody v.ants , to we cb or insis ting .they knocking off then-No. 24
congratulate the Wtldc.~ t s. weren't far aw&lt;ty from bein g Oregon. The Hoosiers also
t~ese days. But the W~ld~at l a gooo team. the Wildcats played Nonhwestern tough
have a n~ther game m a c,ou- ,howcd it on t~e field. The y lust year, taking them to
pie of days. an~ rcmHmcmg piled up -14-1 yard~ of total overtime before the Wildcats
about thal g~eat ."' 1n O\Cr offen,e.
the thtrd-mos t finally won~7-31.
OhiO State, tsn l goutg to help allowed by the Buckeye' in · .. Probahly ~\,ide our
th~m prepare for ll.
.
.. coach Jim .T re"el\ three~ '· foothallteam. it woulo seem
h can be a dt s tractt o~. plu ' ,ea,on,. 'Noah Herron that · we ha ve a lot to prove
~alker
satd
Mond ~y. ru, hcd for a ,ea,on-high 1.\9 comi.ng into. this game.
Before ~ou know 11 · you re yard' and ., cored three rime ,, thinking that (Ohio State)
rev~ilng 111 the celebratro~ . I ~ including the game winner in could nave been a !luke."
don l spend a lot of ttme cel - overtime. ·
'iffety Dominique Price said.
ebratm~ beca~se the .re&lt;tltty
The defense kept the ''But nur focus for every .
of · our .next task .1s rrght '" Buckeye' in check through game i' the same. We feel
front ot.us. ··· We have lo get the first three. quarters, and like we &gt;houHc!Jme out and
our players to n~.ake sure they made big stops when they play our best game. With
do that as well. .
..
had rt&gt; 111 the founh.quaner that, we're a hard~ team to
• From what Phllmore \aid. and overtime. The y lacked defeat.''
·the Wildcats have gor(en the, Ju-rin Zv- ick lour time' and
me &gt;Sage .
.
.
held kadin~ n1 1hc r Lllkll
~ 'lORE
If anyone wa&gt; gomg to It 'c Ro, 1 to 32 y~lrd ,.
•
!V ·
•
· ,
o:f t~e. exc~temenl ol .. Most im portant!). they
Saturday 's 3.~ 2~. VICtory. hnally played wnh the con·
•
Northwestern s lust ov~r 1i1tc'nc y.thcy'd been lacking .
Suhscrihe roda\'.
Ohm State srnce 197 1. ll '
"We had four game' before
992-2155 ·

..

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•
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o Cl ·: :'iTS • \ 'ol. :;:;, No. :ll

SPORTS
• Buckeyes deal with the
blame game after setback.
SeePage 81

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Ohio
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Rolling 5: 3-7-15-36-37

West VIrginia
Daily 3: 2-2-9
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'

In addition. several Pomeroy ,
employees wi ll be working 11 ith children and assisting 'ta\T at Meig '
Elementary School.
Mason employees will repaint the
home of Harry Ray Fry in New Ha\'cn.
Fry is well-known in the communi!)
as a devout. Chri,tian, prouo veteran
and avid Wahama supporter. David and
Jackie Field' of Fields Hardware in
New Haven have agreed to oonate the
paint and painting 'upplies.
In Gallipo·lis employee' will be
repainting the basement of the Ariel
Theatre. while at Tuppers Plain s the

RACINE A Meigs
Coul)ty horse recent\ y took top
honors in a $I 0. &lt;XJO stake'
race in Tillt. Pleasant. Mich.
Beholdanotherbeduino. bred.
owned. and trained by Jenning'
Beegle. won the Great Lakes
Quarter Horse Association
Stallion Service Sale Derby on
Auu. 22 at Mount Pleasant
Metldows Racetmck.
The three-year-olo gelding
now has three wins. two seconds and two thirds with
earnings over $12.000. Last
year he was the Ohio Reserve
Champion two-year-old .
Since Beegle\ retirement
in 1990. he ha&gt; devoted full
time to raising beef cattle and
racin g horses. In 1996 his .
homebred Watch Billy Sweep
won the Buckeye Derby, the
premier race for Ohio threeyear-old Quarter Horses .
In 200 I Beegle' s Meigs
County-breds swept the
awards at the Ohio Quarter
Horse Racing Association
end-of-year banquet. That
year he raced four horses .
two three-vear-olds and two
two-ye ar-o.lds.
Fols Beduino. a three-yearold. set a new track record at
River Downs and became the
lirst Quarter Horse to clock
an official AAA time at that
track, She also won races that year in both Michigan anti
lnoiana anu was awarded
best three-yea r-old filly in
Michigan and Ohio.
The other three-vear-old.
Strikin~ Colors. was reserve
chJmpwn sta llion in both
swtes. That same year Beegle\
Lucks Regal Chick won the $
'I0.000 Buckeye Futurity and
was named Ohio reserve
champion two-ye ar~olo. best ~
ed only by hi s other two-yearold , Our Royal Dancer.
"That was my best year of
ra&lt;:jng. an o I was Ohio\
trainer of the yea(. my
biggest hoitor to oate in racing ." Beegle says.
"I have been raising and
racing horses since I rode my
paint horse to a win at th e
Meigs Coun ty Fair a' a

0

S

aily ·enti.nel

"Pet Calendar"
111 C
ourt 5t.
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ~·

7.• •: _, '"f•' •: T"" ·'••

office 'tall "ill go to Eastern
Elementar) School. 11 here they will
l'OHduct readin g groups. tutor. 'erve
playgrnu~d out y C
illO perform ot~r
ta'k' "' a"igncd h1 the principal.
.. We have alway' trico ro make the
community a better place to live and
work.'. 'aio Paul Rceu . Farmers Bank
pre,ident. "Lending a helping hand i'
real ly what banking i' all ahout. It wa'
our phil o"&gt;phy in I'IIJ-1. and it still i'
tooay. The way we grow and prosper
i' hy help ing other' to do the same."
The bank hope' to make Community
Service D~1v an anm1al event.

J. REED

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport
Community
As'-lot:iation will co 111pkte
final plans fDr Christma'
promotion' in ~o1ember.
ano pl·ans a Moonltght
Madness e\'ent and a pumpkin-themecl conte ., t later
this month.
Meeting
Tue,Oa)
at
Peoples B;mk .. ""ociati on
member" dt..,cu:-.'Jed a ten tatil·e schedule of e1·ent' f&lt;&gt;r
Cllristmas-sca,on promotional e1ents. designed to
encou rage local shnpping.
A

merchant~·

urcn

h\lll\C i~

schcuuled from I to 4 p.m.
nn No1·. 2R. with ··Mr,.
Claus· w hand out treah .
The Chri,rma' Parade will
be conoucted at 6 p.m. on
IJec. -1. and a late-night
.. Frantic Sante~ .. ,hopping

'prce 11 ill be 'P"'"''red hv
partkipating merchanh on
Dec . ~.1.
A l.ongahcrt,:er Bas ket
Rin go gdmP. featuring dou- ,
hk pri1.e., for each game
and a 'pecia\ Snow Bear
designed hy Ohio River
Bear Co. to he awarded to
each winner. 11 il be held at
6 p.m . on Dec. 2. at the
Feen'ey -Bennetl Pmt 128.
American
Legion.
Pnll·ecd' from th~ lundrai'er 11·ill he u,eJ to purchase
"big ti cker " gi1·c·away items
fo r th e in ~ drawing on
Dec. 2.1. lnoi,·idual mer- ·

ch ant drawings will take
place \\cek l~ beginning
D.ec. I.
Brenda :vlcrritt of WYVK
Kadto rl'pnrtcd t lltJt mer-

c·hanh in Gallia and Y!a,on.
W . V&lt;t. c·oulllie' will. also par-

Please see Plans, AS

Southern Homecoming
Queen candidates

Jennings Beegle displ~ys the trophy
to him follow·
ing Beholdanotherbedutno's win. With him from the left are
JOCkey Denny BerryMI and Bi ll Baer who assists in tra ining.
teenager in 1950. Since than I 'till oo a lilt of the ground work
have raced in ~even ~latcs. such as breaking fuals to !call
from New York to Iow a.
&lt;utd line drive. M)· neighbor. Bill
"Stak es races are the tou gh- Bacr. like me a rctireo teacher
est to win. First. the owners &lt;Uld hooked on horses. has dlme
must make a series of pay- almost all the rioing for the pa.'t
ments over several months. tom yem,. until the horse' go to
and the hnrs~s must compete the t&lt;tcctr,tck. LNtally in April '"
in spcetl trials to earn a t:hance tv. o-year-olus. I ;un llntun&lt;tte to
in the final. usually run by the han~ Bill's patience &lt;utd quiet.
ten faqcst quali tiers.
easy approach to these high- Soutt1ern Higll School homeconi, ng week IS underway. At
"It is CS}JCCially gratitYi ng to smutg loals that are breo t(Jr 2 p.m. on Friday tl1e 11omecoming parade wtll make tis way
raise. break. ano tr~lin my hors- s~cd. Rough hano) produce through Rac1ne. Tllen at 7 p.m. the parade floats will ci r·
es here at home bdi1re tltcv haru-mouthed horses. which we
cle the football field before the game and at half·ttme the
e\·er ~ee a starting ~ate or a uy 10 amid.
winne'rs ,of the homecommg court will be al"nounced.
"I want the ·entire breaking
race track. Even if I cuulo afford
il. buying a winning racehor.-.e rr(X.:e~~ tu be plea~ant. gentle. Pictured in the front row {from ·left ) freshman ·attendant.
Morgan Brown. sophomore attendan t. Lmdsey Burrows.
would lllL'an les~ to me lh~m and without fear , 0 lhat Ill\
rai-..ing 1\&gt;al...; frmli my own horses mature illlo calm. tnhi- junior attendatJI. Chelsea Sm 1th. Seco nd row {from left \
ing.animals that W&lt;!n'r panic in . homecoming queen cand idates Ashto n Br own . Brooke
m;tre, here in Meigs Cnunty.
'taning gate. 1\&gt;r in,tance. ano Kiser. Jordan Netgler. Bfltta ny Ph ils on . ~ s hle y Roush .
a
"At 71 ~em-s of age; I seldom
(Beth. Sergentj plloto l
do any of the 1iding~ Ho\\c\'er. I ,elf-Je,tntct.'' Beegk says.

I.

Bring Home
More Bacon! Fo
.
.

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A3
Bs

···••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••···•·r4•

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Calendars

Comics

••

the commuhity service project, which
is being held In conjum:tion wi th the
bank's I DOth an ni versary• celebration.
POMEROY -On Columbus Day.
Employees of the Pomeroy bank
Monoa9. Oct. II. Farmers Bank will will be assist ing the Meigs County
be closed.
Cooperative Pari~h with its move to a
It's not unusual for a bank to be
closed on a federal holiday. but what new central \oc~tion at the Mulberry
is unu ,ual is that the bank employees Community Center, formerly the old
ins1ead of just enjoying a day off will Pomeroy Elementary School. The
be spending their time doing commu- clothing parish, the food pantry.
preschool and other function,, includnity service work.
The staff of all four Farmers Bank ing Goo's Net will all be housed there.
The bank employees will help with
offices - Pomeroy. Mason. Tuppers .
Plains and Gallipolis - about 70 the move. as well as cleaning and
employee' in all , will participate In painting rooms at the new faci lil y.

Meigs County horse takes top award

• Jack McCoy
• James Fisher
• Joseph Blazer Jr.

INDEX

:,

STAFF REPORT .

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Quarter horse Beholdanotherbeduino owned by Jennings Beegle took top honors in a $10,000
stakes face in Mt. Pleasant. Mich. Denny Berryhill is the jockey.

Details on Page A2 ·

t

mldail)"·nti,,..J.,·.,rn

Farmers Bank devotes ·a day to community service

BY BRIAN

,.

~" -N~~~ ~t-p~t:---------------- ~------------------

'""'

BREED@MYDAI LYSENTINEL COM

•••

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

:!011-l

Holiday pl'ans under
way in Middleport

WEATHER

\

\\ J:lll\I ·.SIIAY , OCTOIII.R h .

'

.

•••:

Pet Calendar!

clash over Iraq in
VP debate, A2

at

BY NANCY ARMOUR

2005

Edwar~, ·cheney

~

Browns.win ugly, gJad to be 2-2

-.T

•

Certificate of Deposit Rates
15 Month CD: Z.651Mt • Z-69~ .AP'I
40 Month· CD: 1.9Pift • 4.0Mft AP'I
M/tl:num of$ 10,000 to open the Mcount and obtilm the.mnu.;r/ pcret!nt.rge Ytcld f~PYJ Wh!C(I JJ .ucur.HC' .,;. of OrtobN I liJOf 5ub5t.mtl&lt;ll
penillty for e.trly W !tfldr;~witl Advert!5cd ritte ! f .tv.t•I.W/e unpl ttw end of busml.'u O..ry. CXto~t 15, JOo4

'

'

...

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sov111gs Compan y
'Ptr Bank In'+- .

•
•
•
•
•

Pomeroy 992.2136
Mason 773.6400
Tuppers· Plains 667.316 1
Gallipolis 446.2265
Member FDIC
www.lbsc.com

\

�,•

•

PageA2

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

NewsChannel

.Weather forecast
Skies wi ll be sunn) with 5
MPH winds from the northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 54. Skies will
be clear with 5 MPH winLb
from the northea~t turning
from the east as the evcnin~
'
progresses.
·
Or•emig/u ( 1-6 a.m.)
Qressc-s.
- Aftemoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will linger at
Temperatures will stay near 50. Skies will be clear with 5
63 with today\ high of 65 MPH winds from the eaq
occurnng around 4:00pm . turning · from the 'outhcast as
Wednesda\', October 6
Momin!: (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will &lt;.Imp
fmm 3R early this morning to
the low for the da y of 38 ul
7:00am as they rise back to 58
lute mornin~. Skies will be
sunny with' 5 MPH winds
from tile cast turnin~ from the
north as the morning pro-

-

the

o\'erni~hl
'

Jlrogresses.
'

Thursday. October 7
M"ming (7 a.m.-Noon)
Ten1peratures wi ll drop
from 4Kearly this morning to
-+7 by 7:00am then rise hack
up to 6-l late moming. Skies
will be sunny with 5 MPH
wincls from the east.
.4..ftemoon (J -6 p.m.)
TcmperaiUres will l10 ver at
70. Skies wi ll be sunny to
mostly sunny with 5 MPH
wind; from the east.

Community Calendar
Public meetings

AT&amp;T - 15 .20
BLI - 12.74
Bob Evans- 27.18
BorgWarner- 44 .93
Champion - 3 72
Charming Shops- 7.35
. Crly Holdtng - 33 37
Col- 37.22
DG -20.27
DuPonl - 43.23

Darlene Hussell , RRT. manager of respiratory therapy at HMC,
and Sandy Moore, LPH , Therapy Services Coordinator at
Holzer Medical Centerare busy planning the 4th annual respiratory symposium to be held at the Hospital Oct. 29.
subjects as trauma. treatment
of reversible obstructive airway disease. CPR techniques.
taki ng care of the caretaker
and therapist. teacher and
learner dynamics.
A special feature of the
Symposium is a vendor display with representation from
a number of local' businesses
and organizations, which will
have the newest product&gt; on
hand to view.
Healthcare professionals
who should attend this seminar include all respiratory
therapists. including tho se
from hospitals. long-term

ing education units (CEU )
have been approved by the
American Association for.
Respiratory Care (AARC);
and altendees wi ll receive·
these upon completion of the
Symposium.
To altcnd. a re g istration
form must be completed .
Forms may be obtained by
calling
Moore
at · the
Respiratory
Therapy.
. Department at HMC at (740)
446-5919. Re~istrat inns are
limited and will be un a first
come. first served basis.
Re!!istratil~l deadline will be
October
22.
2004.

l:are. doctor 's otTice~. anti

Regi~tration~ received after·

HME/DM E: homecare/D~E
business. owners; reg istered
nurses; licensed p'racti&lt;:al
nurses: respiratory s[\Idents:
and others who provide respi- .
mtory services. Six continu-

the deadline will be char&gt;!ed'
an additional $10 late fee .'
For registration or general
information about this year's
Resp iratory Symposium. call'
Mnnre al 17401 446-591\J.

Parade winners

Federal Mogul - .19
USB -29. 08
Gannell - 85.20 11
General Electric -~4.05
GKNLY- 3.95
Harley Davidson - 60.37
Kmarl - 89.20

Kroger -

15.56

Lid. - 21.57
NSC - 30 05
Oak H1UFinanc1al - 36.57
OVB - 31 .25

BBT -40.36
Peoples- 27 .22

Peps1co -

49 .35

Premier - 9.20
Rockwell- 39 .92
Rocky Boots~ 17.04
RD Shell.,- 52.33
SBC -27.20
Sears- 39.50
Wai·Marf- 5341
Wendy's .,... 34.50
Worthington- 22.61
Da1ly stock reports are the 4 p.m.
clos1ng quot~s of the prev1ous day's
transactions , prov1ded by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

(AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)

Vice president Dick Cheney. left, answers a question as his Democratic challenger John Edwards
waits his turn during the vice presidential debate in Cleveland on Tuesday. Oct. 5. 2004.

In a da...,h at

c!o~e q.~ar -

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

Support Groups

FAMILY MEDICINE

Skin tags harmless, need diagnosis
by physician before treatment

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
lAP) - Seventy-three people su spected of running a
cocaine pipeline between
New
York City
and
Youngstown have been
indictedonfederalcharges,
the top federal prosecutor in
northern Ohio announced

opening in the mesh.
Investi gator said th e
arrests represented the second phase of the investiga-

;,.J

~~
~
...-g."'
..:;

h

lion. which began nearly
two years ago. The first
detendants were indicted in
May.

f

&lt;-· /

S OW 0 f Your "Pumpkin" ~
In The Sentinel
~~-'..·",·

Cheney, Edwards clash over Ira·q :~~r~\~r~?s~:;!c~~ya~~ ~ ~UMPKIN PATCH~.· .
'-~
·in only vice presidential debate
~
C LEVELAND
Vice
Pre, ident
Dick
Cheney
accused the Democratic
presiden tial ticket Tue,day
night of turnin g again:--.t the
Iraq war for rm!itic~d ga in .
"We need a fresh 'tan"
·countered
Sen. . John
Edwanh
'in
L'illn Jlaiun"
.
c
debate. accu,ing the admm·iqr&lt;J(io n or mismana~ing the
c() nllict. ·
- "

I

Dear

Abby

inspire them to learn.) Thi s. in
ad\lition to spending one-onone time with your daughter.
would keep her French from
getting rusty, without sacrificing a relationship with someone you care about.
P.S. Even if you end the
relationship. there is no guarantee that your daughter
would continue to pass her
French along to her own chi Idren .
DEAR ABBY: My ex-wife.
"Misty," is now dating my
father (who is still married to
my mom. but separated).
Morn blames me. She says it\
all my fault because I brought
Misty into the family. We
have two kids. What can I do
to get past all the hurt and
pain'' I'm depressed .all the
time, and it has reached the
point that it i; affecting my
work and everyone around
me.
Please
help.
DESTROYED · IN KENTUCKY
DEAR DESTROYED: Twu
selfish people decided their
passions could not be denied,
and innocent bystanders- in
this case you and your mother
have been devastated.
Your father's misbehavior
and your wife's was not your
fault. Your mother blame \
you because she is unable to
project her anger where it
really belongs, which is on

your father.
Both you and your mom
could u;e coun&gt;cling to wurJ..
through this 'oap opera .
Plea'e take my advic~ and
wa,te no time in ;eeking a
referral - perhaps to a therapi st with two couches. si nce
you 'and you r mother are sufferin g from the same rroblem .
DEAR ABBY: A }Dun g
woman I know is dealing with
the death of her twin ,ister.
the result of a tragic accident.
Although she continues to
"work through" her grief with
her family and other siblings.
she would like to be able to
talk to another surviving twin
for help in coping with her
pain.
•,
Is there a support group for
twim who have lost their
twin'' Any information would
be appreciated. - WANTS
TO HELP JN OHIO
DEAR WANTS : Have I got
a group for her' It\ Twinles &gt;
Twins
Support
Group
International. Founded in
1985. it offers support for
twins who have lost their tw:n
(or other multiple). as well as
information and referrals.
phone support. conferences
and more. Your grieving
friend can contact the group
by writing : Twinle\S Twin s
Support Group. P.O. Box
980481. Ypsilanti . Ml 481980481. or visit the Web site.
www.twmlesst~m;.org.

• Dear Abby IS wrlllen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los· Angele.f, CA
90069.

Foothills Art Festival slated for Jackson

73 indicted in alleged NYC-Youngstown cocaine ring ·

ASSOCIA.TED PRESS WRITER

Church services

Birthdays

Trophies were presenteo to the winn ing entries in the Sternwheel Rive rfest parade Tuesday by
Btlli Bentley. tourism director. They were Southern High School Band directed by Ben Hager.
first; Southern Brownie Troop 1120 and Southern Junior Troop 1204, second; and Trix the
Clown. third. Shirley Cogar. left is a scout leader. and Hager. back right. is Southern 's band
·
director.

TOM RAUM

meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at
LONG BOTTOM - A
the hall.
hymn sing will be held at 7
Saturday, Oct. 9
p.m. at the Faith Full Gospel
Wednesday, Oct. 6
POMEROY
Return
Church.
Rogie Bissell and
PAGEVILLE - Stipio
Jonathan
·
Meigs
Chapter,
Just for Now will be provicfDEAR ABBY: 1 am fluent
TownshiP. Trustees, 6:30 p.m.
of
the
American
Daughters
ing
the
music.
at Pagev1lle Town Hall.
Saturday, Oct. 9
in French and English . I want
POMEROY -Applicants Revolution, will meet at I
SYRACUSE
_
Syracuse
.
my daughter. "Chantal," to
briefing for all Meigs County p.m. at the Pomeroy Library Church of the Nazarene will speak both languages. I am in
townships, village officials, social room. Rae Moore will
county officials, fire depart- be the speaker. The program have a harvest party at 6 p.m . a relationship with a man
ments not part of a village or will be' on getting acquainted, . on Saturday, with a hay dde, ("Clark") who has three chilwiener roast, and games.
oren who live with him full
township and other govern~ telling a family experience.
Sunday,
Oct.
10
time. I am wondering if
, . ment entities experiencing
BIDWELL
A
special
speaking French to Chantal in
flash flood and river flood
service will be held at the front of Clark and hi s chi ldren
damage, 9 a.m. , courthouse
Poplar Ridge Free Will is rude. My daughter's · first
annex basement. Call Robert
Baptist Church, 2 p.m. with language is French ; and I
Byer at 992-4541.
Sunday,
Oct.
I
0
of Huntington, W. have always conversed with
Sincere
. REEDSVILLE - Olive
POMEROY
The
Va.
to
provide
the music. For her in French .
Township Trustee' will meet
Carleton
Church
of
County
This has been a point of
more information, call.Jo)ln
at 6:30 p.m. in regular sesRoad
18,
Pomeroy
will
have
Elswick,
593-7390.
contention
for some time
sion at the township garage.
its
annual
homecoming
with
BOTTOM
A
now.
i
have
asked Clark to
LONG
Thursday, Oct. 7
dinner
at
noon
and
special
hymn
sing
featuring . make an effort to . learn
POMEROY
-· Public
Delivered will be held at 7 French, but he has no desire
meeting to discuss the initia- services at I :30 p.m.
The p.m. at the Mr. Olive Church. to. nor do hi s children.
tive petition campaign to · RUTLAND
bring full health care to all Rutland Church of Christ will Long Bottom.
There is a "closeness" facliving and working in Ohio celebrate its 175th anniverSYRACUSE - Syracuse tor, I believe, in sharing my
and bring E.R and medical sary with a homecoming. Church of the Nazarene will mother tongue (my mother is
transportation services to Worship and communion will have Burgers and Bible French. my father American)
Meigs County, 7 p.m., begin at 9:30 a:m., a carry-in Study at 6 p.m. on Sunday at with my daughter. and I
Pomeroy Library. Contact dinner will be held at noon, the church.
would like to carry it down
Bob Smiddie, 69ll-3415 or and afternoon services will
POMEROY
The
group
the
generations. Clark says I
follow at 2 p.m . with special
Linda Dye, 698-6050.
Earthen
Vessels
will
perform
can
talk to Chantal in French
POMEROY
Holzer music by the Gabriel Quartet. at 6 p.m. at Laurel Cliff Free when we're alone, but that
Hospice Meigs c ·ounty will
Methodist Church.
wouldn't be often. What do
have it~ dinner with friends
you think? Is this worth endouting at 6 p.m. at Crew 's
ing the relationship'? Restaurant. For more inforThursday, Oct. 7
FRANCO- FILLE IN THE
mation call 992-7463.
,.1
CARPENTER - Revival
U.S.A.
Saturday, Oct. 9
Sunday, Oct. 10
services wi II be conducted at
DEAR FILLE: It's interestSYRACUSE
· The
CHESTER
A 6:30p.m. through Oct. ·10 at
ing
that you ha ve.Jramed your
Carleton
School/Meigs
Republican rally will be held the Union Baptist Church
question
in blaCk-and-white.
Industries
will
be
sponsoring
from II :45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m . near Carpenter. Dr. David
Sunday at the Chester Rahamut, founder of World their 2nd Annual Community Surely your daughter can
Commons. Candidates will Christian Outreach Ministries Olympics from 8:30a.m. to 4 remain fluent in French withbe there.
and pastor of the End-Time p.m. It is a fundraiser for out excluding Clark and his
Harvest Church in Jackson Marvin Cooper who is bat- children from your conversawill be preaching. Formerly tling cancer. Call992-6681 to tions. If you love him and
care about his children's feelof Trinidad, Dr. Rahamut was register a team by Oct. I.
ings, you can enroll your
converted to Christianity
daughter in .French language
from the Moslem faith. There
will be special singers. Pastor
Wednesday, Oct. 6
and literature classes, and
MIDDLEPORT The is David Wiseman, 742-2568.
send her to visit her FrenchFriday, Oct. 8
Friday, Oct. 8
Middleport Literary Club
POMEROY - Widow's speaking grandmother, and will meet at 2 p.m. at the
COOLVILLE .
Fall &lt;fellowship meets at noon at if it's affordable - take her
at
Carthage KFC/Long John Silver's.
home of Leah · Ord. Gay revival
someplace where French is
Perrin will revi ew "Fo ur Community Church, 7 p.m.
the dominant language for a
Spiri ts" by Sena Jeter Friday and Saturday. Pastor
vacation. (If Clark and hi s
Naslund.
David Fields and Builders
children went along, it might
Quartet on Friday, Pastor
· Thursday, Oct. 7
Wednesday, 13
CHESTE R - The Chester- Sam Anderson and 16 vear·LAKIN,
W.Va.- Douglas
Shade Hist.orical Association old accordion and piano playwill have a planning meeting er Andrew Prather on R. Roush will celebrate his
at 7 p.m. at the old Chester Saturday. Information at ~67- 93rd birthday. Cards can be
Courthouse.
.1593 or 667-0606. Church sent to him c/o Lakin · JACKSON - Nearly 600
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The located on U.S. 50 W., six Hospital. I Bateman Circle. works of art are expected at
the 23rd Annual Foothills Art
VFW Ladies Auxiliary will miles from Cool Spot 570-A. Lakin, W.V.. 25287.
Festival at Canter's Cave 4-H
Camp, 5 miles north of
Jack son, off Route 35. 10
a.m.to 7 p.m. Oct. 15 and 16,
and from noon to 5 p.m. Oct.
17.
There is no admission
charge, parking is convenient
and free and the lodge is
handicapped
accessible.
Question: I am 65 years uld change. They are usually removed surgically by your Concessions are available
and have been bothered by painless; sometimes friction doctor, skin tags do not usu- throu gh the Canter's Cave
moles (sometimes called skin from clothing rubbing against ally recur. The "down side" staff.
tags) mostly in the neck area. the skin tags can cause irrita- is. however, that your insurWork will be hung in the
1 have had some removed in tion. No treatment is needed ance may not cover this sim- categories of Oil/Acrylics,
areas that might cause a prob- for a skin tag, but many peo- pie procedure as it is seen as Mixed
Media/Prints,
lem. Is there a topical medi- pie want them removed. "cosmetic." ·
Pastel/Drawing. Photography,
dne I can a~ply to make Often the person feels they
As 1 said at the beginning. Three Dimensional, and
these go away.
are unsightly and detract my strongest caution is not to Watercolor. Most of the artAnswer:
Skin tags, or from his or her appearance.
If
f
"acrochordon" in med.ical Another reason cited for attempt se -treatment 0
lingo. are very common removal is that they have . your skin problem until you
benign skin le sions . A ski n . become infla!Jled or sore have had the diagnosis contag is not the same thing as a because of the friction with tinned by your family physiPOMEROY - The Ro,·k
mole . Since you seem to be clothing that I mentioned. cian. Also discuss your plans
Springs
United Methodist
confused on this point, the Skin tags can be removed for self treatment with him or
first thing to do is to see your easily in a doctor's office. her before starting any ore Church will be making apple
family physician or a derma- The doctor may cut them off medication, even a topical butter this weekend. Orders
tologist to confirm that you . with no local anesthetic if cream.
actually have skm tags.
they are very small. Usually
Family Medicine® is a
Assuming that what you they snip right off, but some weekly column. To submit
have are skin tags, I'll devote can be frozen with cry- questions, write to Martha A
the rest of today's column to ocautery or burned off with Simpson. D.O .. M.B.A.. Ohio
SYRACUSE - Eric and
this common skin problem. electrocautery. Skin tags that University
College
of
Why some peofle develop are removed from an adult Osteopathic Medicine, P.O. Tamara Hayman Tucker of
skin tags is stil a mystery. generally do not have to be Box 110, Athens. Ohio 45701. Chesapeake, announce the
However, we do know that sent to a pathologist for or via e-mail to readerques- birth of a
they are caused by an over- review. However, if a skin tag tions@jamilymedicinmews.o daug-hter ..
growth of skin. and the inci- is removed from &lt;! child, a rg . . Medical information in Paytyn
dence increases with age. In pathologist's review is neces.· this column is prrJI'ided as an F a i t h
fact. more than 25 percein of sary b~cause childhood skin educational service onlv. It Tucker ,
the population past midlife '· tags can sometimes be can- does not replace the J11dg- born . on
14.
have them . Further, we know cerous.
ment of rour personal physi- Sept.
s·
h
e
that they tend to run in famiI looked over several Web cian, who should be relied 011
weighed
7
lies and are more common in sites that tout over-the- 10 diagnose and recommend
obese people.
counter topical treatments for treatment for any medipal pounds, 13
Skin tags are most common ski n tags. I do not know if cmiditions. Past columm ore ounces .
in the creased skin of the they work. I did tind one site
G r 'l n d
Paytyh Tucker
' '
armpit. e"roin region and that said the medication it m·ailable online at llww..fam~
ilrmedicinenews.org.
parents are ·
neck . They usually appear was touting would get rid ·of
flesh colored but can be the. skin tags after three
----------brown . The~e tiny s)&lt;in pro- months of use . .but that the
COUPON
trusions often have a small, tags would recur when the
narrow stalk connecting the medication was stopped.
skin bump to the surface of
H you want to get rid of
Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by.
the skin. but sometimes they your skin tags. fd recomcan be flat.
mend the surgical route. This
Skin rags do not grow or is benwse once they are I~ ™ HEARING AID
. .·
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes OffiCI!
New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH
FRIDAY, October 8, 2004 • 9:00am-3pm . ·
Call Toll Free 1·800-634-5265 lor an immediate appointment.
The tests will bl!.given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist.
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
The Daily Sentinel
copversatlon Is Invited to have a FREE hearing test to see if
Subscribe today • 992-2155
this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you lor
www.mydailysentind.com
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value .

Homecomings/
Reunions

Local Stocks
ACI- 35.98
AEP- 32 .26
Akzo- 36.07
Ashland Inc. - 55 .93

BYTHEBEND
Boyfriend refuses to say 'oui'
to bilingual moms request .

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 6, 2004

HMC to host Fourth Annual
Respiratory.Fall Symposium
GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer
Medical
Center
Respiratory
Therapy
Department announces their
fourth annual Respiratory
The one-day
Symposium.
presentation will give respiratory care professionals the
opportunity to learn and
review different aspects and
concepts in the respiratory
tield. Scheduled for Friday.
October 29. the event will
take place in Conference
Rooms A and B of the
Hospital's Education ·and
Conference Center.
Accordin·g to Sandy
Moore, LPH. therapy services
coordin;~tor at Hoi'zer Medical
Center. and Darlene Hussell.
RRT. manager of respiratory
therapy at HMC. the planning
committee has been working
hard to provide participants
with a superior eti'nference
experience.
A variety of topics will be
covered over the duration of
the Syni posium by several
healt.h care professionals
indLrding . Sally Bell. RN,
MS.· Program Director for
Tmuma Services at The Ohio
State University: Timothy
Myers, RRT, of the Cleveland
Clinic; Dave Rodgers, Ed.S ..
NREMT-P. Charleston Area
Medical
Ce nter
Health
Education and Research
In st itute; Mike Sherbun.
Ph.D .. MHA. RN. Cincinnil!li
Childrens Hospital ; and
RRT,
William
Malley.
Director of Respiratory
Services at West Penn
Hospital in Pittsburgh. The
se minar will discuss such

PageA3
..

-

ters, the Democratic vice
pre,idential
candidate
accused Cheney of ·· not
being straight" with th~ publi c about u wm thal has
claimed more than 1.000
American li I'C'. He ;aid
ca~ualtie~ are ri~i n !! monthly
and the United 'stat e' (s
bearing . 90 pcrccm of 1he
co;t of the conflict a' well
as sullerin_[! 90 rncem of
the dead and wuu ndcd .
Chene y challenged that.
"'ying . the Iraqi sc,·urity
.forces had taken ncarlv h,i Jf

from
the YoungstownWarren. area and nearby
Sharon and Sharpsville, Pa.
Pictures will run:
Eight are from New York ..~
Thursday,
of the ca., ual•ies. "For vou to City and the hometown; of
October
28
demean thei-r sacrif(ce ·is eight others w.ercn·r known. · ~
beyond the pale ... he said to
Three teams of officers ~
Edward s. seated practicall y from the regional Mahoning · .'% Deadline for Entry:
Thursday,
at his clbtlW.
·
Valley Law Enforcement · )fJ
The vice president al so Ta&gt;k Force hit the streets ~
October 21
criti ci(ed Democratic presi- jll't past ;unrise to start :·;,.:·dential candidate John Kerry making arrests. Police in
for wk.ing ''tbe wrong "ide.. New York alsu were out
on defense issues over the making arrests. mmtly in
pa't three decades.
the Bronx .
''I'm 'aying ;pecifica ll y
' All
defenJants
were
that I don ' t be lieve he has charged with conspiracy to
Khlnil' Billin~s
the qualil·ic; we need in a dis.tribute heroin or cocaine. , ·· ·
''l.u\ ~ \'a:··
commander. in chief." he The. pen&lt;Ilty range; from I()
said.
year' to li fe in prison . Some·
Mail or drop off at the Daily Sentinel
race additional charges of
111 Court Street • Pomero y, OH 45769
distributin~ · heroin
or
\:OCaine. fi(carms violati~li1S :;,
I Child's Name:
und money la untlcring .
..
Yollng;town
Detecti ve '. From :
Sgt. Mike Lambert pointed
-· :J Your Name :

· Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

Qn\y

$8.00

i:?r:
..

.

"~faceJjf€J ((;() &amp; 'f/rPng~f€J ~6,

out ..,lee! mc..,h l:o\.;ering a. I

..

rear window or one raided
·Address
house. lie said dru g buyer'
would park next door &lt;llld I;;· Phone:
uJrne throu'g h ~~ gate Hi tJ1e
window. which ha' a1sm&lt;d I

-·

Ads must be pre-paid

Apple butter orders being taken

.

'

-

,.

::;.!
.... '

-..•
::;.!

are now being taken by
Loui se Radford at 992-5218
and Nancy Radord. 992-3912.
The cost is $5 a quart aAd

$2.50 a pint. The money
ra.ised in the apple butter project goes toward projects at
the church.

Tuckers announce birth

·1

' c

Charity Fund. Adena Health
Systen1. Cotner &amp; Cooley.
CPA of McArthur and
Jackson. Oak Hill Banks.
Holzer Medical CenterJackson. National City Bank.
and Ohio Arts Council.
Live music will be heard a\
the Festival with clas;ical
Guitarist Sean Ferguson on
Saturday afternoon and The
Brighton Trio playing chamber music on Sunday afternoon.
· Kids are invited to trv their
hand at a variety of ari&gt; projects on the mezzanine from
noon to 2 p.m . on Saturday
and from noon t'( 2 p.m. on
Sunday. For more information. call Southern Hills at
286-6355.

work is for sale . Participants
range from emerging to professional artists.
Several artists will be working on the premises during the
weekend. Stone scu lptor
Stanley Greer will set up in
front of the . Lodge and
demonstrate his an. Jewelry
maker Cheryl Browning will
be shap ing and stringing her
wire wrap wares.
Painters Joan Arnold of
GreenfjeJd. Connie Barrett of
Hillsboro. and Evelyn Pierson
of Sabina will each have an
area in which to display a
wide variety of their originals
and prints.
Foothills is sponsored by
Sands Hill Coal Company.
OSCO Industries Employees

I
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PROUD TO BE APART
. OF YOUR LIFE.

..

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REE HEARING TESTS

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UMWA• UAW • ARMCO, AND ALL OT~EA INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WALK·INS WELCOME
,

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

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Dan and Faith Hayman of Wheeling. W. Va. and Kath)
Syracuse, Paul Tucker of Cavanaugl1 of Jacksonville, Fla.

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~ &amp;UYTH£

~'i~~~~ PAIR AND
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�OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel
'•

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
'establishment ofreligion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitio.n
· the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

vrEiw

USPS
Appnriates postal tW1kets
Dear Editor:
I would like to say something about our postal service and
the fine men and women who work there for all of us. Do we
really realize just how important this service is to all of us? If
you need to get mai I across town. state or country or around
the world. the U.S. Postal Service is the way to go. The
Federal government considers it so important the the post
office has its own law enforcement officers who have the
power and authority to make an arrest. This is to protect those
who work for it. Consider what would happen without them.
Each of us would have to find our own way to get our mail.
To those we want it to go to in the shortest possible time, not
just put an address and a stamp on an envelope. Each year the
U.S. Post Office dlivers to us. the American people, no less

Wednesday; October 6,

"We intend to enforce the
fundamental constitutional
right of every American to
vote - to ensure that the
Constitution's promise is
realized and that, in disputed
elections, every vote is
counted fully and fairly." John Kerry, Democratic
presidential' nominee
"In 2004, Democrats will
win the White House back
the old-fashioned way- by
counting every vote." John Edwards, Democratic
vice-presidential nominee
"Every American must be
able to exercise his or her
basic, non-negotiable right'
to
vote.
This
year,
Americans deserve an errorfree,
intimidation-free,
voter-disenfranchisemen-t
free. chad-free, butterflyfree election."
Terry •
McAuliffe,
Democratic
National Committee chairman
The party of Kerry and
Edwards and McAuliffe
c9ntinues to insinuate that
the last presidential election
was stolen. Democrats continue to suggest that black
and senior voters were disenfranchised.
Th~y continue to promote
the fiction that, if each and
every vote had been counted
four years ago, George W.
Bush would not be sitting in
the Oval Office.
So this time around,
Democrats say, they are
going to oispatch observers
and lawyers to polling places
throughout the country "to
monitor
elections
and
enforce the law.'' In this
presidential election, they
declare, every ballot cast
will be counted.
Well , it's nice to know that
· Kerry and Edwards and
McAuliffe have dedicated
.
themselves this year to pro-

.

than 200 billion piw;,s of mail. No other post office in the
world can say they can do that. You must admit that is a lot of
mail.
The postal workers walk up and down hills; sidewalks and

Joseph
Perkins

tecting the voting rights of
poor little minorities. like
yours truly, as · well as
seniors. But I, for one, am
not worried about my voting
rights being abrogated. I'm
far more concerned that the
ballot I cast on Election Day
will be neutralized by voting
wrongs.
For example, a coalition of
groups supporting Kerry's
candidacy has set up a Web
site that urges supporters of
independent
presidential
candidate Ralph Nader to
vote for Kerry in battleground states in exchange
for votes by Kerry supporters for Nader in states where
the outcome' is not expected
to be close .
Groups engaged. in thi s
unlawful
vote-swapping
claimed to have "helped
36,000 voters ·exchange
pledges" in 2000. Those
votes could have, conceivably, changed the election
outcome in Iowa , New
Mexico.
Oregon
and
Wisconsin - states that
Bush lost by fewer than
17,000 votes total.
Then there's the recent
revelation that some 46,000
New York City residents are
unlawfully registered to vote
not only in the Empire State
but also in Florida. Of those
registered in both states,
nearly 70 percent arc
Democrats .
Nearly I .700 of those registered in both states request-

ed that absentee ballots be
sent to their home in the
other state. 1t appears that
many, if not most, voted
twice-, making the muchcontested 2000 Florida presidential election closer than
it otherwise would have
been.
A recent article in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association identities yet another area of voting abuse - the large numbers of Americans sutl'ering .
from Alzheimer's disease
and other forms of dementia .
who are allowed to cast ballots. no matter how mentally
incapacitated. Workers for a
party or a candidate who
show up at a nursing home
to "assist" with voting can
commit "wholesale fraud,"
said Stanford University law
prol'essor Pamela S. Karlan,
an author of the article.
That is borne out by two
other studies, one in
Pennsylvania, the other in
Rhode Island. which found
that ·patients in dementia
clinics actually turned out in
higher numbers in proportion to the gener&lt;!l popu~a­
tion than did voters overall
in the last presidential election.
And Democrats continue
to troll for votes in nursing
homes and other long-termcare facilities. For example,
in Santa Clara County. Kerry
campaign operatives have
sued the local Veteran's
Affairs medical center for
preventing them from signing up dementia patients to
vote.
Fim~lly. there's the issue of
non-citizen voting. The 11 year-old National Voter
Registration Act declared
that stale driver's license
applications "shall serve as
an application for voter reg-

streets six out of seven days a week in the hot sun and the bitter cold. The .only time they don 't deliver is when the weath-

.\

Jack McCoy
REEDSVILLE - Jack L.
McCoy, 74, of Reedsville,
went to be with the Lord on
Monday, Oct. 4, 2004, at his
residence.
He was born April 7. 1930,
so n of the late William Rufus
and Elizabeth Hurd McCoy.
He was a. heavy equipment
operator and a veteran of the
U.S. Army during the Korean
Conflict.
Survivors include hi s wife.
Enda McCoy: two daughters
and sons-in-law, Sandra and
Ri ck Bright and Stella and
Charles Blankenship: two
sons and a daughter-in-law.
David McCoy and . Jeff and
.Kathy McCoy; four grandchildren: Joshua Bri ght,
Jeremy
McCoy.
Lucas
McCoy
and
Jacob
Blankenship: a brother and
six sisters.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two
gr&lt;mdchildren. Jason Bright
and Brando n McCoy, two
brothers and \WJ:J sisters.
Services wfrbc held at I
p.m. on Thursday. Oct. 7,
2004. at White Funeral Home
in Coolville. with.' James
Spencer officiating. Burial
wiII follow at Pleasant Grove
Cemet ery in Reedsville.
Friends may call from 2 to
4 and 6 to g p.m. on
Wednesday.

MIDDLEPORT - JJmes
liS.
of
Paul
Fisher.
Middleport. passed away on
Sunday. Oct. 3. 2004 . at
Hol zer Medical Center Ill
Gallipolis. He was born on
Jan . 17. 1939. in Gallipolis.
son of the late Otho and Alice
Neal Fisher. He was a retired
employee of the Pomeroy
Water Department.
Besides his parents. he was
preceded in death by hi s sister. El la Shoemaker. and a
brother. Charl es ''Chuck"
Fisher.
Sun·iving are his wife.
Bessie
Quillen
Fisher.
Middleport:
dau),'hters.
Jeann ie I Bretll l Slaytnn of
lmJiana anU An!!ie Kerr of

IT'S A TOU6H

.

•

Middlcpnrt: fout~

TOU6HJOB...

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services
Correction Policy

· (USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley P~bllshlng Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
accurate. If you know of an error m a through Friday, 11 1 Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy. Ohio. S,econd-class postage
pa1d at Pomeroy.
2151;.
Member: The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper AssociatiOn
Our main number is
Postmaster: Send address corrections
(7401 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

.News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. i 2
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14

Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ex113

Advertising
Outskte SalaS: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
ClaosJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

Circulation

to The Dally Sentinel, 11 1 Court Street,

Pomeroy, Oh1o' 45769.

Subscription Rates
BY carrier o·r motor route

One month ............'li.57
On~ year ...... -...... 1114.40

Dally .... , ..............50'
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Subscribers should remit in advance
d1rect tci the Daily Sentinel.· No subscription by mail permitted in areas where
home carrier BefVIce is availabte.

District Mgr.: Jason Panerson, E~et. 17

· Mail Subscription
lnalde Meigs County

General Manager

13 Weeks .
. .. '30.15
26 Weeks .... .' ... .....'60.00
52 Weeks .... . ..... ' 118.80

Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12

E-mail:
news@mydaily§entinel.com

.

Web:
www.myda1tysent1nel com

•

Outside Meigs County .
13 Weeks .
26Weeks
52 Weeks . . .

. ...'50. 05
.. ' 100.10
. ..... '200.20

Joseph At'thur "Joey"
Blazer Jr. , 42, of Northup,
passed
away unexpectedly
Friday. Oct.
I, 2004, at
Daytona
Beach. Fla.
He was
employed
by
the
Ji v iden

Paul

w e r

Equipment Joseph Arthur
Co.
at
••Joey"
Gallipolis.
Blazer Jr.
He was a
U.S. ~rmy veteran. having
served in Germany for three
yea rs and had previously
been employed by Bob Evans
Farms, Restaura nt Division.
for 15 years.
In 1994. he was honored by
the Bob Evans Corp. as
General Manager of the Year.
He was also a member of the
Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church at Rio
Grande.
Joey was a lively.. courageous. co mmunity-minded
man who had been involved
w;th numerous activities in
the Gallia County area for
many years. inc:luding being
a leiider for the local Boy

.

IT'S A

Middleport

The Daily Sentinel

Joseph Blazer Jr

Troop. He was a 1980
Galli a Academy High School
graduate, and an avid fisherman and hunter.
Joey was born May 18,
1962, in Portland, Ore ., son
of Sarah Tucker Blazer
Hohman of Rio Grande, and
the late Joseph Blazer Sr.
He married Sarah Jane
Hood on April 29, 1990, at
Rio . Grande, ~nd she survives :
, In addition to his wife and
mother. he is survived by two
sons: Joseph A. Blazer III of
Pomeroy. and John. Adam
Blazer of Northup: a brother,
James A. Blazer of Patriot: a
sister. Judith (Robert) Loucks
of Molalla. Ore.: his stepfather. Fritz Hohman of Rio
Grande: and his mother and
father-in-law, Mary (Jack)
Lane of Bidwell , and Robert
(Janis) Hood of Oklahoma.
He is also survived by sisters-i n-law, Leah Fink · of
Mason W.Va., Lora (Charlie)
Lester of Patriot. and Carey
(J.R.) Wright of Bidwell ;
stepbrothers and sisters ,
Gregory Hohman, Jeffery ·
Hohman, David Hohman and
Marilee Bercik of Columbus,
Susan Ri cker of Cathedral
City, Calif.; two special
friends, Mike · Bastiani of
Gallipolis,
and
Barry
Plymale of Bidwell; and
numerous aunts. uncle s,
nieces, nephew s and cousins.
Services . will be II a.m.
Thursday. Oct. 7, 2004. at
Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church.
Rio
Grande, with the Rev. Pat
Kin g officiating. Interment
will follow in the Calvary
Cemetery. Full military rites
will be conducted by the
Gallia County Veterans
Service Organizations.
Friends may call at the
McCoy -Moore
Funeral
Horne Wetherholt Chapel.
420 First Ave .. Gallipolis, on
Wednesday. Oct. 6. 2004,
fron14 to 9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, the fam ily requests that memorial
gifts be gi vcn to the John
Adam Blazer College Fund.
Ohio Vall ev Bank. 420 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
Condolences
can
be
emailed
to
mccoymoore @c harter.nel or
www.timeformemory.com.

Local Briefs .

David Edwards

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

m.

S~out

'

~~"l~ JOB ...

er is so bad it is a direct threat to human life. THey do an great
and oustanding job but how often do we thank them? In the
summer heat. do we give them a cold, can or a bottle of pop?
· When it is bitter cold, do we give them a cup of coffee? There
are many ways to show them we appreciate them. The oldest
and perhaps still best is to say to them, when you see them,
thank you. We would all have a much harder and more difficult life . Think of that the nex t time you get your mail.

"'ll"

David (Ruthie) Fisher of
Indiana, David (Cheryl)
Fisher of Rutland, Dewayne
(Tabitha)
Fisher
of
Middleport, and Jay (Christy)
Fisher of Middleport; 12
grandchildren and a great
grandchild: his mother-inlaw, Myrtle Quillen of
Middleport ; two sisters,
Phyllis (Delbert) Allison of
London and Norma Shively
of Parkersburg. W.Va.: and
several nieces and nephews·.
Services will be held at I
p.m. on Wednesday. Oct. 6.
2004 , at Fisher Funeral ·
Home in Middleport with
Delbert Allison officiating.
Buri&lt;tl will be in Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 7 to
9 p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home , and may send
online
condolence s
to
www .l'i sherfuneralhomes .co

P o

James Fisher

IT'S A TO(J(1H

I

Rotary helps out flood victims

Obituaries

istration with respect to ele.; tions for federal office."
The so-called "Motor
Voter Law" has made it all
too easy for non-citizens to
add their names to voter rolb
in states that do not· require
proof of U.S. cit i7enshlp as a
condition of obtaining a dri ver's permit.
Indeed, in his just published
book, "Stealing
Elections, " u former colleague of mine. 'wall Street
Journal columnist John
Fund, notes that at least
eight of tit~ 19 hijackers who
carried out the Sept. II ,
-200 I, terror attacks were
actually able to register to
vote iil either Virginia or
Florida.
. Yet , whenever the suggestion is made that, in a nation
where so me 32 million residents
are foreign-born
(where as many as one-quarter of the foreign-born are
here illegally), people ought
to provide proof of citizenship when they register to
vote, Democrats cry "intimidation ."
Whenever the proposal is
made that people who show
up at polis to cast their votes
ought to present some form
of photo identification. the
Democrats shout "racism."
The party of Kerry and
Edwards and McA uliffe hasn't had nearly as much to say
about voting wrongs as it has
about voting rights.
Maybe that's because the
Democrats know they stand
to benefit most from voteswapping, double voting.
registration of dementia
patients. and non-citizen
voting.
I Joseph Perkins 1s a
colwwristfor Tire San Di&lt;'gu
Union- Trilnme und can be
rellclred lit Joseplt.Pakins@
Union Tril&gt;.cmn. 1

JOB ...

The myth of clean undenvear
My mother always told me
to wear clean underwear in
case I was in an accident. It
didn't occur to me until years
later that there were plenty
of other good reasons to
wear clean .underwear. Why
didn't my mother ever say:
"You should always wear
clean underwear because
dirty underwear is disgusting"?
·
Why did she bring accidents into the conversation,
especially with a ·little kid?
What was she trying to do?
Scare me? Wreck my childhood? Turn me into psychological basket case for
the rest of my life over
underwear?
People are in accidents all
the time·. and I have yet to
read about the state .of their ·
underwear in any of the
reports. How often have you
ever seen this in the newspaper: .
· ''Marvin Kittle was injured
in single-car rollover on
Route 8 early this morning
after. swerving 'to avoid a
deer. He sutlered multiple
contusions and a sprained
wrist. He was held overnight
at County Hospital for'
observation . Police say he
was wearing clean under-·
wear at the time of the acci :
dent."
"Prisilla Pushface of

a

accident. You're 54, but the
paper will somehow find a .
high school yearbook photo
of you that wasn't even good
back then and slap it next to
the
tale of your untimely
Jim ,
demise. They will find a
Mullen
photo of you that's so bad the
DMV wouldn't even use it
for :,:our driver's license
because it was "too scary."
Cantorville fell off a ladder They will find a photo of
while cleaning· her niin gut· you given to them by an ex ters late Tuesday afternoon. spouse who won't be happy
The EMS crew transported until he's wrecked your
her to Bl.iptown Medical afterlife. too.
Center where her underwear
Your friends and neighwas cut off and tested for bors will lq()k at it and say,
cleanliness. A fuil recovery "I wonder if that's the same
is expected."
Nellie Flatbuzz that we
"Brad Snuffin, 41 , of knew'' It doesn't look anyWaterton suffered a severe thin g like her. Besides it's all
heart attack while washing fuzzy and out of focus.
hi s brand-new red sports car . Maybe she's better off dead,
in the driveway of his home. she neve r took a good picEmergency crews .arrived, ture."
but left him to die when they
The reasoQ papers run
discovered he was· wearing these horribl e pictures is
soiled and tattered under- simple. Say you're in a grue~
- .
wear. No mqutry ts expect- some S UV /train-crossing
ed. His new 18-year-old girl- a.ccident al four in the afterfriend is already seein g noon. The story's going to be
someone else ."
in tomorrow · mormng's
No, newspapers won't, paper: They've got eight
write about !he state of your hours to find out who you
underwear wh'en you are in are where yuLl. live, and get a
an accident. but what they picture ' or you fcir the front
will do is run the mo;; page .
hideou;. dor~e't. geek iest.
So at five after ; ix. the
grainiest ricture of you ever phone rings wher~ )UU used ,
taken . Say you die in a car to live and it's sonic jerk

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

2004

IT'S A TOU6H

JOB ...

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 6, 2004

Voting rights, voting wrongs

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

PageA4

from the city desk wanting
to know if there's a picture of
the deceased they can use in
the newspaper. Your familv.
unlike mine, would probabiy
be too grief-stricken to deal
with it. Going through pictures of you will just upset
them. So the paper calls a
neighbor, a friend or a n!iative. Finally. they find someone willing to part with a
group shot of you at the
company picnic in 1992: .
You are the third one fr01i1
the left in the bottom row. If
they blow the photo up. say
40 or 50 times. they can use
that one.
You haven't combed your
hair that way since 1995 .
you are wearing a shirt that.
was embarrassingly out of
date even then. Whi ch is
why mothers should' just
stop with the clean un\Je rwear thing and start telling.
their children to carry a cur- .
rent. high-quality, k-by-1 0
glossy headshot with themselves at all times. That's th ~ .
thing you'll really wish you
had on you if you are e_ver in
an - accident. Not clean
underwear.
(Jim Mull ell i.l' rile author
o( "It Take.\ " \'ill&lt;lce ldir.•r :
Complicurinx the Simp!&lt;'
Life" and "Bahr '.1 Firsr
Tarroo." You cwr i·eoch ·/rim
at jim_mullr!n @J myn·oy.com )

•

Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz, President of the Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary Club, and Karl Kebler Ill.
treasurer, present Rotary contributions to Rev. Keith Rader. Director of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish , ror flood relter errorts coordinated through the Mulberry Communtty Center. The local
club made a $2.000 donation. presented by Kebler. The Pickerington/ Reynoldsburg Rotary
Club made a $400 donation, which Rev. Heinz presented on the club's behalf. (Brian J.
Reed/photo)

Iran says its missiles have
a range of 1,200 miles
TEHRAN. Iran (AP) Iran s;Jid Tuesday it s missile'
now have a ran ge of more
than I .200 mil es, a subslan·
tial extension of their previously declared range.
The old version of Iran \
Shahab-3 missile had a range
of SIO miles. capable of
reaching Israe l and various
U.S . military bases in the .
Middle East.
In August. Iran tested a
new version of the Shahab-3.
and Defense Minister Ali
Shamkhani said the country
was trying to improve the
range and accuracy of the
missile in re sponse to efforts
ey Israel to upgrade its missile system.
Several days ago. ·1ran

it had added a "strale£'.ic mi ssile" to its arsenal after a successful test.
"Today we have the power
tO· fire missiles to a range ur
2.000 kilometers" - about
1.250 miles. former President
. Hashemi Rafsanjani said
Tuesday. according to a
report by the official Islamic
Republic News Agency.

Rotary plans
dinner

Burgers and
Bible study

to the Board ()f Trustees .

POMEROY
M iddlepnrt /Pomeroy Rotary
Cluh wtll hold a benefit chili
dinner from ~ to 7 p.m. on
Oct. 29 at the \1ulherry
Community
Center
tn
Pomeroy. The co&gt;~ i' $4. with
proceeds benefitting God's
N.ET

SYRACUSE - Svracuse
Church of the Naz.an; ne will
have Burgers and Bihle
Study at 6 p.m. on Sunday at
the church.

Harvest party
planned'

POMEROY - The annu al
meeting of the Meigs Collnty
Council on Aging will be
held at II a.m. on Oct. 19 at
th~
Mei gs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Pomeroy. The
meeting is open to the public.
Those with paid memberships will elect membership

ATHENS
-A
"Harleyween" Poker Run and
bike dt:awing will be held on
Saturday at I p.m. at Athens
Sports Cycles. 165 Columbus
Rd .. Athens. The cost is $5
per person . Costumes· are
welcome. Information rs
available
from .Athens Sports
.
.
Cycle. 59~-1692.
·

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene will
• have a harve st party at 6 p.m.
on Saturday. with a hay ride,
weiner roast, and games.

Plan poker run

Annual meeting
announced

,

Consoritium
to meet
ATHENS - The Southern
Consortium for Children will
meet at I0 a.m. Tue sday. Oct.
19, at the offices in Athens.

~aid

\

'

HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) uncontrollably as she watched
- Condemned killer Edward her son die. She collapsed and
Green Ill was put to death had to be helped from the
Tuesday night despite his attor- room. A second witness was
ne ys' pleas to halt the execu- placed in a wheelchair briefly.
The U.S. Supreme Court
tion because of problems at the
and
Texas' hi gh court declined
Houston police crime lab.
to
block
Green's execution,
Green. convicted of killing
and
the
Texas Board of
two people in a i992 robbery.
Pardons
and
Parole s twice
apologized to families of the
clemency
requests.
refused
victims before he was executGreen's lawyers. as well as
ed by injection .
two state senators and the
" I do not come here with Houston police chief. wattled
the intcm ion to make mvself executions stopped for all
out to be a pe"nn I am iwt," Harri .s Count y cases utili\
Green said in a brief final authorities can review some
statement. " I. never claimed to 2~0 recently discovered boxes
be the best person ..... l did the of evidence th&lt;lt hat! been misb~'l I cou ld with what I haJ." · labeled by crime lab personGreen's . mother sobbed nel &lt;!nd imrrorerly stored. · ·

·Plans
from Page Al
tJcipate
tn
some
of
Middkp&lt;)rl ·, Ch ri stm&lt;b pro. motio tl'... "uch ; 1 ~ "Franti~o..·
Santc1." in &lt;til altempl 10
attrat..:t tra\J.:kr\ to

lhl'

urea

for,hojlpin g. S\&gt;IIIC ot' the the
me rc hant; in Point Plca,atll

al "o plan . to ~j nin

in the

M&lt;11111li gh.t Madnt'""' l'n:- i11 ~
lvlcrill ;aid.
\

The Galli a and Mason merch&lt;tntS diwussed their pa11ici pation al a tri -county merchams meeting in Gallipoli'
held rec en tly. Merrill ,aid an
ultimate g.oa l , of tho~""C merchants who ha\c . hc~n meet ing togctht:r i ~ 1o form an

MGM Mer.:hant' group lo
pn&gt;molc local shoppi ng in all
three rct;ti\commt;nitie,.
The 'lwners of Downing
l-lou~c

· \,ill

t·nurdinatc

a

The Arrow is one of the few
systems capable of intercept ing and destroying missib at
high altitudes. It; development followed the 1'!'11 Gulf
War. when Iraq fired 39 Scud
mi ssi les that struck Israel.
Arrow was developed by
Israel Aircraft Industrie s and
Boeing Co. at a cost of more
than $1 billion.
The Shahab. which means
shooting star in Farsi. is
Iran\ longest-range ballistic
missile .
Th e
country
launched an arms development program during its
19SO-SS war with Iraq to
compensate for a C.S.
\veapuns embargo.
Rafsanjani said the Iranian
mtssile program grew out of
th e I&lt;JXO-RS war.
"We started thinking of
producing mis;i(e, when we
v-ere attJcked bv missiles ...
he said . During the war. iraq.
then ruled by Saddam
Hussein. fired missib that
landed in Tehran. but Iran
11 as unable tu retaliate .

Brjtain suspends license for major
supplier of flu vaccine.for U.S.
LONDO:--! (API - British
health authorities on Tuesday
blocked flu \accine sh ipment.s hy th e mmpany that
produces hal f the \·accine
used in the Lnited States just
ahead of the llu season .
Chiron Corp.'s manutactUJing
license was suspended immediately for three months because
of manuti1cturing problems. the
Medicines.and Healtl1care products Regubtory Agency said.
The Health Department did
not elaborate on the reason.

Convicted killer in Houston case executed
'

"Experts know that a co untry that possesse s this can
obtain all subsequent stage .s"
in
mi ;s il e
production.
Rafsanjani told sta ff at the
Aerospace Research Institut e
in Tehran.
Rafsanjani. who &gt;till wields
great power in Iran. did not
elaborate, but appeared to be
saying that Iran can make
missiles of . any range it
requrrc s.
·'Today. we possess the
basic technolog y 10 produce
&lt;tnd
launch
sate II it es ...
Rafsanjani added. In January.
Iran forecast it would put a
satellite into - orbit with a
loca ll y made rock et within I R.
months.
State Department officials
say they cannot confirm
range or other test data. but
deputy spok esman Adam
Ereli sa1d the U.S. remain;
·Concerned tthout lran ·s missile prugra.m and Iran wa...,
known to be 'No rking on missil es with greater range .
Israel and the t; nitcd States
have developed the Arrow
anti-ballistic missile sy;tem.

Attorneys said the boxes
could contain something relevant to Green 's double-murder case. but prosecutors said
all evidence involving Green
had been accounted for.
Gov. Rick Perry refused to
impose a blanket moratorium
on Harri ' County executions
and rejected · a .10-day
reprieve for Green.
"The main evidence leading Lo Green's con\'iction is
hiS own confe:-....,ion to these
brutal and senseless murde":· th e g'overnor said .
Green. 30. said he was high
after smoking marijuana and
embalming fluid when he &lt;mel a
frie nd ronfrnnted. Edw;u"d

Haden, 72.
and
Helen
O'SuUi\'an. 63. who were in
Haden's car. When Green. bmn·
dishing a pistol. ordered Haden
out ofhis Lincoln. the mw1 uied
to throw the c;u· into rever~ .
Haden and O'Sulliv&lt;ul were shot.
Green\ hl\\'}er&gt; have questioned the reliability or balli,tic; evidence. prese.nted al hi ;
trial. but the controversy surrounding the Houston police
lab lor the past two years lui\
centered on the rcliahil.it\ of
its DNA testing procedure;.
The lab", D:--JA section .hch
been clo,ed since a ~002 audit
revealed j)ossihle contamination of evidence . in&lt;tdequalc
trainin~ for anah·sts and in,uf·
ti&lt;.:iem'Jocumeriun inn .

qn the weekend lu cnincrde
with a Moonlight Madne"
evening shopping pronllltion
on Oct. ~5 .

a ~~ oc i at itHl
The
appnl\cd a SJOO cnntribu iH&gt;n
tt&gt; the United Fund for Meig'
County\ 200:\ campiiign .

Anthonv Jcv.ell said it's not
ve t clear hoi'.' th e Briti sh
sanction wi ll affect l'.S . supplie;. Food anJ Drug •
Administration officials are
\\Orkin~ ll'i tll their counterparts in-B ritain anJ Chiron to
determine that. he said.
Flu shot campaigns usually
,tart in October. a month before
the tlu season typically begins
in the L'nited State\. In an average year. flu kills 36.000 people and hospitalizes another
114.000. most!} the elderly.

Chiron Corp .. which produce' the Fluvirin vacc·ine. said
earlier that factory tests t'C' ealed
that some batches of Yaccine
tai led sterility testing &lt;Uld that all
50 million dose' that the compwl y was producing would be
held up tor addit ional tests.
Under tHe suspension. the
Oxford. En!!land-based company will nOt be able to supply
any intluenza vaccines 'to an}
market. hdth oftlcials said.
In Washington. Health and
Human Services spokesman

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2004-2005 Valley Artist S,eries

.

Opening Concert
V • A • l • L • E - Y·

.tfi~At

GRANDSTAFF
Saturday , Oct. 9, 2004 • 8 pm

Fine and Performing Arts t:enter .
University of Rio Grande
Additional individual tickets available at S to
Call 740 · 245· 7364

S _ ~ E ,• A • I • E • S

~~

putitpkin de"crt contest later
thi ; month . cmd it will be held
•

·- - - -....

----.----··-~-

499 Richland Avenue
Allwns Ol1io 45 701

Phonei740I594·6333
800-451-9806
I

1

!i

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Page A6 • The Dail~enlinel

2-MINUTE
••• •••

BIG TEN STilNDINCS

PF

PA

2-0

All
5-0

Top 25

Minnesota

Big Ten

o-o

177

75

Wisconsin
Michigan
Purdue
Iowa
Michigan St.

2-0
1-0
1-0
1-1
1-1
1-1
0-1
0-1
0-1
0.- 1

5-b
4-1
4-0
3-1
1-3
1-3
3-1
1-3
1-J
2-3

0-0
0-0
0-0
o-1
0-0
1-1
0-0
0-1
0-2
1-1

101
152
189
118
108
119
100
101
119
137

26
90
53
101
111
111
74
84
113
150

North~stern

'(

·.

'"'

Ohio State
Penn State
llUnois
Indiana

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

DRILL

• 2004 Longwing Publications Inc.

GAME OF THE WEEK

lndiaaa at Nol'thweste .. n

Average per game

.JISSDIGOIIERIE

370.2
167.6
129.0
119.4
212.5
212.4
211.1

Ohio St&gt;te.
Illinois . .
Penn State

•a"l"'i&amp;IN--•G Oil ENIE

313.4
182.6
181.8
179.4
179.0
161.0
151.6

Minnesota.
Michigan State
Wisconsin .
Illinois . . . .
Purdue
Northwestem .
Penn State

!'MAL Oil ENSE

549.2

Purdue . .
Minnesota.
Northwestern .
Michigan State
'illinois ..
.Penn State .
Michigan .. .

514.4

·, 429.6
393.6
391.8
364.8
330.0

PASSING DEFENSE

116.6
161.2
169.8
208.4

Wisconsin.
Penn State
Ohio State.
Michigan State .
Michigan .
Purdue
Iowa ...

221.4

239.5
. 47.2

. 66.6
. 85.2
. 90.5
. 97.8
135.8
137.1

,.O,.AL DEFENSE

193.1
268.6
297.0
. 307.0
317.0
330.0
368.6

Wisconsin . . . .
Michigan
Penn State
Ohio State ..
Iowa . . . . .

Purdue .. .
Minnesota.

INDMDU.RL L£.1\DERS
PAlliNG YARDAGE

1367
Brett Basanez, Northwestern .
. .. 1332
Chad Henne., Michigan.
. . 1096
Drew Tate, Iowa . . . .
1010
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota .
895
. 890
Zack Mills, Penn State ..
. 821
Justin Zwick, Ohio State .
RUSHING YARDAGE

Ky\.e Orton, Purdue . : ..

Laurence Maroney. Minnesota
Marion Barber Ill. Minnesota .
Noah Herron, Nonhwestern.
Tony Hunt, Penn State . . . .
BenJarvus Gre~n-Ellis, Indiana .
E.B. Halsey, Illinois. . . . . .
Michael Hart . Michigan . . . . .

.
.
.
. .
.
. .
. .

670

602

47'5
410
406

377
336

RECEIVING YARDAGE

665
. 505
. 496

Braylon Edwards. Michigan ..
Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue ..
Mark Philrnore, Northwestern .
Courtney Roby. Indiana ...
Santonio Holmes. Ohio Stale .
Kendrick J ones, Illinois ..
Ed Hinkel. Iowa . . . . . . . .
Jonathan Fields. Northwestern .

0

. 44 2

430
. 397
. 317
. 317
1471
1411
1019
. 963

Brett Basanez, Nonhwestern
Kyle Orton. Purdue . . . . . .
Chad Henne. Michigan .
Drew Tate. Iowa: ·.
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota .. .
lack Mills, Penn State ... .
Drew Stanton. Michigan State

. 927

. 896
. 851

POIN'I'S ·

. 60
. 41
. 42
. 40
39
37
36
36
36

Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue .
Brayton Edwards, Michigan ..
M.ar:ion Barber ill, Minnesota.
Mike Nugent, Ohio State .
Ben Jones. Purdue ..
Rhys Lloyd, Minnesota.
Gafrett P.ivas, Michigan
Noah Herron, Northwestern .
Dave Rayner. Michigan State.

IN'I'IERCIEPTIONS
Markus Curry. Michigan .. . .. .
Tracy Porter, Indiana
Jason Hannon. Michig an State ..
Ernest Shazor, Michigan .. .
Chad Greenway, Iowa .. .
Anwar Phillips. Penn State
Ryan Mundy. Michig an
'·
Kelvin Hayden, Illinois ..
Ukee Dozier, Minnesota .
Trumaine Banks, Minnesota .

TillS/~\(;/~·

Wildcats in the hunt
L

hut the lll ini are looking for more in fihh -year senior Jon
b'&gt;l ~eason.

aq week. the Bi&amp; Ten ,.,.·orld ~h&lt;10k. Northwc~tern ~ urpri ~ed
Oh1o Stat" 3.'&lt;~7. pro vin.g that the \Vildl'ats ~ou ld become J
factor in the B1g Tt'n race dc:-.pitc their early loss lo
Minne-.ota.
In order to become a rcill tim.: at . buwevcr. No,l1 1l\.n~~tern mu:-.1
g~: t pa:-t a Jekyll-and-Hyde Indiana tc:am thi-. Saturdaj. The
l loo:-.ier:-. ha\~t-l:x:r.·n -.tcllar in the first half of their game:-.. but they
havt•n ·, bern uble to dtl a 101 in thl! -,cco nd half. La"&gt;l week':-. 35-14
los:-. to \.1ichigan marked the fir~t time thi ~ ~e;:a-,on that the
Hoos1ers ha\·e bee n behtnd at halflime.taking &lt;~ 14-7 defici t into
the lock«':r mom .
While Nonhv.estem trie s to avoid a letdown after upsening a
tup \0 team. lndi ;ma l.l.'illlo\lk 10 get past its M.':1.:u nd-half blunders
~t nd finall~ play a complete ~am.:.
• Records: Indiana ::!-3 (0-2 Big Ten): Nonhwe.stern 2- -' ( 1- 1 Bi g
Ten!. • Series: :-.Jmthwestcrn le&lt;.~ d s ~9-~.~- 1 . • Coaches:
Indiana·" G~IT)· D1 Na rdo (5K- 7 1- ll. l\'or1 1w:t•-,tern · ~ Randy

..

After scoring 30 points
in a toss to Purdue two
weeks ago, Ulinois was held to just one
touchdown in a 24-7 loss to Wisconsin, as
third-string quarterback Chris Pazan hit
tight end Melvin Bryant for a 3-yard
touchdown.
--.miAN.A On a tria\ ba~is, the Big
...,..U
Ten has mslltuted a
video replay system for officials to correct
cat\s. Though it hadn't been used a tot
during the season's first few weeks, the
system was used three times in the
Hoosiers' loss to Michigan. AU three of the
questioned ca\\s were overturned,
including an apparent touchdown run by
OB Matt LoVecchio in which he was ruled
down on the 2-yard line. The play did not
effect the game's outcome because
running back BenJarvus Green-Ellis ran
for a touchd own two plays later.
-.wA Entering last Saturday's
.....,.... contest with Michigan State,
Drew Tate was the lowest-producing
quarterback in the conference. averaging
154.8 yards per game. In a 38·16 victory
over the Spartans, Tate came alive,
completing 25 of 36 attempts for 340
yards and a touchdown as the Hawkeyes
amassed a season-high 464 yards.
~
~ 11 ·u Freshman QB Chad
..,nt:.HIIli\J~ Henne had trouble
holding on to the football, but when he
threw it he was highly accurate in
Michigan's 35-14 victory over Indiana.
Henne lost two fumbles, but was J7:for-21
for 316 yards and three touchdowns. He
threw 69- and 39-yard touchdowns to
r Brayton Edwards and a 40-yard shot to
Jermaine Gon.zales.

Wednesday, October 6, 2004

Non hw ~s l ern

NeloorMife.'\blk 81 Meigs
at Fedetal Hocking
Miller at Southern

E..tam

Prep Football
AP prep football poll
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a state panel

of sporls writers and broadcasters ra tes
Ohio high school foalball teams in the
fourth weekly Associated Press poll of
2004, by OHSAA divisions, with won-lost
record and tolal poinls (firsl-place votes in
parentheses):
DIVISION. !
1, Gin. Colerain 126) 6·0
335

2, lakewood St. Edward (6) 6·0

5. Cle. St. tgnalius 5-1

181

6, Cin. Moeller 5·1
7.Westerville5. 5-1
8, Gin. Sl. Xavter 5·1
9, Cle. Glenville 5·1
10, Cin . Elder 4-2

145
116
103

Scioto 33. 12. Warren Harding 23.

1. Avon· Lake (24) 6-0
2. Cols. Brookhaven (4) 6·0
3, Macedonia Nordonia 6·0
4. Springboro {3) 6-0
5, New Philadelphia {1) 6·0
6. Uniontown Lake 5-1
7, Jackson 6-0
Chardon 5-1
9, Cin. Withrow (2) 6·0
10. Louisville (1) 5-1

314
297
251
204
166
128
95
95
61
49

Others receiving 12 or more points:
Sylvan1a South\liew 47. 12, Maple His

11 .
34.
13 (tie), Amherst Steele. Warren Howland
33. 15, Cin. Glen Este 30. 16, Carrollton
20 17 {lie). Akr. Garfield . Tallmadge 17.
19. Day. Carroll 14.
DIVISION Ill
1. Steubenville (23) 6-0
314
2. Canal Fullen NW (3) 6-0
271
3. Lisbon Seaver (4) 6-0
243·

M inn e~ota

Key for Purdue: HI itt Penn State . Nittan y Lion~ QB Za(·k
Mills is banged up with &lt;1 ~hou ld cr injur) anJ is prone tn
turnovers. If the Bnile rmake rs force him 10 make quh.:k det·i~iuns.
he v. ill Jl~o make plenty of miMake ~.
.
key for Penn State: Stop the sh ort-pa:-.~ ~;arne . Purdue QB
Kyle Orton has been aP ie 10 throw dump pao;;~e..-. a ll nV.•ing hi-.
rc~,;eivers to make play~ aftt:r the l:o.th.:h. He ha~ not been furced to
thi'OVI the b&lt;dl down fi eld and thus has not thrown :my
intercept inns thi s seasnn

could during their careers, winning at

Notre Dame (41-16). Orton was 21-of-31
for 385 yards as the Boilermakers won at
Notre Dame for the first time since 1974.
Orton has thrown for 17 touchdowns
without an interception this season.
~CONS IN He sat ou_t the last
.........,
month WJth an eye
injury (right eye orbital fracture),
sustalned in a victory over Central Florida,
but Badgers RB Anthony Davis made his
presence felt immediately upon his

Illinois at Michigan State
• Records:

lllino i ~

2-3 (0-2 Big Tent; Michig:om State 2-3 ( 1- l

!J ig Ten). • Series: Michigan Stale leuds 21-16-1. • Coaches:
ll linoi~'

Ron Turner (-l.l-5fl ): Mi chigan

Sli.l t~ ·s

Joh n L. Smith

I 12li-6Mi. . Kickoff, lc noon ET S"turday . • TV: ESPN2 or

ESPN Plu&gt; .

.

key for Illinois: Limit Spartan'\ QB Drew Stanton\ run ning.
Stanton ran wild two weeb ago. but Iowa ~ep t ~cveral -.pic~ on
him and lim ited his cffecti\'cncs-;. Stanton hasn't prnvcd Ihat ht::
cun help MSU win when he is fmced tn 1hrn'h the hnll.

Key for Michigan State: Im proved tackling. lowa gave MS U
a clini c in Saturday·;-. J~- 1 6 ,victory . The Haw keyes wrapped up
MSU runners. hut the Sp:trlans were lacking on dcfense .. m i ~s ing
st:v~o: ra l ~nnplc tackles.

0

6. Col.~ .

PROL '/)/.)' SPO.\'SOREI&gt; BY TilE FOLLOlH.\'G BF'ii.VESSES:

5-1

197

Watterson (1) 5- 1

160

Others rec;eiving 12 or more points 11 , St.
Marys Memo nal 46 . 12, Wash1nglon C.H.
M1ami Trace 36. 13. Cambridge 26 14
(lie), Akr. Buchlel, Cols. 8eechcrofl25. 16.
Hubbard 24 17. Bellevue 18. 18,
Thornville Sheridan 16
DIVISION IV
1. Coldwater (19) 6·0
328
2. Ironton (8) 6·0
276
3. Plain City Jonathari Alder (l ) 6-0 214
· 4. Akr. Manc hester {3) 6-0
203
5. Huron {1) f%0
6. Marlins Ferry 5·0
7. Versailles (2) 5-1
8, Upper Sandusky 6-0
9. Youngs . Mooney (1) 4-1
10. Youngs. Ursuline (1) 5-1

171
168

143
109
96
74

Others receiving

12 or more polnts: 11.
Delta 44. 12, Tontogany Otsego 32. t3,
Bellaire 2B 14. Urbana 2 1 15. Gtrard 13
16. Garrettsville Garfield 12.
DIVISIONV
1. Amanda-C iearcreek (24) 6-0
333
2, Marion Pleasant (6) 6-0
299
3. N. L1ma S. Range 6-0
209
4, F i ndl~y Liberry-Benton 6-0
178
5. Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 6·0
153
6, Hamler Patrick Henry (2) 6·0
151
7, Sycamore Mohawk 6-0
126
8. Mineral R1dge 6-0
112
9. Gates Mills Gi lm our (2) 6-0
97
10, St. Henry ( 1) 5-1
46

OtherS receiving 12 or more poinls: 11
(tie), Rootstown (1). Ashland Crestv1ew
40. 13. w. Lafayette Ridgewood 25. 14.
Wheelersburg 19. 15. W. L1be,t;W-Salem
18. 16, Dalton 16 17. Bluttton 15. 18.
Smithville 14. 19. Liberty Cenler 13
DIVISION VI

return. Davis controlled the team's 24-7

victory over Ulinois, running'for 213 yards
and three touchdowns. The Badgers'
defense .was also impressive. holding a
fifth consecutive opponent to a
touchdown or tess.

Cle. Benedictine (1)

1, Columbus Grove (24) 6-0

334

2. Dola Hardin Northern (5) 6·0
3. Danville (2} 6·0
4. Sandusky St. Mary (1) 6-0
5. Newark Calh. 5·1

295
245

6. Mogadore {2) 5-t

164
161

7, New

229
166

Matamoras Frontier (1) 5·0

8. Monroeville 5· 1
9. MeChar1icsl:_lurg 5- 1
1Q,,Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 6-0

r

91
85

38

"

Others receiving 12 or more points : 11 ,
Cle. Cuyahoga Hts. (1) 35. 12, H1cksv•lle

30. 13. Troy Christian 27 . 14. E. Can . 26.

15, Glouster Tr1mble 12

Raiders 7th
grade volleyball
beats Eastern

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La!...: \\oil ih 2 I 't l'on"~cu11\C i!.ame ~.~.., Bohh\ Dt!}'le
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fir'l · 6-0
'tart
ever:
CamhriJ~e-, 2X-17 win al
Dm cr m:tr~eJ th e fi"l time
1hc Boheat' deka1ed Jhe
Turnadocs in eighl year':
Humcr Reed scnrcJ Jwo TDs

Please see Notebook, Bl

RUSTY MILLER

COLU MBUS -After losing al Northwestern for lhe
tirsl lime since 1958, lhere is
plenty of blame to go around
for Ohio State. Eve n coach
Jim Tressel is willing to take a
heaping helping.
"Northwestern can be a
very, very good football
team ." Tressel said Tuest.lay
during a post-morlem of
Saturday's 33-27 overtime
loss lo lhe Wildbts. "Thev
roved th at ·Saturday night.
'm not sure I did as good a job
getting that poim across." ·
A lot of points apparemly
didn ·1 gel across for the
Buckeyes (3- 1, 0-1 Big Ten).
who plummeted I I spots in
lhe poll tQ No. 18 afler gell ing
uu lp! ayeJ in almosl every
t;tcet of th e game.
The already moribund nmning ¥ame mu slered a nol-,ograna toial of lJ7 vard s.
C,}uarterback Justin Zwick hat.l
al least Jwo turnovers for the
thirt.llime in hi s four collegiate
slarl,. And the t.lefense. whiL·h

f

ca me inl o the game among the

best inlhe lant.l. was conlinually heaten for hig plays whil e
surrendering++-+ yarJ s.

Please see Bucks, B6

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
-River Valley 7th grade volleyball team defeated Eastern
Monday by a count of 25-17,
25-17.
The Raiders (6-4) were led
in scoring by Ashley Home
10 points. while
with
Jacqueline Jacobs and Lindsay
Howze added seven anq ,six
points to .the winning cau,e.
respectively.
River Valley next plays
Thursday when il hm ls
Southern.

Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel reacts dunng a Northwestern touchdown drive in t he fourth quarter Salurday 111 Evanston.
Ill. Northwestern defeated Ohio state 33-27 in overtime. (AP)

•

Prep Volleyball

College

Basketb~ll

Southern falls to ·Eastern OSU's Sullinger
charged wi~h
drunken driving_
s e r \" e s
Weber handed the ne1
wil h s~veral
more k iII s.
w h i I e

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sporls correspondenl

TUPPERS PLAINS Continuing 10 build momentum going~in lo lhe se\:lional
lournamenl, the high ll ying
Eastern Lady Eagles of
coac h How ie Caldwe ll
grou nt.led the So ulhern
Tornadoes 25- 14. 25-1-l.
and 25-20 in lhree sets.
'In lhe firs l game. Eas,le rn
had a relatively easy time of
it. So uthern had th e first
se rve. but did nol score. a
failure thai sel the tempo for
the res I of the game. Easle rn
hil the .' wring colum n first
on a se rve by Hallie Brook s
before Jort.lan Ne igler ti et.l
the 'core al
1- 1 fo r
Soulhern. Easle rn\ .lillian
Brannon , who had a nice

floor game and serving
game. gave Eastern a 3- 1
lead and I hal led 1o a s\:oring
ava lanche lh al gave E&lt;t,lern
a 15-4 push .
Morgan Weber

JDur pcrrnn In prolt&gt;t"lltm

Shawnee hrokc a 17-"&lt;!llle
losi ng streak lll St. Marv;
Memorial - t.laline lo Ocl
3, llJ~6 - wit h a '7-6 win :
Bascom Hopeweii -LouJ,lll
is 6-0 for the first lime e1er
afkr a 31-7 win over Tiffin
Calven: Titlin Co lumhian
has oul&lt;eoret.l il' lasl lhree
opponents
( Foqori a.
Norwalk and Gal ion 1 151-7
while defent.ltng againq onlv
15 plays in Tornadoe' lerriIOry; after winnin~ ~.1 co nsecutive home gttnlc~o, and 2:'i

Associated Press

37

13. W. Ct1ester Lakola W. H 14, Hudson
15 15.Green13
DIVISION II

4,

'fyler Speelman caur;!JI a
15-yard ffi pass from Kyan
Stucke wilh I :38 left.
Marion coach Tim Guot.lwin
then pulleJ off a surprise.
decidtng lo gu for two puinh
with · Stucke
nitting
Speelman 10 give lhe Flyers
a 15-14 lcat.l.
On lhe nex t posse ss ion
Marion Local' s Marc One
picked otT a pass on the 50
and returneil il to lhe
Versailles 7. Curl is Mueller
scored two plays later with
I :08 left as the Flyers
improvet.llo 2-4.
pN A ROLL: Lima

Bucks deal with the blame game· after setback

63

Olhers receiving 12 or mo re points: 11,

Dublin

Maria Stein Mari~n Local
and Versailles both made it
1Q th e slate finals h"l
December. Then they look
differenl palhs to their meel ing Friday night.
_. Marion Local. whi ch losl
to Columbus Grove 28-26 in
lhe 2003 Division VI tille
game then, after gradual in g
fhe co re of that 11-4 Jeam,
ope ned thi s year with 1hree
consec uti ve los ses.
Meanwhile. No. !- ranked

Versaille s just kept rolling
swamping
along
afler
Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
Joseph 26-0 in lhe Division
IV championship. nuising 10 ·
five wins in a row this sea so n.
When Jhey squaret.l off. il
was supposed 10 he a mismatch with a bi gge r school
with a betlcr rct:ord sett in g
the tempo . Yel il didn 't turn
out thai wav at all.
Marion Li1cal scored Jwi ce
in the final 1wo minutes 10
JJ_in &lt;I 22 - 14 loss on the
Tigers. ending their 23-game
wmnmg streak

298

3. Youngs. Austintown-Fitch (1) 6·0 267
4, Centerville (3) 6·0
233

92
67 •
47

Ti ll er (98-62-11: Penn Slate's Joe Paterno C\-1 1-1 I 1-3 ).
• Kickoff: 4:30p.m. ET Saturday. • TV: ESPN .

..

Frldoy'agomeo

8. Akr. Hoban 5-1
9. Chardo n NDCL 6·0
10. Lima Shawnee 6·0

Ten ). • Series: Penn State leads 6-1- 1. • Coaches: Purdue· doe

Thi!-. week. W\'oc:o n ~Jn ant! Minne~ota will face tough tc~ts on
the road . whilt' PurJuc wi ll mcel a defl ated Pt"nn Sta te team at
home . Penn S~atc ha-, hud unother hard- luck -,tart.lw,ing. all purpose athlete ~1iL"hacl Robin !'.on to a cunc u..,~io n &lt;It Wi~~..:onsin
and playing\~ 11h injured QB Zad Mil h. The Nittany~Lions need a
v.in bad. hut they f:tcc the Big Ten\ hottc~t team in Purdue .
For Wi ~con ,in and Vfinnc-.ow In -.ray undefemed. thcy wi ll
ha' c 10 u\en:ome a long hbtor~ of inferiority"to Ohio State and
M1ch1g.an. Both tile Woln:nne-. i.ll1d Bllckcyc~ have ~hown plenty
of \'Ulnerability. but they have alv.ay~ had an &lt;~bility to play weJI
when the competition ri&lt;..cs .
Iowa has the week off. while Michig&lt;ln State ami Illinoi s will
baltiC for med1ocrity. The loser will mo ve clo~e r to l ht' basemen!
of the conference whi le the winner h0pe~ to get hack in to the Bi g
Ten mce
1\li nui~ has &lt;.~lreJdy doub kd last ~~a-.o n ·'i. victory ltltal wi lh two .

RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

127

• Records: Purdue 4-0 11-0 Btg Ten): Penn State 2-3 10-2 Big

Stubbl&lt;lie ld .

-I

Southern at Watartorrl

7. Napoleon (1) 6.0

Purdue at Penn State

Early in thb Sl'a~on. the trad itiona l top conference teams lOhio
State and Mi chigan) have f&lt;.~llen from the top 10 rank ings . whil~
three Big Ten tt::ams remain unhe&lt;~t e n .
. Each of the undefeated team~ brings ih O\Vn sty le of play.
\Vi-.con..;in hu~ \\'On with defc n-.e and power run ning. . Minnesol:l
ha., \~on with qui~.:kne .. ~ in the runni ng gume. and Purdue has won
\\tth the pi.IS'-&gt; 1!1 coa1.:h Joe T ilItT.!'. spread olfcnst::.
EKh teani ha;., a pair nf star-. who ha vr matlc big contributions:
Jct'emive tao::kle Antta.1 Hav.,thorne &lt;.tnd o;;1fety Jim Leonhard on
Wio;cnn.;ln·, Jl.'fc 1N:. RB-. Laurcnl'C Maroney and Marion Barber
Ill ;.tt Minn~ '&gt;ota ·and Purdue·., QB Kyle Orton and WR Tay lm

Eutern a1 MUiet' ·

lliRTHWESTERN ~~deats'

Golden Gophm .

The Rest of the Matchups

·

33-27 overtime victory over Ohio State
last Saturday was Northwestern's first
victory over the Buckeyes since 1971 and
the first win 111 Evanston, I\1., since 1958.
-.u, ST.'"'TE While kicker Mike
.~
1\
Nugent may long
remember his missed field goal in
overtime in a 33-17 toss to Northwestern,
the kick proved inconsequential. since
Northwestern followed up with a ,
touchdown. It was only the second field
goal that Nug.ent has missed this year. He
also kept the Buckeyes in the game earlier
in the night, tackling Wildcats kick
returner Jeff Backes in the open field to
prevent a kickoff return touchdown.
-.:wN STATE The
Nittany Lio ns
.....,...
struggled to find
an offense without all-purpose offensive
threat Michael Robinson in a 16-7 toss to
Minnesota, but Penn State could take
some solace in its special teams, which
blocked three Rhys Lloyd kicks. two field
goals and an extra point.
-.mnUE Heisman Trophy hopeful
.....-n
QB Kyle Orton, who has
labored in the shadow of Purdue legends
Jim Everett and Drew Brees,
accomplished something last Saturday
that neither of his iUustrious predecessors

~ey for Minnesota: Remember last ~l.'asnn. Minne,ota l'amc
into its meeting with Michigan un Jefe:netl. and hlew a 2R-7thirdquart~r It: ad in M ichigun ·~b i ggest curnebad ever.
key for Michigan: Play agg ressi\'ely on ~pcr ial team-.. The
Wol ve rines arc us ually weak in the ktcki ng gar\'1e. but Minnesota
showed i.l vulnerabi lity by havin g thret:: k i~,;k ~ blod.~tl b} Penn
State. Michi gan should put on all-out block s to pres~ure the

Indiana linebackl.'r., ''"Y home and (Ut offthc ru n ~. the
Hoosiers can he success ful.
Key for Northwestern: Avoid the letdown . After heat in£
Oh1o State. it would be ca~y ror t h~ Wikkats to ov~:: rl ook an
lmpro,·ed Indiana tt'am. ~orthwc::-.tern must play !-.olid defen!'.c to
beat the l-l oo~ias.

a school-record six consecutive 100-yard

Wellston at Molgo

5. Day. Chaminade-JuHenne (3) 5·1 170

• Kickoff: 12 nm&gt;n ET Saturday. • TV: ESPN.

the

Saturday. RB Laurence Maroney now has

Marion Loc~l pulls off a stunner against Ve_
rsailles

Thu!'ldly'o VOI!tyblll

key for Wisconsin: Apply prc s~u!"l.' on QB Ju~ti n Zw1ck.
Defensive tackle Anttaj Hawthorne and the Badger-.· d~fcn-.c haw
held live straight opponents to seven poinb or l cs~.
Key for Ohio State: Fruslrate Wi~con sin RB Anthon) Davi:-. .
Ohio St ate's excellent dcfense. led by li nebacker A.J. Hawk.mu-. t
-.tuff the Wisconsin running game. Badgers QB .l im Sllrgi ha!-. yet
to prove that he can .lhrow the ball enuu,gh Ill \\'l.ll.

5-0 (2-0 Bi g Ten) : \-1ichigan .t- 1 l ~-0 Big.
Ten). • Series: Michigan -lead , 66-23 -~. • Coaches: Minne .. ota·,
Gl&lt;n Mo&gt;lln (I O~- IU~ - 1 ·1: Michigan \ Llo) d Carr 1'111-271.

runs a

after a 17-6 win over Penn State last

Prep football ! notebook

rushing performances.

a Records:

pa,ing oltet~&gt;c wtlh lot&gt; uf ' lwrt pa"c' that turn IIlio big g'" "'· If

the second
• IINNESOTA For
straJght year.

'

(I n -65 -2). • Kickoff: .1:JOp.rn. l:T Saturd"~. • TV: ABC.

Minnesota at Michigan

a

Replay couldn't
save one
touchdown pass. and MSU's tight ends
dropped two more in the Spartans' 38-16
loss to Iowa. In the first half, QB Drew
Stanton found WR Kyle Brown in the
back of the end zone, but Brown was ruled
out of bounds. with the video replay
official confirm ing the call. In the second
half. senior tig ht ends Jason Randal\ and
Eric Knott each dropped Stanton
touchdown passes.
Minnesota has won its first five games,

WRecords: W i ~consin 5-0{2-0 Big Te n); Ohio Stale -' - I (U-1 Big
Ten). • Series: Ohio State lead ~ 50-16 ~5. • Coaches:
Wi~cnn.,in · ~ Barry Alvare7 ( 104-0 7--1- l: Ohio State· s .I im Tr.:~~el

Walker ig5-73-) 1. • KiCkoff: II a.m. CT Saturday . TV: ESPN
PIU'-.
Key for Indiana: UnePackcr play.

B~utjer '.s

Wisconsin at Ohio State

0

,.O,.AL OFFENSE

•• ••
••• •••
•••• •

•. IIEHJGAN ST·

241.8

aVSIIDIG DEFENSE
Michigan .
Wisconsin'
Iowa .
Purdue ..
Minnesota
Penn State
Ohio State.

Penalty drops Earnhardt out of first, Page 82
OHSAA football computer ·ran kings, Page 82
Williams ready to rejoin Dolphins, Page 86
Bengala' Smith charged with DUI, Page 86

-......;rNOJS
.-.n

TEAM LEADERS
Purdue
Northwestern ...
Michigan .
Iowa ..

•• ••
• •• ••
• •• ••
•••

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Wednesday, October 6, 2004

wa~

phe-

nomenal at the net in lhi s
game and sirigle-handcdly
pp~ndcd eight ki.ll s. many of
which were in lhi' dominaling drive. Eastern's floor
play was well synchronitcd.
and choreographed lll perfection. The Eagle serving
was strong and commant.ling. as well as their play a1
the net.
Soulhern · picket.l up the
pace during the last half'of
lhe game and kept pace with
Eastern. but the damage w;h
already done as E:t,tern
rol led to a 25-14 wi rt.
Easlern was fir,t fron1 .ihe
service line in -the 'econd
game and look a .1 -0 "·me
o n three Britta n:. Bt"e ll

SIX

Warner. who
pl;iyed " 'ell
al lhe net
had 'ix kills.
Brooke
Kiser had a
good floor

J ~nnifer

Havman
defent.led
her club\
honor at the
Bissell
ncl wi lh six
defensi1e
relums and two kill s.
Darcy Win ebrenner a lso
slCp()Cd up slrung al ihe nel
wilh ~1-2.'\ 'Pikes and eigl11
kills to lead her Eagle club
lhal
departmenl.
in
W inebren ner's effort led to
man y Eag le scores and
ailled Bi:...~el l ' . .. \\&lt;lllnlng

scn· 1n g

dri\·c

of

eight

straigh l as Eastern claimed
the 25-14 win.
Soulhern slepped il up in
the final ga me . tak ing a 2-0
lcat.l Dn a pair l!f Erin Wise
serves. Eastern came back
on three Bi"ell serves 10
rcla~c the lead . Whiln e\
Riffle ga1c Soulhern a slighl
et.l ge. ant.l j\shle_y Rou' h
made a couple nin~ . . en c~.
ho\\c ver Ea~tern\ Ha\ man
and Wcb~r added 10 poitlls
from the scr1· ic'e line to
bO&lt;lst Jhe hosls.
Lead'in g 15 -9. Eastern\
Bi"ell s_e rved up 'ix poitm
with a good' effurl from
Winebrenner on 1he nel.
Winebrenner secured play a1
the ne 1 with six more booming kills 10 push Eaqern to a
15 1() II.·I ll.

- - --

Soulhern 11 a&gt; led · hi
.-\sl1lev Rou'h 11 ith ntnc
point;' and three ktlls. 'liJ-ki
Rifl'le added ' ix. Kristitna
William' h;td 111n ace' :tnd

ki( Js.

J e n n y

COLUMBUS !API Ohio Slate ba,kclballi'l;ll e r .I .J. Sullinger has been
chargcLI 11 ith drunken Jriving "ant.l i' _,chedukd In
appear in cou rt lwn d;1~..,
hefore the Bucke~:c, 'l ilrl
pral'!ice .
A me""ag~...~ "'l'l'king ~.:om­
menL of Sul ltngc:-r ·.., '&gt;l&lt;ltti'
ll'ith th e team 11 ~~' lelt
Tu csda\ for cPacti Th.td
~(atl;l.. II ho \1 &lt;I' PUt of
..,tate on a re-cruitin g trip
Sports informa li"n dtrc,·- l;t,l ,,.,,,.,n . H~ transferred
t&lt;&gt;r S1e1·e Snapp '.tid 11', l&lt;i. Oh1P St,tlc rn cOlic after

game for the
Tornadoe~

Hayman

~¥ith II se ts

for kills . and also had a

good passing ga me . Bethany

Riffle 1~as 36-36 sel ling ant.l
7-nf-7 ~erYing.
Darq Winebrenner haJ
IJ poinl&gt; from 1hc service
line and had 16 kilk
Britlan y Bis ., e ll had 23
poinls in a perfec1 effort
from !he line . Jennifer
Hit)· man had Ill I I 0- I U) and
1lvtl b ll!cks. Morgan Weber
the unin:· r:...il} ·.., rH~Iil·} 1wt
had I I i ll - Il l. ant.l Erin
to comment nn legal matWeber had nine poinl s and
ter.-..
four blDcks.
Su l linger.
,""~
''-~1,
Eastern\ JeiJ ll,Y. Arme~
'lopped
b1
C"lun thtt'
ant.l Case~ Sm ilh JDined
police carl\ Sc•pJ. -l .tiler
Bis:...ell in playing a great
he 1\ as Llb,CI'I Cd 0!'11111~
tloor game wilh ncar pcrkct
~...·rratkall! . :tlTPrding ·t ~' ~~
'ctlin!! performances . Their
p.olil."e report. H1-. hlnod effort \\a~ integral in :-.etting
akohul lt:'\L'I n,t.., 111~'.1 up ihc Jerrific: Ea,tem sptk 'urcd at O.O&lt;lY, ;t hm c
ing ga me Tiffany Smith had
Ohi(&gt;·, leg;tl limtl pf (J_(IN
1110 kilh .
IIi,
falhcr.
~;rtch
Smnllcm 11 on Jhe t-cscr,·c
Sullin~cr. ':ml 7\l&lt;rn ,l.tl
game 25-1~ ;111d 25-1 7.
1ha1 hi-, ,on H•.td 111 o l'cer'
$outhem\ Sarah Eddv had.
11ilh frknds IIIHi 11erc t1Pt
llJ pninh 'elling up 'son\e
· · tcammatt:&gt;.-. .
gooJ 'Pi~e' from Whitney
"It\\ a.., not in- ... ea ... on. he
Riftle .and A;hlie Robie. and 1·.
is
not ~tnderage . He jti q
Stephante
Riffl e
and
I
made
a · ·real hat.l mi-la~c
Cundiff had seven point&gt; .
lh~ first It me he had" u1u For
Eastern.
!\1egan
ple hcer,." S.tlch Sulltn~er
Broderick had
ele1 en.
'aid " It' \I prob.thl! h~ the
Hannah Prall ei~l11. and
Ia&gt;! ltlllc' ."
\1organ Wem ·,ix .
Sullinger. a l&gt; - fnol - ~
Southern · goc~
t-o
llllllor
guarJ. a\ t•ragl'd
Watcrfonl ThUI&lt;dav. · 11 hile
I
0
.1
J'&lt;llll['
Ill 30' ~am~~,
Ea,Jcrn Jr.tvcb 10 ~iiller.
'

+

PilL' "L.':I"t'll at ..\rk.atbi.b .

111-..
arrai!J:nment
~~
" ·hcduil"J fnt~ Ocl. 1-+ 111
FranUin
l'&lt;lllllll
\ lun i,·t p;tl' C'Hll'l.
In .t 'cpar.tle k g; tlm Jiter
\lnnd.11.. fnrmc·r Ohio
Si&lt;llc' runntn~ hac·~ Ir a
Cuilf1'l'd r~~·t:-1\t: J tV•()
)l'.H" )1fl1 h_,llitlll flH" plllh.:h 111~

\J.,,

;t!Wtlll't

He

r~· ~~ l't' ~,.·J

-.\lldcnt 111
c&lt;&gt;Uid hale

up to -.h

m~HHh!-o

tn .1 all on tht' 1111,J~meanor
,!-.':-o:!Ultl"lrar~c .

Guilltlrd. I~- was ~icked
,,ff the ft&gt;o iball team and •
banned frnm campu' after
he 11 as Jlldtcled. A rob hen
c har~e 11 as Jropped afler
he ra"ed a lie detector
I
t~-..t. prn\e(:Utor' . . aid .
' Guilf&lt;~rd ,;ud he wanh 10
rctu1n tn 0hH1 Slate and
ill' dll&lt; lr llCI ha' slarted
lr~tng '''re-enroll him .

�•

Wednesday, October 6, 2004

www myda1lysentmel com

Page B2 • The Dail) Sentinel

~ribune

Penalty drops Weekly football computer ratings
Earnhardt out
of first place
97773 7 0 egan Cay (5 1) 92833 B
Sp ng Shawnee (5 1) a 7500 9
Lex ng on (51) 8 7000 10 Oentangy
L berty {4 2) 7 7333

Region 7-

BY MIKE HARRIS
Assoc ated Press
N &lt;\SCAR
st 1
D le
r tht d l Jr 111s kmc ked
out &lt; t t t"t p iK e 1 1 the
Nex tel Cup l1y 1 sl p ot the
to 1 lit
E trnh udt "ts d&lt; ckeu 1 S
po 1nt ~ mJ tmeJ S I 0 000 by
N &lt;\SCAR n1 T u csd 1) I &gt;r
CUJSin~ Ullfl I_ I 1 V ntCI
\tell tlt e t h ts I ct&lt;t)' tt
T lltue 1 S q e"pec l w )
AskeJ
Su td 1
by
\/&lt;\SCAR hro de stet NBC
abOLI the s I IlL I LC I hts
tt lth 1 tliOJ) :-1 Ttll td c
E 1 h 1 d t s 1J
It don t
me 1
11 h t Hl\\ D ILII s
won hctc 10 It ms
No 1 mstc I o f k tdtn
Kurt B u'L h b1 I ' potll 111
the Nex tel Ct p st mdt l_s
E ut h 1dt the s&gt; l &gt;I the lllc
sc1c 1 1 me se n es ch n p o n
D le E 1nh a t II tfl Is by 12
W t h se e 1 I IL CS Jel l
I the

E

"'~ 1:-.01

Rr c h e Grlmore drrectot o f
co rtp e t lion
to
D tie
E unit trdt Inc s ud the te 1 n
w II ppeal NASCAR s deer
\lUll

Thts rs a hu ge setback tor
the
e n~tte
co mp1n y
W e te tn 1
G I more s JJd
sport th at f ocuses ns pn 11ary
lltentton o 1 th e ftn tl I 0
races ot the sea so 1 and we re
racrng a~ a t n s t t o rmtdable
teams for 1 c ha 11p o nshtp
We re lactng 1 setback tram
a competttton standpomt tor
somethtno that should be
co n stdeted a petson al foul
We have no choiCe but to
appea l the p om ts por tton of
t he pcnalt)
I t htn k we te th e only
sport t hat tak es por li s oft of
the board attet the) 'e been
scored The popular ty o t th ts
sport s b sed o n color! u I
personahucs and the I ac t th rt
everyone ca 1 rdate to the se
d ver s 11d thet emotiOns
Now tt seem s hke that s a
cetnment
Po ntt 10 out that lu 1 or s
com me nts v. er e 1ot n aue 1 1

t 1 ct G tlm ore s 1 u the te 11 1
h rs rece vcd hundtcu ol st p
p&lt; I t 1c c dh In nltls
Thrs v.hr k
nctuc 11 ts
ll l _ to h ~.:~: C\c r v lne n
the spo rt to ctht 1k sl w n~
1111
excitement til wh t
sh ould
be
1
Jllh lr 1t
nr nent Grimme rddcd
Appetls
t e he ud by
tht cc perso n pat el selected
by
NASCAR
ft om
t he
N lito 1 d Stnc k C 11 R tctn
Commt's o 1 :-lo d t
It s
bee 1 sd lot t he tppe rl
E unh 1Jt \\ I st II he ucd
lied w th th~ 1-+th tel&lt; 1v 1!
ht s ca t eet
nu ltlth
II
Trll1de 1 bu t
w tl
the
p 1 nts pentlty 11
s tl h
It 1 sh eLl ft lth on S t nd 1
St II h e IJa pie t \ ot t lle t
m k e l p the Jette t &lt; 1
Busdl \\ th up t 1 190 po t Its
"1 l1ble 11 e 1ch 1t tl c I rst
st::\t:ll e \ en t ~
11
Febtut}
N&lt;\SCAR
ptcs de t t Mt ke Hcl t 1 I lu
d t lets
\\ llch thu I 11
g u e 01
tdto a 1d tcl ev
s o 1 L ess th 111 a llll n tl I 1le t
he shm;ed he me 111
t
J&lt; hn11 Sar It t " ts t med 1d
lost 25 po nts I&lt; 1 swea n
dur ng 1 radto tnt e t 1 tew l o l
lowtn ~ a Bu sc h Sc es r 1ce 11
L as Veg ts
Ron Hot n aday Jt also w ts
htt wtth a t t 1e and t he lo " ot
25 pomts 1fter cu rsm,_ dtu
tng a I 1e r 1dto mte n tcv. 111
June duttn a Bu sc h 1 tee tl
Dove r
NASCAR
spokesman
Mtke Ztzzo sau.l Earnh 1 dt s
p en a l tv " t s consrsten wtth
tho se pe wltt es
N ASCAR Pres t den M k e
Helton m tde t clear b ack 111
Febt t lfY at the dr 1 e t s 11eet
mg at Rocktn,.ham that we
as a tam tl y sp ort were taktn g
very
se n ous l }
1nd
th ,
tdhert 1g to FCC gu1delt te s
Z 1zzo sat d
The ttllltlg ts
unlortunate fat D d e Jt but
NASCAR tl so m tdc t cle tr
to the competttors that we
woulu poltce th e ltst I 0
r ICCS JU I i1ke \\e dtd the t rst

'6

Cos B ookhaven (6 0)

14 1833 2 Un ontown Lake (5 1)
12 1 66 3 New Ph lade ph a (6 0)
11 0833 4 Ca olton (51) 10 4166 5
Peke ngton Cent a (51) 10 500 6
Cots Ma on F ank:t n (5 1) 8 7293 7
Cant eld (3 3) B 6500 8 Lou sv le (5 1)
8 5500 9 East L ve pool 4 2 7 3533
10 Paaskaa Wa kns Memo a 5 1)

6 6533
Reg on 8-1

Cn

W how

60

16 5833 2 Sp ngbo o (6 0 54833 3
C n G en Este (6 0) 4 6166 4 K tlgs
M s K ngs (4 2) 1 9166 5 Day Ca o
(5 1 1 7000 6 Jackson 6 0 10 9000
7
Day Dunba
5 ) 9 8333
8
Ch I co he (4 2 9 3000 9 Norwood (5 1
9033310 W mngton(42)89666
DIVISION Ill
Region 9- 1 C eve Bened ct ne (5 1)
39166 2 Chadon NDCaheda Latn
(6 0) 12 2333 3 Ak on Hoban (5 1)
5000 4 Mento Lake Cath (4 2)
106 166 5 Hubbad (50
03850 6
Medina Buckeye 5 1) 0 2 40 7 Cuya
Fa s Wash Jesu (4-2) 9 0746 a Ak on
Buch e 4 2 8 4333 9 Ravenna SE {
8 9 6 10 Hun Va ey Unv Sch oo
4 2) 7 2086
Region
10Napa eon
(6 0)
3 6833 2 L ma Shawnee 6 0 2 9666
3 Cos Wa te son (5 ) 2 3000 4 Cos
Eas moo Acad 6 O) 12 0666 5 Cos
Beechc o1 (5 1 9 9363 6 Cos DeSa es
4 2) 9 7 66 7 Be evue (5 1 9 2500 8
C yde 5 ) 9 2333 9 Sunbu y 8 g
Wa nu (4 2) 7 3666 10 Van Wet 4 2)
6 8 166
Region 11-1
S eubenv e (6 0)
7 1660 2 L sbon Beave (6 0) 14 4666
3 Cana Futon NW (60) 3 1666 4
Camb dge 50) 12 0270 5 Tho nv e
She dan 5 1) 0 5666 6 Dove 4 2)
9 1080 7 Wnte sv le lnd an C eek (5 )
8 2063 8 Young Aayen (4 2) 8 0833 9
Beo Wes B anch 2 ) 799 6 10
Saem 42 77833
Reg on 12-1 Day Cham Ju enne (5
1) 2 7333 2 Wash CH M am T ace (6
0) 12 5166 3 St Mays Memo al 51)
1D 3833 4 C rc ev e (5 1 0 3500 5
Cn
nd an H
(51
96166
6
4 2 9 5600
7
A chb shop Ate
C cev e Logan Em 51 85166 8

Notebook
from Page 81
to l ead Ashland Crestvtew
me t Mtn roe \tll e 1614ma
battle of unbeatcn s and
P 11dor 1 Gtlboa s C rleb
Arthur scmed stx TDs tn a
S9 0 w 1 01 er Arcadta

GROI;ND CONl ROL
Ja1011 lf.in get h l d 372 ru sh
t 1g yar'rh; md h1e TD s as
D I) ton
Cha ll1 nade
Jult enne beat CtnctnnatJ
Purce ll
Manan
42 13
Nott)l Ba i t more s T) ler
Bo}er set sc hool recotds
w tl1 \ '0 )lflls ru shm o and
I 1e touchdow 1s 111 a
14
w n
0\er
Fostona
St
Wende ltn Josh Menendez
ot Ch tgnn F 11ls n shed tor
3 16 y rrd s on 18 carnes and
s(Ored mce
n Ch rgnn
F li s 32 15 v.m over Peny
und dcat ed Amherst got a

52

3) 7 8666

DIVISION IV
Region 13- 1 Ak on Manches e (50)
13 2550 2 Young U sui ne (5 1) 9 9453
3 Or v le (4 2) 9 3000 4 Young Mooney

4 ) 9 2000 5 Chag n Fa s [4 2)

a 8500 6 Grad (6 1) 8 2666 7 Young
L berty (5 1 8 0753 8 Garf e d H s
T nty(4 2)78666 9 Mass Tusaw(4 2
7 7646 10 -5u van 8 ack Ave (4 2

7 0596
Reg on 14-1 Huon (6 0 3 3000 2
Coldwa e 6 O) 1 8656 3 Tontogany
Otsego 6 0 9 4833 4 Uppe Sandusky

[6 0) 8 7000 5 U bana 5 I 8 5166 6
De ta (51) 7 8833 7 Moun G lead (4 2
7 8166 8 Avon (4 2) 7 2566 9 te)

school t ecord 289 lards on
19 carne s and ftve touch
dov.n s from Alex Kntpp tn
a 46 0 wtn 01 er Fa1rvrew
North L1ma South Range s
Ben John ston ran for 274
} rrd s and three touchdov. ns
on 35 carnes tn a 31 7 wtn
0\ er McDonald
Ctnctnnalt Oak Hills
Jtmmy D 111 Con nets rushed
fat 260 yards on 26 carrtes
a nd scored twJce but hts
team lost 28 20 to West
Chester Lakota We st Nate
Kmtc rushed tor 230 yards
and three touchdov.n s but
Delta blew a 20 0 lead to
tall to
Hamler Patnck
Hem y
29 26 as Zack
G eoroe threw for thre e
score s Delpho s St John s
Man Shumaker ru shed tor
202 y ards on I :l carnes ,md
had touchdown run s ot 6)
md 45 n a 41 0 v.m o1er
Fort
Recovery
Lrbeny
Townshtp Lakota East s
Paul Bowen set sc hool
mark s lor TDs (IS) 01nd

DIVISION V
Reg on 17-1
Roo stown
50)
1 51662 M nea Rdge(60)1 1333
3 Ga es M s G mou Acad
60
0 4000 4 N L ma S Range (6 0
93666 5 Coumbana Cesvew (5
8 8883 6 Oa on 6 O) 8 8626 7 ab ae
42
8 65 00 8 New M dd e own
Sp ng e d (5 ) 6 7 66 9 Bu o
Be ksh e (4 2) 6 3 0 10 Sm lh v e (5

16 0780
Reg1on 18Ham e Pa ck Hen y
6 D) 0 9333 2 Ash and C es v ew (6 0
10 6500 3 B u I on (6 0 8 8333 4
Fnday Lbe y Benton 6 0 84833 5
Sycamo e Mohawk 6 o 7 8333 6
L be ty C 5 ) 7 4500 7 De phos S
Johns 4 2 7 0 66 8 De T no a 4 2
6 4666 9 She wood Fa v ew (4 2
58166
0 Loan Cea vew (3 3

p01nts (90) \\ ttll 94 rushtn£
yards and three sc m es 1 1 1
49 7 wm o ver Ct l Ct 1n l
Syc 1more Leeto 1 a ran fo r
Sill y trd s on JUSt :l4 carnes
til
a 62 13 \\In &lt;lle r
Saltnevtlle Southern Mtke
Cerbus of Ytenn 1 M atheiVs
ran tor 204 } at ds a 10 thre e
touchdow 1s on 17 carnes tn
a 28 0 Wtll o;er Thompson
Ledge m o nt and Chardo 1
racked up 50 3 ru shtng yat d s
111 1 47 14 w 1 o1et p rev t
ously unbeaten E tstlak e
North

AIRBORNE EXPRESS
Ft nne y tow n s Alex Ok t o
had two ecepl ons for 17'
yards TD c uch es of 9 1
and 8 1 y ards - and m other
sc ore o n a-+-+ v 1rd tntercep
tton retut n tn 1 -,4 I 'i "tn
over D ee r P trk AI Tysn 1
threv. lor :lO~ v trds and t 1 e
TDs
tn
Bloomrl lc
Elmwood s ~o 14 \\t 1 o'er
Gema
D&lt;l
H tdt1
Not tl e 1 s
D m c 1
PI IU ~ h e t c u ht JUst three

p tsse

1 1 S-+ 7 wm over
L e pstL ht t til three wel t
I'
t ouc hdo11 ns
tnd he
tdded a pttn t teturn to
tno thct sc01e
rnd T y le
Pte ce set I
le m school
ecu rd 1etu 11
a n tnter
cep tt on I 00 l 11 Cis t 1 a 29
J' \\It OICI (Jie\JOUSIY
unbc ten \~ 1ret Ho\\ Ia 1d
Ftn lily h ete s whll hap
pet s "hen y m unlea sh a
Bulldog
Rv 111 Bt tl so n became
Canton M c Kr1 ley s c 11 eet
ru sh n k tder bt e 1ktng h s
0 \\ 1 \I 1 Jc
111 ~ I e l O rd I
the p ocess 11 tth 110 vards
11u tht ec TDs on 21 catrtcs
Ill
1 .f.f I
\Ill
UH f
M tss Ih 1 Pe 1 I
H e et the p e1 ous stl
le
1 nc
n trk of 297
Gmc C tt) 1110
\C t s ae' He now has
'I()) c ttcct 1 ) d s br e k
11 &lt;\ott nB111nsmuk &gt;I
1 tq~ 11 th
76 1 rd ru 1
I ti c 1 he I rst h tl f

l\egt!)ter
To Place
~rthune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446 aoos
or Fax To (740) 992 2157
Word Ads

HOW

IQ WRITE AN AQ

r
I
r
1.,--------J
li:i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

••••1•11.._

Lemay
Leonard
Melhyt
Lemay
Ktnnear
Dorsa
Deal
Carpenter
M1ller
Mace I
Schumaker
and
Freda Carpenter
You are hereby
nottf1ed that you have
been named defen
dants 1n a legal act on
ent tied Joyce Dav1s
Adm mstrratr x of the
Defend~nts
of
Freda
Estate
Case No 33129
Amended Nottce by Carpenter deceased
to au1honze the sale
Pub\ catton
TO
Iva
Durst of lhe real estate of
whtch the satd Freda
Carpenter
Ruda
Durst Mildred Durst Carpenter d1ed wh le
Ctrcle Robert Durst
se zed tn fee Simple
Tom Durst
Olive and to apply the pro
Durst
Randall ceeds from sa1d sale
Talbott Zetta Durst toward the debts of
the deceased and the
Boyd Joy Boyd Reva
Jean
Taylor
S d costs of adm1n1ster
ng sa d decedents
Durst
Eber
You
are
Carpenter
Dana estate
Carpenter
Eugene requtred to answer
Carpenter
Anna the complatnt w1thm
(28)
Ha nes Dana Eugene lwenty e1ght
Hames
Ar zona days after the last
pubhcat1on of th1s
Carpenter
Lemay
not ce wh ch wtll be
Gen Curtis Lemay
published once each
Velma Lemay Scherr
week for SIX consecu
Lloyd
Lemay
t1ve weeks The last
Leonard
Lemay
pubhcatton w1ll be on
Methyll
Lemay
November 3 2004
K1nnear
Dorsa
and !he twenty-e1ght
Carpenter Deal and
(28) days for answer
M1ller
Macel
will commence on
Schumaker tf 11v ng
that date In the event
., ~~~~~wa~~~e~~=~n~~e of your failure to
a{ld w1th reasonable answer or to other
d llgence cannot be w1se respond as
requ red by the Oh1o
found
Rules
of
C1v1l
ANOTO
The
Procedure JUdgment
unknown
he rs at
by default w1ll be ren
law
legatees
dered on December
devtsees executors
14 2004 at 1 30 PM
admlntstrators
ass1gns
unknown
m the Me gs County
Pleas
guardians of mmor Common
Probate
and/Or ncompetent Court
0 VISIOn 2nd Floor
heirs
surv1vtng
Courthouse
spouse 1f any and
Pomeroy Oh1o
personal represents
Judge L Scott Powell
tlves of the followmg
DATETORUN
1f deceased Iva Durst
Carpenter
Ruda 9129
Durst M ldred Durst
1016 13 2D 27
1113
C1rc1e Robert Durst
Tom Durst
01 ve
Durst
Randall
Public No1tce
Tatbotl Zetta Durst
Boyd Joe Boyd Reva
Jean
Taylor
S d COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
Durst
Ebert
MEIGS
COUNTY
Carpenter
Dana
OHIO
Carpenter
Eugene
COUNTRYWIDE
Carpenter
Anna
CASE CO 04 CV-()98
Ha nes Dana Eugene
JUDGE
FRED W
Haines
Ar zona
CROW
Carpenter
Lemay
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
gen Curt s Lemay
FORECLOSURE OF
Vel ma Lemay Scherr
MORTGAGE
Lloyd
Lemay
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO PROBATE OIVI
SION
JOYCE
DAVIS
Adm mstratnx of the
Estate
of
Freda
Carpenter Deceased
Pta nt ff
vs
JOYCE DAVIS ET AL

•

HOME LOANS INC
FKA
AMERICAS
WHOLESALE
LENDER AND MORT
GAGE ELECTRONIC
REGISTRATION SYS
TEMS AS NOMINEE
FOR LENDER PLAIN
TIFF

vs

DARRELL R BAAL
LEY ET AL DEFEN
OANTS
DARRELL
R
WHOSE
BRALLEY
LAST
KNOWN
ADDRESS IS 109
PARK STREET MID
OLEPORT OH 45760
AND THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS
DEVISEES
LEGATEES EXECU
TORS ADMINISTRA
TORS
SPOUSES
AND ASSIGNS AND
UNKNOWN
GUARDIANS
OF
MINOR
AND/OR
INCOMPETENT
HEIRS OF DARRELL
R BRALLEY ALL OF
WHOSE
RESJ
OENCES
ARE
UNKNOWN
AND
CANNOT BY REA
SONABLE
DILl
GENCE BE ASCER
TAINED WILL TAKE
NOTICE THAT ON
THE 28TH DAY OF
JULY 2004 COUN
TRYWIOE
HOME
LOANS
INC
FKS
AMERICAS WHOLE
SALE LENDER AND
MORTGAGE ELEC
TRONIC REGISTRA
TION SYSTEMS INC
AS NOMINEE FOR
LENDER FILED ITS
COMPLAINT IN THE
COMMON
PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO IN
CASE NO 04 CV 098
ON THE DOCKET OF
THE COURT AND
THE OBJECT AND
DE"'AND
FOR
RELIEF OF WHICH
PLEADING IS TO
FORECLOSE
THE
LIEN OF PLAINTIFF S
MORTGAGE
RECORDED
UPON
THE
FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED REAL
ESTATE TO
PROPERTY
ADDRESS 109 PARK
STREET
MIDDLE
PORT OH 45760 AND
BEING MORE PAR
TICULARLY
DESCRIBED
IN
1
PLAINTIFF S MORT
GAGE RECORDED IN

I..C.IIJ,.!tl-.11

Clayton mobile home
s1t uate
1n
Me gs
County Ohio to w t
S tuated
1n
the
County of Metgs tn
the Stale of Oh o
Township
of
lebanon and bound
ed and descnbed as
follows
The followmg real
estate
Situate m
Lebanon Township
Metgs County Ohto
and 1n 160 Acre Lot
No 1173 Town 2
Range 11 of the Oh1o
Company s Purchase
and be1ng more par
t cularly described as
follows
Begrnnlng
for reference at a
pomt bemg the mter
sect1on of the west
I ne of that tract of
land conveyed to
W1lham H Hoback
and Joyce E Hoback
as recorded m Deed
Book 294 at page 685
Me1gs County Deed
Records
and the
ex1st ng centerline of
Slate Route 124 (as of
February 16 1990)
sa d potnt
bears
South 83 deg 59 min
utes 01 seconds 'East
a d1stance of 1386 85
feet and South 07
deg 04 mmutes 34
seconds West a dts
lance of 2063 75 feet
from a stone found at
the Northwest corner
of sa1d 160 Acre Lot
No t 173 thenceleav
tng sa1d east hne and
along sa1d centerline
south 89 deg 48 mrn
ute's 45 seconds East
a dtstance of 12 06
feet to a pomt betng
the tntersectton of the
centerline of State
Route 124 and the
centerline of town
sh1p road 132 lhence
leav ng Stare Route
t 24 and along the
centerline of town
sh1p road 132 Soulh
03 deg 13 mtnutes 03
seconds West a d s
l ance of t 50 72 feet to
a pomt thence south
03 deg 20 m1nu1es15
seconds West a dis
tance of 9 28 feet to a
potnl marked by PK
na I the true place of
beginning lor the par
eel here n descr bed
lhence Westerly dis
tance of 111 2 feet
(cross ng an iron pipe
at 1117 feet) to an

MORTGAGE BOOK
OFFICIAL RECORDS
VOLUME 182 PAGE
311 OF THIS COUNTY
RECORDER 5
OFFICE
THE
ABOVE
NAMED DEFENDANT
IS REQUIRED TO
ANSWER
WITHIN
TWENTY EIGHT (28)
DAYS AFTER LAST
PUBL CATION
NOVEMBER 18 2004
WHICH SHALL BE
PUBLISHED ONCE A
WEEK FOR SIX CON
SECUTIVE WEEKS
OR THEY MIGHT BE
DENIED A HEARING
IN THIS CASE
DONALD
K
SWARTZ ATTORNEY
LERNER SAMPSON
&amp; ROTHFUSS
ATTORNEYS
FOR
PLAINTIFF
PO BOX 5480
CINCINNATI OH
45201 5480
(5 13) 241 3100
attyema11®1srlaw co
m
(9) 15 22 29 (10) 6
13 20
Publtc Notrce
Shenff s Sale
Rea
Estate Case
Number 4 CV 55
Farmers
Bank &amp;
Savmgs
Pla1nhff
vs
Mtch ael Warner
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas
Me gs County Oh o
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
d ected from satd
Court n 1he above
ent tied act1on I w II
expose to sa e at
public auct1on on the
front steps of the
Me gs County Court
House on Frtday Nov
12 2004al1000am
of satd day the fol
low ng descrtbed real
estate
We
Therefore
Command You that
you proceed w thout
delay to appra se
advert se and sell
accordmg to the stat
ues regu lat ng JUdg
ments and execu
t ons at law the lot
lowmg
described
lands and tenements
aon~ wth the 1987

I

a.c• -...;. ..... """

1ron pipe
thence
Soulherty 142 feet to
the center of the
creek passmg an oak
tree at 131 feet
thence Easterly along
the center of the
creek 170 feet to a
point marked by a PK
nail en the centerltne
of satd Township road
132 which po&gt;nt 1s
wtth1n lhe conf~nes of
a bndge thence fol
lowing the centerlme
of TR 132 North 14
deg 02 mmutes 33
seconds East 81 44
feet thence along the
cenlerllne of TR 132
North 03 deg 2D m1n
utes 15 seconds East
138 90 feet to the
place of beg&gt;nn1ng
contatnmg 0 5817 of
an acre more or less
of which 0 4807 acre
IS a part of Tract I and
01010 acre 1s a part
of Tract II of those
tracts descrtbed 1n
deed 10 Wttltam S
Hoback as recorded
m val 319 at Page
123 of the Me1gs
County
Deed
Records There ts
also conveyed here
wtth all connectmg
utll1ty septic sewage
and satellite system
easements along w1th
the rlgh~ to use mam
tatn
repa1r
and
replace the same
Satd real estate 1s
subject to all ex1st1ng
leases
easements
aqd righls of way of
retard
Reference
Deed
Volume 23 Page 207
Me1gs Counly OffiCial
RecordS
Audttor s Parcel No
07 00314 002
Property
Address
51296 Hoback Road
Rac&gt;ne DH 45771
Also a 1987 Clayton
mob1le home I D
#41682 Certtflcate of
T tie #5300038933 a
copy of wh ch ,.
attached hereto and
made a part heceof
Current
Owner
Mtchael Warner
Properly at 51296
Hoback Rd
Rae ne OH 45771
PP# 01 00314 002
Pr or
Deed
Reference
Volume
23 Page 207
Volume 17 Page 437
Appra sed at
Land

J""''o.oc•lll.._ .._- I••

I:..._ II....,...._, • .._ • I

SB 000 Tra1ler $2 000
Sold Separately
Terms
of
Sale
Cannot be sold for
tess than 2/3rds of
the appra1sed value
10° o down on day of
sale cash or cert1f1ed
check balance on
conf1rmat on of sale
Ralph E Trussell
Me1gs County Shentf
Attorney
for !he
Plamttff
L11tle
Sheels
&amp;
Warner
PO Box 686
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
(740) 992 6689
10/61320
Public Notrce
Director
Me gs Counly Off ce
of
Economtc
Development
The Meigs Counly
Comm1sstoners
tn
conJunction
w th
Meigs
County
Community
Improvement
Corporation
are
seeking a dtrector of
economic develop
ment Me1gs County
w1th a populatton of
24 000 Is a progres
s1ve tommuntty that
has JUSt completed
$150 m Ilion n new
highway
projects
enJOYS new school
facJ11t es throughout
the
county
and
recently developed
an mdustr al park
wtth a 31 600 square
foot
speculative
butldmg We are seek
ng a candidate to
lead our employment
and Ia)( base growth
tnto the future
The
successful
candidate Will be
responsible for man
agmg
econom c
development actlv
lies n Metgs County
Appl cants
should
have a college degree
and/or five years of
profess anal expert
enee n econom e
development market
mg government or
real estale develelp
ment Strong wntten
and verbal skill•
excellenl
people
skills and a proven
record In business
deve opment
are
e sse ntial A 'Jared

1-.ltlgl•ll

r--.,.._
11••

"""V""I•a•l.,.._ • -

""!1. • ••• •

background 1n gov
ernment bus ness
real estate and mar
ketmg along w1th a
fam1t1ar ty of Oh o
development
pro
grams and pohc es
would be tdeal The
candidate must be a
team player ener
get1c well organ zed
w1lllng to work non
traditional hours wtll
ng to travel as need
ed and capable of
work ng mdepend
antly
The posttlon offers
an excellent salary
and benef1ts package
and w II be a public
employee
Me gs
County IS an equal
opportun11y employ
er
Resumes and three
reference should be
forwarded to
EOO
238 West Mam Slreet
Pomeroy OH 45769
or forwarded elec
tron1cally to
dlrector@metgscoun
tyoh1o com Oeadlme
for
resumes
s
October 15 2004
1016812
Publtc Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS hereby
g1ven
that
on
Saturday October 09
2004 at tO OOam a
publtc sale w1ll be
held at 21 t W Second
St Pomeroy Oh o
The Farmers Bank
and
Savmgs
Company 1s sellmg
for cash tn hand or
cert fled check the
foilowmg collateral
1994 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE
IJ4GZ58St RC280928
1996
FORD
ESCORT LX 3FASP
11 JSTR1 26446
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Pomeroy
Oh1o reserves th e
nght to btd at this
sale and to wtthdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale Further
The Farmers Bank
and
Sav ngs
Company reserves
the nght to reJeCt any
or all b
submlt1ed
The
above
descr bed colla teral

as

I ,_••• ••

wtll be sold
as ts
Where s
w1th no
expressect or tmplted
warranty gtven
For further •~for
mat1on or for an
appo ntmenl
to
tnspect
collateral
pr or to sale date con
tact D ane Rector or
Randy Hays at
992 2136
1016 7 8
Publtc Nottce
NOTICE OF ELEC
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITAtiON
Rev1sed Code elec
Ions 3501 11 (G)
5705 19 5705 25
Not ce ts hereby
g ven that 1n pur
suance
of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Townsh ip
Trustees
of
the
Townsh p of Chester
Chester
OhiO
passed on the 1Oth
day of August 2004
there Will be submit
ted to a vote of the
people of sa1d subd1
v s1on at a General
Elect on to be held n
of
the Township
Chesler Oh o at the
regular places of vat
ng theretn on the
2nd day of November
2004 lhe quesllon of
levy ng a tax tn
excess of the ten mill
lim tat10n
for the
benef t of Chester
Township for the pur
pose of Mamtam ng
and operating ceme
ter es Satd tax be ng
A replacement of a
ta x of 1 mtll at a rate
not exceeding 1 mdl
for each one dollar of
va luat on
which
amounts to ten cents
(SO 10) for each one
hundred dollars of
valuahon for f1ve (5)
years The Polls for
sa d Election w111
open at 6 30 a m and
remain open until
7 30 o clock PM ot
sad day
By order of the Board
of Electtons of Metgs
County Oh1o
John N lhte
Cha rperson
Alia D Smith
Director
Dated Sept 5 2004
ItO! 6 13 20 27

Now you con hove borders and graphtcs
~
added to your closs1fied ads
(.~
!f1't
Borders $3 00/per ad
~
Groph1cs 50¢ for small
$1 00 for Iorge

Display Ads

In Next Day s Paper
Sunday In Column 1 00 p m
Far Sundays Paper

All Display 12 Noon 2
&amp;u•lness Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display 1 00
Thursday f.or Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

Desc::rlptlon • lnc::lude A Prlc::e • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Davs

~~

1

Gl\ EA\\AY

Lost 8 ack &amp; wh e Bo de
Co e Magge ed co a
b eed w h tags Mu be y Avenue
Saturday Rewa d
a ea

1740!992 190

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KIT &amp;

CARLYLE

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Pe enn a Ca Shelte 3390
SR 325 F &amp; Sa 96pm
D ed
owe s
ca ouse
ho se &amp; m sc househo Cl

I 888 277 49 2 Ex 77492
WWW Aa nt ee TaMWayz co

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Satu day Sale by Chu ch a
GUns Uppe AI 7 9?
Mo e th ngs added

~n

(740 441 0668

102 Debbe 0
Gapes
Oho Fday Oct 8 &amp;
Satu day Oct 9 Hou s 9am

G~upS'

Red Bone Coon dog rna e
o gooa home 304 675
7185

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FOUNh

No Fee Un ess We W n

7pm

'"

32984

S deh

Road

I \11'1 0\ \II \1
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.

8E:LP WAN"Il'.O

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 s For Sate..........................
725
Announcement ..........................•................. 030
Antiques
530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Auto Repatr
770
Autos for Sale
710
Beato &amp; Motors lor Sale
750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Buildings
340
Buslne•s Opportunity
210
Bustness Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment
780
Cards ot Thanks
010
Chlld/Etderty Care
190
Electrlcai/Relrlgerat&gt;on
840
Equipment lor Rent
480
Excavating
830
Farm Equipment
610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms lor Sale
330
For Lease
490
For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnl•hed Rooms
450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Grain
640
Help Wanted
110
Home Improvements
810
Homes lor Sate
310
Household Good•
510
Houses lor Rent
410
tn Memoriam
020
Insurance
130
660
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
630
Livestock
Lost and Found
060
Lots &amp; Acreage
350
Miscellaneous
t 70
Mlacellaneoua Merchandise
540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homes for Rent
420
Mobile Hom eo lor Sale
320
Money to Loan
220
Motorcycteo &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Mualce Instrument•
570
Peroonalo
005
Poll lor Sate
580
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Prolo1alona1 Servlcea
230
Radio TV &amp; CB Repair
t80
Real Ea..te Wanted
380
Schopls tnotructlon
150
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
850
Situations Wanted
120
480
Space lor Rent
Sporting Goodo
520
SUV a lor Sole
720
Truckalor Sale
715
Upholatery
870
Van a For Sale
730
wanted to Buy
090
Wanted to Buy F-arm Supplies
620
Wanted To Do
180
Wanted to Rent
470
Yard Sale Galllpolla
072
Yard Sate Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard Sate Pt Ple11ant
076

nee msc
ems cothng
and books Oc 7 8 9 f om

Ht:LP W~NlFJJ

NRA Aecru rters
Wo k lo p otec ou Gun
Rghts and ge pad fo t

(304)675 6166

W h e ect ons ghl a ound
he co ne now s you
oppo un ty to make a
d fte en ce
To schedu e an nterv ew
ca I 1 877 463 6247 ex
2311

womans mens chdens
c olh ng
sc ubs
Home
n1e o k tchen terns ots o
new terns some h ng to
everyone co ne o1 Hysel we ness
Run Road &amp; Twp 175
Succes slul cand da es w
possess exce en tol ow
Oct 6 7 8 Un on Av enue
h ough sk I s
n tat ve
c ose o Aou e 7 New co h
~te pe sana sk Is and be a
ng teens c othes baby
and
eam
e a onsh p
N ke Tommy co hes Adu t
bu de Th s un que oppo u
M sc Coffee and end ab es
nty p ov des exble hou s
Sa
Oct 9 9 3 Dave and a luc at ve comm ss on
based compensa on p an
Spence s 605 Ma n S
Rae ne adult c o hes teen a ow ng you o con o ea n
ng po en a Pea se ca
co hes een eahe

7403799063 0

8778 15

4409
cu ently accep ng app ca
- - - - - - - - - t ons to
espons be and
Ga pols Bob Evans now ca ng LPN s ALL SH FTS
If you are n e es ed pease
com e n and I ou an app
ca on at 333 Page St ee
Mddepo EOE

&amp;

EMTs

k.l
depende
and Sctlools 2NB

l70

Co ages

MN.t I J \~f:OUS

H gh
Schoo
Juno s
Sen o s and P o Serv ce
you can f vacan post o s
n the Wes V g n a A my
Nat ona Gua d 1 you a e
between he ages o1 7 35
o have p o ml a y se v
ce you won f want o pass
hs up Fo Oppo un tes n
you a ea ca
304 675
5837

WANIHl

To Do

ba h
e r1ode ed hOme
Mason WV S35 000 00 No baseme
ew o
ve
ca s
af e
9 OOPM Cn
AC
$700
mo
i740J698-7002
Fe v
40 446
320

\lcmn F HO\!Pi
FON S\1 F
pe s aooos
740 74 2424
3439

ooms no
e e ences
740 992

GET YOUR OAN TO
BUY OR REF NANCE

YOUR HOME
HOME LOANS

h

NEW PURCHASES
REF NAN CES

SO DOWN $0 DOWN

CASH OUT HOME

s

Stall Development Nu se
LPN Q.t.te b ook Rehab
Center s ook ng tor a se f
mot vate&lt;i team playa w th a
hgh ene QV eVe loon ou
management team Must
enoy wo kng w h peop~
ta n ng and CIB\Ie op ng staff
qu ck y
to
espond ng
s aft ng needs man to ng
RIVERS DE
AUCT ON peese eel 877 463 6247 emp oyee
pe to me nee
BARN A 7 South 5 m es ex 2455 or app y on ne nse v c ng and counse ng
be ow he Dam EVE RY ~ww~w~!n~to~c~l&amp;~lp~n~c=o~m~-- amp ~ee Mus t possess
SATURDAY
C
6pm
E;~tce en
commun ca on
740 258 8989
anel
n e pa sana sk s
P esentat on sk s and he
WANTED
ao ty o wok unCle pes
su e Demons aled pan
n ng and o gan ta on a
Abso ute Top Do a u S
skis Cftcal thnk ng and
S ve and God Cons
p obem sovng sk s The
Poosets GodAngs US
ab ty fo follow throug h on
Cu ency M T S Co n Shop
g ventasks Tan heTane
5
Second
Avenue
and Human Resou ce Staff
Gal po s 740 446 2842
Dave opment &amp;;~tpe ence
p ale ad but no equ eel
Pease sencl esume w th
co e e te o Ova b ook
Rehab Cente c/o M che e
G mo e AN DON 333
esume Pega St M dd epo Oh o

45760 EOE

Pets

FREE APPROVED

MPROVEMENTS NO

emp serv

roBUY

k chen co ne e 9 ua 0 and
1 on po ch 5 aces ca
port sheel ba n on coun ~
b ac~ opped oad E~ a
mob e home o Beau lu y
andscaped
S85 coo
(740)2 45 5 57
38 R 28 A 5

No

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POSTAL JOBS

r

ga age 2 ou bu d ngs 6
o (304 675 4024 ask o
pus aces case o schoos
Nancy Homes ead Rea y
$94 000 (740 742 7200
B oke
$600 depos
304 675 5332
3 bed oom 2 baths eat n Why pay en ? 3 bed oom

G een Tow nsh p c ose o 990SngeWdeTa e
schco P ced o se Mo e :} bed oom
2 u s ze ba1'hs
no 740 446 7377
New Have W
Seeking 39 People
304 882 23~5
Locally
Home
Eve yth ng new
whO wan o ea n money
Poss b e no Money down o 97 moo e home 16x80
wh e os ng we ght shOw ng qua ty ng Buye s 304 674 3be2 ba vny sde shn
g ed oo
on and back
othe show
5 11
aeck (740)949 3700
(740)441 982

$ 462$209 2h Nowh
ng Fo app cat ons &amp; f ee
govern men JOb nto ca
Ame can Assoc or Labo

913-599-8042 24

Kl\111&gt;

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shed basemen
3 bed
ooms
bah age vng
3 bed oom
nouse
fn
&amp;"HOOfs
oom and d n ng oorn
Sy acuse w th ga age on
INlmlucnoN
k tchen w h 2 ca ga age
n ee o F nancngava abe
a ached and a 30xo0
No down paymen
w h
ae ached ga age
Gllllpotls Career College
ga age and a 6x24 she e me
approved c edt (740)992
{Ca ee s C ose To Home
house 5 m es ou Che ~ colJn y se ng 5 m n es
3595
om Ro Gande 0 'Tlnut
Ca Today 740 446 4367
~ dge Rd
on he
g
ed
om
osp a
4700
800 2 4 0452
40 245 5 02
man
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40
446
ww.,. gil !pOl s a ae o lege om
oom d nn ng oom
u
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2 ca

1354

Scanne ots more
n oC son
Managemen
Thu s &amp; F Oc 7&amp;8
Co
p
s
cu
ent
y accept ng
6 S oneyb ook Esls 3 m es
app
cat
ons
a
ou
Gal pol s
out Sandh
oca on Qua I ed app
cants shou d be s ab e h gh
ymo vaect ndvduasw h
good co mmun ca on sk Its
We ofte a lu bene ts pack
age and 401 K Seve a
schedu ng op ons ave I
abe No prev ous exper
sma
ence s necessa y We a e
Wed
he p oless ona d fte ence
n elese vices anel neecl
geateampavestoonus
nte ested
can&lt;;! dates

1:&gt;
Down Paymen and
nanc ng ava abe w h
app oved c ed
Ave age
c ed qual es y.ou f down
paymen has kep you om
buy ng h s s you chance
to own you own hOme
yoo have a down paymen
but wou d ke o conse ve
we oUe ow down oayme
p og ams a so G ea
e
es a es Loca co -npa
Mo !gage
Locato s
740 992 7321

Th s newspape w II not
knoWing accept
advert sements lo eal
estate wh ch s In
v o at on or the law Ou
reade s a e hereby
Flformed that all
dwe ngs advert sed n
h s newspaper are
avalab a on an equa
opportun y bases

8676

CoullC

1 you en,ay e de 1y people
and wan to become a mem
be ol ou hea th ca e earn
please sop by Rocksp ngs
Rehab at on Cente a
36759 Rocksp ngs Road
Pomeroy Oh o 45769 and 1
out an app ICS on o he
c asses
Ex end ca e
Hea h
SeN ces nc s an equa
oppo un ty amp oye ha
encou ages
wo kp ace
dves tyMFDN

446 7702

0
Dow n Paymen and
1 nanc ng a a abe "' lh
app oved c ed
Ave agE
c ed l qua es you
dow
© 2004 by NEA Inc
oaymen has kep you Orl
o y ng h s s you chance
o own yOUL ow
ome
110
you ha e a doNn paymen
.1
HELP\\ \NTW
Mason WV Banked Owned bu wou d ke lo conse ve
Home
2 bed oom F a Lo
Ranch NeNe oo v ny
Tudes Bscut Wo d now he a
524900
Mke Sack Od
pump
Sm ths
company
h ng a Po nt P easan WV Cab nets 1 ca ga age pn Co ony
GMAC
Rea ly
Loca o s
locat on Sto e Hou s 5 30 to vate lane off SA 60
304
542
5888
8
2pm app y w hn o ca ac es $92 DOD (740)388
Ranc h sye home w h In

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www comics com

An Exce ent way o ea n
money The New Avo n
Ca Ma lyn 304 882 2645

464

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YadSaeOct89 95pm 2
am y No ea y sa es 3356
Georges Creek

Com me c a blJ d ng p s
5 aces n G een Twp
Cen a hea &amp; a oa h and
camp e e k chen S 6:;, 000
Ca C flo d Rea o s 74D

740 367 7886

0

D shes lools

2 300 Homes e n Upsca e
Deve opmen 4m om
P P easan on Sandh Ad
$29 900
Se ous nqu es
on y
{304)675 3648o
614 747 0998

wae on one su abe o
bu d ng o mob e ome

HoMEs
FOR SUE

F Sat Sun
Oct 8 10
Mut fam y ya d sae 554
Jay D Sp ng Va ley A
s zes c oth ng. coats nc ud
ng boy g
n ant/todd e s
een La ge va ety of tems
I nenslcurta ns housewa es
books bean es s uHed an
rna s co ect b es Clesk
Sam Spm

Basemen &amp; yard sa e
S Rt 141

ad11ert se any

p eference I m tat on or
d scr m nat on based on

r

1..011; &amp;
ACRE\( E

1 888 582 334 5
IU\IISI\11
10

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black
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Shephe d ed co a m ss
ng s nee Ocl 2 Hyse Alln Huge yad sae
161 6 " 74
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Je e s Ad Happy Ho ow Jackso n P ke F day &amp;
Po\lt:RO\ /MIDDLE
a ea Rewa d
740)992 Sa u day 9-Spm

days

ea estate advert sing

n th a newspaper s
subject to 1he Fede al
Fa Hous ng Act of 1968
wh ch m11kes 1 llegal to

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?

5pm
c eam
(740 742 2954

A.ll

I'RotlS'o10N \I
SfRVI(lS

I HAT&amp;
ft£A lll(fR..

Ya d &amp; Bake Sale
Salu day Octobe 9
9am 2pm
Honeysuck e D ve
Add son Atve of L 1e

YARDSALI:GAU !POLIS

Ho\lfs
FOR S&lt;l E

You owe
to you se Cu
you taxes n ha I nexpen
sNe Tax Sav ng no mat on

•

------

Femaa dog 5 man hs od
m Mad b eed mad arge
an b ack face has sho s
ve y hype bu
end y

10

8USINfX'i
Ot PORTUNITY

lwnght@ c net

terns

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s

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• Start Ypur Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response
\V\01 '\JI \II '\I'

Oeaa'lfir~

Dally In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.rn.

2556

.....rc••• •

OH

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

w ndham (4 2) 5 8665

c

~

Else Can!

Region 21-1 Mogado e (5 1) 9 0 96

60 62833 6 Leeon a 51)58833 7
8 We sv e (4 2)
57 86 9 Ma ve n 3 3) 4 8333
0
Norwa k S Pau 4 2) 4 7333
Reg on 22-1 Co u bus Gave (6 D)
8 9 66 2 Bascom Hopewe
oudon (6
o 7 6000 3 H c~sv e 6 D) 7 3666 4
A a Seneca Eas (4 2) 5 0166 5
De phOs
e e so
4 2) 4 6666 6
Convoy C estv ew 4 2 4 5666 7 ( e
Edge on 3 3 M Comb (3 3) Pando a
G boa (3 3 4 5500 10 Lafaye e A en
Eas 33 44666
Region 23
New Matamo as
F on e 5 0 8 1550 2 New a k Ca h (5
7 9833 3 G ous e T mb e 5
7 3500 4 Danv e 6 0 7 30DO 5 W ow
Wood Symmes Va ey (4
6 617D 6
Cen e bu g 3 3 6 2666 7 Be a sv e (4
1 6 600 8 Zanes Aosec ans (4 2)
5 8666 9 New Ph a Tusc Cen Ca h
3 3) 4 8456
0 Ma on Ca h (4 2
4 7833
Mec an csbu g. (5 1
Reg on 24'-19 0333 2 DoTa Ha d No he n (6 0
8 0500 3 C n Coun y Day (5 1 6 7746
4 Toy Ch s an 5 ) 6 2666 5 New
B emen
4 2 6 2000 6
DeG a
N Lew sbu g
R ve s de 4 2 5 5833
T ad 3 3 4 3000 8 Sp ng Ca h Cen
33 42 56 9 Way es edGoshen 4
2) 3 9 66 0 Ma a S en Ma on Loca
(2 4 3 6666

Mt 85 Cou.n

Gallla,
And Mason
CountlesUke
NoOnti

2 S Ma y Cen a Catho c (6 0) 8 6666
3 Man oev le (5 ) 7 5333 4 East
Can on 4 2 5 3330 5 Ctcve Cuya His

(5 1) 10 6560 4 New A bany (5 1)
02650 5 Welson (5 ) 89166 6
Po 1smou h (4 2) 8 3666 7 Zanes W
Musk ngum (3 3 52 66 8 Beln ont
Un on Loca (3 3) 5 0560 9 G anv e 3
3) 4 1666 0 Cad z Ha son Ce
3 3)
4 0933
Reg on 16-1 Pan C y Jonathon
Aide (6 O) 12 3280 2 Read ng 5 )
05000 3 Vesa es 5 ) 84 66 4
Ca ksvle C nton Masse (4 2 8 0323
5 C n F nney ow
4 2 7 9490 6
Sp ng Ken on A dge 4 2) 7 5500 7
Ba av a (5
7 3 66 § Dayton Oakwood
14 2) 6 0423 9
Made a 3 3
5 9000 10 B ookv e (3 3 5 7013

- Sentinel - l\e !)ter
~Mellp,

DIVISION V

H ghland (5 I) Onla o [4 2) 5 9166
Region 15-1 on on {6 O) 13 9166 2
Ma t ns Fe y (5 0 11 5200 3 Be a e

The Dally Senhnel • Page 83

CLASSIFIED

5 7166
Reg on 19-1 Amanda C ea c eek (6
O)
o 9153 2 Whee e sbu g (51)
10 7500 3 W Lafaye te R dgewood (6 O)
10 2500 4 Woodsl e d Monroe Cen a
6 0) 9 7570 5 C ooksv e (5 1) 9 0333
6 Johnstown No th dge (5 1) 8 3480 7
Johnsow[1Monoe (5) 74166 8
Chesapeake (4 2 6 8633 9 Belp e (4 2
6 3670 0 Ba nesv e (4 2 6 1000
Reg10n 2G-1 Wes L be y Salem (6
0) 9 8 66 2 Lees C eek E Cl nton (6 0
9 7373 3 Ma on P easan (6 0 a 6166
4 Ch
Zane race (5
81500 5 S
Hen y 5 ) 8 433 6 A ca um (5 1
7 6460 7 Anna 5 ) 7 056 8
Gandve" Hs (5) 65666 9 Cos
Ha ey(42 65350 10 Shode Padea
Academy 4 2 6 2000

G aham Loca (3 3 81333 9 Cn
Wyom ng (4 2) 7 9000 0 Ham Ross (3

www mydallysentinel com

Wednesday, October 6, 2004

CRED T BANKRUPTC ES New OakWood mega so e
ea u ng
Homes
O)
WE COME
Oa~wood
Fee
G es 0 e sop
on y a Oakwood
Barbou s e WV
3409

UNITED SECURITY
MORTQAQE
HICI0-37()-4965
11'\\'\ll\1

'IO

Ill 'SNlili
. 0J1,ll&lt;ll:NTI1

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STAFFED BV US
VETERANS

wood &amp;
sht:opp nQ
Homes o
304 736

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2005 n'lode s arr v ng Now
Co e s
Mob e
Homes
15256 U S 50 East A hans
Abeo ute Go Clm ne
60
Oh o 4570
740 592 972
vend ng mach nes
eMce - - - - - - - - - Whe e You Ge
Yo
en loca ons a. lo $10 995
Moneys Wo h
M8 5263

~,r___.:m_AR!_s.~•.E-·' r

1800)234 6982

BUS NESS OPPORTUN TV
S a a Second ncome Very
tt e out of pocke cost F ee

COMPUTER
8322
EXT

and 2 bed oom ape
Pu nam Fa m !ncl 3BR
mens u n shed and un u
28A basemen
House
n shea
see u
CleD05
new oollu &amp;nee cen s a
43 ac es enced ba n w tn equ ed no pes 740 992
wate e eel c y cone e e 2218
oos
3 mes
om
Bulla'la Kenna
$ 73 500

v

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Buye $425 month why Ren
$ 5 000 740 245 0133

304 675 2749

Nope s

003

�•
www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 6, 2004-

.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Wednesday, October 6, 2004
ALLEY OOP
I'LL. Wo'.'VE ~
CDNTJ&lt;i0l.6 """" ~

Meig~

~cheduled.

50 Aviator

Phillip
Alder

Must have high &lt;.;chool

automobile imuranl'e . $7 .00/hr. St!nd resume
to:

employment Urug tc .. ting. EyuJI Opportunity
Employer.

t

r'40

I'OR

RENT

APARI'ME!\'IS

I'ORJb:Nf

2 bedrocm apts: 10 minutes Tara

·Townhouse
from Holzer Hospital on St. Apartments. Very Spacious.
At. 160. Water/Sewer/Trash 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
lnclucted. $460/mo. Deposit 1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted.
reqwred
Pets allowed Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
(740}441-1184 or (740)441· PatiO, Start $385/Ma. No
0194.
Pets. Lease Plus Security
Deposit Requi red, Days:
2BA,
Close
to town. 740-446-3481 ; Evenings:
$435/mo. water included. 740·367·0502.

APART- Mollohan Carpet, 202 Cla rk

MENTS
AT
BUDGET
: PRICES AT JACKSON
• ESTATES, 52 Westwood
•• Drive from $344 10 $442
• Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
•740-446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877·830·
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Drive- a- little save alot.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. For sale,
re-conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrig erators. gas and electric
ranges. air conditioners, and
wnnger washerS . Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
TownhOuse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Ca ll (740)441-111t
tor application &amp; intormaliof1.
Furn1shed small 1 bedroom
apt.
Close to PVH and
No Pets. No
s hopping.
Smoking . $295.00 + elec tric. References $200.00
deposit (304)675-2651

Used Furniture Store 130
Bulaville Pike Dressers.
couches. manresses, recti ners, refrigerator, washer,

Gracious li ving . 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Rivers 1de
Apartments in Middleport.

dryer, gas, electric range,
Grave Monuments, much
more!
(740)446-4782
Gallipolis. OH Hrs. 11-3 (M·

From $295-$444. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities

i

IS"!:}~------.,
ANTIQUES

Huge clean, 3 bedroom, 1
bath, dining, storage. aprox .
2,500 sq. lt. No pets/smokCa ll Kel ly
mg . S610
(7 40}446·9961

4 Capta1ns cha1rs. so lid
maple. natural tin1sh, import·
ad/ Sweden, dated 1955.
Cash only. No receipts.
Mercerville: 1 bedroom. (740}388-0870
$250 w/deposit, no pets. Buy
or se ll · Riverine
water included. WlD hookup. Ant1ques . 1124 · East Main
Call (740}256-1245
on SA 124 E. P.omeroy, 740·
One bedroom apartment ., 992-2526 . Ru ss Moore,
no pets.
m Pomeroy, owner.
(7401992·5858
Modern paint1ngs. Anzona
One bedroom garage apart· artiSts. (740)388·0870 Cash
ment, kitchen furnished, only. No receipts 5013 St.
$400, (7401992·3823
R1. 850, Bidwell.

PUBLIC
NOTICES
NOTICE OF E~EC·
TION ON TAX ~EVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code. alec·
tiona 3501 .11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice

is hereby

given that in pu ·
suance

of

a

rb
.._

992 -5152

1ll.IER

lVII'..KOIANDISE

--

tv

OIANDISE

S

given that in
suance
of

pur..

a

Resolution of the
Village Council of the

Syracuse,

passed on the 17th
day of August, 2004,
there will be submit·
led to a vote of tho
people of said subdi-

Syracuse,
Ohio,
passed on the 11th
day of August, 2004,
there will be submltte&lt;l to a vote of the
people of sold subdl·

vision at a General

vision at a General

Election to be hold in
VIllage
of
the
Syracuse , Ohio, at the
regular places of vot·
lng therein, on the
2nd dey of November,
2004, the question of
· tavylng a tax. In
. excess of the ten mill
· limitation, for the benof
Syracuse
. alit
Vlllega for the pur·
pooe of Fire protec·
lion
Said tax being:
· A renewal of a tax of
: 1 .. mill at e rate not
· exceeding ' 1 mill for
· ..ch ono dollar of val·
uatlon.
·which
amounto to ton conll
($0.1 0) for oach one
hundred dollaro of ·
Vllluatlon, for live (5) •
yeara. Tho Polio ·lor
oald Election will
open· at 8:30 a.m. and
- remain open until
'7:30 o'clock P.M: of
.. ld day.
'B y order of the Board
of Eloctlono, of Melgo·
County, Ohio
John N. ihle
Chairperson
Rill D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. 5. 2004
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27

Election to be held In
the
Village
of
Syracuse, Ohio, at the

Village of Syracuse,

regular places of vot·
lng therein, on the
2nd day of November,
2004, the quelllon of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation. for the benefit
of
Syracuse
Vlllsge for the purof
Currant
pose
expena.. Said tax
being:
A renewal of 1 tax of
1.8 milia ••• rata not
exceeding 1.8 milia
tor each ona dollar of
valuation.
which
amounll to olghteen
cento (SO. 18) for each
one bundracl dollaro
of valu•tlon, for five
(5} y11ro. Tho Polio lor
oafd Election will
opon at 8:30 a.m. and
romaln open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
Nld day.
By ordar of the Board
of Eloctlono, of Molgo
County, Ohio
John N. lhla
Chalrperoon
Rita D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 8, 13, 20, 27

FoKSAIJi

F

12x20buildingwith8ft.over- NEW AND USED STEEL
·
1
s tee1 Be ams, p 1pe
·
A b
hang. T•00 many Items
to lSI ,
e ar
$ 2,500. Ca II aft er 5pm. 74 0• For
Cone rete. Angle,
441-0131 ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Gratin g
For
Drains,
8 padded church pews. 12ft. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
$60 each. Buggy wheels, Scrap Metals Open Monday,
$55 each. Ph. (740)446· Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
7787.
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
mR SALE
Black fiberglass topper used
I'V
•
on Chevy short bed truck. Sunday. (740}44"7300
uReese hitch used on 97
1983 Cadillac, 66,000 miles.
BUUJJING
excellent condition . Call
Chevy truck. Used 1st gen(7401441-0194
SUPPUFS
eration Mustang parts. ~
used co mputers and printers. (740)446-775 1 after Block, brick, sewer pipes. 1993 Black Camaro. wiCD
player.
good
condition
4pm. ·
wi ndows. lintels , etc. Claude
$2,500 (304)773-5668
Cash paid for Dish Network Winters, Rio Grande, OH
eq uipment. Have model Call740-245-5 121 .
1999 Ford Explorer XLP
Red. CD. excellenJ condin~J mber's ready. Toll free
PETs
tion , 54.000 miles. $9,8d0
(888)569-2812
I'ORSALE
(740}367-7090.
•
For
sale
Fire
wood
(304)882·2537
AKC 81a clc Lab puppies 2000 Chevy Prism , 4 door,
Shots. wormed &amp; dew claws au to. rad io, A/C. 16.300
For Sale New And Used removed. $200. (740)441- actuar miles $7,500 .00.
Doors and Windows call 0130.
(740}992-7 165
(304}675-4534
2000 Olds Alero . 135K
AKC 'Black Lab. puppies
$2,500
miles.
Call
Males &amp; Femai~s. :.ern
(740)388-9088
9/11 /04
5200
each
(304}773·5103
2001 sil ver Hyundai Accent,
low mileage.
Chihuahua, chocolate and
tan , registered female 1 yr. 1193 green Dodge Shadow.
old, very lovable, $175. good condition. (740)388JET
9831.
(7 40}379-260 1.
AERATION MOTORS
78 Cadill ac Eldorado. Good
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In Full bloodecl St. Bernard
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1- puppies for sale, 5200. Call body, fa1r interior, eng111e &amp;
front end needs work .
800-537-9528
(7401379-2605.
$1.500 fi rm. Call (740)446Old English sheep,dog pups, 1704 after 5pm.
Long wood burner insert, lovable, shaggy dogs, first
98 Olds Delta 88. Loaded,
$250. Phone (74 0)446- shot &amp; wormed, price $250, 119,006 miles, needs intake. '
ca ll (740)985-9823
3897.
$2,600. {740)682-7512 .
Pole Barn 30x50x1 OFT Squirrel Dogs lor sale 92 Silverado. 2x2. shortbed.
Jess loaded , $4.500.
$6395. includes Painted (304)675-6 132
89 Silverado, extended cab.
~etal. Plans, Instruction Huffman
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
?w2. 95 drivetrain $5,500
I \H\1 "'I 1'1'1 II "i
(740}682-7512
(937}559-8385
·' 11\l ... lf)("
For Sale 1948 Chevrolet.
Five Passenger Coupe. new
FARM
muffler system. tires and
EQI.IIPMENf
safety sticker (304)576-2288

r
t

------

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MI~L LIMITATION
Revised Code, elections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice Is hereby
given that in pur·

suance

of

1995 Suzuki Side Kick .
65,000 miles, auto, air, covt.
hard top, excellent condition.
' tow miles. $4.000. (740)256·
G890.

Round bales of hay for sate 1997 Ford F-150 Lar iat. ext.
1740)698 •8211 , Leave mes- cab, ste p-side. €)(C . condilion . 4-wheel drive . $12,000.
sage.
740-367·7762 or 740·36772 72.
4-Sale 03 Gravely 146 Z 30
zero turn. riding mower, 48
YANS
·
FORSA.LE
in cut. 2i hp, Kawasaki
•
engine, $7,000 new only 65
1999
F d
M k
Ill
hrs
$5.500 OBO call Conve. ,,,·onorVan w•"1hr wheel
(304)377-5598 leave meschair tift. 93.000 miles.
$iS,OOO. Phone (
)
_
740 386
m.~-~----., 9017 ·

AUTOS

"

I

Ir 4 MaroRcvcu•·.. I
40

wul.~L' I

':'r

(Befora.u.m

""

Leave MeUCJO!

~ ·

f_

)

w.
_.,;;t: -4.1:4.

200Q Harley Sportster 883
custom factory in stalled
1200 cc, t4 ,000 miles,
excellent condition, pearl
white with Chrome, $6500.
(304)675·3220 after 6pm
200 1 Honda Shadow motorcycle VT1100. Excellent
condition. $4 ,500. (74014467668.
2002 Honda 350. 4•4
Ran cher 4-wheeler. $3.300.
Call (740)446-6876 .
2004 90 Arctic Cat 4 wheeler $1 ,650. Call (740)3889088.

99 Honda Shadow Ace
6,200 miles, excellent cond1·
tion $4,300. (740~446- t948
call after 6:00pm.

50 BoA"Ili &amp; MmuHs
~UR SAU:

..__

_,iiiiioiiiii;;._.l

2001 Cerevelle Intercep tor.
21FT. 56fhours, 9 passenger, l1ke new call (30 4)674 0102 or 304)882-2840

60

Auro PAKI'S &amp;
Acu,;s~;oKit;~

6ft Black Chevy Topper,
Cenl ury $1,000 new. will sell
lo&lt; $500 (304)682·2790

wAS

..
' BARNEY
I'VE NEVER SEEN SOMEBODY SO WAPPY

I").:~~__;_T~O BE MIU&lt;IN' A COW!!
SHE JEST GOT BACK FROM
TH' STORE, ELVINEY -WHAR SHE SAW TH'
LA TEST PRICE
FER MILl&lt; !!

!4nnette)s
·Jfouse Ckaning Service

"'"" ' '"~~1~ 1:"'"" com

THE BORN LOSER

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

p-

...,

YO\) Ki'l()\4, t)f?..U\U~, Wf\E:.N. t'l'\
VI~ITiflCo YOUK ~01'\E., Tf\E.KE.'~
l-it. Vf..R 1-. DULL ·
Ml'\f..f~T 1

1·740·843-5382

P'"WE.LL, t'LL T~ If\ I-.\ f&gt;..') to._
C.Oii\I'LII&lt;\E.tl.l ! \f\N'\K. YOU,

!

I

1'\0Tf\tR. (M.{,(_[I

~

St.

E

Pnn11::rov

i

ho.:~idt: La rry\ r:i·uil S1a11J

Chai n Saw:-..

·Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

Chain Slwrpened
&amp; Parts
Nl'\\ Cl'lll'r:il

St:mdhy

Ciencr:iling s:.~tl"llb and
Rol-A1r Air Comprl'~~on.
Open 8:30·6:00 M·f;
Sa1. H:31J.J:tl0 992·1033

Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homes • Vinyl
Sillmg • New Garages
• Rcplacr.!mcnt
Windows • Roofi n£

29670 Bashan Road

BUILDERS InC.

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FF!EE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599

llOLO&gt;&lt;rLJ L WAY OF SI\YING
C~EAR ~IOLATION

A H ISTOR.Y TEA&lt;:"E R
HAS Ae.SOLuTELY

SCHOOL Rl!I-E&gt;_ YOU
JUST THII.EW

Fof'.
EVENT~ .

SOMETHING
IN CLI\SS'

Racine , Ohio
4577 1

740·949·2217

PEANUTS

Sizes 5'x10'
.to 10'x30'

I JUST SAW TI-l AT'S
A LEAF
FALL ..

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

BECAUSE

SUMMER 15 OVER .. PRETTY'
SOON IT'LL 6E WINTER.

IT'S AUTUMN

AND THE 6ROUND WILL

WHOSE IDEA

WAS TI-IAT?

BE COVEI1.E(;&gt; WITH SNOW ..

111411 mo pd

•
'

~

; I
;I

m

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

HOWARD l.
WRITESEL
•ROOAIG
dOME
MIIIITENAIICI
•SEAMlESS
· GOnER

475 South Church St.
Ripley. WV 25271

SUNSHINE CLUB

1-800-822-0417
"W.Y's # 1 C h evy . Pontiac. Huick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

*Freelsllmltllh

949·1405
GARFIELD

Advertise ·
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

THAT WA5
THE TITANIC .
THE&lt;,&gt; 5POTTED
AN ORAN&amp;E.

ICEBER&amp;

•
i

l
!

'
{~--~~~~~~

i

YOUNG'S

Barnhart
Builders

CARPENTER
SERVICE

30 years experience

•!Sew Homes

• Room Addltlont &amp;

• l.og Homl!s
• Post Frame

Atmodtllng

• New G~r•g••

•Complete Remodeling
•Re1Jian~ mt•n t
~,

Window '!

•Roofs
Commcn:hd and
Rts id t'ntlal

Free ES\imales

740·667.6080

Eltetrlcll &amp; PI!Jmblng
1 Rooting &amp; Q!JHtfl
• VInyl Siding &amp; P1tntlng ·
• P1tlo 1nd Po rch Otckl
We do It al l except
1

turnace work

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCDON
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-lm

992·8215

Stop &amp; Compare

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Ytlrt Loctl Ex rltnct

Dbl.

44

'"'

East
Pass

All pass

A Roman leg1on was divtded mto cohorts
-how many?
.
In bndge. we have lots of diVISIOns . For
ewample. you wilt otl en be ftghtlng wtth an
army of etght trumps . That means the
opposmg troops nave f1ve Accord1ng to
the mathematicians . these are the dlvtSIOn probabilities: 3-2- 67.8 percent 4-1
-28.3 percent: 5·0- 3.9 perqent. So. it
is reasonable to assume a)-2 splt1. but if
you can. try to l1nd a hne that succeeds
agatnst both 3-2 and 4-1 breaks.
You reach lour .spades. West starts the
defense with hts three top hearts. After
rufftng the third . how would you cont1nue?
Declarer thought that he saw 11 easy
tncks: tour spades. one d1amond, ftve
clubs and the heart ruff in hand So. he
immediately drew two rounds of trumps .
However, when West dtscarded a diamond on the second round . 1he contract
was no longer makable. South played on
clubs, but East ruffed the third round and
returned the spade tack . strandi~g declarer 1n the dummy. He had to lose two diamond triCks and finished two down .
To collect those five club tncks. South
needs lo draw trumps while matnlatmng
control. After the spade to the queM
South shou lcl have called for dummy's low
spade. (He could have ducked the first
round of trumps .) Then . declarer can win
whatever comes back. remove East's
remaining spades. and run the clubS 1n
peace.
Note that if spades are 3-2. thts play costs
only an overtnck.
There were tO cohorts in a 1eg1on- did
you wm 10 tricks here?

'-="'
H"-T .JU,;T A

BASEMENT

antee. Local references fur1995 Dodge Da)&lt;:ota 4x4
nished. Established 1975.
pickup.
120,000
miles,
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446Short Horn Fair Steer. $3,700. Call (7401379·2409 0870,
Basement
Raised in
Gall ia
Co. alter 5pm . You won't lind a
deal like this lor a 4x4!
(740}256-6574.

North

· -~ Astro':'

BIG NATE

IMPORTS
. Athens

PiLk -up ;,.ml lk·l lll.' f~ Jo,Cn 1c~·
:\ow -..er\'iL·in~ Kat\~ ~n~ H('ah.'r\

~'R~
High&amp; Dry'

•

.,

Warr;.uHy Rt:pair •
L twn Tn.tL'In r &amp; Pu..:h
Mower~.

YUI', 1'\E.IJER. /&gt;.. WLL MOI'\0-IT\\ '~ JU')T PLI-.11'1 \:lULL
f&gt;..LL me. TIME. 1

I

'l'erry 's Bngllres
~20 E:1~t Main

...,

.,...

~

WATERPROOFING
2 miniature male Donkeys,
, FOR SALE
$300 each. Born on Mothers ..__ _iliiiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l Unconditional li1etime guarDay. (740}446 ·0118
(740}367-3331.

.I

1-800·822·0417

2000
Harley
Davison
Sportster 883 Hugger. Lots
of ex tras . Days 740-645·
3246. evenings after 6:30pm
740 -256·6589

Wt·st

Will the trumps
divide favorably?

AfllAII&gt;
Of Tt4AT.

COME BY 6 SEE ME FOR
YOUR BEST DEAL ON A
NEW OR USED CAR
Ty Hill

tl~
~

•.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~~

a

Resolution of the
VIllage Council of the
VIllage of Rutland,
Rutland, Ohio. paaaed
on the 13th day of
August, 2004, there
will be submitted to a
vote of the people of
eald subdivision at a
General Election to
be hold In tho Village
of Rutland, Ohio, at
the regular placea of
voting therein, on the
2nd day of November,
2004, the queolion of
levying a tax, In
oxc111 of tho ten mill
limitation, lor 1ha benefit of Rutland VIllage
lor tho purpoae of
Current
expenaeo
Said tax being:
A renowil ol a llx of
2 milia at a rata not
oxc•dlng 2 milia lor
IICh One dollar of VII·
which
uatlon,
amounll to twenty
can1o (10.20) for Hch
one hundred dollora
of Vllluotlon, lor llva
(5) yaare. Tho Polio lor
aald Election will
open at 8:30 1.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. ol
aald day.
Br ordor ol th1 Bo1rd
o Elactlono, ol Melgo
County, Ohio
John N.lhlo
Chalrperoon
Rill D. Smith
Director
Detod Sept. 5, 2004
(1Q)' 8, 13, 20, 27

45760

Let me do 1t for you I

.

'3
Q 2

;r.'M

'JAV~'!J Jo.~ .

/ Graph
&lt;Your 'lllrlhd'l)o:

Thursday, Oct . 7. 2004

By Bernice Bede Osol
There could" be a tot ot lucky rewards in
the olf1ng tor you m the year ahead !rom
1nvotvements or dealings you have w1th
large orgamzatiOns or groups . Be a jomer and Oar:ne Fortune will do the rest.
LIBRA [Sept. 23·0tt. 23) - 'fuu nave
good reason to be hopeful today.
because what you~nvis1on as be1ng successful w1 ll play ilsell out and actually be
b1ougtll abou t m ways easier than usual.
Think victory.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Atm for
lofty targets today because Lady Luck
w1ll be makmg ce rta 1n that you lmd your sell more fortunate m Situations whiCh
are mean1ngtulto you rnan those that are
lllSIQnl flcantto you .
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 2 1 ) Whether you seek 11 ou1 or not , others
w11l compel you to take a leadership role
in group mvotvements . Don 'l tllmk 1t IS
stwwboa11ng : you belong up front today.
CAPR ICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19) It
someone wants 10 repay you lor a past
favor today. don 't be loo prOud to accept
it. They need to rec•proca te and 1! n make
•you feel good about you rself and what
they do tor you
AQUARIUS (Jan 20- Feb
1 9)
AlthOugh chances are you·n nave nolh·
1ng to &lt;to w11h orchestrat ing 11 somethmg
benei1C1al w111 be pu t together today that
w1t1 1nclude you It's more tha n lucK you'll deserve it.
PISCES (Feb 20- Marc h 20)- Whether
you are buy1ng or se lhny tuday, stnve to
be fau 1n all your negot1at1ons When you
act m good la11t1 . Darne Fortune w•ll
make sure tha1 you II end up w1th th e be1ler barga1n.
ARIES tMarch 2 1-Apnl 19) - Your populanty w1tll your peers w1ll be very much
1n ev•dence today mostly because you 'll
Know not to play tavor11es ana treat
everyone as your best tnend
TAURUS (April 20-May 20l - Ventures
in wh iCh you ge t 1nvotved today should
1urn out to be exceptionally successful
101 you and show Signs ot domg so ove1
the tong hau l Don't g1ve up 11 early •nd1 ·
calors appear doubtlut
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Seek out
listeners who are known for rnak1ng poslllve contnbut1on s 1f you need to so und
out sorne new plans They'll !lave mu ch
to cont11bu te that would mflke you a wmce&lt;
CANCER (J une 2 1-Juty 221
You could
be e~~.cept1onally lucky today 1n s1tuat1ons
that attcct your earmngs and l1nancial
seCIHITy These opportunltl !di:i 11Hgh1 be
fleetmg. however. :;o ma k:e lt1tl mos t ot
lhtllll
LEO tJuty 23-Aug 22) - It you re lookIng tor a break 111 handhng an unpor tA.nt
matter. today may b €' the dEiy [lon t li sten
to anyone wh d thmks no!l1u1g goad c:o uld
eve r happen to y011 you re 1he lucky one.
not h1m or her
VIRGO I Aug 23 Sept 221 - Two ul•relti!Od forces could converge toucty 111 n
umque Way tha1 ma~· prl!ve to be urrus,1
.;~lly lucky a11cl lu crr!11ve ·Tt)e ~e !)appe·1·
111Q ~ may not be ol yo ur dOiriQ

SOUP TO NUTZ

OUI

55 Gasp

DOWN
1 Ploy

and 3 Uncluttered
4 Chicago

routine
18 Tibe1an ox

19 On lhe ball
21 Develop
25 Like a
fish hook

Open ing lead: ¥ A

'i/

suvs

4x4

1.

South

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

'"?

•
•

-Earhart
52 Different
53 Slcin soolhet'
54 Bleaches

2 Currier

16 Circus

29
3t
33
34

Dealer: North

740-843-5264 .

After 6pm

I 0 9 4 :l

Vulnerable: ·East-West

Middleport

liNDA'S PIINJING
('140) 985-4180

4

"'K Q1o••

L" l""

7 ft . International Bush Hog.
FOR SA.LE
Looking for enQine or lrans3 point hitch . good condition
$600. (7401446·0118 0&lt; "~---M-iliii-.,J m1ssion? Give me a call at
1740)446·0519
(3041675-3331.
1994 Chevrolet Suburban.
Palz Silo Unloader phone All leather seating. Al l
power Equipped for trailer
(304}675-2443
10
Hmu:
towing. Can be seen at 136
First Ave. , Gallipolis. Ohio.
IMPRUVE!\ UN IS
Phone 17 401446-2561 .
rL:&gt;

South

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

4x4

Last year 2nd cut: Round
bale hay $6. New 2nd. cut
hay $16.
851 Ford Tracror, good condition $3,200. Ph. (740)4467787.

"' 1 3

Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

. --~,.~~
....
.;

Closed Tues.

r

8 65

•

+

Box 189

H.w&amp;
GRAIN

KJ854

• J 8 7 j
• lfl 9 7 5
0 IU 9 3

t Driveways t Tennis Courts

10:00-5:00

(hY.ph.)
15 Wildlife
shelter

4 G
A K Q 2

1 Pasta
go.wHh
5 Wagner
opus
10 Energelic
12 Got paid
t3 Polite word
14 Looked
inside?

East

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

Sun. 1.:00-4:00

I r MlscFLLANrou I

~
..All......

PublicNotices in Ne1vspapers.g
Your Right to Kno•, Delivered Righllo Y
'our ll!~r.H

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revi ed Code, elec·
lion
3501 .1 1 (G),
57 . 19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby

5 FREE

Middleport. Ohio
145N. Second Ave.

Dail;

MONTY

10 Of\ 04

A K Q3
J 8 6
A 7 6
A J 2

West

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

on 2nd Ave
Open

+

•

t

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

Sun. Closed

i

Resolution of the
Village Council of tho
Village of Syracuse,
Ohio ,

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

•

4-

871-2417

Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

See Brent or Brian Whaley

4

Henderson, WV

6:30

Restockl'!9' I.Ate .Hodel Salmge
atld Arter Markel 1\lrlil

Over $3000 total baskets
with protectors
·Thursday, October 7 6:00 pm
American Legion
Middleport, OH
Doors open at 5:00 pm
Sponsored by Syracuse
Community Center
Refreshments Sold
NO SMOKING PLEASE
CALL 992·2311 For info.

Tw1n A1vers Tower is accept3 roams &amp; bath. stavenefrig- Ing applications lor waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
eratar. down stairs. utilities
apartment, call 675-6679
paid. $450/monrh . No pets.
EHO
: 46 Olive St (740)446·3945
\II Rlll\\llhl
: 4 room &amp; bath ap1. Stove,
• relrig. water. sewer, trash . · lr!::
1oi!"'"-:'H:"o·USF.Il-·ow---,
' $400. Porter. Ohio 74Q-367·
r~~
. 7146-740-367-7015.
'"UVUlA."'

BEAUTIFUL

St. Rt.681 Darwin. OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

BASKET BINGO

4467 ask for Faye or Lisa

30" electric range, self clean
oven, ellceilent .condition.
(7 40)446.:6278.
-'----------Good Used Appliances.
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers.
Dryers,
Ranges.
and
Retngerators, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine St., (7401446-7398

Parts

North

MYERS PAVING

Antiques

Deposit Required, (740)446·

Applications being taken lor
very clean 1 bedroom in
. co untry setting yet close to
. town . Washer, dryer. stove.
· tridg e included. Water and
: narbage included. Total elecv
• tric with AC. Tenant pay elec:tric. $300 deposit, $375 per
· month. No pets. No smok·
: ing. 74D-446·2205 or 740- 446-9585 ask lor Virginia

Whaley's Auto

Holzer Clinic
FLU SHOT
CLINIC
Friday,
October 8, 2004
9 am to 1 pm

Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604
o
Jackson. OH 451HO.
Deodlinc for applicants: 1018104. Pre-

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2l71
Every Th ursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds,start

sci-fl writer

ACROSS

diploma/GED. \alid dri\'er\ lil'cnse, three
years good dri,·ing t:'tpcrien..:c ~md adequate

AP~IENIS

NEA Cronword Puzzle

A. JJIINUT~!

County Hours:

Evenmg:-.. v.eekend ami ovcrn1ght:-. a.. needed

or as

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

BRIDGE

VOUQ. TI!IP 'rO
J:'IUo.NC£. IN ...JUST

WANTED: Emergency Rolief. Workers
(Sub..,titute:-.) needed to \'-'nrk with people with

mental n.·tardation an

. www.mydailysentinel.com

35
37
38
40

Bounded
Shaggy dog
Cover crop
Angling
a nail
Robin Hood's
refuge
Tierra delKind people
"Pulp

train&amp;

5 Dinghy's
need
6 Implore

23 " Othello"
45 Dutra
plotter
of goll
24 Boot jingler 46 Laugh·a·

7 "Orinoco
Flow"
singer
8 Terrible
smell

26 Roqueton
hue:

27 Wiesel

minute ·
47 Ecru
48 - W-·

of literature
sehen
28 Minor dent 49 Rubber9 Do arithmetic 30 Merit
stamps
10 Med. staffer 32 Conceit
51 Broom
11 Nope
36 Sigma
companion
opposite
follower

12 Vanilla17 Urban

Fiction"

39 Not

imaginary
40 Annapolis
Appeared
in st.
Checks·
4I Springlik•
for typos
·42 Brigitte's
-by myseH
friend
Coral
44 Goat
formation
cheese
transport

name
43 Street
in Paris
44 Frontier
outpos1
48 Famed

19
20
21
22

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetfity Cllhe&lt; cr;·p1ograms arll ::realed !ron QIJOtal1ons b;lai""•OII'i O!!OP-e oast aoo orese!'ll
Eac~ tell er r~ •.lie aor.er stallds for ~~!her

Today's Clue K equals C

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'PolitiCS nas got so expens1ve that 1t takes lots ot
money to even get beat with - ~ W1lr Rogers

':~~:~;;' S©\\JJM.-~~~e,8 WO!Q
GAM E
Edit• d by CLAY R. f'Ol~J. N - - ' - - - - - 0 Ri!!orr:l~Oe let·i!!;lwore';ef !he
b-e1:-~rr ~c~crr.bled

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re ~a:ntin gthe living room. Clear-

ing up is always a chcre. I found
r - - - - - - - - - - - , t~e best woy lo getfres~ pa:cl off

a seat 1s to - ~ • on - -.

ART T A S

I' I' I'
ft UNSUA". 1.Bu: 1-.BOV t ! ~!lHS
'!J
'0 GET ANSW;F.

!:x c1:e- Usual- Lisi9- t...:::c:.J!5e- SUsc=ss
"O.:m 't wori• about COI7llnJ frc:m SJc]· c s "":lo l: :cw:-:, " one
stJiiet told lier·~ew rocmr:1~~-e. "1 th 1:-H", ~ '7lai: ~c~o•.T.s ; ;ve ~he
b ' sges~ SUCCESS sto~1es."
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•
Wednesday, October 6, 2004

www:mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

J

Agent: Ricky Williams
Bengals' Justin Smith
wants to rejoin Dolphins charged ·with DUI
Bv STEVEN WtNE
Associated Press
MIAMI - Mavbe Ricky
Williams is tired oi· traveling.
Maybe he has run out of
books to read. Or maybe he
doesn't want to pay the $8.6
million he owes the Miami
Dolphins for breach of contract.
Whatever the
reason.
Williams wants to rejoin the
Dolphins and has asked the
NFL how soon he can return.
his agent said Tuesday.
It"s unclear whether the
2002 NFL rushing champion
must serve a suspension the
rest of this season for repeated violations of the league
drug program. He has asked
the league for a hearing to
clarifv his status. but no date
has been set.
A Dolphins source speaking
on condition of anonymity
said the team "s understanding
is that Williams can"t.play this
"')fear because of the violations.
f
Williams left the Dolphins
reeling when he retired just
before training camp in late
July. and they're off to an 0-4
stan. their worst since 1966.
His agent. Leigh Steinberg.
declined to discuss Williams'

change of hean.
"'All I can tell you is that
Rick\ ha' a,ked me to
explore and to try to facilitate
his return:· Steinberg said.
"He ·s ~'cited and in ~ood
shape and misses footbalL"
One likely fador for
Williams· re,·ersal: On Sept.
24. an arbitrator ordered him
to repay more than SK.6 mi Ilion to the team for breaching
his contract.
Steinberg and the Dolphins
declined to say whether there
have been recent c"mi,ersations between the two partie,.
·This is an issue between
the player. his representative
and the league:· Dolphins
genera l

manager

Rick

Spielman suid. "Accordingly.
we don't have a comment on
the matter." .
Last week. coach Dave
Wannstedt said he hadn ·r
talked to Williams in about a
month.
NFL spokesman Greg
Aie llo declined to comment
on the situation.
Sin.:e retiring. Williams has
trave led to Asia aml Australia,
but Steinberg said he "s. now in
the Cmted State&gt;.
··He's in excellent shape:·
Steinberg said. ··He has been

working out regularly and
looks great."
William' and the Dolphin s
traded Jon~-di s tancc barbs in
the day' after he quit. But the
Dolphin&lt; poor stan would
likely make them more
inclined to take him back.
The 27-year-old running
hack has given many reasons
lor retiring. He expressed a
desire to travel. read und c.:untinue· !'-moking marijuana. He
said he wa&gt; unhappy about
his contract. a workload he
c.:on,idaed excessive and
Miami's nev..· ot'fensive coor-

dinator Chris Foerster.
He acknowledged testing
positive fur marijuana three
times. Under league rules, a
player in the NFL's drug program face·s suspension if he
returns in tl1e calendar year
after he announces his retirement. If he returns after a
year. he faces a Jesser suspen-

DAYTON
(AP)
Oncinnati Bengals defensive end Justin Smith wSs
arrested early Tuesday and
charged wi'th drunken driving after he failed a breath
test.
the
Monlgomery
County sheriffs department
said.
Smith . 25. was stopped
because his truck was weav ~·
ing. He told police he had
five beers. the arrest repon
said, and he swayed while
trying to walk during a field
sobriety test.
He had a blood alcohol
level of 0.152. the report
said. nearly double . the
state's legal limit.
Smith told authorities at
the county jail that he was
unemployed.
Maj.
Ed
Copher said.
Smith. who faces a maximum six months in jail and

$1.000 fine for the misdemeanor, was released on
bond. Typically, first-time
offenders are put on probation and ordered to attend an
alcohol education course.
He ·was scheduled for
arraignment next Tuesday in
Kettering Municipal Court.
Smith was the Bengals'
tirst-round pick -the founh
overall - in the 200 I draft.
He set a team rookie record

for sacks with 8.5 that year,
but his total has 1!5,clined in
the last two years .
A message seeking comment was left for Smith's
agent, Jim Steiner.
" It' s not appropriate to
comment until the matter is
legally re so lved," Bengals
spokesman Jack Brennan
said.
Bengals players met with
coaches Monday afternoon
to review their 28-17 loss in
Pittsburgh, then were off
until Wednesday morning.
According to the police
report, the deputy who
pulled over Smith said he
smelled alcohol and that
Smith had bloodshot eyes
and a flushed face. Smith
missed when he tried to
touch his nose with his index
finger during the sobriety
test. the repon said.

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,I I

I \. I ·'"' • \

t

0

The Dolphins might be
headed toward their first losing season since 1988 . They
have scored only two touchdown&gt; in four games without
Williams. who rushed for
3,225 in two seasons after
being obtained in a trade with
New Orleans.

• Meigs downs WHS in
three. See Page 81

Turner. Jr. , Jg. was killed
along with 12 other soldiers
in an attack in Balud. _lmq.
POMEROY - Memorials,
Turner had attended Meigs
like people, come in many High
School
with
· shape' and sizes. Memorials. Schneider"s sister and their
like people, are made unique families have known each
by their intentions.
other for years.
Beth Schneider's inten'T ve Jo,t people but I've
tions for a gumdrail that never lost anybody in a war."
snakes up Pro.) pect Hill near she said. "I don 't know how
her home was to siri1ply show those people cope:··
her patriotism. She painted it
Reflecting on the loss of
red. white and blue eight Sgt. Turner this winter
inspi.red Schneider to · start
years ago.
With time the paint began from 'cra1eh on her patriotic
to weather and fade while the but faded gL•ardrail. When
war with lwq became a stark spring came she began creatreality seen in living color on ing a memorial to all the solTV. Still. TV is not reality diers from Ohio who have
and coulunot compare to this lost their lives serving in Iraq.
Schneider first cleaned the
winter when the war hit home
for Schneider after Staff chipping paint from the
Sergeant Ro ger Clinton guardrail with a wire brush

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

992-2155

-"

Andretti gets Nextel Cup ride
CONCORD. N.C. (AP)John Andretti and ppc
Racing. one of the top teams
in NASCAR"s Busch Series.
will get together on a Nextel
Cup team that will begin racing Oct. 16 at Lowe's Motor
Speedway.
Andretti will run five of the
·last six events of the season.
excluding Martinsv ille. Va ..
and the entire 36-race schedule .in · 2005. the team
announced Tuesday.
··A lot of people have been
working hard to .put thi s program
together:·
said
Andretti. a two-time winner
in the Ncxtcl Cup series. "'It's
pretty exciting to have everything set and ready to go. and
to know we are going to be a
very competitive race team:·
The ppc team . owned by
Greg Pollex. won the Busch
Series championship in 2000
with Jeff Green and also has

four runner-up fini shes . The
Nextel Cup team will be
sponsored hy Victory Brand
LLC. Sunoco. APlus convenience stores and Ford.
Victory Brund is the second cigarette company to
sponsor a car full time in
NASCAR.
The
R.J.
Reynolds
Tobacco
Co.
Camel hrand w'" the sponsor
of· a car entered in the 1'!90s
bv TraYis Carter.
·RJR pulled out as spolNX
of the top NASCAR series
les.., than a year ago and
Victory Brand CEO Steve
Swick said his company is
well aware of the pressures
of government regulation
and financial setbacks that
Jed to RJR ·, withdrawal.
"For· years. stoc k car racing
was pretty well closed to cigarette manufa\(turers. but we
jumped when we saw this
opportunity:· Swick said.

Bucks

Holmes had a 63-yard punt
return for the Buckeye'· only
touchdown of the tirst 41 minutes. Ohio State had 'evcral
peni1lties. missed blocb and
mi&gt;Sed tackles on kick coverage.
'~ Good plays don "t necessari ly erase the bad ones.
Zwick finished 18 of 3R fur
21 1 yards with one interception and one touchdown. With
Ohio State trailing 27- 17 early
in the fou11h quarter. under
cun,tant pressure he completed 6 of I~ passes (or 90 yards
the rest of the way. He also
made plays wi th his feet, gaining 18. II and 8 yards on three
big carries to lead the comeback that forced overtime .
Still. Zwick had an interception and was sacked twice dur· ing that 'pan for 20 yard_:; in
· lo"es. And he also lost a first·
half fumble that resulted in a
Wisconsin field goal.
""That " de!initelv not £ood
enough:· Zwick said. '·It"'
something that"s going to happen and it\ so methin~ you
have to learn from. That s li fe.
You ' re not going to be perfect
all the time. But I definitely
fee I bad about puttins our
team in that situation Ill the

from Page 81
''If you put together all of
the parts of what you need to
do to win the ~ame. we didn't
do those. so it s not a mystery
to me whv we didn "t win. ·
Tressel said.
Still, his team lost even
though it was favored by two
touchdown s. hadn "t lost to
Northwestern in Evanston in
46 years and had1i "t been beaten by the Wildcats anywhere
since 1971.
Defensive ta ckl~ Quinn
Pitcock said the Buc ~yes did
not look past Northwestern to
this week's showdown with
No. 15 Wisconsin !5-0, 2-0).
At the same time. he acknowledged he and his teammate'
may not have been focused on
the job at hand.
"Maybe there wasn't as
much heart as they (the
Wildcat&gt;) may have put into
it." he said.
Tressel said the Buckeyes
will need to summon all the
hean and talent ·thev have to
keep from falling .to ·o-2 in the
conference for the flr&gt;t time
since 1992.
•·It wi Jl be a great challenge
for us to see if we can understand the difficulty of the
task," he said of the Wisconsin
game. "(We have to) u'nderstand what needs to be done if
we're going to win the football
game and climb back in the
race in the Big Ten."'
To do that. the Bu·ckeyes
must improve dramatically in
·several areas. Tressel sai,d.
-The Buckeyes didn't get
their kicks. Punter Kyle
Turano averaged just 39,yards
a kick and the Wildcats averaged 12 yards on their two
punt returns.
·
"We need to be superior in
our sr,:ciaL teams." Tressel
said. 'Unfortunately, we had
our poorest punt production
that we've had all season."
In addition. kicker Mike
Nugent missed a 40-yard field
goal on Ohio State\ on ly possession in overtime.
Even though Santoniu

game."

- - The defense was manhandled fur the most part.
appearing to be confusecl at
times as Northwestern mixed
a variety of mi sdirection and
counter plays with stra•ghtahead runs that netted tailback
Noah Herron 113 yard' on 33
carries and two touchdowns. .
In the overtime. after
Nugent W&lt;JS.just wide ri ght on
the k"ick that might ·have given
the Buckeyes their only lead
of the game. Northwestern
took over possession ·and
needed just four plays to notch
the winning TD.
' We always talk about playing relentless defense if you"re
gomg to .win on the road,"
Tressel 'Said. "We probabJy
didn "t have as good a perfor:
mance there as we· vc had all
season. which is ohviously
di&gt;appointing...
.
The Buckeye~ have little
time to get things turned
around for one of their toughest tem of the season .

'

N ASCAR
spokesman
Mike Zizzo said Victory
Brand is welcome to join the
'enes.
·'When RJR was the title
sponsor of the series. other
cigarette companies were
prohibited as part of their
entitlement."" Zizzo said.
··With
RJR no
lon~er
involved in the sport in that
capacity. the category is
open."
Andretti. 41. lost his fulltime
ride
with
Peny
En terp ri ses midway through
last season and ha~ driven
sporadic&lt;illy for several other
teams si nce. He has star.ted
just five races this year. finishing 16th at Chicagoland
Speedway on July II in a
DEI car in his latest ' tart.
He is one of the few drivers
to have won in Nextel Cup.
Indy cars and endurance
sports cars.

\\ . (H

I () B l

I{ -. ;.! \\C)....

\\\,

\~

tll\\1. !1 h "l.'IJ1 uu~l.nnn

Local woman creates memorial for fallen Ohio soldiers

SPORTS

Subscribe today.

--.

I I ' l ItS n

I. .-,,. ' 0 . t ~

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

sion .

Marauders look· to
rebound againt
Buckeyes, Bt

Eastern set for
Hocking showdown
with I ancers, Bt

and a garden hose . The
guardraii' i, so long that the
garden hose couldn't reach
all of it and s\le"d have to
carry buckets of water down
the hill.
Arter the cleaning was
done 'he primed and then
painted the sections of

r '-'

guardrail with two new coats

'I

of red, white and blue. Her
black Jab Sophie even helped
by fetching masking tape to
save her mistre" from walking up and cJown Prospect
Hill.
•
Schneider labored on the
project after wiJrking all day
at Dairy Queen in Middleport
where she i' the manager. She
explained that after a hectiC
day she looked forward to 'it~lease

•

Beth Schneider and her dog Soph1e take a rest near the
guardrail .on Prospect Hill that Schne1der turned 1nto a memo·
rial for Ohio's fallen soldiers fro m the Iraq war. (Beth
Sergent/photo)

see Soldiers, AS

IDAY,
Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, Odober'2oth.

OBITUARIES

To Have Your
Business Included ...

Page AS
• Charles Hensley
• Margaret Kincaid

~oint .t)lragant ~rgigtrr
(304) 675-1333
&lt;l@allipolig ilaailp \lrribnne
(740) 446-2342

Lo'I'fERIES

The Daily Sentinel

, Me1gs homecoming candidates are from the left. Amanda
King. Kat ie Reed. Amanda Ho yt. Ashley Baylor. Just1ne Dowler
and Renee Ba iley. (Charlene Hoeflich/ photoJ

Ohio

Pick 3 day: 2-2-4
Pick 4 day: B-B-5-4
Pick 3 night: 8-3-7
Pick 4 night: 8-6-2-0

(740) 992-2156 ·

Local Car Dealer Stuns Community
And blows away the competition

West Vll'ginia

Sharon Stewart of Rivertown Artwork tags items to be taken to the Bob Evans Farm Festival
thiS weekend. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Dally 3: 7-5-4
Dally 4: 2-6-0-3

"WE'RE SELLING CARS FOR $99.00"

Powerball: 5-6-19-44-50 (28)
Power Play: 4

the lowest possible price. There
will be cars as low as $99.00; yes
that's right, ninety- nine dollars.
This is not a mistake. Some
valued as high as $3500.00 up to
$4000.00 for $99.00. There will

be a tremendous selection of
vehicles on hand.
All vehicles will be on display at
Norris Northup Dodge with pre-

enough that this is a one-day
only sales event." Once our

inventory
ts
Neal Peifer offers a , . . . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . reduced, the
simple explanation Today's automotive consumer wants more slashed prices
Ior
this
come off and it's
unprecedented
than a good deal - they want a great deal! back to business
sale: "We are "With cars as low as $99.00 it doesn't get any as usual. It's
overstocked with
also first come,
first senie, so it's
trade-ins, off-lease, better for the serious car buyer."
and programmed
critical to come
early to get the
vehicles so we are
vehicle of your choice.
making available our entire
registration beginning today. On
inventory of over 250 cars, trucks,
Saturday, October 9th registration
vans and sport utility vehicles. It'~
begins at 9:00 AM. By 11 :00 AM
Of course, there is more to this
that simple." Mr. Peifer adds:
prospective buyers will have been
sale than just reducing inventory.
"During the sales event, we will
given a personalized pass
Mr. Peifer explains: "We are
allowing them to inspect the
always looking for ways to give
offer -unbelievable values on our
used inventory and some vehicles
vehicles that interest them . At
back to the community that has
will sell for as low as $99.00!
11 :30 AM the s)a.shing begins.
given so much to us." They felt
Expect retail prices to be slashed
T~ Slasher will the11 begin
that giving their friends and
by $3,0000 up to $!'1,000 if not
slashing posted prices on the · neighbors in the area a chance to
more:'
vehicles. Who ever is sitting
save on these vehicles was far
Mr. Peifer also points out that
behind the wheel of the vehicle
more desirable than taking them
when the price is slashed will,be
these prices will be "As low or
to auction and selling them to
lower than vehicles sold at
given the first opportunity .to
total strangers.
auctions in many cases. The purchase the vehiCle at that price. I Those wishing to beat the rush
problem with auctions is that the · "We believe that people will not should
get
pre-registered
bidding often leads to inflated
only enjoy getting d great deal beginning today at Norris Northup
prices thereby eliminating
but they will also have fun doing Dodge 252 Upper River Rd.
savings:'
During the super
it." Says Mr. Peifer. Local bank
Gallipolis, OH. 45631.
Slasher Sale , every vehicle will representatives or business For further information on this
be on sale. Sales are on a first
managers will be on hand to
amazing sales event or to get
come, first: s'!rve basis and there arrange low cost financing on the
pre- appro_ved today, please call
viiill be no bidding thus affording spot. "Most of all we've got .over
(740) 446-0842 or (800) 446buyers the prefect opportunity to
two million dollars worth of
0842. (B~d Credit no problem.) " '
purchase a quality Pre-owned at
inventory-that's over 250 cars,

'

and yard sale finds into decorative sit-arounds.
Sharon who has a passion
for painting has a way of
MIDDLEPORT
Loading her cargo trailer and using her artistic: talent to
getting down to Rio Grande take thing ' of little val ue,
so that she can unload and even old trunks or chests in
setup for the l!loh Evans F.~rm Jess than good condition. and
Festival tii (s weekend i' - make them int o beautiful
everyt hin g
on
Sharon keepsake,.
Stew&lt;Jrt 's mind rigilt now.
Anything and everything.
This is the third year for big or little. in multiples or
Stewart
of
Rivertown one-of-kihd. which can be
Artwork in Middleport to be decorated for every day or
a featured artist at the festival seasonal use will be included
which annually attracts a in her coll ection''" display at
crowd of about 40.000.
the festiva l. Keeping up with
Demon.strating her creativi- tuday's trends. Sharon is
ty. she will be turning galva- painting Jots of fruits .and
nized buckets into beautiful !lowers on household items
gift and !lower. containers these days. With the holidays

&lt;HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

couldn't get any better for the
serious buyer."
Mr. Peifer reminds prospective
buyers to act quickly if they want
to take advantage of these
incredible savings. "I can't stress

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

WEATHER

trucks, vans~ and sport utility
vehicles to choose from. "It

Details on Page A 7

INDEX
a SEcni&gt;Ns- t6 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

bear Abby
Editorials

....

POMEROY
Homecoming will be held at
the
Meigs
Marauclers1\'elsonville York Buckeves
game Friday night.
·
The candidates for home ·
coming queen nominated h:
the senior clas, and voted nn
by the MHS student body arc

local artist oft to Bob Evans festival

Area Shoppers Express Disbelief but Local Dealer Remains
Optimistic as Saturday, October 9th Sale Date Approaches
N.orris Northup Dodge announced
plans' today for a one-day sales
event that will feature over 250
cars, trucks, vans and sport utility
-vehicles-some for as low as
$99.00. The event, named the
super Slasher Sale will literally be
slashing prices on used cars right
before buyers' eyes this Saturday,
October 9th 2004, Rain or Shine.

Meigs to crown queen
at Friday's game .·

Rolling Cash 5: 3-4-20-31-33
SUperl..otto: 1·13-24-39-45-48 (5)
Kicker: 2-2-5-3-8-5

STAFF REPORT

A3

A4

RACINE
A LOll"
Bottom man was killed in "'a
motorcycle accident early
Wednesday on Pine Grove
Road in Meigs County. the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reponed.
The victim was identified
as Charles E.· Hensley. 40,

A5

Places to go

AS

Sports

B1

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

said Lt. Ric-hard Grau. comnulllder of 1he G-M Post.
Troopers .said Hensley
was northbuund. north of
Wipple Road. at 3:35 a.m.
wh en the JlJ 81 Kawasaki
650 motorcycle he operatell
drifted off the right ,ide of
the road into a ditch before
re-entering the ruau and laying down on the road.
The driver was pro-

Please see Queen, AS

featuring Ji.Lncing snowmen

and other items which can be
perso naliled.
.
The Bob Evans Fe,tival is
one of the eight or I0 large
shows where Sharon displays
and demonstrates. She's been
to Connedicut and Virgii-tia
alread y and ha' another ~ix
shows over the next three
months .
"This i' really my big season and I work toward this all
year:· said Sharon .

,
I

·Crash kills Meigs County man
NEWS@MY DAILYSENT INEL.C OM

Obituaries

just around the corner. lot&gt; of
'Halloween and Christmas
themed designs are included.
Remaining big sellers for
Sharon are the decorative
buckets and watering cans

Amanda King. Katie Reed,
Amanda
Hoyt.
thhlcy
BaYlor. JLhtin e DPwler and
Rci1ee B:~ile\ . The announcement and cro v.n ing of the
queen 1\ ill tak e rlac·c in pre~ ame l'C I"(.' I1l0nlt..~.., ,

Kathryn Hart and Ann Zirkle present a truckload of grocery
items and a cash donatron toward flood ret1ef to the Mulberry
Commun1ty Center. The centers d~rector. K€1th Rader. accepted · the donated 1tems from the Rac1 ne Area Community
OrganizatiOn 's pres ident aPd treasurer afte r a food dnve 111
Ra ci ne held on Monday. (Br•an J. Reed 'photo)

Llcad at the scene.
and was rclea,cd to Fisher
1-"uncral Home in Middleport
nounc~d

for arrangements.

Flood relief trickling in

Grau said the accident is
the third rural traffic fatalit1·
in Meigs for 200-t and the
fourth ' in the pnst" s two- '
Bv BRIAN J. REED
.:ounty coverage area. There '· BREED@ M YD ~ILYSENTINEL .CO M
were I0 fatal na,hes in the
area in 2003 with 10 killed.
RACINE - RL·,idcnt&gt; arc
he added.
mt.JJ...ing O.:t)J11r ihwiuJh indi 1

I
1

1 iduall) and !hrnu ~ h churdlC"&gt; and nrga nito.Hit'll' h' local
1l ond . rc 11 cI. " Jill fnnd for

Please see Relief. AS

\

~

The HMC Diabetes Support Group will meet Sunday, October 10 fiom
2:00pm · 4:00 pm"at lhe HMC French ~00 Room.
Norm Sfrickland, Medtronic MiniMed Diabetes Management Consultant, will disnm
"Advancements in Insulin Pumps"

Diabetes Self-Management Program - October 25, 26 and 27
4 PM · 7 PM • HMG French 500 Room
Please bring a list of home medications to 'Closs and hovti! prescription from your physioon to attend

Fibromyalgia Support Group
This FREE support group is sponsored

by fhe Arthrifis Foundation and Holzer A- 1edtcal Center

Tuesday, October 12 • 5 30 PM :, 8:00PM • HMC Educolion &amp; Confere~ce Cenler Room AB
Top1cs dtsCui$eCI w,llmdude pom control, e~erme 1 elo~oh 00 fallgoe depres~K:tl ond doc!of/ pot1ent rP-Iallonsh,p

For more i~formation , or to

'I

call Mi ssi Ros's at

1-SCXf-816-5 131 .

MEDICAL CENTER
Uiscot •c r· the H o/;e r llft/(&gt; 1'encc

www.holzer.org

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