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HOME AND GARDEN

PageD6
Sunday,Cktoberto,2oo4

Carving pumpkins, a colorful symbol of Halloween
Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET, VA
Credit the Irish with putting a
colorful face on Halloween.
Carving jack-o ·-lanterns is
a Halloween custom brought
to this country by Irish immigmnts arriving to escape "the
Hunger," or the Great Potato
Famine of the 1840s.
"A legend grew up about a
man named Jack. who was so
stingy he was not allowed
into heaven when he died." a
U.S. State Department publication says. ''He couldn't
enter hell, either, because he
had played jokes on the devil.
As a result. Jack had to walk
the Earth with his lantern
until Judgment Day."
The Irish began the "Jack
of the Lanterns" or jack·o·
lantern tradition by slicing
frightening facial features
into turnips. beets or potatoes.
" But when th e Iri sh
brought their customs to the
United States, they carved
faces on pumpkins because in
the autumn they were more
plentiful than turnips." the
State Department says.
The practice eventually .
spread worldwide. becoming
in the process an enduring
sy mbol of Halloween and the
autumn harvest. Pumpkins
are native to the Americas.
Historians believe they were
fe atured
on the
first
thanksgi vi ng Day menu - ··
probably cut into strips and
roasted by the Indians.
Increasingly, a strong back
can be more important than a
green thumb for growing
pumpkins. It isn't uncommon
for some of the larger hybrids
to produce fruit weighing
more than I .200 pounds. says
Everett Davi s. who directs
the North Carolina State
University
Cooperative
at
Extension
Center
Lumberton.
."Certain varieties grow

much larger than the typical ,
but thev ' re not all that edible." Davis says. "Folks that
grow the giant pumpkins take
things very seriously. They
give their plants meticulous
care . They treas ure their
seeds. making them family
heirluonK"
The world's record runs
well over IJOO pounds.
Fanciers predict th at with the
right seeds and the proper
nurturing, it won't be long
before pumpkins are produ ced that top a ton in size.
Pumpkins are grown most
often for their ornamental
value although they're also a
popular ingredient - often
used interchangeably with
squash or sweet potatoes in pies. so ups, stews and
breads. among other things.
"Most people don't take the
time to cook like that anymore ," Davis says. "The
Con nectic ut fie ld varie ty
(w ith pumpkins maturing at
l 0 to 20 pounds apiece) is
usually grow n for jack-o'lanterns . Miniatures the size
of softball s are used for displays on tables ...
Pumpkins favored for
cooking - the sweet or small
sugar varieties - usually are
planted in spring and mature
by mid-summer. Davis says.
Ornamentals can be planted
as late as Jul y. making them
ripe
for
harve st
by
Hallowee n. Figure II 0 to 120
days to maturity.
Most pumpkin cultivars are
fragile. They're espec ially
susceptible to frosts at planting and when nearing harvest.
If you live in an area with a
short growing season , you
would be wise to start the
plants indoo rs and then transplant the seedlings after the
ave rage date of the last
killing frost.
Pumpkins need plenty of
elbowroom. with a single
vine grow ing to more than 30
feet in length. But the vines
are pliant . Their tendrils can

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o ( I :'\ I S • \

ol.

.l.l. :\ u . :t -1

1

Be it Resolved by the People of the State of Ohio:

Thall he Constitution of the State of Ohio be amended by
adopting a section to be designated· as Section II of
Article XV therepf, to read as follows:
Article XV
Section II . Only a union between one man and one
woman may be a marriage valid in or recognized by this
state and its political subdivisions. This state and its political subdivisions. shall not create or recognize a legal
status for relationships of unmarried individuals that intends to approximate the design, qualities, significance
or effect of marriage.

• Wisconsl\1 overcomes
early deficit against
Bucks. See Page Bl

YES
NO

SHALL THE
PROPOSED AMENDMENT BE
ADOPTED?

ISSUE I
FULL TEXT

OF AMENDMENT

OFFICE OF THE
SECRETARY OF STATE
OF OHIO

Be it Resolved by the People
of the State of Ohio:

I, J Kenneth Blackwel l,
Secretary of State, do hereby eerti·
fy that the foregoing IS the fulltexl

That the ConstitutiOn of the
State of Ohio be amended by
adopting a section to be desig-

of the cons titut ional amendment
proposed by initiative petition filed

nated as Section 11 of Article

State pursuant to Artie le-11. Secti ons

thereof. to read as follows:

in the of1ice nf the Secretary of

Article XV
Section II. Only a union be-

ta and tg of the Con,tilution of the
Stale of Ohio; together wnh the
ballot language certified to •me by
the .Ohll) Ballot
. Board ·and the

tween one man and one woman

c.xplanaf'ions.argumcnts as submit-

XV

may be a marriage va lid in or ted to me by the proponents and op·
recognized by thiS slate and its · ponents of the amendment , as
political subdiviS ions. ThiS slate prescribed by law.
and its political subdivisions
IN TEST IM Ot-;Y WHERE·
shall not · create or reCognize a FORE. I have hereunto subscri bed
legal status for relationships of . my name al Columbus. Oh1u th i•
unmarried individuals that in·
Hth day of September. 2004.
tends to approximate the design,
qualities, signi ficance or effect J. Kenneth Black"ell
of marriage.
Sccrelar} of Stale

1 1 , :.!' 1 u 1

\\ ~' \\

1

lnH l.n h

·••· 111111~

I , • , "'

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFL!CH®MYDAILYSENTIN EL .COM

POMEROY - While th e Meigs
County Health Department will be targeting the elderly, the very young, and
the medi cally compromised with tlu
vaccine at clinics scheduled later thi s
month, the agenc y is not now foreseeing any real vaccine shonages here.
"As a precaution what we will be
doing is asking those who do not fall

into at-ri sk groups if th~y wis h to
decline until those at high risk have
received their vaccine." said Sherry
Weese, RN , director of nursing.
Over 1600 shot s of vacc ine from the
Ohio Department of Health for the
targeted population are availabl e for
th e clinics and in addition to that the
Meigs County Health Department has
purchased 500 shots for the general
public . In 2003 a total of I, 122 flu
shots were administered in the clinics.

A clinic will be held a.t the Senior
Citizens Cen ter f(lr Meigs County
residents age 65 or older and tho'e
with chron ic medical condi tions
(asthma. diabetes, blood disorders.
heart disease. kidney disease , anemia.
etc.) from 9 to I I a.m. and I to 3 p.m .
on Friday. Oct. 22.
On Monday, Oct. 25. and Tuesday,
Oct. 26. from 9 to II a. m. and I to 3 p.m.
clin ics will be held at the Health
Department onice for the general pub Iic.

Weese ;aid that si nce there is no
current indicati on of vaccine shortage
here. there is to no need for citizens to
arrive before th e scheduled times of
the clinics. In past years when shortages ha ve heen pred icted, residents
have come in before the cl inics started and 'tood in lines around the
building for long periods of time.
Once the scheduled clinics have

Please see Clinics, A5

FEMA updates
Meigs flood awards
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MY DAI LYS ENTIN EL.COM

Reagan Herpich, 2, scales a pile of pumpkins Thursday, at The Garden Spot in Independence, Mo. (AP Photo/The Kansas City Star, David Pulliam)
be draped around companion
plants like field corn or
attached to fences to guide.
th em along. Growers ha ve
been known to ripen pumpkins on their decks or from
apartment balco nies after
trainin g seg ments of the
clingy vines, which ha ve
been freed of their fruit , to
climb tre lli ses.
Since the average pumpkin
is about 80 percent water. it
figures they need a steady
suppl y of moisture to make it
to maturity. "Pumpk ins crave
a lot of direct sun: anywhere
from six to I0 hours a day,' '
Dav is says. ··And watering is

important. Most of the people
striving for re co rd sized
pumpkins use trickl e down
system s that provide constant
water to the plants. You can
provide fertilizer throug h the
water to enrich ."
Prui1ing also is important
- pruning both the vine and
the fruit. Davis says. "You
want as muc h leaf

~ urface

as

you can get to catch the sun light and the rain ." he says.
" But re move all th e frui t
deYeloping on the plant save
one. All the (pla nt 's ) energy
then goes to that si ngle
pumpkin."
Pick your pumpkins after

EXPLANATION AND ARGUMENT IN SUPPORT OF
MARRIAGE' PROTECTION AME NDMENT (ISSUE I)
Vote YES on Issue 1 to preserve in Ohio law the un iversal.
histori c in stitution of marriage as the union of one ma n and one
woman. and to protect marriage against those whu woul d ahcr
and undermine it.
WHAT IS SUE I DOES :
Issue I establishes in the Ohio Clinstit ution the histo ri c
definition of marriage as cxclusi\'ely betwee n one man and one
woman a&gt; husband and wife.
~

• Issue I excl udes from the definit ion of marriage homosexual relationships and relationsh ips of three or more persons.
• Issue I prohibits judges in Oh io fi·om anti-democratic etTorts
to redefine marriage, such as was done hy a bare majority of the
judges of the Massac huset.ts Supreme Cm111. which ordered that
same-sex "marriage" be recognized in that state.

"

A majority yes vote is nccessar)' for passage.

:\I&lt; J N I J \ ' • ( )( · I ( UU • I{

Flu shot clinics scheduled for Meigs Countians

SPORTS

the shell s harden and they
tu rn from gree n to a ri ch
orange. but leave six inche s
of stem or more on each. That
helps them remain fresh.
Let the pumpkins sit in the
garde n for another week to
I0 days to mature. then store
(be carefu l if stacking) them
in a cool. dry shed. Given the
proper condit ions. l&gt;umpkin s
wi ll last through the heart of
\vinter.
Ir you haw fou nd a vari ety
yo u like. then you'·re in luck.
Si mply gather a few seeds
from your prize pumpkins.
dry and store them. They will
be ready to produce ,&gt;1 new

cro p for you with the next
grow1ng season.

'\
I

011 the Net:
For more ahout Halloween.
see the U.S. Department of
State :
http://w WW.IISCO/IS U /a,te .gr
IHallo wee/l.lzlml.
For more ctbout gro wing
fllllllflkim. co/1.\u/t North
Ca roli11a

Staie

• Issue I restricts governmental bodies in Ohio from using your
tax dollars to give official status. recognition and benefits to
homosexual and other de viant relation ships that seek to imitate
maniage.
WHAT ISSUE I DOES NOT DO :
• Issue I does not interfere in any way with the individual
choices of citizens as to the private relationships they desi re to
enter and ma intai n.
• Iss ue I does not interfere in any way with govcmincnt
benefits granted to persons in non-mari tal homosexual relationships, so long as the govemment does not grant those benefits to
such persons specifica lly for the reason that the relationship is
one that seeks to imitate marriage.
The wisdom of the ages tells us th at marr iage between one man
and one woman is crit1cal 10 the well being of our children and
to th e nwintenancc uf the fu ndamental soc ia l institution of the
fami ly. Please vote to preserve maniage on November 2~ 2004.
Please Vote YES on Issue I,
the Marriage Protection Amendment.
Submitted by the Ohio Campatgn to Protect Maniage:

Ph II 13 urrcss

lj

~,!

INSI,DE

... • .... .
.. ...•
.. ,.

0

'

•Afghanistan's presidential
election turns sour as
Karzai challengers boycott,
claiming fraud and
incompetence. See Page AS

Ullil'ersil'.'

Cooperatil•e Extension: .
http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/r
ob eso n/edco/u mn/2fJ02/082202.II tml.
You call contact Dean
Fosdick at:
dea nfosdic k(at )nels cape.11et.

' ...~·,

•

• •

.

....

•f
~

. I, 0

'. ·'

• •
•

Face painting is always popular with the younger set. Here clown Paige Cleek creates a des tgn
for Maggie Smith at the fam ily fal l festival. (C harlene Hoefl ich; ~hoto)

Family fun festival a success
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

The Ohio \1arriage Amendment. It's Not What
You Think.

POMEROY - There was
someth ing fun. for everyone
at the second annual family
fall festival Saturday ni ght as
Lynn Street and the basement
of Trinity Church took on a
carnival atmosphere.
Clowns roamed the street
with one doing balloon animals, another face painting s
for the kid s, and another distributin g goodies from a
pocket apron.
Youngsters enjoyed numerous games including throwing ball s at a dunkin g
machine, extin guishin g candles with a squirt gun. and

It Hut1s Families.
If passed. Issue I will el im inate ri ghts. benefits and protections
for all unmarried coup les in Ohio. Claims th at it merely restates
Ohio's long-s tanding delinition of maniagc arc untrue. Even
Defense of Marriage Act author State Representative Bill Seitz
said the amendment is poorly written and too amb iguous.
Governor Taft and Attorney General Petro say it goes too far.

WEAmER

While cla1m ing to protect Ohio fami lies. Issue I act uall y
punishes:
• Senior living together to protect pension benefits
• Unmarried wuples seeki ng to jointly own property
• People who rece ive health benefits from domestic
partner plans
• Un marri ed women seekin g maternity ]eave
• AJoptcJ children of unmarried cou pl es

Please see Festival, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

If this amendment passes. even an unman·icd person's righ t to
leave property to a partner could not be recognized by Ohio courts.
Referring to leaders behind the amendment. The Canjon
Repository sai d ...
"They make no bones about wanting to make life as
difficult as possible for all couple.•, gay or straight,
who don 't toe their mora/line. "

INDEX
'

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGF.S

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

It Hurts Ohio's Economy.
Lead ing economic and legal experts agree that Issue I would
· have a ncg_allve impact on our struggling economy. The edi torial page editorof th e Cle veland Pl ain Dealer stated in a recent editorial that th is amendment would cost the state thousands of
jobs, and help perpetuate Ohio 's "long and relentless di ve to th e
bottom."
Crain·, Cleveland Businessslllnmcd up the economic impact by
stating. "The abilit y to offer such benefits [domestic partner benefits] is a \:rit ica\ tool to many companies and un iversities in
Ohio. The article concluded the editorial by saying ...
"Regardless 11/ytJIIr f eelings abtJUt gay marriage,
tlzi.1 tunendment deseri•es to be 'defeared because iris
ami-bu.•i~re., ., and ami-competitive. ;,
. VOTE "iO Oi"i ISSUE I. PROTECT OHIO FA!\-! ILlES
'
A"'D JOBS.
'

Submitted ll y: Ohioans Protecting the Constitu tion
Alan !vlclamctl. Chair
Mary Jo lludson. Treasurer

_ _ _ _c._

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Sports

B1

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publis hing CO.

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners will
begin interviewing applicants
for the position of Meigs County
Development
Economic
Director later · this month. and
hope to seat tl1e new director "as
soon as possible," Meigs County
Commissioners said last week.
The commissioners will woffi
. closely with the executive com·
mittee of the Meigs County
Community
Improvement
Corporation to find a replat:ement
fi:lr Peny Vamadoe, who left the
iXJSI earlier this n10ntl1 to accept a
position with tl1e Ohio Governor· s
Office as a regional economic
developn1ent representative.
The application deadline for

POMEROY - The Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency announced Friday it
has awarded $2'1 ,579 in 27
hou si ng assis tan ce grants to
those affected by the Sept. 18
flood s.
Since the county was added
to a list of counties declared a
federal di saster are a last
month, I08 Meigs Co unty
homeow ners and renters have
applied for emergency housi ng
assistance. The funds awarded
can be used for repairs to
flood-damaged and uninsured
homes and for temporary disaster rental assistance.
Meigs
Emergency
Management Director Robert
Byer said at least six homes
were totall y destroyed in the
fla sh and river flooding
which devestated areas of the ·
county in September. The
tloods are the worst to hit
Mei gs Co unty since 1964,
and caused some damage to
as many as 50 homes. and

o\·er $2 million in damage to
infras tru cture
in cluding
roads. bridges and c ul verts.
Those residents affected are
al so eligible for cash for home
repairs and other t1ood-related
needs, including medical and
dental expenses. personal
property repai r and unemployment benefits . FEMA has
al so aw arded five grants totaling 530,636 for other needs
assistance in the county.
FEMA has awarded more
than S13 million in grants and
low-interest disaster loans in
18 countie s. including Athens,
Gallia and Vinton. Belmont
County has received $2.4 milli on in housing assistance
awards. and Washington
County S1.55.944. Those two
counties were hardest hit by
the floods, the aftermath of
Hurricanes Charley, FranceS
and Ivan.
Applicants may call FEMA
at (800) 621-FEMA between
7 a.m. and 10 p.m. Those
hours have been reduced
from 24-hour operations
offered earlier.

•'

Youngsters and adults alike showed their creative s kill in carving
and painting pumpkins at the family fall festiva l. Here are a few of
th e more than 30 entered in the competition. Winners were selected by the penny-a-vote system with the money going to God's New,
Meigs County youth program. (Charlene Hoefiich/photo)

Search for new development director underway
Details on Page A2

Rev. K.Z. Smith
Lori \ 'iar"

~

fl'&lt;l)

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Proposed by Initiative Petition)

'Teddy Bear Day', A2

en ne

Ballot Language, Explanation/Arguments and Full Text for Amendment to the Ohio Constitution, Proposed by Initiative Petition, to be Submitted to the Voters at the General Election on November 2, 2004.

PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

ovcs

Steelers beat Browns to
win third Sb'Bight, B6

tl1e position is Friday, according
to Meigs County Commissioner
Jim Sheeh. and the commissioners and CIC committee
members expect to begin inter·
viewing shonly aticr that.
The director oversees the
county\ econom ic developfl.l ent endeavurs. indudi ng
mee tin g with prospective
industries. answe rin g inquiries
about the coumv and its.indus·
trial sites. and' meeting with
stme and district ol'ti.:iak The
economic development director also serves as the supervisor
for the county's totuism oftice.
The position i' fu nded
throu gh
the
.:ounty's
Temporary A&gt;Sistance to
Needy Families appropriation.
Meigs was the tim county in
the state to use TANF funds to r

econom ic development etlo11s.
although several other counties
bave si nce followed sui t.
Commissio1i er
Mick
Davenport said the county
hopes to have a new director
in place soon. but said there
is no specific deadline .
"We hop; to have a new dire&lt;:tor
in pi&lt;K'C a' soon as possible.
because there's much to be done.
but we don't have a Um!et date in
mind." [).tvenpon s;ud.~This is a
busy position ~Uld &lt;Ul irnport;mt
one. wld it's impol1al1tto the county's well being th&lt;d we titld a soung
t~pl acement as soon a' possible."
Davenport said V&lt;mladoe. in
J1i, new position. will continue
to work closely with Meig s
County in its economic development effort.,, si nce his eightco unty re gion includes Mcig,.

As part of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative (MCCI) has provided a video to Curves In
Pomeroy that will be played to their 200-plus members as an
educational tool on detecting breast cancer. The group's mission 1s to educate and get people involved in the figh t against
cancer. Pictured from left are Alberta Hyse ll. Assistant
Manager for Curves. Carolyn Grueser. MCCI. Diana Coates,
MCCI . Carol J. Adams, MCCI. (Beth Sergent/ photo )

Meigs County Cancer Initiative ·
on mission to educate public
· BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDA!LYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - October is
Breast Ca ncer AwareneS&gt;
Month and orga nizations
across the country are stepping up efforts to educate the
publ ic on how w detect and
co mbat the disease.
Local lv. the MeiQ s Count\
Cancer · In itiati\:e.
Inc.

I MCC! l have joined forces

with Curves For Women
located in Pomeroy to raise
awarene's of brea't cancer.
Curws. a fitness ce nter of
200-plus members. have
agreed to show a Yideo in
their work-out room provided
by MCCI. The Yideo is enti tled " Breas t Cancer Early

Please see C•ncer, AS

�PageA2

EDUCATION

The Da.ily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October u, 2004

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

Benjamin Rutherford. Abigail Walker, Jacob Riley, Elijah Warner, front, and Brady Andrew,
Jessica Steele. Andrew Hall, Karlee Edmonds, Amam Meeks, Jadah Barnette. left to right, pose
for a picture with their bears on Teddy Bear Day.

Weather forecast
Skies will be sunny to mostly sunny
Monday, October II
with 5 to I0 MPH winds trom the
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise from .:lito nonhea1t.
57 by late this morning. Skies will be
Eveni11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
sunny with 5 MPH winds from the
Temperatures will fall from 54
northeast.
early this evening to 47. Skies will
be mostly clear with 5 MPH winds
Ajtemoo11 (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures Will rise from 60 from the northeast.
early afternoon to the high for the
Overnight (1·6 a,rn.)
day of 65 at 3:00pm as they drop
Temperatures will remain around
back down to 63 later this afternoon.

for their parents on "Teddy
Bear Day."
Sue Murray, kindergarten
teacher, used the teddy bear
theme and program to teach
prewriting.
story-telling,
wiriting. and creativity to the

with today's low of 41 occurring
around 6:(X)am. Skies will be mostly
Tammy Garber. Dale Gibbs.
GALLIPOLIS . Gallipolis Vanderberg.
clear with 5 MPH winds from the
Career College has released
Students achieving a 3.5 or Crystal Gibson. Lalenya
northeast.
better
grade point average Hankla.
Amy
Harden ,
the list of students named to
the achievement list for sumc were Hope Cochran. Aimee Christopher H&lt;mshom. Sharon
Tuesdav, October 12
Conklin, Susan Cox. Tiffany Hurt. Kimberlie Jackson .
mer quarter 2004.
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Those students obtaining a Culpepper. Jessica Davis. · Christie Johnson. Michelle
Temperatures will drop from 41 perfect 4.0 grade point aver- Nyoka Hairston, Nina House. King. Sarah Layne. Misty
Klein.
Donita Masters. Stephanie McKenzie.
early this morning to 41 by 7:00am age were Pam Alkire. David Kellev
McClintic,
Christina
Linda Mitchell.
Heather
Bias,
then climb back up to 55 late morn- Barnes. · Summer
Mitchell, Amanda Morrison , Moore.
Tammy
Moore.
ing. Skies will be mostly sunny with Cassandra Brumfield, Angela Leslie Richard. Elizabeth Amanda Mullins. John Piggott.
Collins, Natasha Daniels,
5 \&lt;!PH winds from the northeast.
Christina
Denny,
Freel Robinson. Pansy Robinson. Tracy Price. Beth Rocchi.
Rou sh.
Sharon
Dougherty, Kelly Eichinger, Linda Scott, Erica Thornton .lu ssica
Rutherford. Britany Settles.
Pat Gay. Garnett Gill, XaJ;the and Donna Williams.
Those
students
who
achieved
Tony
a St;lpleton. Angela
Glassburn. Brian Hartman ,
Angela Jeffers. Jessica Knapp. a 3.0 or better grade point aver- Stewart, Heather Stur~ill, Tina
Kevin Kuhn, Phil Lee, .lay age were Belinda Bates, Mark Tompkins. Elana Tyrce.Crystan
Bowen, Belinda Brown. Vance. Sandra Weethee, Julie
ate of Public Service degree Mitchum. Chandra Moon. Jon Amanda Combs. Teresa Williams and Trina Young.
from the Universitv of Rio O'de ll . Amy Pearce. Melanie
For information about
Qualls. Angela Shafer, Linua Combs. Brenda Cook. Vicki
Grande in 1997.
·
A graduate of Miami Sibley. Lora Smith, John Cox. Alice Cremeans, Delorse classes or programs at GCC.
University. Kidd first worked Spencer. Shirley Thacker. Elliott, Mary Ezeonu. Veronica call 446 - 4~67 or 800-214as a CPA specializing in Leah Truance and Nancy Fiemings. Deni'e France. 0452.
'
auditing and systems. In
~~.· .a......~· ~~.· I 1 ~· ••••
~·
1970. he joined Oak Hill
Banks as the CEO.
Jane Kidd, a native of St.
Paul. Minn. , also graduated
from Miami Uni versity,
where she received a bachelor
of arts degree.
The Kidds have three children .

.

Math building named after Kidds
RIO GRANDE · The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
named its math and sc·ience
building in honor of Jack and
Jane Kidd during a special
event on Saturday. The
newly-named Kidd Math and
Science Center was named
during a ceremony in the
lobby of the building.
"Jack and Jane Kidd are
Joyal supporters of Rio
Grande and are known for
their philanthropY. throughout
southern Ohio,' said Rio

Granue President Dr. Barrv
Dorsey. The couple has
worked very hard to support
Rio Grande in a variety of
ways over the years. and
Dorsey said it is ve ry fittin g to
name the Math and Science
building after the Kiud fami ly.
Jack Kidd joined the
Unive rsity of Rio Grande
Board of Trustees in 1982. He
served a two-year term as
chairman of the Board from
1994-1996.
Kidd
also
received an honorary doctor-

l

GCC graduation held
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
Career College graduation
ceremomes were held recently for all students who comple~ed thetr course of study
durmg the 2003-2004 school
year. The ceremony took
place at the Fatth Bapt1st
Church Famtly M1111stry
Center m Rodney.
John Danicki, director of education at GCC, opened the ceremony with the invocation atier
which Willi'am Plants, political
science and economics .instructor at GCC. led the audience m

:.•··-......·•·

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...

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e

\

Send us a
photo of
!: your
favorite
: pet and

l

the Pledge of Allegiance.
Betty Collins, Teresa Combs,
School president Robert L. Vicki Cox, Dale Gibbs, ~
·Shirey welcomed the graduates Heather Harle,, Angela
and introduced the keynote Jeffers , Brandy Johnson ,
speaker, Ohio Sen. John Carey, Kelly Klein, Rae Mash, Alisha
Wellston. In his address Carey Mullen. Jonathan O'Dell,
congratulated the graduates on Susan
Phillips,
Sharon
their accomplishment. He Rutherford, Britany Settles,
noted the hard work. sacri- Tanya Sinclair, Steve Spires,
fices,and courage it takes to Florence Tomlinson, Mary
pursue a college degree.
Woodall. and Trina Young.
Following Carey's address. · GCC director John Danicki
associate degrees and dipln- closed the ceremony with the
mas were awarded by GCC henediction. Fnllowino the ceredirector John Danicki to : mony, grauuates and their !,'l.lests
Robm Atwood. James Barcus. enjoyed a reception ii1the center.

:f.. might be

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Pet Calendar!
~:

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

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Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, October 20th.

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'

home . Brent is no help
when it comes to shutting
her off.
I'm
anxi ous
about
Diana's visit because she
ignores my hints that she
keep her ideas to herself.
Am I being mean- spirited?
Her ideas are usually not in
keeping with our style ur
budget.
How should we handle it
when she offers a housewarming gift .. like lawn
furniture .. and in sists on
"helping" us pick it out'
Diana visits so often that
we can't accept something
and not use it.
Abby, thi s ha s gone on for
13 years. I love her in so
many other ways, but this
makes me feel· like an
ungratefu l daughter-in-law.
Please help. ·: ANXIOUS
IN NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR ANXIOUS: Since
Diana is an interior design~~as reported that there will Zwilling, Julie Flemming, er by profession, she cou ld
be pancake breakfast on Oct. Sandy White, Betty Biggs, be verbalizing her ideas out
30. and that on Nov. 13 a dis- Jnzy Newell. Opal Eichinger. of force of habit. Once the
White ,
Goldie ideas start flowing, it can be
trict friendship meeting will Thelma
be held with a potluck dinner Frederick, Charlotte Grant, hard to shut off the tap.
at noon .
Gary Holter, Laura Mae Nice, Rather than becoming
The tl&lt;tgbearers escorted Jo Esther Harden. Opal Hollon defensive when Diana starts
Ann Ritchie. Mary Jo ·
offering suggestions, simBarringer. Helen Wofe. and and Mary Holter.
Doris Gn1eser to the altar
At an earlier meeting the ply ·tell her that you will
where they were presented hospitalization of Everett "keep them in mind" or
gifts for accepting Council Grant and the illness of Erma
offices. It was noted that Cleland were noted. Quarterly
Mary Jo Barringer has pecans birthdays were celebrated ty
for sale for a committee.
· Julie Flemming, Mary Holter. ·
Present were those listed Doris Grue ser. and Laura Mae
and Ruth Smith, Janice Nice.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

Tuppers Plains UMW
TUPPERS PLAINS
Plans for remembering service men and women in Iraq
were made during a recent
meeting of the Tuppers Plains
United Methodist Women .
Thinking of you cards were
signed by the members.
Prayer cards will be included
and Christmas package s will
be se llt. Members will purchase the items to be sent.
During the meeting conducted by Judy Kennedy. it
was noted that the church
cookbook is being printed.
Pans were made for a holiday
dinner on Nov. 8 and for
members to meet at the

''give them some thou ght. ''
It's not in sulting. nor doe'
it commit you in any way.
If she offers a hou sewarming gi ft , remind her
that her tastes and yours are
not always in sync .. and let
her know what YOU have
in mind. After all. you wiJ,I
have to live with the results .
As a profes sional , she can
respect that .. and with her
re so urces. she can show
you things you might never
have dreamed were available.
ABBY: Four
DEAR
months ago, my husbanu
sent hi s 22- year-old daughter a check for a special
occasion . She still hasn ' t
cashed it. She insists if she
cashes it. the money will be
spent on groceries and rent
instead of something special.
My mother always told
me it was rude not to cash a
check from someone immediately. because otherwise
the sender had to deal with
it every month when trying
to balance hi s or her checkbook. My husband ·says I
am picking on her. Am 1
old- fashioned '1
"WICKED" STEPMOM IN

COLORADO
DEAR STEPMOM : Here
in California. if a check
isn't ca,hed within a certain
it 's
cunsidereu
time .
invalid. Howe,er. since
you r husband has accused
you of 'niping at hi' daughter. and he doe,n't seem to
mind th e inconvenienc~
c~used by his daughter's
outstanding check. it's tim~
to halt the 'helpful crit icism
and examine your mali ves .
DEAR ABBY: I recemlv
introduced my 3 1 -y~ar-old
su n anu his ladyfriend uf
three yea r' as my son " Ian"
and hi s fr iend "Lisa ." Li'a
took ollense and .said I
should have introduc ed
them as Ian and his GIRLFRIEND Li sa.
Since the y are not mar. ried or engaged, was I correct in mv introduction '! ..
IAN 'S MOTHER
DEAR
MOTHER
perhap,.
Technicall y,
However. since yo ur son
and Li sa have been an item
for three years. it woulu
have been more accu rat e to
have introduced her a' his
girlfriend. It appears yo ur
· oflband introduction struck
a ,nerve. hut it may he
because she's scnsitne
about that subject.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren . also
known as Jean ne Phillips ,
and was fou nded bv her
mother. Paul ine Phill ips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbb y.com
or
P0
Box 69440. La'
Angele s. CA 90069.

church on Nov. 27 to decorate
for Christmas.
Teresa Lemons shared a
new book, "Having a Mary
Heart in a Martha World"
which has been purchased for
the Church lending library.
It was decided that all
women of the UMW will
donate a cake for a cake walk
to be held at the church
Halloween party to be held on
Oct. 31. Lemons reported on
the Women of Purpose
Conference she attended and
Betty Chevalier gave a report
on the West Ohio Conference
of the UMW noting that St.
Paul received a 5-star giving

"Pfr1ce: t~ ~ &amp;
Tlu"f/~ t~ . JP~··

award . New officers were
elected.
Sharon · Louks and Betty
Chevalier presented a program on the world thank
offering. Pastor Jane Beattie
closed the meeting with
prayer. Members enjoyed
refreshments and fellowship.
Attending were Connie and
Mary
Rankin, . B«ttY
Chevalier, Judy Kennedy,
Sharon Louks, Barb Roush,
Terri Soulsby, Anna Rice,
Weaver,
Teresa
Joanna
Lemons and Pastor Jane
Beattie.

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
to offer·companion class

they

1,,

...

CHESTER - In spect ion
was held at a recent meeting
of Chester Council 323.
Daughters of America, held at
the hall .
Esther Smith . was the
inspectin g officer and presented her report after whic h
she was escorted to the altar
and presented a gift.
Deloris Wolfe conducted
the mcetin~ which opened ln
ritualistic form with pledges
to the American and Chri,tian
flags, The Lord's Prayer in
unison. and singing of the
Nat10nal anthem.

Dear
Abby

we can do" with "o ur'' new

Lodge has inspection.

GCC posts achiev~merit list

~3

DEAR ABBY: My mother-in-law, ·•Diana," is a ~uc­
ce;sful interior designer.
Her son. "Brent," and I just
moved into . a new home.
and she ca n't wait to visit.
In the past, this has meant
days of listening to Diana' s
endless suggestions about
all of the ·•wonderful things

Other events

students.
Each child takes the
Kindergarten Teddy Bear
home for a few days and their
parents he! p them journal the
life of "Teddy" as he travels
around.

Monday, October u, .2004

Mother-in-law's design ideas
don't mesh with couples style

Birthdays

OVCS 'Teddy Bear Day'
GALLPOLIS - Under the
direction of Christy Perkins,
the elementary music and
program teacher at Ohio
Valley Christian ~chool, the
kindergarten students performed a series of bear songs

Public meetings

will conduct a childhood
immunization clinic from 9
to 11 a. and I to 3 p.m. at the
Monday, Oct. 11
ALFRED- The Orange office. Take shot records and
Monday, Oct. II
Township Trustees will meet medical cards if applicable.
- Meigs for a special session at 7:30 Children must be accompaPOMEROY
County Republican Party, p.m . at the home of Clerk nied by a parent/legal
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m., Osie Follrod.
guardian.
Republican Headquarters.
Friday, Oct. IS
POMEROY - The sched· Thesda~Oe. 12
POMEROY
- A staff
uled meeting of the Meigs .
PORTLAND
meeting Local Board of Education has member of Senator George
of anyone inte sted in the been canceled and resched- Voinovich will hold office
Portland Community Center uled for Wednesday, Oct. 27,
and Civil War Museum is at 7 p.m. on the central office. hours from II a.m. until noon
at Meigs
Multipurpose
asked to meet at the. old
RACINE
The
Southern
Senior
Center
in Pomeroy.
Portland School at 7 p.m.
Local
Board
of
Education
Volunteers arc encouraged will meet in special session at Opportunity to discuss federal legislation or to seek assisattend the meeting.
8
p.m.
at
the
high
school
to tance with federal agency
Thursday, Oct. 14
CHESTER -Shade River hire personnel and conduct casework issues. Call Cara
Lodge 45.1 will meet at 7:30 business pertinent to the Dingu s, 441 -6410.
Sunday, Oct. 17
p.m,
at
the
hall. operation of the district.
Tuesday, Oct. 12
MIDDLEPORT- Earthen
Refreshments.
BEDFORD - Bedford Vessels will be singing at the
POMEROY - Alpha Iota Township
trustees , 7 p.m., Middlcport Church of the
Masters Chapter of Beta Sigma regular meeting,
town hall.
Phi Sorority will travel to
Nazarene
6:30
p.m.
Wednesday,
Oct. 13
Ravenswooo Castle, Hocking
Refreshments
will
be
served.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Hills hear McArthur for lunch. County
Board of Health, 5
Members arc to meet at the
p.m.,
conference
room of
home of Carol McCullough at
health
department
at
112 E.
II a.m to leave.
Memorial Dr.
Wednesday, Oct. 13
Monday, Oct. 18
LAKIN, W.Va. - Douglas
CHAUNCEY- A Region
R. Roush will celebrate his
14 Youth Council meeting
93rd birthday. Cards can be
will be held at 9 a.m. at the
sent to him c/o Lakin
Athens Department of Jobs
Tuesday, Oct. 12
and Family Services on State
POMEROY - The Meigs Hospital. - I Bateman Circle.
Route 13 in Chauncey.
County Health Department Lakin, W.V., 25287.

NewsChailnel

PageA3

.

ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will otfer a conipanion class
for expectant mothers and
their birth coaches or companions 6:30 p.m. until 9
p.m. Thursday in the hospital
basement conference room B7.
The class is designed to

prepare a birth coach or companion to provide reassurance
to the expectant mother during the delivery of her baby.
The class is offered. free of
charge: no reg istrati on is
·
re4uired.
Information presented dur·
ing the class will include:
· what to expect during labor,

·YOL'R
CHOICE
'I

delivery and the first hours
afte r delivery; the role of the
companiop ; hosp ital procedures; variations of labor: and
postpartum care. Class participants will also tour the
O'Bieness Birth Center.
For more information call
(740) 592-9275 .

Tw$Recliners for Only

599
PROIIU:R

Rocher Recliner

Davis named Rio Fellow
RlO GRANDE - The
Unlvcrsitv of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande ):':ommunity College
is be;towing its highest honor
on Evan E " D~vis of Oak Hill .
Davis was proclaimed a Rio
Grande Fellow during a special evening ceremony on the
Rio Grande campus. Naming
Davis as a Fellow is the hi ghest honor the institution can
bestuw on an individual.
Davis was chosen for this
recognition because of his
loyal servant leadership to .the
university.
Rio Grande has. previously
named only 16. Fellows , and
President Dr. Barry Dorsey
&gt;aid that Davis is very deservin~ of this honor. ·
'It is because of his'· exem plary leadership and dedication to the institution ."
Dorsey &gt;aid.
Davi s and hi s wife.
Elizabeth. have bee11 very
involved with Rio Grande

over the years. Dorsey said.
The son of the late E. E.
Davis and Imogene Brunton
Davis of Oak Hill. Davis is a
graduate of Oak Hill' High
School and The College of
Wooster. In 1999, he received
an honorary Doctorate of
Publi c Service degree !'rom
the University of Rio Grande
After he graduated from
The Co ll ege of Wooster.
Davis first worked with hi s
father in the refractorv and
banking business. He went on
to serve as the pre sidem of the
Oak Hill Savings Bank (today

known as Oak Hill Banks)
from 1974 until 1991 , when
he became chairman of the
board. He later became chairman of the holding company
board, Oak Hill Financial .
Inc., and is currently serving
again as the chairman of Oak
Hill Banks .
At Rio Grande, Davis has
supported the institution in
many ways including serving
on the University of Rio
Grande Board of Trustees. He
and his wife have three grown
children and live on the Royal
Oak Farms· near Oak Hill.

·PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.·
The Dailv Seminel
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(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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"
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today 1s Monday. Oct II. the 285th day of 2004. There arc
81 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in H1story :
On Oct. II , 1779. Polish nobleman Cas1mir Pulaski, fight·mg for Amencan 111dependence, d1ed two days after being
·mortally wounded 1n the Revolutionary War Battle of
·Savannah, Ga.
. On this date.
In 181l,the l1rst stea m-powered ferryboat, the Juliana, wa~
put mto operatiOn bet ween New York City and Hoboken, N J
In 1890, the 0dughters of the Amencan RevolutiOn was
founded 111 Washmgton, D C.
In 1932, the first Amencan pollllcaltelecast took place as
the DemocratiC Nat1onal Committee sponsored a program
from a CBS television stud1o in New York
In 1942, the World War II Battle of Cape Esperance began
111 the Solomons, resulting 111 an American victory over the
Japanese.
In 1962. Pope John XX Ill con;ened the first session of the
Roman Catholic Church's 21st Ecumenical Council, also
known as Vatican II.
In 1968, Apollo 7. the first manned Apollo mission, was
launched with ast10nauts Wally Sch1rra, Donn Fulton Eisele
and R. Walter Cunnmgham aboard
In 1979, Allan McLeod Cormack and Godfrey Newbold
Hounsfield were named co-recipients of the Nobel Pnze for
Med1c111e for their work m developing the CAT scan X-ray.
In 1984, 20 years ago, space shuttle Challenger astronaut
Kathy Sullivan became the tirst Amencan woman to walk in
space
In 2002, former President ' J1mmy Carter won the Nobel
Peace Prize.
Ten years ago: U S. troops 111 Hail! took over the National
Palace lraqi troops begin moving north, away from the
Kuwaiti border. The Colorado Supreme Court declared the
state's ant1-gay nghts measure unconstitutional
F1ve years ago: Dr. Guenter Blobel of New York's
Rockefeller Universlt) won the Nobel Prize for medicine for
discovenng how proteins fmd their rightful places 111 cells.
One year ago: A team of 18 doctors at Children's Medical
Center Dallas began complicated separallon surgery for twoyear-old conjoined, twms from Egypt; the operation was completed in 34 hours. Clerks for three major supermarket chains in
Southern Cali forma began a four-and-a-half-month stnke after
negohat10ns w1th store offiCilils broke off Ivan A Gettmg, a
Cold War snent1st who conceived the Global Pos1tiomng
Satellite system, d1ed In Coronado. Cahf, at age 91
Today\ Birthdays. Author Elmore Leonard IS 79. Actor
Ron Leibman IS 67 Country smger Gene Watson IS 61.
Smger-music1an Daryl Hall 1s 55 Sen. Patty Murray, DWashington, is 54 R&amp;B musician Andrew Woolfolk is 54.
Actress-director Catlin Adams is 54. Actor David Morse is 51
Country smger Paulette Carlson is 51. Football player Steve
Young IS 43. Actress Joan Cusack is 42. Comedy writer and
TV host M1chael L Nelson IS 40. Actor Sean Patrick Flanery
is 39 Actor Luke Perry IS 38 Country smger-songwnte1 Todd
Snider IS 38 Actress Jane Krakowski IS 36 Rapper MC Lyte
is 33 Smger NeeNa Lee IS 29 Actress M1chelle Trachtenberg
is 19
Thought for Today "When a fnend speaks to me, whatever
he says IS mterestmg " -Jean Renoir, French movie director
(1894-IY79J

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

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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accurate If you know of an error 1n a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 99221 56

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Monday, October u,

2004

The unnerving 'Plot'·

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

Th1s is not a review of
Philip Roth's "The Plot
Agamst
Amenca"
(Houghton M1fflm). It's not
even a review of the reviews
of Philip Roth's "The Plot
Agamst America." Instead,
tt's a revtew, or rumwat10n,
on the su1cidal self-absorption of the 21st-century Left,
that enlightened camp that
believes Dan Rather would
never pass phony docs to
manipulate an election, that
liar-propagandist M1chael
Moore deserved that presidential box seat at the
Democratic Con;enuon. that
John Kerry 1s the spmeendowed, if manicured, epitome of consistency, and that
George W. Bush is a cryptofasclst. And that mmdset has
seized on the Roth book.
Gullible? That's a mce
word for 11 But not sangume. Sometlung keeps the
Left up at night, but not
v1sions of a biochem1cal
attack at the World Senes
That nightmare 1s too reali sllc. What the Left fears- all
the Left has to fear, as grand
old reprobate Ted Kennedy
put 1t, twistmg the celebrated
words of FOR - is four
more years of George W.
Bush The VIllage Voice captures this mood 111 1ts Roth
review: The book "makes
one feel that the worst for
th1s country 1s not only possible but near" Agam - not
a jihadist attack, but a second Bush term.
What connects Mr Roths
fantasy-history
\lilth
ElectiOn 2004? The novel
explores what might have
happened had FOR been
defeated m 1940 by transAtlanllc flight piOneer and
Nazi
admirer
Charles

and the hardships of immigrants from Muslim counttles."

the Patnot Act 1 - has CUI tailed liberties, cost blood
and treasure, and destroyed
hard-won peace of mmd II
thiS Irrefutable fact results in
Be1man's 1dea of Muslim
"hardships" prof11Ing''
surveillance? - there s a
reason: You wiiiiHul 11 111 the
absence of the W01ld Tr,Idc
Center 111 lower M,mhattan
As for Jev.s. the1r "h,ud sh!ps" - 6 mliluu1 nun deled 111 death c&lt;1mps. to
11&lt;1me onc· - !~suited lrom
bemg Jc" '
SuLh L ilh dll' tnvJ&gt;.,thle to
a Lelt blinded bv 1ts h&lt;1t1Cd
of PreSident Bush They

You do? Some might wonder what dnves an apparently functiOmng bram - after
Diana
all, Berman 1s a MacArthur
West
Foundation "gem us" - to
lmk a JLmk-sci-fi plan tor
"scatte11ng JewiSh children
L1ndbergh
And?
The mto the Chnst1an heartland"
Washington Post's Jonathan with the Patriot Act, a postYardley clues us 111 The 911 I measure that has
"subtext g1ves every uppear- stymied numerous potential,mee of bemg an attack on ly cataclysmic terrorisl con·
George W. Bush." Old New sp1rac1es. Berman calls the
Leftist Paul Berman. wntmg Patriot Act "cloy1ng": I call
1t a IJtesdVel
111 The New York T1mes
And what of "sc,ntered
Book Review, elahorates
"Roth shows us how swiftly Jews" .md "Muslim hard· read about a l~tnta:-;y - ld~ll...,t
the nghts and democratic sh1ps' ., Cnt lc- hys tenc Frank 111 the White House v. ho
the
Je-...Ish
c6&gt;toms of Amencan hie aie R1ch - who p1mses "the persecutes
lost, under the authoritarian l1ght (I he hook) casts on thi s minority. and. Instead ol
guidance
of
PreSident present American moment' yelling' C l &lt;~p tl ap!" they cdll
Lmdbergh and hiS cloymgly - .I lso sees a parallel m the tor George W Bush's he.1d
named 'Just Folks' p10g1 am." "aill'n " .tspect tu "nMny m on an electm .d pl.1tter In
The p1ogram. he wntes. tile he.utl,llld" of both "Jews urgmg Steven Sp1elbe1g to
"sets out to break up Jewish 111 the 1930s" ,md today's film the Roth book. Nell'
York Mag,lZJne make~ tlu . ,
lam1hes and neighborhoods Amencan Muslims
But there 's no way, m Ide! dear The celchi.Ited dllcc by scattenng JewiSh chil dren into the Chnst1an heart- 01 11Ct1on. to equate the tor "must liter,Iilze " - litei·
'Roth's
land. " Persecution and experience ot 1930s Jews alize!
metaphors."
the
mag
wntes
with
that
ot
post-200
I
pogroms - ilct10nal - lol Mu sl1ms ThiS Isn't JUS! '"J940' IS .!ClUdJJy 2()()J,
low.
There 1s something grat- hec.1use of a Muslim i11St01y 'L1ndbergh' IS. ol cnurse.
ingly noxiou s about depict- of persecut1ng Jews. Or JUst W: the naven dill III' &lt;II lies
mg 1magmary Amcncan- because alai mmg numbers of the Amenc,m F1rsters ,n e
Jewish suflenng at the hands ol Musl1ms today are sym- Ill fact the Cl dVCn p!O-Wdl
of Amencan Christians at a pathetiC to Osama bm lies ot the &lt;\me11C.1n
time when both Jews and Laden, who hopes to eradi- Enterpme lnstilllte. ,md
whose
Christians are mcreasmgly cate Jews (and Chrisllans) 'Amen c&lt;I n Jews'
targeted by specifically Or because Arab-Muslim nghts and prote ctions die
lslam1c teiron sm But what count11es wei e Tlmd Reich slow ly stnpped dW.IY by "
di'C
have Roth's fevensh f1ctions dihcs Or bec,Iuse Muslim hostile government
co urse.
Aiahabout a dov1sh-isolatiomst ant i-Sem itism - a feature of of
PreSident Lmdbergh - who the Lclt - has agam made Amcncans ·
Actudlly' In Iact' 01
defeats hawkish -Interven - Europe a pe11lous place for
Jews
The
fact
is,
until
couiSe
&gt; Sounds l1ke .l re,ll
tionist FOR- to do w1th the
,
hawkish· i nterven 110111 s t Mushms leave the holy war plot agamst Amenc.I.
I Dia11a We111 1 a columll/\1
admm1strat1on'' agamst non-Musiims 111 the
Bush
8th
century,
we
v.
II
I
have
}or 111e Wcilhmgioll f1ml'l
Berman wntes "You fmd
Musl1m
tellollsm
PostShe um he t ontm ft' rl 1 w
yourself reflecting on the
equally cloying Patriot Act 200 I, that terronsm - not dumau nt@\ &lt;Jt r;on.llt:'t )

L;zura or Teresa? -who eares?
When m) husband and I
hired a contractor to remodel
my kitchen, or a financial
adviser to oversee our retirement fund, or a baby-sitter to
care for our son when he was
young, we never insisted on
meeung tfim spouses. It didn't occur to us I had never
been asked to bnng my hu sband along on a JOb interview, and he had never been
asked to bnng me.
As I understand Il, the
standard hmng procedure "
to assess a JOb candidate's
skill and trustworthmess
through mterv1ews and references of those who have
worked with them. Who the
job candidate shares a bed
and a checking account With
1s not Important
So why do we make such a
big deal about the presidential candidates' wives?
Yes, there is the Peoplemagazme celebrity factor
We want to know personal
detmls about famous people,
whether they are realityshow winners or presidential
candidates But despite all
the magazme arucles and
interviews
and
stump
speeches, the w1ves are Irrel evant. They are no more of a
factor m a presidenllal race
ih&gt;!n a candidate's blrlhplace
or al rna mater. Studies show
they do not affect the final
vote count
"I don 't think anybody
pulls the curtain behind them
m the votmg booth and votes
for (who they want to be) the
first lady," said Robert
Watson, professor of political science at Flonda
Atlantic Umvers1ty and
author of four books about
first ladies.
Betty Wmfield 1s a
University of Missoun journalism and political professor who stud1ed press coverage of candidates' w1ves during the 2000 presidential
race. She agrees "I don't
thmk 11 makes much d1ffer·
ence (who the WIfe ")," she

want to say 11 "
It "mstrucllve to note that
the dll.lcks on the w1ves did n't affect the outcome of the
cl ecuon The1r husbands still
won The dltdcks were. tor
Joan
the most p.Irt. cruel enterRyan
tammcnt
"They USC the Wife lO try
to emascLiiatc the c.llldi·
says 'The power is wilh the • d.1te," s;ud Elaine Lallerty,
president."
CLillm ol Ms Maganne,
Yet we pretend the candi- 11 h1ch Iccently r&lt;1n a cover
dates' w1ves matter tor two story elllliled. 'First Lad1es:
1easons
Who
Needs
Them
One. If we make a b1g de.Il Any" "l ' ·
about the w1ves. we can fool
"The) s,1y. He can't even
ourselves Into behevmg that conuol hiS own Wife. How
women .1re pldyers 111 the can he he com mande r' m
most impo1tan t polit1 c.li clnel'' "
aren,I 111 the country If 'A e
Tc!Cs.l He1nz Keny "the
turn the w1ves Into b1g cuncnt designated punclung
enough stars, maybe we'll bdg. Just as Hlildry Clinton
forget th,Il. 40 yems after the "'" 12 yedrs ago Indeed, as
women's movement .llld I rc.1d ids! weeks New
decades after less-progres- Yorke1 .p-rofile of Hein~
s1ve countnes have elected Kcny. I thought the write!
Women to lead, the v.omen l1.1d JUst changed the names
on the presidenllal camp.ugn .md Sllllply rep nnted "
trml arc still not the actu.Il Hill.n-y profile from 1992
cand1d&lt;Ites.
Contrary to press coverage.
The second reason we pre- It '"" a myth then and a
tend that they are !actors 111 myth now that a wile's mdethe electiOn IS so opponents pendence .md opinions .ne
can feel JUS!liled tn usmg detllment,Ii to her husband s
w1ves as ammumt1on dg.nnst candidacy (People who
the candidates ('Te re sa is couldn't
st,md
Hilhu y
l31r game," read one head- nonetheless voled for he1
line I saw recently, reternng husband m droves )
to John Kerry 's w1fe.)
The New Yorker story,
The practice goes way perhaps unwittingly, capback
Ulysses
Grant's tured tile impossible, archaic
detractors
publ1cly and contrad iCtOiy expectaridiculed hi s Wife for ha;- \Ions ol c,mdidates' w1ves
1n g a cro ssed eye Ida On the one hand , they a1e
McKmley became a targe t supposed to be 1mport,1111
of rumors and jokes enou gh to occup) pr11ne
because she ' had ep1l epsy. speak 111 g slot s dunng th e
Rachel
Jackson
was politlc.!l comentions ThevJ
denounced as .1n ,adulteress arc supposed to be importdnt
because the· d1vorce she enou gh to del1ver speeches
thought had been granted on the c:nnpa1gn stump But
was not yet of flew! · when God help the wife who
she
man 1ed
Andrew thinks. talks or behaves as 1f
Jackson , Ab1gail Adams 1he "Important
was cnticlzed &lt;IS too pol111ln the
Ms
article,
ca l, an,d thus a poor rellcc· Eilt,Ihcth F:d-....~rcb. the su e11011 on lh e mttnltne""' o l hct
Ll:\ "' lll! ld \\)CI who '" m.lJ husband "She hdCI Icle.Js on fl ed to DemocratiC VIce presmen and matters." her ob1t - 1dentl.d Ldlldid.lte John
uary IC.ld , ·:and she wasn't Edw:ucls , .IriiCLiidlccl hette1

than ,myone the sll,lllg~ ~XIs ­
tence ol a c.md1datc\ IHk
She w.1s t.dkmg .1bout ho11
her public rd.Hion ship 111th
her husb,md h.Is to he dilfeielll tromthc1r ICal -ille equ .d
pdrtlleiShlp
"In i.l sense ' '&gt;he '~ud ' 11 1..,
,( dem ,Ill\ C ~XISICilCC .111d
you h,11e to .ICL'Jll th,1t II
you1e clfcc·111~. you dnn 'I
\'.dill people to look .11 \Oil
You w,ult them tn Juof.
through you to h11n"
Perh.1ps 1! John Ken y h.Id
mdi ned, say. Cou1tnev L"' L'
Instead o1 Tc1esa Hcn11 ' "
if President Bush h.1d llldi ned. say. Am) FIShel. thc11
chmces 11oulu he "' ,uhstdnl, ,li Jy Icv~. lim g ol then
judgmenl .md 1 .dues tlldt
;otcrs would be "'"ycd 111
vote against them But sholl
ol th.1t. "e don 't h11 c
AmeiiC.I s Je,,dei b.1scd on
the wom,m who sh.ue' h"
hcd. We'll '''IUIIIIIIC hc1
• h.nrstylc ,mLI go 1nto IICII ·
11es 1f sl1e s,'Y' snmetl11n g
l1kc "shove It" We'll cluck
ove1 how much monc} 'h~
spe 11ds on clothes "' home s
01 how much "'"'1!hl she has
gained. In the end 11 s l"'t
stuff to talk .mu Wille ,Ihout
because It's lun
Once ., . wile Iedlhcs ih~
While Hou se. , he c.u1 hdl c
an 1111pact 11 she chno'e'
She ha s a stat!. a hully pul pll She cdn l1 ke E J e .~no 1
Roosevelt. take soLidi ""d
political stands hc 1 husb.md
cannot (.Is she chd 011 r,1cc
ISsues) B11t dlllm g the clcL !lOll, they ,1re little 111111 e thdn
props Popul.mty " 11 1 the
sdme lls power not b pre~~
cover.1ge clout
Women on the c.nnp:11 g 11
trail will neve 1 truly matte 1
until they are the ones at the
podium, 1nv 1t111 g thcu husbands up f01 photo ops
(.loon Rliin 11 a w/ 1111111111
(111

1he

\ u •1

t-.11111 , ' "

0

Chuuw It• ~ t nd ( ( I I I/ JJil 11 1,
,lo 111' 1 in""" uf '""""" 'l'" fll'i ur ,·end he 1 &lt;'- mail a/
'"""' \un(Q1 1/&lt; hm1111 !e com. 1

Monday, October u,

2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Afghanistan's presidential election turns For the record
sour as Karzai challengers boycott,
claiming fraud and incompetence
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)
- Afghans packed polling
stauons on Saturday for a hiS·
tone presidential election that
was blemished when all 15
candidates opposmg U S backed mterun President
H,unid Karzai withdrew.
charging the government and
the U.N. with lraud and
mcompetenee.
In the end, taulty mk - not
Tahban bombs and bullets threatened th1ee ye,us ot
pa11"t.Ik1ng progress toward
demoCI acy The oppo~111on
candiddtes cla1med the 1nk
used to mark people's thumbs
rubbed off too eas1Jy, allowmg tor mass deception
Electoral oltic~als rejected
opposnion demands that voting be slopped at m1dday.
saying n would rob millions
of people of their first chance
to d~rectly decide their leader,
and tile joint U N -Afghan
panel ove1 seemg the electmn
would rule late1 on the vote's
legJtllnacy.
Even 1! the vote IS ulllmdtely validated. KarzUI's ability
to umte thi s nation , fight rampant warlordiSm and crush a
lmge nng Taiiban insurgency
in this nation of an esumated
25 n11l1Ion people might be
f,Itally comprom1sed if hiS
opponents refuse to accept
lhe result s and insiSt that hiS
rule IS illegitimate
But on S.1turday. Alghans
who brdved the threat ol VIOlence to C&lt;ISl ballots were JUS!
happy to vote.
· I am old. but thiS vote IS not
JUst tor me. It 1s for my gr.mdchildren." s,ud Nuzko. 58. a
Widow who stood 111 hne ,It a
K.Ibul votmg station. L1ke
m.my Alghans. she uses only
one name "I w.mt At'ghamst.In
to he secllle .111d pe.Icetul."
But
ihe
controversy
nonetheless c.1st a pall over
Wild! hdd been a JOYOUS da y
111 Alghamstan Mill1ons of
ethnically diveiSe Alghan
\'oters cr,umned polling stations lo1 an clccuon anned at
bnngmg p~acc .md prospcmy
to a COU IIII )' ncdriy IUIIled by
more th.m 1110 de cades ol
w.Ir Men .md 11omen voted
.11 scp.n.!tc booths 1n·keepmg
wllh thi s lldliOn· s conservatiVe lsl.umc Jean111~s.
K,117,u - who 'IS w1dely
favo1ed to '"" - said the
late of the ballotmg was with
electoral panel , but he added
that, m h1 s v1ew, "the election
was free and fair 11 IS very
legitimate."
"Who 1s more Important,
these 15 candidates, or the
milliOns ,o f people who
turned out today to vote''"
Karza1 said. "Both myself
and all the se 15 candidates
should respect our people because 111 the dust und snow
and ra in; they waited for
hours and hours to yote."
Taliban rebels got tnto a
sklfmlsh wllh U S. troops
that left at least 25 insurgents
dead. and managed to kill

Divorces
POMEROY
- 01vorce
actions have been liled in Me1g"
County Common Pleas Court
by Thelma L. Soulsby, Pomcrov,
agamst Wilham T. Soulsby,
Stockport, Lee Anna Weddle,
Racme, against Gregory E.
Weddle, Portland; and Scon A.
Warner, Pomeroy, agmnst Jam1e
S Warner, Pomeroy
Dissolution
POMEROY
DISsolutions were granted 111
Me1gs County Common Pleas
Court to M.1ne E Phillips and
Terry R Phillips. Kenneth G.
Rose and Pamela J Rose.
Amanda St Clair and Jerry
St Cla1r, and Marry Ann Z1eg
and Thomas W. Z1eg.
Dissolullons
filed
hy
Brenda Kae Neutzlmg and
M1chael A Neutziing and
Terry R. Sheets and Demsc L
Sheets have been diSmiSsed
Marriage licenses
POMEROY
- Marriage
licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Jerry
Allen Har~h. 22, Pomeroy, and
Jacquelyn Louise Buck, 23,
Pomeroy: Timothy Roger Priddy,
Afghan women weanng burqas pass by men Sltt1ng atop a wall. awaltng pres1dent1al candidate 26, Middleport. and Darlene Jean
Mohammed Mohaqeq one day after the coyntry's first-ever d1rect pres1dent1al elections 111 Kabul , Hunter, 24, Middleport: Timothy
Showalter.
37.
Afghanistan, on Sunday World leaders greeted the vote by m1111ons of Afghans to elect a president Edward
as a great step for democracy. but some vo1ced caut1on Sunday over the boycott of the result by Reedsville, and Beth Ann
Thompson, 26. Reedsville, and to
opponents of the heavy favonte, mtenm leader Ham1d Karza1. lAP Photo/Em1i1o Morenatt1)
Karza1 agreed to the boycott. mk)," said former U S
'Tnday's election " not a Assistant Secretary of State
legitimate election It should Bernard Aaronson, the team's
be stopped and we don't rec- co-leader "Perhaps some of
from Page A1
ogmze the Iesult s," Snat sa1d those who don't do so v.ell are
"ThiS ;ote IS a fraud and any trymg to prov1de an excuse for
government formed Irom 11 IS why they didn't do so well "
trymg to get bean bags
lllegltnnate ·•
The European Umon and through " hole 111 a board
Islamic poet Abdul Latif the Orgamzation lor Secunty
Carved and pamted pumpPadran, another minor candi- and Cooperation m Europe kills were teutured 111 the decdate. sa1d. "Today \~as a very sent observer miSSions as well. orations and then JUdged.
black dav Todav was the
U.S Ambassador Zalmay Wmners of pnzes m the age
occupatiol1 of Afghamstan by Khalilzad arrived at the categones were. SIX to II,
Amenca through elections."
oppositiOn camp to meet wnh Katie Hartenbach. f1rst.
Election officials acknowl- Sirat. makmg no comment Devon Varney. second, and
edged th,ll wo1 kers at some other than to say he was there Scout Faeemyer. third. 12 to
VOI111g statiOnS mi Stakenly "only to help"
17. Hannah Cleek. first, Tina
sw.1ppeli the permanent mk
Khaliiz.ld, " naturalized Prunty, second. and Olivia
burn
111 Cleek. third. and 18 to I 00.
meant to mlilk thumbs v.1th U S · citizen
normdl mk meant for ballots Afghamstan, h.1s been widely Marquita Kennedy, first,
but mSisted the problem was cnticlzed tor perce1 ved Apnl Smith. second. and
t.Ivonu sm for Kmzm and IS Pam Hartenbach third
caught quIckly
"Haltmg the vote at thi s seen by many At ghans as a
Select1on ot the W11111mg
stage IS unjustified and would puppet-master Afghans gath- pumpkms was made by the
deny these people th eir nght ered outside the house Joked penny-a-vote &gt;ystem That
to vote." sa1d Ray Kennedy. that a resolution to the cnSis money and donations acceptvice ch.n1man of th e JOlllt was near becduse "the b1g
man has arrived ..
U N -Atghan electordl panel
"The1e have been some techLiter. the ambassador
111C,Ii p10blems but o;erall 11 ISsued ,, statement calling the
ttnumg vtolence lhe1e.
elections "a profound sucIn St LouiS . the preSident h.1s bee n s,Ite and orderly ..
from Page A1
cess" He sa1d 1111tial mdicaKennedv
s.11d
11
could
tdke
exulted m the Atghan vote'"
t1me 1(), tlie electolal body to tions pomted to turnout that
c1 "mt~rvelous thmg" and sc11d
Detection: Know .the facts.
hiS ddmmiSlrdllon should redch d deciSIDn on the vote's was "extraordinanly h1gh"
"We recogmze that some Know for Sure."
receive at least parlldl cred1l. legilllndcy lmti.Ii 1esults
to
the
Accord1ng
"Freedom IS powerfuL" were not expected until late • allegations 1emam and that
Bush told a Republican break- Sunday or early Monday, and there should be a process to Amencan Cancer Society
fast fund -ra~ser. "Thmk about anythmg appr.oachmg a full addres~ these allegatiOns 9,500 new cases of breast
through a thorough and trans- cancer will be d1agnosed
a society in which young girls count could take two weeks
mvesugation ," among women 111 Oh1o. 1900
About I0.5 million registra· parent
couldn' t go to school, and
Ohm women w111 die of
their mothers were wh1pped in tion cards were handed out for Khalilzad sa1d
But he also warned, "For breast cancer th1s year wh1ch
the public square, and today the election. a staggering num·
they re holdmg a presidential ber that U.N, and Afghan offi· Afghanistan to win, the IS slightly h1gher than the
losers in the election should national average.
election "
c~als say was inflated by wide·
The American Cancer
It was a starkly different spread double registration. not undermine the achieveSociety recommends annual
scene m Kabul, where the Organ1zers had argued that the ment of the Afghan people "
The election was supposed mammograms begmnmg at
opposition candidates met at indelible mk would prevent
to offer a stark contrast to age 40, regular breast exams
the house of Uzbek candidate people from voting twice
A 13-member U.S. observer Afghamstan 's many forms of by your doctor, and monthly
Abdul Satar S1rat and signed
a petition say1ng they would team from J.lle bipartisan imposed rule in the past 30 breast self-exams at age 20
An unhealthy d1et, excesRepublican years - monarchy, Soviet
not recogmze the vote results. International
sive
consumption of alcohol
Sirat, an ex-31de to Institute descnbed the polls as "a occupation. warlord fiefdoms
and
lack
of exercise 1s linked
Afghanistan's last kmg and a triumph for the Afghan people." and the repressive Taiiban
"It IS not surpnsmg that theocracy ousted by the U.S · to most kmds of cancers
minor candidate expected to
MCCI's miSSion 1s to edu·
some
of the candidates are led mvas1on followmg the
poll m the low smgle-diglts,
cate
othe residents of Meigs
said all 15 challengers to raiSing the question (about the Sept II terrori st attacks.

three Afghan policemen
accompanymg ballots back to
a co unting center after the
vote. E1ght more police and
two CIVIlians died when their
vehicles ran over m1nes
But the 1ebels d1d not muster
.mythmg approachmg the
masSive atmck they had threatened to derml the elecuon.
The boycott was a blow to
the international community,
which spent almost $200 million staging the vote. At least
12 election workers. and
dozens ot Afghan secunty
l01ces. cil ed 111 the past few
month s as the nation ge.1red
up lo1 the vote
The chaos also threatened
to become part ol the debate
111 the U.S. pres1denual camp.llgn. President Bush has
held Afgh,ul!Stan up as an
examp le
of llounshmg
democracy and a precursor to
elections hiS admmiStration
InSists will move forward 111
l,mu,lry 111 Iraq, despite con-

VIrUS that is transmitted from
Infected persons to the no se
or throat of others." said
Weese 11 ho encourages those
from Page A1
who tall mto the at-nsk catetaken place. then Weese sduJ gones to get the vaccme
She s.1id th e tlu se,!Son
plans are to 1ra1el to remote
snes around the ..:ounty to ex1ends f10m November
.Idmnmter Jlu shots. It the through Apnl each year and
rem,nlllng v,ICC ine su ppl y described the symptoms as
mcludmg !ever. cough. ch1lls.
perm II s
so
re throat. headac~e and
Cost of the Jlu shot " $10
muscle
,Iches
t01 those wllhout MediC,lre
·Many people lmstake gasB. R.llilo.Id Med1care. or
Med1c.ud cdl'ds People wli I l!OIIltesllnal v1ruscs for the
be .1sked to present the appro- llu but ,myone previous!)
puare he.lit he are c.Ird before didgno,ed v.ilh the diSe,tse
1Cce11111 g the llu vaccme.
will recogmze the symptoms
It was ;10ted tiM! commelci,II and realize the dlife1ence"
msuldllce c.umot be accepted
The ., ncubation penod (or
but those gei tm g shots ,ue l11e tnne 11 takes to get the tlu
em.:ourdged ln submit d datm I rom the l11ne of exposure)"
to the1r healthc.ue comp.my one to tour days. but It usu,Il lor posSible re11nblll semen!
Jy dverages two d,Iys. accord" Jnll uenza " " senous diS- Ing to Weese "While most
case, -... h1ch " c&lt;~useu hy a people who get the 11 u are

Clinics

s1ck tor only a few days.
some are Sick longer. and
some may require hospital·
Ization:· she said.
lntluenz,I ep1dem1cs occu1
on an ;Jnnual bllsJ s ami cause
thous,mds ot deaths and hospll,lilzations throughout the
Umted St.1tes The Center fm
OISedse CuntiUI 1eports th.It
last year 36.000 deaths
occun!d and over 200.000
hospitali zat ion s
were
reqUired as .1 1esult ol the llu
,md complications
"Rate s of mfecuon ,lie
greatest .miOng chlid1en. but
1.11es ot se11ous illness .1nd
de.1th are h1 ghest 111 the 65
years or older population &lt;1nd

dtnong persons of .my .tge
who ha \e med1cal condit ion'
th.11 n1.1ke th em suscept1 ble
lor llLI compll c,Illons," said
Weese "Howc;er. Jlu ~ac­
cine Ldll p!C\elll mlluenz,I ..

The nurse smd the VIruses
that cause the disease often
change and that 'S why the
vaccine has to be rev1sed each
ye,Ir by replacing .11 least one .
componenl "ot the nnmuni zauon v.uh a newer ;ersiOn 111
,111 effort to en,ure that the
current flu shot " etlecuve.
P1otect1on develops about
two weeks alter the vaccme
IS admmiStered and may Ids!
for a ye.1r. she s.ud. tiut a new
shot 1s needed on an annu,II
bc1SIS

"People at nsk for con II actmg ,, serious case ot mllucnZ&lt;~ or rel,Iled -:ompl!callons
.md people -...ho .1re 111 close
contact With someone w1th •l
chronic medical condition
should recei\'C the ,,,ccme."
Weese stressed
Among those she list ed as
most suscepublc to llu comphc.ItiOn' ,ire people 50 and

John Ryan Hill, 26. Pomeroy, and
Kenda Kay Wh1te, 34, Pomeroy.
Civil suits
POMEROY- A foreclosure
action has been filed 111 Me1gs
County Common Plea' Court
by Cny Nauonal Bank of West'
Vir~lllla, Cross Limes, W.Va.,
agamst the Estate of Rogeho A.
Avcn.,n. deceased. Pomeroy.
and others, allegmg default on a
mortgage agreement 111 the
amount of $2R I.693 0 I
A per&gt;cmal Illjury Jawsull has
been filed by Lmda L Miller,
Middleport. against Courtney
Vanan. Cheshire. and others
A su1t ..cekmg recmery ol colJater.Il ha' been liled by
Vandertllit Mortgage and Finance
Co . Mwyvlilc. Tenn . agwnst Sue
Ret7Joff. Pomeroy. and otherSentenced
POMEROY
- Donald
Cm1.1han w,cs sentenced to II
months 111 pnsnn, suspended. on
a count ol breaking and entenng,
in Me1gs County Common Plea'
Court He was ordered to complete
the
Commumty
Corrections program. perlorrn
500 hours of commuruty service,
and wa&gt; placed under a curle11.
Patnck Steven Soulsby wa;
sentenced to one year in pnson
on each ol live counts of breakmg and entenng. and ordered to
pay restitution to victims.

Festival

cd for food wh1ch was served
without charge to everyone
will go to the youth programs
of God's NET and toward
further development of the
\1ulberr y
Commumty
Center
Wmmng the 27-mch color
televisiOn
for correctly
guessmg the we1ght of a
was
Debra
pumpkm
Kennedy
Michelle Noble estimated
that more than 200 turned out
for the event sp111sored by
churches. Trinity. United
Methodi st of both Pomeroy
and
Middleport
Grace
Ep!Scop&lt;~l. Pomero) Church
of Chnst. St John and St
Paul Lutheran. F1rst Bapt1s1
of Pomeroy. First Southern
Baptist of Pomeroy. and
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
Church

Cancer

County on the benetits of
ea1 ly detection of breast cancel wh1ch ..,;.1\e~ women·s
!1\es
MCCI IS a non piOllt orgamzatl on th.n abo h.Is 'peakers a1 a1lable for programs
related to certam types of
cancer For free speakmg
engagements or questions
about the group caJl Dmna
Coates at 992-2161, or Carol
Adams, RN, BSN at 9922311.
All money raised by
MCCI stays m Me1gs County
for educational materials
such
as
pamphlets,
brochures, colorectal cancer
screening kits, and the video
currently being screened at
Curves.
MCCI meets every 3rd
Fnday and welcomes cancer
survivors or those who have
lost loved ones to cancer who
would like to J0111 the1r group
to combat the disease

older. residents of long-term
care facilities that house persons v.nh chronic med!c,Ii
conditions: persons su tfenng
from senous. ex tended hedlth
problems or a weakened
Immun e system: children
aged six months to 18 years
on lung-Lerm dspm n trec11
ment. pregnant women .,, ho
will be past the thlfd
tnmester dunng tlu season.

11orkers .,, ho w1ll be 111 con- ,
tact w11h people at mk of
developmg senous mlluenza
compi!C dllons.
Those 11 uh quesuons or in
need of .Iddltlonal mtormatiOiliC~.Irdm~ the flu \aCCille
Or the sdleduJed dllllCS
shou ld conl,Il'l the Meigs
Count) He,Iith Department.
992-6626. Monda) through
Fnda\ !rom 8 .1111 . to 4 p.m

I'm looking forward to
your support in the
November Election.

joe Kirby Sr.
lndependant Candidate

MEIGS CO. SHERIFF

EASY PAYMENT PlAN'
$10 DOWN •$10 PEl MONTH
' SEE STill FIIIOIIlS

----- ·----

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 11,2004

www.mydailvsentinel.com

NASCAR Notebook, Page 82
Steelera beat Browns, Page 86

News ·A bout Senior Citizens
In Meigs County
ACTIVITY
SCHEDULE
&lt;H.:tivities held thmughnut the
week include ~ewing. quilt ing.

bingo . ..:heckers. and games.
D:.Jnre team practu..·c i~ he ld

'.

each Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost
" $1.00 per session attended.

.1.£

Smothered Chicken
Broccoli w/Cheese
Rice Pilaf
Baked Apple
Roll

No lunch served today
Nutrition inservice training

....

Wednesday from 10 :00 a.m .
until noon .

All ages are mvued tu attend
Join us

for lunch and st:lcct what you

w;mt from the ala carte menu.
or ynu can enjuy the regu la r

meal . Ala L' artc items an:
individually priced . The
s uggested dnnation fm the noon
meat is $2 .00 for those 60 or
nlder.

Rag Bag class

Pinto Beans
Kale
Pickled Beets
Strawberry Chiffon Pie
Cornbread

22
21
20
19
Scalloped Potatoes &amp; Ham
Meatloaf
Baked Pork Chops wiApple Slices
Beef Ravioli w/Meat Sauce
Breaded Chicken Patty
Peaches &amp; Cottage Cheese
Au Gratin Potatoes
Baked Sweet Potato
Italian Green Beans
Cream of Broccoli Soup
Lima Beans
California Blend Vegetables
Waxed Beans
Fres~ Grapes
Calico Macaroni Salad
Cornbread
Arabian Apricot Salad
Banana
French Bread
Orange Juice
'
Wheat Dinner Roll
Banana Cake
Bun
'
Wheat Bread
29
28
27
26
25
Beef Short Ribs
Turkey Pot Pie
Hot Philadelphia CheeseCountry Fried Steak
Fish
Mashed Potatoes
Spinach
Steak Sandwich
Roasted Red Sktnned Potatoes
Baked Potato
Sauerkraut
Cranberry Banana •
Vegetable Soup
Brussel sprouts
Corn Confetti
Waldorf Salad
Mandarin Oranges
Fruit Cocktail
Blueberry Coffee Cake
a.
~. Sa I '11~
.
Pumpkin Pie
Apple Muffin
Breaded Chicken Patty
.
Roll
I
~.
I
\

~- '

'

I

Judy Gannaway will teach a
class on how to make tote bag
with the popular frayed out
edges. Stop in to the Center and
see the finished product.
Small bags- $20.00/materials
included
Large bags- $25.00/materials
included.
You wi II need to bring your
sewing machine. Call Debbte
Jones at 992-2161 to register for
this class on November 4 from
6-8 p m.

.

. . '

a

Transportation Services

------------------------'!:''tl

Stretch for joy
Joy Bentley. Fitness
Coordinator at the MCCoA,
will be the instructor for a mild
stretching class. The class wtll
be held nne day per woek and
will be held in the afternoon .
The day and time will be
decided depending on class
size. If interested or for more
information, call Debbie Jones
at 992-2161.

Tran s portation se r vices
offered through the Meigs

In 2003 the transportation
program provided 5859

MCCoA transpnrtatinn serv ices,
how ever d o~ations are strongly

County Co'1nc i! on Aging are

pas~enger

L'OL'O uril gt:d .

provided Monday through
Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:.10

over 28,000 miles. The MCCoA
currently operates nne full size

trips and traveled

uf th e cust of thi s new veh1cle.

A benefit auct ion will be held at

·
to help raise the needed match
mnney. Donations nf new or

counttes of Ohio and
Parkersbur !::'"' and Pot'nt Pleasatlt

arebeingaccepted.

""

.-..

...

.,

the ~cn it&gt;r center Qn October 23

u~ed 1t e rn~ in good condnion
There is no se t charge for

Fur more information on
h
h
regu lar va n routes 1 roug out
tile ··t&gt;unty
,,,. ''' ·s&lt;' hedule a
'
d. 1
·
1
II
me tea escort tnp, Pease ca
th e Transpo rtati on Department

t the MCCoA The phone
anumber i~ 992-216l.
·

tn West Virginia s hould be

t~

111Cl!t

frnm 1:00 ().rn . -::.! :30

Did You Know?

Rclwbilltatinn Ce nter. is the
cnmdt nator.
The

Diabetc~

Group will

m~ct

Support

rNAPSl- Yuu

va rict.y of sizes nnd widths withsncri ficing cnmfnrl. Stylish
shol'~ frnm Snffl feature Eurodcf:iil.!n nnd modrrn cn mfnrt .

The shm~.., t'nruhir w lllxurv, trndi-

handllladr with 1lu• ntn 1pst :~ltf'n·
tio11 nnd r:11" l•'m· llHll'(' infnnnntio n

Social Security

For households with more than 8 member&gt;, add $ 4.770 per

;:J.pplication, please call lo Schedule an appointment. Kath y i:-.
ulso availnble to make home vi~ i ts for indtvtduab that arc::

disabled or homebound.

•~

•~

t~
,, shots will not be given at the Flu Clinic.

ll

11
~~

~l

~l

t~
""
:~
•~

Make-A-Difference Day Auction-October 23
10:00 a.m .-?? at the Meigs Senior Center. Food will be tl
available- guaranteed to be something for everyone
•~
The proceeds from the Make-A-Difference Day Auction tl
will be used to help fund our Christmas star projects and the tl
local match money for the new ODOT van. We are 11
currently accepting donations of items for the auction. Call .o
Tammy at 992-2161 for more information
~l

tl

tl

Craft Show· December 4 !please note this is a new date) •l
•• Stop by our Craft Show to see local crafters who will be ••
~ displaying th eir crafts. Plenty of gift ideas for Christmas!

tl--~

H

r&gt;m

nut

on October 21 . !Jean

at 9')2 -c lul.

740-992-2161. If you need as;istance wi th completing a !lEAP

•• have Medican! B. otherwise. the cost is $10.00. Pneumonia ~•

t:
~:

Begjnners' Line Dancing

••
t4

have faoh - ~~ A beginners'line dancing class will be held on Mondays at ••
Ot.:c uptllinnal Therapist. HDi zcr ionable European designs in a
I :00 p.m. starting October 4·N0\ ember 8. The cost for :~
p.m. on Oct11ber 12. Lia Ttpton.

If you arc interested 1n
e~ltendin~ tht: Hea lth y Living
Support Group plca~c l'tm lac t
Debbie Jt)ne ~. A(tivity Director,

If you need more information about the HEAP Program.

t:

:: · Flu Shots will be given from 9-Il &amp; l -J d
h
•.~~ This day is designated f(Jr those 65 an over odr t ose t•,
•
•• considered hi."h risk (ex. Asthma. diabetes. heart isease, .o
"'
:~ lung disease. kidney disease). There is no charge if you ~l

~l

The Caring and Sharing Meetings begi n at 10:30 a.m .
Support Group meets on the an d are held in the Co nferenc e
fourth Thursday of each month Room
"'
the
Meigs
at the Meigs Multipurpose Multtpurpnse Center.
Center at 1:00 p.m. The meet ing
Sheila Co zan. RN. will
date is OL'tnber 28.
&gt;pellk lit the October meet ing on
Lenora Leifhei t IS the "Preparing for Surgery."

Healthy Living
Support Group

contact Kuthy Goble at the Meigs Multipurpo!-!e Senior Center ut

t:•~

u

tio n nnrl nnlmalhc;llll .v. Tllf•.v'n•

member.

~•

~l

The Stroke suppon Group

Total Gross Household Income
up to$ 13.965
up to$ 18,735
up to$ 23,505
up to~ 28.275
up to$ 33,045
up to$ 37 .815
up to$ 42,585
up to$ 47.355

tl

tl

Support GroUpS

\\·in

Below are guidelines ror the 2004-2005 HEAP program :

tl

•: Classic Color Pictures· October 15.16 &amp; 17
tl
:~ For$10.00youwillreceiveavintage8x 10pictureofyour •~
tl children. Purchase your picture today!
ll

••

cnmdlllatm fnr the group .

The Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP), is nne of
several programs offered by the Ohio Department of
Development (ODOD) to help low-income Ohioans pay their
utility bills . Households may be eligible fnr a&gt;&lt;i,tance if the
household's income is at or bel ow the 150% federa l poveny
guidelines.

5
6
7
8

~l

~~ Health Fair/Flu Shot Day· October 22

prov iders and othe r soc ial

sen·ire orga ni zati ons. Some day
trip~ to points of interest are
··I·.·,, rr•&gt;v,·ded.
",
Mediral escort trips to doctors
·n
M•t'g&lt;
. . G,·,((,·,., ··nd Athen•
l

HEAP

4

tl
~'4
tl
tl

Annual Plant Exchange· Ortober 14
,1
The Master Gardeners will hold their annual plant exchange tl
at II :00 a.m. If you have perennials you want to share, ••
·~
~:C
:, bring them with you and take home some that you don'\ •~
tl have in your garden.
~l

Choir formed

I
2
3

rhe donatiOns from

H

LOOK WHAT IS HAPPENING AT THE
~
MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL ON AGING, INC. •~
MEIGS SF:NIOR CENTER
~l

riders help the servic e continue
to operate . Increa sed gasoline
p.m . for Meigs County older \'an and three minivans. The pnces. along with ot her related
adult s and/or persons with agency will replace the 1997 costs have hit thi s program
disabilities. Trips may include full size van with a new one espec ially hard this year. Some
rides to and from the Meigs through the Ohio Department of public fundtng is received that
Multipurpose Senior Center, Transportation Specialized covers part of th e costs but not
banks . grocery stores , Tran sport:ltion Program. The aii.Donationsarerelieduponto
pharmacies. health care MCCoA is respo nsible for 20r1r supplement the public dollars.

scheduled at least one week in
advance of the appotntment. ·
Rtdes to and from the center
We're starting a choir at the may be sc heduled daily.
The MCCaA Transportation
MCCoA (Senior Center) and we
Department
consists of four
need members . Shirley Hamm
s.taff
persons.
Kathy Goble is
wtll be the Director and Darla
Hawley will ,be the Piani st. If the Transpo rtation Director and
you are interested, please call drivers are Mary Folmer, Mert
Zeiner and Art Conant.
Debbie Jones at 992-2161.

Size of Household

;;xxxxx::::::::::::::xxxxx::::xxx:xxx::xxxx~

H
~tl

Vl !' ll

www.su!Tb;]wP.l'Ulll.

A r r'll!'dinv, ton ri!C!'Ill "t11d .v
from Hlllll'l'. r,fi PPJ'('Pnt of Anwrl('flll frnniliPs pln n t1&gt; d ri ve to thl'ir
vncntion rlP s l i nnti011 thi s sumnw r .
A nrw l'm·1n 11f tt·:-tv1• l ill"llr;tno·
1'(1\'1'1' "' t h t• c.: p· ···it'it· ll/'l'(l o:; nr 1':11'
trip " l ' n,t ' l' ll i•ll !'nr· llll t•n ll n'
fHmilv tr:l\' ' 'lim-! in tlw ,:;. nml' n·hirlr• &lt;.;,n h&lt;• Jlllrrhn~t'd f11r niHlut

1

:: each das,: . attended ts.$1.00. Paulelte Harrison will be the::
•~ instructor.
••
•4
••
••

•4

· 1·
·
·
·
or m
ormation
on any o t- t h ese events,
t'Ontact us at .0
.-~
.-~ (740) 992-2161 or check ou t our website at •~
.-~
.-~

--~
•~
H
•4

F

--~
•~ -

www.memssenHJfS.cnrn

t4

•c

•

~txxx::::::::::::::::::x::::x::xx::::::::::tj

What to do when driving
throws you a curveThe i\ARP 55 ALIVE Driver
Safety P ro~ram will be held on
Fr1day. November 5 from 8:00

(nmpletion of th e cou,·se. Some
ln~u rLince cmnpanies offer
dts\:ounls to perso ns l'ompleting

th~ Meig~

Crowd~d road~. aggre:-.sive
dn\•ers. and cven eyes tght that
;~ nJ mrdil'n\ p11\iri&lt;• t-:. Yo11 ('an H] ')l l
1:-. not w h at it usCd to be can
gl't fill Enh:m1'••d ll r i\- P Prntrdiflfl
spell trouble un the mad . That is
l 'hn th nt· pno\·iclr• r:: .t l'ip .t':llll'r•lla-

the 55 ALIVE course. Check
wtth you r in sur ance company.
To enroll in the class or for
further information. call Alice
Wamsley, 55 ALIVE Volunteer
Instructor, at 992-3938.

t 1on and 1ntf'T' 1'11Jll inn benf' fit~ .
fnr nwn• i 1. furmat i o n. \' i ~i l
w w \V. n t'l' £' ~"a 1111' rin• .t•om /d n \ ' f' q r
t:tdl 1 - KOI)- {!~·q . R : tno .

Birthday parties

~f'W'Ii tl n llar~

l{ cpre:-.ent.t ti ve:-. ·frum the
Athens Social Secu rity Office
\\Ill he a t the Meig:-. Senior
Ccntl!r Ill a s :-. i ~ t people wit h
Sm:ial S~cunly prublem s and tn
pro vide infu rmal tun . Th e da tes
arc October I:1 &amp; 27 from I0:00
am. tu ll :00 a.m.

t:

n rl:ty. An example of a.m. - 4:00 p.m . at

insur R11cc lS A c ces~
Am&lt;'rica's lhi\'P Prot&lt;•dion. wh ich
cnv c r s rl cdi JCtlh 11" g~p :::. 1n nulo

thi s

IH' W

Senior Center.

why you ;hould tukc the AARP
55
ALIVE driver safety
pn-.grarn. the X-hm11· classruom

refres he r t·ourse

dcs1gned

Cnme and celebrate your
birthday with your friends at the
Center Octnber 28 is the date
made payable to AARP. for those having birthdays in
October. loin us at I I:00 .
Certifi c ate~ will be given upon

nver
The - fee for the ..:lass i~
:S I 0.00. che ck or muncy nrder

2004 Calcndor of [nnts

...,;-===-~='"=n=d=~·c.'·-~==t':7==T:_u:_r~s,:d;;,a'=·====co:=='='~·,.,llu.: !&gt;tlay

I11

' II
' 011 Donee Group (F)

13
10:00 II 00 Sn·;i,:l ~l'CUfll~

H.:.1illl) Lt1 111~ ( "''
I 110 Da nce ~N\1 p

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! 19 .

.

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•

11 OO P n ini C I ;t ~"( l · l

CH it ()IU .'sS I' IC ll

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-- _

1 20

Annual Boa rd \1 eetinQ '
1

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J~ ·3o

ic-,

~-

E \ ~.: ha nb! t:

\\ Jt h t&gt;.b o.; le r (iardr ners

10:00 II 00 Holida&gt; Cm lis
I I:00 Golden Buclo.c~ e
1
1 Progm m

: Js

! 1.00 f' lant

....

lfJOn- 12 :0f1 Kni tll lll; Curk
1:
1 -k allll~ l i·. 111;!

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J·Oo D l \ 1 \1dl11r• b d~.·

l :00 0;\Jlce Grnup t.f )

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22
9:0 0 -: I ItO l' a11 11 ( \~h.., ( I 1

"We Care For You Like Family"

• HOME OXYGEN

• HOSPITAIJ BEDS

• CPAP MACHINES

• WHEELCHAIRS

• NEBULIZERS

•OXIMETRY

( ,r,• tip
11 U!J L'r.1ib \~lilt L ibrar~
C11rl~

25

--· -

(,

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l :(iUDimcc Group t F 1

10.0 0 -1 ~ : 00 \i o! ida'

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' Si~n up\\ 1th D~bh1c J ,..,~l~ ..
0fll~
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24 /lour Emergeucy Service • Free Delive1y

1~::1~,,

(JI' ( .,11'1~ ,.II.~ ~h_lill!i-!

-

21 flhiu Hin•r 'Jihwa

Nemechek
holds off
Rudd for
victory
Busch adds to lead
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press
KANSAS CITY. Kan. - The biggest
gripe aoout NASCAR 's new 10-man
Chase for the Ncxtel Cup championship
was that the drivers not m the title banle
would he ignored.
Nobody could ignore Joe Nemechek
on Sunday alter he ~eld off Ricky Rudd
to win the Banquet 400 and finish off a
weekend sweep at Kansas Speedway.
"'The guys in the championship chase
have more to lose than we do,"
Nemechek said. "We're on the offense,'
not on defense:·
This one was almost as close as his
half car-length victory over Greg Biffie
in the Busc h Series event Saturday, with
Nemechek ;md Rudd racing side-byside and bumping once with a lap to go
before Nemeehek took control again
and beat Rudd to the finish by 0.081
seconds- about I 1/4 car-lengths.
Nemechek, who did a backward victory lap on the I 1/2-mile oval to honor
the memory of his brother. John. killed
in a U11ck race in Homestead. Ra., in
1997. was relieved to win after nearly
getting too conservative at the end.
"There at the end I was trying to save

Please see Nemec:hek. Bl

Crew extends
unbeaten streak
with tie
EAST RUTHERFORD ,
N.J .
(AP)
Jeff
Cunningham scored in the
tlrsl half and the Columbus
Crew extended their MLSrecord unbeaten streak to 17
games with a 1-1 tie against
the MetroStars on Saturday
ni ght.
The Crew did not make the
playoffs last season. but now
have won eight games and
lied nine in their streak.
Sergio Galven Rey scored
on a penalty kick in the 71 sl
minute to tie the game for the
MetroStars. The kick was
awarded
after
Duncan
Oughton fouled Eddie Gaven
in the penalty oox.
Cunningham. who nearly
won the game for the Crew in
the 75th minute when he
fired a shot off the cross bar,
s~ored his ninth goal of the
season in the 26th minute.
The MetroStars outshot the
Crew 20-6, but Columbus
goaltender Matt Jordan had
several good stops, includin g
two on Galven Rey.

College Football
lbeAPTop 15
The Top 25 teams in The Assoc iated
Press eollege lootball poll, with first-

Banquet400
Reaune
By Tha Associated Preaa

Sunday

At Kanoao Speedway
Kan111 City, Kan.
Lap length: 1.!5 mllet

(Start position In parenthflet:)
1. I11 Joe Nemecnek. Chevrolet, 2671ape ce&gt; 1IJ)leiOd
2. (12) Ricky Audd, Ford, 267
3. (6) Greg Biffle, Ford, 267
4.01) Elliott Sadler. Ford. 267
5. 13) Jeremy Mayfield. Dodge. 267
6. (22) Kurt Busch. Ford. 267

Wisconsin running back Mike Davis (28) is tackled by Ohio State Antonio Pittman (26) in the first quarter Saturday
in Columbus. Wisconsin won the game, 24-13. (API

Wisconsin overcomes
early deficit against Bucks
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press
COLUMBUS - The game plan
was to get an early lead and never give
it up.
Instead, Wisconsin stuck with what
always seems to "'ark again" Ohio
State.
.
The Badgers fell behind Ohio State
I 0-0, then came back behtnd a bntising
defense and Anthonv Davis' 16R ru'hing yards to roll to a 24-13 win on
Saturday.
'·We have been in this position
before against Ohio Stare:· Wi,consin

411/i E. II uron St.

4H F.. Stim:mn An·.

defensive back Jim Leonhard &gt;a id . rose from No. 15 to No. 10 in the AP
"We've teamed over the past L·ouple of Poll. "Our guys are fi ghters. They're
years when we're down. don't p&lt;mic. not ~oing to fold their tents because
stay focused. play our style and the they 'fell behind.''
The loss ended Ohio State's 18cards will fall in our favor...
So will thf-.Buckeyes, who leJ the game home winning streak and, on the
Badgets 17-0 in 1999 anu lost -12-17 _ heels of last week's stunning 33-n
and 17-0 again in 2001 hdorr lming menime loss al Northwestem. pinned
20-17 .
coach Jim Tressel with back-tn-back
1
It wa~ Wiscun-.in \ third ~trail.!ht win lo:-.ses for the fi fsl time in his 3 : "eaon Ohio State's home tut1', the liN .sons. The Buckeye&gt; 13-2 ) fell from No.
time a visitor has done that SIIK'e I R to No. 25 in the ran kin!!s anu
Illinois won hlttr in a row from I&lt;J88- dmppcd to 0-2 in the Big Ten !·or the
94.
lirst time since 1992.
"We show a (film') clip on Friday
"All that talent we haw out there:·
night and I showed the last three 11 ms,..
said coach Bany Alvarez. whose team
Please see Deficit. Bl

7. (10) Jam1e McMurray, Dodge. 267
8. (9) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 267
9. (8) Dale Earnhardt Jr_ , .Chevrolet, 267

10. (13) Brendan Gaughan . Dodge, 267

t 1. (26) Michael Waltrip. Chevrolet. 267
12. (2) Kasey Kahne, Dodge, 267
13. (30) Jeff Gordon. Ch811'rolet, 267
14. (24) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 267
15. (17) Jet! Burton. Chevrolet, 267
'
16. (5) Bobby Labonte. Ch811'rolat 267
17. (15) Matt Kensetfl. Ford. 267

18. (36)

Ausly Wallaco. Dodge, 267

19. (25) Brian Vickers, Chevrolet, 267
20. (18) Mark Martm , Ford, 267

21 . (19) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 267
22. (16) Cart Edwards, Ford. 267
23. (31} Bobby Hamilton Jr.. Chevrolet, 267

24. (38) Shane

Hmiel. Dodge, 265

25. {33) J1mmy Spencer, Chevrolet. 265
26. {14) Scon R1ggs. Ch811'rolel. 265
27,. {32) Ken Schrader. Dodge, 265
28. (23) Robby Gordon, Chevrolet 26~
29. (27) Jeff Green, Dodge, 262
30. (35) Ward Burtofl. Chevrolet. 255
31 . (21 ) Casey Mears. Dodge, 243
32. (4) Jimm1e Johnson. Chevrolet, 239, accident
33. (7) Ryan Newman, Dodge, 223, aCCident
34 (28) Sterling Marlin. Dodge, 2 16, accident
35 (29) Kevin Harvid&lt; , Chevrolet, 160, overheating
36 . (37) Scott Wimmer. Dodge, 146. overheating
37 . (34) Kyle Busch. Chevrolet 136. EICCident
38 (39) Kyle Polly, Dodge. 88. handling

39 . (20) Todd Bodine, Dodge. 68, steering box
40 _(4t ) Herm1e Sadler. Chevrolet. 38, rear end
41 (43) Stanton Barren. Foret 30, &gt;Jibrabon
42 . (40) Larry Gunselman, Ford. 26. suspension
43 . (42) Kirk Shelmerd1ne. Ford. 3. clutch
Polr:~ ' Standlnga: 1. K.Busch , 5,685. 2 .
D.Eamharctt Jr.. 5,656. 3. J Gordon, 5,606 . ...

E.Sadler. 5.542. 5_M.Martin. 5,535. 6. T.Stewan.,
5,512. 7. M.Ke_nseth . 5,505. 8. R.Newman. 5.4;53.
9 J.Johnson. 5.438. 10. J.Mayfield. 5.42B.

throUgh Oct. 9, total points based on

..

25 po ints for a first-place vote

through one point for a 25_th-place

Buckeyes Football Notebook

vote, and previous ranking:

Record
Pts Pvs
t . Southern Cal (4t)5·0 .. t,60t 1
2. Oklahoma (23) 5·0 ...... .1,582 2
3. Miami 4-0 ........ ............ .1.464 4
4. Auburn (1) 6-0 .. ............ 1,450 6
5. Purdue 5-0 ....
.. 1,24t 9
6. VIrginia 5·0 ....
... 1,219 10
7. Florida St. 4-1
.1,188 8
8 Californta .3-1
.1,094 7
9. Texas 4-1 ......
1,010 5
t 0. Wisconsin 6-0
993 15
11. Utah 5-0 ...... .... .......... .979 1I
t2. Georgia 4-1 ..
. .. 963 3
t3.Tennessee4-1
.. 947 17
14. Michigan 5-1 .. ...... .. .... 813 14
t5. ArizonaSt.5-0
..63t 19
t 6. Oklahoma Sl. 5-0 ... ... 590 22
t7. Wes1 Virginia4-t ....... 574 16
I 8 . Lou isville 4-0 ..... ........ 546 20
19. Minnesota 5-1
.. .482 13
20. LSU 4-2 .......
.. .450 24
21. Boise St. 5-0
.. .4 13 21
22. Florida 3-2 ....
..342 t 2
23. Texas A&amp;M 4-1 .......... 106
24. Southern Miss. 4-0 .... 97
25, Ohio St. 3- 2 ............ ..90 tB
Oth~us recei vlf'19 votes: Missoun 62,

-~-------.-"-~

DO\'A TIO\'S ARE ACCT I'JTil .\\ !&gt; .·\I'I'I~ECI.\ TEl)

•

ll 'it I- ; , ru1 l'&lt;~lill t.. Lb., r I 1

Nextel Cup

NEWARK (AP) - A second Ohio high school football team has forfeited four
victories after reporting that
it had used an ineligible player thi s season.
Newark Licking Valley
enrolled a sophomore student
whose family was in the
process of building a home in
the central Ohio district east
of Columbus.
The school was required to
notify the Ohio High School
Athletic Association before
the season in order to have
the student declared eligible
to play. The situation wasn't
reported until last week,
resulting in the violation.
"In the ruling that we have
to forfeit our wins, they ruled
him eligible immediately and
reinstated him for the rest of
the season," said Licking
Valley football coach and
athletic director
Randy
Baughman .
The
forfeits
dropped
Licking Valley's record lrom
5-2 to 1-6, likely costing the
team its chances of advancing to the playoffs for the
fifth consecutive season.
The OHSAA the sanction. ing body for prep sports in
the state, will hear an appeal
Thursday of a ruling that cost
Lakewood St. Edward four
victories for using a player
who did not meet transfer
rule s.
St. Edward. now 3-4
instead of 7-0, lost the bigschool state title game last
season and is currently second-ranked in Division I.

place ·votes in parentheses, records

especially for dri vers 50 and

October

College Football

15

18

The Knitting Ctrde rneeb nn

S(h~duled .

Baked Ziti
Italian Vegetables
Grape Juice
Lemon Meringue Pudding
Garlic Bread

Scra mbled Eggs
Ham
Hash Brown Potatoes
Prune Juice
Muffin

licking Valley
ordered to forfeit
four victori.es

Menu ts Subject to Chango

-

13

12

11

Monday, October 11, 2004

Menus Prepared by Linda Myers RD LD

-

The Meigs Multipurp""'
Center is open Monday thrnugh
Fnday from 8:00a .m. unlll-!:.10
p.m. Regularly scheduled

the activities

October 2004

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
The Senior Nutrition Meal is served Daily at 12:00

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Virginta Tech 62, UCLA 50, Navy 41,
Texas Tech 1B Notre Dame 13,
Boston College 10, Maryland 2. N.
Illinois 1, Wybming 1.

Video reviews give 'Shoe fans a chance to vent
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

tec hnical advisor Gil
Marchman. Lipski's
ponion of the conver·
sation was played in.
the pre"box.
"The ball came
loose when the hall.
wa~ in the mr. so

COLUMBUS - The Big Ten is using video
review of play s this year on a one-year trial basis. '
An exit poll at Ohio Stadium on Saturdav would
likely •have resulted in a thumbs-down ·from at
least I 00,000 fans.
,
we're going lO go
Wi sconsin tailback Anthony Davis ran for IJ
had and put it right.
yards on the second play of the second half. wi th then ·.'· ' Lip,ki said .
the 15th-ranked Badgers holding a 14- 13 lead mer
But mot1lent ., [;tl~r. tile pia) was allowed to slanJ
No. 18 Ohio. State . Near the end of the run. the ball when an official on the ftcld said he inadve rte nt!\
popped loose.
·
·
blew his whi,tle .
·
Televised replays appeared to show Davis still, "After rcviewin~ the plm. the ball wa' loose,"
upright when the ball tumbled to the ground and . Lipski said over his qadiutil microphone for all in
Ohio State's A.J. Hawk fel l on it.
a crowd of 105.090. the fifth-largc'l in stadium
Just before Wisconsin quarterbaa John Stocco histor). to heat " HLliiC\ Cr. h' rule the whistk had
could take the next snap, an offtet~l ttmcout was blown and 11e "111 gl\c the ball back Ill the
called so that the techf)tcal advtsor tn the pre"box · offense ."
co uld review the video:
The ;mnounccment w;ts ·met bv thunderou&gt; boo&gt; .
Referee Dennis Lipski 1poke for 2 tltttlLncs Wtlh · Almost · a1 if to reason lvith the crowd ..

+

Marchman added. " By rule we HAVE to give the
ball back to the offense ...
Ohio State coach Jim Tre&gt;sel declined to get
involved in the di;cu&gt;Sion of the re1·iew.
'"It was irrelevant:· he said :
Late in the game. after Wisconsin's ~4 - 13 decisio n was all but etched in £ranite. another play was
reviewed . This time Davl; fumbled after another
guin. fumb ling near the Ohio State ,ideli ne with
t~ammat.: Jonathan OtT Lllling on the loose ball.
This .time. the video oflictals ruled that Da,·is
had fumbled and that Orr 's rccoven resulted in a
thrce-varJ ~am over" here. the· ball-had ori~inall\
been ti~arked .
·
Those left in the crowd - many ha,·ing alread)
headed for their cars - once again booed loud and
long.
• BAD BLOOD: After the , game. se,·eral playef' from each side were involved in a fight at midfield . At least two players from each team had to

Pleese see .Buckeyes, Bl
-

..-

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy's Smith Father and Son
racing team wins Skyline feature
BY

SCOTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent

STEWART - Pomeroy dti
\er Todd Smtth defeated t field
of over thirty late models be tt
mg some of the best names 111
regtonallate model auto r,1cm~
when he dele tted Coolvtlle s
Andy Bond m the final pomts
race at Lou Hubbard s Skyhne
Speedway
Smtth took tdvant tge ot
some bad luck from two ol the
early leaders but somettmes
one has to be lucky as well as
good to V.Jil m the htghly com
pettme L lie Model dtvtston
Smtth races for the l&lt;umly
owned TNT R tcmg te 1111 #T 7
bused m Pomeroy The team ts
financed bv Todd htmsell and
rettred Iather and mother Tom
and Apnl Smtth Occa~tonally
brothet 111 law Cork Cleek ts m
town to tum the wrenches but
bastcall) the mechantc work IS
a tv. o man operatton shared
between father and son
Srruth clrumed five feature
wms m 200 I had 22 second
place fimshes and dropped out
with mechamcal p10blems
whtle leadmg etght other races
The year before wtth a steel
block engme he won three fea
tures at Jackson County
Speedway en route to that
champtonshtp whtle hmshmg
m the top five on all but two
occasiOns
He has also been a Sem1 Late
Champ ton at Sk} lme m 1998

and has won street stock ~ham
ptonshtps at Vmton County
1991 and 1992 He IS JUSt as
proud ol Ius tenth tn pomts 111
the Wmston Racmg Senes
standmgs at WVMS several
years back
Todd s wm m the regular sea
son hnale at Skyhne was sus
penseful The 25 lap Late
Model feature hned up on the
track at wtth John Brov,n and
Harold Redman Jr leadmg the
18 car held to the green tlag
start Brown took the lead at the
green v. tth Redman Rod
Evans Greg Mttchell and Andy
Bond roundmg out the top live
on lap one
The feature event v. a• marred
by etght cauuons On a lap 19
restart Brown the race long
leader was passed by Rod

E\ ans as 11 tppeared Brown c us ftom Oh10 West Ytrgtma

v,as havmg mechamcal p10b
lems On lap 24 Ev ms spun Ill
tum two collectmg the second
and thud place cars of Mttchell
and Smtth Evans was taken
from the track on a wrecker
wtth Mttchell and Brown also
gomg to the p1 ts
Pomeroy s Todd Srruth would
restarted up front and lead the
final lap to clatm hts first wm of
the year dm mg hts Tom Srruth
prepared
Bank s
Construction/Bob s Market and
Greenhouse/Sham Carburetton
and
Decals/Wtlhams
);~gmg/Eagle Memorabtha
The wm was a popular one
wtth the crowd m attendance as
Smtth the underdog posted the
wm agamst an all star held ol

and Kentucky
SUMMARY
Late Model Heat #1 -John
Brown Rod Evans Andy
Bond Todd Smith Dan
Momson Tracy Ftscher Joe
Ramev Justm Powell and Josh
Flynn
Heat #2 - Harold Redman
Jr Greg Mnchell Larry Bond
Sonny Conley Lany Smtth
Mtchael Shepard Brent Steel
Freddtc Carpenter Jason Edge
DNS Jason Montgomery
Feature - Todd Smtth
Andy Bond Harold Redman
Jr Dan Momson Jason
Montgomery Jeff Shepard
Jason Edge Flynn Carpenter
Ramey Conley
Mttchell
Evans Brown Ftscher L
Bond L Smtth and Powell

NASCAR Notebook

Delay or no, cursing remains a NASCAR no-no
BY STEVE BRISENDINE

Assoc ated Press

KANSAS CITY Kan
NASCAR had one more
remmder for Its dm ers before
Sundays Nextel Cup tace at
Kansas Speedway
Don t count on gettmg sa\ ed
by the bleep
NBC Implemented a live
second dela} for NASCAR
telecasts last week after Dale
Earnhardt Jr used prolamty m
an mtef\ tew after hts wm at
Talladega
But NASCAR whtch lined
Earnhardt $10 000 and docked
htm 25 champ10nsh1p pomts
satd the delay won t keep dn
'ers from bemg penahzed for
sweanng
Do not expect that to keep
)OU out of trouble NASCAR
prestdent Mtke Helton smd at a
dnvers meetmg before the
Banquet 400 You re better
oft bemg responst ble for ) our
own destmv by bemg responst
ble to start wnh Do not expect
those delays to prevent a reac
uon from us
Some dnvers mcludmg
Tony Stewart have cntlctzed
the pomts penalty as excesstve
The last ttme I checked we
had I reedom ol speech cor
rect1 Stew U1 satd Satllfda)
Smce v. hen has that changed
nov. 1 I dtdn t know the
Constnutmn changed m the
I 1st couple of weeks
What he satd dtdn t cheat
anvhody on the racetrack
Stewart satd It dtdn t have

,my effect on how the 1ace was
run
On Sunday Helton acknov.l
edged the debate over llee
speech but hkened NASCAR s
rules on sweann(Y to 1-estJJc
!tons tmposed by homeowners
aSSOCIUtiDnS
Thts ts another comnllmtty
that you paru~tpate m he
satd Thts 1s the rules ot the
commumty and thts ts how v,e
have tu lt'e m 1!
Rustv Wallace a'ked wh tt
dnvers were allov,ed to say
We II we knov. ""h 11 yo u
can t say Helton responded
We II start there and I II see
you alter the meeung
• STEAMED STEWART
Tony Stev. art and Joe Gtbbs
Racmg teammate Mtke Bhss
were sum moned to the
NASCAR hauler Sund IV
mormn" to explam theu alter
cat ton followm g S 1turda) s
Busch Senes race
Stewart mtssed hts l1rst
Busch vtctof) when he m 1dc
contact wnh Joe Nemechek
and crashed with I I/2 ltps tu
go m the Mr Goodcents 300
But bv then he \1 as tlread)
steamed at Bliss for racm_ hun
out of the ptts earlier 1~ the
race
He C&lt;tlled Blt ss 1 h 1m mer
head ovet the 1 1d1o dunn" the
mce and tbe tv.o cltshed later
111 the team hauler
Ftom what we know tt ght
now It was kmd ol a lamtlv
spat NASCAR spokesman
Jun Hunter satd Thete w ts
wme pushmg some shovtng
some cursmg

NASCAR planned to tnter
1tew more witnesses to the
1ltercatton on Monday before
makmg any dectston on dtsct
plme Hunter satd
I don t see us gomg very
h trd on an} one he smd
•STAR-CROSSED STERLING Smce 1 hfth place lm
ISh . In Kansas Speedways
mauguml Cup race 111 200 I the
ll ack has been mythmg bu
Kmd to Sterling Marlin
He broke hts neck m a crash
111 2002 and mtssed the last
se\ en races ot the season
Then m 2003 he was headed
lor a top I0 fimsh but ran out
of gas with I0 laps lett
On Sunday Marlin dtdn 1
e'en get tar befoi'C dt&gt;aster htt
Headed mto the startmo
gtee n !lag hts dnves halt c une
loose md nearly knocked ht'
hood open He retw ned I tter 111
the race but had tu drop out
alter completmg 216 laps hn
tshmg 34th
It " ts one ol those de tis
where you thmk It s gomg to
get better but we took the
" Ieen 111 second gear and 11 1ust
exploded M trl n s ttd The
dm eshaft tlew out md 11 was
JUst t mess
• HE'S NOT SHY Rookte
Bt e 1dan Gaughan who 1111
tshcd lOth put on 1 letsl) per
lorm mce m hts postracc tnter
v1ew

Ftrsl he took on the medta
I 01 ""h n he satd w 1s undue
locus on the I0 d vets 111 co 1
tenuon lor the Nexte l Cup
under NASCAR s new ch un
ptonshtp lormat

vear starter at ~u 1rterhack ILtslm
Zv.tck atld hts melfccuve ol lense
were booed loudlv by I05 090 pant
san
fans the hfth largest uov,d 111
from Page 81
OhiO Stadtum htslory
Zwtck completed IS of 31 passes
satd ~ed Gmn Jr who scored the
lor 125 yaal'- \1 llh two ol the com
Buckeyes onl) touchdov,n on a 65 pletton&gt; and 27 of the yards wmm_ 111
yard punt retun 111 the llrst quarter the final fev, seconds
We should do more
We want to forget tbout til &gt; one
Wtsconsm 3 0 m the Btg Ten ts 6 as soon as posstble Zw tc k satd
0 for the first lime smCe 1998 That
Ohtc.J State coach Jmt Tresselltced
year the Badge" tm tshed I I I more questtons about Zw ck - and
shared the Btg Ten title and won the whether a shake up was com ng at
Rose Bowl
quarterback - than he d d about all
Sophomore John Stocco was other aspects ol the team Tressel
stead} all da} for the Badgers com remamed steadfast 111 support of
plettng 15 of 24 passes for 169 yards
Zwtck even though the sophomore
and two touchdowns wtthout an mter has thrown more mcomplettons th m
ce~uon
cpmpleuons m each ol hts last three
We stuck together and never got
games
down on ourselves Stocco satd
That s not somethmg th,lf JUmps m
Stocco gave the Badgers a 14-7
mi" mmd us u solutton lrcs&gt;cl sutd
leud on an 8-yurd fudc puss to Dumn
makmg u chunge utthe postuon
Churlcs then to.,ed 11 I0-yurd sconng ot W
r~;consm pluys ut unbeuten
pll!ls - ulso on u fude punem - to Pur\lue unu ut home 1111111n&gt;t
Jonuthun Orr tn the lourth quurter to Northwestern before u hye week the11
clinch the 11urne Orr s dlvlnu cnlch clnSCls
schedule with Mlnne•otu ul
cumo Ju~t three ~luy~ utier Ohio lmme the
und mmJ ~ume• ut Mkhtgun
SWill • Snntonlu Holme1 muffed u Sw!llund Jpwu
pulll Wl~conMin ~ S~nll !iturkM •hnv
win li!F ll• Alvurw
tnu him u~ldQ un~J thQn rulllnl! on lh~ suldIts 1\u~ hu~Je
nnt
~~~~y to wme ttwt h~1"
looMe ~nil ut the Oh In Stute I'Ieurl y In lillY win II tmtk~• twxt wee~ ev~n
lhll fourth qUUI10f
bi~j!er
MQunwh\1~ Ohio Stute ~own 11r~t

Deficit

Monday, October n,

www mydadysentinel.com

You guys are makmg the
btg ballyhoo about the Chase
tor the Cup Gaughan satd It
doesn t mean they re gomg to
wm every race guys It doesn t
mean th 11 they are gomg to be
top I0 every race There s 41
teams out there and we re all
I lCII1 0

Gaughan also had some
chotee v.ords for Goodyear
whose !Ires he blamed for cars
propensity to get loose m the
second turn at Kansas
Speed\\,lY
I lo1 e Good) ear but man I
JUSt hate the ttre that we have
now he satd It remmds me
ot that Goodyear we had from
2000 ?00 I - the one th 1t we
used to call the Death
Tv, ttcher
I went mto tum two and
one ume m particular I was
he 1cllng towmd the wall
G tugh m satd A lot ol guys
v.ere domg 11 and some guys
ge t 1 better handle on 11 and
some gu} s don t We rea te&lt;tm
th 11 s still tf) mg to get a handle
on thts ure
•WHERE'S THE NAVY?
Sunday was a good day lor
m1 hllry sponsored cars
Joe Ne mechek won 111 the
Army car barely holdmg oft
Rudel
111
the
Rtcky
Motorcralt/ Atr Force entry
And 111 thtrd w ts Greg Btftle
m 1c u sponsored by Subway
md the N 11101111 Guard
Th tl s reallv cool Rudd
satd but I re tll} wtsh the Atr
Force car could have been out
front the w •Y thev are when
we go tow tr

Buckeyes
from Page 81
be pulled tway alter they threw punches tl thetr
lppone lt'
Pollee c 1 tches and other stdehne personnel
stepped 111 to sep nate those squan ng ott
Jnn Ttessel and I talked Wtsconstn coach
Bany Al\atez satd It w 1s too good ot 1 foot
bJII game to h tve somethmg ltke that tarmsh 11
Ltke Jtm 'ud- and I tgree wnh htm- tl w ts
probably two or three guxs that started some
thmg We don t need that 111 sports
Tressel satd he go t a ftrsthand 'tew of the
list cuffs
I saw the tv.o oppostte color Jerse}S gomg at
one another a little bit he satd And probably
not very smartly I was 111 the mtddle of n with
out ,t helmet
• COMING-OUT !'ARTY F(1r weeks urm
ch,m quurterha~ks 111d cullers to sporls·ruuw
shows hnve been lomplutntng thlll Ohto Stute
llCCUS to j,lCI ih~ bnJJml!lthe hands ollresh1111111
T~d 011111 Jr mme
Gtnn tonk u punt 111 ht• owtt 1~ -~~~·ored
thrnu11h the 1111(/dl~ ul the nn~umlnj! cuveruy~
un\i und I hen oped 1n11w len •Ide of the 1\eld to
11111111n c ve1 yone till II M y111 d 111u~ h~Jown return
GeitlllJ!Itlthe end tone - ~etlln~ us~ure lor
1\w tettm - wt" very ltllpltrllmiiO me •uld Jhe
tnmJu&gt;~hti!Mil Ohio Si111e tewtli 111 tile &gt; I us~ ul
20IIH Yo11 v~ Mill It• Jell yow•ell I httve 111 do
Whlli I tuk~• Ill lw/ptli~ 1~11111

Nemechek
from Page 81
gas and here come Rtd.:y Rudd
out of nowhere Nemechek
satd I w as like Hoi&gt; Maley
I had to get back on 1t He got
bestde me one ume but I was
n t gomg to let It happen
The end off the race was
pretty neat satd Rudd who
drove onto the apron and near
ly spun out on the late restart
before brcakmg out ot the pack
to chase down Nemechek
I got hung up m traffic and
Joe had a half a strmghtaway
lead on us Rudd added I
caught hm1 somehow and I got
to hts door but my car was slip
pmg and I had to ea~e oft so I
dtdn t t tke us both out Joe and
I netther one needed that type
of endmg to a great day lor
both of us
Rudd raced to only hts sec
and top- I0 flmsh of the year
both comtng smce bemg
reumted wtth crew chtef
Mtchael Fatback McSwam
m August
Nemechek was among a
group of 10 drivers who stayed
on track when cars ahead of
them pttted dunng a caution
penod late m the race movmg
from 14th to fourth as Btftle
and Jeremy Mayfield v. ho
were I 2 at the ttme were
among the leaders who dtd pn
I was gettmg really really
good gas mileage and we elect
ed to stay out when those other
guys pttted for a splash of gas
Nemechek smd It worked out
JUSt perfect for us
Another vellow tlag on the
ensumg restart left htm m the
same spot but the veteran
racer who started from the pole
for the second stratght r tce
charged to the front once the
green tlag waved tor lap 218 of
the 267 lap e\ent
He passed Rudd md Jamte
McMurray and dueled v,nh
champtotlshtp contender Elliott
Sadler bel ore grabbmg the le 1d
on lap 231 staymg out front the
rest of the way for hts tourtk
career vtctmy and ltrst smce
May 2003 at Rtchmond It ts
the ltrst ttme smce the champt
onshtp battle began last month
at New Hampshtre that one ol
the title contenders has not
v.on
Bttlle ltmshcd thtrd Sund 1}
followed b) Sadler Mavlteld
and Kurt Busch v. ho came mto
the race wtth a 12 pomt le td
over Dale Eamh,udt Jr 111 the

2004

Nextel Cup standmgs and fin
tshed
Sund,ly
leadmg
E:m1hardt who fmtshed mnth
by 29 potnh
Mayfield led a mce htgh 72
l1ps and Btftle was next wtth
IH Bttlle wa&gt; parttcularly dts
appomted
Not very often do you get a
mce car that xou can JUSt go on
all day tong Btftle satd For
somethmg to happen and not
wm 1t bums Its actd m your
stomach But those are the
cards we were dealt tod 1y
Jeff Gordon who tmtshcd
11th ts thtrd 79 pomts behmd
after four ol 10 races m
NASCAR s new champ1
onshtp lonnat
Busch got a little lucky
Sunday a\mdmg damage
when he spun mtdv. 'Y through
the r tee He came back to fin
tsh 111 the top stx tor the fourth
str u0 ht r tee the on ly dnver to
accomplish th 11 teat m every
race smce the I0 race playoff
beg 111 E unh udt commg off a
~1ctorv 111 Talladega 1 week
ago got hts lounh stmt ght top
10 ltmsh
We a\ otded a btg pill all
today Busch satd Our car
was not vef) good when we
were around other cars
Wtth stx 1aces remammg
Sadler ts fourth 111 the stand
mgs tratllng Busch by 143
pmnts followed by Mark
Martm v. ho fmtshed 20th
Sunday and ts ISO pomts
behmd
Jtmmte Johnson and Ryan
Newman
the defendmg
Kansas Cit} v. mner both had
atlother bad day 111 the champt
onshtp Each htt the wall m
separate
acctdents
v. 1th
Johnson llmshmg 32nd and
Nev. man 33rd They are etghth
md nmth 111 the st mdmgs both
more th m 200 pot nts behmd
Nett her te levtston broadcast
et NBC nor r 1d10 s Motor
Racmg Network needed to use
delays they announced e u Iter
m the week 111 the 11tcm1lth of
E unh I dt LIS no I I ul!!anty
dUIII1 0 I I IC!OI) llllcf\ leV. Oil
lt~e
TV l tst 1~eekend
1'\ASCAR lmed Earnhardt
S I0 000 and docked hm1 25
pomts knockm" h m out of
ltrst pl1ce 111 the stmdmcs
NASCAR pre,tdent \\anled
the dmet' dunno the prerace
dm crs mcctmg th It the} tre
sttll responstble to w ttch thetr
I mgu 1~e m&lt;l not count on the
delay to protect them There
'Nctc no report' ol mtpptopn
tte lmgu t-e dunn the pos
trace nte1' e"'"'

www mydailysentinel com

Monday, October 11 , 2004

The Dally Senhnel • Page 83

Ul:rihune - Sentinel - l\.e
CLASSIFIED

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
Ul:rihune
Sentinel
Your Ad.
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156
Call Today•••
Or Fax To (740) 992 2157

i\egtster
(304) 675-1333

Oftfee lloar~

Now you can have borders and r;~raphlcs
~
added to your classified ads
_(. ~
1m
Borders S3 00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S 1 00 for larr;~e

Monday thru Friday
S:OO a.rn. to 5:00 p.rn.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Succe••ful Ada
Should Include Th..e Jtema
To Help Get Reaponae
\\\01 \( I \11 \.I"

r ~~CEMFNrS I

r

• Ad• Should Run 7 D•v•

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110

lm" AND

Y~u~

F:nd

• St•rt Your Ad• With A K•yword • Include Camp ete
o ..crlptton • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl8tlons
• InClude Phone Number An• Addtlll Wl"'•n Need•d

e.o-·FU•H•~.~.~.LE..._.I eo

~C.od-ng·HEI.P--"·p·~·,.·,·,·on.a

1

Go man

..

3 bed oom 2 bath I \1 ng
oom d nn ng room fur
2 ca
n shed k chen
ga age 2 outbu d ngs 6
plus acres close to schoo s

Shepa d dog n Wayne Needed Ful t me 2 yea
Accepting Sea ed 8 ds on Nat anal Fo rest (740)643 deg ee n Medica Records
10 25 04 unt 12 I"'IOn on a 1002
Requ red Know edge of
6HP 8 gallon
Gaso ne 70
CO 9 CM Cod ng and DRG
Whee
Ba rei style A r
YARD SAl.E
ass gnment expe 8nce p e
Camp esse $400 ese 11e
fe red Exce ent Bene! ts
Send b ds o MCEASA PO
Package
F ex be
Schedu ng Send esume
to Camden C ark Memor al
Hasp tat
Human
Resources PO Box 7 8
RIVERS DE
AUCT ON Pa ke sbu g WV 26102 Fax
BARN At 7 South 5 m es (304 )424 2825 or apply on
below the Dam EVERY I ne at www comh o g
I ue SATURDAY
@
6pm

r

740)256·69B9

fi90

Gl\ I:AI\A\

roBm

1 yea odmaeBo)(e mx o Absoue Top Do tar US
good home (740)256 1092 S ve
and God Cons
Poofses God Rngs US
Cur ency M T S Con Shop
151
Second
Avenue

G I
Lab pupp es o
good home (740)446 9552
5 m

110

.
1
G ve away 3 fema e k ttens
1 femaecat 1 maektten
(7 40)992 IS 0

'

I

~ted

HELP W.w rm

he p
wanted
Weed ng general ga den
ma n!enance etc Kanauga
a ea 740 208 7977

740 446 2B42
'I
'I H\ It I "'

0

•

lo

oC son
Management
~-------- Co p s cu r ent y accep ng
app cat ons at ou Ga pc s
oca on Qua 1ed app
Toy Ame ca n Esk mo Toy
Ame can
Es~ mo
m x st o
1 monh od must cans shou d be sable h gh
She and/Corg m x mov ng have efe ences &amp; be nlant y me vated ndvduas wth
they nee d a good hone ch1td CPA ce I ed ca good comm un cat on sk Is
740 992 2423
between 6 9 (30 4)576 3353 We offe a u 1bene! ts pack
age and 40 K (50% co
match) aile n nety days
Seve a schedul ng opt ons
to cMose from No p ev ous
4•4 s For Sale ................................................. 725
expe ence s necessa y We
Announcement
030
a e the p ofess onal rJ. ffe
Antiques
530
ence n e ese v ces and
Apartments lor Rent
440
need g eat team p ayers to
Auction and Flea Markal
080
JOn us nteres ed cand
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
dates pease cal 1 877 463
Auto Repair
770
6247 ext 2456 Appy n pe
Autos for Sate
710
son at 242 Th rd Avenue
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale
750
Ga pols
o
on ne
Buildtng Supplies
550
www nfoqs on com

======='-'--""

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Business and Bulldtngs
Bust ness Opportunity

Business Trammg
Campers &amp; Motor Homes

Camping Equipment
Cards of Thanks
Child/Elderly Care
EtectricaVRelrlgeratton
Equipment for Rent
E•cavatlng
Farm Equipment
Farms for Rent
Farms for Sale
For Lease
For Sale
For Sale or Trade
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
Furmshed Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ads
Hay &amp; Grain
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Homes for Sale
Houaehold Goode
Houeea for Rant
In Memoriam
lnauranca
Lawn &amp; Gordan Equipment
LIYtltock
Loat ond Found
Lola &amp; Acr11gt
Mlacolloneout
Mtacollantout MtrchondiH
Moblla Homa Repair
Moblla Homtalor Rant
Mobile Homeator Salt
Money to Lotn
Motorcyclat &amp; 4 Whtlltra
Mualca lnatrumanta
Paraonola
Peta for Sale
Plumbing I Hitting
Profeulonal Servlceo
Radio TV I CB Repair
Real Eatate Wanled
School a lnatructlon
Sttd Plant I Fertilizer
Sltuatlona Wanted
Space for Rent
Sporting Good•
SUV a lor Sale
Trucka for Sale
Upholstery
Vans For Sale
Wanted to Buy
Wanted to Buy Farm Supplies
Wanted To Do
Wanted to Renl
Yard Sate Gallipolis
Yard Sate Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sale PI Pleasant

340
210
140
790
780
010
t 90
840
480
830
610
430
330
490
585
590
580
450

850
040

050
640

110
810
310

510
410

Its About Your Freedom
A e you conce ned abOut
the th ea s to the nghts ol
gun owners?
AI nfoC s10n you can earn
up to $8 hour wh e help ng
o p otect the r gh s of gun
own ng Arne teans
Full t me and Pa t me
sh rts ava able We a so
offer pa d 1 a n ng vaca
ons and ho days you
a e serous about protec ng
you Second Amendmeflt
gh s cal us today
t 877 463 624 7 ext 2321

LABORATORY

TECHNI

ClAN mmed a e open ng
Ia a Med ca Labo ato y
Techn can Days only no
n ghts
o
weekends
Contact Athens Med ca
Labo atory 400 E State
A hen s Phone (740)593
8240

020

130
880
830
080
350
170
540

880
420
320
220

740
570

005

580
820
230

180
380

150
850
120
480
520
720
715

870
730

090
820
180
470
072

074
076

Know a aa wet

Ca M ke OB74 0049
Looking

HVAC
(740)44

&lt;Cl 2004

www com1cs com
110

Independent ca e needed
An Exce ent way to ea n fo
davey of Haod
money The New Avon
Dspach n Ga po s aea
Ca Ma yn 304 882 2645
Est pol 1 $~ 200 month
Ca A.ndy Ma n 1 BOO 888

2B34

SECURITY OFACERS
Peasant
Pease send
esume o
Oenta Att OH ce Mg
3984 lnd an C eeK Road
El~v ew WV 25071
Pont
Pleasant
Moose
lodge now accept ng app
cat ons Ia a Bartende &amp;
Wa t ess apply a he Moose
lodge between 8 30 3pm at
A 2 Charleston Ad
~OSTAL

JOBS

$14 62 $20 92 h~ Now h1
ng Fo app cat ons &amp; tree
gave nment ob nto cat
Ame K:an Assoc of Labo
19135998042 24hs
emp se v

Psychologlsr

FULL TIM E POSIT ON
N GALL POLS

~~

by NEA Inc
To Do

D ve Needs Wo k C ass A
COL A Endo semen s Ca
(740)367 7899

(740)69B 7002

FREE UN FORMS
' ' ' ' " 1\1
PA DTRA NING
ADVANCEMENTS
BUSIN~
PAID VACATIONS HEALTH
0PPOR'IlJNI1Y
BENEFITS
OFFERED
INCENT VE PROGRAMS
Abso u e Goldm ne
60
PLEASE CAL
vend ng mach nas
excel
MON FRI
ent ocat ons a o $10 995
9AM 3PM
(BOOi234 6982
1 eoo 869 8975

CONT NENTAL SECRET

01lllpolle C•rwr College
(CI ttra CIOII To Home)

I you rt llrlouaabout a new
ca eer and ere looking' lo
the a nlng and guidance
tnat a e 1111nt a tor ong
term IUCCIII WI Cl I ke IO
talk to you

Need n gt11 shill donut
make to oca bakery Exp P 1111 atop n tor an nte
p el not nee Br ng resume VOW
to 454 2nd Ave
Norrie Nortl'lup Oodgl
Ova brook
Aehablltat on Chryaler Jtlp
Cente
a now accept ng
esumes ro the poe tlon ot
0 ector or Social Serv cea The Easte n Local Schoo
Cand da e must pouen 0 st ct 1 11ee~ing quality
strong Ye bal and wr !ten applicants to se ve as
skIs coaches tor the ro lowing
commun cat on
Mad cad
Med ca 8 and w nte sports pos 1ons Boys
MOS know edge LSW w th Jun or Va s11y Basketbe
Coacn Boys Juno H gh
expe ence n eng te m care
p eter ed but not equ ed Basketba I Coach (2) 0 rls
Qua 1ed cand dates please Va sty Bas~elbalt Coacl'1
Jun o
Va s y
contact
Cha a .8 own G r s
Basketba
Coach
G ts
Admns ao a 333 Pace
H gh
Basketba
St eel
M dd epa t
Oh Juno
Coach (2) tnte es ad pe
45760 EOE
sons shou d con act Jon
Pa amad cs
8.
EMT s l nde
P nc pa o Pam
needed Apply at 1354 Ooulh tl Athie c D ector at
Jaclolson P ke Ga po s
Eas te n H gh SchOol

Cal Today 740 446 43B7
1 BOO 214 04&amp;2

k&gt;

I'ROFFS'.lONAL
SfR\ICES

5B37

Seetin• 39 People
Locally
who wan to earn money
wh Ia os ng we gh show ng
others hOw

1740)44, 19B2
FREE SAMPLES

www ramousnu r t on com

ment de ached ga age
coun y sen ng 5 m nutes
fomRoGande Omnur
ed t om hosp ta
"-700
month
depos t 7 40 446
3051

$0 DOWN $0 DOWN
CASH OUT/ HOME
M~ROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT BANKRUPTC ES
WELCOME
UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
t BOO 37()..4966
CALL TODAY

(740)949 9016

6ll80
3be2 ba vny sde shn
g ed ool I on and _,back

deck (740)949 3700
mob e homes sta 1 ng at
$270 pe month Ca 740
992 2 67

STAFFED BY US
VETERANS

ooms no
e e ences
(7 40 992

Noce
Apa 1'11en s
eta space
a so to ent (740)992 3702

1\lflllll.f HO\II:&gt;i
IDR Rf~r

A real eat81e advertising
In this newspaper Ia
subjec1 to the Federal
Fair Houa ng Act of , 968
wh ch makes It llegalto
advertise any

preference limitat on or
dlaerlmlnatlon based on

aee calor rei g on

•~

famll at atatua or national

ortg n or any intention to
make any auch
preference lim tat on or
diacr mlnatlon

3409

2 Dedoom a eec c 4
m tes no th o Ho ze 5350
rr onth
second depos 1 &amp;
re e ences 17 ~ 0 446 6865
0 740)446 6189

SAVE SAVE SAVE
S ock mode s a old p ces

3 bedroom mob e home no
pets (7 40 992 S858

2005 models a v ng Now
Coles
Mob e
Homes
15266 US 50 Eas Athe ns
Oh o 4570 (740 592 1972
Whe e You
Moneys Wo th

Get

You

Th a newspaper w not
knowing y accept
advertlaemen1a for rea
estate which Ia n

vlo at on Gl the 111w Our
readers are hereby
ntormed that at
dwe I nga advertised 1n
th s newspaper are
avallabie on an equal
opportun ty baaas

c ean
n

i'--lllliiAiiiCRFAiiiiiiliiiGiiiE_ _.~I r
L.ars &amp;

re

moo e nome to en
county 740 256

6574

APARn IE!S'fS

FUR Rr.Nr

•

2 acres on nga s Road
$ 5 000 740 245-{1133

1 and 2 bed oor; apa t
ments u n shed and unfu
n shed
secu ty depos
requ ed no pe s 7 40 992

Se ous nqu es 2218
on y
304 675 3648o
(6 4)74 7 0998
2001 mob e home 16x80
aso wo aces and
me
t om Rt 7 nea Eu eka

S65 000

Ca

1740 256

9234

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI&gt;
No Fee Un ess We W n
1 BBB 582 3345
Ill \I ISI\11
fliO

HOMES
FUR SAIL

House 3 Bed oom 1
Bath Heat Pump new
Ca pet W ndows &amp; Roof
Ave Vew 12 Smth St No
Money Down to qual ty ng a ea
Buyer $425/montn why Rent 3390
(304)675 2749
House 4 Sa e 9y s Old 2br
Co ne Lo Qu et wooded
a ea
n
C !ton
WV

(2) 3 bed oom houses fo
sale 2 baths I ep aces on 304)BB2 2626 or 1304)882
ac eage Ce
(740)709 2969
1166
House for sa e by owne 4+
0% Down Pay men and bed ooma 2 S baths 1 1;11
I nanc ng eva abe w th country kitchen 1 5 atory 2
app oved cred t
Average ca attached garage plus
C Od I QUI let you II down
wo Ia Qe outbu d nga
payment has kept you from Blacktop d veway many
buy ng thla 1 your cnance
axtraa $129 000 with 7, 3
to own you own home U
ac 1 tot or S159 000 wllh an
you have 1 down payment
add lt on a 3
acr11 ot rtat
but would llkl to conae ye I
g ounQ Very clolt to town
we offtlr ow down payment
on Spr uce St ext1n1 on
p og amt a to G 111 nter
Ca (740)59 0.37 anytime
111 a tt l loca company
Mo tgege
locator• Houu lor 1111 to Movt

IU \I \I..,
App cat ons be ng ta ken lo

Hous~

ve y ce an 1 beet oom n

FOR RThT

country sen ng yet close to
own Washe a ye stove
1 d~e nc uded Wate ana
Q&amp;r'bage nc udad Tota e 8C
t cwthAC Tenan payeec
t lc S300 depoat $375 pe
mon M No pets No amok
ng 740..«8 2205 o 74.0
446 9585 11k fo V rg n a

0% Down Paymen and
flnanc ng ava abe w h
Ava age
app ovad c ed t
c ldll qual fee you It oown
paymant hat kept you from
buying th 1 Is you chance
o own your own nome I
you have a down paymtnt
APART
but would 111111 to conatrvt t BEAUTifUL
AT
IUDOET
we offer low down payment MENTB
~RICES
AT JACKSON
p og lrTII 110 Great nte
111 1111 Loca company ESTATES 52 Wearwooc
Dr vt from $344 o $44 2
Mo lglgl
~OCI 0 I
Wak o ahop &amp; mov 11 C•
(740 &amp;92 732
740
2588
EQ ua
$6500 OBO (30.)e7~ 231&amp; 2 bid oom Mull ln..Eurtka HOUI ng Opportuf'l ty
IMtr 5 00 pm
New y remodtled
-Mao_o_n_WV--B-a-nk_o_o-:0-w-neo- montl"l !400 depoa t No CONVENIENTLY LOCAl
ED • AFFDRDABLEI
Home 2 bid oom F 1 Lot pe11 740 256 6408 740
$2 4 900
M ke S aok 0 d ' ' t.o58e3
Co ony
GM/I.C
Realty 2
bedroom•
Pome oy
) ,.
304 5 2 5888
$275 00 par month p ua

'Be

M.L~IS
108 Leg o Ta ace ranch
_ _ _ _ _ __ . type hOu!!a n QOOd shape

·~
H gh
School
Jun o e
San ore and P or Serv ce
you can tl \/&amp;can poe 1ons
n the West V ~;~na A my
National Guard II you a a
tletweM the ages of 17 35
o heve p or m hary se v
ce you won I wa nt to pass
tl1 sup For Opportun t es n
your a 88 ca
304 675

14x70 87 Clayton 3 bed
oom 2 bath C A new car
pet ceram c tie washe &amp;

"'

H 0 VALLEY PUBL SH
lNG CO ecommends tha
ou do bus ness With peo
e you know and NOT t
end money th ough th
a untl you have nves
ated the otter n

740 99'~---'3.c2-::-----:-

•

FUR SALE

New Oakwood mega store
featu ng
Homes
by
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
G es One stop shopp ng
only a Oak.wood Homes of
Barboursv I e WV (304 736

WE PROVIDE

\SO

MOBILE HOMES

MB 5263

$8 00 PER HOUR
MUST BE B YEARS OR
OLDER HAVE OWN CAR
VOL AND A CLEAN
CR M NAL RECORO
EXPER ENCE IN
SECURITY OR LAW
ENFORCEMENT
PREFERRED

SERVICE BUREAU NC
T ed of the hassles of he
pr vate p act ce want a
EOE
steady ncome o JUS! need
ng a change? We a e one of
F'u o part t me a\la lable
the tastes grow ng nat ona
Casn pa d week y
com panes de a ng w 111
ca M ke @ 674 0049
Ge a cs We offe a great
statng saay wth a 401K
pan I you have a docto a e
&amp; a e lcensed &amp; want o
wo k
par
1 me
ca
Psychologist Transitions 2pm appy wthn a ca
877 734 203 o fax esume 304 675 6166
877 734 2030
We a e now accep ng appl
cat ons a potent a u I t me
Sales
and o pa I t me c e ca
open ngs App cants must
A e you lao~ ng ro a new nave computer e~per ence
ca ee w h an unl m ted To apply s op by the
opportun ty fo ad ... ance Gall pols Da y T bune 825
men!?
Th d Avenue Ga I polls
Ann
Jm
Oh o 4563
Would you 1ke to be ecog
n zeci as a p o ess on a
salespe son n one of the Whee cha
t uck d ve
count y a highest paid occu needed Must have high
patens?
schoo d p oma/GED Clean
dr v ng record 25 years 0 d
II so our salespeop e earn 740 446 7930
an a~~:cellant ncome and ll'li!"'";..~---....,
ScHOOLS
enjoy the benet 11 of working
INsrRucnoN
Wth I IUCCIIIIUI and pro- .1

t236

Inc ~0 1033 Logan Oh
43136

11

WAN1'ID

tJEL.P WAN I'ID

lor experienced
helpe a
Cal g eaa ve deale eh p

Manage needed for moble
nome perk n snade eend
uume to Country Par~

Why pay rent., 3 bed room
3 bed oom hOuse water lu
bath
emode ed home n sl"led no pels $400 ent
Mason WV S35 000 00 No $400 depos t
740)245
calls
alte
9 OOPM 5064

Home
Eve ylh ng new d yo $10 000 (740)446
Pass tile no Money down o 4233
qual ty ng Buye s (304)674
1991 14 x70 3 bedroom 2
5111
4b
n Sy acuse
OH
ba h hea pump AJC ca he
$600 man h $600 oepos t 3
dra ce ngs deck St 000
ATIENTIONJ
Needs moved (30 4 882 3b n Sy acuse $475 month
Hud App oved both no Pets
GET YOUR LOAN TO
3682
304 675 5332
BUY OR REFINANCE
1
993
Mans
on
Mob
e
YOUR HOME
Home 4X60 2 bed oom 1
FREE APPROVED
oasemen V ew ol
ve
~ath
tota e eel c good
HOME LOANS
Cn
A
C
$700
mo
cond 1on centra a stove
ef ge ato and miC owave Ga po s Fe ry 740 446
NEW PURCHASES/
3481
nc uded
$8 500 00
REFINANCES

1 BOO 913 2B23 ex #1

\11'111\\11

I

3BA 2BA 5 129 aces
G een Townsh p c ose to
schOo P ced o se More
nfo (740)446 7377

Cou ld Ea n $50 000 yr
Wok om home
FexbeHous GeatPay
Persona Computer
Requ ed

Ga I po s Bob Evans now
accept ng app cations for
expe anced Sa es Staff
App y n person

HOlSE'i

FUR RENT

$94 000 740)742 7200

DATA ENTRY

WANTID

Holi!FS
FUR So\LE

111ur ng a season a porch
beaut ru v ew o ve stone
a chway minimum ya d
upkeep 2 bedrooms pus s
torma d n ng room &amp; ~ tchen
noo}l tu basement w d
nookup 12 bath &amp; garage
c ose to bus ness sect on of
own $39 000 {740 992

••e

s•oo

depol1 1740)992-()175

2 story Co on a 3 bdrm 1
batt1
Gas heat Cnt AJC
ooma 1 batt) Ia ge tv ng
oom ana din ng oom $600 mo (7 40)446 3-&lt;B 1
5502
k rcnen w lh 2 car ga age 2b Houu n New Haven
on attached and 1!1 30~60 App ances Fu n shed,. No
Ra nch Newe oat v ny ga age and a 16x24 s~e te Pats
$300 ctepos t
he a
pump
Sm the house 1 5 m es out Che ry $325/month 304 )882 3652
A dQe Ao on rhe
ght
Cab nets 1 ca ga age p
5 baths
vate ane olf SA 160 8 740)245 5102
close o hosp ta off Jackson
aces $92 000 (7 40 388
Ren a n Po n P easa.nJ P k.e $600 en w/$600 sec
8676
$400 men h 1304)675 5540 dep You pay a ut It es
o (304)675 4024 ask. to Refe ences equ red Ca
t-iomes
Nancy Homes ead Rea y 7 40 446 3644 fo app CA
Fo c osu e VA Hud o s
ton
ng BOO 49 8106 ex ~og B Oke

Gecoustvng !!.nd2bed
oom apa rtments a V age
Mano
and
R ve s de
Apa t!J'lenta n M dd eoo t
F om S295 S4o44 Ca 740
992 5064 Equ&amp; Hous ng
Oppo tun I es
HuQe clean 3 bea oom
balM d n ng sto BQe ap ox
2 500 so 1 No pets smok
ng S6 0
Ca
Ke v
740 446 9961
pets
n
740 992 5858

r"'I

apartment
Pome oy

�r

Monday, October 11 , 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

ALLEY OOP

~ 1r~1

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Call (740)256 -1245.

fifties era 4pc bookcase,
bedroom suite. yellow/brown
One bedrOom garage apart- PhaltzgraH stoneware. 614
ment, kitchen furnished, St . At. 325 south. Rio
$-&lt;00, (740)992-3823
Grande. (740)245-5845 .

•j '

Tara
Townhouse Cash pa1d for 01sh Network
Apartments, Very Spacious, equipment. Have model
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors , CA. 1 number's ready. Toll lree
1/2 Beth, Newty Carpeted, (888)569-2812
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio. Start $385/Mo No For Sale New And Used
Pets, Lease Plus Security Doors and Windows call
Deposit Required . Days: (3041675-4534
Evenings.

Twin Rivers Tower is acceptIng applications for wai ling
Nst lor Hud·subsized, 1- br,
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO

Go Cart, Road Boss 409Xl,

Join us for an exciling 6 weeks of

Tecumseh 5 hp, $450.
Mossberg 500 fully·rifted
barrel, $500. Volvo, 1980,
240DL, $1 ,700. Saddle.
$150 . (740)446·0910

FREE vocal lessons.

HouSEHOLD
Goo!l&gt;

Parts

740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553

NEW AND USED STEEL
Sleel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains.
Grallng
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Warehouse
in Henderson, WV. Pre·
:awned applicanes starting at
'$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
:we do serv1ce wor~ on all
-Make and Models (304)675)999
- - -- - - - , -- -Good Used Appliances ,
:Rec ondllioned
and
Guaranteed.
washers ,
Dryers,
Ranges,
and
:Refrigerators. Some start a\
•$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
:vine St., (740)446-7398

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Pole

Barn

30x50x10FT

S639~ . includes Painted
Metal. Plan s. lnsl ruction
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
(937)559-8385
Solid maple 2 pc. hutch.

r

145N. Second A\'C.
Open Dni ~- I0:00-l :00

Sun. I".00-4.00
Close-d Tues.
992-5 152

740-446-9800

r
1

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

.6

99 Voltswagon Beetle. Red,
5 speed, CD changer.
'
62,000 miles, $6,500 OBO
Block, bric~ . sewer pipes. Short Horn Fair Steer. 1994 Buic~ $1,000. Good (740)256·16 18 or (740)256windows, lintels, etc. Claude Raised
in Gallia Co. shape, call for more in forma- 6200.
:Table and 4 Chairs, good Winters. Rio Grande, OH (7 40)256-6574.
tion (740)256-9234.
condition $75 call (304)675- Call740·245-5121 .
85 Celebrity Chevy wagon .
15
TRUCKS
3056
Cii!i-~~~:,:..;....
S
PF:RSIA"SI •.
HAGRAily&amp;N
1994 Pontiac Firebird 6cyl. L.oo--·FO·R-iiAI;;;.E•
:- ·
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
·u
,..._
• __
runs &amp; looks good, $3,000
Aepair-675·7388. For sale,
OBO {304 )676 _6986
1989 Dodge 1/2 ton pick up
re-conditioned
automatic 2 miniature male Don ~eys, For Sale Ear Corn (304)675- =:.::.c::::':'.'.::.::.:::~- 8 ft . bed , 318, V8 , 60,000
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- $300 each. Born on Mothers _15:.:0_:_6_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1995 Chevrolet Lumina ; miles, new rubber, towing
tors , gas and electric Day
(740 )446 _01 18 or
Origirtal owner; looks and package, new pain!, excelranges, air conditioners, and (
)
_
Laying Hens and Hay- runs greet! $2,200 080. Ph : lent condition, 3 speed over740 367 3331
Square or round bales. 19tl1 (740)245-0135.
·
drive....
$3,250.
Call
wringer washers. Wi ll do
repairs on major brands in AKC" Black lab puppies. Buick
LeSabre .
Call
(740 )446-4514 8am-5pm
1996 Buick Century, 94.000
shop or at your hOme .
Shots, wormed &amp; dew claws (740)388-9033.
miles,
good
shape 740-446-3248 after Spm
removed . $200. (740)441 Used Furniture Store 130
(304)675-1506
92 Toyota 4 Runner. 4 WD, 5
0 130
Bulaville Pike. Dressers, c:.::.:::.:
· - - - - - - 4-Sale 03 Gravely 148 z 1998 Pontiac Grand AM , 4 _ speed, loaded. 1t7K. excelcouches, mattresses. reclin- AKC Black lab. puppies Zero turn. riding mower, 48 Door, Ps, PB, Ac , 97, 000 lent con dition, $4 .800
ers, refrigerator. washer, Males &amp; Females, born 'in cut, 21hp, Kawasaki miles. Excellent condition {740)245·0124.
dryer, gas, electrrc range, 9/ 11 /04
$200
each engine, $7,000 new only 65 inside and out, $4,500 or
Grave Monuments, much (304)773·5103
hrs . $5,500 080 call best offer call (304)892·

BUilDING

Sl.JPPIJES

r

I~

LIVESJ'OCK

11

·L_ _ _ _ _ _ _.,l

Ir

_ _,

r

~~~~~lis, 0~7~~~~~~~;~~~

cF:.: ul-1'c.b..:lo;_od;_e:.;:d.::_S_t._9_e_r_na-rd

(304)377-5598 leave mes- 3773 or (304)895-304 5

S)

puppies for sale, $200., Call sage
(740 )379-2605·
SPORilNG
Squirrel Dogs for sale lni!""'_""":_ _ _....,
Goous
(304)675-6132
Jess
Auras
Hutfman
_
llJRSALE
.Jennings Buck Mas1er Bow.
I \I{\ I -,1 1' 1'1 II -,
fully equiped, with hard
$5001 Honda's, Chevy's,
,\ 11\1..,10("
condition $150
Jeep's,
Ect
Police
Impounds! Cars from SSOO
for lislings 800-391 · 5227
EXT 3901

r

r•o

(304)882 · 2537

1994 Chevrole t Suburban .
All leather sea ting. All
power. Equ1pped for trailer
towing. Can be seen at 136
First Ave.. Gallipolis, Ohio.
Phone 740 446-256 1.

_a7_2_o_ _ _ _ _ _ _
. 2 miniature male Donkeys,
Wood $300 each. Born on Mothers 1993 Black Camara, w/CD
Day
(740)446-0118 or player,
good conditio n
{740}367-3331 .
$2,500 (304) 773 _56S8

1995 Dodge Dakola 4x4
pi ckup. 120,000 miles ,
Five Passenge r Coupe. new $3,700. Call (740)379-2409
muffler system, tire s and after 5pm. You won·t f1n d a
safety sticker (304)576-2288 deal like this for a 4x41

I

MERCHANDISE

Fire

L__..;,HJ;;;RiiiiiSiiAiil.[iir'- •

1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme
(304)675-8604 or (304)675-

MlscEuANEouS
sale

2001 silver Hyundai Accent,
low mileage.
1193 green Dodge Shadow,
good condition . {740)3889831

suvs

78 Cadillac Eldorado. Good
body, fair interior, engine &amp;
4X4
front end needs work.
FoR SALE
$1,500 firm . Call {740)446·
5pm
1704 a"er
!\
•
1987 Ford Bronco II 6cyl,
88 Ch rysler Fifth Avenue 4x 4 w/air, 4-speed w/oyerBody good, new tires, drive,
runs
good
breaks, shocks , batteru runs $1,500/0BO (304)675-1408
'"'
good . $1,200. 740·645· _o_r1_74_0_I4_1_B_
·0_79_o_ __
11 65.
1990 Ford Ranger 4 WO,
93 BMW 325i. Custom cover exl. cab, 5 speed, $1.000
&amp; extra wheels, $3,500. ci7C'40~)!:!4:.41:_:·0~5~0::_0_ _ __

7 ft . International Bush Hog.
Buy or sell
Ri\lerine 3 point hitch, good corJ:tition
·
E
M
Anttques, 11 24 as 0 a1n $600 . 1740 )446 _0 11 8 or
on SA I 24 E . Pome,oy. 740 · 304 ~ 75 . 3331
992·2526. Russ Moore,
owner.
LI\~TOCK

___
For

At.rrOS

fOR SALE

L.,.------·

1983 Gadi llec, 66.000 .miles,
·
c
excellent condition .
all
(740)44\-() \94.

7c:4::.0 1.:4 "'
46o:·9e:!\"'5::.5 ·:__ _ _
~1For
Sale 1948 Chevrolet,

j

LINDA'S PAINTING

Fc&gt;R SAL.E

1996 F-150, 4x4, exten ded
cab, 5.0 auto, t02 ,000
miles. winterized, tuned up,
new !ires &amp; brakes, $6500.
Racine Service Cen ter.
(740)949-2700

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, elec·
lions 3501.11 (G) ,
5705.19, 5705.25
No1ice is hereby
given that in pur·
suance

of

a

Resolution ot the
Board ot Township
Trustees
of
the
Township of Orange,
Ohio,
Reedsville
passed on lhe 4th day
of May, 2004, there
wtll be oubmltled to a
vote of lila paople of
uld oubdlvlalon at a.
O.neral Election to
be held
In
the
Townohlp of Orange,
Ohio, ot the regular
placet
of
voting
thweln, on the 2nd
day of Novombor,
2004, the quattlon of
levying a tax, In
exce11 of the ton mill
ilm~atlon , lor the bon·
till
of
Orango
Townehlp lor the pur, • poH of Fire protec-

tion
Said tax being: 2 A
renewal of a lllx of 2
mlllo at • rete not
• exCHdlng 2 mlllo lor
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amount• to twenty
cente ($0.20) lor each
ona hundred dollare
of valuation, Ill' live
(5) yeare. The Polio for
said Election will
open. at 6:30 a.m. and
remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
oald day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, O!llo
John N. lhle
Chairperson
Rllll D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 4, 11, 18, 25

NOTICE OF ELEC· NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, elec- Revised Code, elections 3501 .11 (G) , tions 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
5705.19, 5705.2.5
Notice is hereby
Notice Is hereby
given that in pur·
given that in pur·
of
a
suance
of
a suance
Resolution of the Resolution of the
Board of Township Village Council of tile
VIllage of Middleport,
Trustees
of
the
Townohlp
of Ohio, passed on the
Columbia,
Albany 2nd day of August,
Ohio, pa01ed on the 2004, there will ba
7th dey of June, 2004, submitted to a vote of
there will be oubmll· the people of oald
at
a
tad to a vola of tho aubdlvlalon
people of uld aubdl- General Election to
vlalon at a General be held In the VIllage
Election to be held In of Middleport, Ohio,
the Townohlp
of at the regular placeo
Columbia Dhlo, altho of voting therein, on
regular ploceo of vol· tho 2nd doy ol
lng therein, on tho November, 2004, tho
2nd ct.y of November, quaatlon of levying a
2004, the quootlon of lllx, In IXctlll of the
levying I tax, In ton mill llmllltlon, lor
bontllt
of
axcooi of tho ton mill tho
limitation, lor tho bon· Middleport VIllage for
purpoao
of
ollt
of
Columblo tho
expen111.
Townohlp for the pur· Currant
poao of Maintaining Said lllx being:
end operating cam• A renewal of on oxlotlng tex of 1 mill at a
!ariel.
rate not IXCHding I
Said tax being: 2 An
mill lor each one doladditional tax oft mill
II II rate not exCHd• lar of-valuation, which
lng 1 mlll.lofuch on• amount• to ten centl
dollar of valuation, ($0.10) lor •ach one
which amounto to ten hundred doilere of
· cents ($0.10) for 01ch valuation, lor !Iva (5)
one hundred douara ·yearo. The Polio lor
of valuation, for five uld Election will
(5) years. The Polls lor open at8 :30 a.m. and
sold Election will remain open until
open at 6:30 a.m. and 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
remain open until said day.
7:30 o 'clock P.M. of By order of tile Board
of Elections, of Meigs
said dey.
By order of the Board County, Ohio
of Elections, of Malga John N.lhle
County, Ohio
Chairperson
Rita D. Smith
John N. lhle
Director
Chairperson
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
Rita D. Smith
(10) 4, 11, 18, 25
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
'
(10) 4, 11 , 18, 25

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF 'rHE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, electio.n s 3501.11 (G),
5705.19 , 5705.25
Notice Is hereby
given that In pur·
suanca
ot
a
R!osolution of tho
Village Council of tho
Village of Racine,
Ohio, paaaed on tho
2nd day of Auguat,
2004, there will be
aubmltled to a vote of
the people of said
subdivision
at
a
General Election to
be held In the Village
of Racine, Ohio, at the
regular placoo of vol·
lng therein, on tha
2nd day of November,
2004, tho qu11tlon of
levying 1 tax, In
IXCIII Oflhl llln mill
llmlllltlon, lor tho bonlilt of Racine Village
lor tho purpooo of
Current
expanoat.
Sold IIX being :
·A replacement of tax
of 3 mlllo 11 a rote not
exCIIdlng 3 mlllo tor
eech one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounll to thirty
conto ($0.30) lor each
one ·hundred dollars
of valuation, tor flvo
(5) yearo . The Polio for
oald Election will
opan et 8:30 a.m. and
remain open until .
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
aald day.
By order of the Board
of .Elections, of Meigs'
. County, Ohio
John N.lhl,e
Chairperson
Rita D. Smith
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 4, 11 , 18, ~

in Ohio and

..~ ·---"' ~,.,_ /'~-""

BARNEY

Is giVIng 10% OFF CHAINSAW
REPAIRS IN OCTOBERl
we hava pans and accassurles tor
m•st brands. located an It 1 b!IPass
autsldel'lmarov. Ohll ..

HOW IN THUN'DER DOES A

PILLAR 0'

T~'

COMMUNITY

END UP STANDIN' 'FORE ME
CHARGED INJF RECEIVIN'
STOLEN PROPERTY, DOc ? ! !

)

Small

SNUFFY SMIF
PAID HIS BILL,
YORE
!!

~'"'yes ... eur You c.E.~&lt;:.TM~-~L'&lt;

R20

2003 Honda CA85. great
condi t1on , new chain &amp;
sprockets. Selling because I
out grew it. Graphic kit &amp;
seat cover. Renthal handle

E:.~ .~t M :.~in

Pomrrn \'
hc"1Jo: I.arT')'·-" Fi-uil Smnd
Warran ty R~.:pair •
Lawn Tnu.:tor &amp; Pu ~ h
Mower:&gt;., C hain Saws.
Chain Sharpened
Pan s
Nev. Go:ncral S t &lt;~ ndh v
Gcnl,!ra l ing Syl:&gt;ll'lll~ aild
Roi- Air Air Comprc~sor~
Open 8::10-6:4HI M-F;

4 new BF Goodwrench
P235-70·R16 1ires, wheels
and
chrome
hubcaps
WheefS f1t late model Ford
F-150 $375.(740)446-6137.

PUBLIC NOTICE

Loo~ing for engtne or trans·

The annual election ot the Board ot
Directors tor the
County
Meigs
Agricultural Society'
will be held a the
Secretary's Office at
the fairgrounds on
Monday, November 1,
2004. Tha polls will
be open from 5 p.m.
to 9 p.m. on Election
Day.
The election shall
be by ballot. Ballots
must be marked with
an "X" oppoait~ the
name or II will not be
counted. The casting
of votu lor directors
by proxies are not
perm iliad.
Only Melgo County
raoldenll
holding
membarohlp tlckala
lor at loaot 15 dayo
before lho data of
oloctlon may vote.
Membero of the
ooclety muot declare
lholr candidacy lor
tile oHica of Director
of tho Society by Ill·
lng with tho oacretary, Debbie Watoon ,
42455 Woodo Road,
Coolvllla, Ohio 45723;
a pet"lon olgnod by
10 or more members
of the society who are
residents of Malgo
County, 'at leaot 7
days before the annual election of dlrectoralol)eld . Only reg·
ularly nominated can·
dldatea who have rna
tho filing · requirements will be allglblo
for election as director.
(10)111TC .

m1ssion? Give me a call at
(740)446-05 19.

See
.Hupp

740·992·5232

BISSELL
BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Viny l
Sid in g • New Garage.!~
• Repla ccm cn1
Window s •

Roofin g

}f()~IE
IMPROVEMF.NI'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondi tional llfe11me guar·
antee . Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hro . (740) 446·
OB70, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

" . HA
HA HA HI\

29670 Bashan Cload
Racine, Ohio

PEANUTS

45771
740-949-2217

RESI DENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours

740-992-7599

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

COMM ERCIAL and

.i

1/ 14/ 1 mo pd

l
!
I
8
10/11 /0 4

Dean Hill

SUNSHINE CLUB

New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.

HOWARD l.
WRITESEl
dOOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GOnER

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-041 7
"W.V's # I C he\~'· Ponliar. Htiit'k. Olds
&amp; Cu stom Van Dt·aler··

IF YOU Cl-OSE YOUR EYES,

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

• Po"t Frame
•Cmnpll'll.! Rt•modelinJ,!
• Kct,hln-nu·nt \\ i nchm ~

•Rnoh
( "runrnt·rdal ami
l&lt;t..,idcnliul

Frw Estimates
7411-66 7-6080

Today·s cfue I equals~

" TA

ETSIPO ,

TAROZ

BVOINEB

LOOZ

ETCSVLSP ,

LSA

NR

WSP\'IQX

L0 0 Z
TPEBI

~

YOU CAN PRETENP THIS
'I
L.E'!'TUCE 15 CHOC:Ol.AfE CAKE ~

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ROBERT
BISSEll

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Elec1rlcal &amp; f'lumblng
• Roofing &amp; G~ tims
• Vin~l Sidit· g .~ f-- aintin g
•.Pallo and ?or ·11 '1 tiC~I
We dO· it ill I t !:cept
furnact work

CONSTRUCTION

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992·1611

992' 62 15
Pomeroy, Ohio

Stop &amp; Compare

22 Years Loe111 Er

·New Homes
• Garages

I 1\l\~\( ~'1'!
" 0!-\~'( 6. CAQlel-l

'"11.\II:ACii'il.

YNCXO

l eH!! ~!

0 Reor:or:o;;t'
lour suoll'lbi Dd

WORD
GUll

!~e

of

worcis· t&gt;e·
low to form lour sirr.pl e worC:s.

RHUS CO

I I .I' I
I

FINKE

I I I I'

L-...J..--'--1--'---.J~

MRp p

4

!

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1

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r - --W-I_N_U

5

l' I I I I I
.

.

.

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7

.

_

rOtl~e:J,'

"Have yo&lt;;
my harco II eagJe mu.1terec.. "Th a,'
worry is the :lr.l~ thmg t'1at
hasn'l g oce - - ,r, - - - - -?."

.
nee

0

(Qmolete 1 ~e c:kuc~ie Qt.lcfec'
b~· hllin~; in :he miUrnij wor :h

yo\.J develop from

s~~P

No . 3 te !ow.

I'

6

PR 1NT N\1M3E~EU tETHRS 1

~

UNSCRAMBLE Lclifi51
I
IN
fO' ANSWER
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS : , _,_, ,

IN l HES.. SQUARES

I'

I

J

l-4
I

I'i

I
I I I

No:arv - INaken - Partv- \"ih ;ien - W7-:,\ 7 you WANT
~he youngslec was p~..:t1ng becaL:se nis mom had told
him 'no'. K1s grandpa toi:J h1m :~at experience is wha: you
ge: when you dun'l ge~ WH.L.T you WANT

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YOU ~HOUL.DIJ'f

~A. Y

COL.UM&amp;U?

"DI~COVERE.D' ' A,;o\E.~!C~ ...

YOU CA.IJ'f ~E.AL.L.Y ~AY

H£ Ct..AlJol.tD

r:,

ErH£R .

.,E. DlO~'i K.I.)()W WHE."£

SOUP TO NUTZ
"I 1'1-\li'it&lt;' 11' ~~~o,D M
1~1. \tYM011 kiN~.

111\M N UNilmiiiH, .A
~- w~ C4Nr.Nel
.._@

_, , -" )

'

thai unlaslens the lock of

- - - - - - - Edil• d by CLAY R. 'OLlAN- - - - - -

fiN.

N81ii!N ~ ~"" "'"

rtence

BCYBDP

~~~~~t:;v S©\\.cJ.~~~- ~ 'f}}&lt; ~e

!?f ou~ Plf~MI'Ne~ •.

Remodelin g

WBX

SJ. "

PRE VIOUS SOLUTION- 'Divorce: lhe key

Ul '1i&gt;li~l"

• Complete

LOAT\0

wedlock ." - Evan Esar
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CAPRICORN (Dec_ 22-Jan . 19) - For
best results in fulfill ing your ObJectives
tod ay, don't br'oadcast your mlent1ons or
means ot do1ng so. The quieter you are,
the greater yoUf chances will be for large
returns
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Current
real1tres m1ghl force you to make some
cha nges 1n your plans today that you may
not have anticipated . However. fortunately tor you. they'll be substantially better
lor you .
m'fn'7J'J7i7'--?-;:::;;::;--;-:;::;;-;;-~~7,;-;~,:-- PISCES (Feb. 20- March 201 - You 'll
Dl D lrOJ
. SE.E. A
have an Important role to play today and
t""LI(-L.i__ _~:-.... HANDBAO UK£ 11-\At
you'll play it well. However. your greatest
WAJTY?
rewards are likely to come from Sl!ualtons
orchestrated by Lady luck herself.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) - Bonds can
be str engli1ened loday wilh those who
are important to your goals by being generous in your cooperation with lhem.
Seize lhe oppor tunity lo reform disgruntled associates.
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20)- Your think·
~ng rs both expanS I V~ and nonrestrictive
R today. enabhng you to transform and
§ rmprove established fun ctions pertaining
to your wor~ or cR reer whrch aren 't es
i o (r'
productive anymore
L.:..:::..:...------------------~ GEMIN I (May 21-June 20\- Drplomacy
and tact, not aggress~veness. are the two
tools that can be productively used to
ach1eve your goals today. Once you real~ IF YOU CL-05!0 YOUR EYE5 ,
IZe the1r power, you 'll use them elfec l~ve­
~
l CAN HAVE REAL.
ly
~
CHOCOL-ATE CAKIO 1
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Nolhmg
w111 g1ve you greater satis l~ctr on today
~
than car1ng for those who are near and
dear lo you Your 1nsllncls urge you lo fulfill this noble desire t~t thrs lime.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Ct1ampron your
own cause today rather th.an wa~llor others to speak up on your behalf There. rs
no one boner than you who has the sbiiIIY lo dramatize your own proposal .
VIRGO. (Aug. 23-Sept 22) - Th e possl01111188 tor material gains are extens ive
today and will lnaplrll you to asplrt to
new hel~j~htt you wouldn 't have dared
prt vloutly. Thlt which you go efttr cen
bt lChlt \lt d

34 Glasgow
resident
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landers
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Charlotte-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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I

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:-.1· 1{\ U I s

Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Some developmenls cou ld occur in the
year ahead that will give you an inside
track on where th e action is in advancing
your career. Once recognized. what tran spires for you will be for tunate and quite
bene tlc1al.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) ...Y""success IS
highly likely in your endeavors today
because, first, you have the ability to be
'an active visronary and , second, Lad')k
Luck will lend '8 hand. Whal you co n·
ceive, you can execute .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -Your pos~
Slbilit1es for substantial material garn
have been very prevalent fo r some lime
now. butloday somet hing really big could
happen to set things in motion. Be ready.
SAGIJTA.R IUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21} ~As of
today, condition s will begin to develop for
yOu socially !hal will result m firmly
entrenching you rn an optimistic group of
people_Thei r cnftuence will be very lultill -

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Sizes 5'x10'
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on the Tiber
12 Type
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of exam
to Saturn
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counterpart 30 Polynesian
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consumers 327and11

Philfp Guedalla, a British biographer,
wrote, "History repeats itsel f. Historians
repeal each other."
Bridge writers repeat each other, and
somelimes
repeat themselves. I
described 1his deal last March . It occurred
during the final of the 2003 Spingold
Knockout Teams Championship. In
Augu st, l found it on my desk. looked at it,
and a proverbial light bulb wen1 on . Than ,
l wondered why t had previously o\lerlooKed a key po1nt.
How can the defenders deleat fou r
spades? Try to find both answers .
North's two-cl ub response . the Drury con·
vention, pr&lt;lmised a maximum pass wilh
at leas1 three-card heart support .
In lhe SpinQotd, botn pairs of defende~
began with lhree rounds of spades. the
declarers ruf1ing the last in hand
At the first table, South drew two rounds
of trumps. then played a club to h1s k1ng.
However, West won with his ace and continued with a fourth spade . killing the contract .
In the other room , Zia Mahmood. sens1ng
th e 4-1 trump split, im mediately led the
club eight from his hand. West played low,
and th at was that. Declarer won with
dummy's queen. cashed the K..Q-J of
hearts : crossed to his diamond ace,
pulled East's remaining trump. and ran
the diamonds to gel home. To defeat four
hearts, West had to go in with the club
ace and lead another spade
But there is a much s1mpler defense: At
trick one. East overtakes the spade king
with his ace and sh1tls to the singleton
diamond jack. Now declarer must lose
two spades, one club and one diamond
ruff.

TO
IN PIA!

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, October 11 , 2004

~

~Yo' A~

THE.££. Wt-RE. -41.!l.I..IOIJ':i&lt;&gt;F PE.OPI..E.
H£1&lt;£ A.I..RE.AD'I'

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October u,

www. mydailysentinel_.com

2004

•

NFL: Steelers 34, Browns 23

Stealers beat Browns to win third straight Clemens leaves,
Braves defeat Astros

BY ALAN ROBINSON

Associated Press
PITISBURGH - The Pittsburgh
Steelers keep telling themselves Ben
Roethlisberger is only a rookie and they
can't expect too much. Apparently, their
opponents are unwisely taking the same
approach.
Roethlisberger. becoming more comfortable and more productive with each
start, confused Cleveland with his running and creativity and the Steelers won
their third in a row behind the rookie
quarterback, beating the Browns 34-23
Sunday.
Browns safetv Earl Little said beforehand that Roethl isherger wasn't
Cleveland's biggest worry because the
Steelers are asking hill1 only to manage
their offense and keep from making mistakes. Turns out the Browns might have
underestimated him just a little .
240~pound
The
6-foot-5 .
Roethlisberger was 16-for-21 for 23 1
yards, a touchdown pass and a TD run.
And to think he might not be playing if
starter Tommy Maddox hadn ' t hurt his
right elbow Sept. 19 against Baltimore.
"Every week is getting better,"
Roethlisberger said. " It's all just starti ng
to come together."
Just as it is for the Steelers, who are 41 for onlv the third time in 22 seasons
after going 6-10 last season. Duce Staley
complemented Roethlisberger by scoring
on a 25-yard run while gaining 11 7 yards. Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, left. runs away from Cleveland
his third consecutive 100-yard game.
Browns defensive lineman Orpheus Roye for nine yards in the fourth quarter of the
The Browns (2-3) missed a chance to Steelers 34-23 win in Pittsburgh otl Sunday. Roethlisl)erger completed 16 of 21 passmove over .500 after multiple games for es for 231 yards and a touchdwn. (AP)
the first time since late in the 2002 season
and dropped two games behind yards to the Cle veland 9. A play later, throw the football."
Pittsburgh in the AFC North.
Roethlisberger. apparently not rattled by
While Roethlisberger stayed poised,
Some NFL scouts felt Roethlisberger the hit, powered up the middle on a 6- Browns fre e agent quarterback Jeff
needed the most polishing of the three yard TD nm - matching the number of Garcia still looked uncomfortable out of
quarterbacks chosen early in the April scoring runs the less-mobile Maddox has the 49ers ' West Coast offense despite
draft. Yet while the Giants' more-publi- in 33 games with Pittsburgh.
dodging a heavy pass rush to throw for
cized Eli Manning and the Chargers'
"He made some throws," Roye said. 2 10 vards. Coach Butch Davis, 1-7
Philip Rivers are sitting, Roethlisberger "He played like a veteran. You couldn't against the Steelers. made no move 10
is only the sixth rookie "quarterbal:k to tell he was a rookie."
replace him with Kelly Holcomb. who
win his first three starts since the NFL
The threat Roethlisberger created by passed for 663 yards in his two career
merger in 1970. Steelers rookie Mike his running also led to his 37-yard scor- starts against Pittsburgh.
ing pass to Burress that made it 24- 10
Kruczek was 6-0 in 1976.
After Chris Crocker's 20-yard inter"He made a couple of plays that. yeah. midway through the third. Roethlisberger ception return for a touchdown in the first
you definitely look at and say. 'Boy. thi s rolled out of the pocket. momentarily quarter, Cleveland's only scoring consi stguy can play,'" Steelers ce nter Jell freezing the defense and allowing ed only of Phil Dawson's three field
Hartings said. "The way he throws on the Burress to sl ip 5 yard.~ behind cornerback goals until Andre Davi s' 7-yard touchrun, being able to slop and sl ing it -t0-50 Amhony Henry for an unguarded touch- down caq;h in the fo urth quarter. Dawson
yards, that's just natural ability. I think down. Burress made six catches for 136 is 11 -of- 11 this season and has made 21
Pittsburgh's going to be happy to have yards.
in a row since Oct. 19. 2003. to prop up
him.:·
.
.
''A lot of those plays are n't ca lled, but an offense l~at hasn' t scored a tirst-half
With the score lied at 7. Roethlisberger . the linemen are doing a great job of ' toul:hdown this season.
scrambled to elude Ebenezer Ekuban, blocking and the wide receivers are get" If you settle for field goals instead of
then was. fladened by_ Orpheus, Roye's ting open." Roethlisberger said. "For me touchdowns. you never create any heat
h1t, yet still found Plax1co Burress for 51 ·it's easy, all I've got to do is run and on them." Garcia said.

Lewis has changed everything except
Bengals defense as team enjoys week off
Bv JoE KAv
Associated Press
CINCINNATI - The uniforms su re
are different -' as bright and gaudy as
any around.
The reputation ? That's definitely
changed for the better. Comedians no
longer use the Cincinnati Bengals as a
,
punch line .
The bottom line is better, too. Instead
of play'ing in a half-empty stadium, the y
enjoy the roar of record crowds at
home .
Coach Marvin Lewis has changed just
about everythingsince he took over la., t
year and set our to revive the league's
most downtrodden team. His imprint is
everywhere.
Everywhere except the defense. th at
is. And that's quite a surprise.
It'-s been easier for Lewi s to remake
the Bengals' image than to upgrade
their defense. the main reason they're
stuck at 1-3 during their bye week. The
fans have come back , but not the tackles or the sacks.
" It' s taking a little longer." safety
Kim Herring said.
Herring knows what Lewis would
like 10 see. He was a starter on the 2000
Baltimore defense that set NFL records
and won a Super Bowl with Lewis as
the coordinator.
"It's controlled mayhem," Herring
said. "When · I played four years in
Baltimore, that's what it is. It looks
crazy when you see it on film. but it 's
11 guys knowing what they're doing
and it's controlled aggression."
Lewis' current unit isn't even close ,
When he tookrover last yeat, Le:ovis

..

inherited an up-and-coming offense and back, two at strong saf~ty and _one at
a down-in-the-dumps defense that was free safety because of injuries. Thirdthe main reason for the Bengals' poor round pick C.ileb Miller started twice at
showings each year. -·
middle lmebackcr. Others have been
He started an overhaul right away, forced onto the l'ield prematurely.
getting rid of veterans who had never · "Right now, it is not the way we had
panned out. Former first-round pick this thing put to gether," Lewis said.
Reinard Wilson was jettisoned. a sig n it "But it is what it is right now, and we're
was a new day in Cincinnati.
going to get better with it."
·
The next step came last April. when
They're at the bottom ri ght now. givthe Bengals took four defensive players ing up a leag ue-high 166 yards rushing
among their first five draft picks. They per game and 5.2 yards per carry. The
all had one thing in common.
problems go beyond the rookie s - the
"He's going to try to build a defense veteran linemen are in'effectivc as a
around-speed." linebacker Kevin Hardy gro up. making it tough ·to get anything
said. "The guys he'' drafted are fast and done.
athletic and ca n. run around and get to
As the missed tackles mounted,
the football. That's the blueprint of the Lewis got defensive about the unit's
defense that he's trying to put together.'' fa ilures .
"You do your job. you make tackles.
The Ravens used the same blueprint
and assembled a defense full of speed. you have a chance l&lt;) play well,' ' he said
talent and orneriness. Lewis sti ll recently. smal:king hi s hand on a ·tab le
admires the way they play.
for emphasis. "If you don't, you're
When linebacker Ray Lewis leveled . going to be in big trouble. Just line up
quarterback Carson Palmer with a high. and do your job. We keep making a big
illegal hit during their ga me two weeks deal out of thi &gt;. It 's not a big deal. "
ago , the Bengal s coach saw nothing
It's a bit of a mystery why a coac h
wrong with it.
·
known for defense has been able to
"Ray was just launching into whoev- change everything except the defense.
·er has the football." Lewis said, admir- His former head coach understands.
ingly.
"You're no longer the offensive or
He wishes he had someone like him. defensive coordinator, you're the head
He tried to get defensive lineman coach and if you don ' t. attend to those
Warren Sapp throug h free agency in the (other) things, you're not going to be
offseason to give the unit some attitude, the head coach for very long," Ravens
coach Brian Billick said.
but lost him to Oakland.
Lewi s was left with a youthful unit
Lewis already has job security in
still finding its way. Becau se of injuries, Cincinnati, getting a contract extension
they've found their way right into the after he turned most things around in
lineup.
his fi rst season. He has the community' s
Second-round pi ck Madieu Williams respect and ownership's support.
was forced to start one game at cornerThe only thing missing is defense.

U.S. women beat New Zealand in exhibition
CINC INNATI rAP)· Cindy Parlow
scored two goals and as sisted on a
third to lead the U.S. women\ . national team to a 6-0 win over New Zealand
in an exhibition match on Sunday
afternoon .
Mia Hamm and Aly Wagner each had
a goal and an assist as the U.S .. which
won the ·gold medal at the Olympics
this past summer in Athen s, improved
to 4-0 on its Fan Celebration Tour.
The American s have outscored New

I

Columbus woman
with cancer holds
her own wake, A6

Sharing God's
love through 'shoe
boxes',·As

Baseball: NLDS

Zealand 11 -0 in two cnmecutive
games. The U.S. team ha sn' t allowed a
goa l in its last three matches .
Sunday's match .drew a crowd of
18 ,806, the largest to watch the U.S.
women play in 28 matches this yearincluding the' Olympics.
Hamm broke the score less tie with a
goal in the 25th minute of the first half,
on an assist by Cat Reddick .
Less than tw o minutes later. Kristine
Lill y rook .a pas s from
. Hamm in front

of the net and scored her third goal in
three games to give the U.S. a 2-0 lead.
Wagner scored on a free kick in the
51st mi~ute and tea m captain J4lie
Foudy made it 4-0 four minutes later
with a shot from in front of the goal off
of Parlow ·, ~· Parlow followed up
with her pair Of g~als .
·
The I 0-match tour is scheduled to
continue on Saturday when the U.S.
meets Mexico at Arrowhead Stadium
in Kansas City.

Clemens was 0-3 with a
BY JOEL ANDERSON
6.98 ERA on short rest. He
Associated Press
was making a quick turnaround for the first time
HOUSTON - As soon since April II, 2002. And
as Roger Clemens was he hadn't pitched on three
gone, the Atlanta . Braves days' rest in the postseason
pounced on the Houston since a loss to Oakland in
Astrohs' bullpken and avoidehd 20 oo.
anot er qmc cx1t 1rom I e
Not
surprisingly,
playoffs.
Clemens got off to a rough
Adam LaRoche hit a start.
tying, three-run homer in
He gave up three straight
the sixth inning and J.D. singles to begin the second,
Drew singled home the go- with Andruw Jones driving
ahead run in the ninth for a in Chipper Jones. LaRoche
6-5 victory Sunday that tied followed by grou nding into
the best-of-five NL series at a double play that scored
Johnny Estrada to give
. two games apiece.
."We get to go back home · Atlanta a 2_0 lead.
and the plane ride 's a lot
Clemens got the Astros'
easier," Atlanta closer John offense going in the second
Smaltz said. "We worked with his first postseason
very hard to get home-lield RBI, a sacrifice fly that
advantage and we need' to scored Kent.
The inning appeared to
take care of it. I feel like we
· got a break today."
end on Craig Biggio 's
Jaret Wright , the Game I popup that hit the' rafters
loser, starts for the Braves and was caught by Atlanta
on Monday at Turner Field starter Russ Ortiz. But the
against · 20-game winner ball was ruled foul, and
Roy Oswalt. who didn't get Biggio followed with a
a decision in Game 2.
-three-run homer that sailed
Pitching on only three over the left-field fence and
days· rest, Clemens left sent the crowd into a freilafter five innings with a 5-2
lead, but the Braves rallied zyCarlos Beltran followed
to snap Houston's 19-game with a double and Bagwell
home winning streak . II was singled him in to give the
another agonizing loss in Astros a 5-2 lead.
October for the Astros , still
Shortly after that , , the
looking to win a postseason Jumbotron began showing
series for the lirst time.
an animated skit in which
"Streaks are streaks . swarms of killer bees buzz
they ' ve got to come to an over the Braves' tomaend some time," Braves hawk. The skit ended with
manager Bobby Cox said.
a single word emblazoned
Houston tried to mount its
own comeback in the bot- across the Astros' shooting
star logo: Believe.
tom of the ninth. when Jeff
Not just yet. Hou ston fell
Bagwell
and
Lance apart when Clemens left,
Berkman singled off Smaltz and th e se llout crowd of
with one out to put runners 41 :13S
·1
·
at the corners. Smoltz then · ··
got een Y qUJet :
"He was at the end of his
got his record 14th postsea- road," Astros manager Phil
son win when Jeff Kent Garner said. ·'As a matter
grou nded into a game-end- of fact. he was on pure
ing double play.
fumes. He got us through it.
On the verge of its third We had some momentum,
first-round we had the lead. We let it
co nsec utive
loss. Atlanta made its move slip away."
right after Chad Qualls
Chipper Jones had a difreplaced Clemens . Chipper ferent take on the Braves.
·
Jones singl ed . . Andruw comeback.
Jones doubled whh one out
"We overcame a fluke
and LaRoche homered into five-run rally," he said.
the Astros ' bullpen in ri ght. "You're just . thinking to
The '-':inning rally began yourself right there that
when· Russ Springer. who there is no way we're going
relieved Brad Lidge to start to end our season on that
the ninth, hit Rafael Furcal note."
· with a pitch with two outs
With the score tied at S in
and Furcal stole second.
the eighth, Houston put
Drew, hitless in thre~ pre- runners at the corners and
vious at-bats Sunday and 2for- !5 in th e series to that threatened to take the lead.
Orlando Palmeiro hit a
point, singled to right-cen- gro und er that Marcus· Giles
ter, with Furcal scoring eas- scooped up and !lipped to
ii~:Threc ru n.s ·ts no1enoug h Smaltz - just before
against that team,'' Kent Palmeiro got to the bag for the final out of the
said. "And then the y bring
h . mnmg .
.
l'k S I
m a guy 1 ·e mo tz. w 0 "
"This isn't a new situaHouston catcher
dominating . It 's tough to . tion,
score run s against him . You Brad Ausmus said. "We've
have to get ahead against been on the cusp of being
them early so you don'r eliminated numerous times.
have to face a guy like We've seen the c,nd of the
that."
C oming into Sundav, Plank. We 've seen the
J
shark-infested waters."

Show Off Your "Pumpkin" ~
In The Sentinel
r~
~~~

PUMPKIN PATCHij

i;

Pictu~es will run:

· ~

~

')~
fl1.~

&gt;

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE
• 'Superman' actor became
real-life fighter for spinal cord
research. See Page A2

Pick 3 day: 9-4-1
Pick 4 day: 5-2-5-1
Pick 3 night: 3-6-3
Pkik 4 night: 5-9-3-3
Rolling Cash 5:2-7-10-21-32

Sabra Bailey. Meghan Short. Allie Brumfield and Hannah Barringer. primary students at Eastern
Elementary School. enjoyed spending the day with Farmers Bank volunteers Beck Grate.
Jessica Pore. ·and Jenny Doczi . The bank employees and five others. all from the Tuppers Plains
bank branch , spent Columbus Day volunteering at the school. (Brian J. Reed/ photo)

West VIrginia

Farmers Bank employees donate time

Dally 3: 2-B-3
Dally 4: 5-0-3-0
Cash 25: 5-6-1 0-11-13-22

.~

Mail or drop off at t~e Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street.: Pomeroy, OH 45769

~­

"ND BETH SERGENT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

Detalla on Pa&amp;o A6

INDEX
SEcnoNs Calendars
2

12 PAGES

A3

© 11004 Ohio Va.llcy Publishing Co. ,

-~

Name :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
From: _ _
Your Name:_ _ _ _ _ _ _•__ _ __ _ __
Child ~s

Address :_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Pho~e : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~----Ads must be pre-paid

Please see EPA, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED

Weather

·Mommy &amp; Daddy

Council will seek a new fiscal officer ~i nce the re.-.ignation earlier this
month of Jeanette Beers. who
resigned after onlv two weeks on the
job.'
·
.

Ohio

On\y
~B.00

"Love Vat"

nut going to happen:·

•'

~
~~
·J~

p~r Pumpkin)

est payments for the past year.
HmJch in-. ~uggc . . tcLI that lannarelli
check on the p&lt;hs ihility of applying
the :',2 1.500 ""uinst the loan, and
making another year of interest paymenh on the lower bt.tlance. '
"The dream wa., that the sa le of real
estate wuu ld be used to retire the debt
this year." Houc hins said. "But that's

nation of the new sewer system and recent flooding . He
was conl:erned that more rain
POMEROY
The would wa;h lhe road away.
Pomeroy Village Counl:il met
Currently. residen ts of
Monday evening to di,cuss a Ehenzer have to use a pri'vate
variety of i"ues including a driveway 10 get out of the
sink hole on Ebenzer. FEMA. street. Mill&gt; felt fire trucks or
Trick-Or-Treat and new emergency vehicles could not
employees for the .police traverse the road in its predepartment.
sent umdit ion and showed
Sherma n Mills. a reside nt council a photo of the , ink
along Ebenzer addre ssed hole .
counci l about a sink hole thm
"This creates a major safe:
has been present on the street ty h&lt;uard... sai d Mills.
for over two weeks.
"We· re not second class citiMill s believes the sink
Piease ste H~le, AS
hole was caused by a cornbi-

,

LOI"I'ERIES

Sports

I"'' Ad

The village will also see k funding tn meet payroll expenses for the stree t
through the Ohio Public Work&gt; and police department s.
Counci l voted to apply $2 1.500
Commission
and
Appalachian
from the sale to the unpaid loan bal Regional Commission.
Real estate for the plant was recent- ance of S53,000 borrowed last year
ly donated to the village by Harold from Peopl es Bank'to help make pay ·
Brown, and new wells have been roll expenses. The bank gave three
drilled on land in Hobson in readiness option' based on three principal payfor the new plant. which will include ments. lannarclli said. and wuncil
voted to pay all the sale proceeds to
soften ing equipment.
The project could go to bid in the loan. leaving l:ouncil with a payment of $62.'i per month , for a fi veMarch or April, 2005, Hay s said.
year period. Such a one-time payment
Other business
The village will apply funds from will -save the village nearly $200 per
July 's sa le uf modular classroom month based on a five -year payment
units on the high school property 10 schedule. ·
The village ha.s been making interhelp repay a bank loan made last year

Page AS
• Mike Kucsma

Thursday,
October21

(One. subltc:t

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

c4

'ii!'t~

'""' ·m"l.tih -.·ntitH'I ,.,,,

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

Khloie Billings

:!oo,t

Council discusses
sink hole on Ebenzer

~~ Deadline for Entry:

~'I

I{ 12 .

Ohio EPA approves water plant plans
MIDDLEPORT - Plans for the
village 's new water treatment plant
have been approved and a permit to
inslall has been issued by the Ohio
Enyironmenlal Protection Agency.
Becky Hays of Floyd Browne
Associates discussed the project at
Monday evening's regular meeting of
Middleport Village Council. She said
a third grant application for the construction of the $3.9 million plant has
been made in the amount of $500,000
through
the
Community
Development Block Grant program.

Dear Abby

5

II I ...,II\\ . Ol I OBI

I '\I" • \ 11!. .1.1 '\o .\ 4

."ill \

Classifieds

Thursday,
October28

~

...-·

POMEROY - Employees
of Farmers Bank and Savings
spent
their
Company
Columbus Day holiday work ing on several volunteer projects in the commu nity.
Nearly 70 bank workers
from offices in Pomeroy.
Tuppers Plains. Gallipolis and
Mason, W.Va. chose to spe nd
their federal holiday doing
community service. The service. day is part of the bank's
ongoing I OOth anniversary
celebration, and all bank
employees participated, Bank
President Paul M. Reed said.
Workers from the bank's
main office in Pomeroy were
busy . assisting the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish
with their move to the Mulberry
Community Center. Workers
from the Gallipolis oftice
repainted the basement of the
Ariel Theater. Mason oftice
employees repainted the Harry
Ray Fry home, using materials
donatedwby Fields Hardware in
New Haven. W.Va., while
Tuppers Plains and Pomeroy
staff helped the kindergarten
students at Eastern and Meigs
Elementary Schools with
school work and other projects.
Rev. Keith Rader. director
of God's
NET ,Youth
Ministries in Pomerov felt the
volunteers were doing a good
'

Work on stabilizing the hillside behind Gravely Tractor Sa les on
Condor Street is expected to be competed in about two weeks.
Here Ma iden and Jenkins Construc~ion works on crushing
some of the large stones which fell from the cliff area
(Charlene Hoefli ch/ photo)

Condor Street landslide
work nearing completion ·
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOE FLIC H@MYDAILYSENTI NE L.COM

Instead of working inside all day, Farmer's Bank employees
Jackie Casto and Linda Mayer rolled up their sleeves and worked
outside the Mulberry Community Center. (Beth Sergent/photo)
job as they helped moved furniture. paint. clean. and do
landscaping work outside the
Mulberry Community Center.
As Farmers Bank employees Amy Young , Kelly
Gilland and Chasity Martin
cleared a patch of weeds to
make way for a !lower hed
near the entrance to God\

NET, the y explained that this
was their way of showing
how much they · appreciate
the community's wpport .
."Lending a helping hand is
really what banking is all
about." said the bank's president. Paul M. Reed . "The way
we grow and prosper is hy
helping others do the same ."

POMEROY - In about
two weeks correcti1·e work to
stabilize the hillsick behind
Gra1·e!y Tractor Sales on
Condor Street where a massive landslide occulTed earlier th is year is expected to be
completed.
'Til be delighted to get
everything tllken ca re of."
said Manning Roush who
owns and operates the
Tractor Sales. and has seen
mud tlow into his business
build ing. not once. but twice.
as the htll slipped toward the
qreet. He noted that there i'
some struct ural damage to hi s

buildmg as a result of the
landslide.
The stabilization project is
being paid for by the Ohio
Department of
Natural
iODNR),
Resource s.
Di1 is ion of Mines . with
Maiden and Jenkins of
Ne!som ille doing the work
which has an estimated cost
of S!3-1 .000.
Movement stil'rted several
month&gt; again as a result of
water seepage fro m an abandoned mine about halfway up
th e hill. according to John
Husted of ODNR. anq gained
momentum as the heavy hurricane rains moved through

Plea1e 1ee Condor. AS

Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 4th Annual

Respi!'alory Fall Symposium
Friday, October 29 • 7:30am - 4:00 pm
HMC Educa.tion &amp; Conference .Center - Gollipolis
A one-day event that gives respiratory care professicinols

the opportunity to learn ond review different aspects
and concepts in 'the respiratory field.
For more information, or to register,_call Sandy Moore ot

(740)'446-5919

MEDICAL CENTER
Discm·er· the Holze1· Difference ·

www.holzer.org

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