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                  <text>. Thursday, October 7, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 88 • The Dally Sentinel

PlUS...

Marshall not looking
past Bobcats, Bt

at

MERCURY
________ ---

~----·-----·-··

... .
·

--~-·--

.,

,

rtEW

2005

fO(:U~

$12,995

\".f.~ 2004

UPTO

s&amp;ooo

2004

REBATE

FREESTAR

......

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.l&lt;l l I "\I" • \ ol. .).1 .

\11 .

SPORTS

REBATES
UPTO

..

S6Q0Q

• Off and running, Browns'
Suggs ready to start See
Page B1

.

2004 SABLE
STARnNGAT

.20 JS fORD 500
&amp; fREI:~STYlE

~~~

Cards take 2-0 lead
over Dodgers, B3

5,222

2004 CROWN

VICTORIA

S18,995

*

#E0409

LINCOLN
AMERICAN

I Hill\\ . 0(' I OBI I{ N. :!00~

:U

FEMA to tour flood sites; dumpsters gone after this weekend
Bv BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - FEMA will
hold two meetings on
Wednesday for townships.
the county engineer and village officials.
The purpose of both meetings is to allow FEMA representatives to tour actual sites
where tlood damage occurred
as well as help with paperwork.
The first meeting will be at
9 a.m . at the Courthouse
Annex for townships and the
county engineer only.
The second meeting will
take place at I :30 p.m. in the

Senior Center Conference
Room for all other village
officials that suffered tlood
damage . These officials may
include (but are not limited
to) representatives from
churches, schools. the Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department. EMA . officials.
EMS officials. and independent lire departments.
Individuals who suffered
flood damage are encouraged
to call FEMA's toll free number 1-800-621-3362 to be eligible for assistance.
' Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Director Bob Byer wants to

remind re sidents that even
thm1gh lluod victims have
registered their names with
local EMA or EMS ugencics.
they must call the FEMA
~UU-number to start the
paperwork to receive government assistance .
According to Bycr. the
flood crested in Pomeroy at
52 feet and caused major
damage to 45 homes in
Meigs County.
Byer also advises that the
EMA dump s te~ hat have
been disbursed throughout
Meigs County to collect
tlood debris will be removed
after this weekend.

UPTO

S6Q0Q

RACINE
Steps
toward getting the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) to provide funding for flood
damage expenses incurred
by the village were taken at
this week's meeting of
Racine Village Council.
Mayor Scott Hill and

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DISCOUNTS
UPTO.

clerk Dave Spen cer were
authorized to prepare the
nece"ary forms and submit them to FEMA .
During the meeting
Council authorized advertisi ng for bids for scraping ••
priming and painting of the
first floor windows in the
municipal bu.ilding and the
replacement of several
Please see Council, AS

5

prubahl ) &lt;WI he rc cei ' ed
Ullli I J anuarl .

POMEROY
- The
Gallia/Mei gs
Cmnmunil v
Action Agency will sec k
Grant s Adm im&lt;trator Jean
funds to provide jobs for the
Tru"ell
a public
unemployed in a twrH·ounl) hearin £ onconducted
the Ne\\· Horizon~
tlood cleanup program.
Grant - program. '" ail able ·
Arnott
met
George
through the Ohio Dep"rtment
Thursdav with Mei~s Countv &gt;~I Dne lupmc nl. The proCommi;sioner~ tl; di~cu . :-.
~ram
funJ~J
•t
Teen
funding through the Ohi&lt;' Toleranc e pro~ra111 i ll local
Department of Job and hi~h ~choob Ja..,t \ L'ar. ..t nJ
Family Services for a one- Trussell said tilL' · progr&lt;un
year employment program would he npanded in to the
similar to one just completed middle scflllol le' d if fundunder the CAA's ''1pervision. ing is appr,nved .
The program would place the
The cuuntv wrll 'eek
unemployed on t1ood clehri s ':&gt;,15.000 tl1rough . the procleanup work, and would gram.
provide up to 1.040 hours of
Commi~~ioner~ also:
work per employee. at a wage
• c\prrmecl fLmJ, tran,fers
to be determined .
·
for the Common Pka' Court
According to Arnott. the and sheri If and tahled tr~ms­
agency received $700.000 fer requesh from Engineer
from the National Emergem:y Eugene Tripktt .
Grant program to clean up
• Set a' ie\\'ing for 10 a.m.
area,; in both Gall ia and on Oct. cH on a proposed
Meigs Counties followin g the road ci&lt;hin2 on Salem T.R.
February. 2003 ice storm. and _1~7. · Sh ~ h
~oad.
at
· rhat employment program Tripkt r·, rt•yucsl.
\Va~ l'ompletell thi' summer.
Prc,cnt
were
Similar funding is likely for Cornmi ...... illth.'r"'
!Vlick
thi~ new program. Arnott
Da1·cnpor1 &lt;md .lr n Sheets
said. although funds will "ml Clerk Gloria Kine,.

Other business

10,500

t\~'\\1
· 2004 f150 SUPER CAB "'{.~
2004 FOR.D RANGER
&amp; SUPER CRf~W
SAVINGS SAVINGS

UPTO

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CM proposes new job program

iiE0328

~EO I 55

Council seeks assistance on
flood damage from FEMA

LUXURY

2004 EXPLORER

REBATES

\\\\\\ ,nl\lla ih"'"liolt'l.o·um

OBITUARIES
Page AS
.• Ronial L. Morrison

UPTO

ss,

LoTI'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 7-4-0
Pick 4 day: 2·9-1·3
Pick 3 night: 3-6-8
Pick 4 night: 1-2-3-8
Rolling Cash 5: 10-11-14·26·27

West Vuginia

Patrick Wood

Pomeroy man publishes book of poetry
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Dally 3: 2-7-6
Dally 4: 2-0-6-7
Cash 25: 3-1 0·11-19-20·22

POMEROY - '' I have
just one thing left to give
you - my legacy of love."
Those words were included in touching poems written by Patrick Wood of
Pomeroy reflecting .on the
growing-up years of hi s
children. Lori and Danny.
They are titled "Ode to a
Daughter" and '·Ode to a
Son."
They are among 66 selected poems. including one
written as a tribute to hi s
late wife. Audrey. called

WEATHER

'· My Queen of Hearts"
which have now been put
into a booklet titled "The
Collected Works of Patrick
Wood ."
"Puttin g th em in a book
was a way I could leave
something to my children
and grandchildren." said
Wood. now 7S. who has
been wri tin g poetry for
nearly JO years.
Pat is a member of the
I nterDational Society of
Poets: and in 2000 participated in a celebration of
poets held in Washington.

D.C.
For the fifth straight year

he has been a first place
winner in the Are" Agency
Aging's
se nior
on
essay/poetry contest l1eld on
the campus of the Uni1·ersity
of Rio Grande. His most
recent win was "The Voyage
With Faith."
Over the years his works
have been printed. read at
-..ocial
gathering s.
and
enjoyed by many.
L·ast
month one was selected for
use in ' the bulletin for the
Ohio Grand Order of
Eastern Star..,· annu'-l l con vention.
"Poetry is my way or
expressing things," sard Wood.

Details on Page 'As

Family fall festival set for Saturday
INDEX

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SR,'IONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials

(

Bs-6
B7

As
A4

Faith•Values
Movies

A2

NASCAR
Obituaries
\

B8

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A8

As

© 2004 Ohio Valle)· PubiL'Ilhlng Co ..

POMEROY - Residents
will be given the opportunity to cony· ibut e to an out reach mini\try for teens
while enjoying a family
outing at the community
fall festival to be held
Saturday at Trinity Church.
The festivities will be
from 4 to 8 p.m. and will
be held both in th e church
basement and on Second
and Lynn Streets just out·
side.
There is no
charge to take part in any
of the activities. according

to Mic)lelle Nohle. chair-

Other prires will include
woman .
two $50 sav ings bonds and
Area churc hes and busi- a karaoke machine .
nesses · tire 'sponsoring the
A carved pumpkin confestival with it!! proceeds test has again this year
to go to th e Mulberry · been included with pri1es
Commttnity Center. "There to he awarded in three "ge
will be indoor and outdoor L'i.l LL·gorie~ . The fir~L ~ec­
games. prizes. food and und and third place win candy, clowns and face ners in each division will
painting, even a dunking be dctcrmi.ned by a simple
penny-a- \·ote method .
booth , saicf Nob le.
"It's a fun and· easy 1\ay
Amon g the prizes .. will he
a · 27-inch color te levision to rai .se money.
said
Noble.
··Ju
st
hring
.
you
r
to be awarded at the end of
the evening to the winner carved pumpkin and wc "-11
of the "G u.es' th~ Weight of put it on the .table with the
the p·umpkin " uintest. rest or them ."

ODOT: Stay off new highway
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTI NEL COM
DARW!f\i - The ne\\
section of U.S. 33 from
Darwin to Ath~ns will prclhably be opened In tr&lt;ilfic·
later thi s month. hut the
Ohio
Department
of
Transpnnation is L·nnc~rneU
that some care lc:-, .. Jri \' t' r~
are Urivim.! on it alrl'w.h
Bv doinu so. those drl1e rs
th re-a ten their ,afely and
that of their pa,~cngc r ~ and
crew:-.. wor~int! nn the ro ad.

Stephanie Filson. publ rc
informat ion
(ll'ficer
fDr
ODOT in ~ldrictta . 'aid
GlfS

travcl itH! on the n~w
L'. S. .\ .1 i, . an

section of
incrca~ing

prPbkm a.., the
road':-.. opening appn)ach~'·
The Ohi11 Stale H i~ h" ' "
Patro l has hcer 1 . i.'Cllltac·tcJ
and j.., munit uri ng traffic un
the ne11 hi~hw a 1. but 1\ ork er:-... are still uln(crned Jhl)Ut
their safety. Filson said .
"We j ust can't hal'e pri \ate c iti1en' Jrirm e. on tlw
mad at 1!1is time . ' It\ nor
,afc." Fibcm said . ··we h&lt;lle
a lut nf \\(lf~ \Ct to hL· .
J &lt;'nC he fore thai road II a\ i'
open to traffiL·. e'pcci":rlil ·

worl. rclatin~ Ill public
safet1. The stripi ng hasn't
heen completed. there are
no retlectclr., in place and
. . omc o r the- hridi!C'" ha\'e
nnt ~ ct ht.:'t' ll cornpTctcJ ...
hhnn

. . aid

dn,·ing

h&lt;ll~

th&gt;l IL'I been filkd can
· hnth
~.:ar
aJH..l
hrid ~c:. &lt;llld c\lliSC pos,ible

dtll'll~I !..:C
IO_llll" ~

thl.:" , drl\('r~o,

ll l

www.turnpikeflm.com

740·446·9800 .
1·BD0-272·5 179

~

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MERCURY

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LINCOLN
·~ ~ · , .~ '" ' ~ ' '

•

+,

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pi1.., . . cngcr . . .

Fi] ,(\11 "a1d
\\nrh.t•r..,
m;trJ...~d

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do tlt)! nh . . cn·e
btl!..'"' or right"' of

\\ hik \\otlin!!. llll the

rrc)l,"l'l. "nd arc nc{t ,·xpectin~ Olh..·omin!! tra tliL·.
c"Thne ar~- lt&gt;ls of crews
' till worktng fu riou'l) l'\Cr)
d,t~
m ,n'dcr tn. l"\)lllplete
th 1' prnjec'l ... hl,ll n 'aid.
"' Th e 1&lt;~...,1 t h111~ lhl'\ rwcU 10
Jp i' turn a ~·,,rnc.r and hit
a prj' ,ttc t lti ;c n lll·aJ llll. ..

Fil,on ,,11d ODOT hth not
) el set a da te fm the rllad\
~ ) remn ~.
in~ Ja t~

A ll'nt:tt i\l' open ·

&lt;&gt;f · 0'1. I:; 11 ill
rroJ&gt;ahl\ nut hL' rC,Jilled.
... he 'a1~l. ~m d .1 Ill'\\ . lla tc
\\ ill depend nn the ,1\,l liahilll\ "' l im . B,,h Ta tt fm
a rihhnn - ~' tlllin ~ •.-crellllHl\

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Sov ngs Company
195 Uppar RIVar Road
GalliPOliS, OH

vn

tho-..L' hrid1Zc' \\ h~rc ~joints

�•

PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 8,

A3

WORSHIP GOD T·HIS WEEK

2004

•

A HlJLJrl~~~. F()Jr M&lt;:}~~
Bemg passtve doesn't work
well in the spiritual realm .
Many Christians say' that they
want to have a more meamng ful spintuallife and yet invest
no significant effort in the cultivatton of that deeper hfe
Thronged
by
people
entranced by His talk of a
"higher hfe." Jesus was often
met by folks who wanted only
shon-c\liS and easy access
into God 's favor. But Jesus'
invitation to know God wusn 't
at all an imphcatton th.tt God
was ready to "wait" upon the
table of our dreams and wants.
- taking our order for spiritual
blessings while we sit and gab
away our ltves. asking us, "Do
you want me to superstze
h t''"
t a ·
Jesus '
invitation was
always on His terms and 011
His ttmetable. Furthermore.
His mvttation always requires
a res pohsc trom us .. "Come
and see" (John I 39). "Follow
Me" (John I :43). "Ftll the
jars" (John 2 7), "Take these
out" (2:16). "Give Me a drink
of water" (John 4:7): "Go and
call your husband" (John
4:16), "Go'' (4:44). ''Stand
up" (Joh n 5:8). and so on and
on.
The response necessdry for
us !o enter a posttton to grow
spirit uall y and experience
God ts first a yteldmg ol our
heans and mtnds and then a
reordering of our atttt udes.
plans and acttv tttes
Real
faith, afte r all. cannot help but
mamfest itself somehow m
our physicalltves .
Sadly. when we fat! to
actively recetve Hts tm·ttatton
to jom Him and know Him.
we put God off and mtss ou t
on expenencmg Hts work 111
our li ves. When we refuse to
walk away from our pasts and
our ambtttons for the future
and choose to li ve instead on
our own terms and on our own
timehnes. we can stmply not
expenence God as He desires
us to and we can never fully
know all He COULD have
done had we allowed Him to
get us tnto a posiuon to bless
us
But tf we thirst for God's
Higher Life made available to
us through faith 111 Jesus
Christ, we MUST respond
and follow. We MUST get up
off our proverbial posteriors

1

Local religion briefs

Homecomings
Sunday, Oct. 10
POMEROY
The
Carleton Church of County
Road 18. Pomeroy wi II have
tts annual homecoming wtth
di tmer at noon and special
services at 1:30 p.m

Pastor
Thorn
lohan

TUPPERS PLAINS -- St.
Paul
Untted
Methodist
Church Homecomm g. Carryin dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Special music by The Jarvts
F&lt;tmily. Scott Anderson at 2
p.m.

and follow Him as He leads us
by Hi s Hol y Sptrit.
"(Jesus) cned out. ' Let
anyone who is thi rsty co me to
Me, and let the one who
beli eves in Me drink. As the
Scripture has satd. "Out ot the
Believer's heart shall flow
rivers of living water" (Joh n
?:3 7_38 RSV). Let us under. st~tnd that we are ~hallengecl
'
to actively pursue a deeper
and more vital relationship
with God. Let us believe th at
there is more to thi s life then
the rout me of eac h day. Let us
trust that the "trivtal" can be
"supersized'' oppnrtuntttes
when in the hands of God.
And let us embrace the tact
that it is the Father's will for
us to have a more exciting lt fe
at the hands of the infmtte
God of the umverse then those
of a finite world. Are ynu
ready then to belt eve that God
has more 111 store fnt you th.m
you can ever hoped for or

Fellowshio
Apostolfc

------------~-------------------------------B-i-s-~-~-1-an_d_J_u_s_t_w_r_N_o_w__w_i_II___P_o_pl_a_r__R_i_d_g_e__F_r_ee- --W--ill

RUTLAND
The
Rutland Church of Chri st
wtll ce lehrate its !75th
anntversary with a homecommg. Worship and communton wi ll begin at 9·30
a.m.. &lt;~ Cdtrv-in dtnner wtll
be held at noon, and afternoon scrvtces wtll follow at
2 p 111 wtth spectal mustc by
the Gabnel Quanet.

Church services be providing the mus~c
Fall revival
Hay ride at
planned
Syracuse

Ch urth of Jesus Chrisl ApoStolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd. Pa_~tor James
Mdlcr. Sunday School - 10 30 am.
Eve n1ng • 7 )0 p m

Baptist Church, 2 pIll .
Sunday with Sm~c;re of
Huntington . W. Va. to provtde th e music . For more
information .
call
John
)
Elswick. 593-7390.

Hymn sing
scheduled

LONG BOTTOM -- A
hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m. Friday at the Faith Full
Church
Rogie
Gospel

3rd
Ave , M•ddlepon, K~vm Konkle. Pastor,
Sunday. 10·30 am
Wednesday 7 00
pm, Youth Fn 7 JOpm
Emmanutl Apostolic T~btrnacle Inc.
Loop Rd o ff New Ltma Rd Rutland
s~rviCC!&gt; Suo 1000 a m &amp; 730 pm ,
Thurs 7 00 p m.. Pas10r Many R Hunon

Libtrl) Aiiembly of God

even imagined"

As you earnestl y and
acti vely work to cultt va te a
deeper relationship with God
(In the context of Hts Btblc.
prayer and a church fami ly)
expect God to work in your
heart 111 such a v.ay that He'll
lay before you an mvitation to
get up from what you';e
dlways been and alw&lt;Jys
kno wn antl go wtth Hun .

There wtll be ttmes when
He'll "Wow us '' wtth Ht s
presence. love and works and
we will bear Htm say 111 the
sttll small votce He whispeiS
to our heans. "Did I not tell
you that if you believed, you
would see the glory ot God''"
(John II 40 RSV )..
(Thom Mol/ohm! has minIst ered 111 wuthem Oh1o the
pas/nine years and is Ihe paslor of Pathway Communit1
Church. He and !tis wife are
Ihe parenls of three cluldren
wilh another on the way.1 He
may be reached by email a/
pastorthom@ pathwayga llipolis.com).

was honest in telling the truth.
his father did not punish him.
Now. Jimbo. with th at story in
mind. was it you that pushed
the •uthouse over the cliff
into the river?"
limbo rolled his eyes as he
constdered his grandpa-.. 's
questton. He knew right then
he w,ts 111 big troubl e. It
sou nded li ke to htm, based on
the story that hts grandpaw
had JUst told . that tellmg the
truth was his best option .
·'Yes. Grandpaw. I cannot
tell a he. I was the one that
pushed the outhouse over the
clitf into the river."
"That is all I need to hear'"
he
replied.
Suddenly,
Grandpaw reached up and cut
a sturdy sw itch from the cherry tree. Next, he took hold of

.till 'A.,r,hp

Wednesday 7 p m

Catholic

School

Ser\lcc

Scrv1 ce ~-

St~·ve

Pa-.tor

Llllk. Sund ay Sch1)()l &lt;} 10

Ml lh:ll~po n.

G runt Sl .

~c d nc sdu~

Sen 11;~ 7 p m

lrd

Jon Brockert

S uu J. 1 ~ Sl hon l -

9 \0

Ea.~l

Ma111 S t

~ 111

Wu r ~l11p -

10 IOn m

J&gt;,l ~ \t1r

Wm~tup -

'
j

740-992-6215

'

8 IS a 111,9-45

&lt;~m

&amp; 7 OOp m,

First Baptis t C hurch
\11ddkpnrt S u nd&lt;~} Slhnol
101 ~

Wednc~d,t~

purcbiiJt a

"So I stnve always to keep
my consc ience clear

t::Uutt~

before God and man ."

Acts 24:/6

IOOiUit. k lf)()lhtr WI) t.ltllWII[t

appl'tlC'ialioo that •t •m born ka
till$ laid &lt;lplllllj.

uardra11, Fence &amp;
s1gn erect1on

" H )llU wnkl bt'

po..eu
and Jtl ¥t w tht poor, aod yoo wtU
hnt H tllitlrt Ia htaun .....

Racine, OH.

'WOUld p!'llbibly AOI

PO. Box 683
Pomero Ohto 45769-0683

(6

flnl.

Yrt.. 1tbft"'e d11 •t lqla1

,\l.,.tof our IIIIO.o\ &lt;turdles ond
provMl
lilt
opportuolt' for thh:tg, naany
~d111~ '"lnlteu and ,.. tlrial
JUts. \\ bJ Jtlll ¥Ph y1mr Joral
lhurdt or l)ll~lllfut f11h •Kk1

:f)Q•~ogu~•

499 Richland 1\vt!nue, Athens

740-594-6333

~~~~ nRfy t'Wft )""

help tkr pr1ur,
ynu will ntrirh }rmr J~~Joill u

w&lt;IL ' " ' wil bt twiro ~«d.

.....

Sl''\;DA \

; 1·11

.....

\tONnA,
2 1 ·1 .~

,.....

n 'r.:SilA'
3. t-Il

"A Home Bdnk for
Home People"'

29670 Bashan Rd.

kU mo~r P'i"ttduo~ wtaen
Wt' tin., we IMllllly ttt·the 1M
3th til ... moth oud onoblish Ill&lt;
ldrul ,J •Jllrk .. l &lt;qullibrlan• Iflo!

bui

740-949-2210

Hills Self Storage

ptrftcl, J!U, Mil ~filii ~118

ron~tt frlliJI ptllint olktl'l

209 Third
Racme, OH

Wt'J:Nf.si&gt;A \
Mk'.
H-13

TII1 R."iUA. \
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6 I-ll')

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2'1·11

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)IIIIUID

. .'

t -HtH)-45 t -9H06

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

740-949-2217
Stzes avatlab le 5xt0 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye .1/ra/l
ask wlrat ye will, and it .1/rall
be done rmto you.
Jolrn 15:7

7 00 pm ,

am
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I 1111111 ,\ l'\,1~ 1 1,111 ]{ d,

Churd1

Ill 20 I I r 111

]{ t&gt; ld ( ,.lllip•llh OH

I ull Coll\]ll'l ( hunh

l' ,l, l •l f ~

11"1 1 P 1•1 "1 '\ (, \1

Lnd- I' ll

I

St .luhn I utht ran ( tuard1

1 O!l

Wl·d u c:~, ],. , \ c niLl~ -7 (~1r•n

pm

Faith Baptis t C hurch

am

s~• ~ •~l·

Lutheran

'I~ ()-~ m

· IOJO :t m

\0 '0 am. 6 p m ,

s~riiLl' - 7 ()!)

~u oJ;~'o

k\],N,\up••l'l•l - I'

1'.1,1\'f 1ol\11 ( nl11 "11 \ u d.o• '-ch '"I \II
.t Ill \ \ 11hh1]&gt;
'} ol Ill
\\, dlh',,j, \

., I10 I' 111

-t-lfl 11.:!-1 7 111

lhll

)~1uth \lm~&gt;t c r

'lund,!\ S1houl

Dc-JdH C hurch of l'hn!it

P ~ s tor

""l ]\,

'o !111•

t'l

7r m

Su nd.ll

l lo l lli L' III&lt;II-.I n,!'lll•' c: tm ~

Rd

7 00 p m ,

Sunday

,,j II ~ \1111

1.,11\1" I iiJ1•

-1'111

Ill 'l tl .t m

"' L'TI te l

11

S ~ h &lt;•o l

•w .. td\ll' l

Retds\lllt.' C hur{'h of C hris t

Mi ddleport , Sunday

Thur~d a)

Rt

S.tl l ,l ll ll' ll l

am

FrH \\ill BMptist C hurch

Mun11 ng
\\ ~ dn ..:\ l1,1 1

pm

ll'l'~

(

\ [, lhl.i\ ., 1111 1'111

\und.1\ \Llh••d

E\llll!!C li q t\11~1' 1\hl\lr~ Su nd.11 Sdu&gt;o.'l

OH

Dan1d Mnca Su nd,t} Sd wol -

m , Sumlin

~~

Suu d .1'

Sdloh&gt;\

H.au nc

( ~Ill

(_ hri't 11f L11Ht·r·lla1 Saml..,

.md

lll cku r v Hill~ (h un h uf ( hr1 st
Great l'knd

RPIIl'
1'-1111 '

\\·1

l ht· ( lnmh nf

6 lOp m

Bcthleht'm Baptis t Chur('h

\\ ,,[11

l ullh lull

I' ~&gt;hH \ \ ilh 1•11 ].. . \ l 1r'l ,tll 'oulld•l
'\ h&gt;n[ )11 \ ~ 1 111 \\,11•111[' L) \'Ill

Latter-Day Saints

Bn1dford Church of ( hrist

Hdl
' tJ

111

p Ill \\ uln t~d

\(l ,, m

C o 111cr of St

!)

\,'1\l,l 1111\1'

,I

~ I tt ' \htlmd 1~t

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•J .111 ,,

Rutland C hunh of t: hmt

!lam, 700 pm

F.\Cn1ng

' II\~

I

Ill

... .. 11 Ill

u1d ~ nut h

'·

t'lll~r

l.tft' \ ll iHfl (

~--~ ( ,u•l!!''

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m

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Po '&gt;l. er Ill

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ill

( .unn·l-'i u t l"u

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Da,u.l \\J st'man Sundav

~

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\t.:~IR

l&lt;ull. md

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7 00 p m

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l11ll (,.hJ'll ( hu •, h

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L) 11) I lo \\,l~h
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7 IIIII

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rm

\\cd n1•d.tl 7

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pm

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')und~~

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]) Ill•
O..,utd.11 ' l l ' l u
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Rob Bdrber.

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12~

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r 11

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111

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y

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rm

t!I&lt;IUf' ()

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l 'u u I I h.1pd

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7 00 p 111

Wcdnc ..d.ty Ser\ ICC • 7 {)()

Whatever stories vou ha ve
to te'll. and tf you ktiow ltrstITand this sa me qory. , ju st
remember what the best storv
to tell is .
·

' o~uth

111

J

J1l

\l nwr\\lllt•
P&lt;~~ltll

rIll

1\ illj!

\h dn~'•lo~l

Ytluth i i ll pill Suml.1 \ ll1h k

C o nUII\IIliOil -

JOam ,

I I Ofl

J ~v.dl

'hd••..:'d"\

LJ urcrh.l' h •rrm,m

l'.t,h&gt;r

r

:Ui

7 ''lpm

R ~Jmclng

~O( J

W11r~h1p.

\\nt•hl]' Ill .till h~ 111r1 g \\.or"l11p 6 pm

S~ho~"l

H.

\\J\lll'

rm

f-',"lor J un Proll 1n ·

'J IU am

\\ ~dll{'-d a ~

\'\l~tanl

lhml1.1111 '&gt;unJ •• \

.1 111 \\ 111 ,]up

1'.1' 1"1

,E.a,t••r

J) Ill

]IJ

~

.. Ill

l hurch

Bl•thcl \\nrshtp tentn

t 111 Sui1d.11 '\, h ul

Pl11111 ( hunh nH hn\t

'lut• pcr~
ln ~ lrumcru.ll

·•m

Sihtr Run Bapti~t
Pa~!nr

S u nd.J~ Sdl•~• l

P11\l1

\\ c~ l t.'\1111 llllllt·llolmt.&gt;s~

Rd 1Rt 1-1 11
W&lt;1t•1'h. Sund.tl 'id1o&lt;.d

111 , V.or~lnp

I ll\

)I) ~(l

P'1"1"r

7 r Ill

l'il ~rim

~ u nd.t\

\\'.,r , hq •

Chn~t

Road \liddlqwn SunJ.t •

- Ill -ll l 1 m

Wcl.ine~dJ y Scrv ll: c~

P a ~ wr

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
I

V &lt;11 a 111

]!J ,.

c;; ..-n.~.t·

Stht'n\lllt.' ( ommunm

' lldilllll\

') 15 &lt;1m

Rutland Free\\ Ill Bapllsl

I• Mallltt• 19:21, 4U r l.ard

r.1~

1m . h

ll~ m~nn\•llc

Rog~1

a

St u d ~

Radnl' First Hapti~ t
Ru: k Ru le, Sum.lav Sd111nl

P.a~tor

name was Jesus.

\Vri!m Frwnd/1
t1I 11!0 \flirt' I I '

't l \ l l~'

rrmu

\hK 1' 11/ IC

P.1s tor M :uk Morrov., 6t h a nd Palmu S 1 ,
Wnr~ ln p

l'••lllJnd R.Jl\1\( Kd

Ill

llt'~h t \liddlqJUrt l
B n&lt;~n

\\ or~h•r ·

or C hrist

( 'mnmunit'

I!!

( la•ll' l ~ .. hlll •l. l' a~to 1

rm

l'ml• (, ni H lllhlt• lluiHil'.,._ ( lmnh

Su nd ., "' d tool Y W

Z10n C hurth ol

Cnmmur11u n

1\lt. Moriah Baptist

u thtu, f t"t$11 II lh t JWI II d l

'W t

\\ cd nco, d,t ~

\l illie I

\ II I'\ .1 111

Michael L. Crites
Director or Family &amp;
Community Services

e

I I .I

'ltr\ll t'

Bihle ( hurch

" ednc~dJ\

h t~tl

a 111 , \\o1 , ]up 11 ,1 111

VIdor l{ nu~h Sun d,\\ ~llltl•l l 9 ~ J 111
'i und.l\ V. &lt;ll'hi p - l ll 1 0 ·• Ill ,\,.: 7 r 111

hrt~t

Churth ni l

I 0 \0

Pnnwn &gt;\

Sl'hnnl - 9 l (] 11m

Hillside Raphst C hurch

i\lhcns. Pomeroy or P.trkersburg
We utlcr phy"cal.ucc upaiiOnal.
speech. art &amp; mu sK thcrap1e~
740-667-3156
''.'\lest and Re.\·t''

&gt;h lp

l en.

1),.

Hall

ml-~ 11111!~ 111 humc~

0 1hc1

· ·nrc"t Kun

l '.~ ~~~~r

Su nda) ~ch&lt;lnll.J \0 J m S u nJa~ \\ O r ~h •r

to htlp ul~tu wltl.' dt• •ol b't
.... lit bo.&lt;k ....... 111&lt;1. ttd~ll

1lHU1Jb

Jdlrt'\ \\',1ll.h.C:, l 'l .111tl

l~ rn ,

Bru le

r m. Wl'Jnc\d .. ,

Wcdne'&gt;(lay Scr\ Ill' S- 7 00 p m

~ t!60l

26 years In local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

\~ t• l

Ill'

-4\ !17:! Po m crn~ P1k c. P:~~wr E Lamar
Sund a ~

li 1hk

Jlfol\ll IIIL'dlll.! - J1 Ill

Wor ~ lllp

9 l (l

F1rst Southern Baptist

0 Ar)all l

I l(j JIll

l'."l11 r Buh 1{.,/1- uhnll

\1&lt;1111 Strcd
\\or..h!p- 10 0(1 1m

Sundu}

n~·\11';.

Schu"l

ol lll

Wcdne;,da\ B1ble S1ud y • 6 00 p m

Pomeroy, OH

(otlifbJII:ut«l,

Ill , PH ~ hl r

P.t ..hlr

Old Bethel

T&lt;Wice Blest

.I

Pomeroy First Baptist

I

Young's carpenter Seruice

~~

S u n d . 1~

· lJ \I J d 111

"~rm

Suu1h I 11Uflh Awnuc \1 1Jdlc p" n
P.t,lul ( hr1' 'ik10o.tr1 10 l){j .u n ~uud&lt;~)

\untl.n ..,, hu11l

l',l,h ll Kr 11h K,lll&lt;.r \1111d,,, \, ho!tl

TtlmC f..

l c.nlllll! C1~1f.. Rei

Su n d .1~

525 N 2nd Sl M1ddlcpot1, Pus10r hmc s
E Kee,cc. Wohh lp
lOam 7 p m
Wcd nc~U) Scn' ll:C~- 7 p m

ur ht la.it thut

l&lt; utland

\\ 1.• d lll'~d,l\

Pa~tor

1\. 11\~

\kdmg In !he o&gt;IJ &lt;\llKfl•ltn L~g1•m

Huw ofSh urnn llohm·o;s Church

Bt•a r"ullo~ H1d~: c

Victor) Baptist lndf'pt"ndent

~r holllllt'

Ulm , S und:w S!. h01 1l \.J ~ 0
t\ l'i liJ llf .1m 7 p m
Sc1 \ 1c c~ 7 p m

Kt'l

t-mlo.~l

PnrnCJul Pi l l ( " KJ
P ..tur Kl'\
Bl alf..Y.ull\l '&gt;U111J,I\ '&gt;Lhl~;y
II 111 .t m,

hn.i' l hn,tllln h·llo"!i&gt;hlp

f

II am anJ 6 p m

Rutlttnd first Baptist C hun:h
Sundu\ S&lt;:hool - 9 ~0 11m Wor~h1p
10 4~ •• Ill

l.J ~0 .t

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolvtlle, Ohto
Located lc" than 30 llllllUic s tram

St~ l c

ll,lfl I•Pnl il k
Yn 111h

1\t.'no ( 'hurch of ( 'h ri ~ l
II) ' 0 a

~&lt;:h nol

SLJ nduy

or Chri~1
H .~rl ~nll

J o~h

Wn r~h1p

Hope Baptis t Ch urch (Southern )

\o.•f\Jll'" ., \!I pill

Su11J

wnr~h•p -

Wc dnc~ d~)

II

7 p nt

Middlt!porl C hunh

am Mommg Wo rsh1p 10 10 am, Sunday
c\emng 6 J O pill W~d n r ..da) 6 IOpm

~7 0

Hl.1 m . fl p nl

\\.,.,Jur

7 lli

Holiness
S unda\ s~n 11.c- 7

Sun d.l)

Other Churches

K 11l11n,~•n

li•1h

Jill

Hat\H}ll{h

l l f ~ 'i7 S1.1h.' R• lUio,' 1~'i L.tll!!'-111•

and M.1111 , 1'.1 \ hlr AI

Mllll:;tcr

4J~

\~ c·dnl'~d.l\

\t lld ~ \hd

llun \ ille H u lint&gt;s ~ C hu rch

Home Rd

'•nh••ul -

I ntnl l1r

P11...t11r

~fllll

'&gt;unda\ 'i...twu\

1pm

Ch tl drc n· ~

J\\r.I•J~l'l. f.'J~Itlr

P... l&gt; lr i\rl •• rl

St l'um c lo~. \)un da~ S du ~ &gt;l

( uhan

·• m

Wednesday Sen I CI.'~ ·7 p m

dteldM•• whthtr

Amhtm }

" ed nl''&gt;tiil~

p m

l()

f)

I \\&gt;11 dt'llo lllllll.t(U&gt;I11!] Jclh &gt;... ,hlp •

and Hul y l:u ~ h.tm l l l OU am

Pao;tor

Y '0 a m

S &lt;: hl)OI

Wcdne ~duy Ser.o,K c~

~lh

C heshire Baptist Church

Scr\ tl:l' Wo rship

'

S lmd:~y

ServKc

lntcrun P reacher Floyd Ross

~ Lnu

' !(1 E

am , B1hlc

M101 ~ 11:: r

Fallh fi'IIO"Shlp ( ru)¥dt' ror Chn§(

Won h1p

( .~~t~•n

•ntt•rprht'

Episcopal

Pomeror Chun'h of Christ

Schoo l - ll ,1111 . Wo nh1p

Prea&lt;:hmg

~o:;

Ill

('ommullll) l: hurch
'

' 'hun

(, rau• Ep1stop11l ( hurrh

Pomt'my We!l!l&lt;ild e ('hurrh nf C hr1st

E\cnmg

S1 Rt 1-l, JUSt off Rt 7,

our lit~ J61nr !If It§: mi¢1t
h•-r • r ourlkt 11niqu II) lltt:dt
•ho• U&gt;t illlh~ &lt;&gt;&gt;Uotr)-io&lt;ruf'!

Sunda) S..:huo) 9 J 'i am

l

9 30am,

-

10 :lOam,

Jamcs R

Dl~

IJ. \U

Worsh1p- 10 '0 11m . 6 p m , Wcdne-.d.t\

Sunday

rent or historical.
But, there is a compelling
story most necessarily told
than any other about a man on
a tree. How he got there captures the imagination. Why he
was on the tree sttrs the emotion. What he dtd -..htle on the
tree dramatically and effective ly changes the lives ol
those who hear the story told
People who saw him the
day he was on the tree teased
him and dared hun to get ott
of tt. The mtngumg matter
.;bout it all is tl1at lie cou ld
ha ve come down at any pomt
he wanted. But, he remamed
on the tree beL·ause he had a
beneficent purpose for bem g
on the tree.
One person who was compd led to tell this story gave
thts explanation. "Who his
own self bare our stns 111 hi s
own hod y on the tree that we
should lt1 e"
The lree he wa~ on wa . .,
called the Cro&gt;S His lt"l

1m

~nhk

SIUd)' - 7 p 111

33226

POMEROY -- The group
Eanhen Vessels will perform
at 6 p m. Sunday at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.

R1:1

w~,r~h • p

10

.t 11

\~1\ll~·~

'iund1~

ollll

Po m ero). Pa ~t 1 11

M orns -

Carpenter Baptist C hurch

1 rinit~ Church
Sewn d &amp; L} nn

'::1

~q

Jll

S~n•cl'•

lth;•d.i\

] 0 \0 ol lll, \\ oi &lt;.lllr

M1n1ster Larry Brcl'AO Wo"h1p ~0

lll,tlll

'&gt;und.11 "i~ h uul • 9 lf) am

'I

rm

~~(I

"'

Jo n u th ~ n

Pastor Ne1 l Tennant. Sunday
Servaccs- I 0 00 a m and 7 p m

Baptist

'\t'r\ •~c'

II II m Wt•dnc,Jay

Sun

Hemlock Gruvt: C hri~;tilln Church

10

10 a 111

1-! callll', Sund.tl \lhuul

('('nlrHI I lll,tt'r

Church of Christ
Sundpy Schoo l

-

Congregational

'4·45·5 I 'ip m . Ma ss- :C. lO p m
Con 8 4.5 9 15 a an .. Sun . Ma~s
am. Dail y Mas§ · !I ;\Ou Ill

a an

Sdmul

J Jn~

pm

Sacred Heart CathoUr Churth

7 OO pm, Wednesday B1hle St udy 7 lXI pm

ltttle Jimbo, and app lted several stern lashes to his backstde.
Jimbo , was utterly surprised. Through hi s tears, he
sputtered, "Grandpaw,! Why
have you whtpped me 0 You
said
that
George
Washington's father did not
puni sh him when he told the
truth about cutting down that
cherry tree.''
"Well , there is one big difference , Jtmbo," mutte red
Grandpaw as he started to
walk toward the hou se .
"George Washington's father
was not in that cherry tree
when George dectded to cut tt
down!"
Thts story tt ckles the funny
bone of my imagmatton every
time I thmk about it, because I
can envision Grandpaw's ctrcum stan ti al consternatton as
he rulls over the cliff mtn the
river 111 an old outhouse.
We all have stones that we
te ll everyday Some are
humorous whtle ot hers are
serious. Some are tactual
whtle others are fantasy. The
mveteracy of telling stories ts
tngrained in each of us
whether our stories are cur-

Sum,hn

~or.h1 p-

212 W Mam St ,

W Va .

Earthen Vessels
to perform

BIDWELL - A special
servi ce wtll be held at the

7 pm

Evenmg

PO. Box 467, Duddmg Lane. Mason.

· 9 10 am Wnr!ohlp

Ron
Branch

Ch.1p1111111

Assembly of God

There is a better story than this one to tell!
One of my tavonte stories
to te ll involves an exchange
betwee n a grandpaw and ht s
very mtschtevous grandson.
Ltttle Jimbo was sitting OIJ
the front door step drinking
water when he heard the voice
of his grandpaw calling him .
When .ltmbo rounded the
house, he saw his grandpaw
standing underneath the backyard cherry tree Jtmbo cou ld
tell by hts grand paw 's cou ntenance that somethtn g wa~
wrong.
"Come here. boy!" his
granc!paw barked sharply.
When Jimbo got close
enough. he was asked, "There
is something serious about
which I need to ask you. But.
before you answer, there is a
story I want to tell you Once
upon a t11ne, there was a ltttle
boy
named
George
Washmgton . One day. George
took hi s father's axe. and cut
down one of the cherry trees
in his father's orchard. When
George's father asked if he
was the one who had cut it
down, George satd, ' Yes.
Father, I cannot tell a lte. I
took your ax and cut down the
cherry tree.' Because George

, Mommg wurshtp II am

Pas tor. RC\'. Wal ter E Ht.'m7 Sat Con

Apostohc. Worshtp Center, 873 S

Food for body
and soul to
be served

Gospel sing
announced

P,l\1\11

Rutl.11nd ( 'hurt'h or the ~azarenf'

Pt~ul

fuppen Pllun" "it

C hun::h ot&lt;:oo of Propht:t.'¥
OJ Wh1te Rd oll ~~ R t lhO P;Nm PJ

161 Mulberr) A\e , Po mero)'. 9Y2- 5ij9!1

RhtrValley

Fall
COOLVILLE
SYRACUSE -Syracuse
revival
at
Carthage Church of the Nazarene wtll
Community Church. 7 p.m . .have a harvest party at 6 p.m.
Friday and Saturday. Pastor on Saturday, with a hay ride.
David Ftelds and Builders wiener roast, and games.
Quartet on Friday, Pastor
Sam Anderson and 16 yearold accordion and piano
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
player Andrew Prather on
Church of the Nazarene will
Saturday. Information at 667· have burgers and Btble Study
3593 or 667-0606 Church
LONG BOTTOM - A at 6 p.m . on Sunday at the
located on U.S. 50 W., six hymn
smg
featunn g
mtle s from Cool Spot 570-A Delivered wtll be held at 7 church.
p.m. at the Mt. Olive Church,
Long Bottom.

Delivered
to sing

Suond Baptist Church
Ravens\\ood WV, Sunda) School 10 am ·

'

Ro\ 270

2~2\\~

James H. ,\ n de~ n. l.in·nwd t uut'ral llnn tur
Heidi , AndrNm t nrtthou jthl t u ncrall'lannm ~

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER
The

ct~re 1ou

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36759 Rocksp nngs Rd
Pomeroy. OH 45769
7 40-992-6606

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SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
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Pomeroy

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

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strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
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•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Oct. 8. the 282nd day of 2004. There are 84
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 8. 1871. the Great Chicago Fire erupted while
another deadly blaze broke out in Peshtigo, Wis.
On this date:
In 1869, the 14th president of the United States. Franklin
Pierce. died in Concord. N.H.
In 1890. American aviarion hero Eddie Rickenbacker was
born in Columbus. Ohio.
In 1918. Sgt. Alvin C. York almost single-handedly killed
25 German soldiers and captured 132 in the Argonne Forest in
France.
In 1934. Bruno Hauptmann was indicted for murder in the
death of the infant son of Charles A. Lindbergh.
In 1944. "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" made its
debut on CBS Radio.
In 1945. President Truman announced that the secret of the
atomic bomb would be shared only with Britain and Canada.
In 1982; all labor organizations in Poland, including
Solidarity, were banned.
In 1985, the hijackers of the Italian cruise ship Achille
Lauro killed American passenger Leon Klinghoffer.
Ten years ago: President Clinton, responding to the massing
of Iraqi troops near the Kuwaiti border. warned Saddam
Hussein not to misjudge "American will or American power"
as he ordered additional U.S. forces to the region.
Five years ago: Laila Ali, the 21-year-old daughter of
Muhammad Ali, made her professional boxing debut by
knocking out opponent April Fowler 31 seconds after the
opening bell in Verona, N.Y.
'
One year ago: A day after being elected governor of
California, Arnold Schwarzenegger said he was promised "a
very smooth transition" by ousted Gov. Gray Davis and
vowed to "open up the books" in dealing the state's ailing
economy. Americans Peter Agre and Roderick MacKinnon
won the Nobel Prize in chemistry; American Robert Engle
and Briton Clive Granger won the Nobel Prize in economics .
Jarome lginla of the Calgary Flames was tabbed to become
the first black captain in NHL history.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Paul Hogan is 65. The Rev. Jesse
Jackson is 63. Comedian Chevy Chase is 61. Actress ·
Sigow-ney Weaver is 55. Rhythm and blues singer Robert .
"Kool'' Bell (Kool &amp; the Gang) is 54. Rock singer Steve Perry
(Cherry Poppin' Daddies) is 41. Rock musician C.J. Ramone
(The Ramones) is 39. Singer-producer Teddy Riley is 38.
Actress Emily Procter is 36. Actor-screenwriter Matt Damon
is 34. Actress Kristanna Loken is 25. Rhythm and blues singer
Byron Reeder (Mista) is 25. Actor Nick Cannon is 24. Actor
Angus T. Jones ('Two and a Half Men") is II.
Thought for Today: "Politics are usually the executive
expression of human immaturity." - Vera Brittain, British
author ( 1893-1970).

ADVISORY ON
ELECTION LETTERS
Letters to the editor on the Nov. 2, 2004, general election will not be published or accepted
by this newspaper after Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2004.

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

Our main number Is
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Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 1 2
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, E:d. 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris. Ext. 15
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

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District Mgr.: Jason Patterson , Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich , E&lt;l . 12
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through Friday, 1~ 1 Court Street.
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Ohio Newspaper Association.
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Friday, October 8,

2004

The army if compassion

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2~57
www.mydallysentlnel.com

PageA4

'

With the hurricane season
winding down, life is getting
back to normal for the
Salvation Army - but only
temporarily.
The Salvation Army is
best known for il&gt; work
among the needy and the
victims of life's tragedie s.
When disaster has struck in
the world. the Salvation
Army has been there - soldiers marching onward to
the drumbeat of Christian
service. It was there this year
for those in the path of
Charley, Frances, Jeanne and
the other destructive storms.
Soon the "kettle corps"
volunteers will begin appearing on street comers collecting money for those whose
chimneys Santa Claus will
miss on Christmas Eve. This
is also where those who are
down and out can find refuge
at any time of the year "when
other helpers fail and comforts flee."
But what many people
don't ·realize is that the
Salvation Arm,y conducts
Sunday worship s,erviccs
that are open to all throughout the year. I attended a typical Salvation Army church
service on a typical Sunday
morn mg.
You might call the
Salvation Army "the church
with the Big Band sound." It

love thee"). the 14-voke
Senior Songsters and the
Junior Songsters who sang a
delightful. whimsical number, "Noah found grace in
the eyes of the Lord''
George
The sermon·, by the wife of
Plagenz
the com munity center's
director. was ai) exposition
of the David and Guliath
S\ory. particularly the verse
muv even evoke memories (I Samuel 17:39) where
of ·the days when Glenn David refuses to put on a
Miller and Tommy Dorsey sword and coat of armor
played at the opulent movi e when going off to fight the
palaces of the 1930s and giant . His reason: "I have not
'40s. There. amid breathless proved them ."
"He was a boy and he
anticipation in the audience.
wanted
to use soniething he
the plush curtain on the stage
would part and we would see knew something about." said
and hear the orchestra go the preacher. "We can't tell
others about Je sus unless we
into its theme song.
That's pretty much how it is know something ahout him
at· a Salvation Army church and have proved him in our
service. When the service was own life."
Other churches could learn
about to begin, the red curtain
on the platform opened and a lesson from the Salvation
the band came into view. But Army in putting together a
instead of "In the mood" or worship service that. without
'Tm getting &gt;entimental over being staged or theatrica I.
you."- we heard this 24-piece touches the hean and soul as
Salvation Army brass band few other services do.
playing "On Chris1 the solid
While all will find compassion here . the Salvation
rock I stand."
Talk about a wake-up call Army is not run on sentito worship I
mentality. For · example.
The music throughout the alcoholics must submit to
service was superior - not ihc rigid rules of the detoxi only from the band. but the fication program if they
singing by the harmonizing want the Salvation Army 's
mixed quartet (" My Jesus. I help. But if they are willi11g

THERE

to do this. they have a place
to stay.
For those whose problem
is not "demon rum." there
are chores to do to earn their
keep.
The secret of the Salvation
Army 's appeal would appear
to be its simpli city and si11 ·
eeri ly.
As the service I attended
drew to a dose. a man in a
blue T- shirt with a tattoo on
hi&gt; right forearm came forward in response to the
"altar call." He was the only
one kneeling there.
"Is there anyone else''"
asked the pastor. "Forget
what the fe llow next to you
might think. He can't get you
int() heaven. Will anyone
ebe come?''
At th~t moment, the bass
player in the band left his
fiddle and c·ame forward. It
turned out he is a Salvation
Army major. in charge of the
center. who was out of uniform that mornin g and
dressed in a red blazer. He
knell at the altar with the
man in the blueT-shirt as the
pastor prayed.
After a closing hymn. we
filed out. A man gave me a
firm handshake and said,
with a big. toothless smile.
"You're lookin' good." That
made my day. I don't hear
rhat very mucl1 any .more.

ToUGH
CROWD!

GOES THE
NEIGHBoRHOOD.

Friday, October 8,

Obituaries
Ronial L
Morrison
Ronial L. Morrison, 50, of
Gallipolis. passed away
Wednesday, Oct. 6, 2004. at
Holzer Medical Center.
He was born Jan. 20, 1954,
in Letart, W Va., son of the
!ale Wade Nelson Morrison
and
Vera
McKinney

Community calendar
Morri son.
He was a general !~borer.
He was a U.S. Army veteran.
In addition tQ hi s parents,
he was preceded in death by a
brother, Walter Morrison.
He is survived by three sisters, Georgia Crynor of
Gallipolis , Mable Long of
Point Pleasant. W.Va., and
Iris and Vernon Clifton of
Gallipolis; two brothers. Bill
Morrison of Billings, Mont..

Local Briefs
TANFmoney
available for food
POMEROY --U p to $1
million
in
Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families
funding will be made available to provide food boxes to
families in 20 counties,
including Meigs, who have
been affected by recent
floods and severe weather.
''The flooding has strained
the resources of food banks
and food pantries in these
counties," Gov. Bob Taft said.
"This money will put food
onto the tables offamilies who
have suffered as the result of
severe storms and flooding."
Taft signed an executive
order providing the funds
through the Ohio Department
of Job and Family Services to
the Ohio Association of
Second Harvest Foodbanks.
The funds will be used to distribute food. soap, detergent
and personal hygiene items to
families who have been
determined eligible for TANF
disaster assistance by county
departments of job and family services.
Distribution will begin in a
few weeks.

ters," Stewart said. 'These
men and women have literally helped to build Ohio into
the great state that it is today.
I thank them for putting their
trust in me as a state legislator."
The Ohio State Council of
Carpenters, part of the United
Brotherhood of Carpenters
and Joiners of Amerka. rep- ·
resents carpentry craftsmen
and tradesmen across the
Buckeye state·.
.
Stewart, currently serving
his first term in the Ohio
House of Representative s,
represents the citizens of
Athens, Meigs, Morgan and
parts of Wh&gt;hington counties.

Journalist
to speak

ATHENS - Leonard Pitts,
Jr.. Pulitzer-winner columnist
of The Miami Herald. will
give a free public lecture.
·'One Nation: How news
media have fostered cults of
political extremism on the
right and, increasingly. on the
left. and how neither really
seems to speak for the vast
majority
of
ordinary
Americans."
The lecture will be held at 7
p.m. on Tuesday in 20 I
Morton Hall on the campus
of Ohio University.
Pitts was nominated for a
Pulitzer
Prize
for
COLUMBUS
State Commentary in 1993 , and
Rep. Jimmy Stewart, R- won in 2004. He writes about
Athen s.
was
recently political. social· and cultural
endorsed for the 92nd Ohio issues in his column, which is
House district by the Ohio published in newspapers
State Council of Carpenters, across the wuntry. His visit
a union of craftsmen and and lecture is sponsored by
laborers. and pan of one of ttte Ohio University Studen.t
the largest groups of skilled Chapter of the Society of
Professional Journalists, the
workers in the nation.
"It truly is an honor to have E.W. Scripps School of
the support of Ohio's carpen- Journalism. the College of

Carpenters
endorse Stewart

and Eugene Morri son of
Middleport ; and several
nieces and nephews.
There will be no services or
visitation. Burial will follow
at the convenience of the
family. Arrangements are by
the Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant.
Please visit deal _fh @charter.net to send e-mail condolences to the family.

~

Battle.ahead in the GOP?
The New Republic, among
others, has recently gotten
excited over the prospect of
a major battle in the
Republican Party. It won't
break out until after the election (for, after all , until Nov.
2 the party will be exerting
its united strength to re-elect
President Bush), and what
happens afterward will obviously depend in large part on
whether Bush wins or loses .
If he wins. he will decide the
outcome of any intraparty
bra\\'IS that occur during h'is
. . term, If he loses, the party
will be up for grabs. and the
ba~tle to control it is likely to
go on for several years.
The protagonists, according to The New Republic.
are (on one hand) the socalled "neoconservatives ,"
consi&gt;ting of various second-rank figures in the Bush
administration and certain
influential outsiders like
William Kristol and several
of his colleagues at the
Weekly Standard. all of.
whom bave bee n zealous
supporters of the war in Iraq .
and (on the other) a looser
coalition of comerval ives ,
inside and outside the
administratiOn. who are le&gt;;
eager to see the United
States barging. around the
world, liberat ing oppres;cd
nations at the ·cos t of
American lives
The argument goes that
the neoconservatives car -·

doubt that a lot of influential
conservative Republican s
have serious reservation s
about committing America
to the Clintonian policy of
improving the Wl1rld b;
William
brute force (Haiti. Bosnia.
Rusher
Kosovo ) unles' a 1·ital
American interest is at stake.
This.. applie s. of course. to
the pany's isolationi st rump .
hy
Pat
tured Bush early on. and personifi ed
induced him to use the pub- Bu chanan , but ex tends well
lie outrage over Sept. II as be yo nd it. The powerful
an excuse for ·invadin g Iraq. wing of conserv&lt;\tive opinas the first step in a .grand ion led by the National
scheme to democratize and Review has not -. al least.
tranquilize the Middle East. not v.el- clearly thrown its
But that may overstate their r1ot in witb the 'h(llter-eyed
influence. The traditional neoconser vativ es on this
test
for
comnirttrng i"ue. and it will be inrercstAmerican ·troops to battle ing to sec whether it does so.
abroad (namely. whetber a
As for th e neocon serva"vi tal American interest" ti ves. they mu st he aware
was at stake) was passed in that they would not be at
Iraq on the theory thai the ir
st ron gest
rn
a
National
Saddam Hussei n posse"cd Republi ca n
weapons of ma" des true- Convention gen uinely repretiop. When it turned out that s&lt;:ntative or opinion in tile
he didn't, Bush badly needed pan y. They arc at I heir hest
an aliernative justificati(,n in the gove rnment offices
for the war. and not unrea- where they c~n u.sually be
sonably beg an to stress the found . or at cock tail parties
liberation of Iraq and its spon,orcd hy the Weeki}
potential for encouraging Standard.
if th e predicted
de.mocrac y throughout the battle breaks out. it\ likely
reg ion . Hi s appetite for such to in fluen ce who win' the
bold geopo li tica l st ro ke' nominat ion in 200S. the ncomay date from that nece&gt;si- con.,ervati ve' will try l&lt;l find
ty. and not from some e,,rlicr a candidate " ' rnpathetl c to
conversion to what William their vie w' and ndc htm· to
Kri stol has dubbed ·· national: victory.
Based on Bill Krist(&gt;]\
greatnes\ conservati \m."
In any case. th ere 1s no ucrnonstratcd cnlhusiaSJm.

s,,,

1

at any rate, thi; seerm likely
to be Sen. John McCain (RAriz. ). who has staunchly
supported the war on Iraq.
McCa in is well known to be
interes ted 111 the 2008 nomination. and would presumab ly welcome neoconservative support . But he is
undoubted ly aware of their
~tatu~ as a . . maiL ~ mru1 and
highly opinionated faction.
rather than as a major force
in the party at large. and
wmrld prohabl y prefer not to
he known as merely their
tiger. Other candidates are
likely to be still more circumspect.
. In a nutshell . then. there is
indecJ likclv to be 'orne
sqlrabbling ir; I he GOP during the next four years over

exact ly how much influence
the . neoconservatives ought
to wie ld . As noted above.
Bush. rf he i.s re-elected. can
answer th&lt;tt question for the
duration nf lm sewnu lerm.
But It i' li kclv that not even
he san head 'nil. or decide.
the OUICOille' of the ,2008
con1cnt ion . And that is
wkrc· the i'sue of neoconservat ive influence in the
party. &lt;md for tllal matter in
the country. is likel y to be
determined fm the fore,ee-·
&lt;tble future• .
(\Vi/limn , R11 .1her is &lt;I
Oistin~uishetl Felln11· of the
Clorl'llumt !IJI'tilllle for the
Stutlr r~f Stme.,·manship cmd
l'nliticol 'I'hilo.lt!J&gt;ilr. J

HOBSON - A two-car
accident at the intersection of
Ohio 7 and Hobson Drive on
Tuesday sent one of the drivers to a IDeal hospital for
treatment of injuries, the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Mary D. Freeman. 34, 44425
Forest Run Road. Racine. was
transported to Holzer Medical
Center hy Meigs EMS following the 12:25 p.m. collision.
Troopers said Freeman was
northbound on Ohio 7 when a
car driven by Ann Noble Walsh,

Council
from Page A1
panes of gla ss. The bids will
be opened on Oct. 18.
It was noied that the village representative's term on
the Sewer BoarJ expires Dec.
31 and co unci I discussed
making an appoiDtment :md
notifying the board rn
December.
Concilman Greg Taylor
will get so me quotes for fencing at ball field at Star M1ll
Park to be paid for willl
money from a Communrty
Development Block Grant
(CDBGJ which also includes
funds for bleachers.
Th~ mayor was authorized
to continue the mowing con.· tract throu gh October and
November at his discretion.
The mayor also reponed
he recently received a _letter
that the village had rece1vcd a
grant to replace the sidewalk
and new drairwge along old
124 from Tyree to the
Southern Elementary. ODOT
will do tile en gi neering and
bidding for the project.
..
He also noted that councrl
president pro tempor.e Bob
Beegle will be attendlll~ the
annual mavor\ coul1 trarpmg
on Oct., 29. Clerk Spe8eer

85. Mason. W.Va .. failed to
yield to the stop sign on Hobson
Drive, entered the hi ghway and
collided with Freem•m 's car.
Both cars had disabling damage. and Walsh was cited for
failure to yield from a stop sign.

...

POMEROY - Gary L.
Shamblen. 53. 37448 Ohio
143. Rutland, was cited for
failure to control by I he patrol
following a one-car accident
Tuesday on Ohio 143.
Troopers ·said Shamblen
was southbound at 3:10p.m.
when the car he drove went
off the right side of the road.
reported he will be attending
a state auditor's oftice train ing session for village clerks
on Oct . 14 at Burr Oak Lake.
Trick or Treat was set from 6
to 7 p.m. on Thursday. Oct. 28.
Residents wishing to participate
are to tum their JX•rch lights on.
The mayor and council
commended village workers
and frremen for tbeir work
during the llood and clean up.
' Monthly bi lis were paid
and the minutes approved. It
was rep"rted that fine s for I he
money were $131.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
'""'

..t~G -45.::: &lt;1

&lt;)tlll10lHl&gt; .... [,T
r.a~ JACK~ ON ~~~E

7

FRI10/8/04- THURS 10114104

Public meetings

Sunday, Oct. 10
CHESTER
A
Republican rally wi II be held
from II :45 a.m. to I :30 p.m.
Sunday at the Chesler
Commons. Candidate' will be
there.
Monday, Oct. II
ALFRED- The Orange
Township Trystees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Clerk Osie Foil rod.
,.
POMEROY - The scheduled meetin g of the Meig'
Local Board of Education ha&gt;
been canceled and reschedCommunication,
the uled for Wednesday, Oct. 27.
Department of Residence at 7 p.m. on the central office.
Thesday, Oct. 12
Life, the Martin Luther King,
BEDFORD
- Bedford
Jr. Committee and the
Town ship trustees, 7 p.m .,
Student Activity Council.
regular meeting . town hall .
Wednesdav, Oct. 13
POMEROY . - Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., conference room of
TUPPERS PLAINS - St. health department at 112 E.
Paul
United
Methodist Memorial Dr.
Church will hold homecoming on Sunday with a carry-in
dimier at 12:30 p.m., and special music by The Jarvis
Family and Scull Anderson at
Sunday, Oct. 10
2 p.m.
POMEROY
The
.Carleton Church of County
Road 18. Pomeroy will have
its annual homecoming with
POMEROY
- Meigs di11ner at noon and special serCounty Board of Health will vicesatl :30p.m.
meet at 5 p.m. on Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS -S t.
at the conference room of the Paul
United
Methodist
health department. located at Church Homecoming. Carry112 E. Memorial Dr.
Ill dinner at 12:30 p.m. Special
music by The Jarvis Family.
Scott Anderson at 2 p.m.
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Church of Christ will
celebrate its !75th anniverPOMEROY
-Meigs sary with a homecoming.
County Republican Party will Worship and communion wiLl
hold a regular meeting at begin at 9:30a.m., a carry-in
7:30 p.m. on Monday at dinner will be held at noon.
Republican Headquarters.

Homecoming
planned

Homecomings/
Reunions

Board to meet

Republican
Party to meet

Correction
POMEROY- In a picture
of Riverfest parade winners,
a woman was incorrectly
identified. She was Debbie
King. co-leader of Southern
Brownies. not Shirley Cogar,
as reported. Others who took
part in the parade but were
not pictured were Ashley
Romine of Troop 1208 Big
Bend Cadettes, and Jerrena
Ebersbach, a representative
of the service unit.

For the record
Highway Patrol

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

re-entered the road, crossed
the center line. overturned
and came to rest on its top.
llre car had disabling damage.

•••
POMEROY- Anthony E.
Stewart, 19, 28737 Ohio 7.
Middleport. was cited for failure to control by the patrol on
Tuesday following a one-car
accident on U .~ 33.
Troopers said Stewart was
eastbound at 5:40 a.m. when
the car he drove went off the
right side of the road and
struck the end of the guardrail.
The car had severe damage, troopers said.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Scott Hill. ClerkTreasurer David Spencer,
Marshal Dion Jones, Council
members Robert Beegle.
Henry Bentz. Joni Fisher,
Gary Freeman. Greg Taylor
and Charlotte Wamsley.
The next council meeting
wi[l he at 7 p.m. on Oct. 18.

-

All YOl/ CAN EAT!
$6.00
DRINKS ARE FRE{
tlam-Snm

Cl\.__eviva(

1:oo, 3:10 , i':oo &amp; 9:10

Eva11ge/ist-Revera11d David Canfield
of Rush, KY

SHARK TALE (PG)

Octoher 10-0ctober 13

THE FORGOTIEN (PG13)
. 1 :00, 3:00 7 :00 &amp; 9:00

HEUOS

WalleYe Fish FrY

1:00 3:30 7:00 &amp; 9:30

LADDER 49 (PG13)
1:15,3:30, 7:15 &amp; 9:30

Birthdays

E-Cylinder.;

October I 0. 2004

1 :t0, 3:10, 7:t0 &amp; 9:10

Church services

\

Rutland American Legion

FIRST DAUGHTER (PG)

Other events

and Chrissy may be just
DEAR ABBY: I am a 28plain masoch istic about.
year-old. unattractive guy
who is in love with my best
men. If Chri"Y is unable to
female friend. "Chrissy'' is
recognize the value of what
25 imd a single mother. I
vou have to offer. il would
have always adored her. We
be healthi er for you to disDear
met in high school in 1996.
tance yourself and find a
Abby
In 2002. Chrissy ran into
woman who's a better jLJdge
an old high school boyfriend
of men .
who was addicted to drug s
I agree with your friends
and has psychological probthat it's time to lay your
lems. She fell back in love
cards on th e table. You
with him. and soon they hecause if I do, she'll pull deserve to have a loving
were dating . He was inse- back and probably stop see- relationship. Un e is at it )
cure about her having ing me altogether. My best when it's muti.ral. When
friends. especially someone friends say- I should speak it's not. it's torture. So s top
of the opposite sex. so he up or slop seeing her. but I
gave her an ultimatum - can't. To quote a song. 'Td torturing yourself and allowhim or me. She chose him. A rather live in her world. than ing yourself to be taken for
granted. Remember Some
year later they had a baby. without her in mine."
When Chri&gt;sy finally got it
I pray every ni ght for God • of God's greate ; t blessings
through her head th at he was to grant me this one prayer. arc unanswered prayer&gt; .
never going to change or What can I do to make thi s
Dea r Ahbv is 1rritrm br·
give up drugs. she broke up work" - DESPERATELY Abiga il Van Buren. also
with him.
SEEKING "C HRISSY"
hr01m 11s } Nlllllt' Phillips.
Being the good guy - or
DEAR
DESPERATE: a11d )I 'll.&lt; jiJU11ded In her
fool - that I am. I became You'.ve
done
enoug h mother. Pauline Phillips.
close with her again . Over already. Your belief th at you Writ e
Dear
Ahln · at
time. I have gotten to know are un altractive may be part ~rw~t ·. De(lrAhh \'.com or PO . .
her son and have treated him of your problem . Beauty J&gt; Box fi9NO. Lo.• Angf'ie1 . CA
like he was my own. I do in the eye of the beholder, 0069.
9
anything and everything for
them. I would like to have a
real
relationship
with
Chrissy. It makes me sad
that she'd rather go out with
guys who don't really care
for her (she admits it herself) than see how much 1·
love her. I want so much to
be with her. but I know she
Now you can break free from cylinders w1th lhe
doesn't see me in that lr~h·t.
small, ligh twe ig ht HEUOS• Personal O•ygen
I don't know what to do. I
System. No other portable oxygen system thiS
don't want to say something
small an(j light lasiS so long.

FRtOAY NIGHT LIGHTS (pg13

TAXI (PG13)
1:30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30

Clubs and
organizations

Man hopes to open the eyes
of woman blind ·to his love

Box Office 0!)9ns @
6:30PM Nightly &amp; 12:30 pm
For Sat &amp; Sun Matinees

RAISE YOUR VOICE (PG)
1:10,3:20,7:10 &amp; 9:20

p.m. at the Mt. Olive Church.
Long BQttom .
Sunday, Oct. 10
BIDWELL - A,pecial service"' ill be held at the Poplar
Ridge Free Will Baptist
Chun:h. 2 p.m. with Sincere
• of Hunt ington. W. Va. 10 pro·vidc the music. For more
Saturday, Oct. 9
John
ca ll
POMEROY
Return information.
Elswid.
593-73\10.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American ~ SYRACUSE - Svracme
Revolution , will meet al I Church of the Nuarene will
p.m . at th e Pomeroy Library have Bur~ers and Bihle Study
social room. Rae Moore will al 6 p.m on Sunday al the
be the speaker. The program church.
POMEROY - The group
will be on getting acquainted.
Earthen
Vessels will perform
tell ing a family experience.
at 6 p.m. at Laurel Cliff Free
Monday, Oct. II
POMEROY
- Mei gs Methodist Church.
County Repuhli can Party.
regular meeting. 7:30 p.m.,
Republican Headquarters.
Saturday, Oct. 9
SYRACUSE
The
Ca rl eton
School/\1eigs
·lndu &lt;,tries will be sponsoring
Friday, Oct. 8 ·
COOLVILLE
Fall their 2nd Annual Community
revival
at
Carthage Olympics from ~ : 30 a.m. to 4
Community Church. 7 p.m. p.m. It is a fundraiscr for
Friday and Saturday. Pastor Marvin Cooper who is batDavid Field s and Builder' tling cancer. Cal l992-6681 to
Quartet on Friday, Pastor Sam register a team by Oct. I .
Friday, Oct. IS
Anderson and 16 year-old
POMEROY -A staff
accordion and piano player
member
of Senator Geor~e
Andrew Prather on Saturday.
Voinovich
will hold office
Information at 667-3593 or
hours
from
II
a.m. until noon
667-0606 . Church locathl-tln
U.S. SO W. . six mile s from at Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center
in
Pomeroy.
Cool Spot 570-A.
Opportunity
to
disc
uss
federal
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing will be held at 7 legislation or to seek assisp.m . at lhe Faith Full Gospel tance with fe deral agen cy
Church. Rogie Bissell and casework issues. Call Cara
Just for Now will be providing Dingus. +ll-6~ I0.
the music.
Saturday, Oct. 9
SYRACUSE - Syracu&gt;e
Church or the Nazarene will
Wednesday, Oct. 13
have a harve st pany at 6 p.m.
LAKIN . W.Va. - Douglas
&gt;on Saturday. with a hay ride. R. Roush will ce lebrate his
wiener roast. and games.
93rd binhdav. Card&gt; can be
LONG BOTTOM - A sent · to him c/o Lakin
hymn
sing
featuring Hospital. I Bateman Circle,
Delivered will be held at 7 Lakin. W.V.. 25287. rand afternoon services will
full ow at 2 p.m . with· special
mu&gt;ic by the Gabriel Quartet.

Sunday Morning IO:JO Al\1
Sunday Evening li:OO 1'1\1
Monday-Wednesda~' 7:00 l'i\1
Pomeroy Chun.·h or tht.• Naznrt~rw
196 l\.1ulbcrr) A\'c , • Pomt• ru~·. 01·1
l•astor Jan La,•endt•r irn:i1es t·n•rymu•.

lilt&amp; up 10

8-10

I' ',

""""I

'-------Find out 1-Jow the .HELlOS
syslem C: tlf"l h~lp yo .. "ega •n
you r treecfom, .rronil 1t..,. and
1ndepondenco

Cell us today for a free
consutt.tiory.

~ PRE~Ulii'TIO'
~.
n.. /~ rrr.

li\n;n

( "•pm~•

••rlr '~ ' " "' '~"""'

800-364-0115

.

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October~

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

·-

.Racine VFD.educates Southern stucft!nts on fire safety Fire departments ·
:

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM
·
'
RACINE - Every year for
National Fire Prevention Week
the Racine Fire Department
visits Southern Elementary to
:educate students on lire safety.
: This year grades K-8 were
~rea ted to a tour of fire trucks
·and emergency vehicles .
"Racine firefighter Curtis
Jones dressed some students
in the protective turnout gear
.firemen wear.
: Jones explained to the
;chi ldren "When you see a
·fireman dressed · like this it
:means he's here to help you ...
''Or s he ~· interrupted the
studeJ!!S'
"Of she,'' Jones agreed.
The children also rece ived
:gifts from the firemen such
:as frisbees. eencils. sticke rs
:and plastic fireman helmet.s
·all promoting fire safety.
Zach Pickett who has been
with the Racine Voluntee r
Fire Department for four
·yea rs explained that this
:year's theme for National Fire
:Prevention Week is to check
·batteries in smoke detectors.

POMEROY
-Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Services provided the following list of local fire departments
and contacts in Meigs County.
All but one of these departments are dispatched from the
EMS ofticc in Pomeroy.

-...

BY BETH SERGENT

POMEROY - During National Fire
Prevention Week local fire departm ents
go out and educate the pub lic on topics
such as changing the battery in thei r
smoke alarm and how to properly burn
debris outdoors.
Outdoor burning!' prohibited in Ol1io
between the hours of 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the months of October and November
according to the Ohio Depan mem of
Natural Resources (ODNR).

.

·-

----

·-

-- --

-- --

Ohio 143
992-6663

992-6663

Salem Township

Olive Township ·

- Qid Lambert. Chief
Ohio 124
Langs1·ille

Dirk Kreiss. Chief
Ohio 124
Reedsvil le
992-6663

992-66f&gt;3

---- .

Scipio Township

Larry Cleland. Chief
Ohio 248
Chester

escapes. Avoid burning on windy days .
Do not burn within 200 feet of any
woodland. brush or field containing dry
grass. Stay 'with the fire until it is out. ·
For specific information on burnin g
laws. contact Ohio EPA at 6 14 -72~1344 or the ODNR Division of Forestry
at 614-265-6694. Individual s intendin g
to do any open burnin g are also advised
to consult their community fi re depat1ments for inform ation regarding local
ordinances.

The Ohio EPA also prohibits the
burning of rubber, grease. asphalt and
petroleum materials at any time during
the year without agency permi ssion.
The Divi sion of Forestry offers the
followin g safety tips and gu idelines for
burning outdoors. where and when such
burni ng is permitted.
Clear the burning site of al l tlammable materials. Use a proper burning container or bane[ with a lid. Clear a 10foot area arou nd the burning area. Have
water and hand tools ready in case fire

Chester

--

F

Jim Gaston. Ch ief
Ohio 143
Alhany
\l I I

.

-·

We Salute the many fine Men and Women who
'"'-- serve to protect our
loved ones.

Columbia
Township

Syracuse
992-666]

·-

NATIONAL FIRE PREVENTION WEEK

Don Stivers. Chief
Race Street
· · Middleport
992-666 1

Jack Peterson, Chief
Third St r~et
Syrm:usc

--

In Celebration and Recognition of-

Middleport

Dave Neigler. Chief
Fifth Street
Racine
992·6663

BSERGENT@MYDAtlYSENTtNEL.COM

-·

Harry Spencer, Chief
Bashan Road
Racine
992-6663

Racine

Tips on outdoor burning

-·--

The Daily Sent'inel • Page A 7

Bash an

Jeff Newell, Chief.
Ohio 681
Tuppers Plains
992-6636

Ri ck Blaett nar, Chief
Buttern ut Avenue
Pomeroy
992·6663

Students from Southern Ele mentary were treated to a tour of this firetruck and other emer:
gency vehicles from the Racine VFD as part of National Fire Prevention Week . (Beth
Sergent/ photo)

www.mydailysentinel.com

Orange

Pomeroy

~·.

•

Friday, October II, 2004

t
•

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

:~==============================================================~

Hartwell House

This page proudly sp·onsored by these
many fine businesses.

·-----

Thanks to all firemen who helped
during the flood!
100 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH

.;....

.

992-7696
.

Knight Law Offices

.

109W2nd

992-2090

Weaving Stitches

King Hardware

All your hard work is greatly appreciated
thanks!

405 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH

106 W. Main Street

Whaley's Auto Parts

lnge~s Carpet

St. Rt. 681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013
or740-992-5553

175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH
•

..

11 0 Court St.

Pomeroy

9920:3322
.
· A special thank you to the Fire

Sue's Selectables
The Crafters Loft
107 Mill St.
Middleport, OH

740-992-3148

.Bernard V. Fultz
Pomeroy, OH

(40~992-7101

.

Attorney At Law

-

DETTWILLER
TRUE VALUE LUMBER
634 East Main Street

Pomeroy, OH

740-992-5500
'

992-2054

7 40-992-3684

Meigs County Clerks of Courts

Pomeroy, OH

-Vote Experience . Vote kay Hill
For Meigs County Recorder
Supporter of our local Fire Departments ·

K&amp;C Jewelers
992-3785
~omeroy,

Supporting our local fire departments

992-5627 • Middleport, OH

Meigs County
Auditors Office

HOME NATIONAL
f:oli BANK
~

Ohio

Pomeroy ·

992-6524

l£NOER

......---'""""';&gt;.'

949-2210 • Ra~ine,OH
992-6533 • Syracuse, OH .

CourtHouse

992-2698

Downing-Childs
Mullen -Musser
. INSURANCE

Insurance Plus
Agencies, Inc.
114 Court St.

Court Street Grill
112 Court.St.

I

1

THE SHOE PLACE/ SWISHER &amp; LOHSE CROW&amp;CROW
PHARMACY
LOCKER2·19
ATTORNEYS AT LAW

Vote November 2nd
for

Marlene·Harrison

'

I

Pomeroy, OH

Departfllents for their exceptional help
during the flood

2.34 E. Main St.

Meigs County Commissioners
Jim Sheets
.. Mick Davenport
Jeff Thornton

Clark's Jewelry
113 Court

'

I

•

DAN'S

"3 on the T"
Middleport Department Store

111 1/2 W. 2nd Street

172 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH

992-7075

992-7028

Dairy Queen

992-1135
-

• Pomeroy Fire Department • Rutland Fire Departlq1ent • Bashan Fire Department
• Racine Fire Department • Chester Fire Department
• Orange Township. Fire Department
• Syracuse Fire Department • Salem Township Fire Department
• Olive Township Fire Department
.
• Middleport Fire Departme.nt • Columbia Township Fire Department
• Scipio Township Fire Department

'

CPU

.

Snouffer's
•

I

'

.

..

.·

We Salute the Fire Departments of
Meigs County

992-5020

Pomeroy, OH

..

•

Pomeroy

992-6677 ·

Fire Departments
Candidate for Meigs County Recorder

·
!

Chester, Ohio

992-2155 • Pomeroy, .OH

St. Rt. 248 • Chester, OH

BAUMLUMBER
985 - 3301 ·

The Daily
_Sentinel
Ridenour Gas Service
TV &amp; Appliances
,.

992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH

.Always
* Tomin support
Lowery *
of our

992-2955 • Pomeroy, OH

·

992-6059 • Pomeroy, OH

VALLEY .
LUMBER
•

992-6611 • Middleport, OH

.Ingels Radio Shack
.&amp; Picture Gallery

740-985-3307

992-2635 Middleport, OH

-BROGANWARNER
INSURANCE

FARMERSBANK

992-6687 • Pomeroy, OH .·

"Your Bank For Life"

· 992-2136 •

Pomeroy,OH
985-3385 • Tuppers Plains, OH
446-2265 • Gallipolis, OH
304-773-6400 • .Mason, WV

·

!

~~
- ----~~--~-----__ --~--------_-_--. ------~--------------------_._ ~. -.~

•

�-

.,

..

PageAS .

0

The Daily Sentinel

From ·Stubby to Private Hammer:
mascots boost morale for military

Friday, October 8, 2004

INSIDE

JAMES HANNAH

NL Divisional Playotfa, Page B3

Local Stocks

OSU defense faces questions, Page 84

Friday, October 8, 2004

. DAYTON - When Air Fore~ pilot Ru"
BLJ-11:so
Steber was air-dro pping food and supplies to
Bob Evans - 27.20
the blockaded residents of Berlin in 19-l~. hi'
BorgWarner - 43.29
pet boxer dog roamed arounu the cockpit.
·
Champion - 3.85
When word got back to Ge n. Curtis LeMay.
Charming Shops - 7.37
commander of the Berlin Airl ift. Steber wa'
City Holding - 33.36
summoned to the general's nffi,·c .
"I thought. 'Oh boy. I' m in trouble."' Steber
Col- 36.48
recalled thinking.
DG -19.93
LeMay surprised him.
DuPont - 43.59
"He said, 'This is nne of the best morale
Federal Mogul - .19
builders I've had on the airlift. and I 11 lluld
USB- 29.23
like to have a parachute made fur the dn); ... .
. Gannett - 85.55
said Steber. 86. of Melbourne. Fla.
General Electric - 33.95
A new ex hibit at the U.S . Ai r Force
Museum pays tribute to the boxer. among aniGKNLY- 4.10
mal mascots that historians say have played
Harley Davidson - 60.07
an important role in boosting soldier'· spirits
Kmart- 87.75
throughout the history of the U.S. military.
Kroger - 15.40
''It just goes so far to increase morale Ltd.- 22.80
that somebody else. something ebc is sharing
NSC- 30.39
their ex perience with th at level of tail-wagOak Hill Financial ging and enthusiasm ... said Terry Attkcn. the
museum's senior curator. '' It take:-. yo u away
36.40
' from life-ancl-death i» ues."
OVB- 31.25
(AP Photo/Dayton Da ily News. Bill Reinke)
Steber outfitted tile do~ wit h a small L·ar£o
BBT- 40.31
parachute that wou ld atltomuti l:all y open ' ir Camryn Wol1ver, 5, of Springboro looks at one
of the newer displays at the U.S. Air Force Peoples - 26.83
the crew had to bail ou t.
And, at LeMay \ suggestion. Steber l'hangcd Museum in Dayton that commemorates the Pepsico - 49.01
the name of the dog from Bj orn Von Mu lcnt hal Boxer "Vittles" with his spec1all y designed para· Premier - 9.39
to Vittles after Operation Vittle s. wde name chute. The dog was owned by 1st. Lt. Russ Rockwell - 39.72
for the airlift launched bv Britain. France and Steber and accum ul ated about 2000 hours, on Rocky Boots -19.69
the United States after the Sovie t Union cut oil 131 missions. aboard Steber's C-4 7 during the RD Shell - 52.62
all land and water routes to West Berlin in an Berl lll Airlift. Gene ral Curtis LeMay named t he SBC- 27
attempt to starve the western powe rs out.
dog and ordered th e parachute made.
Sears- 39.42
Vittle s flew in 1.1 I mission.s with Steber Union troops adopted an c;tgle named Old Abe Wal-Mart - 53.55
and more with other crews - and ne ve r had
to scout nut Confederate troops: which put a Wendy's - 34.58
to use the parachute
Having mascots 111 combat situa tions is nut buur1Ly \&gt;rr the bin.l·~ htad. The eagle was wound- Worthington - 22.71
without risk. Vittles' curiosity in the cockpit is ed twice in 36 ball b. but survived the war.
Daily stock reports are
Th e Armv's I0 Ist Ai rborne Divi sion bears the 4 p.m. closing quotes
one example.
"One time he stuck his nose in an electrical the nicknai11c Scrcamin~ Eagb after Old of the previous day's
~
outlet and liked to wre.c k the airplane." Stcher Abe .
· recalled.
In the caFly days of the U.~. Navy. cats were transactions, provided by
Aitken said lion cub' we re uuupted by co mmon ly adopted to rid ships of rats. said Smith Partners at Advest
American volunteer pilots who flew with the h ck Green. historian at the Naval Hi stori cal Inc. of Gallipolis.
French Air Force during World War I. But he C e nt t~r in \~.ias h i n g lnn . n.C' . Dng...; and mnnsaid the cubs didn't work ou t because when kevs obtained by s.11lors duri n ~ shore leave
they go t larger they became too hard to handle. later showed up on ships. he sa id.
Some mascots were an ad vantage on til e
Ma'&lt;:ots often became a sy mbol of a uni t
battlefield.
and seJ'I · ~d as someth in g to rallv around .
Stubby. a boxer-terrier. was the mascc&gt;t of a Green swll. The animal~ ~1!"1 cn wer~e J llowed
Connecticut-based in fantry unit stationed in ro stay on hoard if the c:rew wo k care of them
Europe during World War I. The dog's keen and they didn't get in the way. he said.
sense of smell al erted the troops to Germa n
"It tended to be what thc ·command inu offigas attacks .
cer wuu ld put up wit h... Green said . -

Prep Volleyball

s·outhern tames Wildcats in five-game thriller
. BY Scon WOLFE
Sports correspon9ent

Ovemight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures wi II fall from
58 Carly overnight to 51.
Skies will be partly cloudy
with 5 MPH winds from the
sou th .

Friday, October 8
Moming (7 a.m.•NoOJr)
Temperatures will rise to
fi 7 with today's low of 50
occurring around 7:00am.
Skies will range from sunny
to mostly sunny with 5 to I 0
MPH winds from the south.
Aj(enroon ( l-6 p.m.) ·
Temperatures will n sc
fro m 69 early afternoon to
the high for the day of 74 at
4: 00pm as they drop back
down to 72 later this afternoon . Skies will be mostly
sunny to partly cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the south.
Eve11ing (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Te mperatures will drop
fro m 64 early · this evening to
57. Skies will range from
mostly clear to partly cloudy
with MPH winds from the
SOLnh .

Saturday, October 9
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will be a cloudy morning. Temperatures will climb
from 50 to 67 by late this
morning. Wind s will be 5 to
I0 MPH from the south turning from the southwest as the
morning progresses.
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will remain cloudy.
Temperatures will rise from
69 early this afternoon to 72
by 3:00pm then drop down
to 68 late afternoon. Winds
will be 10 MPH from the
southwest.

s·

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155

Jacob Cruz
leaves Reds as
free agent
CINCINNATI (AP)
Utility player Jacob Cruz
decided to become a ·free
agent Thursday rather than
stay with the Cincinnati
Reds., who had dropped him
from their 40-man roster.
Cruz was the Reds' top
pinch-hitter last season, leading the team with 14 hits and
55 at-bats off the bench. He
also started 22 games in the
outfield, at first base and as a
designated hitter after he was
promoted from Triple-A
Louisville on April 28.
Cruz hit .224 overall with
three homers and 28 RBis .

Bradshaw back
for Herd after
ankle sprain
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
. (AP) - Marshall running
back Ahmad Bradshaw is
expected to play Saturday
against Ohio University after
missing the last two games
with a high ankle strain.
Bradshaw, a freshman from
Bluefield, Va., suffered the
injury in the Hcrd.' s 24-21
loss to Ohio State and spent
much of September on
cruTches and then in an orthopedic boot.
"It still bothers me a little
bit," Bradshaw said. "(The
pain ) comes up. almost up to
your leg. It 's a painful thing."
He said he is eager to play .
"I have a brace· nbw. so it's
helping out a lot," Bradshaw
said. "I "m ready to go out and
see how it will do ."

St. Ed's forfeits
four wins for
using ineligible
player

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The Paily Sentinel

OHSAA boss to speak at Rio, Page 82
URG to host Athletic Recruiting Day, Page 82

ACI- 35.54
AEP- 32.20
Akzo- 35.79
&gt;\shland Inc. - 56.73
AT&amp;T -15.04

ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER

...

..

I
P l"l lld t'' rjfJ AC l or 1h ~ ~tl ul

~,;,'

IH Ill h .

West Virginia's #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, And (ustom Van Dealer.

Alpley·Fanl)laJn
~

Monday • Satur.d..Y 9 am • 9 pm • Sunclay 1 p·m • 8 pm ·

E.Rt 132

Take 1·77 to R1pley FAIRPLAIN Interchange
(exrt 132)Turn North on At 2 1,
Dealership is 3 miles on left

COLUMBUS (AP)
Lakewood St. Edward. the
unbeaten and No. 2-ranked
big-school team in Ohio. will
forfeit four victories for
using an ineligible player, the
Ohio High School Athletic
Association
announced
Thursday.
St. Edward drops from 6-0
to 2-4 and will have a difficult time qualifying for the
f)ostseason playoffs.
The OHSAA. the S&lt;tnctioning body for prep sports in
the state, was informed by St.
Edward admini strato rs on
Sept. 27 of the possible violation of OHSAA rules. The
P.layer in question did not
meet rules regarding transfers.
: "St. Edward administrators
are certainly to be commendoo for informing our office
about the situation and for
~onduction
a thorough
administrative review when
it discovered the ineligibility,"
said
OHSAA
Commissioner Dan Ross .
''Their actions were certainly
honorable and I have sympathy for the players, coacltes.
fans and St. Edward co mmunity."
.
The all -boys school with an
enrollment of just over 650
st udents will forfeit wins
over Cincinnati St. Xavier,
Lakewood, Akron CentraiHower and Warren Harding.
The ineligible student did
not participate in wi ns. over
and
Maple
Heigh ts
Washington. D.C.. Cool idge.
· The forfeits wi II be retlected in the nex t OHSAA computer ratin gs on Tuesday.

WATERFORD In a
hard-fo11ght match that went
to the limit of . fiv e games,
the
visiting
Southern
Tornadoes overcame the
host Waterford Wildcats to
get back into the win column.
Waterf@Td claimed the
,. first ga me 25-15, then
Southern won the nex t two

25-22
and
wa s
9 -9
15- 15 hefore
serv 1ng, 59splitting the
63 spiking
last two 19with eight
25 and 15-'1.
kill s: Jordan
Brooke
Neigler had
Ki ser
was
four kills in
14- 14 serva
13- 17
in g with a
spik in g
37-39 passni ght and 3in
g
game
3
serving.
Kiser
Williams
and 66-67
and Ashley
setting game with 16 sets Roush was 16- 16 servi ng
for kill s. Kristiin a Willi ams with an ace and 2R-35 pass-

Ill g.

had r·.1o

Bethany Riftle wa; 1-1 -1-l
se rving. and 71 -77 'cttin t'
with fo ur sets for kill s.
Whitney Riffle was .J--1
serv ing. Linda Ed d) "as
28 -n serv in g and 15-2R
passing.
Ashley Robi e was 15-15
spiking with ni ne kill s and
two points se rving . Jennv
Warner h'bd fiv_e ki ll s in ;,
18-20 sp11i 1n g mght and two
blocks. while Kas ie Sellers

gooJ nil-'h t at

for ki lh and a

;ch

th~

net.

Wa te rfonJ was led bv
Hale) Drayer with 26 point~;
and Rllhln Arn&lt;lld with 20
po111t, .
Southern won th e re,erve
g a111c 25- 19 and 25 -22.
Lind sey Burrow s had eight
po ints. Ash ln Rohie had
13. Whnne y Riffle 6. and
9.
Stephanie
Cundiff
Kri slin Sum p" &gt;n h;,d II for
Waterford.

Pro Football
'

Off and running, Browns' Suggs now ready to start
BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

BEREA - Waiting has
become a part-time job for
Lee Suggs, one he'd like to
quit for good.
Cleveland 's speedv and
soft-spoken runnin g' back
has be co me · increasingly
impatient , and it's easy to
see why. After sitting out
the first three games with u
neck injury. Suggs ru shed
for 82 yards and a tou~h ­
down in hi s seaso n debut
last week as the Browns
beat Wa shington.
.,.
And now that the second year back is finally healthy
enough · to have played in
2004. Suggs is waiting to
see if he' ll make his fir st
start in the NFL.
"Still (waiting) ." Suggs
said with a shru g Thursday
as the Browns (2-2) prepared for thi s Sund&lt;ty's
game at Pittsburgh. " ( want
to start. yeah. I just want to
play most of all. But I
would like to get that start ."
W9uld it mean more if it
came again st the rival
Steclers - 0-1 ). cu rrentl y
leadin g the AFC North'
" I co uld care le ss ," Suggs
said. " I don ' t care who it is
again st.''
Suggs ' return has complicated thing s for Browns
coach Butch Da vis, who
has )o fi gure out how to
split the curri es between
Suggs and Willi am Green .
It' s a good probl em to
have - to a point.
Davis ha s to balanc e
keepin g both pl ayers productive· and positive about
their rol es . By favoring on e
over the other. Davi s ri sks
l1a ving a di sgruntl ed playe r.
or two who doil' L know
what th ey'll be doin g from

week to week .
Green, who ru shed for 91
yards a week earlier against
the New York Giants , only
had four carries again st the
Redskin s. He didn't ge t on
the field in the second half
as the Browns used Suggs
exclusively.
On Wedne sda y, quarterback Jell Garcia offered hi s
opinion on. how to best use
the tandem .
" Maybe it 's so me thin g
that co mes down to a 60/40
split or 70130 split, " Garcia
said . " You have fo go with
the guy who can be the
mo st productive for the
tea m. Whoe ve r th a t is,
th at's got to be the guy who
gets the ma jo rit y of th e
load. because he has to find
a rhythm. "
Asked for his take on
Garcia's backfi eld plan.
Davis didn 't exactly reveal
much .
"OK." was all Davi s
offered .
Green has kept a low profil e this week. He didn't
s peak with reporters fo llo wing last Sunday ' s ga me
and shooed the media away
from hi s loc ker a day late r.
Suggs sa id he and Green
have a good re lation ship.
but that the two have
stee red clear from talking
abou t who's No. I and
who's No. 2.
"Ain't no use in bringing
it up ." said Suggs. who
added
that
Green ts
depressed by the poss ibi lit y
of

p~a y in g

les s . .. That goes

without say ing."
Before Thursqay' s practi ce, Suggs was still not
su re how the playing time
will be diviued .
'T m curio us." he sa id. Cleveland Browns running back Lee Suggs (44) is ta ckled by Washington Redskins safety Matt
" I'm just waiting to find Bowen (41) w1th Sean Taylo r (36)· also givi ng chase at the end oi a 13-yard run in the four th
quarter Sunday 111 Cleveland . In his firs t game of the season. Suggs rushed f01 82 ya rds
including the go-ahead touchdown in Cleveland's 17-13 win over the Redsk1ns. 1AP Photo)
Please see Suggs. Bl

Prep Volleyball

College Football

EHS grounds Miller Marshall isn't looking 'past Ohio
STAFF REPORT

sports @mydaily1nbune.com

(A P) - lhe Ohio Bobcats L't'l1ai nly haw
Marshall 's attemion now.
Last wee k'' 1R- 16 upse~ of Kcnlucb has .
buoyed the Bobcat&gt;' hope&gt; and all but prcl·~m ­
ed opponents fro m looking past them.
"Whenever you dominate an SEC team. then
you are doi ng so mething well.'' Marshall coach
Bob Pruett said.
The Bobcats t3·2. 1- 1 Mid-Ameri can
Conference) exceeded their' win total from last
year with the stunner in Kentuckv that left th e
home fan \ booing at the fi nish. ·
"t Thc bm rid e! was a lot better than some of
those ntl1cr ones. I can tell I'Ou tha t." coach
Bria n Kn orr ,a id.
·
It wa~ Ul ll' or LIJC higgc ... t win .-,~.~, cr for Ol{io.
wh i~ h ~.: amt: into thl' -.caqm ha\ inl! \\'On onh
seren game" in Knorr· . , fir ... t thrcr:'" ~ea:-.nn.., ii1
Athen s~

Scott Mayle caught touchdown pa,ses of -l-l
and SY yarJ, to It-ad the. wa1 as the Bnlxat.s
beat a tc[un fro m a BCS e&lt;&gt;nfc.rence fL&gt;r ihe tiN
time ., ince toppi ng Minne,ota in c(XlO. Other
tha n a win over Marvlanll in 'i997. Ohio had
not defeated a maj(li'-L· nn ference opponelll
since North"estern in IY?:l.
In, addition. the But-cats hall lost the ir la:-t 10
road game :-.
"For us. it just gil'es us some ,·onfidl!ilL'C ...
KnmT saiu. ·~we haJ won l\\'0 games before.
but 10 go out and "i n un the road be fore 60"'nlL'·t hnusanJ fl&lt;.'ople ga' e us some l'Onti -

+

,/._
1'! •. ••
• -...~.•

MARSHALL

-

TM

OHIO

at Peden Stadium
Athens, Ohio
Kick-off, 1 p.m. , Saturday
Jencc gl1ing into the tou ~h j1&lt;H1 tlf ~~ur ... ea,on ...

That p.1rt bc·~m' 1111h \l.tr,h,d l .11- .1. 1-01.
\\hi &lt;..'h j, 1:1'11\111~ ,)J"f .111 illlpn.',..,hc .1.3 - ~5 \ i~o..·l\)­
,:\ la-..t \\~L:k. il~dill'-1

\ I J..tnl ; t t}hit~\
• Thl' ThullLk:rith! H~o.'l\.l h,t\c.' \\tltl ,j, tit the
la:-.t 'l'\~o.'ll m~o.;l.'llll~' \\ 11h til~· Bnhl·;th Tile
gaml' i-.. rcfe!Tt.'d lll ,t, ti1L' H.Htk• f1,r the Be ll.
·· \\ "c arl' goin~ ll, ho.t\l' tn ~11 up there. pb~ for

th~

hell and it" itl he ~~ battk· bl.'t\\l'Cil t\\Cl !.Wod
fnnthalltL'anh ... Pn1e11 said .
Thc ,()1&lt;1ol; ,tre 'cpar;ned b1 ju,t 65 mile;.
ill am uf the pia~ er' ha,-c· fr(c ,iJs nr fonncr
tc:ammatc•s &lt;lll the nth~r team . E1 en though
1\l;mhal l i' lea1 111g thL' \1.-\C Ill join
Conference l 'SA nc'\l 'ea,nn. hoth ,ide; c~re
l']O,L' hl -..1gmng. J co1111 dl'ttn cn~u re the.· ri\i.llr\
\\ ill l·t lllli nuc .

··

\Ia~ lc \,a prime c'\;llllple. llf till' 'PI It .loyal -

Please see Ohio, Bl

•

�-

.,

•

Friday, October 8, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 8, 2004

OHSAA lioss to speak at Rio Grande Rio to host Athletic
Recruiting Day
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

RIO GRANDE - Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Association Commissioner
Daniel B. Ross will speak at
the University of Rio Grande
3:30 p.m. Monday in Bob
Evans Farms Hall. The session is open to everyone and
will be an LA 101 for Rio
Grande students.
Ross will be speaking on
the topic of Sportsmanshi~ :
It's
Everyone s
Responsibility. As a part of
the lecture. Ross will speak
about hazing prevention and
recognition, athletes, coaches and parents fair play
codes, parents· role in
Interscholastic Athletics and

ethics and integrity.
Ross is the ninth commissioner of the OHSAA.
replacing Clair Muscaro.
who served in that role near-.
ly I 5 years. Ross has extensive experience as a school
administrator in Ohio, having served as a superi ntendcnt , principal , teacher,
counselor and coach for 30
years, and he also has experience as a college instructor,
in manufacturing and as a
contest official.
He is a native of
Portsmouth and graduated
from Columbus St. Charles
High School in 196 7. Ross
earned a bachelor's degree in
history and political science
from
Ohio
Dominican
College in 197 L
For the past 21 years he

has served as superintendent
at three different school districts. leading the Patrick
Henry Local Schools in
Hamler (Henry County) for
three years from 1983-86,
the
Pickerin~ton
Local
Schools (Fairfteld County)
for II years from 19~6- 1997
and the Avon Lake City
Schools (Loraiil County) for
seven years from 1997 to
July 31 of thi s year.
In addition, Ross was registered for 20 years as an
OHSAA official. where he
had five boys state basketball and two girls state basketball tcrurn~ment assignments and also worked in the
sports of volleyball and
baseball .
Ross has represented the
United Swtes on an e_duca-

tiona! mission to the Soviet
Union and represented Ohio
on educational missions to
China and at Columbia
University. He worked with
the Ohto Chamber of
Commerce and local boards
of
education
on
"Boardsmanship''
workshops. worked with Georgia
Southern University on
''Projects for Youth at Risk"
and was a member of &lt;)n
OHSAA ad hoc committee to
review the byla\\'S and constitution.
He is also an adjunct profe ssor at Ohio University,
Bowling
Green
State
University and BaldwinWallace College . ·
Dan and his wife. Kristine,
have four grown children.

Riverside, Cliffside Golf Clubs complete
first day at Buick Scramble in Florida
ORLANDO.
Fla.
Riverside Golf Club turned in
a 13-u~der-par 59 to stand in
I 5th place follow ing the
opening round of the Net division at the 2004 Buick
Scramble
National
Championships today in
Orlando.
Riverside is comprised of
PGA Professional Ty Roush
along with amateurs Brent
Fields, Tim Roush. Jerry
Tucker and Jeremy Tucker.
Elsewhere in the net division, three teams, including
Harrison Hills G&amp;CC of
Attica, lnd; Royal Lakes CC
of Flowery Branch, Ga.; and
West Chester of Canal
Winchester, Ohio are all tied
for .the .lead after the opening
· round at net 16-under-par 56.
Cliffside Golf Club currently stands at 18th in ·the Gross

Ohio
from Page 81
ties. The · sophomore wide
receiver from Philippi, W.Va ..
broke a lot of hearts back in
his home state with his career
day. In addition to making
four catches for !57 yards, he
also led the Bobcats in rushing with 52 yards on five end.. around plays ..
"He's a good player." Pruett
said. "He got away and I wish
he hadn't."
Knorr said his players are
still wired about the big victo: ry in Lexington. but that they
: haven ' t- lost sight of the
: imposing figures of the
Thundering Herd.

division following a round of Orlando.
The official Web site of the
!!-under-par 61.
. PGA Professional Robert Buick
.
Scramble,
Kincaid and amateurs Rick www.buickscramble.com,
Van Gandy, Tom Meadows, provides up-to-date informaBob Marchi ·and Tim tion and results on the particiSnedaker make up the pating teams throughout tourCll!Jside squad.
nament week.
Forest Lake Country Club · Golfers participating in the
of Bloomfield Hills. Mich. national
championships ·
and Faribault G&amp;CC of began their journey earlier
Faribault, Minn. stand tied for this summer by winning one
the lead at 15-under-par 57 in of more than 1500 local
the Gross division.
championship tournaments
The 72-hole tournament, offered nationwide, followed
taking place Oct. 7-10, is tak- by taking the same honor at
ing place on six Orlando area the one of I04 sectional
go lf courses,
including championships with the addiOr'!!J&amp;.e County National's tion of their respective PGA
Panther Lake and Crooked Professional. •
Cat Courses; Walt Disney
The Buick Scramble is now
World's :vlagnolia and Palm in its 21st season as the
Courses; Celebration Golf world's largest amateur golf
Club and the Ritz-Carlton tournament, and third year
Golf Club at Grande Lakes under the Buick banner.
"We had gone in (to the
Kentucky game) with the
approach that regardless of
what happened at Kentucky
we were stepping out of conterence and the next week we
were stepping right in with the
heavyweights," Knorr said.
"Certainly our kids are excited. They're buzzing about
being able to go down and
beat Kentucky. I think they're
grounded in that they realize
the tough task ahead.''
In other games around the
MAC on Saturday. Bowling
Central
Green
visits
Michigan, Kent State is at
Miami
(Ohio).
Eastern
Michigan at Ball State,
Buffalo at Akron, Northern
Illinois at Central Florida and
Tol,edo at Western Michigan.

Suggs
from Page B1
out. It's not my call."
Davis said it doesn't
matter who starts, and that
both backs will get their
share of work.
"It's going to be running
back by
committee."
Davis said fo llowing
Thursday 's workout. •· tt
doesn't
matter
who
starts."
As time goe&gt; on, egos
could be as big an obstacle
as any linebacker. But
Davis think s both his
backs have already adopted team-first attitudes.
"It shou ldn't be a problem if the No. I objective
'

.

Sanctioned by the PGA of
America, 214 teams ( I 09
gross, IOS net ) are competing
for national championship
honors and a purse of more
than $285,000 (cash for PGA
Professionals, gift certificates
for amateurs).
The Official Car of the
PGA of America and the PGA
Tour, Buick is title sponsor of
four PGA Tour events and
pre senting sponsor of the
PGA Club Professional
Championship. Buick has an
endorsement agreement with
Tiger Woods, who is the honorary chairman of the Buick
Scramble.
For complete
information on the 2004
Buick Scramble National
Championships, please visit
www.buickscramble.com, or
contact 1-800-582-1908.

is winning:· he said.
Suggs played with a protective collar I a~~ ~ week to
protect his neck, which
got wrenched during a
practice last month. He
came out of the gqme feeling fine but was sore on
Monday.
"Football - playing
so re ," he . said with a
smi le.
Suggs was pleased with
hi s performance last
week. which began with a
25 -yard run the first time
he touched the ball.
"There are so me things
I need to work on," he
said. "B ut there were
some good things. too.
You watch the film and
there are always things
that you can do better."

sports@mydailytribune .com

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
will host an autumn
·Athletic Recruiting Day.
Oct.
17.
Regi stration
begins at 1:30 p.m. in the
Lyne Center, located in the
Newt Oliver Arena, on the
campus of the University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College.
Prospective student-athletes will have the opportu nity to meet with coaches
from women's volleyball.
men's and women's cross
and
country,
men's
women's soccer, men's and
women's basketball. men's
and women's indoor and
outdoor track and field.
baseball, softball and
cheerleading.
Tryouts will also be conducted.
Parents and student-ath-

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·•

I

I

of chance\.
Marcus Giles fouled olh.a
squeeze bunt, then slruc~
out. Lidge 'ki pped a pitch
in the dirt to J.D. Drew, bui
Furcal he ,i tatcd in breaking
for home and was tagged
out when Chavez retrieved
the ball just outside the dirt
and threw to Lidge cmwmg.
The Braves tied it up in
the eighth with three hits otT
Lid ge, who was forlllnate to
escape with only one rttn
sconng. The Braves had a
runner thrown out at th e
plate for the second inning

.

'

BY JAY COHEN

Associated Press

COLUMBUS
New
Cleveland Cavaliers forward
Drew Gooden needed just a
. handful of practices this pre: season to impres&gt; teammate
· Jeff Mel nnis.
: "He's looking for that fresh
: start and he's good," Mcinnis
said. "He's athletic, got fresh
legs, dunking. He can shoot
the ball, he can defend. He can
. do a lot for us . We're just
:excited to get on the court
· with him ."
: The early revtews of
·Cleveland's key offseason
acquisition are nothing but
positive so far. and Gooden
can' t.hide hi s happine." abolll
:playing with superstar LeBron
: James and the Caval iers.
: " It's a great balance of vet· erans and young talent,"
· Gooden said after I he team
finished up the first of two
preseason practices Thursday
: at Capital University.
: The CaYaliers arc hoping
; that a stable situation will help
: the 23-year-old Gooden bios. sum into a consistent force in
the post. He was drafted by
the Memphis Grizzlies with
· the No. 4 pick in the 2002
: NBA Draft but the Cavaliers
: will be his third team in as
: manv seasons.
: The Grizzlies tried the ofoot-10 Gooden at small forward hefore trading him to
: Orlando in 2003. Playing at
: his natural power forward
•position , Gooden ·averaged
: ll .o points and 6.5 rebounds
: in 79 games last · season with
-the Magic .
Orlando cleaned house after
finishing. with the worst
. record in the NBA and

Gooden was traded to
Cleveland in Jul y.
c.This is my fitih coach."
Gooden said. ·'Not onl y have I
been getting swapped around.
my couches are gell ing
swapped around. Teanunate., .
I've played with a lot uf teammates. 1 haven't been on a
consistent team . since college."
Cleveland acquired Gooden
after Carlos Boozer siuned
. c
.a
six-year. $68 million deal
with the Utah Jaa The
Cavaliers. who said they
made Boozer a free agent only
after he told them he wanted
to stay in Cleveland. declined
to match the Jazz's offer.
Coach Paul Silas said after
the trade that he was confident
the team had fou nu a 'o Iid
rep!aceme nt· for 1300/.C r. \\ ho
averaged 15.5 points and 11.-l
rebounds. He said he l1a&gt;n·t
changed his mind after watching Gooden in practice .
c.He's learning the "''tcm
now but he has "thlcllc"m
and he's verv conridcnt.'' Silas
said. "He· ent hu ,ed ahout
being here and that'' h' tlf the
battle . I'm not expc,·tin ~ him
to set the world. on fire carl\
on but !think in time he has ·a
chance to be a rc&lt;~l l y t'•l11&lt;l
player."
Gooden shied awav from
predicth1g any numh.cr~ for
himself. but said he know' h ~
can do the job. Pla;ing fm
Silas also ha&gt; made hint more
confident. he said.
" I've never playeu fu&lt; ,
player\ coach before and t·
think it's a rel&lt;~ti o n,hip whC'i'e
you want to win:· Gooden
said. "You don't w"n t to let
your couch down bc·cau'e he
gives you the opportunity to
be comfortahle and b~ yomse lf.'.
'
. · ·

s

Bv R. B-

FALLSTROM

Assoc1ated Press

gone 7-tor-15 with two OUh manager Ton) La Ru"a
in each of the fir't two 'aid . ··But he "'" ' trug ~din g."'

!.!ame .....

ST. LOUIS _ The Lo' , "One of thhe thin g' thhat \
tmporwnt ts t at two-out ll'
Angcle' DoJgcr' "'"'died St.
Lou ;,· trio of MVI' c:~nlii - wil l u'ually win ball games ...
date,. It' , the hott&lt;Hn of tile Sande rs 'a id . ·'Thi s team
battle' and battl es and bat Cardinal' order that ~me 1
dd
· ·
· h
the m fih.
'
t c' an oe'n t gtve a pt~c .
· '1 .k
• 1 tl
cr a chance to be at ea,e.
1en1. 1ct1ga r
\l It
B dl
Sh
" 1 ·e "a
Rentepa and R,·e .::ie s,ll1tkr' · ( . I on . I rtjl cy. wawnh
.
.........
.
JrCL'Il anu
J) '-!O il
ert
comhtncd to ~o X-lor-I D
.
' .1 1··J\1.' ruJh homered lor. tl1c
Dod~er,.
' th 1..1\'C RIll .., anu
WI
.
......
.
who
lo'l
th~1r et£hth stratght
d
I
I
1
~core .
1~ p111~
at h.'
.
"
·
Cardinal' "in "itlwut th e l'1ai ull g.amc and rcmamed
.1 111.1' 111.
wtnlc"
tn the pmhe;"on
Ione: ba II Th ur...,uay
.
.
".
.
'"
'tncc hcmtng Oakland tn the
Alter tytng a P&lt;"t'c'"'ll t Jl)oo w .1' 1 S ·
L
··
homc' run' A ~~
"' l .1ene,.
o'·
· 1 ltve
tn a row.
I w111
recorc
.1
s
1
0
5
.
·
.
ng~
c'
urop1Jeu
to
at.
t.
Drew led ol'f with an
"..' NL
11l:&lt;
voll 'l'rte' olll'llL'r, 1. OUI\
'· I 11 ·1 ~ Vl!'l['
.
. ~
infield single, bu t was
ct~ht 'lne"k' . l\\0 dot1hlcs .. .. , .
' .d·· a bl e ta' k· 1·or
, " tnple
.
t ' a ·~.-ormt
thrown out attempting to
and
prmluced the u~. ub\
iou ... Jy." manager Jim
st eal. Chipper lone ' walked
same mtt com~ St. Loui-, in
Tra(\
'!tid.
"But I'm not
and Johnny Estrada si ngled I Ga111e ~- an .'-;-J 'i \..'tn n O\ er
gulng
t11
..,
j
t
here
and . . ay it
to right · be fore LaRoche
the Dodger,.
can't be done :·
doubled off the wall in left- 1
"The hi)! thrt•c I"'' bee n
Mathen\. the No. 8 hitter.
center.
the l' lttal"l fm u' "II vear.
With the go-a head run at I and tht·\ · re dt'llflllc' h . the ;, the fir;t Cardinals player
third, Andruw Jone' hit a 1
lD "et four RB!s in a di' i~i o n
re;hon '' c .Ill' '' hl'rl' we se t1e, game after hitting a
one-hopper' to thi rd ba,eare ... Sander, ,,ttd. ··1l ut thi&gt;
man Morgan Ensberg. who
i-. a l' lllk cti\~ d"fort It·..., pair oft\\U-run single~ in the
easily threw out pinch-runfifth and ,c ,·cn th. A .239
evcryh"dy...
ner Wilson Betemit at the
career h.itter. he·, 15-for-39
Follnwin ~
a . . v.eL·p at
plate . Thomas e nded th e
13u
,c
h
Siad
i&lt; tlll.
the UKS) during an !! -game
threat by striking out.
Cardin al . . hl'tid to Dod !:..'t'r pu-..h~a..,on hitting streak.
Oswalt. who led the NL in
Renteria. batting sixt h.
Stadium "ith a ~-0 ka ct' in
wins, gave ttp etght hit ' and
the he -., t-uf-fi , e . . .:ric . . . \Lttt "''" .1- for--l. His two-out. goa run in h 2-3 innin i!s.
ahead ,; ngle was th e key
:V1orrt ' will 1r1 to \\rap 11 up
Hampton pitche'd well
hlo" in the · fifth. Sander'
agtlin ... t .lo ... e l .i mn 111 (ic!llll' ~
a~ainst his fo rmer team.
was :l-for-3 and scored twice
on Saturda\ ni£ht.
gtving up just four hit' in 6
''Thc...,e ~U\ ~ diL'Il. t hL'rL' "hi le batt in~ seventh.
1-3 innings . But he gri The CardiT1als won de spite
bccau'c it·-, ;, riu~ c. " l. iJIT\'
maced in pain after a pitch
to Jose Vizcaino in the sc,·Walker 'aid. "Thev ·re tH;t a &gt;haky outi ng by 15-game
enth.
~
going to ju .'d roil o\ tr. winner Ja, on Marquis. making his fiN career postseaAfter throwing u coup le
T hey're go ing to hattie. ,tl
&gt;on start. He couldn ' t hold a
of warmup pitches with the
th ~tt\ what \\C.\C" t!O lt o do."·
:l1 scconu- inning lead .
train er
lookin':!
un,
Albert Pujol, , Scoll Ru lc11
:~llowin
g hom ers to Werth in
Hampton left the game
and Jim Edinond,. who each
the fir&gt;t and to Green and
because of tightne ss in hi s
had 100 RBh. wetT u cum· Bradley
on consecutive atleft forearm. The seriousbined 1-for-11 in Game 2.
bah
to
start
the fourth .
ness of the injury wasn't
Th e c·h"e&lt;t \he Cardinah
The homer by Bradley. the
immediately known. but he
came to a horne run \\a:-.
Dodger'
troubled right
wnsn't ex pected to pitch
Tony Womack·, triple ollthc
again in the .series.
ftelder who had a run-in with
ha sc of the wall in tht' 'ec- a Lo, Angeles reporter on
Notes: The onlv time the
ond
and a dri\'e to the wall in
division
Braves 'tarted
left -center bv winning pi tch - the off-day Wednesday. was
series 0-2 wa' 2000, when
a drive. estimated at 46 1
er Dan Haren in the pinJtal
they were swe pt by St.
feet.
that ricocheted off the
three- run fifth that rtl( the
Louis ... . Smoltz qruck out
right- field 'Coreboard.
Cardinals ahead 6-J.
in his only two at-bats of
tvlar4uis lasted only 3 1-3
"That':-. all J"\·c ~nt:·
the regular 'eason .... Fortyinnings - his shortest outHaren &gt;aid. ·T II 'cttlc for in g ut' the year six-year-nld Julio Franco is
and
th e \\;in ...
the second-oldest player 10
allowed
three
homers
for
the
ln~t~ad . .._~, · .:n o f tht: ci~ht
reach the posheason. Jack
~econLI lime this 'eason.
St. l .oui . . run ........ ~orl·d \\. .ith
Quinn wa' -+7 when he
two ouh :~&lt; th~ Cardinah Both ~:ame against the
pitched fm the Phi ladelphia
DoLigers.
chased Jdf Weaver in the
Athletics in the 1930 World
"He\ been outstanding,"
ftfth. The Cardinuls have
Series.

happy
to be with Cavs

, October 29, 2004 OR October 30, 2004 ·beginning at 6:30p.m.

----------~

Associated Press

~Gooden

al'\d a ~le\'er wht&gt;-dv.l'll'lit that will keep ~l&gt;u 9uessi1'19 ul'l ti! the end!

tAddress:

The Braves outbit the
Astros
14-4,
holding
Houston without a hit for
ATLANT
the final 5 1-3 innings .
A- With plen- Furcal had three hits and
ty of incentive, Rafael drove in three runs.
Furcal made sure the
Atlanta Braves ' season lasts
Realizing the importance
at least two more games.
of the game, Atlanta kept
Set to report to jail once closer John Smoltz on the
the postseason ends. Furcal mound l'or three innings, his
hit a two-out, two-run longest
stint
since
homer in the lith inning September
200 I.
The
that sent the Braves over the Braves also let Smaltz bat
Ho~ ston
Astros
4 _2 in the bottom of the ninth ,
Thursday and tied their NL and he responded with his
Ia off set' .
ftrst htt smc~ 1999.
P. Y
tes at one game • Houston brought in closer
· the sevent h.
each.
With ' H · t
th Bra d L'd
1 ge tn
ver
ous on °.n . · e He went 2 2-3 innings ge of a commandtng his longest outing of the
lead, Atlanta ralited from a season _ but couldn't hold
late two-r~n deftctt to force a 2 _1 lead giving up Adam
extra mnmgs. Both t~ams LaRoche&lt; RBI double in
went
to
extraordtnary the eighth.
,
means- the Astros lookmg
Antonio Alfonseca. the
to go two-up 111 the best-of- last of four Atlanta pitchers.
ft~\! senes, the Braves real- got the win with a perfeci
tzmg they needed a split lith
before heading to Minute
The Braves played the
· Matd Park, wh~re Houston game under protest, con: has won 18 straight ga~es. . tending that Houston man: Braves . rookte ,Charles ager Phil Garner feigned a
: Tholl!as stngled ~tth one problem with the phone line
, out Ill the lith off Dan to the Astros bullpen to give
M~ceh. and stole second. Eli Lidge more time to warm
: Marrero popped out to the up in the seventh.
• catcher, but Furcal.golfed a
No need for a ruling now.
: I-2 pttch deep mto the
Hou ston's Jeff Bagwell
: nght-f1el~ seats, tltpptng homered in the first, his sec. hts bat Ill the atr about ond extra-base hit 'i n as
: halfway down to celebrate many day s. Before this
hts ftrst postse~son homer. year, he had gone 46 at-bats
Furcal was Ill court JUSt 111 the postseason without
. hours before Game 1. where anything better than a sin: he .-:v.as sentenced to 21 days gle.
: 111 Jatl and 28 days tn a treatStill, Bagwell's homer
:ment cente~. for . vwlattng was not nearly as surprising
_probatton ~~~h hts second as the one hit bv Raul
, drunken-dnvtng .arrest tn Chavez. Normally
the
. Astros' backup catcher. he
four years.
The s~ntence do,esn 1 started this one and led off
: begm unttl the Braves sea- the third with a drive into
: son ftmshe~ . Furcal.ensured the left-field seats off Mike
• that tt w~n t be endtng wuh Hampton .
Chavez has only two
: Saturdays Game 3.
The Astros routed the career homers, the last comBraves 9-3 111 Game I and ing on April 15, 200.'\.
. were ahead 2-0 gotng to the
The Astros ' offense disap: seventh with 20-game wm- peared after th at. Trying to
: ner Roy Oswalt on the hang on, Garner summoned
: mound.
.
Lidge in the seven th after
: But . NL East .c~amp~on Furcal's run-scoring single.
- Atlanta !ought back. manFurcal immediately stole
agtng to overcome some second and went on to third
Chavez's
thruw
shaky baserunnmg - two when
were ·thrown out at the plate bounced into center field
. - and plenty of _other wast- for an error. Ninety feet
- ed chances before Furcal away from tyinn it up the
:came through.
Brave s sq uande~d· a c~uple
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Pro Basketball

Don Tate Motors

fv1 urder At Mt&gt;ut~t Vertlt&gt;t\ farm Reser't3t~&lt;&gt;t\S ,

Braves tie series with 4-2 win Cardinals take 2-0 series lead
over Houston in 11 innings
with 8-3 victory over Dodgers

I

Ht&gt;rsedr.~wl'\ ~arria9e rides, pre-l'I'~Ster~ tt&gt;ur , catered ~«&gt;trest~!e dil'll'\er

I

MLB Playoffs - National League

letes wi II take a tour of the
campus and information
admission~.
concerning
financial aid. housing and
eligibility will be available.
Rio Grande held its' first
recruiting: day last spring .
which was a rousing success. The university will
continue to host recru·iting
days in both the fall and
the spring.
For more information
contact
Ken
French.
Athletic Recruiter, at (7401
245-7294 or the office of
admissions at 1-800-2827201.

STAFf REPORT

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www .mydailysentinel.com

a

Five relie,cr ' kepi the
Dodgers oil the 'corcboard
the re't nf the "av. Haren.
who worked t" " ·,core lc"
inning&gt;. ;, projected tube in
the rotatton next ) car with
both Morri' and Game I
'tarter Wood ) \\ ill tatm e li gible for frrl' a~l'nl·y .
The Dodge r' hc't chance
to bre;:\ k the garne open came

in th e fourth alter Cal Eldred
walkeu Ce ,ar ln uri' anu
Werth ~ ith two (JUt\ t" load
the bases and then "ent to a
3-0 counl aeain'l Steve
Finlev belore r~llrine him on
a tly out !&lt;J center. '
Wea,·er mad e hi- first
career po-...hl';p.,on ...,tl.Jrt and
endured hi' 'ecnnu straiu ~
shaky JlO"t...,e:!-.nn n uti~g.
giving up ...,ix ruth on eig ht
hit.... in --+ 2-3 inning . . . La...,t
year. he v.a' wit ll th e
Yankee' ;llld 'urre ndered a
12th -lnning. ~ame-wi nning
homer to Alex (i on!alez of
the Marlin &gt; in the pivotal
Game -l of the Wurl d Series.
We a\ er wnrkcu around
two walk, in the fif\t when
he 'truck out Eumond' for
the final Dut. He had another
1haky inning in the 'econd
and the Cardinal, capita lized . with the fir1t run "oring on Weaver'' wild pickoff
throw to first.
With two out,. Ton1
Womack hit an RBI triple oi'r
the right-fiel&lt;.l " 'dl and Lam
Walker followed with a run
scoring duuhle JU&lt;I in,t&lt;.l'
the fir'i-ba,e lin e for a 3 I
lead .
Notes: The · Dodgers hit
consecutive homer' fo r the
first time ,ince Pedro
Guerrero and Stc\ e Yeager
connected in the 1'181 World
Series again;t the Yankee s.
... Marquis w;h 1-J " ·ith a
5J-+ ERA in hi&gt; la't li\e regular -~e ason ~tart~ . .. The
Cardinals·
bullpen
has
allowed one run in 8 2-J
innin::l~ in the fir~t lU.·O
games of th e 'erie, .... The
Cardinals are H-1 :11 home in
division serie, pia\ . and cdl
three previou' 2-0 start'
have ended in sweeps.

-Local Car Dealer Stuns Community
And blows away the compet!tion

'

''WE'RE SELLING CARS FOR $99.00"
Area Shoppers Express Disbelief but Local Dealer Remains
Optimistic as Saturday. October 9th 'Sole Dote Ap~rooches
,.-

Norris 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.

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

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

couldn't get any better for the
serious buyer."

. be a tremendous selection of
vehicles on hand.

Mr. Peifer reminds prospective
buyers to act quickly if they want
to take advantage of these
incredible savings. "/ can 't stress

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 p rices
fo r·
t h is
come off and it 's
unprecedented
than a good deal - they want a great deal! back to business
sale: "We
are
"W'th
1
cars as }ow as $99 .00 1"t d oesn 't ge t any as usual. lt~s
overstocked with
also first come,
trade-ins, off-lease,
better for the serious car buyer."
first serve, so it's
and programmed
critica l to come
vehicles so we are
early to get_ the
making availab le our e ntire
registration beginning today. On
vehicle of your choice .
Saturday. October 9th reg istration
inventory of over 250 cars, trucks,
vans. and spprt utility vehicl es. It's
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 redu cing inventory.
"During th.~ sales event, we will
given a person alized pa ss
Mr. Peifer explains : "We are
offer unbeli\ro'abl e values on our
allowing them to inspect the
always looking for ways to g1ve
used inventory and some ve hicles
vehicles that interest them At
back to the comm unm that has
will sell for as low as $99 001
11 :30 AM th e slash ing begi ns.
given so much to &lt;.S.. f hey felt
Expect reta il pric es to be slashed
The Slasher w ill t hen begin
that giving t he tr frt~n ds an d
by $3,000 up to 58,00 0 if not
slashing posted pr ices on the
neighbors in the area d chan ce t6
more:'
•
vehicles . Who ever is sittmg
save on thes e vehtcles wa s far
Mr. Peifer also p o ints ou t that
beh ind the whe·el of' the vehicle
more desira ble thdn taki ng th em
these prices w ill be "As lo w or
when the price is slashed will be
to auction. al'ld selling them to
lower than veh icles sold at
given the first opp or tunity to
total strangers.
auctions in many case s . The
purchase the vehicle at that price .
Those wish ing to beat the rush
problem with auctions is that the
"We believe thdt people will not
should
get
p re- registered
bidding often leads · to inflated } only enjoy getting a grea t deal
beginning- today· at Norris No rth up
prices theretiy e liminating
but they will also have fun doing
Dodge 252 Upper R1ver Rd .·
savings:·
During the super
it." Says Mr. Peifer. Loca l ban k Gallipolis, OH . 45631 .
Slasher Sole, every vehicle will
representatives ur business
For ·further · inf or mati on on this
be on sale. Sal es are on a first
tr. Jna~ers will be on ha n d to
amazing sal es event' 01 to get
come, first serve bas 1s and there
J rrange low cost fmanc111g o n the
pre· approved today. please call
will be no bidding thus affordi ng
spot . "Most of a ll we've got over
(740) 446-0842 or (BOO) 446 two million dollars worth of
buyers the prefect opportunity to
0842. (Bad Credit no problem. )
purchase a quality Pre-owned at
inventory-that's over 250 cars,

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

2004

For a change, it is· Buckeyes
defense that faces questions
BY RUSTY MILlER

Associated Press

. COLUMBUS - The prevallmg op1mon had been that
even though Ohio State's inexpenenced offense might not be
,tll that dependable. the
Buckeyes could always rely on
their sturdy defense.
But on a cool evenmg m
Evanston, IlL, of all places,
Northwestern showed that years," said linebacker Bobby
maybe that wasn' t the case Carpenter. "We· re expected to
' ~ wm games and to come out and
after all
"Their offense just took con- kind of fall apart like we did
trol of our defense," said Ohio was unacceptable."
Northwestern scored the
State w1de receiVer Santoruo game-winner
on a four-play
Holmes, shakmg his head m
burst
that
revolved
around
dtsbelief. "They came out and
played harder than we did. I quarterback Brett Basanez's
JUSt thmk they wanted It more." 21-yard keeper that set up
With No 15 \\ltsconsm tak- Noah Herron's chnchmg 1mg on 18th-ranked Ohm State yard TD run.
But the Wildcats earned all of
on Saturday, for the first tune m
years many are doubtmg the their early points by beating the
Buckeyes up front They took a
Buckeyes' defense .
3-0
lead after an 11-play drive,
The Wildcats had little diffithen
went up I0-3 on Herron's
culty slicmg and d1cmg a previ14-yard
sconng catch from
ously Impenetrable unit, totaling 444 yards and contmually Basanez that capped a I 0-play.
conung up with the precise 52-yard drive.
Ahead 13-10 at the half, they
play needed to keep the cham
took
the second-half kickoff
gang busy
They cmn erted 12 of 20 and went 78 yards m 10 plays
third-down SituatiOns to amass with Basanez findmg Oh10
24 t!TSt downs. Even more native Mark Phtlmore on a 27 ·
dauntmg for Oh10 State's fans yard pass for the touchdown.
was that Northwestern didn't Then they butlt a 27-17 lead
need tnck plays or long bombs early m the fourth quarter with
but beat the Buckeyes with a an 80-yard march that Herron
steady dmmbeat ot double-fig- finished with a !-yard plunge.
Ohto State has faced spread
ure gams
offenses
stmilar
to
Days later, the Buckeyes "Northwestern's this season and
remained m shock
··we've kind of been 3 staple m the recent past Usually the
around here the last couple of defense has controlled the hne

and the game's tempo.
Opposing offenses have completed short passes here and
there but were unable to stnng
together long dnves. Until
Saturday mght. that is
"Our tackling skills have
gone down over th1s past year."
said defenstve lineman Quinn
Pitcock "Third down was a big
factor. We need to get off the
field more and get a break and
talk about plays It's a big problem for us"
Coach J1m Tressel declmed
to pomt the finger at h1s defense
for the loss. After acceptmg
part of the responstbthty "We dtd not have that preparatiOn to play the best we were
capable of playmg," he satd he credtted Northwestern's
offense for pulling off the big
upset
"I don't thmk we were temble," he said of h1s defense.
"They (the Wildcats) did an
excellent job withm the conststency and the discipline of what
they do"
Linebacker A.J Hawk, who
led the Buckeyes wtth 14 tackles, said the loss, and how it
came about, left the defense
numb as tt lett the field.
"We're fine now." he said.
"That's the thing about football. you've got to have a short
memory. The game ·s over.
We've got a great team commg
m here (m Wt sconsm). You
hate to lose and 1t' s bad tor the
whole program, but you try to
take a positIve out of It We had
a great pracuce today.
" It's almost like a new season
out here.'l

OSU fan 'Neutron Man' dies
ture at Ohio State home football games. Dressed in a scarlet football Jersey with the
name "Neutron Man" across
the back, Kmg would take hts
cue from the opening notes ot
the marching band's versiOn
of " Neutron Dance," by the
Pointer Ststers.
King loved the notoriety his
dance moves generated. said
Ron Zeller, general manager

of the End Zone, a restaurant
Kmg owned m Newark.
'·He relished tt." Zeller said.
Funeral arrange ments were
pendmg. smd the manager ol
a Ponderosa Steakhouse that
Kmg ov.ned in Columbus
" He was a big. b1g tan. He
did everything he could for
them," satd manager Dave
DeLong. who satd spoke with
Kin g's wife on Thursday

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rebate;;o~ti"ii'iipoini'ii'biilieifoii'l''iipiioig'ii"iphi'icoiili"'i'oii'ii'••••

Public Notice
Nollco To Bidders
Meigs
Local
School District to
accepting bids to parform aabeatoa heurd
abatement and rotated work at Salisbury
Elementary School.
Sealed bldo will be
received In the Office
of the Treasurer, 320
Eaot Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
until 3:00 p.m. (local
time) on October 21 ,
2004, and read publlca ly and recorded
lmmd1ately thereafter
Any btds received

Public Notice
Director
Meigs County Office
of
Economic
Development
Tho Meigs County
In
Commlaalonera
conjuncllon
with
Meigs
County
Community
Improvement
Corporation,
are
aeektng a director or
economic develop·

:~~~~a M:g~~~~~~~n~i
24,000 Ia 1 progreootvo community thai
hao juet comptlled
$150 million In new
highway
projecte,
enjoyo new school
focllltlll throughout
the
county
and
recently developed
en Jnduolrlal park
with a 31,600 oquore
foot
opaculatlve
building. We are ooektng a condldate to
lead our employment
and tax baoe growth
Into the future.
The
succasaful
candidate will be
rHponelble for man·
aging
economic
development ecllvltltt In Melgo County.
Appllcento
should
have a collage degrH
end/or five yearo of
profeaalonal experl·
ence In economic
development, merketlng, government, or
real estate develop·
mont Strong written
and verbal akllla,
excellent
people
oklllo and a proven
record in business
development
are

essential. A varied
background In government , business,
real estate and marketing along with a
familiarity of Ohio
development
programs and policies
would be Ideal The
candidate must be a
team player, ener·
getlc, well organized,
willing to work non·
traditional hours, willIng to travel as need·
ed and capable of
working Independent·
ly.
The position offers
an excellent salary
and benefits package
and will be a public
employee .
Meigs
County Ia an equal
opportunity employ·
er.
Resumes and three
reference ahoutd be
forwarded to:
EDD
238 Well Main Stroot
Pomeroy, OH 45789
or forwarded elec·
Ironically to:
dlrectorGmolgacountyohla.com. Deadline
for
reaumao
to
October 15, 2004.
1016,8,12
Public Notice
ADDENDUM
TO ITEM N0.8
PUBLIC NOTICE
SOUTHERN
OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE NO.
3 - S~ LEM SHAFT
PERMIT D-0483
Southern
Ohio
Coat Company hu
eubmltted an application to revise coal
mining Permit fA·
0463-55 to the Ohio
Department
of
Natural Reeources,
Dlvteton of Mineral
Resources
Management
This
permit Is located In
Meigs County, Salem
Townahlp, Section 32
The
permit
area
encompasses twentythree (23) acrea and
Ia located on the
Wilkesville 7 5 minute
U.S.G.S. quadrangle

map, approximately 2
miles southeast of
Wilkesville, Ohio on
the
property
of
Franklin Real Estate
Company.
The
application
proposes to make a
post-mining land use
change to provide for
the permanent retention of an off1ce/balh·
house
bu1tdmg,
potable water sys·
tems includtng a
water storage tank,
paved and ston~d
access roads, and
parking areas. The
twenty-three (23) acre
area associated with
the revision had a
premlnlng land use of
"pastureland",
but
witt now be changed
to allow for post·mlnlng land use as a
"commercial site".
The application Ia
an file for public viewIng at Melgo County
Recorder's
Office,
Meigs
County
Courthouee, 1oo E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
and shall remain ao
for at la01t lhlrly (30)
days following the
teat dl1e of publication of this notice
Written comments or
requeeta for an Informal conference may
be flied with the
Dlvteton of Mineral
Resources
Management, 1855
Fountain
Square
Court ,
Columbus,
Ohio 43244, within
thirty (30) days after
tho taet dale of publl·
cation of this nollce
(10) 8, 15, 22, 29 4TC

Help Wanted

In Memory

.Job Posting
SEPTA Correclional Facility
7 West 29 Drhc
Nelson viii~, Ohio 45764

t•oohllo: No.&gt;fl-..:o.:s in N..,....,,..._._.P"""""
Your Right tu K.-.o_., l.&gt;elivercd RIJ{hl to v ..u r lllucor.

ders Is particularly
called to requirements as to: conditions of employment
to be observed, bid
security and contract
security as described
in
Bidding
Documents.
By Order of Board of
Education of Meigs
Local School District
Mark E. Rhonemus,
Treasurer
10/8,12

Help Wanted

or Fax To (740) 446·3008

u" " .!oit.•placbc."f.or~ A c.:mnplelt' JOb dcM rtj)llnn 1s a' .ul.1hlc fur rt'' ll"" ·
I he deadline lor applu.:al1un lor thb IJIJ~ I1m: I!! ~nd.n Olloht•r 12. 211n-t

Po ... itlon : Priman

Cuunselor
\\urk Schedult': Tuesda\ throu~h Saturda\ • 2'\J.m. to 10 p 111 .
Houri)' salar~. $ 12 .93 an hour
\Jimmum Quahfica110m. IJ,1cheJor \ dt~rt'l Ill "ioc.:ial nurk, pS)l hoJu~~.or
dus~ l~ related field. At least one \'C,Ir ul suncs~ lul \\Ork t:t.pl' riem'' 111 ment,tl
health, subsl:mce uhust', cornrlwns, a nlatcd field \\ilhln I he past fi ,c ,t.lrs.
Licensure in good sta ndin~, trom the Ohw (ounse lor and Soual \\orku
Board, Oh10 Department of Alcohol and Uru~: \dtht lion Sen it:cs, or n-l.tlt•d
credentialing board preferred. l\1ust lm\ l' a 'al1d Ohio drht•r"s lke n~e and a
~ood drhln~ n~rord .

Spedai11..ed Skills and Kno"ledge: Ha s " orkm~ kmmlcd~l: and expc riem c
with individual and gnmp wunselmg, and cast' ruana~t· mt•nl of correctional
populatums includin~ kno"ledge of rele' ani corrct·t•onal counseling lhl'o·
ries. assessment tools, spec1fic le,el s or correc.:tional SUJWn is1on rl'fcrral
s ~ s tem s. and service delivery model s of such.

SEPTA Correctional f ac1l1t~' IS a Drug·Frt.&gt;e \\ orkplace and
an Equal Opportunit) Emplo)er.
Postmg date Seplt&gt;mher 21 , 2004

Get A Jump

In Memory

In Memory

on

SAVINGS
,

~ml

811 1 hj1eld
2/28!25 · /ON/2000
!/ lean r rmfd h111ld a

\Ia Ill~(/\ WICJ
lflt'II!Ortt'\ ({ /(1/!f!

J"d walk rtJt,hf UJt lrJ
H t'm 1~11 and hrmK
\011

ANNOUN&lt;l'.MENTS

I

GUUI'OLtS

Losl·

black

-----

r

G1ve away 3 female kittens
1 female cat 1 male ~11ten
(740)992 1510

~

Y•RDSAI FGAU.IPOI.L~

Kmg
S1ze
Sealy Box
Supporl Waterbed Matt ress
102 Oebb1e Dr Gall1pol1s
wtneater (304)937 3263
Oh 10 Fnday Oct 13 &amp;
Toy Amer1can Esk1mo Toy Saturday Oct 9 Hours 9am
Amer1can
Esk1mo
m1x 5pm
St'letlanC!JCorg1 m1x mov1ng
they need a good home 2012 Jackson P1ke Name
brand clothes computer
(740)992 2423
cha1r household 1tems Fn &amp;
(_o,-r ANJ)
Sal 8-?

FOlJNil

home II ,IICl/11

Lm e, Motif!

c~:s~ffleds! jSHOP CLASSIFIEDSj

From the
family or

Morgan
Taylor
Minshall
March 5, 2004August 3, 2004
We "ould like to
thank even one
for their prayers,
sympathy and
support. Morgan
"as a beautiful
gifl from God.
Though her life
with us "as short,
she touched man)
lives. We take
comfort in know·
ing lhat she is
home with Jesus
and that we will
be with her again.
So many people
sent cards,
brought food,
gave donations,
sent nowers, telephone calls, visil·
lng our family.
said a prayer. All
lhe lo&gt;e and support during our
loss Is greatly
appreciated and
noted, not just by
the family but by
our Heavenly
Falher as well.
Thank you all so
verv much.
lisa 'Minshall
and family.

Dally In·Column : 1 : 00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Ne~et Day' s P•per
Sunday In-Column : 1 : 00 p.m .
For Sundays Paper

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publlc;iltlon
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays

POL.ICIES. Ohio Valley Publlthlng ren~n the right to edit. reject, or cancel any ad 111 any time Errora muet be reporled on the flrat day or publication and the
Tribun ..Sentifiiii·Aegtater will be- r. .ponaibla for no more than the coal of the apace occupied by lhe error and only lhe ftrlt maertton We shall nol be liable r~
any losa or e•penae that results from the publleatlan or omtuton of 11n &amp;dverttsemenl Correction Wi ll be made tn lhe f1ntavatlabla edition • BoJ nvmber eda
are always confidential • Current rate card applies • All real eslate advertisements are
to the Federa l Fa1r Hous1ng Act ol 1968 • This
accepta only help wanted ads mMting EOE standards We ~ 1 11 nol knowmgly accept any
in v1olatton of the lal\'

lwright@lc

170

H1gh
School
Jun1ors
Sen1ors and Pr10r Serv1ce
you can f1ll vacant pos1!10ns
IIi the Wesl V rg1n1a Army
Nat1ona l Guard II you are
between the ages of 17 35
or have pnor military serv
1ce you won 1 want to pass
th1s up For Opponun1t1eS 1n
your area call
304 675
5837

Seeking 39 People

Locally

Georges Po rtable Sawmrll
don t haul your logs to the
m111 JUS! call304 675 1957

Large,. yarD sale 559 Jay Dr
8 1c~ctes lots of good stuff
Thursday &amp; Fnday

© 2004 by NEA, Inc

www.comlc&amp;.com

.::._:::_::::_&gt;..::_.:_:::::_&gt;_ __

Yard sale Sat 9 30·3 1718
Kemper
Hollow
Ad
Gallipolis
Baby strollj:r &amp;
sw1ng lots of clothes tor
k1ds s &amp; toys m1sc 1tems
Women s clothes
Yard Sale Thursday-Fnday
Sl At 850 81dwell

1074

YARil SA! 1:-

Po\II'KOY/MIDDLf.

110

Hu.r WAN"IlCD

Oct 6 7 8 Umon Avenue
close lo Route 7 New cloth
mg teens clothes baby
N1ke Tommy clothes Adult
M1sc CoHee and end tables

Codmg
Professional
Needed Fuli·t1me 2 year
degree 1n Med1cal Records
Required Know ledge of
ICD·9-CM Cod1ng and ORG
assignment e)(penence preOctober
7
8
&amp; 9 !erred Excellent 8enel1ts
Crossroads 124 and Ball~ Package
Fle111ble
Run Road 1st house on left Schedulmg Send resume
October 8 &amp; 9 College Road IO Camden-C lark Memor~al
&amp; S1xth Streel 1n Syracuse Hosp1tal
Human
Clothes odds &amp; ends toys, Resources PO Box 71 8
baby clothes decorat1ons
Parkersburg. WV 26102 Fax
(304) 424-2825 or apply or'l
Route 143 October 8-9 Lots 11ne at WYM comh org
of stuff Come and see
9AM 5PM
Independent earner needed
lor delivery of Harold
Sat Oct 9 9·3 Dave o 1spatch m Gallipolis area
Spencers 605 Mam St
Est prol1! $1 200 monlh
Rac1ne adult clothes teen Call Andy Mart 1n 1·800 888
w1nter clothes teen leather 28 34
Jacket household 1tems.
Lookmg for expenenced
J076
YAND SAJ.I.HVAC
helpecs
Call
Pr.I'I.EASAN"r
(740) 441 1236

=::..:.:._______

Ru mmage Sale

Scared

Hear t

Manager needed for mob1!e

CatholiC hOme park 1n Shade send

110

HH l'W"llll

FULL TIME POSITION
IN GALLIPOLIS
$8 00 PEA HOUA
MUST BE 18 YEARS OR
OLDER HAVE OWN CAR
VOL AND A CLEAN
CRIMINAL RECORD
EXPERIENCE IN
SECURITY OR LAW
ENFORC EMENT
PREFERR ED
WE PROVIDf..
FRE E UNIFORMS
PAID TRAINING
ADVANCEMENTS
PAID VACATIONS HEALTH
BENEFITS
OFFERED
INCENTIVE PROGRAMS
PLEASE CALL
MON-FRI
9AM·3PM
1 BOO 869 8975
CONTINENTAL SECRET
SERVICE BUREAU INC
EOE

S1dehlll
Road,
A
S
Rut land ,
Bini hme
October 9th &amp; 1Oth 9AM •
4PM Freezer gnU organ oil

Church Hall 2222 Jackson resume to Country Park
Avenue Thurs Fn Sat · Oct Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh Staff Development Nurse
43 138
7th·8th·91h . 9 00 till ?
Overbrook Reha tJ
LPN
Center IS look1ng tor a sel l
AUCTION o\l&gt;o'IJ
Need mght shift donut mot1vated team player w1th a
Fi.EA MAKiiliT
maker to r local bakery Exp h1gh energy le~Jel to JOin our
pre! not nee Br~ng resume managemen l 1eam Must
RIVERSIDE
AUCTION to 454 2nd Ave
enjoy workmg w1th people
BARN Rt 7 South, 5 miles
rra1mng and developu1g stafl
be low the Dam EVE RY Nursmg Assistant Classes responding
QUICkly
10
SATURDAY
@
6pm begmnmg October 4 20 statf1ng needs monltonng
740)256·6989
2004 thru October 20, 2004 employee
performance
II you en JOY elderly people 1nserv1C1ng and counselmg
and want to become a mem employee Must possess
ber of our health care team Excellent communlcat1on
please stop by Rockspr1ngs and Interpers onal Sk illS
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Reha01hta uon Center al Presentat1on s~1!1s and the
Silver and Gold Cams
36759 Aocksprmgs Road ab1llty 10 work under pres
Prootsets Gold R1ncs U S
Pome roy Oh iO 45769 and 1111 sure Demonstrated plan
Currency · M T S Coin Shop,
out an apphcatiO ii tor the nlflQ and orQan 1zat1onal
151
Second
Avenue
cl asses
skills Crrtlcal lhmkmg and
Gallipo lis 740 446 2842
Extendlcare
Health problem SOIIJ ing skills The
Wanted to buy Santy a or Service&amp;, Inc 15 an equal ability to follow through on
trade tor TV (304 )675·5354 opportunity employer that g1ven tasks Tra1n the Trainer
en courages
workplace and Human Ra source!Staft
I \11'111\\11 \ I
diversity MIF ON
Developme nt
expenence
'I In II I 'prefe rred but .not reQu ired
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT s Please send resume w•th
t
HELP WANTED
needed App ly at 1354 cover Ietter to 0 verb rook
Jackson F&gt; 1Ke Ga llipoliS
Rehab Center, c/o Michelle
Gilmore AN DON 333
An E~~;cellent way to earn
POSTAL JOBS
Page St Middleport Oh10
45760 EOE
mona~ The New Avon
Sl~ 62·S20 92/hr Now h1r·
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
lng For apphcallons &amp; free Tudors BISCUII World now

lamps canning jars dishes
coo~ware lOis ot good mise

AVON I All Areas I To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304·

Yard Sale 520 Ball Run Rd
of t Sk1dmo1e D1shes loo ls
mens dress sh1rts (med 1
lots ot m1sc
Yard Sale Clothes golf
clubs golt balls teweiry
kerosene heater, toy s. play
house walkers play pen
m1sc Frr-Sat 322 St AI 7
Gallipolis.
across
from
Elhotts Appliance
Yard Sale Fn &amp; Sat 125
Portsmouth Road GallipoliS,
OhiO
Yard sale Help a family New
serge1 rockers leather J~ts
collectibles
many
n1ce
th1ngs Sat Oct 8 9 5 Rt 7
S &amp; Lovers Lane
Yard Sale Oc l 8·9 9 5pm 2
family No ear ly sales 3356
Georges Creek

YARDSAI.E·

PoMEROY/MnJDLE
32984

W,\NTEI&gt;
mBUY

I

10

government JOb Info call
American Assoc ot Labor
1·913·599 8042 24 hrs

W1ll do housecleamng B1g
or Small JObs Call P40)446·
1310

10

BtiSI;o..!l:..~"'\

OI,'ORTh'Nm ·
BUS INESS OPPORTUNITY
Start a Second mcome Very
l1tt1e out ot pocket cosl Free
COMPU TER
1··888·279
8322
EXT
77492
WWW Ra1ntree MoneyWays
com

"'

You owe 11 to yoursei1 1 Cut
your taxes 1n hall me)(pe n·
S111e Tax Sav1ng mformatmn
1·888·277-4912 Exl 7749 2
V..WW Ra1ntree TaxWayz co
m
'l

lw--~-NS-1

D1str lct IS seek1ng qua li ty
RliU
ii'Cil:111i(lilN-.,J
applicants to serve as 1
1
coaches or the oiiowmg Galllpolte Carter College
w 1mer sports pos1fl0ns Boys
(Caree rs Close To Home)
Jun 1or Varsity Bas~etOall
Coach Boys Junior High Call T~-~~-~~~~~:~;4367
Basketba ll Coach (2 ) Grrls

PR4 Ul!'t."iiO~AI

Sl R\ let:'
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wm 1
1 888 ·582-3345

HI \I I ' I \II
r10

3 bedroom 2 baths eat-1n Rental

1n Pomt Pleasar;t
$400•montt&gt; (304)675 5540
or 1304 !675 4024 ask tor
Nancy Homestead R~aity
B1oker
- - -- - - - - Why pay renfl 3 bedroom 1
rem odeled home
bath
Mason WV S35 000 00 No
3BA 2BA 5 129 acres calls
after
9 OOPM
Green ToY~ nsh1p close to 1740)698 7002
schocl PriCed to se ll More
1nfo (740)4.16 7377
~2o \ lo~ll.l' HO\

k11chen concrete paho and
front po rch 5.,. acres car
port shed barn on county
black topped road Exlla
mob1le home lot Beautifu lly
landscaped
585 000
(7 40)245-51 57

11:'

A Attordab le 2 Bedroom
Home
Everyth1ng new
Possible no Money down to i 4lt70 87 Clayton 3 bed·
1
qual1tymg Buyers 1304 )674 room 2 bath C A new car
pet
ceram1c
111e
l'.asher &amp;
5111
drye r, S10 000 (740 )445
4233
Art""' I tO,''I!
GET YOUA LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME
"FREE' APPROVED
HOME LOANSI
NEW PURCHASES1
REFINANCES
$0 DOWNt SO DOWN
CASH OUT HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT BAJ\!KRU 0 TCIES
WE LCOMEI
UNITED SECVRtTY
MORTGAGE
1·600-370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U S
VETERANS
MB 5263
10h10 Loans Onlv)

3 Oedroom bricK 'ronl
Rancn Newer root vinyl
heat
pump,
Smiths

AU real estate adv ert1s1ng
m th1s newspaper IS
sub1ect to the Federal
Fa1r Housmg Act of 196S
wh•ch makes 11 Illegal to
advert•se any
preference, l1m1tabon or
d1 scnmmat1on based on
race color rehg1on sex
fam1hal status or national
ong1n or any mtent1on to
make any S'uch
prefe rence llm1tallon or
d1s cnmmat1on
Thts newspape r will nol
knowmgly accept
advertisements for real
estate which 1s 1n
viol&amp;tion of the law Our
reAder! are Meretly
Informed !hat ail
dwell ings &amp;dvert~aed 1n
t1"1is newspap41r are
available on an equal
opportun lt'f bases

•

1991 14x 70 3 bedroom 2
bat h heat pump /J.JC cathe·
draf ceil1ngs det;k $11 000
Needs moJed (304)882
3682
1993
ManSIOn
MOOI I€
Home-14X60 2 bedroom 1
ba th total elect r1c good
condrt1on central a1r stove
retngerator and miCroNave
mc!uded
S8 500 00
(740)949 9016
97 mob1ie hOme 16x80
3be/2 ba v1nyl Side Shin·
gled rooi Ira ni and back
dec~ (74 01 949·3700

Make 2 payments rnove 1n 4
years on note t304 )i36
3409
New Double W1de and 1
acre of and S78 000 lOBO )
cal l t304167 5·i 561
New Oakwood mega store
leatunng
Homes
by
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
G11es One srop shopp1ng
onl y at Oakwood Homes of
Barboursvrl!e WV (304 )736

3409
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models a1 old pnces
2005 models ar r vmg Now
Coles
Mobii B Homes
15266 US 50 Eas1 Athens
Oh 10 45701 (7401592 1972
Whe re You Gel Your
Monev s Worlh

r

f&gt;R\l~
FOK SAI..E

Putnam Farm ana 3BR
House
2BA. basement
new rootJturance centra ! a1r
43 acres tenceo bar"1 w1th
water e1ectnc1ty concrete
floors
13 m11es
trorn
Buffa lo/Ken na
$113 500
443 7 45· 7784

LoTs &amp;
L.--.:A~L'R
;;;FA~C:;..E~2 acres on Ingalls Road
515000 740·245·0133

2 300 Hom es1te m Ucscale·
Deveiopm en l 4mllrom
pt Pleasant on Sandh1ii·Ad
S29 900
Senous-1nQJ ~ res
on
ly
t304
)675·364Bo r
Blacktop or 1veway many
extras $129 000 w1tt1 713 (6t4 )747·0998
acre lot o· $159 000 w1th an
20C I mobile home 1exso
additiona l 3 485 acres of f!e t
also two acres IMO 1 m1 1e
oro und Very close to tcw n
t rom Rt 7 near Eureka
on Spruce St elttens1 on
$65 000
Ce I t 7 40\256·
Call (740)591 0437 anyt1me
9234

acres $92 000 (740)388 ·
"88:,:7,::6_ _ _ _ _ __
_
3 oedroor;
house
1n Mason wv Bankea Owned
Syracuse With garage on
n1ce lot F1nancm~;~ ava1lable
N d
1
lh
o
own pay m en
WI
approved credit (7401992
3595
:::::::.__ _ _ _ _ _ _
3 bed room 2 bath hv1ng

FS-ApptOK 25 Acres M/l
Pnvate
remote
rough
access goOCI huntmg no
marketable·tlmber Mt Alto
area $35 000 (304 )895·
3390
--------Ranch style hOme w1tn f1 n
Home 2.bedroom Flat·Lot
Mike Slack Old
524 900
Co lony
GMAC
Realty
(
304 1542 5888

:::=======:

IShed base-ani
3 bed
"'
I
I
rooms 1 bath arge 1vmg ..,
room anc d l"lr"lg 'OO'TI rt10
kitchen With 2 car garage
attached and a 30x60

H&lt;ll""l''
' ,,

RJ.:'T
L..,;_,.jolil;.;,;;o;,;,;._,J
F'OR

garage ana a 16•2 4 shel ter 2
oedrooms
Pomeroy
house 1 5 m1les cut Che rn..
., $275 00 l;)er month pluS
Ridge Ad on the 'IQh 1 deposit (74Q)g92-G1 75
(7 40)245 5102

"

f

1990 Smgle W1de Tra1ier
3 bed roo m
2 full s1ze baths
New Haven WV
(30-i)882 2355

For sale or rem 2 bedroom
motlile homes s1art1ng at
S270 per month Call 740·
992 2167

House 3 Bed ~oom 1 t '2
12) 3 bedroom houses tor Bath Heat Pump new
sale 2 baths fireplaces on Carpet Wmdows &amp; Root
acreage
Call (7 40)709 AlVei V1ew 12 Sm •th 51 No
_1_16_6_ _ _ _ _ _ __ Money Down to qua11tymg
o~~ Down Payme nl and Bu)er $425tmonth why Rent
tmanc 1ng avai lable w1th (304 )675 2749
approved credit
Average
cred 1t quallf 1es you 11 down House 4 Sale 9y rs olo 2br
payment has kept you from Corne1 Lot Ou1et·wooded
buying thiS 1s your chance area
1n
Cilttor"1
' wv
to own your own home 11 (304 )882 2826 or (304 )882·
you haiJe a down payment 2969
but would 11Ke 1o conserve 11
we otter low down paymen1 House to• sal e tly owner 4+
pronrams also Great 1nter · oeo rooms 2 5 balhs large
est • rales l Local compa ny country io;ltche1'1 1 5 story 2
Mortgage
Locators car enached garage plus
(740 )992·732t
two
large
outbuildings

wwwgt~lrlpotllcar ee rcollege oom room d1nn.ng room fur
Vars1ty Basketball Coach
•~o.: red led Membe• 4c cr ~td Mg nl shed
~ r tche n
2 ca r
G1rls
J un10r
Vars1t Y Counc1 tor 1noep1!111 oen1 c 01 &amp;\les
b ld
C
G 1
.• 5 - " '" ' ' '
ga rage r 2 out u1 rngs 6
Basketball
oach
rr s ;':.:'":_::'·=
~•:,..:".:.:.:;,_,,....--,
olus ac•es close to scho ols
Jumor
High
Basketball
$94900 (740)742 7200
Coach (2) Interested per
sons should contact Jon
Homes
!rom
$10 0001
ForcIosure VA H u..• 1or 1IS1
Linder Pnnc1pa I 01 P am
Douthitt AthletiC 01rector at
,'r"lg 1·800·749·8106 Elli l709
Easlern H1gh School

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Ho\tl.~

lllR SAl£

"'

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommenos tha
ou do busmess w1th peo
le you know and NOT I
end money lhrough th
ma11 unt1i you have 1nves11
ated the otfenn

hlr1r1g at Po 1nt Pleasant WV Cab1nets 1 ca1 garage pn·
location Store Hours 5 30 to \iate lane oil SA 160 1 8

G1ant • G1~nt • Giant Yard :6.:.75::...:.14.::2:.:9______
2pm apply w1th1 n or call
sale Oclober 9th 2004 5
_ _ __•_
m_P_'_"_"-,-- ;' 3
;04;,;:;
16;;.
7;.
5 .;,
6 1,.;6;;;6_ _ __,
Babys11ter to come 1n ~y
tam 1lys sale all logether home 1n Mas on Co WV to The Eastern local School 1!iO
SalooL.."i
New toys games tools fiSh· sn tor 11 month·old must
mg eqU!pment turMure have reterences &amp; be 1ntant,
1
clothes all srzes and much
ch1ld CPR certllled cal
much morel 36510 Sate between 6 9 (304)576-3353
1
Route '7 out 143 3 ml es
corner of Wotfoen &amp; 143 Part t1me Recep/Ci er~ needCan 1 m1ss 11 Don 1 m1ss t1115 ed tor Dental Office 1n PI
send
Pleasant
Please
yar 0 sa Ie
·esume IO
Hune multi fam1ly yard sale , '
~~
Dental Att Ot11ce Mgr
10 4 Thurs Fr Saturday
3984 lnd1an Creek Road
womens mens Chlidrens
Elkview WV 25071
cloth1ng
scrubS
Ho me
lntenor k1tchen 1tems lots at GallipOliS Bob E11ans now
new 1tems somethmg tor accept1n q app l1cat1ons tor
eve ryone corner of Hysell expl'rh:~'lle d Sales Stafl
Run Road &amp; Twp 175
Appl y, 1 ~ Ms6n

Small Carpentr~ work
Underp1nn1ng Pa1n11ng
Porches &amp; Por ch Dec ks
1304)675 6473

II'\\" 1\1
SECURITY OFFICERS

Ho• lf.,

IDR S•u

FOR S,\ LE

who want 10 earn money
wh1 le losmg we1ght show1ng
others how
(740)441-1982
FREE SAMPLES
www famousnutn1 1on com

Huge yard sale
16t6
Jackson P1)o;e Fnday &amp;
Saturday 9 5pm

Yard Sale 4353 Slale Route
t 41 (Across hom Graham
School Ad ) Fn 8th 9 00
5 00 Sat 9th 9 00-5 00
BOOKS GALORE turn1ture
&amp; m1sc 1tems

10

net

Garage sale Fn &amp; Sat 61 4
Sl AI 325 south of A1o
Grande Ant1ques glass
ware men &amp; womens cloth·
mg (o)(lra large) s1zes
books
shoes, baby &amp;
household 1tems old turm·
ture &amp; Phaltzgra ff d1shes

Yard &amp; Bake Sale
Saturday October 9
9am 2pm
Honeysuckle Dnve
Addison R1v8r ot Li fe
Umted Method1st Women

l!i4

• All ads must be prepaid•

Fn·Sa t·Sun
Oct
8 10
Mul11·lam11y yard sale, 554
Jay Dr Spnng Valley All
SIZes clothing/coats 1nclud·
mg boy1g1r1 lnfanlfl oddlers,
teen Large vane!~ of 1lems
l1ne ns/cu ri al ns., housewares
books bean1es stutted an1
mals collectibles
desk
9am 5pm

Oct 8 9 8 5 402 4th Ave
Tool s turn1ture
clothes
appliances lots of good1es

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifledads
(.~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

ElectroniCs co mputer momtor TV pnnler fax more FnSat 9·2 Redwood Dr1ve
(1/2 m1te from At 7 on
Georges Creek Ad )

2336 Centenary Ad Oct 9
1D-6 9 older Longaberger Perenn1al Cat Shelter 3390
Found
Your"lg
German
baskets boy toddl er g1rls SR 325 Fn &amp; Sat 9·6pm
Shepard dog m Wayne
Dned Hewers
carousel
clothmg m1sc
Nallonal Eorresl a40)643·
hOrse S m1sc household
1002
744 2nd Ave Antiques 1tems
Sat urday Only
G1ve Away Bunny 10 a good
Saturday Sate by Church at
nome about 3 months old Fnday &amp; Saturday 6929 Gnff1ns Upper Rt 7 g.?
Sta te Route 588
Call (7 40)992·7335
More thmgs added

4x4 's For Sole ,
..... ....... • ...... 725
Announcement .......................................... 030
Antiques .....
. ...............................530
Apartments for Rent ,
.... . .... .
. .... 440
Auction and Flea Market.,,,,, ..................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories.. ...... . ....... 760
Auto Repa~r .............. ............ ..... . ....... 770
Autos lor Sale ........................... ..........710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .... ........ . ..... 750
Bulldmg Supplies......................... ....... 550
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
Busmess Opportunity.... .. . ..... .. ....... 210
Business Tra1ning ..................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. ......
.. ....... 790
Camping Equipment ............ .. ...... ....... 780
Cards of Thanks ....................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ... , ....... .......... ........... t90
Electrical/Refrigeration .............. ................ 840
Equipment for Rent ....... ...... , ............ 480
Excavating... .......................................... 830
Farm Equipment.... ................................. ... 6t0
Farms for Rent................. . .... . ..........
.430
Farms for Sale .............................. ........... 330
For Loase ... ... ..... . .................. ............ 490
For Sate............................ ...... .. ........ . 585
For Sale or Trade..................... ............. . .. 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ................................. 580
Furnished Roome. ......... ........ .. .............450
General Hauling... .. ............ ....... ................... 850
Giveaway .................................................. 040
Happy Ado ........................................... .....050
Hay &amp; Grain .................... .............................640
Help Wanted ....... ................... ..................... 110
Homolmprovementa..............................810
Homes for Salo ............................................310
Houoehold Goode .................................... 510
Houses for Rent.. ....................................... 410
tn Memoriam .......... ................................... 020
tnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equlpmen1 ........................ 660
Ltveetock ......................................................630
Lost and Found ..........................................oao
Loll a Acreage............... ........ .. ............. 350
Mtocellanoouo............................................ 170
Mlacellaneouo Merchandloa ......................540
Moblla Homo Repair.............. ..................860
Mobile Homes for Rent.. .. ........................... 420
Mobile Homeo for Seta ............................320
Money to Loan...... .................... .......... ...220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Whoolora .........................740
Muelcattnatrumentl ........ ........................... 570
Peroonata .................................................005
Poll for Sate ................................................ 560
Plumbing a Heating...... ......................... 820
Professional Servlcoe... .................. . ..... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................. 160
Real Eatate Wanted .................................. 360
Schools Instruction.................................... t 50
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlllzar .............................. 650
Sltuatlona Wanted ........ ....... .................... 120
Space for Rent.. ......... .. .. .... .......... .. ..... 460
Sporting Goods . ................... ...................... 520
SUV'a for Sate .............. · ..................... 720
Trucko for Sale ........ :...... ...... .......... .. 71 5
Upholstery ............. ............................ ...870
Vans For Sate. ..... . ..... . ...... .. .. ..... 730
Wanted to Buy.............. .....
...090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ............... 620
Wanted To Do ...... ........ ..... ......... ... t 80
Wanted to Rent.. . ....... ....
...... 470
Yard Sate, Gallipolis . ............................. 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle ....................... 074
Yard Sate-PI Pteuant
... 076

Word Ads

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

FOUND

Shepherd red collar m1ss
Help Supporl a New· Breath mg smce Oct 2 Hysell Run
of Poht1cal a1r m the Mason Jeffers Rd Happy Holl ow
Coun !y
CommiSSIOn area Reward (740)992
Elect1on Race· November-2 2556
go·oul and Vote your trueLost 2 German shorl·halred
ConviCtiOnsl
Pomte r dogs V1C1n1ty of SR
141 &amp; 775 (7 40)4463547
GIH:.\W41
days (740)379·236 1 alter
7pm
3 3 mon old Chow/German
Shep pups good guard Lost Blac~ &amp; wt"11te Border
dogs Ml good wl kidS 304 Collie Magg1e' red collar
w1th tags Mulberry Avenue
576·3080
Saturday Reward
area
5 foot wh11e cast 1ron bath (740)992·1901
tub
Great
cond1t10n
(740)446·2340

Oead'ffir~

Dl!liC:ription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrellll When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

i

German

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

YARD SALE·

~

l\egister

~~--~~~~~~~

l.os'J· AND

CLASSIFIED INDEX

\pplu.: atum~ ma ~ he obtained fmm and relurncd In Sf Pl \ ~ 00 tt m lu
.t·OO p .m •• J\londu\ lhrou~h fnd al . or h' \i"iJting our 'Hh~ Jtt al

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Etse Cant

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

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

,e,..,

i~ter

Sentinel

~ribunr

Offee llowc-.s'

Don Tate Motors in Pomeroy, OH is having our FaD
Clearance Sale on all Pr•Owned Cars &amp; Trucks. We
want to Claar the lot of all our Inventory as fast as
Possible! To do this we are doing something that
bas not been done before in the "llid·Ohio Valley.
During September if you have '80000 per month veri·
fiabla income 1 you are a_p~rovad! That's Righ.L._You
Are Approved! Don't wail lor the Disclaimer, ..-nara
Is Not One, YOU ARE APPROVED!
1/t~ur
Price ~ader 11n fhe Riwr...

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

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

Help Wanted

after above refer·
anced time and date
will be returned to
bidder
unopened
Board of Education
reserves the right to
accept or reject any
or all bids and to
waive cartam infor·
malltles or trregutarltoes In bids received.
No bids may be withdrawn , attar ached·
uted ctosong time for
receipt of bids, for at
least thirty days.
Bids
wilt
be
received for asbestos
hazard
abatement
and related work.
Estimate of cost for
thlo
project
to
$35,000.
A prebld meeting
will be held at
Salisbury Elementary
School,
41785
Pike,
Pomeroy
Pomeroy, Ohio 11 2:00
p.m. (tocet time) on
October 14, 2004.
Contract
Documenta, Including
copleo of drawlnge,
lpoctfiCIIIOnl, bid
lorma,
forma
of
ag,..mont and bond,
are on fill 1nd may be
oxomtnod
et the
Bualna11
office,
Mllfll LOCI! Schqol
Dletrtc, 320 E11t Main
StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
4576i (740) 882·2153
end at Office of
Gandee
&amp;
Aaaoclattl,
One.,
4488 Mobile Drive,
Cotumbue,
Ohio
43220 (614) 459-t338.
A comptlle 111 of
Bidding Documonto ·
can be obtained from
Gandee
&amp;
Aaaoclataa ,
Inc
Bidding Docmenlo
will be luued to
prospective blddere
upon
depoolt
of
$25 00 for etch 11t.
Depoel will be refund·
ad to document hold·
era of record who
return
Bidding
Documento with shipping chargoa postpaid and In good con·
dillon within thirty
daya after .opening
Bide.
Attention of bid-

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!rribune- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

"wardrobe malfunction " durmg her halft1me performance
dt the Super Bowl. CBS was
lined a record $550,000 bv
the FCC fo r Jacksonts
bre.1st-banng Incident.
Networks have In stalled
del ays of up to I 0 seconds
lor some programming, and
ABC's " Monday Nigh t
Footb.tll'' 1s using a 5-second
del,Iy th1s season. But. unt1l
now. NBC had decided not to
~ 1 ve 1helf" chance to censo1
it s NASCAR telecasts.

E,trnhardt was docked 21
pomts m the Nextel Cup
standmgs .md t med $10.000
for h1s sli p of the tongue m
an NBC mtcrv1ew alter h1s
victory
at
T,Jil.Idega
Superspecdway. dropp mg
him to second place w1th
seve n races lelt in the season.
He will appeal the point
penalty
·
Federa l re gul·a tors have
cracked down on ob,ectionable content on TV and rad1o
s1 nce
Ltnet
Jackson's

NEW YORK CAP)
NBC IS adding a 5-second
delay ,to Its NASCAR telecasts after Dale Earnhardt Jr.
used a vulganty dunng a
postrace TV interview last
wee kend.
"We 're di sappointed for
our viewers to have to do
thi s, but the delay prov1des a
level ot protection agamst
anythmg mappropnate gomg
out over the air," NBC
Sports
chai rm an
Dick
Ebersol said Thursday.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, October 09,
2004, at 10: 00 am., a
public sale Will be
held at 21 1 W Second
St. Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company IS selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
t 994 JEEP GRAND
CHEROKEE
IJ4GZ58S1 RC28092B
t996
FORD
ESCORT LX 3FASP11-J5TR 1 26446
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
rtghl to bid at this
sate, and to wllhdrsw
the above collateral
prior lo 11te. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Sovlngo
Company reaervea
the right to re)ect any
or all blda aubmlttad.
The
above
detcrlbed collateral
will be aotd - ·ao toWhere Ia", with no
expreooed or Implied
wsrranty given.
For further lnfor·
matlon, or for an
sppolntment
to
lnapact
collateral,
prior to oslo date conloci Dione Rector or
Randy Hays at
992-2t36 .
t0/6,7,8

Friday, October 8, 2004

NBC adds 5-second T.V. delay

College Football

CO LUMBUS (AP)
Orlas Kmg. whose spmted
dancmg at Oh1o State football
games earned him the mckname "Ne utron Man, " has
dted He was 62.
The restaurant owner d1ed
Thursday whtle prepanng to
play golf at a condominium in
Flonda, the managers of two
of hts restaurants said
King's gyrations were a fix-

Friday, October 8,

www .mydailysentinel.com

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Call now to .purchase

for our

740-992-2161

Homestyle Buffet

1 Certifi cate per household

11 am-3pm
$7.99

Ladies, do you
like to sing?

Featuring Baked Chicken.
Homemade Mashed Potatoes,
Soup Beans &amp; Cornbread
Assorted Salads &amp; Desserts

740·992-2507
Cal in orders welcome

Join us for an exciting 6 weeks of

•

FREE vocal lessons.
They will begin on Oct. 12th and
run thru Nov. 16th, at 7 p.m .
Grace United Methodist Church
600 Second Avenue
Gallipolis , OH

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

North

Whaley's Auto
Parts
·
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

Restockirtt:} ln.te _\lode/ So lmg£•
and Arwr Market Part.~
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:~0-5:00
Sat. R:30-Noon
Sun . Closed

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

671-2497
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Ave.
Open Daily J0:00-5:00
Sun. 12:00--HlO
Clo~c d Tues.
992-5 152

0% Down Payment and 1 and 2 bedroom apartfinancing available with ments, furmshed and unfurapproved credil. Averag e mshe_d , security deposit
credit qualilies you . If down required . no pets. 740·992-

payment has Kept you from 2218 . •
buying, this is your chance
to own your own home 11
you have a down payment
hu t would like to conserve 11,
we otter low down payment
programs also. Great interes! rates! Local company.
Mortgage
Locators.
(7401992-732 1

2 bedroom house 1n EureKa .
Newly remodeled . $400
month. $400 deposit. No
pets. 740-256-6408- 740441-05863.
2 story Colonial 3 bdrm. 1
bath. Gas heat. Cntrl AJC.
$600 mo. (740)446-348 1.
3 bdrm hOuse· 1.5 baths.
close to hospital oH Jackson
Pike. $600 rent w/$600 sec.
dep. You pay all utilities
References required . Call
(740)446·3644 for application.

3 bedroom house, water furnished. no pats. $400 rent .
$400 deposit . (7 40)245·
5064
3 bedroom, 1 bath, full basement, detached garage ,
country setting. 5 minutes
from Rio Grande. 10 minuted from hospital.· $700
month + deposit. (740)446·
3051

Middleport· 5 rooms. no
pets, deposit &amp; references
(740)742-2424 . (7401992 3439
Nice 1, 2, &amp; 3 bedroom
· Apartments/ retail space
also for rent (740)992-3702

MOBILE HOMF.~
FOR RENT
2 bedroom 14x70, near Clay
school. Trash and water
'Included. $350 month. $350
deposit. (740)256-1664.
2 bedroom, all ·electric, 4
miles north of Holzer. $350
month + second deposit &amp;
references (740)446·6865
0&lt; 1740)446-61 89.
· 3 bedroom mobile home, no
: pets, (740)992-5858

MISL'I'LL\~EOUS

IUR RENT

MERCIIA~lJL~f:

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spac1o us,
2 Bedroorhs, 2 Floors CA , 1
112 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
Patio. Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Depostt Required. Days
740-446·3 48 1: Evenings ·
740·367 ·0502.

Ant1que wicker couch &amp;
chair, oa~ sideboard . old
poster bedroom suite and
fillies era 4pc bookcase.
bedroom suite. yellow/brown
Phaltzgra·fr stoneware. 6 14
St. At. 325 south. Rio
Grande. (740)245-5845.
--------Black fiberglass topper used
on Chevy short bed iruck.
Reese hitch used on 97
Chevy truck. Used 1st generation Mustang part s. 2
used computers and print·
ers. (740)446·7751 after
4pm.

--------1 bedroom apt. WID hookup
$290 month + depos11. Close
to Holzer Hospital. Call 740:3_::39::_·_:_03'--6'--2_ _ _ _ __
1 bedroom. recently updatTwin Rivers Tower is accept·
ed HUD approved. $280.00
1ng applications for wa1Mg
per month, (888)51 4-0192
list for Hud·subsized, 1- br,
1-Bedroom furnished Apt, apartmen t, ca ll 675-6679
Utilities Paid, Basic TV. EHO
$550/month. $500/deposit.
\II IU II\ '\,IJISI
No pets In or out (304)671Cash paid for Dish Network
0031
HOUSEliOW
equipmen t Have model
Gooo;
2 bedroom apts. 10 minutes
number's ready. Toll free
from Holzer Hospital on St.
(888)569-281 2
Rt. 160. Water/Sewer/Trash· Complete set of used
sale
Fire
Wood
Included . 5460/mo. De~sit Kitchen Cabinets, base &amp; For
required. Pets allowed . wall, coun ter top , slt1k &amp; (3041882-2537
(7401441 -1184 or (740)441- stove top &amp; wall oven. Good
For Sale New And Used
0194
condition. App. 15' $350. Call Doors and Windows call
8am-5pm . (3041675-4534
3 rooms &amp; bath. stove/refrig · 740·446·4514
erator, down stairs. utilities 740 -446-32 48.
JET
paid. $450/month. No pe ts.
Good Used Appliances ,
AERATION MOTORS
46 Olive St. (740)446-3945.
Reconditioned
and Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
. Washe rs. Stock. Call Ron Evans, ~ ·
4 room &amp; bath apt. Stove, Guaranteed .
refrig . water. sewer, trash. Dryers.
Ranges.
and 800-537-9528.
$400. Por ter. Ohio 740-367- Refrigerators, Some start at
7746· 740·367-7015.
- S95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine St., (740)446·7398
Long wood burner insert,
Applications being taken for
S250 . Phone (7401446LA-Z
BOY
RocKer
Recliner,
very clean 1 bedroom in
3897.
country setting yet close to co ral color, $125 Call
(740)446·0123.
town. Washer. dryer. stove ,
NEW AND USED STEEL

fridge included. Water and
garbage included . Total electric with AC Tenant pay electnc. $300 depOSit, $375 per
mon th. No pets. No smok3 b&amp;d rooms, Minersville. ing. 740-446-2205 or 740·
$400.00 per month, plus 446·9585 ask for Virginia
deposit (74q)992-0175
B.EAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT ' BUDGET
4br, in Syracuse, OH
PRICES AT JACKSON
$600/month. $600/deposit,&amp;
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
3br in-Syracuse $475/month Drive from $344 to S442
Hud Approved both no Pets Walk to stlop &amp; movies. Call
13041675-5332
Equ al
740-446-2568
Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths·. w/
basement. View ol river
AJC
$700
mo
Cntrl
Ga llipolis Ferry. (740)446·
3481 .

r

AI}AR'D1ENTS

Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
Angle,
For
Concrete ,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains .
Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friqay. Sam-4:30pm . Closed
Table and 4 Chairs, good Thursd_tjy,
Saturday
&amp;
condition $75 call (304)675· Sunday. (740)44 6-7300
3056
- - - - - - - - - Pole Barn 30x50x10FT
Thompsons Appliance &amp; $6395. includes Painted
Repair-675·7388. For sale, Met al. Plans. Instruction
re-conditioned automatic Book, Slider, Free Delivery
washers &amp; dryerS. refrigera- (9371559-8385
Housing Opportulllfy.
'""'
tors. gas and electric
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ranges. air conditiOners. and
Bun.utNL
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
wringer washers . Will do
SlJPPuF.-;
Townhou se
apartments, repairs on major brands in
and/or small houses FOR shop or at your home.
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for application &amp; information. Used Furniture Store t30 windows. lintels. etc . Claude
Bulav1lle Pike. Dre sse1s, Winters. Rio Grande. OH
FurniShed small 1 bedroom
couches. mattresses, reclin· Call740-245-5121.
_apt. Close to PVH and ers, refrigerator. washer.
PITs
s~opping
No Pets. No
dryer, gas, electric range .
FOR SALE
Smoking. $295.00 + elecGrave Monuments. much
tric
References $200.00
more!
(740)4 46 -4782
deposit (304.1675-2651
2 miniature male . Donkeys,
Gallipolis. OH HrS. 11 -3 (MS300 each. Born on Mothers
Gracious liv1ng. 1 and 2 bed- S)
Day. (740)446·0118
or
room apartments at Village
(7401367-3331.
Manor
and
Riverside
ANTIQUf:&lt;i
Apartme:nts in Middlepor t.
AKC BlacK Lab puppies
From $295·5444 . Call 740·
Shots. wormed &amp;· dew claws
992·5064 . Equal Housmg Buy or sell . R1vemw
removed. $200. (740}44 1·
Opportunities.
· Antiques, 1124 East Main
0130.
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Huge clean , 3 bedroom , 1 992-2526. Russ Moore.
AKC Black Lab. puppies
bath , dinmg, storage. aprox owner.
Males &amp; Females, born
2.500 sq. ft . No pets/smok·
9/11/04 •I $200
each
1ng, $610.
Call Kelly
(3041773-5 103
(7401446-9961 .
MERCHANULSE 1
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porte:r. Ohio
(740)446-7444 1-877-830 9162. Free Estimates. Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Dnve· a· little •save alot.

r

r

r

Mercerville: 1 bedroom.
$250 w/depostt. no pets
water Included. WID hooKup
Call (740)256-1245.

· Beautllul Riverview ideal for One bedroom apartment. ,
1 or 2 people, no pets. refer- no pets, 1n Pomeroy.
ences. (740)44 1·0i 81 .
(740)992-5858
.
Clean mobile home for rent One bedroom garage apart·
1n thG country. (7&lt;10)256· ment, K1tchen fl.Hn lshed .
6574.
$400, (7401992-3823

Ml&lt;icr~'ffirlUS

1-800·822-0417
I· \1~:\1 "il 1'1'1 II o.;

15

,\11\fSJil(f,

TRliCKS
HlRSALE

FARM

1989 Dodge 1/2 ton pick up.
8 ft . bed, 318. VB, 60.000
miles, new rubber, towing
7 fl. International Bush Hog package, new paint, excel·
3 point hitch, good condition lent condition, 3 speed over·
$600 (740)446-0 118 or drive..
$3 .250.
Call
740)446·4514 8am·Som
(3041675-3331.

r

f725

Box 189

Short Horn Fair Steer
Raised in Gallia Co.
1987 Fo r d ~ Bronco II 6cyl,
(7401256-6574.
4x4 w/a1r, 4·speed wroverdrive,
runs
good
HAY&amp;
51 .5001080 (304)675-1408
GRAIN
or (7401418-0790

r

For Sale Ear Corn (304)675·
1506
Last year 2nd cut. Round
bale hay $6. New 2nd cut
hay 516.
851 Ford Tractor. good con·
dition 53,200. Ph. (740)446·
7787.
1•1)111'.

4-Sale 03 Gravely 146 Z
Zero turn. riding mower, 48
In cut, 21hp, Kawasaki
engi ne. $7,000 new only 65
hrs. $5.500 OBO Cf!ll
1304)377-5598 leave&lt;~ mes-

1_990 Ford Range r 4 WD,
ext. cab, 5 speed, $1 ,000.
(7401441-0500
1995 Dodge Dakota 4x4
pickup. 120.000 miles.
$3.700. Call (7401379-2409
after 5pm. You won't f1nd a
deal like this for a 4x4!

~t1Pu:&gt;YMENT
OFFIC~

••

•

HOW COME YOU
VOLUNTEERED TO
STAY AFTER
SCHOOL AN'
WASH TH '

1996 Suzuki Side Kick .
65.000 miles. auto. air. covt.
hard top, e•cellent condition.
;;::10::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
low miles . $4 ,000 (740)256At'ITl&lt;'i
6890.

mR SAu:

1997 Ford F-150 Lariat ext.
t 983 Cadillac, 66,000 miles. cab, step-side, exc. cond1·
excellent condition. Call tion. 4·wheel drive. $12,000.
(740)44 1-0t94.
740·367 · 7762 or 740-367 ·
7272.
1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme
(3041675-8604 or (304)675- 1999 Ford E•plorer XLT
4X4. Red, CO, excellent con·
8720 dillon, 54,000 m1les. $9,800.
1993 Black Camara, w/CD (7 401367-7090
player. good
condition
40 MutOR&lt;.:Yc u ;&lt;;/
s2.5oo 1304i773-5B6a

/0

MEET BOYS,
SAMANTHY

p-1 \':) 1\N 1\~T\QUE. I&lt;At&gt;IO POP """l
FOUI'\0 UP I ~ \ 1-\t:: f\TTIC. I

p-\-.11-\1\\ ':':&gt; Tl-\1\1 TI-\11\\G 7

'r:::==::::::::l I•

Main SL.
Pomcrov

bc~l(.k Lan") ·, 1-;·u11 Stand

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

i
I
~

8~0 Ea~t

~'!{~

p-i-I.E. ')1&gt;-,'{S IT'S SO OLD 1\
! ONLY BROI\DCI\S\S IN
BLI'\CX 1\N() Wi-I.\\E. 1

!1""-:;:::::------, r---;--:;:

f'erry's Engines

1996 F- 150, 4x4, extended
cab, 5.0 auto, 102.000 P ic~·up and lki i \Cr~ '&gt;l.'rl kt•
miles. winterized, tuned up. Now-.en icin Kcro'-t'n~ H~ata•
new tires &amp; brakes, $6500,
Racine Service Center,
(740)949-2700
~--------

ftiOvl HOST.

IF YA WANNA

I· 7 40·843·5382

SH
Rocky,"RJ·t'

Rl•I -Air Air Cumpre,~nr~
Open 8:.10-6:110 ~1-F:
Sat. H:J0-2:(10 992-103.1

BIG NATE

Hupp,, ·*,

CAN WE

CA N

PLA"(
DODGEBALL
IN GYM~

IMPORTS
Athens

(,~C:~~:OR~
~~ ULTY

I

An-EWJNIE~

f&gt;O LJ !&lt;?..

THE

A C. I D ~

0 -.

millennia
60 Rubens

org.

models

20 Wa~ed

61 Bas1itte Day

22 Panoramic
season
view
62 Pied Piper
24 Sports
follower
enthusiast 63 Type
25 Current
of earring
26 Movie
lioness
DOWN
28 Give a hand
32 Actor
1 Savvy
- Wallach
2 Outback
33 Oven glove
bird
34 Put on 1he
3 Rock-band
payroll
need
35 Psyched up 4 Hun1·and·
37 Bucket
peck errors
handle
5 Rum-soaked
39 Corn crib
cake
"lO Mantra
6 Refinery
chanter
shipment
41 Impulse
7 Tiny
42 Bright color
organism
43 Lobster trap 8 Window-

rattling
9 Eight bi1s
10 Slide
downhill
12 Computer
network
19 Flounder
nowfall

easure

spr~a

31 Hang fire
36 Fence flaw•
38 Class topic
44 Last box
to check

46 "IsH"
(hyph .•

47 Christmas
22 Europe's
48 Radiale
longest river 49 Basilica
23 Common

part
phrase
50 Helena's
24 Exhaustion
loc.
25 More 1han
53 Kiwi cousin
a snack
55 Fuss
27 Celebri1y
56 Old-time
29 Virgo's
auto
neighbor
57 Nile reptile
30 'The

Tempest"

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celellnty C1~l"W cryp!Ograms a1e :reated trom Quotaoons b~ lame us oeoo1e pas I and PI lisen:
EaC61ener 1n tne opne• stands tor anothe1

Today's clue: Yeauals P

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KDA

UKMBB .

UMJYXC

ROLG

EDIVKOXMUR .

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OKW

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TVGUUDK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I lell1n love w1th the public. the publiC lell1n love
with me, and l tr1ed to keep 1t that way~ - Julia Child
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc 10-8

';~~:t;;' S©"RJ:\1A-~"E-~~·

- - - - - - - Edl!td by C:I.A.Y R. ,QI.LAN

0 Rearrange

letter$

of

the

fo ur scro rn bled word) be·

low to fo rm four words

I

TRONAY

op.

BISSELL
BUilDERS InC.

Nc \\ HDmc~ • Vinyl
Sid ing • New Garages
• Rcplaccmcnl
Wimluw~

• Kuofi11g

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Your pleasant and gentle dispos1!1on 1s always a

Hill's Self
Storage
29670

L_~~~:s:

Bashan ::load

Racine , Ohio
45771

.-; -.

PEANUTS

740-949-2217
IO i tl/0-'1

Slze85'x10'

to 1o·X3o·

'

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours

740-992-7599

7:00AM • 8:00 PM
111411 mo.

pd

SUNSHINE CLUB

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

~

1·800-822-0417
"WYs

WELL, lv1AY&amp; f-IE WAS.
YCXJR 6R.fAT, ~T.

~ ,--------,

STONE AGE.

'

GREAT, GREAT. GI&lt;'AT.
GREAT, GREAT, GREAT.

EXHIBIT

~ &lt;------

Chevy. Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer'"

~I

GR£AT, GREAT. GRfAT.

i -+

GREAT..

~

f'

GUTTER

~

•

*Free EsUmates.

949-1405

rof•

r--------,

. GARFIELD
IF YOU ,CONTINUE 1"0 GAIN
WEI&amp;HT AT YOUR CURRENT

Advertise
in this
space
·.for
$50 per
month
Builders

Pass

A greater number of tun activities are ir"l
store for you 111 the year ahead . which will
balance lhmgs out with your mo re seri ·
ous considerations There will be e)( citing
happenings and new mterests to devel-

0 "='

diAMliSS

Barnhart

Pasb:

Saturday, Oct . 9. 2004
By Bernice Bede Oaol

--------

New&amp; Used

88 Chrysler Filth Avenu e
Body good. new t1res 6ft Black Chevy Topper.
breaks. shocKs. batt ery. runs Century $1 .00G new. wlli sell
good . $J 200
740·645· tor $500 (304)882-27·90 _
1165.
Looking for engine or tra ns- r--::---:~--::--"'1
93 BMW 325i. Cus tom cover mission? Give me a call at
&amp; . e)(tra wheels. $3 .500 17401446-0519
(7401446-9555.
SIJ{\ I&lt; I·'
."\fl )'l '&lt;tr:-. ~X I)~ri cm·~
98 Oltls Della 88. Loaded
• \;''" H 1unc.,
\
10
HOME
1 19,000 m1les, needs mtake
• Lug I lome!'.
hWNO\ F.MI: NTS
$2 ,600. 17401682-7512
• l'o-..t Frallll"
92 Silverado, 2x2, shortbed
•( "umpltoh" l{cmodclina.:
loaOed. $4,500 . •
BASEMENl
•Rt•plm"l'tnl'lll \\ i mhm ~
8~ SilveradO. extended cab.
WATERPROOFING
2x2. 95 drivetrau , $5.500 UnconditiOnal 11f€!1me guar- • Ruol .,
(7401682-7512
.
antee Local references fur· ( "nmmcrTial ami
n1shed , Established 1975
Ht'oidt·ntinl
Fo• Sale 1948 Chevrolet Ca ll 24 Hrs (740) 446·
Free Estimates
F1ve Passenger Coupe. new 087Q. Rogers Basement
mufller system. t1res and Waterproofing
7~11-6(,7 -6tlNtl
safe·ty st1cker (304 )576·2288

·s +

- . . 'lllrthd!IY:

Dean Hill

HOWARD l.
WRITESEl
*ROOFING
*HOM I
MAINTINANCI

East

2NT

AstraGraph

4 WHEELER-;

1994 Buick 51.000. Good
shape, call for more mforma- 2000" Harley
Davison
tlon (740)256-9234
Sportster 883 Hugger. Lots
85 Celebnty Chevy wagon . of elitras. Days 740-645·
3248, evenings after 6 30pm
t995 Chevrolet Lumma : 740-256-65 89.
Original owner:. looks and
runs great! $2,200 080 Ph 2000 Harley Sportster 883
(740)245·01 35
custom factory mstalled

8 5

Sun Tzu. a Chinese general in the filth
century B.C., said , '·A g'eneral is skillful 1n
anack whose opponent does not Know
what to defend; and he is skillful 1n
defense whose opponent does not know
what to attack ."
In bndge, a player is Skil lful lf he knows
what suit to attack.
In this deal, you are West, defending
against five spades. You lead the diamond
ace: four, nine {count) . five. You cash the
diamond king: queen. two. eight. How
wou ld you continue ?
West's Unusual-No-Trump overcall shows
at least 5·5 in the minors. North's jump to
four spades is pre-emptive: tong spades,
weak hand. East has an easy five-diamond b1d. But the n, when South persists
With live spades. East probably should go
on to six. Although it is theoretically a
phantom sacrifice (both five spades and
six diamonds should fail), when one has a
double lit, it usually pays to declare.
At trick three , West should shift to a tow
club. There are two good reasons for this .
First, this is a key aspect of dazzling
defense: On the second round of diamonds, East made a suit-preference sig·
nal. Here. he played the two, his lowes t
remaimng diamond . asking tor a club
shift. If East haC wanted a heart switch,
he would have played the diamond JaCk .
Second, a club shift is unlikely to cost the
contract. failing on ly when South has
something like 6·3·2·2 shape, no heart
loser. and the doubleton ace-queen o1
clubs.
Note that a trick-th ree heart shift gives
away the contract. Declarer can drf!w
trumps an d discard all of dummy's clubs
on his hearts.

BARNEY

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

·

"' A

Dazzling defense
dialogue desirable

MY I~LI~F · THAT If YOU
CAN'T SAY fOMHtiiNG
NIC~ AIOUT A nflSON
YOU StiOIJL-DN'T SAY
ANYTHING AT ALt.
SP~t.HI&gt; POOM fOfl
MY CAfl~rfl AS A
MI&gt;IO TAL~

THE BORN LOSER

Gcnt"rating Sy,tt:m~ ;.~(l d

8 75 4
J 93 2
QJ

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~ouse Ckaning Service

Warrant y Repai r •
Lawn Tri.l~.:(or &amp; Pu ... h
Mower..,, Chain Saw ... .
Chain Sharp..:ned
&amp; Pi.lrtS
New Gcncr:ll StJnJh\

•
•

Opening lead: • A

!4nnette)s

FoR SALE

this page for as low os

992-2155

K1086;3
South
4 AJtfi72
¥ AKQJJU

BLACKBOARD,~~t:

FOR SALE

SE ·Y OUR
BUSINESS

· T'he
Daily
Sentinel

.

MARY BETH?

1994 Chevrolet Suburban.
LIVFBTOCK
All leather seating. All
power. Equipped for trailer
2 miniature male Donkeys. towing. Can be seen at 136
$300 each. Born on Mothers First Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio.
Day.
(740)446 ·0 118 or Phone (7401446-2561.
(7401367-3331 . '
4x4

I \\\\, ·"- L\ IWI'

6 3
AK11171i

53

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: E:ast-West

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

SUVs

Patz Silo Unloader phone
(3041675-2443

18 Job-safety

•

West

to Pierre

17 Sporty truck

t

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

EQUIPMENT

t200 cc , 14.000 m1les,
1996 BUick Century, 94.000 e)(celle nt condi!1on, pearl
good
shape wh1te w1th chrome . S6500,
Full blooded St. Bernard miles.
130416751506
8 padded church pews. 12 fl . puppies for sale, $200. Call
{304 )675-3220 alter 6pm
•
$60 each Buggy wheels , (740)379-2605.
1998 Pontiac Grand AM . 4- 2002 Honda 350. 4)(4
$55 each . Ph. (740)446· •
7.787.
Old l;nglish sheepdog pups, Door, Ps, PB, AC , 97.000 Rancher 4-wheeler. S3.300.
lovable, shaggy dogs, first .miles. Excellent conditiOn Call (7 40)446-6876
Go Cart, Road Boss 409XL, shot &amp; wormed , price $250. ins1de and out. $4.500 or
best otter call (304)892· 2004 90 ArctiC Cat4 wheelTecu mseh 5 hp. $450. call (740)9 85·9823
Mossbe1g 500 fully-n fled - - - t - - - - - - - 3773 or (304)895·3045
~e r 51 ,650 . Call (740)388·
barre l, $500. Volvo. 1980., Squirn/ Dog s for sale
9088.
240DL $1.700 Saddle. (3041675-6132
Jess 2000 Olds Alero , 135K
Call 99 Honda Shadow Ace
m11es
52 ,500
$150. (740)446·0910
Hutfman
(740)388-9088
6.200 mites, excellent condl·
tion $4,300. (740)446·1948
2001 s1lver Hyundai Accent. call after 6:00pm
low mileage
1193 green Dodge Shadow 750 BoA"IS &amp; MutURS
fOR SALE
good condi tion. (740)388·
9831
200t ~aravelle Interceptor,
78 Cad1tlac Eldorado. Good 21 FT. 56/hours. 9 passenbody. fa1r Interior. eng1nc &amp; ger. l1ke new catl (304)674from end needs work 01 02 01 (304 882-2840
$1 .500 fi rm . Call (740)44660 At qn P\tn~ &amp;
1704 after Spm

$25.00 per 111onth!

Let me do it for youl

9 42
Bast

•

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

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

•

• 7

Middleport
~~-~+ 45760

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

16 Buoy insec1 59 Many

•

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

...

Se~.:o nd

15 Little dog

Q 4

StO£ OUR. TI/Vof.

"'J....NE.!

emplOyer
54 " Pal Joey "
penner.
58 Lily ,

9 2

UNTIL THE. OLO
GU¥'~

tropllles
13 Tentacle
14 Popeye's
Olive -

•

•

JusT

45 Routine

47 B·vltamln
1 Fervor
source
50 Netting
5 Python
8 FedEx units 51 ReforM
11 Tube
52 MD

•

West
GOOD.' WE'LL

and Financial Services

Mitldlcpm1. Ohin

14SN.

IO·tlR·04

4 KQ9864

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Antiques
on 2nd A••

'
NEA Crossword
Puzzle

BRIDGE

740-843-5264
At•AKfroU:Nlli
fXIRRENT

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

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

Meigs Senior
Center

invites you to join us
Sunday, October 1Oth

www.mydailysentlnel.com

To place an ad Call 992-2156

$10.00 for 8x10
photo
October 15, 16.
"'" .
&amp; 17th

in Syracuse

Friday, October 8, 2004
ALLEY COP

Business Services

Children's
Vintage Portraits

Riverway Cafe

•

Friday, October 8, 2'004

www.mydailysentinel.com

RATE -- -~--'

YOUNG'S ·.

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garagn
• Elec!rlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roqfing g Gutteu;
• Vinyl Sidin-g &amp; Painting
• Pat10 11nd Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

V.C: YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy. Ohio
22 Year&amp; Local Ex erience

IN 17 Y EAR 5, YOU 'L- LBLOT OUT THE 5UN'

TO GET A
DONUT AND
A Fl.A5HLIGHT

GRIZZWELLS

ROBERT
BISSEll

Pl~l'oi~T ,.\Illl'( ~·T YoU
\'bK( ~ I'CI&gt;.t-\t:T'? 1-\'i:ST
Al'\ll _IVIAI&lt;!i. Sl.lll£ lT'-5 1:1-\f'IY ~

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remo~eling

140-992-1611
. -Stop &amp; Compare

!:bY, IT''&gt; ALWAY!&gt; ALL A\30U1 YoU,
\?1'\'T \1 ?

we lcome addition to any gathering .
Today, however, th 1s soothing de meanor
of yours w1t1 be especially gra tifying and
apprec1ated .
SCORPI O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Much to
your cred1t you won "! selfle for the sta tu s
quo today. and will turn th ings arourid for
yourself in ways th at w1ll allow ~·ou to
realize a personal desire tor which
you've been suiving.
,
SAGITIARIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) - If
need be. lind those coho rts today who
can assist you w1th your present plans
and get your heads together with them.
Collectively. you will be able fo generate
a numbe r of bnght •d eas.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19)- Great
gains can be rea lized today through
unselfish gestures that you' ll prove by
placing your own interests behind those
of others and strive !i1st to improve their
lot in tile
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19 ) - Your
dreams are not that far out of line rega rd·
•ng thmgs lor wh och you have been hop ·
1ng. so do something about them . If you
take pos1tive act1on today. chances are
you'll succeed
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) - Dor"l 't
hesitate to team up with otners today
You could be e)(tr emely fortunate 1n jomt
oflorts. espec•ally 1! you associate your ·
sell w1th one who IS idealistic as well as
smart.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - You won't
come on m a demonstrative manner
today. and yet the subtle kindness you
show to your tam 1ly and fn ends. both 1n
word and doed . makes a powertul statement and unpre ss1on .
TAURUS ( Aprii20 ·May 20)- Others will
make quick no1e of th e lacl that your
1rnag1native and crea t1v e mmd is especmlly sharp today and turn to you for
1deas. You'll fr eely offer them 10 au those
who see~ your help
GEMIN I (May
2t ·June
20)
Commandmg the attenti on of oth ers may
not be your Intention today. but your
cheery d1spos•tion anU wit1y ou11ook. will
make you an espeCIAlly attrachve person
to be around
CANCER (June 2~ ·July 22) - One of
your spec1a1 mnate tal en ts IS sens1ng the
needs of others Today. however, while
you·re w•llingly stnvmg to make hfe eas1·
er for them . , some unsoli Cited advan·
tages will come to you .
LEO (Ju ly 23 -Aug 221 - Romance w1th
a cep 1tal "R"' seems to be m the winds tor
you today. II you arc Unattached ana
seek1ng a p,artner. you could cross paths
With one wtth whom you II f1nd much
mutua l anract1on:
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept 22) - The re s a
better 1han average chance thai today
you 'ft find !h"a way you·ve been seek ing
to obtain someth1ng you ve wa nted for a
long t1me. 11"11 come aoout in a most
unusual manner

~ I I I I' _
-K.,....-W,E_.A.,....-N-r::--1,.

l

P. yp T A

~
~-.,,,,---,,r----.1-:-'-r[---i'1~

I

I

-

-

'

~

.

.

~e;ause his morn had told him

'1c'.

~

-

His grandpa told him that

exoe~enceiswha!yocge!when
yoc do0't gel- --· you-----

N E WT H I

I

=--,---1 0
"
1

L..-l--'--'---'----'-.....J

co~ , ,.,. ,h, , h" &lt;'• , uo" d
o~ !dJinr;

11"1

rht mltsll"\9 word!

':'0\.f d~velop !rom stt;:&gt; No.

3 bel:)w.

,.

·'
UNSCRAMBLE f0R 11
ANSWti1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS t D~7~ol

Behind- Quirk- Motto. Tussle- QUESTIONS
"Wisdom:' the college professor lectured our ?sychology
class, "is not illways having all the answers, bu. 1n Knaw1ng
wh~t 0/IFSTIONS tn ask"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ
BEUE\JE '1bu G::IN

•1

-

1--,,..:1-r,;,:.,:I;_i-l;_.,:!

,..,.m., ... IF 'b; PUT

,,' .

rr,a voun~ster was ooll.ino

:"

"!'buR t11ND Tc IT .. So
I " DEC ID£D To NOT
SuccuMf! To ~~O LD
MaN DEaTH"

I flLE.W OUI( CHA!.l~ TO~
01J TV! HOW·DID I BI..OW
OUR CJ.W.lCE. 'Ill Bt; Ol.l"fV ~/

�Friday, October 8, 2004

88 • The Daily Sentinel

II&gt; II you have a ·question or a comment, write : NASCAR Th is
Nt X

T~" L

&lt;.:: -t.J ..,.

one. The late Dale Earnhardt
won 10 races at NASCAR's

Last year's winner : Ryan

latter may take Jun1or a wh1le
to duplicate but he's reeling

most outland1sh track . The

elder Earnhardt also won sev·
en Cup ch ampion shipS. The

Race record : Ryan Newman.

Talladega
Jr. has
se&lt;:ond in
drivers
Think they

SUSCti SERiES

S~Ht£S

Race: Banquet 400
Where : Kansas Speedway.
Kansas City (1.5 miles). 267
laps/ 400.5 miles.
When: Sunday. Oct. 10
Newman
Qualifying record : Jimm1c
Johnson. Chevrolet. 180.373
mph, Oct. 3. 2003.

Dodge, 121.630 mph, Oct. 5.
2003
last week : Ca ll him Dale or
ca l l him Junior or caJI "wn
Dale Junior. But , when you
call hm1. ring VIC t ory lane at
Ta lladega Superspeedway.
Earnhardt's the ma ster of

th1s fearso111e speed palace.

Oaddy m at Talladega. Dale
Earn hard t Jr's EA Sports 500
victory was h1s seventh at a
··restrictor-plate track." wh1Cll
os NASCAR slang for the two
tracks. Talladega and Day·
ton a. where the devices are
used to limit horsepower. The
victory wa s the Chevrolet dri-

ver"s fifth. all 1n the span of
the last seven races. at the

higll·banked .
track.

c;o The Gaston Gazette , P.O. Box 1893 , Gastonia, NC 28053

Race: Silverado 350k
Race : Mr. Goodcents 300
Where : Kansas Speedway, Where : Texas Moto r Speed·
Kansas C1ty (·1.5 miles), 200 way. Justin (1.5 miles) . 146
laps/219 miles.
laps/300 moles.
When Saturday, Oct. 16
When : Saturday, Oct. 9
Last year's winner : David · Last year's winner: Brendan
Gaughan
Gmen
Qualifying record : ~ icha el Qualifying record: Scott Rig·
Wa ltrip. Chevrolet. 178.365 gs. Dodge. 181 .953 mp h,
mph, Oct. 4, 2003.
Oct. 4, 2001.
record:
Brendan
Race record : 'Jeff Green, Race
Ford. 129':125 mph. Sept. Gaughan, Dodge, 137.736
mph, Sept. 13, 2002.
29. 2001.
Pre&gt;Jiously: Martin Truex Jr. Last week : Todd Bodine
boosted his points lead by drove a Toyota to victory at
winning the Stacker 200 at Ca lifornia Speedway in
Dover on Sept. 25.
Fontana.

2.666-mile

and it doesn't ma tter which

"u'""o ·o"o" f!ni·shEld in the
1111 three of the
.. ,,,., earnhprdt Jr. !&gt;as
· top 10 in all three. ·
''i'lt~ingty',· the race for flrst
eetually be closer if
system were still
the new system.

·race.

· · · ·· ·· ·

tN ·'THE · SPOTLtGHT .......,,, ....,.,....,.... ,.~

JEFF BURTON

NEXTEL CUP SERIES, No.

30 AMERICA

......FEUO

E

Busch by 13.
·system, Earnhardt .
lead Jeff Gordon by 10.
i~- ~1 points behind in
in the officia l stand·

R

s

ew

'r:~!K;;vln Harvick (second) and

&lt;~~~~:~;~Gaughan (fourth) both

season-best fmishes
atTalladega. Not so fortunate
were Jeremy Mayfield (38th),
Wltll basically checked out of the
·title race , and Jimmie John son
(37th). who dropped from fourth
to ninth In the 'standings.
· ·• There are on ly th ree drivers
Within 100 points of first place.
· which means it will likely take
some adversity up front to turn
this into anything other than a
, three-man race.
·• Mayfield could exploit the rules
:· of "the Chase" if he passed up
the final seven races. He's lOth
in the standings and , by ru le.
that's the lowest he can fin ish.
He's also 108 pomts out of
ninth place. Why not turn his
··· No. 19 Dodge over to Bill Elliott
for the final seven races? An·
swer in part: NASCAR wouldn' t
like it.
.. Only three of the top 10 finish·
ers at Talladega were cha mpi ·
onship contenders .
.-What a difference a new points
. · system makes. if the old system
: were in place, Ryan Newm an
would be in 10th pl ace. 479 behind Earnhardt Jr. Now, though.
· in the 'brave new world ." New·
· man's seventh, 159 points be·
· hind. Busch trails Earnh ardt by
· 13. If the old system were still
: around, he'd be 264 points out.
... Newman, by the way, stands to
• prosper in Kansas the same way
,.; Earnhardt Jr. did at Talladega.
... ; He's never finished worse than
.... second there .

·;

..•.

, ..if

.?

·J,•y! .•

WHO 'SHOT
·
"l'oO WHO "S NOT

/"'

_,

'i'!Jio·~··

hOt'/ Dale Earnhardt Jr.
finished
in the top 10 four
'!'-.'· '·' _,
.: faees in aHow .... Kurt Busch
~·- llfi finished in the top 15 nine
~.,,, bas

;; races In a row. .. . Brendan
;, Qaughari's fourth· place finish

·

~: &lt;~career test.

.. Who's !lot? Jeremy Mayfield
· has fared poorly in· two of the
·
and fallen 280
of the points lead... .

JiJ:~~~ng_~l~ostgoing
nve spots
from

·s

nintn.

sname. really,

lildlerl•,. he led most of the
the lO.ra~e PIS)'-

y,, ..

,..

·-·

WEE., ·

.v

ONLINE CHEVROLET

n~i~- ~~~

ilo1

OF· T~E

,new

Robby
Gordon

Burton's switch to Team Childress seems to be paying dividends
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR

What B difference B few month s
makes.
Jeff Burton now drives the AOL
Chevrolet for Richard Childre ss. having moved during the current season
from one of NASCAR's more promi nent teams. Roush Racing, to another.
The 37-year-old nati ve of South
Boston, Va., has moved up fou r spots,
from 25th to 2l't, in the Nextel Cup
points standings since making the
change. He fini shed 13th in Sunday 's
EA Sports SOO, leading six laps at Tal·
ladega Superspeedway.
The new ride offers bright promise
for Burton. who ha s won 17 times in
NASCAR's premier series. The most
recent, however, occurred on Qct. 28,
2001, at Phoenix (Ariz.) Intern ational
Raceway.
Perhap s the hi ghligh t of Burton's
career is his victory in 2000 at
Loudon, N.H. It marked the most re. cent occurrence of a rarity. Burton led
all 300 laps in that race after starting
on the outside of the front row.
"To do that is pretty fascinating and
it's neat to think about, but the thing I
enjoy thinking about is how we did it,"
he recalled . "It was a really neat day
for us because we almost didn 't lead
every lap because, on some ofthose, it
was just by two or three inches. We
started second and raced Bobby
Labonte and got the lead (on lap one)
and then, late in the race, he made a
strong run at me.
"If I led the whole race for 300 laps,
he ran second for 300 laps. It was just
right there all da y long , and it was
fun. It was really neat to get on the
airplane going home tfiat night and
reflect on that a little bi t. \Ve normal·
ly don't get a chance to do that. bu t
that deserves some reflection and de· .
serves some time spent thinking
about it becau se that was pretty special.··
Since joining Richard Childress
Racin g, Burton's best finish is a
fourth at Bri.stol, Tenn ., on Aug. 28.
"We are a performance -base d industry," said Burton. "and people look
at how many wins you have and where

Robby Gordon
vs. Ricky Rudd
Gordon continues to appear regularly in this space, although his
ninth-place finish in the EA Sports

just got bounced and run over at

the end of the race." sa1d Rudd.
"He (Gordon ) ran over the top of us.
1 think it was the '31 ca r.' He ran
over me. and he ran over everybody."
·

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: "Robby Gordon is an easy target right now. and
ot's fa1r to say that he got himself
into this mess and he'l l have to

work his way out of it. He's an exceptiona l talent. but he's gotten him·
self in trouble with his peers."

,.......FAN · "FI P S

.

B-l!oys put on a musical
show at Talladega
The B-Boys, a trio of young men
from the Helen Keller School in Tal·
ladega, sang the national anthem on
less than a minute pr1or to Sunday's

race .

John Clark/NASCAR Th is Week

Veteran driver Jeff Burton has moved up four spots in the points standings since moving
from Roush Racing to Richard Childress Racing.
I

you are in the points and those kinds
of things, and if you look at just that ,
then we haven 't had a successful vear
·a nd we haven't . We are building, 1
mean , there is no doubt about that. 1
think you can see that on the race
track."
"We're building, we're running a lot
better and we' re much more competitive . There's no question about'that.
The competitors see that; I don't know
if the public sees tha t, becau se TV
tends to only show if you're running in

Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611
QIIAIAI--L

. 1()6 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

Ricky
Rudd

Rudd finished 12th after starting on
the outside of the front row. "We

&amp; Supply

I....,.

s

500 was his best in four weeks .

This Week

Valley

u

252 Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis, OH

the top five , or you happen to be one of
the guys that had a lot of success. or if
a lqt of fans follow them they'll show
you if yo u're running 30th, but in our
case right now, because we haven't
had a lot of success, they don't show us
unless we're running in the front."
"Running in the front," though , has
occurred with a lot more frequency in
recent weeks.
Contact Monte button at
hmd4858@peoplepc.com ·

Thos is akin to the break1ng of the
four-minute mile. A major-league
baseball reporter has timed rendi !ions of the anthems for more than a
quarter-century without ever hearing
it rendered in less than a minute.
The Helen Keller School is one
component of the Alabama Institute
for the Deaf and Blind. The group of
Bnan Helton, 12, Ben Meredith. 18
and Tiinmareo Woods. 15, complet· ..
ed "The ?tar-Spangled Banner" in 57
seconds.

Thompson's memoir
filled with humor, history
longtime Martinsville (Va,)
Speedway publicist Dick Thompson
has written a warm memoi r of his

years in rac1ng, A Funny Th1ng Hap·
pened on the Way to the Check·
ered Flag (Precision Publishing,
$6.99 ).
The book is liberally spiced with
the funny photos and accompanying
captions that have been an enjoy·
· able feature of Thompson ·s Mar·
tinsville programs over the years ..It
can be ordered online at
NASCAR.com.

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