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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 14, '2 004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Buckeyes still don't know who they are on offense
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS - It wasn't
so long ago that when Ohio
State faced a critical third
down , it just handed the ball
to Pete Johnson or threw the
ball in Cris Carter's direction. Then the first-down
arkers were moved ahead
I
ards and play continued .
In 2002. the Buckeyes
could give the ball to
Maurice Clarett. Ju st last
season. quarterback Craig
Krenzel always seemed to
find wide receiver Mkhacl
Jenkins on every big play.
Stuck in a two-game skid.
the 2004 Buckeyes (3-2. 02) are still searching for a
play or playerto go to when
they absolutely have to gain
a few yards for a first down.
Quarterbal:k Justin Zwi~k
·was at' a loss when asked
earlier this week what he
considered the strength of
the Buckeyes' offense .
After a pause of several
seconds, he said, " I think

we do, really, we do whatever we need to do to move
the ball in certain &gt;ituatiom.
When you have a 'ituatinn
it's what you need to do Ill
move the ball ami we don ' t
really "'Y we throw the hall
better (or) we run the hall
better. It ' s whalevcr we
need i-; whar we're ~uoitH.!.' to
do ."
If that sounds as if Zwic k
is co nfused . !hen he· s not
alone. Most of hi' !cammate s hem and haw hecause
the y don ' t ha\'e a handk on
what the y are capable of
doing.
Wha1cvcr the l'Oaching
staff is calling - and how~
ever the players arc execuling it little is being
ac~ompl ished.
The
Buckeyes are las! in the Big
Ten in total offense and
97th of the 117 tea m&gt; in
Division 1-A.
When the Buckeyes ntn it.
they're managing just 112
yards a game. I Otlt in the
conference and 92nd in the
country. When !hey pa" i1.
they are eighth in the Big
Ten and 70th in the nation at

195 yanb a game.
"We need to get our act
together." said Kirk Barton,
wiio will make his first start
at right tackle at Iowa on
Saturday in place of Tim
Schafer. "Honestly, I'm
embarrassed that people
'like (ESPN unalvst and
local
radio personality
Kirk) Herbstreit say. 'Well.
their defense i~ w great and
their offense ts like a big
pillow fight and they can't
move anybody off !he line.'
That\ embarrassing. You
lta\'e to have pride. If you
have tha), it makes you
angry.
Cen ter Nick Mangold
acknowledged that the currenl Ohio State offense does

Purd·ue's Orton nearly
sacked by .his classwork
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

.

Professors were as much the '"use of
Kyle Orton's first off game as pass rushers and defensive backs.
The Purdue quarterback went through
the first four games without throwing an
interception . Then came a difficult week
of tests and papers in class- and a tough
Penn State defense- and the result was a
rather ordinary day for Orton in Purdue's
20-13 win on Saturday.
"The thing about college i.s. when you
have a test. you have four tests ... Onon
said. "It was a tough week last week.
mainly because of academics .
It's
funny, all the professors seem to save the
tes.ts for the same week."
Orton had to write an English paper and
tl!ke tests in History and also Race and
Gender, all while preparing for a road
game at raucou s Beaver Stadium .
"It was a verv demanding.'' coach Joe
Tiller said. "He had a very challenging
week, but didn't let on. He really subscribes to the theory. 'never ' how weakness."'
Orton wasn't as sharp against Penn
State, throwing two fourth-quarter interceptions and missing a wide open Taylor
Stubblefield on one play that wou ld have
gone for a ga me-breaking touchdown.
Still, he managed to throw for 275 yan.h
and a touchdown , and the Boilermakers
stayed perfect on the year to climb to No.
5 in the nation.
"I thought I played a sol id game." Orton
said. "They were dropping nine guys into
.
coverage an d there wasn I muc 11 room lo
squeeze the ball in there."
WHAT UPSETS ARE MADE OF: lt"s .
.
a f amt']'tar pro bl em f'or the ha'es- tgnoring the have-nots until it's too late. ~
Michigan knocked o tl unbeat en
.
ta 1as 1 wee k . Th e nex t b.~~ garne
M mneso
on all the Wolverines' list is in twl~ weeks
·t th e re ·.
1 v.•l li lt' t1nts
·
ts o Y
at P urd ue. Bu,t f..trs.
(2-4 0-3).
"It'•
s toug h.not to over 1oo k· games. .. 1·uII back Kevin Dudley said.
Coach Lloyd Carr p'reaches that hi s
players keep the big picture in mind when
they're preparing for non-marquee ga me s.
" If you have big goa ls, aspirations for
doing something special. you better be
improving as you go," he said.
Defensive tackle Gabe Watson said it's
a different playing at places such as
Illinois, where just 50,000-plus people
will be in the stands instead uf the more
than 100,000 the Wolverines play in front
of at home.
"You can't let your guard down" Wat son
said. "That's how Opsets are made ."

NO HISTORY BUFF: Iowa quarterback Drew Tate doesn 't get hung up on
history - at least football history.
He doesn't know much · ahout Iowa' s
victories over Ohio State or th e quarterbacks who led the way in those wins. All
he knows is that he ' d like to join that
group when the Buckeyes '' isit on
Saturday.
"[ (jon ' t look much at what has happened here," Tare said . "] probably

should. That might be important . I understand the respect for th e older guys who
have heen around and thin gs like that. but
I don't rea ll y worry or care much about
that kind uf stuff."·
Of course. it wmtldn ' t be hard to memorize the list of Iowa quarterbacks who
lw ve bemen Ohio State because there
hav~ only been three in the past 41 years:
Chuck Long ( 1983 ). C hu ck Hartleih
1 1987 l and Matt Rodgers t 1991 ).
TV TALK: Former Purdue and NFL
quarterback Gary Danielson , now a co llege football anal ys t nn TV. has strong
opinions on wh~it's ahead in the confercnce r&lt;.tL'e .

On Wiscon sin's schedule: "They have
Minnesota at home and they don't play
Michigan. They've already beaten Ohio·
State . So if Wisconsin wins this week (at
Purdue). I dnn'l know who they lose tn."
On Purdue's soft side: ·'Purdue has the
type of ol'knse that, usually they have a
week where it all doesn't click. Usually
there's a week where vnu need to grind it
out and kind of· play di-rty football . ~ nJ the
other schools have th e advamage ur being
able 1o do that."
On the strelch run: "Wisconsin, Purdue,
Michigan and maybe Minnesota arc sti ll
in it. It' ~ ~ti ll a good four·team race.··
COUNTERFEIT BUCKS: After a 3-0
start thm took them 10 No. 7·in the nation .
Ohio Stale has lost at Northwestern 33-27
in m ·ertime and at home 24-13 to
Wisco nsin 10 open !he Big Ten wilh consecuti\C lossc.s fur the first time in a
doLen vea rs.

Fur ;, pro gram gro wn haughty by the
~002 nati onal championsh ip and a No. 4

ranktng la st year. it has been an appalling
sltde.
"W - b
k' ' J r
·1 d tl 1 t f
e.. ve ee n · rn
spot e ~e as ew
years . . lullback Branden Joe s~ud.
. The Buckeye s sav·. 1.theyd are e mbarrassed.
lrustrmcd and humt tate ·
Others hope· lor a turnaround
· 1
S
· at Io wa
t"d o n
1
1
1
1
. altHC ay. w 11 e nn e res 1man ~' co n 1 en t
that there ts nolhtng bu t good limes ahead.
Th
·' fl
·
·
.. . e way I see 11. at-out. we re go m,g
to wtn them &lt;Iii trom here on out. There ,
!!Oing to he no l ea m that Cafl stop us.'" tail bac k· Tony P'tt
t mat 1 sa ·d
t .

°

not have a go-to guy like
Carter or Clarett, Johnson
or Jenkins.
"We don ' t have the one
thing, I guess. that a lot of
teams would have." he said.
"We've kind of developed
what we need to be. That's
the best thing to say about
an identity for .us . We're
going to do what we think
we need to do to win."
The problem is. the
Buckeyes are not producing
nor are they winning. In a
33-27 loss at Northwestern
two weeks ago. they managed 308 yards but many of
them resulted from having
to play catch-up from a I 0point fourth-quarter deficit .
In Saturday 's 24-13 home
loss to Wisconsin, coach
Jim Tressel opened up the
playbook with five-receiver,
no-bat:k sets, a Statue -o fLiherty run and other trick ery.
And Ohio State still man aged just 224 yards, totaling
minus-3 yards rushing. 52
passing yards and four first
downs in the second half
when the game hung in the

balance .
Mangold said he wasn't
sure what Tressel -· who
calls all the plays - might
call on a third-and-4 pia~.
Whatever it would be , he
said, he was sure it would
be successful.
"If we need that four
yards, I'm sure coach is
going to call the play to get
that done," he said.
The statistics dispute that.
The Buckeyes are dead last
in the Big Ten in third-down
conversions, getting first
downs less than 30 percent
of the time - exactly half
the success rate of unbeaten
Purdue.
Offensive coordinator Jim
Bollman who doesn't
even call the plays - has
been taking a lot of flak
from critics for what they
see as an unimaginative
offense. Tressel has long
acknowledged that he is not
a risk-taket on offense ;
relying on defense and special teams to win games
rather than to breeze past
oppqnents with a high-powered offense.

Zwick. who hasn't com.pleted even half of his passes in the last three games, is
also being singled out,
along with tailback Lydell, ~ _
Ross, who has averaged 3.3
yards on 83 of his carries
not counting the 68 yards he
had on one burst in the season-opener.
Iowa is tied for ninth in
the country in rushing
defense, permitting just 85
yards a game. Unless Ohio
State finds a way to shake a
runner free every now and
then, it cou ld be another
long day for Tressel, Zwick,
Ross and Co.
"We have a lot of things
that with ju&gt;t one tweak
here or there might be a
good play for us," Zwick
said. "We're continuing to ·
work on those things. We're
not going to ~et our goals on
one play to get us four yards
every time because it's not
going to happen. So we
have to continue to work on
eve rything we have and
hopefully we'll be able to
find some thing that will
help us move the ball."

Browns' war of
word: Garcia and
Davis in debate
BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press

BEREA Jeff Garcia
doesn't mind being called
mobile. shifty or quick on his
feet. Don't call the Browns'
quartcrhack
"skitti,h."
th&lt;\ugh.
Garcia's a little sensitive
about th at word.
Browns coach Bmch Davis
knows that now, two days
after he referred to Garcia as
being "skittish" during a 3423 loss, against Pittsburgh . last
Sunday.
''I don't have a reaction to
that." Garcia said Wednesday
when asked how he felt about
Davis' comment. ''Until he
(Davis) plays the quanerback
position. then he can underqand · where I am co ming
from."
Out:h. The Bush-Kerry
presidential debate may not
deliver a juicier line.
Based on his salty delivery.
Garcia meant 10 say "can't
understand." But it's not the
first mixed message coming
mtl of team headquarters as
the Browns (2-3) try to salvage a season that's show ing
signs of slipping away . .
Cleveland\ offense enters
thi s week's game against
Cincinnati ranked 30th in the
NFL. Theories abound to
what's at the heart of the
Browns· inel'ticien~y . Is it the
lack of a running game'' b it
Garcia. who can't seem to
stand still in the pocket 0 h it
the offensive line'' Do the
Browns have enough play makers?
Garcia offered his take on

Wednesday.
saying
the and the protection doesn't
Browns are simply missi ng hold up, you will get skittish.
too many chances at big plays. That is no reflection on him."
While watching game tilm.
Garcia acknowledged there
Garcia finally sees the open have been times when he has
receivers he's not seeing left the pocket too early, and
downtield on Sundays. He's said that he is still "in a learnseei ng receivers not coming ing mode'' with the Browns.
back to the ball when he
He's still adj usti ng to his
scrambles, and watching new team . Slowly.
potential touchdowns tum into
''I'm not saying that I had
field goals.
better protection in San
"That is what is disappoint- Francisco, but I knew exactly
ing," said Garcia. in his first where to go with the football
season with, Cleveland after pretty much 95-to-99 percent
signing as a free agent. of the time," he said. "I knew
''Because it's not like we are a how to get the ball out of my
bad team or a terrible otlense. hands quickly and make
The plays are there to be things happen."
made. We're not making · While he was with San
them. and that's me included." Francisco. Garcia said the
On Monday. Davis said 49ers spent a po"rtion of every
Garcia. who has been sacked practice working on scramble
13 times this season and was drills . . They simulated game
running from Pittsburgh's conditions so that when
blitz on virtually every snap, Garcia fled the pocket the
needed to trust his protection. other offensive players knew
"The quarterback has to what to do.
He suggested the Browns
have confidence . that the last
time he got hit was an aberra- should do the same.
lion," Davis said. "He can' t be
"Maybe that's something
skittish. He has to sit in the that we need to fo~us on a lit-.
tie more here hecause that's
pocket and make throws."
Following
Wednesday's the type of player I am," he
practice, Davis was told that said. "We can all get better
Garcia didn 't see m happy when those situations arise."
about the ''skittish" comment.
Notes: OL Enoch DeMar
" He probably sbouldn 't will replace Paul Zukauskas at
have been," Davis said. starting left guard this week. ·
"That's one of those things ... RT Ryan Tucker (quadriwhere the media takes one ceps) and DL Gerard Warren
word out of 12 paragraphs and (chest) are both listed as quesparaphrases it when it is taken tionable for Sunday's game.
out of context. Jeff and I Davis expects both to play....
talked about it and laughed U.S. national sec urity adviser
. Condoleezza Rice will visit
about it.
"I will still say that when a the Browns on Thursday. She
quarterback gets hit, when he spoke to the team last season
thinks that he has protection in Baltimore.

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SPORTS
• OSU defense hopes
to take out frustration
on Hawkeyes.
See Page 81

J-1{1 II\)

. I)( ' ] I IBI.H 1:;. :.!IU'-1

"'"' ·""''·"'"' '""""' ·' "'"

ODOT to open U.S. 33 on Oct. 22
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAllYSENTINEL .COM

DARWIN - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
will cut a ribbon to open the
new 16-milc stretch of U.S.
33 between Darwin and
Athens on Oct. n.
ODOT Director Gordon
Proctor will attend the ceremony. which will begin at
10:30 a.m., just west of the
junction with Ohio 681.
ODOT District Director

George Collins said local
elected officials from Athens
and Meigs Counties have
been invited to attend the ceremony. The Meigs Higtr
School Band will perform at
10:15 a.m.
Construction on the new
highway began in late 200 I.
Smith
and
Johnson
Construction completed the
project in two phases. at a
total cost of $73 million .
The new roadway is a
"super two" highway identi-

cal in design to the
Ravenswood
Connector,
opened laq December. 11 is a
two-lane road on a four-lane
right uf wuy. whic h allows
ODOT lo expand the road to a
four-lane hi ghway. if truftic
coums warrant it. wi thout
acqumng additional real
e-rale. Collins said.
The new highway's design
includes 12-foot driving lanes
and 10-foot paved shou lders,
and left and right turning
lanes at each of its tive inter-

sections. There are eighl
bridges. Col lins said. While
the roadway is designed for a
65-mph speed limit. the limit
will be 55 MPH in accordanc,·
with state law.
"The continued development of U.S. 33 is so important route because it connects
to 1-77 in West Virginia and
helps move traffic throu gl\
Ohio in a north/south direction," Collins said. "Thi s is a
major corridor, with a large
amount of truck 1raffic. and

our goal in L·ompleting tht'
corridt1r from Ka'vl'll "'\ l~lH.I .
\\. '. V;t. I ll C t) lumhu ~o, j, to
incr~;1..,e ..,;tkt\ ;111d lll(Jhilit\
fo r mo ltm ..,h. \\ hilc pro' 1Jing
'outhea,tcrn Ohio opport uni-

ty fo r gr~al~r an:c ...... and eco·
nomt c· de' elopmcnt."
ODOT
Spokesman
Stephanie hlsun 'aid 111c publ i ci~ L'llcuurugt!Ll to uttemJ the
upt&gt;ning

'~oint $Heagant iReglgter
(304) 675-1333
- '

@a!Hpohs Jlallp a!:rlbunr
(740) 446-2342

next'' erk.
11

ill be

Please see ODOT, AS

Senior Citizens Center hosts. annual plant exchange
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOE FLICH@MY DAIL'r' SENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - What will
you have 0
Dahlias or day lilies. hardv
begonias or hydrangeas, a huttertly bush or sp ider plant perhaps. Or will it be geraniums
or grasses.
Perennials and tuberous
roots with stems ready to set
into the ground, potted house
plants to enjoy during the winter months, and stems ready
to be rooted in water, were
among the table full of plants
brought to the Senior Citizens
Center Thursday for the annual exchange.
While the event is called an
Page AS
"exchange" · - that 's where
• John Boyd
you bring plants from home
and exchange them for some- Juanita Roush, assisted by master gardener Connie McCambridge, left.
. thing different - it was more selects several plants for her home flower garden. (Charlene
than that for many who had Hoeflich/photo)
nothing to share. It was a time
Right: Here Hal
to
get a start for a new plant.
• A Hunger For More.
As an educational part of the proKneen talks about
Those attending were encourdged by the gram. Kneen talked about growing
SeePageA2
how dahlias. the
master gardeners, Alice Thompson. Alice dahlias and some of the other plants
• Meigs Girl Scout diary.
tuberous root. which
Wamsley, Shirley Hamm. and Connie included on the excha nge table. He
See Page A6
if planted this fall will
McCambridge, who hosted the exchange. gave tips on selecting the right lot:a• Judge rejects bid by
flower next summer.
and Hal Kneen. Meigs County Extension tion and soil for specific plants. the
and the care the
Jackson defense to throw educator. to pick and choose from the many use of fert ilizer. the role of pinching
in
by
those
who
had
varieties
brought
plants require.
to stimulate new growth, and care
out indictment, reveals
plants to spare. Many left with plastic hags to be given during the winter
(Cha rlene
details. See Page A7
tilled with a variety of plants.
Hoeflich/photo)
months.

OBITUARIES

..

INSIDE

WEATHER

First Baptist Church of Racine building more than a legacy Elderly flood .
BY BETH SERGENT .

,

BS ERGENT@M YDA ILYS ENTIN El .COM

RACINE - "If you build
it, they will come.''
That famou s line of dialogue from the tihn 'Field of
Dreams· could apply to the
new building being constructed by the · First Baptist
Church in Racine.
The multi-purpose buildDetails on Page 48
ing is first and foremost for
church members but also for
community memhers.
'The biggest thing is we want
to reach out to people,"
explained Pastor Rick Rull
2 SEctiONS - 16 PAGES
about the church's new addition.
Calendars
A6 'The Baptist Church is not just
Classifieds
B4 -6 for a select group of people. We
Comics
87 don 't care where vou are in life."
Rull hopes 'the building
Dear Abby
A6 will house activities that will
Editorials
A4 appeal to the elderly, handiFaith•Values
A2-3 capped. teenagers and whole
families.
Movies
As . There arc plans to use the
Nascar
88 building as a walking facility
Puzzler
Insert during inclement weather,
as a meeting place for a
Obituaries
As and
new ministry geared toward
B!. handicapped children .
Sports
AS
Weather
Please see Building. AS
© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

victims offered
assistance
· Bv

CHARLENE HoEFLICH

H O EFLI CH@ ~ ~DAii..lSE~TI"-tS -.

CO M

P0\1EK0)
\lcig&gt;
Count\·.., !lund 'ictirn--. age
60 or -n, ('r urc b~.:·in~ ntfe rect
"Pe(ial Jj,a,tl"r r~lic-1 -.en iLe\
hv the :\rca Al.!l'n'-·' 011
.{gin§! .~~ program t7! Ru~·keye
\ ,rile\
~ De' L'l1lpr11eri1

Hi JJ,- H ucktn~

R e~iPn;d

D"u·ic l.
Thi, 11 et'l-; !)1' .-\r~a -\gene;
on A~inl.! ~llliH'Lllh.:cd that
elderi\ tlonJ 1 ic titm in
.-\then'}.
\lei!.!'- \1onn)l.!,
\-1or~an. '\nhJ,·. Per r\ and
\\·a..,fllll~ton n .Hillllr..';, :.ire cli2:ibk fc1r . . ome . . ~n in~ . . free

of

&lt;

•

Pastor Rick Roll stands on the staircase leading to the 'mezzanine of the new multi-purpose
building being built by the First Baptist Church of Rac1ne . The building is so large it will have a
high school regulation size basketball court. (Beth Sergent/photo )

I

char!!e t hl\llt ~h the .-\rca
Ae.e nl\.
':". In ~in t:ffurt to '-~''bt tho~e
in net:J . ._·a . . e m,Hlclt!t'r..., from
tht! .-\rea Af.!enn 0n .-\~inc
will \ i . . it inc.li\'idiJ ~d-, in ~~rde..r
to 1dentlf\ n~ed .... llh.l ih"-hl in
cnnncl l ill~ th r..'m \\ tth .._·ommunit\ ._re-.Pur~.'l.&gt;· . . aid
Rchet:-~a Lau ghlin. -\ gt'nC!

1

1

Please see Assistance, AS

Emergency Nurses
Week
is October 1b - 16

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 .

~.:eremon)

amllha t traffic control

INDEX

QUOTABLE: Jim Tressel. philosophiLing on foot ball and life at his weekly news
confe ren ce: '·Everyt hing is a part of
everything."
QUICK·HITTERS: Purdue coach Joe
Tiller goes for career win 1\o. I 00 a!!cainst
Wi sconsin. ... Purdue WR Taylor
Stubblefield became the Big Ten 's career
receivin g leader, with 271 catches ....
Wiscon sin's Jim Leonhard set a ~onfer­
ence mark for career pun1-return yards
with 1.185 .... Duslin Fox, a three -yea r
starter at corncrbat:k. returns for Ohio
S!ale after mtssin g 3 l /2 games with a
hrnken ann . ... Purdu e is 5-0 for the firs t
time since 1'1:15 .... E1·e ry national ly
ranked Big Ten team but one hit&gt; the road
S&lt;tturday: Nn. 20 Minne,ota at Michigan
State . No. 14 Michi gan at Illinois. No. 25
Ohio State at Io wa and No. 10 Wi scons in
at No. 5 Purdue .

British paper solicits
letters to ·
Ohio voters, AS

Holzer Medical Center salutes our
Emergency Department nurses during
this ~pecial · observation .

+

MEDICAL CENTER
DiSC'()ll('l' the J-lolzcr nif.f'ercncc

www .holzer .org

•.

�..
-

FAITH

The D9-ily Sentinel

a

0

•

.

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, October 15, 2004

Church News

it had been planted.
How much more true is
th is of the Word of God for
the "Seed of His Word" is
ALWAYS good' ... ''So is My
Word th at goes out from My
mouth : It will not return to
Me empt y, but will accompli &gt;h what I des ire and
,;•chieve th ~ purpose for which
I ' cr11 it" (haiah 55: II NIV ).
. We know that what He says
is "good seed." And wh ile we
can celebrate the promises and
affirm ations His Word supplies
us (the "Wann-fuzzies" that
encourage us along. if you
will ). God is interested in more
th an just the "he'rc-and-now."
Each word of direction, correction . .transformation and · comfort ul timately produces the
fru it of a li ving testimony in
our li ves. This is a harvest that
encourages others and teaches
them to trust in the goodness of
God and the faithfulness of
Chri st. And do not fruits each
hold within themselves even
more seeds that will in turn be
sown in the soil of other lives?
Let us then each allow God to
mature His fmit in the greenhouses of our obedience' Too often we
become weary. frustmted and discolmlged witl1 our circumsumces.
unaware tl1at the Fatl1er is tilling
the soil of the hidden places of
,our hem1s &lt;md in the hearts of
those around us. Let LIS instead
"lay hold" of His admonishment
in Galatians fi:R to "not become
weary in doing good. lor at the
proper time we ';"ill reap a harvest
if we Zlo not give up."
(Tiwm Mollohan has min·
istered in southem Ohio the
past nine years and is the
pasliJr
of
Pathway
Community Church. He and
his wife are the parents of
three children with another
011 the ·way! He may be
reached by email at pastort hom @path way ga llipo·
lis.cofll).

Fellowtshio
Apos olfc

Homecomings
to be held
Sunday

Church. 398 Ash St. ,
Middlepon . The schedul e
includes: 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school: I0:30 a.m. morn ing
worship ; noon, dinner and fel·
. lowship, I :30 p.m. Earthen
POMEROY
Vessels: 2 p.m. Rev. Calvin Homecoming will be held at Minnis speaking ; 3 p.m
the Mornin g Star United Glorybound Quartet, formerMethodi st Church Sunday. ly JoyFM Trio.
There will be a basket dinner
at 12:30 and a song servi ce in
the afternoon . John Gilmore
is pastor.
CHESTER
Homecoming will be held at
POMEROY - A contemthe
South
Beth el
porary
service will be held at
Communit y Church on
Silver Ridge Sunday with 7 p.m . Saturday at the St. Paul
Sunday school at 9 a.m.: Lutheran Church.
basket dinner at noon , and
an aft ernoon song•service at
I :30 p.m. Singers will be
Jerr y and Lisa Queen .
Coolville, the Martin s, the
MIDDLEPORTChri stys ,
and
Kevin
Damewood .
Linda Earthen Vessels will be
singing at the Middleport
Damewood is pastor.
Church
of the Nazarene 6:30
MIDDLEPORT
On
Sunday, Oct. 24 homecoming p.m. Sunday. Refreshments
will be held at the Ash Street will be served.

Contemporary
service set

Earthen
Vessels to sing

COLUMBUS (AP)
Bishop
James
Griffin
announced his retirement
Thursday from the Roman
Cat hoi ic
Diocese
of
Columbus and said the 23county diocese weathered the
priest sex abuse s~:andal of
recent years better than some
others.
The pope appointed an auxiliary bishop from Minnesota
to replace Griffin, 70, who
said age and arthritis pain are
forcin g him to step down.
"If we compare our dio~:e s e
with others, I think there are
few that got through the difficulties of the last 10 years as
well as the church of
Columbus," Griffin said.
"That's due to the people I
work with."
The Columbus diocese paid
about 51.4 million in recent
years to settle abuse claims
against 26 of its I ,000 priests.
dent for his signature. church sands of church plans, set up The diocese covers the
pension plans can participate so clergy and lay church largest area of nine dioceses
in "collective tru sts" where employees can save for retire- and eparehies in the state, but
corporate and other secular ment, to enjoy the benefits of serve s the fourth-largest
pension plans join together collective buying power.
number of Catholics, about
The bill , approved by voice 234,000 in central and southfor investment purposes in
vote, would make it easier for east Ohio. ·
siock and non-stock areas.
The House spo,nsors, Reps. churc h plans to diversify their
Griffin said he wants to be
Judy Biggert, R-111., and investments and to share the remembered [or the progress
Harold Ford, D-Tenn ., said risk of transaction costs with he's made in 2·1 years as
their bill would enable thou- other pension plans.
bishop. He established a
charitable foundation, fund raising campaigns for education and a task force trying to
www.mydallysentlnel.com
reduce family violence. A
native of Fairview Park, he

VISit US·Online at

~co n d

Dapt l&lt;tt Ch urch
w v. ~unda~ S.:h\)(ll 10 Jtrl
. \1 mmng v,.or~lup I I 01111 I-' \'C IIin~; 7 pill,
R:~1em~A~&gt;od.

Church or J t.~ us Christ Apostoli c
Va n 7~ •m.h tt m.l W.trd RJ... Pa.,wr· 1.unc~
Miller, Sunday S.:hrn d
liUO J.m ..

Revival
servcies slated

7 .~{)

b ·en in)? .

POMEROY - Revival services will be held a( the
Enterpri se Chu rc h 7 p.m.
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday.
Rev. Jim Lambert will be the
sipeaj(er. There will be special
music. Arland King is pastor.

p.rn.

WcJn c,da) 7

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. Midlllcpon. Kc\in Knn kk . ·Pu.,lur.
Sund11y, IO:.l() a m. Wcd n~~Ua~ . 7JKJ
p.m. : Y11uth Fri. 7:30 p.m

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11 . 111 ., Sun ~ f&lt;i,,
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a.m.,

Emm a nuel A po~ l ol ir T11bcrn11de Inc.

6-

Combs to speak

Sun 10:01) a.m. &amp; 7:.10 p.m.

Thu r~ . 7:C)(J p.m . Pu~wr .\I any R. H uuou

MIDDLEPORT
Rob
Combs will be speaking at the
Ash Street Church. 398 Ash
St . Middleport , at Sunday ·,
I0:30a.m worship service .

Pomeroy Churc h orC hris t
2 1 ~ W. Muin St .• M in i ~tl! r : Anth ony
M o rri ~ - Sund ~y s~· h ,lo l - 9 :.'0 a.m .
Wur~hip - HL ' O a.m .. 6 p. m .. \\blnl"~d ;t~

-167. IJudJi ng Lan e, Ma ~on .
W.Va., P . t ~to r : N.:tl T.:nnanL Sunday
Scr\· ice~ ltHXl a. m. and 7 p.m.

P.O. Rm

Sc r v it:c~ -

:n nt~

Ch riJ ri! n\

Kt•nu ( ,'hurdr of"Chri s!
- 1) :.l 0 ,1.111 .. ~ unJ~ y S ~ h o 1 nl ·

Wor~ h i p

Hope Baptist Churt·h tSouthl'rn l
570 Grant St.. Middh:pun . Sun day ~d Jo&lt; ll
. ~ : JO ol.lll., Wn r·~hi p - I I tu n. ~ nd" 6 p.m ..

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Zion Churl'l1 of Christ

Sdw ol - ':I:JO . 1 111.. Wnr, lllp ·
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Pomem~ .

HOirTi MHt\ilk Rd . t Kt. I-UJ.

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4 JR72 Pom cwy Pike. P:1Hor: E. Lamar
O ' Hrp nt , Sun day Sd wol · 9 : .~() a. m..
Worshrp · 8: I :'i a.m .. '):4.'i um &amp; 7 I JI) p.m ..

p.m.. Wc dn c ~da y Sen i cc~ -

Wedn c,day Scrv r c:c ~ -

Co mmunion - J() a.m . S u ntlot \ S dil~ • l ·
10: 1S &lt;1.111 .• Vnulh- :'i:JIJrm t;u nJ &gt;~;o. B11"&gt;lc
Stu ll}· W~ dm•,d a~ 7 pm

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7 :00

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was ordained m 1960 in
Cleveland.
His successor, Bishop
Frederick Campbell, has been
an auxiliary bishop since
1999 in the Archdiocese of
St. Paul and Minneapolis.
Campbell, '61, has been rector of the St. Paul Seminary
School of Divinity for the
past two years, during the
abuse crisis.
" I always sense among the
seminarians a realization of
how difficult the process has
be~n, but also a deep recommitment to the meaning of
the priesthood and pastoral
life," Campbell said.

Sen

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Bradford C hurch of C hri~l
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"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear.
before God and man."
Acrs 24:16

Roofing &amp; Building Work
,, Pomeroy, OH

740-992-6215

gi~('t

up, Wf' l!ld&amp;fll tot ht hltl ll lbi\ llld
ttr oppt rt111it7. th w· a.~ • m••t
d ~ltrnll"d idi•hh••l · ftt was
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fs.a iUUa ud Kilt Fmhei.t4 il f

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walttnl tc tnlnu • tdltilllll4 qut51. uu~
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fGCJid ..ridll n" trqotd lhf MUt • tit'l
ht lutlt•d AI Otlf .i110ru . (; d l11.
Mnnl ~~~~ (M f of11nhu.i.

!740 ) 9l12-M 51

uardrail . Fe n c e &amp;

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
· Overbrook
Rehabilitation Or.
"A Celebration of We "

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Park ershurg
We offer ph ys ical ..occupational .

speec h. art &amp; music therapi es
740-667-3156

333 Pag e St reel
Middlenort OH

"Nest arrd Rest"

pm

\kdn,· ~u .•~

Hunfurd Chun·h of C hris t in
l" hri ~ liun l"ni()n
ll-lrtln1J . \~ Va . P.l• Wr. D.•&lt;1d G tl"l"l .

Racine, OH

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Home CaoJud M t-als &amp; Dai(\'

.~·pedal~

20

10 a.m. hc nin ~
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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

190 N . Second St

men, th at lh ey may

URA'JCE

~ENCIES

KEHLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
All /11come Tax &amp;

Finallcial Services Fir_m
61 8 E. MaiitS trect • Pomcruy
(740) 992-7270

..................

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212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Inc.

Full line ol
In surance
Pro ducts+
Financial
Servtces

wprds abide in you, ye shall
ask w!rat ye will, and it shall
be dor1e unto you.
john 15:7

992·66n

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White Funeral Home
Since 1858
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7 40-667-311 Q

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REHABILITTION CENTER
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36759 Roc kspnngs Ro
Pome roy. OH 45-13~
740-992-6606

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Brogan-Warner

PHARMACY

INSURANCE
SERVICES

I

We, Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
in heart,· fior the_v •m ,."'h' "''lc''
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works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Mauh cw 5:16

Local source for trophies ,
Ia ues !·shirts and more

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .~.•
(740) 992·3279
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Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

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K&amp; C JEWELERS

740·992-6128

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

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MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

If ye abide ill Me, a11d My
words abide ;,. yuu, ye shall
ask wlrat ye will, and it .~hall
be do11e u11to you.
john 15:7

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Rutland Free Will Haptisl
S.dc m St.. 'Pa.,tr• r: J arn 1e 1-un ncr Sunda)

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

7 40-949-2217 .

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740·992-77t 3

Hills Self Storage

a m.

:\11. :\lorit1h ("',h urch of God

Gtlhl' rt ( nng. Jr S u nd a ~ 5chnot ·
n 111.. Wl' r&gt;hlp - IO · ..J~ ll m

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Open 7 days &lt;.1 wee k

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"A Home Bank for
Home People"

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7 40-949-221 0

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29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

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Hilbidr H11plist Churd1

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S..:n u: c: HU O "m .. Bt t&gt;l..:
Stud ~. W~drr c~ll &lt;l ). fl ..l Up.rn.

J"uith IJa pti st Church

26 vears in local business

$ ~· 11 K~ - 7 111!

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Pa~ wr: Ph tlip Sturm . S unUJ~ S.:hnn l 9:.\1•

Old IMhl'l Fret• Will RHpli !&lt;ll"hurch
~Kbll l Sl
~~
7. \ \t,! dkp•HI. Sund a.\
Sdlno•l
Ill .1 rn. hc: nrng · 7 00 pIll .
Thur,d .t)
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l:.l.mge lt-.t

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1 0~ . 11 1., 7 p.m ..
\\'.:Jnc,dJ) Sl."tl rl.:' · 7 l' ·m

faith de~ '111ll~w it your h-'itl$1
1
" 'ould , ., . lr' ttr .st HI 1rtl hu.:
10C'I D, 101id )f.m 11d bmMUallot,
f.J!Cldltt '"r lllf"t,.r sa•itl" tad
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Su~ tl" I1 1 Prr c ,lli "tl&lt;!

:'li t. L"n iun Rupti~ l
P:1, 1o 1r . D:111J \\ rwr n.m. Su ml .t ~ Sd r•1nl (, .111 p.m .
Y: -1.'
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Camp be II earn ed master \
and doctoral degrees at Ohio
State University and taught
history at the Pontifical
College Josephinum in the
Columbus
suburb
of
Worthington from 1967-6&lt;)
before he attended seminarv
in California. Campbell, who
was ordained in 1980, said be
is amazed at Columbu s'
growth during hi s three
decade s away.
The diocese has not vet
announced a date lor
Campbell's insta-llation a'
bishop, which will mark the
transfer of authority from
Griffin .

11 \··h&gt;l l\o•
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Latter-Day Saints

\1 1n1 , t ~ r

p

11 I \i I I !

i ' II 111\!!l I I

I'

7:00pm

I Ia nr . 71 11 )

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Sihcr Run H11plist
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P.l' l l 1 r: ( ) k ll ll I&lt;&lt;!IIL" , Surr d.i ) s,·ln .. •l

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t"hnn·h f!f Chr ist

P.t, h lr j ,,hn S"J il"lll. SUrH.l.t: "ich nPI ·
J(b 111 .

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9:.1(1 . 1 111 .
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't.:l\l l l" i 1' ·111

l. :w nd &lt;" Iill"Fn· ~ \ ll•thtKi b l Chun·h
nradhur~·

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1! ~ t l
P:• ~ h w 1{.,. ~ Kulc. S uml a~ S,·hn,il
a.m .. Wor .~ h ip 10:40 am .. 7:00 p Ill.,
Wcdn~·~, Ja ~

Bishop Frederick F. Campbell, right, talks with reporters during
a news conference Thursday in Columbus where Bishop James
Griffin, left. rear; announced his resignation as bishop of the
Diocese of Columbus . (AP Photo/ The Columbus Dispatch, Lisa
Marie Miller)

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l n, lrLJill{'l11:11. \\ q r,hlp s ~ nk..: . lJ ;1. 111.

7:()() p 111

am .

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Firsl Baplist C hul'l'h
Pa~ tor : Mark ,\ 'll•mm . 6 th and Palmer St ..
i\1 1ddlcp(&gt;rt , Sun day S~ h ,••J I · 9 : 1 .~ &lt;L. rn..
10 . 15

I
"

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S u nd u~

.

( 'hu rdt
P:t-tm : Stele Tmnd. . \ l:t m Strw1;-'
R. utl:m d, O..,unJ .tl Wor~ I H p 10.0(1 :u n
Sund;ll S&lt;." l l t•c 7 p nr

lirsl Ba1Jti ~ l

Jpn Br ockert. Ea~t M a in St. .

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Scn·icc., · b·JOp m

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WPr ~ h i p

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81'urwulloY. Rid~:e Church nf Chris l
Tc rf), S t 1nd ~1 :&gt; Sd mo l -9 ..l0

Ruthmd Fi rst Baptist Church
Sunday St' hnol - 'J:JO a .rn .. Wur~ h i p

Pa s t ~ · r

I,, &lt;i lhl

S un d a~

J rd

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Holine'Ss

Row 11f !o!h:tnm

I):JOpm

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\ 'ru "r Hothh. '- trnd . r~ ,, h,.PI

Westside l'hurrh uf C hr ist

\ liddlcpurt Church of C hrisl
5th ,md 1'\·latn . P: 1 ~ t nr· AI H art~nn . Y••lfth
Mini ~t e r : J o ~ h t 1Im. Su nduy SL·houl · '} 'O
a. m.. Wonhip X: l .'i . lnJoa .m .. 7 pm ..
Wc•ln e~ da) S.:rvkc'i - 7 p.m.

Cllt'shire Ru.plisl t:hurch
l'a~tnr: S1l' \"c Lm lc. Su nd:J )' Sdwol : Y: JO
arn . Morn 111g Wor-: hip: 10:.'10 am. Sund ay

1

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t.:ntf i' 1-: pl&lt;;l'opll l Chu rc h
\ ~ fl !:.. ~Lnn S1 . Jlt \1 1\Ci ll). Surr d.1y 'wlu •,,J
;m d J-1 , 1} l~ u L h.m ' t 11 .00 ;t.rll

L ah ar~·

7:00pm. Wc d n c~Ll ay Bible Stm! y 7:00p m.
Interi m Preacher FlnyrJ Ross

Wcdn c ~ da y

I '.t •

I ~,,

'I

nan\ illc

Horne lhl. . S u m/ a~
Schm• l · I I a.m .. Wnrsh ip - IOa.m .. () r .m.
Wc dn ~s day Sc n· k e ~- 7 p. m.

Sun da)· Sr hnnl - 9:JOam . Prc a;: hing
Servkc:
l!)·]( lam . E\'cning ScrviL"l'

t\"cnin g: fl:Jn pn1

&lt;;;un d &lt;.~ ~ SLII•~&lt;•I

7 p.m.

Pom r rH~·

Caupcnle1· Uapthl Chu rc h

LONG BOTTOM
A
hymn sing featuring the
Golden Tones ·of Parkersburg.
will be held at 7 p.m. at the Mt.
Olive 'Church. Long Bottom.
on Saturday, Oct. 24.

1 II

_q l)"\ 7 Sl:ill' !&lt;toUt&lt;:

Baptist

Hymn sing
scheduled

t;ol!l•

Cu mmuni l ~

Uberty Asst'mhl}" o( li.od

\',

Trinil .\ C hu rd 1
~ cl oud &amp; 1._111n. flru nch l). l'a~tur
/{.·\
Jp n ;• tlt&lt;~n \;uhk-. \\ uro•1np liJ.:!:'i :• ttt

Stud y - 7 p.rn .

Assembly of God

1

Episcopal

HemiDl"k C. nm~ C hrlsthm Chun:h
Min r~ter: Larr1 8 ru Y.n , Wur-, hip
Y :~ ll
a.m. Suu day 5~-:hou l · 10:30 a.m ., B1hk

Rulh:lnl l.

H oll.orrt/ 1 !J

I

Mu" - IUO a 111.

Church of Christ
Loop Rd nil Nc1\ L1ma Rd

1'1rr

hlt'l"
l' ,,, '

Olh t' r ( ' hurdu: ~

Congregational

Sa(•red Ue11tr1 ( 'atholil' C'hun.' h

Av~

Scr\\I.."C~ :

&lt;:hurr h of Gud of t' mphtc~
OJ \\hilt' 1{,1 ••It 'II 1&lt;1 JI&gt;Cl Pc~•l"r f&gt; J
C h;tp•llm 'iumL11 \d! , ~ l l
!It .t r~
\\ nr-,h rp
I .t.lll., \\ L· d n~~ d a\ Sen r,c, .,

J'lll

Catholic

r m.

Riu •r \•ll f~
Apostolit· Wnr-. hrp Ccnt&lt;'r.

Columbus bishop to retire

Church pensions alloweGj ·to pool
assets under bill sent to president
WASHINGTON (t\P) The House voted last Friday.
to amend several securities
laws dating back'to the 1930s
to allow church pension pro·.
grams to pool their assets
with private and government
pension plans as a means of
increasing retirement savings.
Under the legislation,
which now goes .to the presi-

PageA2

• V ALUES

A Hunger For More
One day. while Jesus was
out and about teac hing the
things of God, He told the tale
(or parable) of a farmer who
went out to · sow his seed
Pastor
(Luke 8). He described the
Thorn
various places the seed fell.
Mollohan
Some were cast upon a path
whereon the seeds were tram pled and then devoured by" ·
birds. Some fe ll on rock and
immediately sprang up onl y
to then shri vel up again once "What kind of soil is my hean·r
the day's sun dried out' their If I will surrender my will to His.
hold on to Him in tc•ith. then my
exposed roots.
. ·
Some fell among thorny hean is "good and rich," ready
underbrush and grew fine for plant ing. If you cannot honuntil tin.all y choked out by the estly say that you are responsive
and readv to walk with Him (and
ri ot of thorns about them.
Jesus'. disciples seemed to m-e not &lt;is a result "good soil' ).
have a pretty good idea tha( take care and conside'r that ·'etesJesus wasn' t just giving an nity" is really. really long tinfe
agri cultural · lesson ·and and it c&lt;m ~neak up on you realpester_ed Him abou t the m~an­ ly, reall y quick 11L however. your
mg ot the story. He e xplam~d lite seems to indeed be the kind
that the seed was the Word of of soil that Jesus described as
God and the path upon which "good," take courage and know
the seed was thrown is the that seeds sown in good sui! will
heart of the one who hears His gem1inate. ·
But don 't get impatient
Word. but then disregards p r
with waiting for the hareither
rejects it because of the
vest
of
God 's blessings. When
world's innate contempt of it.
She never beli eves and is we plant a seed in our gardens,
consequently not saved (Luke we soon may see that first lit8: 12). The rock on which seed tle leaf rear its tin y head from
was scattered was the heart of the earth. but we are not satisthe one who hears" it, receives fied in merel y thi s fra gile bud .
it gladly. but then never allows No. it is just the beginning.
We are not content thou gh
the things of · God to grow
its
stem ri ses from the ground
deeply in his life and naturally
fall s away when times get and it spread s it s leaves
tough : He can 't take the heat, towards the sun . No, it\ not
done yet. It ha s not yet
so to speak (Lnke 8: 13).
achieved
its destiny.
The thorny ground, says
We wait though it unfolds
Jesus. is the hean of one who
hears the Word of God, receives it s petals and are still not satit at first. but then finds t~ life isfied. for we kn ow that each
that God would grow there all blossom is merel y a promise
choked out by the thorns of of something yet to come .
Then , we rejoice when in the
worry and the strangling weeds
place
of each tragrant flower. a
of temptation (Luke 8: 14). But
fruit
begins
to fonn . When at
then there is the seed which is
sown in the hean that "hears the last its t'ruit has matured and is
Word, retains it, and perseveres ready for harvest, we know that
until its crop is produced" the tiny seed has finally
reached its potential and
(Luke 8: 15).
The question naturally arises, arrived at the destiny for which

Friday, October 15,2004
· www.mydailysentinel.com
The Dall y Se!'~nel • Pa ge AJ
~~~~==?=======================~~========================~~

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erace is suff;ctenr
foc thee: for mY
stre neth is made
Pe rft:e t .in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

15ououffrt 's
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117 GN 2•1d Ave.
'1tdrle"O,
OH
.i- •
I"' Tt.
9-92 ·6 ~ 76

~~~~~~~~.J.....................L....................~•••~~~~~----~--~----------~--------.1

�0PINIO

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156,..• FAX (740) 992-2157

www.mydilllysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News

Ed1tor

Cc m.~l'css

slrall make 110 law respecting an
e.&lt;talllislrmeut of religion, or prohibiting the
)i·ee exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
or speeclr' or of tlte press; or the right of the
peoph· peaceably to assemble, and to petition
til ~· Gol'ernnrerrt fo1· a redress ofgrier,ances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TC)DAY IN HISTORY
·1 &lt;&gt;d 11 " I 11J.I\ Oct 15. the 2H9th d.1y ol 2004 There .tre
I ll' k it "" the yc.u Islam 's ho ly month of Rdmadan
b~~tlh ! (H..L t ~ or tomon ow w nh the s1ghung of the t1rst moon
1\f ! ilL !l L'\\ lundJ mnn th
l&lt;&gt;d. l\ ' H1~hltght 111 Htstot y· Foil) ye.1rs ago. on Oct 15 ,
It)',~ 11 11 ' " &lt;lllllllun ced th.1t Sov1et leade1 Niktta S.
J-;i llll,]h hl" h.Jd h~e nt cmolc UIIom ul l1ce He was succeeded '' J'ICJlliL'l h) '\lexet N. Ko sygm ,mel a' Comm umst Party
-.L'LIL'L t l \ ln L.conJd I Brethnev
( In tJn, d.tt c. In 191-1. the Cia) ton Antttrust Act was passed
Ill 11117 \1,1!.1 1ii111 &lt;l DutLh d.m cer who h.1d spied for the
( "''"'·"" "·" cxL~utcd by " Frcnd1 llnng sy uad outstde Pan s
In JI)2X the German dlflg tbl e Graf Zeppehn landed 111
I .Jkcliuts l \ J compleling Its lt rst commercial tltght across
tlh• \{],JilllL
Ill 1'1 "' th e fornw prem1er of Vichy France, Pterre Laval ,
'7

\ \d \ ~ ,~,.·~..u ted

In 1'1-lh '1,111 war cn mmal Hermann Goeri ng poisoned
illillscll htnlls helme he was to have been executed
In 1966. P1estdent Johnson stgned a btll creaung the
Ilq'·" t me 111 ot Tr ,msportat 1011
1! 1 llJhlJ. pe.tce de monstrators staged act tv1t1es across the
" " "il l) . 1ncludmg a candlelight march arou nd the Whne
l111usc·. '" p.til of " moratonum ag,u nst the Vtetnam War
Ill 1117!1. m the first debate of ns kmd between vtce.-prestck llli.il IHlllllJlees. De moet at Walter F Mondale and
Rc·r uhiJ c'.\11 Bob Dole !.teed off 111 Houston
Ill I ~90. Sm Jet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev was named
the lcll JliCnt ol the Nobe l Peace Pnze
Ten 1c.u, .tgo Haman Prestdent Jean-Bertrand Arisude returned
to Ius country. three years ,Iller being overthrown by army rulers.
fhe L N Secunty Council welcomed Arisude 's return by voung
to lilt sutlmg trade sanctions imposed against Haiti.
1-i 1c' 1 e c~" ogn The humamtanan group Doctors Without
Hllltkls 11.1s named w1nner ot the Nobel Peace Pnze. ln sh
tclll'l loset L&lt;Kke. whose ltfe msp1red the 1992 fil m '· Hear
\ h So11 g Llicd 111 Coun ty Kildare, Ireland. at age 82.
011c : e.Jr .tgo Eleven people were killed when a Staten
Is I" nd k11: '1,11nmed mto a mamtenanee p1er. (The ferry's
rilnt "ho d blacked ou t at the co ntrol s, later pleaded gutlty to
II ,o11 nh ol m.msl,mghter ) Doctors 111 Flonda removed the
t~eu11 t ~ tu be ot Tern Schtavo. a severely bratn-damaged
11&lt;&gt;m.m .tt the center of a nght-to-d1e battle (The tube was
JCll hc'rtcd '" days later alter the Flonda Legtslature ru shed
'll l &lt;&gt; ll ~h Tern·, La\v:· wh 1ch was rece ntly struck down by the
I l&lt;; tl d,t Sup1eme Co urt J An explosiOn npped apart a U.S
dip lnnl.llJC 1eh1cle 111 the Gaza Strtp, killtng three Amencans
C h ll l d I.IUnched 11s first manned space mtsston, becommg the
d111d l·o untl) 111 hmory to se nd a person into orbtt The Flonda
\1.111 ms &gt;I un the NLCS v. tth " 9-6 \lclory over the Ch1cago
( uhs 111 G.tme 7
illli.J I ' Blflhd.J) s Rock mu"CJan Don Stevenson (Moby
C'' ·'P" ' '' h2 \ 1u"cJan Ri chard Carpenter ts 58. Ac tor Vtctor
B.lllCIJce '' ' H Tennts player Roscoe Tan net is 53 Smger Tito
l.ll h &lt;Hl " 'I Bntam·s Duchess ol York. Sarah Ferguson, IS
-+5 (he I Fmen l Lagasse IS 45 S1nger Enc Benet JS 34
ri H·u~ h t lur Tnda) "The trulh (") that there IS on ly one
cc'llllllt.Jiclign ll) - ]me. And th e story ot a love t;s not JmporI.J ill - ,, h.1t " llnpnttdnt "th&lt;~t one" capable of love It ts
pu
the on I) gltmpse v.e are penmtted of etern1ty ·· lk lcn ll.lles Amenc.tn act ress (1900- 19931

' "Jl'

ADVISORY ON
ELECT ION LETTERS
I c //C/'1 111 !he edrwr 011 the Nm •. 2. 2004, f?enera/
dcr /ton '' til not !Je puh!i1hed or accepted bv this
II C',&gt;\flllf71:'1 uftn Tu e.\dar, Oct. 26, 2004.
- - - - · -- - - - - - - ,

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Pagel\4.

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Outstde Meigs County
13 Weeks
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Friday, October 15,

2004

•

Deaths

The candidate we need
Because I am not smJttcn
wtth etther ot the maJor prcsidentt,ll cand1dates, pet h.tps
I wtll c.tst a wnte-in vote 111
Nmember
lor
lormer
Sen.ttot Bob Dole While he
tsn't running. Dole 1s the
only publtc ligure who has
,1ppe.1rcd ready to do something about th e mor.il
declme m th1s countty He
ma) be the Last Punt,m 111
Babylon .
When he w.ts the 19'16
Repubhca n
prestdenttal
nom inee. Dole made · a n
unpasstoned speec h to the
exec utives ol the entertamment mdust1y
Dole asked the audtence.
"Is thi s what you tn tended to
dl:Comph~ h in

The

yolll

GOP

uccu~ed

c.u ecr .., ·)''

candidate

ente ttwnment gtan t

Time Warner ol bc1ng
Jmmoral - tralltckmg 111
cultutal tt ash and gJV Jn g the
countr) "ntghtmares ol
depr&lt;~vt ty "
He warned
med aa orga niza tiOn s ()ga 1n ~t
culuvattng moral LCm luSion
fo r prof1t
· Although Dole ne vet s.tJd
censorship uutnght. wh.tt he
said made the Holly\\ nod
b1gw1g s thmk at It .til on
their o"n Thete h.Jd bee n.
they knew. censorsh ip ,tt a
stmtlm ttme 111 the p.tst
Cou ld th ese J ays come
agam!
In 1934, the Ro m.1n
Catho lt c lobby es tabhshed
the Legton of De,ency.
wh1ch was f1rst pnmanly
respon sible tor tmpos1ng
censorshtp in the mov te
mdu stry, demandtng th at
movtemakers adopt a productton code
Sexuality on- screen and
Hollywood sex scandal s offscreen were destroytng the

George
Plagenz

Itim lapilal's 1111age With the
puhltc In pa rtJcul .tr. M.tc
West\ double e ntendrcs and
su ltt y w,1 lk drew deep
liOWilS lrom the Legion or
Decency
In the I.Jce of such "out r.l~c " and threate ned wilh "
bL~YLOtl by C.ttholiL lllOVle~OCIS. the film bosses decided th ey had be tter pollee
thcu uwn lllOJ.ils hefo1e
somebody else stepped 111
&lt;tnd dtd tt lm the m
They
org,1n 17ed
th e
Motll&gt;n Pl clltre Producers
•md DJStllbutoJS ol Amenc.J
and n.uned Will H.1ys ,ts
the 11 prestdcn t wtth all the
power~ nf .t censor
H.1ys h.td perfect credcntt:tl s for th e JOb He Wds ,m
e lue1 111 th e Presbytcn.1n
CllUiCh. d teetOt.Jier ,mJ
non.., mokel

swo re.

.tnd

s m , lll - toV~-n

w ho

nevc1

c.t mc

from

AmerKd

(Su lll vdn. lnd 1. Hay s JOse
become c h&lt;~Jnn a n ol the
Rcpub ltc ,ul
N.Jt ton,tl
Comm tttee and. hk e Dole. a
c.md1date lur the GOP pt esJdentJ,tl nomtnalJOll (ill
1920 ).
· W,men Hdfdmg got the
nod but he later rewarded
Hays for h1s support b) namIng h1m U S postmastergeneral. Hays left that .J Ob a
year later to t.1ke the movie
post.
-\s moHe czar from 1922
to

to I9-15. Ha ys ran a "tight
sh 1p " Accordmg to Gerald
G.1rdncr's book about the
H.tys Office years tttled
"The Censorship Papers,"
even the mtldest vulganltes,
like .1 burp, were omitted
It om " sc npt
But protests hy authors
,mel producers thdt the Hays
Office w,ts rummg the1r cre•1tt ve cflmh do not appear to
h.1vc h.1d much va hdtty
Qu1te the contrary The
1930s. when the studios
r.1ised the CIY that they were
bcmg lurced to operate
und er unposst bl y restncuve
mm al st,muurd s. turned out
to be Holl ywood's "golden
years
Not eve n a wholesome
nuw1e ltke "Gomg My Way "
11944 ), in wh1ch Bmg
Crosby and, Barry Fitzge rald
st.n red '" two am table pansh
pi tests. cs~: aped the censonuus eye of the Hays Office .
Al ter Father O'Malley
lpl.1yed by Crosby) "translerred tu .1nnt her parish, the
hJShop sends Father Ttm. a
h.1ppy-go- luck y
cutup
pl.1ycd hy Fr.mk McHugh, to
t,1kc h" pl.lce Alter I0 mmutes v.tth F.ttheJ Tim, ihe
.1gmg p.1rish prtest. Father
FtLzg1hbon
1Fttzgera ld )
sh,1kes hts head m di sma)
"How d1d he ever come to be
a pnest '" he &lt;tsks Fathet
0 Malley replies, "We blindlolded htm and he thought
he wds JQl nmg the Elks "
Joseph Breen. a promment
Catholic. who directed the
Hays Office from 1934 to
1954, ttgured th1 s would
upset th e Catholic Church
and ordered the ltne deleted.
Bteen, &lt;1 fonner newspaper man and amiable sort,
was nevertheless relentless

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 15, 2004

Building
from Page A1

John Boyd
in the pursuit uf hts watchdog role.
oppos1110n
to
His
Hollywood's glorification of
the "sweater gt rl" 111 the
1940s caused consternatiOn
m the swea ter industry,
which charged that Breen
was hurtmg thetr business.
Though the Hays Office
would stay afloat until 1967,
by the early 1960s the once
"tt ght ship" was taking on
water and sinkmg rapidly.
When the 1966 fi lm "Who's
Afratd of V1rg1ma Woolf?"
was given the censors' seal
of approval after an appeal
by Warner Bros , 11 was censorshtp's dymg gasp.
The Edward Albee play
brought to the sc reen a verttable avalanche of obscemues never before heard in a
movie theater. The era of
clean dtalogue and happy
endings was over. A "fine
reticence" had gtven way to
tasteless reahsm
In I 968, the Hays Code
was replaced with the
Molton Picture Association
of America (MPAA ) -film
raung system
Lucktly for him, Hays was
no longer around. He had
dtcd m 1954
He would
never have understood what
was happen mg m our culture
As we now know, nothmg
came of Bob Dole's brave
stand for morahty. but for
one brief moment Camelot
appeared to be waiting 111 the
wmgs on the Amencan
stage. Then, shortly, we were
back to our old ways, gettmg
our ktcks by "looking down
into the trough," forgetting
that culture, as British author
Malcolm Muggeridge has
reminded us. is "lookmg up
from the trough."

POMEROY - John Patnck Boyd, born Apnl 13. 1930.
dted on Oct. 3, 2004. at The Ohio State Umverstty Hospital in
Columbus.
Hts wile, Chnstmc Watson Boyd, survi ves.
Services were conducted on Oct 6. 2004, at Urnon Baptist
Church in Oak Htll, wtth burial m Fatrmount Cemetery tn
Jackson. Arrang~ments were under the dtrecuon of KuhnerLew!s Funeral Home in Oak Hill

Local Briefs
'

Board schedules test
POMEROY - Metgs County Board ol Elections wtll hold
a test of the votmg tabulation system at 3:30 p.m. on
Wednesday

Plan revival service
REEDSVILLE - Eden Umted Brethren 1n Cht ist Church
of Reedsvtlle wtll huld a tall Jcvtval at 7 p m , Oct 22-2-1 .
with Cra1g Holler, and spec1al mustc each evening. Oct. 23
wtll be youth ni ght, wtth a spectal serv1ce and teft e,hmen ts
The ch urch ts located two mile s north of Reedsv tll c on Oh1o
124

Hunter course offered
CHESTER - A hunter safety course wi ll be offered at
Eastern Htgh School un Nov 8. 9 and II w1th cla"es from 6
to 9 p.m and Nov 13 when the test w1ll be taken trom9 am
to noon
Pre-regtstratton tor the course IS tu be h,mdled throu gh
Gilbert Woods, 985 -3914. by Nov 5. The course IS tor both
youth and adu lts

Plan outage
MIDDLEPORT - Lead ing Creek Conservan'y Dlst11ct
wtll replace a water va lve on Noble Sumn11t Road on Monday
Customers in the followmg areas wt ll have servtcc tnterrupted between 9 30 am and approxunately I 30 p.m · Ohio 124
from Happy Hollow Road to and mcludmg Noble Sumnut
Road and Jividen Road.
When service ts restored, a b01l adv1sory will be 111 effec t
unttl further nottce.

Ground was broken for the
project on Easter Sunday and
shou ld be completed around
the first week of November.
The proJect wtll cost an estimated $500,000.
· "
The butldtng wtll house a
h1gh "hool regulatton size
gy mnasium
full -cou rt
Instead of a wooden tl oo r, the
basketball co urt wtll be coated w1th a durable epoxy
pamt
There will be a kttchen.
concesston s t&lt;~nd , confcrence/cl.issroo m and two
bathrooms wtth handt capaccessiblc showers so that
the buildtng can be used as a
shel ter 111 case ot a cummumty emergency
Pr.tct1cally all the duct
v.ork fo r the build1n g is
outstde, eltmin.Jting an eye
sore &lt;1 nd utilt zing what are
call ed ·'atr throwers" that
throw out hot or cold atr
from a few strategtcall yplaced vents. The atr ts
thrown I 00 teet and then
tri c kl es down tnto the
butldmg .
Another mteresttng archJtectur,tl pomt about the structure ts that the ce1ling has a
mesh -ltke cover to reduce the
.unpltti c,llion at noi se common 10 gy mna siums
The l11 ghes t pomt in the
hUtlding's cetltng ts 26.8 feet,
allowmg for a second
story/mezzanme area. Th1s

area wtll be pnmanly for
teenagers .
Rull .111d yout h worker
Robert Brown &gt;a td there "
nowhere. other than school,
tor teenager&gt; to go 111 Racmc
Act"ities at the new hutldtng
wt ll provtde an alternative
destmatton for the teens wtth
exercise equipment , games
and pool tables
"The potentt al ts staggering ," said Rull , whtle he
gazed up at the ht gh ce tltng
"The heltcopter can lam! over
there," he JOked ,,t the butldmg\ SIZe.
" I dtdn't cnvi ston tt getttng tim btg but we had Icedback from the congregatto n
about posstble uses .111d tt
grew." Rull added. admnung
th at the ongtnal tdea for the
butldtng was about hall the
stze ol what it ts becoming.
··we didn ' t want to butld
somethmg and then have to
add on later··
Some 111 Racme have
remarked th at the new but ld·mg is larget thdn the actudl
church . Although the butldmg IS the taller structure, tt
comtsts ol 12.000 square teet
whtle the church (whtch has
two lloors) co nsJ&gt;ts of20.000
square feet
The Ftrst B&lt;~ptt s t Church
of R.1cu1e began 157 years
ago under trees m Anttqutty
Its longevity proves that each
generatton ledves sumethmg
for the next, whtch ts what
thetr new buildmg is all
about.

Law you can use
Consumers should ask questions
before choosing cemeteries

Stop global warming - ·at what cost?
The
global-v.anllln g
alarmiSts ha1en 't managed
(yet) to hnn g on the worldwtde eco nomic parai )SJS
that wou ld resul t lroi11
implement ation of th e Kyoto
Treaty. but they arc abo ut tn
score a lesset vJctoJy tll.\ t
wtl l resu lt m the loss of
thou sands ol human ll'es
The
Cai J! orn l.l
An
Reso urces
Board
h.!s
approved .1 plan th.tt woulu
sharply red uce. over th e next
II years. 'chtcular e miSSIOns of carhnn 'tl tnxtde.
whtch so me sc ienti sts · contend " partly responSible lor
what they believe "a tecen t
rJSe 111 global temperatutcs
(Other sc Jen ll st... dJ"d~.uee
that world tem peratu res' .tre
ns mg, let alone that mcreases in carbon di OXide ca u,ed
by human acuvny arc
responstble, hut th e medtd.
tecdtng the same public dllX Iety that nut long ago lastened on nuclear wmte r .&gt;ctd
ram and the ozone hole. bas
turned "g lobal wa tnHng "
Into a worldll' tde c.Juse ,e]ebre I
The reg ul.tt tilll. wh1ch
would phase 111 lrom 200lJ to
20 16. would Ioree each
year\ ncv. cars .md trucb to
meet

IIH.:rC\Iilflgl y

' tr H: 'tcr

IJm Jt;.&amp;tiOib on cmJ ,.., Jon ot
carbon dJoXJde and oth ct
g.1ses supposecll) l1n ked to
global warm 1ng The ho.Jrd s
own st.tfl cslllll.Jtcs 1h1s \VIII
.1dd .1bout ~ 1.000 to the " " '

William
Rusher

ol eac h ne" \eh tcle. but
conte nd . . th&lt;t t "~tvJng ... on
g.tso linc \\uu ld. 111 the long
1un. mo1 c Lhdll make up lor
th J' !Would. that Js. il the
1ntttal buyc1 drove the vchJcle I Ill 11101 e t h" n I 00 000
miles. wlltc h few do J
J'nuu stry spokesme n disagree \.\.lth th e LO\t e . . tlllld!C
puttlll)! ll at I rom S2.11110 to
5&gt;3 OIJO ~ l.u mme th,m any
gd~ol mc ~d V I n~:-. II . . o. Ltlf
manulaLlurers wil l do the
onl y th1n g th C) cuncnt l) c,m
to keep pnces ,11 an .tlloru"t&gt;le Jc, cl UO\Illstlc nev.
veh tcles 1 Ifyhnd c,\" \vo n't
so lve the dll ordoh tlt ty problem bec.1use the)' cost at
lc.tst currently. up to S~.000
more th.m "llllildr uuncn t tonal c&lt;1rs 1
Well wh.tt \ so bad .Jbout
dowThl/111 1! ' Do AmerJCdll"
tc.tll y ne.?J the mid- .1nd
l clfg Cr - .... 1/Cd r.t. . .._enger L .. lf\
th .t t clog the ro.~ d . . !od.t) '
\1J ~ h t n t 11 e ,til be lwtteJ oil
ill mceu to ull\c sm,dleJ .u1d
11 cohte1 \t.:h ll: lc ")
l nlortUII.Jtel\ th e .J nS\IC I
, ..,

Illl

\\hil l'~ " f11l !l U! JI !!\

\Chicle rollover deaths have
mcre.tsed (up by 200 deaths
between 2(102 ,md 2003). a
st ud) by the National
H1 ghw,1y Tratttc Safety
AdmJntstr,ltJon showed that
1chicle downsiZing m the
1970s ,md XOs , 111 the name
ol fuel en&gt; nom y. resulted 111
2.000 dea th s a nd 20.000
sc n ous
lllJUrie'
The
N,uwn.11 Academy
ot
Suenccs co nltrmed the fmdJn g .•md USA Today, extrapola un g the results to all
yc.1rs 111 whte h luel econo my
stdnd.lrds h.tve been m
ett ect. foun d that ve ht clc
downsl;ing cau,ed 46,000
deaths
The 1ncre.Jscd nsk run by
people 111 sm.tll cars ts one of
the hcst-cstabl"hed stati stics
111 the who le f1eld or car
s.tlet) As R.tlph Nader himse ll put IL m ILJ89. "Larger
c..trs ._1re saler ' And Joan
Clayb1ook. the L.1 Pasmnara
as
nl
.llltn
s,1te ty
" ,\dmlllistr.ttor
ot
the
NHTSA. put ll thiS way
' The tn cre.JSeu ttsk for small
cat occup,mts who are m
l (tJ\ J..,IOll \ \\ Jth ldrger cars
are c.rstly recogn11ed But , it
" also u uc tlun e'en 111 smgle vehicle CJ.tshes. there ts
Jnuc,Jseu nsk of 'enous
lllJUr! 01 dcmh "
It 11 mtld he b.tu eno ugh 1f
this ll~te C tlil orn1 a' problem ,tlonc. smte The New
Y'"' T1mes LIL'dJts th at state
11 1th ,1 Ilith o\ ll.ttlonal Cd r

•

sa les . But New York,
Massachusetts, Maine and
Vermont make tl a poltcy \O
follow Cal ifornia's car rules
(whtch are eonstdered superior to the federal Clean At r
Act). and the Ttmes reports
th at New Jersey, Rhode
Island and Connecticut have
announced th at they intend
to start domg so Together
they add up to about 30 percent ol the Amencan car
market
Is It unreasonable to ask
the Caltforma Atr Resources
Board to delay doommg
untold
th ousa nds
of
Americans to death 111 smallcar acc idents until the effect
or carbon dJOxtde emissiOns
from automobiles can be
lmked wtth far more certamty tu th e alle ged menace of
global warmmg'
The earth 's temperature
has tt sen and fallen . far more
dram atically than ·anythmg
Ill the prOJeCI!Oil S of the
global-warmi ng doomsayers. throughout its 4 billion
year htStory. For mankind to
1magme that we have the
power to stop these lluctuattons, and determme to the
fracti on of a degree the temperature at whtch we choose
to hve, is an act of almost
unimag inable hubns
!Willwm RtHher 1s · a
Dllt/11 ~111\h ~d Fellm• of 1he
Clare mom In HI /Ute for the
Stud\ of Stme\IIJafll'hlp and
Pnht1&lt; of Plulnlliph l )

Have you ever wondered
what happens to a cemetery
after It JS filled up ~ Who 1s
going to pay to cut the grass.
pull the weeds and repair the
roads 1f no fu nds are commg
in from sell ing grave plots '~
The answer, tor many cemetenes, ts an endowment care
fund .
Q .: What ts an endowment
care fund , and how does It
work''
A : For cemeteries that
opened after July I , 1970.
Ohio law requ1res that they
inttlally deposit $50,000 tnto
a permanent e ndowment
fund. After the mtltal deposil,
I 0 percent of all grave plot
and mausoleum sales made
by the cemetery must be
placed mlo the endowment
fu nd The Inte rest Income
from the endowment lund 1s
then used to pay operatmg
and mau1tenaqce expenses for
the cemetery 111 perpetuity.
Q. : I'm thtnktng about buymg a grave plot. What should
I know about th e cemetery's
endowme nt fund ''
A.: lt IS tmportant tor consum ers who are considenng
the purchdse of grave plots to
mqui re whether the cemetery
has an endow ment fund and
how long 11 has been in existence Cemetenes operatmg
before 1970 and relig tous
cemetenes. whtch are not
covered by the endowment
tru st law, may have voluntanly formed thetr own endowment fund s Smce a cemetery
wtll e~e ntually ftll up, It ts
tmportant that 11 has an .ldequate endowment fund
Q Wh.tt happens tf. f01
example. a church that ow ns a
cemetery dectdes to quit
using the property for tlldt
purpose''
,
A. If the orgamzauon owntng a cemetery chooses to
stop using 11 '" a ce metery.
Oh)o ],lw says the organtzduon can diSmter .til bodtes
buned the1 e and re- Inter
them. "'th gravestones and
monuments. tL) a nea1 by
cemetery that 1s open for pubhe use At least 30 days before
removing any bodtes. however, the cemetery owner must
give notice ·to the next a t km
' or tamtly of the deccdent"mJ
allow them to move th e
tematn s tn ot het ce metene&gt;
Q · Who pays tor movmg
and re-Mry mg people when "
cemetery closes''
A It the or~anJl.ttlon IS

sull 111 extstence. 11 must pay
for the costs of the dismterment and rebunal. If that
organhatton 1s insolvent, then
the mumctpahty or tov. nshtp
where the cemetery ts located
must pay those costs
However, the muntcipality or
townshtp would then collect
the proceeds of any sale of th e
former cemetery lands once
all of the bodtes have been
removed
Q. What happens when a
cemetery's foundmg orgamzauon Si mply aba ndons It ~
A Generally, when a
cemetery ts abandoned by the
organuauun that fo unded it ,
responstbtl1ty for tts upkeep
falls to the muntctpaltty or
to" nsh1p where the cemetery
ts located Accordmg to Oh10
law, a mumctpaltty or townshtp mu st keep ce tlletery
fences 111 good repa tr ,md
remove the undc rgro" th and
weeds Irom an .1b.mJoned
cemeterv at least once a year.
Unl ortunately. 111 these ught
economtc tunes. mumcJpalt tJes and townsh ip' often do
not have fund s 1n the budget
to cover th1s re sponstbi11ty.
Therefore. con sumers shou ld
be CdUt tous 111 selec tmg cemetery propcrttes by askmg the
n ght qu es tion~ reg,ud in g
endowment care funds.
LiiH' Yvu Can lhe n u a l'ek1\ conu1me1 legal mfo ,.,natiml column l'""u/ed to tllll '
HCII !':! pap£'' a\ a publn H ... , \ 'Ue
of the O!Jw State ' Bw
A \\ocia11o11 and ril e Uhw
State Bw FowulaiWII T/111
article""' tJrepwed Ill artor- ~
11&lt;' 1' 1: !)w /1 G•lligilll of
Gli/Jga11 L1111 0!{1&lt; n 111
Clllwllla/1. Allicin appeal- I
111g 111 tl11 1 co/um11 al&lt;' llllended to pro\'ld(' hnwd. i?l-'1H-' I al '
m{o111wllo11 abou t rhe la11
Bejol&lt;' appl11 11g till&gt; lll(o rma!Um to a f!JWl t/n l e~?a l ptoh- 1
!em, reade1' are lll l(;ed ro \l~ ek
the oclt 'l et) of ail&lt; £'1/\e(/ uflo f ne\

Let there be light! Robert Harns from Ka l Electrtc (left) and
Pastor R1ck Rull stand 111 the mezzan1ne of the new mutt1pur·
pose building bemg bUJlt by the F1rst Baptist Church of Rac1ne.
Moments earlier a m11estone occurred when Hams turned on
the power to the buJid mg fo r the f~rst t1me. (Beth
Sergent/p hoto )

ODOT
from Page A1
on hand tu asstsl moton sts
· We were expectmg 200 at
the
ope nm g
of
the
R.t'enswood Connector. and
we had o'er 400 people shL'W
up.· Ftl son satd "We hope
th at we' ll have JUst as much
mtetest tnlhJS h1ghwa) openmg .Js we did for that one."

Assistance
from Page A1
spokespe1 su n
"The dts.tstet relt el setvt,es .11 ,ul.tble throu ~ h the
agenc) Include chore se t·
VlcCs .111d 1111n01 home moUJ·
lildtHm serv 1ces,'' L~1ugh l111
expl.uneu
Chnre sen ices. she said.
1ndu de but are not hmt ted to
st ru ct uJ.tl clean mg and
rcm(l\.tl nl deb11s and waste
matcn,tls. Asststance wtl l
.tlso be p1 O\ 1Lied tn remov tn g
h.u,uds th.tt pose tht e.lls to
the p.trt JCtp.ult \ health .md
wcll.1re. she added.
As lor tlll lillr home mod lfl Uit!Oll sCI' a.:cs. Laul!hlm
cxpl.nned tht s 1ndudcs -both
Jlltt~J m1 .md cX te11or mud 1f1 -

Ftlson satd the ope nmg
date is 1deal for those who
wtsh tp tl) ou t the new htghway - It ts expected to be
th e peak of autumn loli.tge
colors 111 southeastern Ol11o
The Athens-Darwm po111on ot
U.S 33 ts part of a l.trger comdar project wh1 ch al so 111cludes
the Ravenswood Connector. a
bypass of L111caster n0\1 nc,umg completton. and a byp.tss of
Nelsonville whtch "in the pl.mnmg stages
cattons to tmprove &lt;JccesSIbiluy or mobthty. such '"
ramps, tn spec tlon' ot lurnaces and water he,ucrs.
plumbtn g and electn c repa1 r
mspectton and matntcnaJKe
of water pump&gt;. repd tr or
replacement of w1ndov. .md
dour screens. and repl .lcement or installation nl electnc fuse'
·
For more ml ormat 1on or to
request assiStance th JOU[! h
the A red A. gem.:y on Agmg,
re&gt; tdents ,\re .tsked to contact
the screemng departmen t .n
740-373-6-100 ur tu ll-lrce ,n
1-800-33 1-26++

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
_

l

4 IG ·l ), ·I

&lt;ll f1 R!\(J(f I Wf 'il
!.~l JM~~(It) PI~ I

7

FRI 1011 5/()4 • THUAS 10121!04

Box OHJco Opens @
6:30 PM Ntgh1ly &amp; 12:30 pm
For Sat &amp; Sun Matinees

TEAM AMERICA (R)

1 20 3.20 7 20 &amp; 9.2
FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS (pg13
t ·oo, 3·3o , 1·00 &amp; 9·3o

Asll For Grants Bloln
7'Dgalhar Jlnd Baalgn For
l'tofll l'tojacls f'hal Ala So
Craallva f'hal I Can SaU
'l'llam, So You Can Ban Jl
lob. Wa Can Do II!

RAISE YOUR VOICE (PG)
1·10, 3·20, 7· 10 &amp; 9•20
TA~I (PG13)
1•30, 3:30, 7•30 &amp; 9 30

SHARK TALE (PGi
1·10, 3 10,7 10 &amp; 9•10

Pl&amp;as&amp; £&amp;111&amp; Rlllp. C. "Ed" lvans. ·

..

lnllspsnllenl l'llr Cfllllrty Commlalonsr

...

. : ' ... . :

'

~ """

I'Ll I n 1 8' l

Hll'

LADDER 49 (PG13)
1:15, 3•30, 7•15 &amp; 9 30
THE FORGOTIEN (PG131
1·oo 3·oo,
&amp; g·oo

1·oo

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Authorities capture bank robbery
suspect mistakenly freed
C IN C I:-.JNATI (AP I
Law enlorcement oflic1als 111
Houston have arrestcJ" han'
robbery suspect "ho was
mi stak en ly freed from an
Ohto Jail m Apnl. the FBI
satd
Leonard 0 Dmter, 11. ot
Clrrcmnall. was arrested
Wednesday dt .1 Houston &lt;ill port Dn stcr h.td Jrugs on
h1m and he also a ll ~geJ i y
stru ck " poke ntftcet. the
I'Bl " "d 111 a news re lease .
Dnster was be tn g held at .1
Houston tacthty. u.uthont tes
sa1d
Dmter. James Bl.1ck and
Trevor Woods we re ungmally
Jailed m the Hatllllton County
Just ice Center on Aptil 12 on
charges they held up a PNC
Bdnk
111
Spnng ti e ld

Township . otfiLt.tl s s&lt;nd
Dnster was dlso accused ul
tmng shots at poltL e \\ htle
tr) mg to get aw a)
After the men 11cre tlllltctcu on leuera l h.tn' rohher)
charges. the H,nnthon Count)
riO\CC UIOr VI

;J\

llOIJiied anti

state charge s "ere d"'ppeu
But officers at the J.ul had not
been notJfleJ ol the kdewl
ch.tmcs and rc k.Js eu Dmtcr
.tlld ~131aLk becau se th~ stdtC
charges ~&lt;Jd he en UJS tlll sscd
Ot 11 u itl s d " ' 01 c red the 1r
tmstake abou t 12 hoUJ s later
Woods 11as kept 111 ptl
be c~u...,e there were reuln.h
th,tt lcdcral authontJes "ant ed htm to J,,,c other ch"r~e s .
olfiC I,tls s,11d
Black W.Js still ,tt larue the
I'BI s.tid
~

Ohio receives $28 million
in federal welfare bonus
COLUMBUS
iAP J Ohtu rece1veu a 5&gt;2X mill1on
bonus from the teder.ll gm ernment tor tts work 1110\ mg
people olf "e llare ,md mto
JObs, the most of .my st.Jte 111
th e 2003 awards.
Mmnesota wa; next \I tth
$13 millton . followed h)
New Jersey with $12 million
The state bonu s w1ll be
d1 v1ded among all ~8 coun ties. sa1d Tom Hayes. d1 rec
tor of the Oh1o Department
ot Job and Family Sentces

fhtrt\ -seven ' tates and the
DJStn ci
ol
Culumb l.t
rece11ed ~200 mti iJ on 111
annu&lt;~l bonuses lrom the
U.S Health and Humdn
Sc1 \ 1ce" dnnuunc ed Tue..,Jay
The aw.1rJs went to states
th at succeeded 111 11ndmg
people JObs .md help1ng them
, t.l} employed
The total num ber ol people
on 11clfare w.ts ILJ3.606 111
Septembet. down 7.J percent
from the Ma rch 19lJ2 peak of
7_.8.717. the state smd

Louisiana jury decides on death
sentence for suspected serial killer
BA1DN ROUGE. La (AP)
...,- A Jury took JUSt over 90 mmutes Thursday rught to dectde on
the death penalty for twtce-conVlcted ktller and suspected senal
slayer Derrick Todd Lee, apJ?arently reJecting defense clatms
that he ts mentally retarded
As he was bemg taken tram
the courtroom, Lee shouted.
"God don't sleep," and 'They
don't wanna tell them about the
DNA they took e1ght tunes "
Hts relauves shouted "I love
you," whtle members of h1s vtcllm's famJiy gasped and then
cried and hugged one another.
Jurors earher tn the day heard
conllicti ng testlmonr from
defense and ~rosecutton witnesses on Lees mental condiuon. A 2002 Supreme Court
dectston forbtds the execuuon of
the mentally retarded.
Lee, 35, has been linked by
DNA evidence to the deaths of
seven women from 1998 to
2003 The same Jury that cunvtcted htm Tuesday of tirstdegree murder in the stabbing
and beatmg death of 22-)ear-old
Charlotte MLnT&lt;lY Pace at Baton
Rouge dectded Thursday mght
that he should d1e
In closmg arguments. prosec utor John Smquefield urged
the JUl Y to g1\e Lee the death
penalty. saymg he Wds ,1 "serJ,JI ktll er trymg to h1de bdund
,1 cla1m of ment.1l retard,mon
to esc.1pe the pumshment he
so n ch lv Jeser\es ..
Lee s i1ttomey pleaded lor hJS
client's IJie
" I don ' t knoll ll' h,u ktnd ol
C\ II mu st h.l\ e descended
upon thdt m.tn to produce
\\t)1.tt )'O U "ll\\ I ll tho"e pll'tures i do nLH umlc1 st,md th.tl
e' tl I do not I.Jt hom th.tt C\ tl
But th.1t e1 tl " 111&gt;! 1.kle.ttecl h\

tence for hts Au~ust conv1ct10n
tn the slaymg oluemlyn DeSoto
111 West Baton Rouge Pansh
Gouvter,
a
Drew
Lou isia na State L'mverstty
psychology professor, testified for the defense dunng
the penalty phase
"All uf the reqwrements for
mental retardatton are met for
Mr Lee. preny much wtthout
question,'' he satd.
Gnuv1er smd Lee scored 65
on an IQ test. below the 70
deemed the threshold for mental retardation That test combmed w1th hJS proble.ms
understandmg language. copmg wtth struauons and makmg
plans - showed Lee ts mildly
retarded, Gouv1er said.
Sarah De land . a Tul ane
Cm\erstty
psyc ht atnst ,
agreed th at Lee I ' retarded
She satd Lee told her he pa1d
someone to take the test for
h1 s commercial truck dmer's
license and fatled the rene» a]
test "hen he had to take tt
htm self
But .tfter Deland also &gt;aJd Lee
couldn't meet the qualtticauons
to become a p1pefine1. prosecutors brought m t\\O men who
, md Lee 11orked tor a constnuctJon companv 111 th,u capamv
G.trv Robt llard. Lee\ lormer ,iJpen tsar. s.ud Lee w a,
a goocl ptpef1ttcr 11 ho cou ld
re ad blueprm ts .tnd 1111rked
hts ".1y up on the JOb
Prosecutors also c·alled .t ps) chi,tln st. Ro~11 BLmLhe. ,md .1
ps)cholng1st. Dnn.1ld Hoppe
· OnLe \ nu look at the
enttre plctttrc. Jt\ let') clear
th1 ~

lllMI

I"'

11\lt

n h:O td!h

re tarded ... Hoppe s,ud
•
Hoppe s,uJ the IQ test
Gou\Jer u..,eJ £1\l'.., .L 1~U1 ~e nt
score' tl1.1t silo,\ s Lees JQ coulu
"l1Ckll12. .t llL'tXIIl' 111 .111 .trill.,, ~,Ill\ 11here I rom 62 to 70. and
lw s.i lll . 1 J"lCfSilll \ IQ ,,·ore
attornc)· Bruce L l l .tll ~ st s,11d
Lee ahead) l.tccs .1 lill' sen- llll ~ h l L h.m ~ c tn)m J.1y to da~

DELINQUENT REAL ESTAtE
PROPERTY NOTICE
In compliance with pron;wns of Section
5721.03 of the Re1 i'ed Code of the State of
Ohio. there ~~til be published on Nm ember
12th and NO\emhet I 9. 200-1-. in tht' ne11 spa per. a delinquent l,tnd li st containmg the
description of the propen~ as tt appear' (lll the
tax li st. the name ut the pe rvm in 11 ho-.e n~u11e
the property ts lr-.ted. the amount of taxe-. ,md
penalties due and unpa id
E&lt;1ch person charged 11 tth real propert~
taxes and penaltte' may pa) the full amount
of taxes af the ~1etgs Cottntv. TreasuiTr·s
Office by -1- .00 p m. on N01 ember 5. 200-1-. to
a1oid publicalton
~
To motd addttionalmterest charged on
December I st. a ,taxpayer may enter mto a
written agreement 11 ith the County Treasut cr
to pay one-fiflh ( 1/5) ot the delinquent taxes.
~

Nancy Parker Grueser
Me1g' County Auditor+-- -

�Q

~ageA6

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

.Community Calendar
Public meetings

Monday, Oct. 18
CHAUNCE)' - A Region
14 Youth Cuuncil meeting
Monday, Oct. Ill
wi 11 be heh.l Jt 9 a.m. at the
CHESTER
- Che,ter Athens DepJrtment of Job&gt;
Township BoJrd of Trustees and Family Sen·ice&gt; on State
meet at 7 p.m. at the Che,ter Route 13 in Chauncey.
Town Hall.
RACINE - R:11;in~ Village
Thursday. Oct. 21
Council will meet in rece,sed
POMEROY - The Meigs
session at 7 p.m. at the munici- Coumy Retired Teacher'
_ipal building. Quote lonm on· Association. noon luncheon,
_painting the windows in the at Trinity Congregational
building can be picked up at Church. Second and Lynn
the treasurer's office.
Streets. Anit Moore. vol unLETART
Letart teer coordinator of Holzer
Township Trustees. 5 p.m at Hospice Care tO 'peak. For
the office building.
re servatiom call 992-32 14 or
949-2601.
Wednesday, Oct. 20
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
'Education. 6:30 p.m .. library
conference room.
Sunday, Oct. 17
POMEROY
Homecom ing will be held at
the Morning Star United
MethodiSt Church. There will
Saturday. Oct. 16
be a basket dinner at 12:30
POMEROY - Buirlngham and a sonl! serv1cc 111 the
Modern Woodmen. potluck aftemoon. John Gilmore 1.'
dinner, 5:30 p.m. at the hall. pastor.
Hotdogs. pizza. cider. donuts
CHESTER
·and table servi ce provided.
Homecoming wil l be held at
the South Bethel Comm1111ity
Sunday, Sept. 17
Church on Silver Ridge with
. RAC INE Republican Sundav school at 9 a.m.; basParty meet the candidates ket diimer at noon. and an
program with fre e hotdogs afternoon song service at 1:30
11 :30 to 1 p.m. on Third p.m. Singe rs will be Jerry and
Lisa Queen, Coolville. the
Street.

Martin,, the Christys, and the Ash Street Church, 398
Ke\'in Damewood. Linda Ash St, Middleport, I0:30
Damewood i&gt; pastor.
a.m worship service .

Friday, October 15, 2004

Mom hopes daughter won't
continue to stand by her man

DEAR ABBY: My daughter. "Ci ndy." is 20. She's very
Sunday, Oct. 24
attractive, with a great sense
Saturday, Oct. 23
MIDDLEPORT
LONG BOTTOM - A of humor. Because of those
Homecoming will be held at hymn sing Jeaturing the attributes alone. she could
the A'h Street Church. 398 Golden Tones of Parkersburg,
Dear
Ash St.. Middleport. The will be held at 7 p.m. at the have any terrilic young man ·
Abby
schedule i ndudes: 9:30 a.m. Mt. Oli ve Church. Long she wants. However, Cindy
has instead made up her mimi
Slmday schooL 10:30 a.m. Bottom.
morning worship: noon. dinto "wai t for her man"- who
ner and fellowship, I :30 p.m.
will be , pending the next five
Earthen Ve&gt;Sels; 2 p.m. Rev.
yems in federal pri son for feel reje~ t ed , and that he's
Ca lvin Minnis speaking: 3
selling drugs. They became ashamed of me and our relap.m Glorybound Quartet, forFriday; Oct. IS
eng'
aged just before he went tionship. I fed left out. on the
merly JoyFM Trio.
POMEROY -A staff
member of Senator George 111.
out,ide l"oking in. Any sugCindy went into the Navy ges tion&gt;' -- NEEDS VALIVoi novich wil l hold office
hours from 11 a.m. unt il noon and gr:tduated. She is being DATION 1'-: OREGON
at Meigs Multipurpose Senior deployed to Iraq next month .
Saturday, Oct. 16
DEAR t\L EDS: You have
Center
in
Pomerov. Before she leaves. she will rinalyzed your situation very
POMEROY
Contempomry service, 7 p.m. Opportunity to discuss feder- visit her fiance in pri son.
well. You ARE on the outside
Saturday at the St. Paul al legislation or to seek assisI lo ve my daughter. but this looking in. Whether or not
Lutheran Church.
tance with federal agency has come between us. Our
casework 1ssues. Call Cam relationship isn't the same as your boyfriend and hi s wife
Sunday, Oct. 17
still dwell under the same
Dingus, 44 1-6410.
it used to be. and I am afraid roof. they arc legally married.
MIDDLEPORT- Earthen
that I 1la1c lost her. I have and he is providing for her
Vesse ls wi ll be singing at the
Saturday, Oct. 16
Middleport Chu rch of the
exhau:·dL·d
every means ro nicely. By staying married to
CHESTER -A genealogy
6:30
p.m . fair wi ll be held from 9 a.m. stL&gt;p Cindy from continuing
Nazarene
Refreshments will be served. to 5 p.m. at the Che ster this relationship . Have you his wife. he has '"sured that
if anything happens to him
POMEROY- Revival serfor
beginning
and
Courthouse
any
suggestions
I
might
have
she will be provided for.
VIces will be held at the
researchers. overlooked'1 - FIGHTI NG Since you have asked for a
Enterprise Church 7 p.m . e~perienced
Sunday,
Monday
and Genealogist and vendo r FOR MY DAUGHTER IN suggestion . I suggest you
Tuesdav. Rev. Jim Lambert tables can be reserv ed for NEBRASKA
take your cues from what
will be the sipeake r. There $1 0. The event· is co-sponDEAR FIGHTING: Yes . Ronald does rather than what
will be special music. Arland sored by the Chester- Shade Stop fighting . It will only
he says. and find yourself a
Hi storical Association and the
King is pastor.
drive
yom
daugh
ter
further
boyfriend who is eligible.
Historical
Rob Bedford/Lodi
MIDDLEPORT away.
She
is
going
into
a
war
DEAR ABBY: I recently
Combs will be speaking at Group.
zone. and that kind of experi - read an article about a medence makes people grow up ical center in Maine that has
very quickly. When you r rellt!signell ih qandard hospidaughter returns. she will not ta l gowns to provide e~ t ra
be the same little girl who coverage for p&lt;[tients. (The
wen t away - and her priori- ,tandard gow n. open at the
girl s want to earn their ties and judgments may be back. violate' 'lJJne people 's
include crash dummies.
Eastern .Junior
Silver Award and steps and very dif!Crent than they are religious custotm and everyTroop 1290
Fur the next meet ing. we
The troop is led by Amy plans were discussed. A now. My a.dvi ce is. Don't
will be hav ing a Halloween
one's modesty.)
party. Leaders are Steven Mark worth.
potluck cookout was enjoyed · blow your &lt;:ool and say
I am di,turbeu that modest
Meigs Junior Troop 1276 after the meeting as we U as
and Brenda Grady.
something
now
you
'II
regret
hospital gown' hal'e not been
Meigs Brownie Troop
The troop has had two a water balloon comests.
later.
Ri
ght
now.
your
daughconsidered
a priority before
meetings. Our girl s picked
1015
The troop met on Sept. 26
The troop wi ll be led hy what events they wanted to at the home . of Teri and ter needs all the support she now. A p11ticn t's di ~ nity
&gt;hould be pl"(l t ~ct~d rcgardJac kie Wolf. Meetings wil l attend and put those on a Ambe r Hockman · for a nut can get.
DEAR ABBY: I have been le .'~~ or gendt:t' or rclig10u.-.
begin afte r ~c h ool on calendar. Our girls earned sales training. We are going
the My Be., t badge at our to sponsor the Countywide datin g "Ronald " fm three beliefs.
October
20 at
Meios
Your
tll&lt;lu[.! ht ,.
c
last meeting. We are out Food Drive on Nov. 20 and years, He 'ays llc lo1·es me . pJcase . - OFI-'Et\DED liS:
Elemen tary.
Meigs Brownie
selling nuts 10 earn troop plans were discussed. We will Ron is still marrieu. but THE SOuTH
funds for events. Our meet- be offering a fun-filled day.
Troop 1271
S\Vear~ it\ only ... a he can
DEAR OFFENDED:
The troop is now being ings are 2 to 4 p.m. every
Admiss ion will be 2 to 3 keep his wife on his health Jon"t ~ec it in term:-. of reliformed and their first meet- other Sunday, at Zion non-perishable items to be
in surance as he 'd promised gm u' he liers or g.ender. E.\tra
in~ wi ll be from 2 to 4 p.m. Church of Christ on Ohio donated to God's NET.
We her. Howel'cr. they talk ncry
cnl'cragc ' l10uld be cl\·ailabk
on Oct. I0 at Zion Church 143. Our next meeting is discussed several places to
October I 0. Leauers are Dee have this event and severa l day "a' fricnlb" and 11 ,11e a upon r~que .'ll tu ~m! uth.? who
of Chri't. ~ tu -l p.m
Ea,t.::rn 13nnvnie Trnnp Swartz. Amv Cremeans , girl s are checking into daughter and grctndchi ldren feeb. i..l\'L'fCXpO"('d. bl'Ci.ILI~C
In COI11IIl011.
man y people do. That shou ld
Li sa Meadows, and Cheryl place s to have it.
1316
The troop i., led hy Tma King .
Ron
come
&gt;
here
(to
another
be
r~a~on l.!nough.
Nut Sale s training was
Samp,ou and Liml:1 Putman .
Southern .Junior
completed and the gi rl s state) to l'isi t me often, but 1 ·Dear Ahhy ;,, lt'ritteu by
Soutl1crn Bnm 11 ie Truop
Troop 1204
voted to not take the incen- have never met hi s daugh\er Abigail ~h11 Burell, also
I I Oll
The troop meets from 5 to tatives, but to earn the extra or grandchildren. and he feels known a., Jean11e 1'/iil/ips,
The troop i' leu b) 7 p.m. every other Monday lo .cents on each item .
no urgenc.y to int roduce us. and ora., jiwuded hy her
Dawn a Arno ld and Dchi at the ·Syrac use Commun ity
The troop elected offi- Kon has met my entire fami- mother, l'auliue !'hi/lips.
K ing. ThL· troup lllt:CL\ on Building. The troop had an cers:
Preside nt.
Amber
Write
/Jear
Abby
at
:\1onday.., at the Svracu"e cmergenc·y meeting from 5 Hockman: Vice Pres ide nt. 1\'.
P.O.
www.nearAbby.com
or
I feel that he is lead ing two
Community Center. to 7 p.m. on Sept. 27 at the Lindsey Houser: Secrewry.
The fir't fal l meeting Syracu'e
Comm unit y Ashley Romines: Treasurer. li''" and is happy in both Box 69./40, Los ,\,fides, Cil
was held on Sept. 'i with Building . Only t·our girls Stacy Macomber; Quiet worlds . I. lln the other hand. 911069.
1~ girl&gt; attend ing . Girh were able to attend. Tl1ese Girl , Hailey Ebersbach.
worked on .s igning card" gi rls reviseu the troop ru les,
Several - girls will be
to put in ch rysc111th em unb 'et dues. anfl decided on the attending the "Make ' Em
for Grandparent' Day.· and Purple Pansies as their troop Laugh" and girl s signed up
also earned the Ma nners ~re st for this year. Leader for "Baby Thi nk It Over" as
Subscribe today • 992-2155
Try-i~,
remmded them that _they well as "Pamper Sampler."
Sept. II was a l'ery busy needed a three-nng binder . Leaders
are
Jerrena
day. as 17 girL- partic ipated and to te bag fo r the year. Ebersbach
and
Teri
in the Racine Fall Fe&gt;tiva! The tote wil l be decorated at Hockman. Meeting places
Parade. Girl Scout 2004 Fall the next meettng._
.
vary, so · for more informa\~\ ~-~ ·--=-c-·--·····
Kickoff Dance at the
Thc next meeting Will be tion regardin g tim es and
... -- -. - --=··---·-"'?I
Syracuse Community Center. Oct. II at the same plac_e. dates call 992-7747 after 4
foll owed by pizza , at the At this meetmg, offi cers wtll p 111 '
I
Racine American Legion be elected for the next two r:·=·========='~
\ ANNIVERSARY
picnic ·she lter. and a Sept. months. The leader went
I I Tribute at Southern High . over the nut sales that begin
School. where the troop pre- Oct. 1 and t goes until Oct
sented the American Flag 17. The troop makes 65
and led in the Pledge of cents per item sold.
AND MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
Allegiance.
Girls want to go to three
Sept 12. Grandparent&gt; events &lt;:oming up in October
BEST PRICES,
Day. Troop I 120. alo ng and November. They were
BIGGEST SALE
wit h
siste r
Southe rn told that they wo uld have to
SAVINGS TO CELEBRATE
Junior Troop 1204. de liv- pay half on the events. The
ALL MONTH LONG
ered · over 200 chr ysan_lJle- troop wi11 be in the
mums with cards to the Sternwheeler Parade on Oct.
We've got a year's worth of savings
residents of Rocksprin gs 2. Refreshments were served
In
store on all your favorite flooring .
and Overbrook nurs1ng and a small craft was made.
.S:erving
homes. Girls aho sa ng Troop Leaders are Shirley
Meigs
VIsit Ingels Carpet to experience
songs and ta lked with re s- Coglir and Phyllis Deem.
County
a sale you can't afford to miss.
ident s at Overbrook.
The
troop
meets
on
for
over
We've got selections for every room,
On Sept. 23. girl' and par- Monday' at the Syracuse
~zo
Ye11rs!
every style, every occasion.
ent' received information Community Center.
about upcoming nut/ candy
Cadette Troop 1208
sab Oct. !-17th. On Oct.
The troop met on Sept. 5
DON'T MISS THIS ONCE-A-YEAR
2nd. 16 girls participated in at the home of Jerrena and
Home Oxygen
EVENT DURING THE . ENTIRE
the Sternwheeler Parade. Hailey Ebersbach. We went
Portable
Oxygen
MONTH OF OCTOBER!
where G1rls Scout' received bricll y over what we wanted
Free Back Up Oxygen
'econd pi&lt;Lce.
to Jo for the year. Several
Berber Carpet
VInyl Flooring
Portables Delivered when
Starting At
Starting At
you want thero
«·ti~l 0 NI~~P-~
7 days a week 24 hrs. service
IJtmlitli'd * Experienced • Dedicated~
Complete line of respiratory
per squ'l\re yd.
.
Fair &amp; Honest
per square yd.
products
·
Nebulizers, C-pap, Ventilators
.and much·more.

Other events

Church services

Homecomings
/Reunions

Clubs and
organizations .

Meigs Girl Scout Diary
POMEROY - Girl Scouts
across the county are selling
nuts and other snacks for
fund raising. This sale started on Oct. 1 and ends 0L't.
17.
Future events
There will be "- Juliette
Bonfire/Candleligh t
Low
Vigil on Oct. 30. Girl s arc
to line up at Mill en iu m
Teleservices and will walk
to the Pomeroy Municipal
Park at 6:30 p.m. The fee is
$3. which includes an event
·patch. Please dre» accllrding to the weather and bring
· a tl ash l ight. Refresh mem'
will be provided. DeaJiine
.for registration i' Oct. ~2.
and are to be mailed 111
. Shirley Cogar. Treasure r.
Terrie Houser is chairman.
The annual foou drive will
be sponsored by Cadeue
Troop 120R. The event will
be held from 2 to 4 p.m. on
Nov. 20 at God\ N.ET
The troop will provide a
Game Day. Adm ission will
be two to three items of
non-perishab le itetm and S I
for a patch. The registration
· deadline is November I and
all reg istrations must be sent
to Shirley Cogar. Treasurer.
Eastern Daisy Troop
1334
The troop meets at 1he
: Tuppers Plains VFW bui ld; irtg from 6 to 7 p.m. on
: Tuesdays. We have plan' to
attend Coolvil le Oktoberfest
on Oct. 16. We are planing
. on visting their special train; ing place for the firefighter.
:Thi s training will also

Birth

:announced

Olivia Grace Burgess

.
.
;
:
-

TUPPERS PLAINS
Angie and Kevin Burge;,
announce the birth of their
first chi l(l . a gi rl. Oli1·ia
Grace Burge".
The infant wa' born un
July 30 at Aultman Ho&gt;pital
in Canton. She .weighed 7
12
oun ce'.
pound s,
Grandparents are Gary &lt;111d
Roberta Mu rphy of Tupper'
Plain , , and Phil and Susan
Burgess of Syracu se. Grea tgrandmother
''
ll c11d
Murph) of Tuppers Pi a"''

Lava building up rock at Mount St. Helens,
but no sign of big explosion brewing
SEATTLE (AP) - More
lava emerged Thursday on
the crater tloor of Mount St.
Helens, expanding a rock
formation building on lhe
volcano's old lava dome.
Airborne observers have
~een "vigorous jets" of ash
and steam near the new
growth, said Tina Neal of
the U.S. Geological Smvey.
Aerial photographs suggest
some uplift on one side of
the emerging rock ·"fin."
But
seismic
ac ti vity
remained low Thursday, suggesting that molten rock , or
magma. is reaching the SLtrface without significant
obstacles, r&lt;Jeal told a news
conference at the Gifford
Pin chot National Forest
headquarters in Vanco uver,
Wash ., about 50 miles south
of the mountain.
The new formation has
grown to abo ut 400 feet
high and l.fiOO feet in diameter. Nc:tl said. The red-hot
stone, blanketed with feathery ash. exceeds 1.300
degrees Fahrenheit in places.
Because the crater tloor
slopes downward to the
north, the new formation on
th e hi gher so uth side is
abo ut level with the 1.000foot top of the old dome.
which was created in the six
years I(IIlowing Mount St.
Helens' devastating 1980
eruption .
The current dome-building
began with intense sci~m ic
activity Sept. 23. which
indicated ma ~ma was breaking through ~ rock. Several
steam eru ptions fol lowed,
and geologists detected lava

PageA7

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

at the surface late Monday.
Gas-rich magma can cause
explosive eruptions, but
samp les' taken thi s week
have detected little carbon
dio~ide or hydrogen sulfide,
Neal said. There was no
'•
evidence, such as increasing
earthquakes or ground detormation, to suggest pressure
was bui lding, she said .
So far this fall, the most
visible bursts at St. Helens
have involved steam and
small amounts of ash as
rai nwater and glacier melt
combined with hot rock in
the crater of the 8.634-foot
peak.
As the dome-building continues , it cou ld produ'l:e
small explosions with little
warn ing, Neal said.
A large explosion is still
possible, but is among the
least likely scenarios. she
said. · Such a blast co uld
'end a column of steam and
gritty ash ten s of thousands
of feet up and out. posing
potential problems fo r airplanes and road traffic.
Trails within a five -mile
radius of the peak remained
closed. with the alert level
at mid-range . The Forest
Service. however. reopened
some roads and trails near
th~ mountain.
Mount St. Helen s has
been the most active volcano in the lower 48 states
and Canada during the past
4.500 years. Its 1980 erupti on hurled debris nearly 20
miles north , killed 57 people A hel icopter is dwarfed as it fl ies past a rising column of
and paralyzed much of the steam be ing emitted from Mount St. Helens Thursday. at
Northwest
with
gritty. Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Mon ument, Was h. (AP
machine-clogging ash .
Photo/E laine Thompson)

Companies cancel flu v~ccine clinics because
of shortage, distribute advice instead
NEW YORK (A P) -

The forced to cancel its program Medicine found. Vacci nation
12.3 work day
ing many companies to can- !ish an article in its newslet- absences and 2.5 doctor viscel inoculation programs and ter about how to avoid th~ its per I00 people who get
switch to educati ng workers flu, using information from the· shots.
about preventing influenza the Centers for Disease
The nation 's tlu vaccine
Control and Prevention.
instead.
supply was cut in half last
Recommendations include week after Briti sh regu la tors
While employers expect
more sick days this tlu sea- washing hands frequently unex pectedly suspended the
son, most do not believe it and staying home when sick, license of Chiron Corp., citwill. have a debilitating said
spoke sman
John ing manufactu ri ng proble ms
effect. That is because so McNeilly.
at a Liverpool plant. Chiron
few people get vaccinated ·· "lt is a fine line," he said. was supposed to supply the
even when th ere isn' t a "We don't want them to stay United State' with 46 million
shonage, and only a. small home if they just have a snit- to 48 million doe s of flu vacpart of the population actual- tle."
cme . .
"There will be abseineeism
ly gets the tlu every year.
Flu vaccine programs are
Walter Indu stries Inc., a popular with employers : The and there may be strains at
homebuilder in Tampa, Fla.. shots save a company an compan ies," said Shelly
had offered
its 5.200 average of $ 13.66 per person Wolff, national practice
employees free flu ' hots for vacci nated. a 2001 study in leader for health and producthe last seven years bLtt was · the Archives of Internal tiv it y at the consulting finn

flu vaccine shortage is fore- thi s year. In stead, it will pub- prevents

Proud to be apart of your life.

Watson Wyatt Worldwide.
Wolff pointed out that only
7 percent to 20 percent suffer
from the tlu in any given
season, according to the
CDC. Plus, she said no one
knows how severe the season
will be or where it will be
most prominent.
Another mitigating fa~tor
is that few people actually
participate in inoculation
programs . Consulting firm
Towers Perrin found that
when its client s offer flu
shots, only 5 percent to 15
percent of employees take
advantage of them. The CDC
said only 25 percent of people over the age of 5 months
got a tlu shot last year. ·

Friday, October 15; 2004

Judge rejects bid by Jackson
defense to throw out
indictment, reveals details
SANTA MARIA . Calif.
(AP) - The judge in the
Michael Jackson mole~tation
case Thursday rejected a
defense bid to throw out the
indictment in a ruling that for
the first time publicly detailed
the conspiracy charge agains1
the pop star.
Judge Rodney S. Melville
also turned down defense
requests to exclude evidence
seized from a private investigator's otlice and Jackson's
Neverland Ranch estate
northwest of Santa Barbara.
Melville rejected defense
arguments that the indictment
should be th rown out because
of aggressive conduct by
District
Attorney
Tom
Sneddon during grand jury
proceeding s. insufficient evidence, and fl awed lega l
instructions given to the
grand jurors.
Melvi ll e said in hi s rulin g
th at the conspiracy charges
against Jackson and others
appeared to involve events
that allegedly occurred following a February 2003 television documentary in which
Jackson said he lets ·unrelated
children sleep in his bedroom.
Recapping the prosecution's theory of events, the
judge said in this ruling that
Jack so n and . hi s advi,se"
wanted to make a rebuttal
video with the boy Jackson is'
accused · of molesting. a
young cancer patient who
appeared in the ori ginal documentary.
Jackson invited the boy and
his family to Miami, then
·'personally explained to the
mother that her children were
in danger" and urged her to
coo perate with his filmm akers. The filmmakers · asked
that she sign documents
authorizin g a lawsuit against
the BBC. which tirst aired the
original documentary.
In the following days, the
family
was flown
to
Ne\lerland. where the boy and
his brother "were invited to
sleep ·in the Jackso n bedroom." The family 's movements allegedly were limited
and their phone calls were
monitored . The rebuttal video
was filmed , and pas spons and
visas were obtained for · the
family to travel to Brazil.
The family at one point left
the Neverland ranch, but "were
strongly encouraged to return,'"
the rultng said. They did, but
when the mother later left . her
children remained behind and
she was not able to see them
"unti I she concocted the ruse
that their grandfather was ill
and needed to see them."

Security personnel allegedly were given a written directive that one of the children
should not leave Neverland.
· Melville said the alleged events
could support the view that extortion. false imprisonment and
child abduction occurred as a
result of a conspiracy.
Jackson ha s pleaded not
guilty to child molestation .
conspiracy and administering
an intoxicating agent, alcohol .
Melville has ordered extraordinary secrecy in the case.
citing Jackson's celebrity.
News organizations, including
The Associated Press, have
gone to c!lurt to try to ease the
restriction,. which include a
lack of access to &gt;orne hearings. the withholding of the
identities of Jackson's alleged
conspirators, a sweeping gag
order and the sealing of all
case document~.

Perhaps the most unusual
restriction came at Thursday's
hearing. where reporters and
other members of the public
were prohib ited from talking
in court. even before the proceedings. Bailiffs re scinded
the rule after a midmorning
break. saying there had been a
misunderstanding . They did
not explain what it was.
Also Thursday. Melville
reje cted defense effort&gt; to
e~c lud e ev1dence seized from
Neverland Ranch and from
the office of private investigator Bradlev Miller. who was
present for the filming of the
rebuttal video.
Jackson's attorneys said evidence se ited from Miller' s
oftice was inadmissible under
the attorney-cl ient privilege of
conlidentiality because Miller
worked for former Jackson
attorney Mark Geragos.
The judge ruled that authorities did not know of the relationship when they staned the
search. and that the privilege
would not app ly if there was
probable cause that evidence
of a crime would be discovered in Miller' s office.
The judge al~o agreed with
prosecutors that most items
seized in a November search
of Neverland Ranch were
taken properly. He said 16 of
the 150 items- including letters, pictures, recordings and
computers - would not be
admitted as evidence because
they were not covered by a
search warrant and were not
in authorities' plain sight.
The judge also set a Nov. 4
hearing on a defense request
to have Sneddon removed
from the case, and a Nov. 5
hearing for a defense request
th in Jackson's bail be lowered.

H 0rsed~wr. carriase rides, pre-fl'!~ster~ 'tLur, catered ~0rrest~!e dirr.er

ar&lt;d 3 c!eter W~0-;-Jur.r.it t~at will ~eep I:J0ll suessir.s ur.til t~e end!

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992-7028 MOHAWK

·"

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• October 29, 200~ OR October 30, 200~ ·beginning at 6:30p.m.
• YOU become the detective, interrogate suspects and solve the dastardh deed!
I

• Call for resmations · limited seals available!
• 565/ person for this chilling experience
• for more information please call, (30~) 673-~3~0, Ext. 1326
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I
I

Please complere.fonH. derach

I

a11&lt;/send 11·irh paymei!T ro :

I
I eNamc: --- - - - - - 1

e City, State &amp; Zip! .

I eAddress:
I
I
l · eTelephone number:
I
1

I

eNumber of attendees &amp; preferr.ed date:

A!ake all check1 pawhie to thePleawmt Valier Hq.1pital Foundation .\la.Welt'alll and Ii.\'il filt' (li'o&lt;tcn:pted .d.~
·.41/plliceed\·grJto tlw Foundation tofimd thehandicupaccessiblenwerrdenin 11'&lt;1\fJitJject. Ct!l'/1111 o11i1e. Adulr.s onll:

PLEMflllT vALLEY HoSP!iAL
C6/1f1UIJ!iY Rtl.AUOIIS
/1URDER 11YSitRV
D!JIIItR
.
25'20 vALf..tY Dfttvt P6!JI'r PLtMAIIf, 'IN 25'5'5'0
'

L------------------~------------------------------------------~
~-

.

.

'

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

____,....,. ........ _,

_____

.., -

�•

Page AS _

•

•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

_F riday, October 15, 2004

Local Stocks
ACI- 34.00
AEP- 31.79
Akzo - 34.94
Ashland Inc. - 54.89
BBT- 39.08

Friday, October 15, 2004

~·~~ ~~ooa®- -

BLI -11.43
Bob Evans- 25.96
BorgWarner - 40.31
City Holding- 32.01
Champion - 3.63
Charming Shops -7.24
Col- 36.01
DuPont- 42.66
DG -18.49
Federal Mogul - .1760
Gannett- 81.18
General
Electric_

)

address and receive ihe name
SPRINGFIELD (APl
Undecided voters in Clark and address of a registered
County are about to be deluged Clark County voter not affiliatwith letters from overseas. pan ed with a political party. The
of a campaign by a British paper received more than 3,000
newspaper to urge people requests the lirst day, said feaaround the world to trv to intlu- tures editor ian Katz.
The web sire states that
ence the presidential election.
The Guardi~n of'London is each leller-w riter is free to
offering a three-day trip to the support either candidate,
western Ohio county for the while notin g a poll it conducted showed 4 7 percent of
four best letters.
The. paper pubtished a multi- Britons bac k Kerry and _16
page section Wednesday urging percent su pport Bush.
Marcia Frank of Springfield
non-Americans lo speak up about
said
a letter from abroad would
who should be elected. Under the
headline, "Football and mowers," · make little di tlerence to her.
"I would pretty much disthe paper describes the county 30
miles west of Columbus as a cou nl it, beca use I don't think
good example of American life anyone who doesn't live in
ihe U.S. can fully understand
outside big cities.
The paper calls it a signifi- the issues," she said.
cant swing county in a signifKatz said the newspaper does
icant swing state. It notes that not think a letter-writing camin 2000, Democrat AI Gore paign will sway the election.
"I th ink with this little project,
won the county by 324 votes.
By logging onto the paper's ·it would just he great if it led to
Web site, www.guardian.co.uk, a bunch of people in the States
anyone can put in an e-mail having a little more awareness,

perhaps, of just how huge the
effect of American policy is on
the rest of the world," he said.
'The United States is the most
powerful country by far.
Domestic decisions are in fact
huge decisions that oould affect
everyone in tl1e world. In many
ways this election will have more
impact in our countries than our
own political elections do."
The Clark County Board of
Elections shows 50,754 undeclared voters. Katz said the
Guardian received about
36,000 names and addresses.
Linda Rosicka, director of
the Clark County Board or'
Elections, said the paper paid
$25 for a "flat file," a list of all
registered voters in the county_
Anyone can buy the list, arid
purchasers can extract whatever segment of voters they want.
The Springfield News-Sun
received about a dozen e-mails
about the campaign. most of
which expressed some degree
of outrage over the contest.

. ,I

1 SOuthe'l! at Watertbnl

·:~

'. •.·

BY BuTcH CooPER

,

' Giacl&gt; itt Ohto Volley Christian
i,

'&gt;:~-·· Yo..,.

'

T

.

.·

Gl~ lot 01119 Valley Chrlqilan ·
l ......,. ···'

' ., , Satu····"""'" ,., '

: 1 !~~'oil* Coll~!ty .
i)JIUa "' ,._c~my · at . $E()'AL
'¢hampiOO&amp;hlpo (at Rio Grande)

River VBIIty 81 q/C M~ (at Falrlf!lld)

36.14
OVBC - - 31.25
Peoples - 26.43 _
Pepsico - 4 7.85
Premier - 9.10
Rocky Boots - 18.88
RD Shell - 52.58
Rockwell - 38.00
Sears- 37.09
SBC- 26.35
AT&amp;T -15.37
USB· 28 .74
Wendy's - 34.35
Wai-Mart - 52.10
W9rthington - 20.06
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

' '

steady around 49. Winds will
be 10 to 15 MPH from the
southwest.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.) ·
It should continue to be
cloudy. Temperatures will
linger at 48 with today's low
near 0.17 inches. The high for of 4 7 occurring around
today of 54 will occur early 6:00am. Winds will be I0 to
morning as temperatures 15 MPH from the southwest.
diminish to 48 by 9:00am.
The temperature will then
Saturday, October 16
climb back to 49 later this
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
morning. Winds will be I0 to
It should be a cloudy morn15 MPH from the southwest.
ing. Temperatures will hover
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
at
46. Winds will be 10 to 15
It's going to be a breezy
and cloudy afternoon. Thera MPH from the southwest
is a slim chance that it could turning from the west as the
rain . Temperatures will stay morning progresses.
Afternoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
near 50. Winds will be 15
It will continue to be
MPH from the southwest.
cloudy.
Temperatures will
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Cloudy evening. There may remain around 48. Winds will
be
a
brief
sprinkle. be 10 to 15 MPH from the
Temperatures
will
hold west.

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

, Ohio

••. Yoli~Vbiill .
Valley CMsttarr at

~··
Schedule IUUbf/let to
1

·,.

Second-season less than a·week away
bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

Pt. Pieliant-al F l a . Wt~ 81 ~ 'ltall
. fi•utnon at Buffalo
.r.
•
'SOccer

JPMorgan (formerly Bank
Friday, October 15
One) -38.53
Morning
(7 a.m.-Noon)
Kmart- 86.12
A cloudy morning. There
Kroger- 14.90
could be a sprinkle or two.
Ltd - 22.97
The rainfall should end
NSC- 30.95
around 7:00am with total
accumulations for this event
Oak Hill Financial

'

·

- t.tlller
~·~
.
"' llaatern
'·

58.19

British paper solicits letters to Ohio voters

l

. ~' Poliltat-V&amp;Hey
litnlilll 'I ~"" Gallla · ·

GKNLY- 3.900
Harley Davidson

Clark County (Ohio) Board of Elections Director Linda Rosi cka ho lds examples of computer
media c*taining public records of voter registration rolls in Springfield. The Guardian, a
London-b _~d newspaper. bought a copy of the information last week so they could begin a letter-writin campaign where British readers write Clark County voters before the Nov. 2 to try to
influence the U.S. presidential election in this hotly contested area.

., ·'-~j·~

"· Gafla AcatiOm)- a1Win111

33.46

(AP Photo/Springfield News-Sun, Teesha McClam)

.

t.

High School Volleyball

he seco nd season of hi gh
sc hool volleyball begins in
_le ss than a week.
The first section al tournament ga mes in southeastern
Ohio are scheduled to be g in
Tue sday with are a teams fi g ht ·
ing for the right to advance to
th e district, r eg ion~! and per-

ha p s eve n th e 't a te tournament.
In Division II, No. 4 seed Gallia
Academy will face Vin ton County,
a fifth-seed, 7:30 p.m., Oct. 21 at
Well ston.
The winner of that ga me wil l
play either top-seeded Warren,
Jackson or Waverly in the section al
final s 2 p.m. , Oct. 23, also at
Well ston.
Another battl e at Well sto n
between
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic Conference and Tri -Valley

Conference teams will take place 4
p.m ., Oct. 23 when No. 7 Meigs
takes on No. 2 Mari ett a.
The winner will meet the winner
of the 5: 15p.m. game between No.
2 Northwest and No. 6 Athens at 7
p.m.
The Division II district tournament is sc heduled for Oct. 27 and
30 at Southeastern Hi gh School.
In Di vision Ill . River Valley
earned a bye with a No. 3 seed and
will await the winner of 7: 15 p.m.,

Oct. 21 contest between No. 6
Federal f-lockin g and No. II Oak
Hill.
With the hyc. lhc Rai ders have
already earned a spnt 111 the sectional finals and wil l face ei1her the
Lancers or Oaks 6:30 p.rn. Oct. 23
al Vinton Cnunt) High Sehoul.
If the Raid ers win. the y wi ll
advance lu the district tournament
heginning Oct. :2:-: at Wa\'erly.

Please see Tourney, Bl

ACSI

cl)6pg6 •/

College Football

Eastern wins
final TVC match
GLOUSTER
- ·
The
Eastern Eagles concluded its
Tri-Valley Conference volleyball schedule with a convincing three-game sweep of
Trimble 25-14, 25-11 , 25-10.
The Eagles ( 15-4, 13-3
TVC) finished perfect against
the Hocking Division in 2004
and also concluded its regular
season with a 73-of-74 service performance.
Jillian
Brannon
and
Brittany Bissell paced EHS
with 14 ami 12 points ,
respectively, while Morgan
Weber added 14 kills and
·
seven points.
Erin Weber led the defen~ ive attack with eight blocks
and Jennifer Hay man contributed three blocks ami
eight points in the win.
Darcy Winebrenner had 12
kills for Eastern, with'
Jennifer Armes and Chelsea
Young adding nine and one
pojnts, re , pective ly, to· -tHe ·
victory.
The junior varsity squad
also won its finale with a
three game thriller 25-21. 2325, 16-14.

Tee Times for
2004 Riverside
Pro-Am

Lancers
take
down
'Does
Bv Scon WoLFE

Sports correspondent
STEWART - The Federal
Hocking Lancers made it a
clea n 'weep uf di\'t&gt; iun foe
Southern 1X - IIJ 1 Tl1ursdav
nigh l by claim·ing 1he TriV a I I e y
Conference
Hnck1n~

DiY i~ i on ma tch
in three dose
sets 25-16. 2519. and 25-23.
Federal
Hock ing took a
'----- R-Iffl_e_ ___J :; -0 lead in 1he
fir~t £amt? arid
held a -+-5 point margin until
Soulhc rn pull ed closer at 1-+12. Fede ral once again pulled
away tor the 25-111 game one
Will.

South ern t oo~ a 5--l lead in
Wisconsin running back Anthony Dav1s (281 is hit with a tackle by Ohio State free safety Nate Salley 121) in the fourth quarthe
second game. hut Ash ley
ter of the Badgers' 24-13 victory over the Buckeyes Saturday 111 Columbus. Trailing on the play are Ohio State's Dante Wllitner '
John
son scurcd six strai~ht to
(9) and Anthony Schlegel (51). (AP)
give Federal Hocking a' 10-5
lead and F~deral marched on
to the 2'i-ll) win. The final
game wa\ exL· iti ng tn the finis h. After Southern led 16-12.
Federal wen t up llJ - 16 on
sn·cn 'traig h1 Terri Wo lfe

OSU defense hopes to take~
out frustration on Hawkeyes

. Sunday, Oct. 17
. Play will be in eightsomes
with times 15 minutes apart
Time Team Pro or Captain
9 a.m.
Chris Black.
Valley View GC, Lancaster
sen · e~.
(Ohio); Cory George. Valley
Federal Hocking "ent up 20View GC. Lancaster' (Ohio)
lo
. hut Southern's Kns1 1 i n~
9:30 Tad Tomblin. Berry
BY RUSTY MILLER
after bemg knocked back on thei r backer Anthonv Schlegel said. " You
\\..' i]ilarn ' ga\ e Southern one
Hills CC. Charleston; Randy
Associated Press
reall y c~m · L It 's don~- tButl we're
heels by back-to-hack losses.
last hurah and a 22-20 lead.
Jewell , Portsmouth elks.
"We need to do a beller job ~'P front, goi ng to use the fm'irati on of the lwo
Tkd
m 2.\-2.1 . .A.shlc·1 J0h1lsc1n
Portsmouth (Ohio)
maybe go back to old school and just losses and carry it over to doing everyCOLUMBUS
Two
games
ago
posted the 2.flh a-nd game
9:45 Charlie
White.
get nasty and kick peoples ' butts," thin g it takes to prepare fo r lowa.-Northwestern &lt;;pened things up and tight end Ryan Hamby said.
points f,,r the· Lancer win.
Ashland (Ky.); Steve Koreski.
~ol1h\veste rn came into its f!ame
had Oh10 State s defense guessing all
Woodridge
Plant.,
Tnri Wolfe led Federa l
That's particularly tme on a defense with Ohio State on Oct. 2 hal' ing' won
night.
Last
week,
Wisconsin
dominatParkersburg
Hncking 1\'ilh 2tl points.
that was a bankable commodity the j ust one nf it s fou r games. The
ed both lines and run at will.
10 a.m.
Kenny Frye.
Ashle\ Ca,tlt- had I~ and
past 2' : years but has been more of an Wildcat&gt;. had been porous on defense
Heading into Saturday's game at undependable liability the past two and erratic on offense.
Orchard Hills, Barboursville;
KcJ,e\- Lac·kc -l had 12 .
Iowa, the Buckeyes are trying to chanKen Lacy. Logan CC. Logan
weeks. '
nel their anger into ; t surly attitude
Please see Southern, Bl
10:15 Craig
Burner.
Please see Buckeyes, Bl
"I don ' t dwell on (the losses)." lineEdgewood CC, Charleston:
Harold Wallace, Portsmoth
Elks, Portsmouth (Ohio)
10:30 John
Abbott,
Riverview CC, Madison; Paul
Wackerly, Congress Lakes,
Canton (Ohio)
10:45 John
Bentley, ,
Columbus (Ohio) ; John
participants to
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BY RUSTY MILLER
nus Bob Kni ght, Geiger
field (.1 team .
McDonald, Brookeside CC.
bwalters@ mydatlytribune.com
Associated Press
hir,ed Th ad Matta away
V inton
Columbus (Ohio)
from in-slate powerhou se .
Counll' won
II a.m.
S c o t t
Xavier.
.
ALBANY - Th~ M ~ig&gt; girls
the le,(m ,·vent
Davidson, ' Parkersburg CC.
COLUMBUS _:__A ll IS
Now
Matt
a,
who
has
cro»
co
untry
t~am
won
the
\\-ith ;1 ...,l'llre of
Parkersburg; Tony Brown .
new for the Ohio State
200-+
TriValev
Conference
Iitie
,
the
-+~.
ht"~ltin!!
never
fa
iled
to
make
Ironton CC. Ironton (Ohio)
Buckeyes. who are still
\londa;
at
Like
Snowden
with
Bt'lrrc h\ three
NCAA tournam ent durin g
II: 15 Steve Slater, Berry
trying to find their way
a
one-p-oint
win
over
Alexander.
r
ll 1 n ., . .,
one
yea
r
al
Butl
er
and
Hills CC. Charleston; Barney
after a turbulent summer.
The
Marauder'
won
1he
e1
ent
A lc\ander \\ ~~ :-.
three at Xavier, is trying
Thompson , Eagle Ridge .
"That' s a beautiful
\l.'ith a ..,.,:ore of -+0 in the four~
th
ird "ith a
l-ouisa (K v.)
to gauge ju st how far th e
thing about getting a new
leam li eld.
"l..' l1t\.~ d t
.:'iK.
Samar
II :30 Jonathan
Oliver.
Buckeyes have fal len and
Ashlel' Samar t~-1:281 and
coac hin g staff: It 's a
11 Iitie \\ellston
Albany (Ohio): Jason Kerns :
what needs to be done to
Me~han· Clelland i24:'-l.1l were
compl etely new start," se lec tio n
I lJl) I clc-ka tc~ cl
and . i11ep1 rebuild a once prouu proEric Fi shette, Groveport
n,m1ect
second
team
AII-TVC
Trimhk
1 I () _1),
' forward Matt Sylvester defe nse .led tO a 6-10 con· (Ohio)
"ram.
"ith
li
ni
shes
of
,ixth
and
se1
tO!
flHl
rth
sa id Thursday. "There's fercncc re cord. Fans were e ,
II :45 Bobby
Kincaid .
"!
bel
ieve
this
:
peo
pl
e
cntll.
re\pcctil·c!v.
pl;
t
~'C
that sayin g. that you only disgusted bv the team's
Cliffside, Gallipolis (Ohio):
Ca1 Ia Lee ( 25'50 ) missed all R, '" \\'c II
ge t one chatKe to make a me- fi rst piay, stayin~ really want Ohio Sta t.e to
Tim Ailes. Columbus (Ohio)
l
ca~tie
honors by t \1'0 sp&lt;ll&gt;. lin\\a'
.thl..· tnp
do
well."
.
t&lt;.latla
sa
id.
first impression., The fact away fro m Value City "We've tried . to do as
12 p.m.
Jim Stemble.
i ,shln~ 12th in the ~0-runner
tnd11 IU&lt;I.tl linthat we gel to make a firsl Arena by th e thousand s. · much "' we can tn dnnil
Pickaway CC. Circleville
ri1cc .- Ashkj· Sava~~ 126:'i6l
hher for ~ki~ ...
im
pressio
n
is
g
rea
l."
ll111sh~d fm111h fnr \ l ei~, and
(Ohio); Clyde Cunner, The
II ilh ,I 2() 2'1. .
But that was just a rircMajor co ll ege basket · lude to th e troub les th~1t up the interest again and
15th tl\·erall. and 'ta"ic
Greenbrier, White Sulphur
plac·in~
llim
t the m - exci ted . We
PatteNlll
1
~lJ:
15
)
rounded
,,ut
ball teams hi t the court rocked the program in th e ge
t_
HlC
..,pot
nut
nf
Springs
k·now t11is prngr~un·s not
th e - 1\· innin~ elTon" ith a J2nd.
\11-T\'C
stalus
for their first official .summer, when coach Jim where
12: 15 Phillip
Stemble.
we want it. but the
placc linisl1.
Clelland
in II th .
practice on Saturday. 0' Brien was sudden ly goou thin g is it ·s ·not ·
. Pickaway CC. Circleville
Hayley
\1ethen)
ot
Gram .-\rnnld
(Ohio); Doug · bon, Jr ..
Finall y gett in g bac.k to fired after athletic dirccAlexander
won
the
girls
cven1
wherc
it
was
2
day&gt;
ag9.
i
20
:
~h
)
was
nn11\1r
Ihe mamon
Ironton CC. lronton .'(O hio )
work gives· the Buckeyes tor And y Geiger said The guys 'hav e done a
with
a
time
of
22:57.
and
gold
with
a_
!5th-place
lin- 12:30 Corky W11hroe. Ri ver
a chance to take th e first O'Br ,cn admitted paying greal job workino . That ;s
n1e
Spm1ans·
(47
points
l
fin
ish. anJ G&lt;Jr\ Znn~hctii r22·1 J4 )
Bend, Ashland (Ky. I; Ty
steps towa rd blotting n ut a recruit $6.0HO. Six
"'i.
s
heJ
ahead
of
Vinton
Coun11
nn111ded
m1 1~tl ll' \tl~~~ . . l'nPn m
Roush, Ri vers ide GC, Mason
the hitt e r memories ' nf week&gt; later. after , going tn he the bi g cha lt56)
~ind
Well&gt;ton
(6-l
)
for
scc'.2 ht place'.
_ '
" lc11ge for us . In keep · this
J 2:45 Brad Westfali.Tygart
la~ t year\ cmba rra~sing n&lt;ftio n wi Jc search· 1hat
nnd place in the girb Jivi,iniL
Chn,
Rc1
c'
&lt;
'I
Bel pre wnn
Lakes,
Grat'ton:
Dave
14- 16 season.
On the bovs side. · tht· till' htn-.. L'\L'Ilt v.nh a llllK' ol
th
ough
t
wou
ld
many
Lawrence, Charleston
Sel fi sh play. J1ll!\r , !lOt hegin and end with alum -' Please see Hoops. Bl
Marauders did nrll ha1C enough I '1 :21l .-

Prep Cross Country
Buckeyes - hopef~l before
start Qfonew hoops season Meigs girls win TVC

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�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

. Friday, October 15,

www. mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 15,

2004

I' il I;.,,

www.mydailysentind .~·um

2004

These Bengals, Browns don't know the riValry :Cardinals take 2-0 series lead
BY JOE KAY
Associated Press

CINCINNATI
Paul
Brown's
revenge .
Pat
Mclnally's catch. Bernie
Kosar's
heave.
Sam
Wythe's taunt.
The state's pro football
rivalry is full of great
moments. the kind that stir
the blood pressure . and
divide Ohioans into north·
erners and southerners for
.two weekends each fall.
To borrow from Wyche's
most famous and most
inflammatory line · as the
Ben gals' head coach: If you
don't know the history of
this often-bitter rivalry, then
you don't live in Cleveland
... or in Cincinnati.
Or. maybe you happen to
play for one of their teams.
The Brown' (2-3) and
Bengals ( 1-3) have remade
their rosters and strugg led
so mightily that the game
has lost much of its sizzle
for the guys who play it.

the Raiders. who we' d play
every couple of years or
every so often," Jeff Garcia
said. "You find that in this
division. there is a rivai&lt;t:y
with every team."
Cleveland's main rival has
always been Pittsburgh. a
similar city with a shared
football history. The in-state
ill will started when former
Browns owner Art Modell
fired coach Paul Brown
after the \962 season.
Brown got his long - await ~
ed payback by forming the
Bengals and then beating
Modell's team 14-10 at
Riverfront Stauium in 1970,
giving the ·series its 'raw

"All I've heard is a littl e
bit of the history of the
Brown family," Bengals
rookie middle linebader
Caleb Miller said Thursday.
"! don ' t even know what's
true with that or not. so 1
can't really say anything
about it.
"! know they're &lt;.:lose
cities, and that 's about it."
Same
thing
up
in
Cleveland. where the new
quarterback
from . s'an
Franl:isco is trying to get a
handle on what makes thi s
one spec ial.
"As much as I had rivalries with San Francisco. it
was pretty much limited to
the Rams and then maybe cUgc.

Many legendary moments
have followed. including:
-Bengals receiver Pat
Mclnally getting knocked
unconscious by safety Thom
Darden, then returning to
catch a touchdown pass in
1980;
-Kosar throwing deep on
the first play in the Browns'
34-3 victory in 1986, propelling them into the playoffs and the first of three
heartbreaks against John
Elway;
-the Browns winning 2610 while their fans ripped up
Cleveland Stadium in the
final game before Modell's
move to Baltimore in 1995.
. - Cleveland
officially
Paul
Brown
opening
Stadium with a 24-7 victory
in 2000.
To many of the curre nt
players, it's all rather foreign.
For instance. Miller doesn' t know anything about the
Dawg Pound - the notorious section of dog-faced

fans in Cleveland's end
zone. That's not surprising
- Miller was born the year
of Mclnally's catch and
grew up in Texas and
Arkansas.
They have different rivalries - and different mascots - down there.
He 's not alone. Players on
both teams are a little
unclear about exactly what's
on the line when they line
up this weekend by Lake
Erie.
" It's a rivalry between the
cities, no question about it ,"
said Marvin Lewis, who got
his first win as the Bengals '
year
in
coach
last
Cleveland . "It goes back a
long time . But with our
players, ~f today and their
players - they 're all so
young. They don't know.
Both .teams are fairly young.
so it's not as it used to be."
It's so humdrum in the
locker rooms that it took an
antacid to give it some spice
this week. Bengals receiver

b~ts al~&lt;~;~ ~~~~~t ~~.· L:~;~u~h;act"':~)

Cardinals' big
~~~~1 to come through in the in the fifth . Rolen was the
Albert Pujols led off the first batter Chad Harville
ei~hth inning with a tiebreak· faced after he relieved jour~
nevmati starter Pete Munro.
'ing home nm. Scull Rolen
Beltran's ' ixth homer of
·followed with his second
. homer of the game and the the postseason helped the
Cardinals stormed back 10 Astros to a 3-0 lead off Matt
Morris.
·
beat Houston 6-4 on a miserHouston later made it 4-all
able Thursday night for a 2-0 in the seventh when Lance
~~':fe~n the NL champion,hip Berkman doubled. stole third
. The weather was awful all and scored when Ensberg
.evening, with driule delay- grounded a single . past the
drawn -i n infield. The tying
·
h
·
mgt e start lor a1most a half- hit off Kiko Calero came
hour and the rain lastin g again .st an especially odd
through the final pitch . By backdrop.
the time it was over. with
temperatures falling illlu the
Dllring the at-bat. fire ·mid-40s. no one in the sellout works exploded high beyond
'crowd at Busch Stadium was the lert ~ field roof. Thev came
from the riverboat ' Becky
complaining.
Thatcher. which . so meone
Pujol' and Rolen connected for the fir't consecut ive had commissionecl for a party
home run s in the Cardinals' on the nearby Mississippi.
· .1n ~
Calero
oil ,1 th e
loll "~ · p1·oud 1,0 ., 1s·e·.tson 111s
d E bucked
b
ry. "Larry Walker al'o home- . moun . ns. erg steppe~ out
red. enough to offset yet of the box•. •mel f.111s ch~c1cd
another shot by Carlos the_ .· . nndllcolor . s i.Jow.
Beltran and a homer by Cotnctdent. tll y,.ll~e C.ud111".~'
Morgan Ensberg for the 'topped shoottn, ott ltrc·
Astros.
works alter home nm' thiS
Now. the series shifts 10 season because the~ posed a
Mi1iute Maid Park for Game danger to construction work3 on Saturday. with Roger ers butldmg the team's new
Cl emen' set to start for stadtum sd to open Ill 2006.
Houston against Jeff Suppan .
The Cardinals were 0-for· 7
If the Rocket can pull the with n111ncrs in scoring posiAstros close. then 20-game tion before Walker delivered
winner Roy Oswalt will have the big hi t they needed. The
a chan&lt;.:e to even it iQ Game slugger completeu his t:yde.
4.
albeit a day later he
Still. the Cardinals hold a tripled. doubled unci singled
commanding edge. ·
in a I0-7 win in the opener.
Of61 dubs that have fa ll en
Munro gave the .Astros
behind 0-2 in a best-of-seven exactly what they needed. at
· postseason baseball se ries , least for a while. But like
only 12 have come back to unheralded Brandon Backe
in the opener. Munro v..a s
win.
Julian TavareL got the vic- pulled after 4 2-3 innings
torv
in
relief.
Jason with a one-run lead. falling
· lsri"nghausen worked around one out shy of qualifying for
· two walks in the ninth. get- the win.
ting Ensberg on a long fly 'out
And for the second straight
to finish for his second save day. the Houston bullpen
quickly gave away the edge.
of the NLCS.
Dan Miceli took the In" as
Munro pitched in and out
the Astros ·bu llpen continued of trouble all night. Even so.
to falter. He took over to he did a lot better th an most
"begin th e eight h and gave up people expected from a guy
home runs to the first two who began the season at
batters he fac·ed.
Triple-A for Minnesota. was
Rolen. nurstn g :1 strained released in June. signed with

•

Johnson's not funny .to Browns

Rice preaches strong
offense to Browns
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

BEREA ·- On her wish list
of places to visit. National
Securitv
Adviser
Condoleezza Rice has an
interesting location near the
top: The Dawg Pound.
Rice. in Cleveland to give a
speech on the war against terrorism. visited with her
favorite NFL team on
Thursday. stopping by the
Browns' training facility.
Although . she 's from
Birmingham. Ala.. Rice 's
football roots stretch to Ohio.
Her father. John. a football
coach and high school athletic director. raised her to love
the game - and the Browns.
"! was supposed to be his
All-American linebacker."
she said. "''m an only child,
so he taught me about football instead. And the team we
got (on TV) most often was
Cleveland. It was the days of
Paul Brown and Jim Brown
and so I just became· a dyedin-the-woo\
Cleveland
Browns fan."
Following practice. Rice
spent a few minutes chatting
with some of the Browns
players. She has spoken to the
team on two other occasions.
and it's apparent Rice keeps
up with her beloved Browns.
She &lt;.lidn ' t want to name a
favorite player. but had high

Hoops
from Page 81

Ill

thing moving forward."
The only starter missing
from a year ago is the
graduated
Velimir
Radinovic.
Captain
Terence Dials is a lock to
start because he was the
Buckeye s· best inside
player a year ago and the
roster thi s season has only
one other big man. career
sub Matt Marinchick.
Leading scorer Tony
Stockman, swingman J.J .
Sullinger . and
guard
Ri cardo Billings will vie
for playing time on the
perimeter, with sop homore
Ivan Harris and the 6-7
Syvester in the rotation at
forward.
The
2004
Associated Press Mr.
Basketball in Ohio, Jamar ·
Butler, will battle for the
point guard spo t with
senior Brandon FussCheatham.
The next few weeks
leading up to the Nov. 15
opener against Towson in
the Guardians Classic will
be spent lear,ning Matta's
system and seei ng who fits
where - or doesn't fit at
all.
Stockman senses. a different mood on this year's
team.
"I thought we thought
we were too good at times
- · at the very beginning.
before we start ed playing
(games) last season ," the
senior shooting gua rd said.
"Maybe that had ~b[lie-

pratse for Jeff Garcia,
Cleveland's starting quarterback.
"He's got great mobility."
she said. ·'He's a playmaker
and this team is going to gel
around a really good quat1er"
back with a lot of experience.
I'm looking forward to that.
and don't be surprised when
the Browns start stretching
the field. too."
Rice hasn't seen a home
game in Cleveland, but look s
forward to getting to one
soon.
'T ve never had the great
pleasure of actually being in
Cleveland Stadium, but I'm
going to get that opportunity
one of these days. I'm what
they u'sed to call subway
alumni, 1 sit and 1 watch on
TV and 1 try to catch the
Browns when thev come to a
citv I'm living. ~But I sure
would love to ~~!tend a gan1e
i'n Cleveland."
.
Rice has another goal- to
one day become. NFL commissioner.
'' ] sure would."' she said .
"But 1 want to make it clear.
it's not until Paul Tagliabue is
ready to step down. He has
done a fine job as commissioner."
·
Rice was asked what defensive advice she might have
for Browns coach Butch
Davis.
''I'm a great believer in
always bei11g on the offense."
thing to do with it. When
we were talking with each
other an d peopl e around
th e program. eve ryhody
wa' sayi ng. 'We're going
to be good.' 1 think we got
ahead of ourselves."
Asked if he. was humbled
by th e wa)\ the season
turned out. he added. "Yes.
Very. Very much."
Sullinger was privately
disciplined by Matta the coach wouldn't disclose the nature or th e

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

National security advisor
Condoleeza Rice signs an
autograph on a football at the
Cleveland Browns training
faGil ity Thursday in Berea. Rice ·
will speak to the · Cleveland
City Club Friday. (AP)
she said. "! don ·t think there
is anything like an offensive
line dommating a defense
down the tield:·~
She then gaye an an~wer
that all Browns fans can
relate to.
. "On defense,.. never, ever go
11110 a prevent. a reference to
Cleveland's mistake that led
to John Elway 's "Drive" in
the 1986 AFCChampionship
game.

punishment - after being
arrested for drunken dri~.
ving earlier this month.
Sullinger said there isn't a
player on the team who
doesn't look at the upcoming year a~ a chan&lt;.:e to

make up fp r the woes of
the past year.
"We start nff new and it
can be h:~ppy if we let it."
he said. "If we do the
things we need to do to
make it happen."

__

BEREA
Pink has
become the trendy, hot color
for some of the Cleveland
Brown s thi s week.
No need to call the fashion police.
Bengals wide receiver
Chad Johnson has stained
this week's CincinnatiCleveland game a milky hue
of pink by sending the
Browns' four starting defensive backs a •are package
that included a bottle of
medicine to settle an upset
stomach.
'· ] think it's hilarious."
said safety Chris Crocker.
"That ' s some good trdsh
talking ."
Kenard Lang isn't laughing so hard .
The Browm defensive end
and
unofficial
team
spokesman didn't find too
much humor in Johnson 's
practical joke. In fact, Lang
would like to make Johnson
sorry for hi s special-delivery boxes .
"That 's all fun and all."
Lang said Thursday. "But
what's he trying to say, that
he 's going to make us sick''
He 's going to send up
Pepto-Bismol and then go
out and kick our butt? That
ain't happening.''
Johnson sent the bottles
attached with a handwritten
note
to
Daylon
McCutcheon , Earl Little.

Southern
from Page 81
Southern's Brooke Kiser
was 39-41 seting with eight
sets .for kill s. eight points.
and 23-34 passing. Bethany
Riffle was 30-31 setting and
17-25 passing; Kristiina
Williams was 27-28 spiking
with ten kills. and had 14
points with four aces. Kasie

.....

my daughter or my son have
a little upset stomac h I'll
say. 'Thank you, Chad.""
Lang applauded Johnson ·'
tie-in to the charity. But he \
also looking forward to
Sunday and' a chance to
deliver his own message to
Johnson face to face.
''I'll probably tell him
he's a fool,'' Lang said . " I'm
mean fool as in crazy. I" II
say. ·Man. you· re crazy.
You better he glad you sent
it to them and not me.'
''When it comes Sundav.
you've got t.o produce. You
send a package. you'd ben~r
make somebody sick. If not.
it 's going to roll back on
him. They might end up giv ing him some Tums or
something. some Rolai ds
when. we leave.''
This isn't the first tim ~
Johnson has done somethin g
outrageous in the days leading up to a big game. Last
season. he guaranteed the
Benga\s would defeat the 90 K:msas City Chief\ and
Cincinn:Jti did. 24-19.
None o f the Bengah
seemed
upset
with
John so n's latest pre~game
publicity st unt .
"It's short of a guaran tee.
tu .''
but 1 think it will work t(&gt;
Little has his pink bottle get us all going." he said.
proudly displayed on one of "I've done something as far
as not only putting a chalthe shelves in his locker • len ge on myselt, but also on
for the moment.
" I' m going to take it home us as a team. 1 think it will
and put it in my medicine help us get out of this slum p
cabinet," Little said. "When we·re in ...

Robert Griffith and Anthony
wrote:
Henry. Johnson
"Hope this adds some color
and re'lief to your week.''
and personally signed each
note.
Little took John son' s message two ways.
"You lau¥h and at the
same time it s a little sign of
disrespect," he said. " I
know he' s not trying to disre spect us as in we're
garbage. That's how he is .
He 's a tlashy guy."
Johnson 's clever idea was
meant for more than just
pre-game trash talk . He has
teamed up with PeptoBismol to raise money in
the fight against breast cancer.
Pepto-Bi smol is donating
money to the National
Breast Cancer Foundation
for every catch Johnson
makes in October.
Johnson said he got some
positive feedback from a
few of Browns, who took
his jab good-naturedly.
"They're cool," he said .
"They know me on a personal level. 1 think it 's fun .
especially that it's the rivalry week and all that. It 's
something to look forward

Sellers had four kills.
Jordan Neigler was 14- 15
spiking, and Jenny Warner
was 15-16 passing with five
blocks.
The Southern reserve s
posted their sixth win in a
row by claiming 25-20 and
28-26 wins. Southern was
led bX Lindsey Burrow s

Buckeyes
from Page 81
But they converted 12 of 20
:third -down plays. amassed
444 ya,rds and averaged
almost 5 , yards on every play
in a 33-27 overtime victory.
Noah Herron rushed fu r 113
yards an&lt;.ltwotouchuowns on
33 &lt;.:arrics and Brcu Basanet.
pa"eu for ~7R yards and two
more :-.cores.
The Buc:k~ ves 'aid it wa'
· Northwesteni·s
spread
offense - which features
multiple receivcr.s anti one or.
no ru nning backs -- that led
to that fo rgettable night. They
said they welcomed playing
Wisconsin , wh ich hau an
unproven first-year st;ll1cr at
quarterback (John Stocco)
and a straight-ahead running
game that didn't rely on tricks
or subterfuge.
Stocco. howe1 cr. looked
·like Johnny Unit &lt;" in his.
prime. passing for two scores
with almo&gt;t no mistakes.
Tailback An thon y Davis
played keepaway from Ohio

with 12. Ashley Robie had
II. Whitney RiiTie eight.
and Kaylyn Spradlin had
seven.

Federal Hocking was leu
by Tracy Dye had 12. anti
Deanna Dotson with II.
Southern goes to River
Valley for a 'tri -match with
Meigs Tuesday.

PUMPKIN PATCH~

~.~
, ...

,.

.·.•' ----~----- -~"

'

·- ~

~
,1~

DAY, OCTOBER 29th
Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, October lOth.
To Have Your

Business Included ...
~

..

~oint ~len!'lnnt ~egister

(304) 675-1333
&lt;!9nllipoli!ii 1llnilp ~ribune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156

Pictures will run:
. Thursday,
~
October28
I"
'
··"'1? Deadline for Entry:
'"
Thursday,
October 21

·Tourney
from·Page 81

5
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(Ont subJtcT pei- Pump

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"'Love Ya!''

·~

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. Mail or drop off at the Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomero y, OH 45769

·J

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From :
Your Name:

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Phone:

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Ads must be pre-paid

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Khloie Billings

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to the minor-. in. . August.

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third pitch of the game. lin -

lll.l!l :l

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\\lith l.!&lt;~l'h ~wmg thi :-.
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made it ::! -0 with a IUilllL' r" ~·:· !11 J·l1.11, l \~Jr._.
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That nwrlcU th e A ... trn-..· 1lwm" h1 ~~1o· ,. ~~ .1 I il" :~
ninth run of thi &gt; 01LCS. all
tai1 b.i\1. lltil. the· lltk· .tl'"
them cuminc on ~ix homer ~o,. "'J1L'l l o utiiJ,·IL' ;.., Po pt"l 11;. t'
Hou~aon ... fin~tll\·
found 'he .!. : lt)\L' tll l ...... ~·.., \ll' " ,,
:tnother way lU ... cC1re in !he ·n it. · . , •l i'l \•I.., Lo~l!: o1
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hoth manat!lT,._(\fltu til t..· 1-i L~kl. l lld~l' .1 k 'iti1n.1·.·,

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Zwick said. "'They're h:h)( in
what the v U(l bui the1 Utl 11
well. We're just ·going io ha1·c
to go out anrJ take ath ; u Jt a~c
of \vha t we can."
'
Cornerback Dust111 F"'· uut
since game two hc-l'au . . c n!' a
broken arm. return" fllr thl'

Bttckeycs this wcdc. Hi'
cxpericn~..:e and -..IL';Id) in ~
prcs~ncc in the huddle - 11ill
el)ivc the dcfen-.e a h ~J u "l
It 's an :tttnudc "' mud1 "'"
style th:tt the Bu ,·~e'l e'' :trc
trying to recapture. Ohit&gt;
State de \C ndcrs u"·d 111 te~ kc
the rielu wit\1 a S\\'a~ eeT th:tt
:til but declared a ~~- r,;- hdorc
the op...~ning kickoff. ;\ u

1nor1?

Now. just like the ir mtllll Cr·
parts on offense . t hq :tl'c
struggling 1o regain th;1 ! "'l1f1~o,'­
riority comple x.
··we're trying 1o g~t b~h.:k 1~1
what we useu to do :tlld the•
way we u~ed to play. " -. t rol l ~

safety D(&gt;nlc Wilitller "tid
He said the problem lie' 111
'"pcupk nut bl' ing in pn,I Ii 1111
to make plays. l .nk':lll. lik'l
Jre in a po-.ition tu m.rl-c
play&gt;. but they're not lll :t~llt;:
them . That l:!oc..; for n11r l'tllii-L'
deknsi1e ui1i1.··

• No. I Warren "· Jack son/W:11 nil '' 111~
· ncr. 6 p.m .. Oct. 21.
·
·
lli,·ision Ill .
T\'C
at Vinton Count\·
• N(l . 9 Belpre vs. N(l. ~ 1.~ 1ic· hht11 c { \.11.
5::10 p.m .. Oct. 20.
• No. I~ Nehonvil\c -\",lil ' '· \r•. '
Hun11ngltln. l&gt; p.m.. Oc t. 20 .
• :-.lo. I 0 We\\,ton ,., , 1\c&gt;. 7 Za ne l t.k·c. "
p m .. Oct. ~I.
• N(l. ~ Alc .\:tnclcr ' ' · \\'e•ll •ttlll/ .. 111'
Trace. 5 p.m .. Oc:.t. 2:1.
0\'C
,
at :'liorlhwcsl lligh sdwol
• No. 1.1 F~t i rL111cl n N11 . 4 lmllt ll tL l• . -l'~
p.m .. Oct. 20 .
• No . :' Rc&gt;ck Hill _.,, No . I c l'on ,nwtnh.
H p.m .. Oct. 211.

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Eastern c:trneil u· bye in Division IV with
2 seed.
• No. 7 Soutilea,lcrn and No. I 0 Trim hie
will meet 6 p.m .. Oct. ~I at Athen s Hi gh
School with th~ winner going·· up against
·the Eagle.s in the scctilllW I final 4:\0 p.m ..
Oct. 2:1. That game will ;t\so be played at
Athen,.
• South Gallia. a :slo. &lt;J s~etl. wi ll '4uare
off a_gainst No. X Sout h Webster 6 p.m ..
Oct. 20 at Athens. The winner will play
Eastern (Pike) in the sectional fina.l I p.m..
0 t:·t ' .,__').
On Oct. ~I &lt;1l Athens, No : (\ Southern·
• No. 10 Clll'"dJK'&lt;t~l' ' ' · ~u 7 1'uii\Ill1)l!\h
will play No. II Cro(lk" ill e in ·a 7JO p.m. West. 5:30 p 111 .. (kt. 21 .
The winn er will face No . .\ Walcrford in
• No. 1-l Cu:t l Cirol'e ,., _ :"li11. I \l ~tl t "rll.
"the s~cti(lnal final l&gt; p.m'.. Oct. 23
6:45 p.m.. 6 :-15p .m.. Oct. 21.
Other \Cctiun,tl game' involving arl'a
• No. 6 S11u til Point " · :-\1&gt;. I I \ .. n11
confcrl'IH..'l' tca irl..., llre :
Auams . X·p.m.. t kt. 2 I.
[)j, isiun 1\
Dil•ision II
Tri- \'aile\ Confcrt'lll'l'
SEOAL
ut Atlwns lligh Srhuol
at Wellston
•
No,
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• • No. X J&lt;ic:ks"n "·No . 1) W&lt;t1 · ~rly. 6 p.m .. St. Inc. 7:.1 0 p n1.. Or t c.1
Tuesday .
-a No.

~

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:'~! $8.00

State in the second half. finishing with 168 yards on 39
carries and a TD.
"We've kind of been
embarrassed the last two
game; on defense.'' line -backer Bobby Carpenter said.
"We picked up our eff011 last
week but it got away from us
at the end ' '
Now Ohio State's rushin~.
pa)sing and total defense Ts
near the bottom in Bi~ Ten
stats. 1\u longer can losses be
blamed solel y on the
Buckeyes· impotent offense.
"We've got to out play their
(the other te:tm's) defense' and
we didn ' t," Schlegel said.
"We· ve got to take care of our
business before we c·ari say
anything to anyhndy (on
offense)."
It will be difficult for Ohio
State's defense to outplay
Iowa's. The Nawkeves are in
. the top I 0 in the country in
stopping the ru n.
"They have nine 'tarters
back from the defense of last
year. They" re tough and phy'·
ical. They 've got good
upfront guys. good linebackers:· quarterback Ju stin

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In The Sentinel
~

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left calf, was 0-for-14 in the
postsea,on before hitting an
RBI 'ingle in Game I.
Rain or
He showed no ill eiTects in
L · Game 2. as he. Rolen and

Associated Press

ST LOUIS _
s
shine.
the

H:~

Gloom town: Red
Sox back home,
trying to .rebound

BY BEN WALKE:ll

Chad Johnson sent PeptoBismol to his buddies on the
Browns' defense - the joke
was that they'd get sick trying to cover him - for a
good-natured jump-start.
"!think it's fun, especially
that it's the rivalry week and
all that." Johnson said
Thursday. ·' It 's something to
look forward to more than
just the Cleveland fans and
Cincinnati fans."
Neither team has a winning record, and that may be
the biggest reason there's
not much pizzaz. Games
that mean· the most are
remembered the longest .
This rivalry hasn't had any
of those for a long time .
"Hopefully we ' ll get it
back to where it used to be,
and that's when both teams
are playing well and it
means seeding in the playoffs." Lewis said. "That\
when it's a rivalry because
it's big. We have to have big
games to make it be the
rival ry it used to be ...

.

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Send us a
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•
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the• \
nli!Jllt br
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2()05

Pet ta lenda r!
Deadline for

r:r :-. s: November 15, 2004

The win ni ng pet• will be f eatu~: d
uniqup calendar
The winner w ill ~ , ' 1 lightPr! ..:rt "
-- -. --. . . -- - . • Nam e of ret

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Please send or brin g Ib,,

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[" nlJ 1111 t'

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jJtlllll

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"Pet Calendar"
1 rt
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1
1 625 Third Avenue
200 '111 1.11 &gt;I
·: Gallipolis, OH 456Jl I Pt Pleasant. WV 25550

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�Puge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 15, 2004

F'riday, October 15, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

nnscnR 1nextet Cup
Martin to scale
Newman Wins pole with track record back after 2005
JENNA fRYER
Assoctated Press

CO'\COIW. N C. - Ryan Newman
~'ll"" he II h.tiC to be ll,t\1 le" over the
tin,d '" t.tLC' to \\Itt the Nextel Cup tttle
' ''" 111.111 11 .ts )ttst th.tt Thursday mght.
,!J.tt t Ct \11~ the t1a1~ rec01d .tt Lowe\ Motor
s,x:cd\\,;1 \\htle 1\\lllllllg the pole t()l the
l \\.\ (1 ~1 Qu.rltty 500
:\c11 m.tll tLtmcJ .t lap at 188 877 mph in
hts Dod ~c tn 11111 the top starting spot It
:-&gt;c.ll the tt.tck record of 187.052 that
lttllllllc .lnhn&gt;&lt;lll ,et herem May- a lap
th. tl c·r.hc'd the record Newman had held.
I told m1 1\\le I \\,tnted tt b.tck,"he satd
But ~e1i m.m knows the track record
tlll'.llh nutht ng He needs a wm Saturday
nn:ht "' cltmb back mtu the Chase tor the
Ci1,1\ llf11Ull•h1p

"" \lt d-place fintsh tn Kansas last
11 cc~c·nd Jtopped htm to etghth in the
•t. llldtn,es. ~~~ potnts behind leader Kun
FlLN

h

\I c tc Jll't gotng to keep our smtley face

"" .11td d11 the best .Job we 1·an." Newman
'·"•' II\ ntll c·as) to do b) any means. but
'''" h.11c tnl urgct what you can't fix ..
h. I'Ll K.tllllc ran a lap at 187 311 to
yu.tltl 1 '''" HKI .mel Casey Mears was thtrd
t&lt;' I'll\ D&lt; '"~~s m the lirstthree spots Mears
11 "" lite· l~"lc lur Fnclcty mght's Busch
,,., ,,., t.l.l· shnt11y bet me he made hts Cup
jU,iJJ!\ Ill~ lUll

H,,h K.ilu1c .md Meats rue lookmg for
.h. 11 111 '' '\c"el Cup v.ms Saturday night.
'"''''" l1''"' ''on the Chase for the tttle .
\I tilt 'I' t.tcc, lett m the IO-e1ent playoff
' I ' '''til. tt s .tlmosttumed into a three-man
1.1\..L

Bu,.lt D.ilc Edtnhatdt Jr . and Jetf
(;,'"'•'11 .n,· h.lllllll~ tot the lead. wtth the
, ·~h,·• '"'en dm cis hopmg they slt p up
).!,\111 ... umc ~round .

tn

• lllllf.:h

I lli"11 S,idlct ".me '11t them. and he qual-

ttied his Ford fifth Thursday mght. But he
knows to pull within striking distance. he
needs the others to make mistakes.
"'We think that Kun Busch ha~ been yery,
very consistent &lt;Lnd we wouldn't wish bad
luck on anybody." Sadler smd. "But I think
he's gmng to have to have at least one slip
to let a couple of us back m the game "
The slips rmght have been m quahfymg,
v.herc the three drivers at the top were only
med1ocrc Busch qu&lt;~hfied 21st. Gordon
23rd and Earnhardt 25th
They head mto the race wtth Busch holdmg a 29-pomt lead over Earn hat dt Gordon
ts 79 pomts back
Busch wasn't rattled by the mediocre
quahfymg run.
"'It's a good car, we haven't had any problems w1th tt until now." he said. "We've got
to get up there and lead a lap and get those
fi ve potnts and make sure we do the best
job all day"
Meanwhile, the drivers trymg to chmb
back mto the Chase had strong quahfymg
runs
Johnson, who dominated the race here m
May by leading 334 of 400 laps, qualified
nmth He is desperate for a strong run after
v.recking at Kansas last Sunday to fall 247
pomts behtnd the leader.
Mark Manm. who announced earlier
Thursday that 2005 wtll be hts final full·
ume season. quahfied 12th He's fifth m the
standmgs. ISO points behmd.
·'We have a good race team. we're back a
few pumts but \lie' re filth and we· ve moved .
up every week except for last week,"
M,U1m smd "Thts ts a week to try to make
some hay "
Jeremy Mayfield qualified 13th. and
desptte being th IOth place and 257 points
back, thinks he still has a shot at the title.
"We want to run up front all mght and
lead laps and see what happens.'' Mayfield
said "'It's not over w1th yet We could very
easily come back ..

NASCAR UAW-GM
Q,.ality 500 Lineup
•

At Lo-·o Motor Spoodway
Concord. N.C.
Utp length. 1.5-mlle quad-oval
(Cor number In parenthe-)

1 12) Ryan Newman, Dodge 188 877 mph
3 411 Casey Mears Dodge. 187.279 mph
4 1Of SCOtt A1ggs, Chevrolet 166 483 mph

6 38) Ellton Sadler. Ford, 186233 mph
6 15) Michael Waltnp Chevrolet, 186 226 mph
7 29) Kevm Harvlck Chevrolet, ~ 86 143 mph

8 011 Joe Nemochek, Ch8\lrolet, 186.066 mph
9 48) J1mmle Johnson, Chevrolet. 185 989 mph
10 (99) Can Edwards. Ford. 185 976 mph
11 (32) Bobby Hamilton Jr Chevrolet, 185 957 mph

12. ~6) Mark Martin, Ford 185 319 mph
13 19) Jeremy Maytietd. Dodge, 185 274 mph
14 21 Rusty Wallace, Dodge, 185 223 mph.
15. 20) Tony Stewart, Ch911rolet, 185 122 mph.
18. (17) Brendan Gaughan, Dodge, 184 982 mph
17. 25) Bnan VIckers Chevrolet, 184 849 mph
18. 16 GreQ Biffle, Ford 184 837 mph

19. 31 Robby Gordon Chevrolet. 184 ~72 mph.
20 14 John AndreHI Ford, 184 615 mph

21 97 Kurt Busch, Ford, 184 527 mph .

2214) Jimmy Spencer, Chevrolet, 184 502 mph

24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 184 370 mph
42) Jamie McMurray Dodge, 184 300 mph.
8) Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 184 055 mph
50 Jeff Fu ller Dodge, 183 480 mph
37 Kevin Lepage, Dodge , 163 349 mph
51 Tony Ratnes, Che11rolet, 183 312 mph

29 09 Johnny Sauter Dodge, 183 237 mph

30. 49l Ken Schrader. Dodge. 183 22S mph

31 40 Sterling Marlin, DOdge, 183 163 mph.

32. 45 Kyte Petty, Dodge, 183 069 mph

33 43) Jeff Green Dodge, 183 OS1 mph
34. (18) Bobby Labonte , Chevrolet 183 014 mph
35. 30 Jeff Bunon, Chevrolet. 182.958 mph
36

4

17 Matt Kenseth Ford 182 408 mph

37. 13 Greg Sacks Dodge 182 260 mph.
38 84 Kyle Busch

C hevrolet~

182 254 mph

39. 88 Dele Jarrett, Ford Provls1onal.
40
41.
42
43

~5)

Terry Labonte Chevrolet, ProlltStonal
21 WRtcky Rudd, Ford Provisional
22 Scott Wtmmer Dodge, Pro\IISional
0) ard Burton, Chevrolet, Prqvlsional
Failed to qualify

44 00} Kenny Wallace Chevrolet 181 622 mph
45. 94) Darrike Cope Dodge, 181 165 mph
46 35} Mtke Wallace Chevrolet 180 796 mph
47. OB) Carl Long Chevrolet. 180 693 mph
48
Ktrk Shelmerdu'le, Ford, 178 630 mph

(72l

49. (59 Larry Foyt. Dodge. 177 737 mpn
50 {02) Hermte Sadler Ford, 177 148 mph
51 . (89) Morgan Shepherd, Dodge 177 061 mph
52 (98) Geoffrey Bodme, Ford 176 384 mph

Memphis tops Cavaliers in NBA preseason
\II \IPIIIS. Tcnn &lt;API \\.'It ght

\)IL'Il/LI1

:.llld

l).tlllll.tl

Iones h.td 1:1 potnh

t.'. ,_/,

k.td the Mempht'

!tl

111 ,,

&lt; ,, t!! ltc•
lUll

Cl~'' cl.tlld C.(v,tlu:rs

I , Kt ""
tli!ttth

ex htbt·

Tlllii ...,J:J\ !11gh t

\ IL\l)l\

• •I ,., the·

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l.tmes

h.td 25

0Jt•v..

Goode n

.111d

tddcd 13 lllOIC ,tnd 12
tl'i"lll l\llds l&lt;'t Clc1e land
The G~tulte, held a 49-42
.tel1 ,tnl.t~c .tt the half. but
l lc1 ,1,1\;d c.ltlll' h,tck to lctkc
Ihe· I, .td "' (J(). 'il/ un .t t.tst ·

break dunk
by
James
v.ith
5 48
left tn the
thml penod
James stole
the
bal l
under the
Memphts
bas ket and
sprt nt ed
James
do wn
the
floor alone for the stuff
Abo ut a mmute later. he
c.tme up Wtth ,1 stmtlar ste,tl

tor another runnmg dunk. bmcd 101 2~ louis 111 the
purtmg the Cavs up 67-64. fo urth qu,trtet ,tlonc.
He h.1d 16 point s in the pen Mcmphts made e tght 12
oct

o,hoto, fH)Ill J - po 111t r.tn ge

But by mtdway mto the
ftnal quarter . helped by a 3potnter by Pau G.tsol and 111 o
3-pointers from James Po se).
the Gnultes were b.tck "'
front at 89· 79
Both leam s spent much ol
the mght running tnll&gt; eac h
other, wtth Memphi ' ptckmg
up 40 foul s to 17 tm
Clevel,md The te.uns l"lllll·

Memphts ,tlso ~ot I I fJlllllls
I tom E.1 rl W,11sun anJ I 0
ftom Poscv G.t,ol h.1J ntnc
The Gnizltes ha1e pr.tct t·
c,tll) the s.11nc lmeu p h.tc~
11om l a ~ t o,ed...,Oil.

the he"t

CLASSIFIED

Melga, &amp;.Ill•,
And Meson

111

fr,tnclliSC htstOt y Mempllts
h,tJ 50 vktm tcs .md 11 ent to
the ltrst tnund nt lhc NBA
rla yofls Both WCIC fi"ts lot
the lt.tnchtse

countl.. uke

CONCORD. N.C.
Mark Marttn joined the
growutg list of longtime
dnvers ea"ng thetr way
out of NASCAR, announc·
1ng Thursday that the 2005
season wtll be h1 s last as a
lull-lime rdcer.
Marttn ts not retiring,
but wants to hghten hts
schedule after what will be
Ius 19th fltll season. That
wtll be the last opportumty
tor him to wm a championshtp
"' In 2006, I'll still be in
the dnver's seat," Martin
sa rd. " I just don't know
exactly what seat that will
be JUSt yet.
"I' rn too young to retire,
but J';e had enough of this
full schedule and the battle It\ been really tough
on me and u's been tough
on my fam tl y, and I look
forward to openmg the
next chapter ..
The 45 -year-old Marlin
ts the latest dnver to begin
the ftnal phase of ht s
career.
Terrv
Labonte
said
Tue sday he'll run JUst 10
races a sedson for the next
two yeMs. then retire.
Rust y Wall ace is makmg
2005 hiS hnal season Bill
Ellrott has already scaled
back to a luntt ed schedul e
M,u ttn "ltd he still
11 ants to 1ace. JUSt not run
the lull 36-event schedule
He' ll probab ly co mpete tn
'" me Nex tel Cup races .
,omc Busch sen es eve nt s
anJ pu" tbl ) e1en a tew
Cra ftsman Truck se ne s
t.tce". ~tmon g other thin gs
But he IHm "t be in the
7-Ju 6 Ford lor Roush
R.tnng af ter nex t year.
011 ncr J.tck Roush plans to
lteld tiM car 111 2006, but
h.h secuted netther a
tepl.tccment Lh tver nor a
spons or
M.trt tn h,h fa mously

NoOne

• IJM c:;.nt
c.u~

NOTEBOOK
failed in hts long pursuit of
a NASCAR championship ,
fimshing second in the
potnts four times and third
another four time s.
He used a strong summer
push thi s year to qualify
for NASCAR's 10-race
playoff system, and -is fifth
in the standing s heading
tnto Saturday night 's
UAW-GM Quality 500 at
Lowe 's Motor Speedway.
"I want to step out while
I' m at the top of my
game," he ex platned. " I
wanted to go out that way,
mstead of on the decline "

PUBLIC
NOTICES
ADDEN DUM
TO ITEM NO 8
PUBLIC NOTICE
SOUTHERN
OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE NO
3 · SALE M SHAFT
PERMIT 0·0463
Southern
Ohto
Coal Com pany has

las1 date of publicatton of th1s nottce.
Wntten comments or
requests for an infer·
mal conference may
be filed with the

submttted an appllca·
re vtse coal
m mmg Permtt #A·

Court 1
Columbus ,
Oh&lt;o 43244, within
thtrty (30) days after
the last date of pubtl·
calion of this notice
(10) 8, 15, 22,29 4TC

t10n to

0463-55 to the Oh1o
Departmen t
of
Natura l

Resources ,

DIVISion of Mineral
Resou rces
Management.
Th1s
perm1t IS located In
Metgs Co unty, Salem

01VISIOO Of Mineral
Resources

Management,
Fountain

1855
Square

Public Notice .

mtles southeast of
Wllkesvtlle , Ohio on

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE . Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, October 16,
2004, at 10: 00 a.m ., a
public sate wilt be
held a1 211 W Second
St, Pomeroy, Ohio
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Is selling

the

for

Towns htp, SectiOn 32
The
permtt
area
encompasses twenty·
three (23) acres and is
located
on
the
Wtlkesvtlle 7 5 mmute
U S G S. quadrangle
map a pproxtmately 2
property
of
Estate

Franklm Real
Company

·The
application
proposes to make a
post·mmmg land use
change to provtde tor
the permanent reten~
han of an offt ce/bath·
house
butldmg,
potable water systems
mcludmg a
water stora ge tank ,
paved
and stoned
access roa ds , and
parkmg areas
The
twenty-th ree (23) acre
area asso ciated With
the rev tston had a
premmtng land use of
pas tureland '
but

wd I now be cha nged
to allow for post-mtnmg l and use as a
commerctal stte "
The appl1cat1on ts
l'ln ftle for public v tew*
•1g a t Metgs Count y
Reco rders
Offtce ,
Mr.otg~
County
Cou rthou se . WO E
Sec.on d
Street ,
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

l'ld s hall remam so

lo r al leas! lh&lt;r1y (30)
drJf&lt;&gt; fo ll nwtng the

cash In hand or

certtlled check the
following collateral :
2003 ODYSSE'f PON·
TOON FRUA7385A303
2003 ELK TRAILER
5F4BB20103E001715
2003 MERCURY 90
HP ELPTO OT7331 03
1992 MARINER BASS
SKEETER
STER024 t Ft 92
1992
SKEETER
TRAILER
1991 MARINER 150
HP MOTOR 00079836
The Farmers Bank
end
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio. reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw

the above collateral
pnor to sale Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company

reserves

the rlgh1 to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold " as IS·
where

Is",

with

no

expressed or Implied
warranty given.
For further lnlor·

mation ,

or

for

an

appointment
to
onspect
coll~teral,
prior to sale date con·
tact Diane Rector or
Randy Hays at 992·
2136.
(tO) 13, 14 &amp; IS 3TC

Public Nottce
OHIO DEPART·
MENTOFINSURANCE
CERTIFICATEOF·
COMPLIANCE
NAICNo. 60255
Meigs County
Issued 8/5104
Ettecttve 4/2/04
Expires 4/1/05
I
Ann
Womer
Sanjamml hereby carIlly that I am the
Director of Insurance
In the State of Ohio
and have supervision
of insurance busl·
ness in sld State and
as such I hereby certl·
ty that CENTRAL BEN·
EFITSMUTUALIN·
SURANCE COMPANY
ls authorized to trona·
act the buslneu of

Help Wanted

Call TOday...

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

r

following aectlons of
the Ohio Revlaed
Code:
Section 3911.01
Life,
Heatth
&amp;
Annultlea.
CENTRALBENE·
FITSMUTUALINSUR·
ANCE certified In Its
annual statement to
this Department as of
December 31 , 2003
the1 It haa admitted
assets In the amount
of $CENTRALBENE·
FITSMUTUALtNSUR·
ANCE 59,081 ,834 lla·
bllllleo In 1he amount
ot $14,867,370 and
surplus of at least
$44,214.464.
INWITNESSWHERE ·
OF, I have hereunto
subscribed my name
an d caused my seal

ro be affixed
at
Columbus, Ohio this
day and date .
Ann
H.
Womer
Benjamin, Dlrectot.
(1 0) 15

EBAY Class

Call Scott Reuter
740-446-9800

ANNouNcE.\ItNIS

For tnlormaiiOn lead1ng to
the arrest and conviCtiOn ot
the person or persons that
re moved the portable gener
ator from the property of
John E Carroll 1 142 Olver
Ad , Gallipolis OH dunng
lhe periOd of Aug 23 to Oct
1 2004 InformatiOn may be
forward l o Galha Coun l y
Shentt s oHtce al 740·446·

I

GIVEAIVAV

.

Klnens to good home 3 112

mon th s old 1 mala
female (7 40)446·8657

r

LosT ~ND

Learn to
, BUY (Save $$$)
SELL (Make $$$)
You can be buytng or selltng tn
about 1 hou r
$50 00 an hour •

Call Cathte at

740-992·2066

r;;:~::;::~

r

Gt\IA\\~\'

Y ~RD SALE

Yo\RilS\U"a

G -\l.I.II'OU'S

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it wit.h a
copy of your photo ID.

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'

Broa·d Run Gun Club
Sunday, October 17
680 Slug Shoot
12 Noon

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ __
Phone_~-----Matl or drop oH this coupon along .
wll1la eopy ol your photo ID 10
Ohto Val ~y Pu~lshtng

P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

...............................•

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POI.ICI!S OtMo Y•ll•y Publishing r... rv11 t"- right to ed1t, ,.;.ct, or e~~ncel•ny ed 11 sny lim• Errors must bt rsport.d on tMI f1111 dey of
will b8 rHponslbll for no more thsn the cost of thl 1pec1 occuplfll by the error 1ne1 only t he flrtt ln .. n!on We 1h11\ not bt II
.,y loll or
lttlt ,..utts from the pub!lcstlon or omls1lon of sn ldnrtiHmtnt Corr1ct1 0t"l wiU b. msdl1n the hrst svat llb!e sdlt1on • Bo•
. . 1twey11 conftd.nllll • Current rail clrd IPPIIIII • All rM I 111ut1 ldvtrtiHments 1r1 1ubject 10 ths Federel Fatr Hous1ng Act of 1te8 • Tl'l!l newopotoorl
~ecspts only help wanted 1d1 msetlng EOE aUtndltrdl W1 will not knowingly sccept sny 1dvertl1lng In vlol•tlon of the lsw
Trlbun.s.ntlna!~.; l ltlf

••l»f1••

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~ARll
SAL!:·
G~UJI'ULIS

ro

~G.a.ra.ge""'s·.,·.·1·0·5·2·S·ec·o-"nd

p•c&lt;up

&lt;ehoge&lt;alol

4x4's For Sale .. ............................................ 725
Announcement. ..
.......................030
Antiques ........
. .......................... 530
Apartments lor Rent
.. 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... 760
Auto Repair.. ............ . ............................ 770
Autos lor Sale . ........
........... ................ 7t 0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
.. ... . .. . . 750
Building Supptles ........................................ sso
Business and Buoldtngs ........................... 340
Business Opportunlty .............................. ... 210
Business Training ..
. ........................ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .......... . ............ 790
Camping Equipment . .. .......................... 780
Cards ot Thanks ........................................ OtO
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
ElectrlcaURelrlgeratlon ....... ..... ... ........... .. ... 840
Equipment lor Rent... .................... .. ... ......... 480
Excavating... .. ... . ...... ... ......................... 830
Farm Equipment.... .............. .... ..... .. ........ 610
Farms lor Rent........................ . . . ......... 430
Farms lor Sale .. .......................................... 330
For Lease ................................................. 490
For Sale ............................................... ...... 585
For Sale or Trade.................... . . . .. . .590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables.......... .. .. ..
. ... 580
Furnished Rooms.. ....................... .. .. . . 450
General Hauling ......................................... 850
Giveaway ............................ ........................ 040
Happy Ada............ ........... . .............. .... 050
Hay &amp; Grain........ ... ... , .... . .. . ... ....
640
Help Wanted............. . . .. .... . ... . ...... .. . 110
Home Improvements ......................... 810
Homaalor Sale ................ ...... .. ................... 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houeea tor Rent ...................... .................... 4 t 0
In Memoriam....... .... ......... ... .. ....... ... . .
020
lnaurance ....... ............................... . .. . ... .. 130,
Lltwn &amp; Garden Equipment ........ ... . . ....... 660
Llveatock ............... ........... .............. ............ 630
Loatand Found .......................................... 060
Loll &amp; Acreage ......................................... 350
Mlecallantout............. .. ........ .................. t 70
Mltcellaneoua Merchandise ............. ... 540
Mobtle Home Repair .......... ................... 860
Mobile Homes tor Rent............ .. .
. 420
Moblla Homes tor Sale ............................... 320
Monay to Loan ........ .. ... ..... ........................... 220
Motorcyctae &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Muelcallnetrumenta ............... .. . ..
...... 570
Pereonalt .............. ........... .. .• .. .. . ..... .. 005
Pelt lor Sale .......................... .. .. . . . .. ... . 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing ............... ...... ..... ... 820
Proteaalonal Servlcea ................................ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .......................... 160
.......................... 360
Real Esteta Wanted
Schools lnatrucllon. ...
.. ......................... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .. . ..... ... ..... ..... 650
Situations Wanted ................................... 120
Space lor Rent . ...
. ............................. 460
Sporting Goods .. ..
. .......................... 520
SUV'a lor Sale .. ...... . ............. ...........720
Trucks tor Sale.. ....... ...
.. . 715
Upholstery...... ................. . .
. .. . .. 870
Van a For Sale ................ ..........................730
Wanted to Buy . ..
.. ........................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplles .................. 620
wanted To Do ... .
. ........... . ....... 180
Wanted to Rent .. ................................... 470
Yard Sale· Gattlpolls............................ .... 072
Yard Sala·Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasant ............................. 076

76

y \RlJ S \I.FPl. PU.:AS\.Vf

"---iisOoiiiiiiiiiiiii'-,.1

0

"'

1) 35 hrslwk 11 pm 8 30am
Sat 7pm 9am
Thurs/Fr1

Sun

l.ito

110

HELP W wmo

~--_.l

MechanFca l

Mu st ha"e hands on expen·
ence us1ng power tools
eleclnc saw dflll press and
others Must be able to read
eng1 neenng
drawmgs

ID:t.P \hi\TI11

PsyLhologisl
T1red of the hassles of the
pr1va1e pract1ce want a
steady ancome or JUSt need·
1ng a cha nge? We are O'le ot
the fastest growmg natiOnal
companies Clealmg wtth
POSITION
Gertalncs We otte r a great
ANNOUNCEMENT starling salary wllh a 401 K
plan If you have a doctorate
Posting Date Oclober 6 2004
&amp; are licensed &amp; want to
work
par t
t1me
call
RECORDS OFFICE Psvchologist Trans•ttons
877-734·2031 or faiC resume
SECRETARY
877·734·2030

- - - -- - - Overbrook: Center WFII soon
be offenng the State Tested
Nu rse A1de classes If you
are 1nl erested please come

The Un1vers1ty of R10
Grande tnv1tes applicatiOns
tor the pos1t10n ot secre tary
1n the Records Otf1ce

~P~~E' ':~o~1tr:,~:~1tt~~~~n

Respo ns1bFhtles ot thiS 40
hour per week pos1tton
1nclude but are not l1m11ed
10 prov1dmg general secre·
tanal clencal and techntcal
asststance for the Records
Department Slaff , wh1ch
tncludes entermg student
data regFSiratF on mformal10n
and grades,
matnlams
updales and arch1ves alec·
1ron1c and hard cop1es of
transcr~pts and other documents
Complete
tob
descnptFon avai lable upon
request from the Human
Resources Off1ce

Overbrook
Rehabthta1 1on
Cente r IS now acceptmg
resumes tor the posltton of
Absolute Top Dol lar U S
Dt rector of Socml Serlo'tces
Stiver ancl Gold Coins
Candidate must possess
Proofsets Gold Rmgs uS
strong verbal ana wr1tten
Currency M T S Com Shop
COffimU~ICa i iOn
SkillS
151
Second
Avenue
Medtcatd
Medicare and
Gallipolis 740 446 2842
MDS knowledge LSW Wl lh
Wanted 213 Bedroom house expertence m long term ca re
w/g arage Tuppers Pla1ns or pre ferrecl but not reqwecl
Chester area Praapproved QuaiFfleq" cand1dates please
contact
Charla Brown
flnancmg (740)949 2194
McGu1re AdminiStrator at
I \\1'1
\II \I
333
Page
Street
..,1 In II I o,
Middleport Oh 45760, EOE Must·have h1gh school d1plo·
ma or eQuivalent Prefer two·
year secreta nal sc tenCEI
p
Paramedtcs
&amp;
EMT s
degree
Prev1ous otftce
1
needed Apply at 1354 eKper1ence preferred Good
'
Jackson P1ke GalhpoiFS
oral and wntten communtca·
An EKCellent way to earn
110n Skills reqwed Mus!
money The Nev. Avon
Pomt
Pleasant
Moos e
work well wtth the public
Cell Manlyn 304·88 2·2645
Lodge now accepting applt·
ca ltons for a Bartender &amp;
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
All applicants must submit a
Wallress apply at the Moose
letter ol 1nte re15t and resume
Sell
Shirley Spears 304*
Lodge between 8 30·3pm at
mclud1ng the names and
675-1429
AI 2 Charleston Rd
addresses of three refer·
Desk clerk needed Please
ences on or before October
apply
at
Budget
Inn, Saltl
22 2004 to
Jackson Ptke Gallipoli s No
Are you 1ook1ng for a new
phone c alls please
Ms Phyllts Mason SPHR
career w1th an unllmll&amp;d
Director ol Human
Janttortal service has 2
opportuntty tor advance·
Resources
1mmed1ate open1ngs 1n the
ment?
PO Box 500
Galltpohs area Expenence
R10 Grenda OH 45674
In Stripping and WBXInQ !Fie
Would you ltke to be recog·
email pmasonCno ed u
floors CE:III 800 988 7847
n1zed as a proleS! ton al
EE0 1AA Employer
LABORATORY TECHNI· salesperson 1n Or'le ol the
ClAN. lmmedFete open1ng counlry s highest pa1d occu·
tor a Medical Labora1ory patlons?

o'

"--------,.1
Hu W.wrt.:o

TechnFctan Days only no
nFQhts
or
weekends 11 so our salespeople earn
Contact Athens Med1 cal an excelle nl l(lCOme and
enJOY lhe benettts of worklnQ
laboratory 400 E Stale
At hens Pho ne {740 )593· w1lh a successful and progressive dealership
8240
Mal-ee 50~ c selling Avun
11me
ONLY
Llm1ted
{740)446 3358 F1rst 5 to call
rccetves a g1lt

It you re se nous about a new
career and are looktng tor
the tra1n1ng and gutdance
that are essentia l tor long
term success· wed like to
Manager' needed for mob1le
talk to you
home pari( m Shade send
resume lo Country Park.
Please stoo m lor an 1nter
Inc PO 1033 Loga n Oh
VteW
43138 ,
Sate\l11e lnslallers 'leeded Norr is N orthup
Stato Wtoe (304)674 OC:58
C hrysler Jeep

I

l"o

TechntCFan

TLC 1740)379-229 1

.

BL'&gt;l'E~

"'

r

Some mach1ne shop knowl·
edge helpful Electnc and
gas
weldmg
a
plus
UTRON Inc Ashton WV
Mov1ng Sale Saturday Oct Fax resume to (304)576·
16 9-4 105 Htghland Ave 3376
couch and cha1rs refrtgera
tor many other 1lems Aa1 n Need someone to hve 1n &amp;
or Sh1ne
care
lor
elderly
lady
Housekeepmg cookmg &amp;

116

11"\C I \I

'rn

4 Fam 11y Yard Sale Stewart
St Clifton Octl5&amp;l 6 lOam
? Lots of good stuff

RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
BARN Rt 7 South 5 mtles
below the Dam EVERY
SATURDAY
@
6pm
(740!256 6989

Let me run your errands br
you locally also ava~lable 2
days a week for data
enlry 1fFhno 1740~985-3620

10

www comtcs com

Clol htng Prom dress mFsc
turnl!ure Harnsonv1Ue F1fe
Dept.

\fisi~iio0oiiollJJ.__,. i.si•O-.ioil.rlll~ioiSiii~ii\.__.l

llt.,180
___

Wanted L1ve Fn nanny lor
0P!'(JR"n.
elementary age ch1ld tn a
Chrtsttan home Only non·
smokers please room &amp;
board mcluded m add1t1on lo foHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
salary Pl ease send resume lNG CO recommends tha
ou do ous1ness With peo
and references to PO Box
33 Pot nt Pleasa nt WV pie you Know and NOT to
enc money lhrough the
25550
ma11 unt11 you have 1nvest1
WANTED
Part-lime poSF·
ated the otter1nq·
liOn ava1lable to ass1st w~
IndiVIdUalS Wtlh menial retar•
datiOn al a group home tn
PRon~"\101\i.\L
Bid well
Sl:ln l{'F."i

sto&gt;e

Huge Yard Sale Fnda y
October
15
Saturday October 16 Craft
suppltes 365 Grant Slreet
Middleport Ram Shtne

HF.l.P W-\1\'ITD

Village ol Middleport 1S
seek1ng a F1scal OfiFcer
tCierk Treasuren Must have
computer and accou nt1ng
expenence Seno resume to
237 Race Street by October
22 2004

clothos and m1sc

1206 Orchard HFII Rt 117
Soulh watch for Stgns Ocl Saturday Oc tober 16th
15·16 9 DO·? Ram or Sh1ne SAM 5PM Sweaters m1sc

Fnday &amp; Saturday Ram or
Fuel Ott Furnace not sure 11 Shme 9·5pm A little bit ot
everyth1ng 11 02 2nd Ave
11 works {304)882·3200

ore matl
calh lecuslom@hol matl com

• All ads must be prepaid'

...,
Yarel 8 Estate Sale Sat Oct
Female Coon Hound found t6 eam·?? 2236 Graham
m June Owner may have School Ad Postpone 1f ra1n.
been lookmg tor her on
Y~RD SALEBu lavFIIe
&amp; Campa1gn ~H
(7 40)367·7737 afler 9pm
I'oMEROI'iMIDDLE

3200

Address - - - - - - - ' - -

All Dl•play : 12 Noon :z
Bu•lne•• Day• Prior To
Publication
Supdey Dl•play : 1:00
Thur•dey for Sunday•·-·---·

L---i.FIIowilllroiii.-_.1

70
Help Support a New·Breath
ol PolitiCal aFr 1n the Mason --,
Comm iSSIOn
County
EleCtiOn Race November 2
pn
go out and Vote your true
Convtc llons•

How you can have borders and graphics
~ .
added to your classified ads
.f.;t_
Jm
Borders 53.00/per ad
E!,iiill
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

3 Ave Tl"lurs Oct 14 Fn
Oct 15 9·4 Loads of m1sc
teen boys clothes small
petFte mens large new gas
log f1replace msert

2·250 gallons fuel 011 tanks Children &amp; adult clolhlng
1n basement not rusted lawn mower Nascar toys
must take both (304 )882 lois of mFSC

Subscriber'sName _____

992-2157

los! Reddtsh-brown Beagle
Garage and tnSFde m01.11ng
m1x WFth purple collar
sale Friday Saturday and
Female small·medFum s1ze
1221
Sunday October 151 6 17
Answers to DFxFe Very spe
9AM·4PM
39495 Slate
Accephng Sealed 81ds on c1al lam1ly pels (740)441·
Route
7
Yellow
double·wFde
10·25·04 unt11 12-noon on a 1269
to
water
co
mpany
next
6HP 8/gallon
Gasolme
Wheel Barre! style A1r Lost Male black &amp; white
Austral 1an Shepard has col Huge yard sale 39081
Compressor $400 reserve
lar on answe•s lo Duke Bradbury Road Wednesday
Send b1ds to MCEASA PO
Please call 740 245 9459 or October 13th thrl.l Saturday
Box 34 Pt Pleasant WV
740 245 5029
Oclober 16th 8AM·4PM
25550
Cl'!::""'_ _ _ _ _...., Tree sland topper for S·10

on your home delivered
subscription!

F ree Admt sston

Located on Second Ave 1n
Middleport Masontc temple
(Formerly Dan's)
Approx . 3600 sq ft. of floor
space plus storage ,
2 bathrooms, heat1ng and
cooltng

~

U REWARD U
S400

Senior Discount*

. North Royle 7

BUSINESS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
RENT.

r
I

l\egister

!Jeo.cl/1ir~

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete
Delcrlpth;m • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlon•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 D•ys

Succe•sful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

If so, you qualify for a

Sunday, October 17. 2004
H ours 9 a m • 4 p m
Galltpolts Ho lt day Inn

or Fax To

Dally In- Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Jneertlon
In Next Day •e Peper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
~rlday For Sunday• Peper

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

or older?

COIN SHOW

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

Word Ads

Are you 65

MAKE YOUR
ANNOUNCEMENTINTHE
BULLETIN BOARD

Sentinel

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

Your Ad,

{

WANTED: PositiOn available to
asstst an indl\ tdual with mental
retardati on who resides tn the Meigs
Hi gh School Area. 20 hou rs/wee k.
split shtft (bel roe and al ter school) .
Must have hi gh schoo l
'i\iploma!GED, valid dnver's ltce nse ,
!1-Jree years good dmmg experie nce
and adequate automob tlc Insurance
$7 .00/hr. Send resume to Buckeye
Community Services. P.O. Box 604.
Jackson , OH 45640. Deadlmc for
applicants: I 0/20/04 Pre-em ploy·
ment dru g tesung Equal Opportunit y
Employer.

insurance under the

mrthune

To Place

TERRIBLE
TONY:
NASCAR will penalize
neither Tony Stewart nor
Mike Bli ss for a fight they
had after la st week's
Bu sc h sene s race at
Kansas Speedway.
They spent last Sunday
morning in the NASCAR
hauler explatmng what
happened after they tangled on the track dunng
the Mr Goodcents 300.
Stewart ca lled Bhss a
"hamme rhead" over the
rad1o during the race , and
they clashed later 111 the
team hauler. Although they
are teammates at Joe
Gtbbs Racmg . Stewart was
not driving for Gtbbs in
the Busch event
NASCAR
spokesman
Jtm Hunter has characterIzed the hght as "kmd of a
family spat .,
"There was some pushmg. some sho vmg , some
cursmg." he satd
NASCAR offtctals conSidered the f1 ght to be an
tnternal team matter and
declm ed to mterve ne.

co.. niJ 011

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

'

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Wanted

w.~_...7

JENNA FRYER
Assoctated Press

2 9) Kasey Kahne. DOdge, 167 31 1 mph

23.
24
25.
26
27
28.

mrihitne - Sentinel - l\egister

Dodge

21 31 hrslwk 3·8 30~ Th Fr
1 10p Sal/Sun
High School d1ploma!GED
valid dnver s ltce nse and
three years good dr1vmg
exper1ence
requ1red
$7 00 1-]r Pre-employment
Drug Tes t1ng Send resume
to
Buckeye CcmmunFiy
Servtces PO Box 604
Jackson
OH
45640
Deadlme
for applicants
10120/04 Equal Opportunity
Empl oyer
WANTED

Fu ll t1me
Appotntmen ts Clerk needed
to work w1th people w1th
mental retardatiOn at two
group homes 1n lhe [Jtdwell
area Dut1es mcluoe sched·
uhng and transporllng to
appointments Hours 9am·
5pm Mon-Fn H1gh school
d1ploma/GEO val1d dnver s
hcense tnree years good
ar rvmg e~penence ade
ouate autornoblle msurance
coverage and willtng lo d' ve
1n heavy conges·ect lrafttc
Re1a1i sales clerk 27 hours
areas requ1red Must have
or more per week must be
excellent
comrnumca110'1
able to work some evemngs
and orga ni zational SkillS
No Sundays S6 75/hour
$7 QO,hr Excellent benefFis
Ptck up applicati on at
package Pre-employment
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Drug Test1ng Send resume
Pomeroy
to
Bu ckeye Commumty
Serv1ces PO Box 604
SECURITY OFFICERS
Jackson P1ke OH 45640
Deadlme for appl1cants
FULL TIME POS ITION
10120 104 Equal Opoortun1ty
IN GALLIPOLIS
Employer
$8 00 PER HOUR

MUST BE 1BYEARS OR
OLDER HAVE OWN CAR
VOL AND A CLEAN
CRIMINAL RECORD
• EXPERIENCE lh
SECURITY OR LAW

ENFORCEMENT
PRE FERRED
WE PROVIDE

FREE UNIFORMS
PAID TRAINING
ADVANCEMENTS
PAID VACATIONS HEALTH
BENEFITS
OFFERED
INCENTIVE PROGRAMS
PLEASE CALL
MON -FRI
9AM·3PM

I:MJ

SLll(XlJ.&lt;;

Lwnn c noN

The Me1gs County Council
on Ag1ng FS 11c.r.eDitnQ appll·
catFons/resumes tor Home
A1des
App llcanls
Care
should ha~e a h1gh School
D1ploma1 or G E 0 reliable
rransportatFon telephone 1n
the home and Willing to wor11.
week ends &amp; holidays Must
POSTAL JOBS
be mollvaled and flex1ble
$1 t1 62·$20 92/hr Now h1r· W1ll train Expenence 1n pro·
mg For application s &amp; !rea vtdlng direct care or wo(!I:.Fng
governmenl JOb tnlo call
Wltr"' o!der adulls a plus
Amenca n Assoc of Labor
Stale tested nurs1ng ass1s·
1 913·599·8042 24 hrs
1ants encouraged to apply
amp serv
Appltca!tons are avatlable at
tM Me1gs Mull purpose
Pr1vate owoed Beauty Salon Sen1or Center
Mulbe rry
naeos
styl iSt •to
work He1gh1s Pomeroy Oh an
M ondays Tuescllly ::- and EOE employer
Wednesdays W1l l r y c:;ooo
and wtl l ouy all s u~ :llitls Wheel c ha ~r truck dr1ver
Clientele prefe rred Send needed Must have h1gh
resume to C LA Box 555 PO schOol CllplomaJGED C1ean
Box 469 GalltpoiFS OH Clrlvmg record 25 years old
740-446 79JO
45631

NEW PURC~ASES
REFINANCES
SO DOWN 50 DOWN
CASH OUT HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO
CREDIT 8ANKRLPTC1E S
WELCOME
UNITED SECURITY

MORTGAGE
1-800·37 0-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY US
VETERAN S

MB 5263

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt•

(Ohto Loans On ly)

No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1 888 582 3345

IU\IfSI\11

10

HO\If.,
FOR SILt

t21 3 bedroom houses for
sale 2 baths fireplaces on
acreage
Call !740 )709
1166
0° ~ Down
Payme nt and
lmanc1ng available wtlh
approved cred1t
Average
cred 1t qualiiFes you If down
payment has kept you from
buy1ng thiS FS your chance
to own your own home II
you have a down pay ment
but would like to conserve 11
we offer ow down pay ment
programs also Great 1n1er
est rates 1 Local compa 1y
Mortgage
Locators
1740)992 7321

2

br ltVt"i gr ocm
j 1nmg
room Kitchen 1 2 t:oasemenr
on 1 acre ground
1 4 ot a &lt;THIS on Bud Chantn
Ad 304·675· 3144

3

bed100m br1cll. front
Ra nch Nel'l er roof Vl-y\
heat
purnp
Sm1ths
Cabtnets 1 car garage on ·
tate lane ofl SR 160 1 8
acres $92 000 (7 40)388

8676

All real estate advertising
Fn th 11 newsp•per ts
subject to !hi!' F&amp;deral
Fa1r HowJtng Acl of 1968
wh !ch makes It lllegal to
advertuse any
preference hm1tatlon or
dtscrlmtnatton based on
race color religion se•
lamtltal status or national
Oflgtn or any lntl!nlton tc
make any such
preference hmFtatFon or
d1scrtmmat10 n
ThiS newspaper wtll not
knowmgly accept
ad\lertFseml!nts tor real
estate whi ch I!I tn
vtolattcn of the law Out
readers are Hjtreby
Informed thl'tl ell
dWelling!! advl!rtFsed tn
thts newspaper are
avatlabll! on an l!qual
opportunity bul!s
House 3 Bedr oom 1 1 2
Bat h Heat Pufl"p
ne ...
Carpet W mdows &amp; Root
Rver V1ev. 12 Sm1th St No
Monev Down to QuartfyFng
Buyer S425 month why Rent
1304)675 2749

House tor sa le to Move
3
Oedroorr
ho use
1n
5650 0 080 {30 41675 2316
Syracuse wnh garage 0'1
atter S 00 pm
mce lot F1nancmg available
1\lo down payment With 1-iowse 1r Ka r auga Old
approved cred 1 (7401992 !:armers Rd Ga lli polis Oh
3595
S40 000 2 tra 11ers Krodel
on
Neal
Ad
3 bedroom 2l batn l1v ng Park.
tn vestment
roo m omr11ng room f:;r S675 montl"'
tra 1lers
$35 000
n1shed
k ttcl'len
2 car Both
(740)44
1
5725
garage 2 outbUF idFn gs 6

GallipoliS Career Co llege
,cnreers C 1ose To rlome)
Call Tooat 740 1!46 4367
1 800 21 4 0452
,..,.,. g~ll po! ac:tuee•col BQa con'
Ac:cr&amp;Oued Memoer Accrechtong plus a'res close to scnools
Counc1 101' 1noecer.oen1 c;onlt'ilei 594 000 (7 40)742 7200
11M

sc~ool&amp;

12NB

3 bedroom lull basemen!

H 1gh
Scnoo l
Jun1ors
Sen ors and Pnor Serv1ce
you can 1111 vacant posTtFons
m the Wesl VFrQtnla Army
Nat1onal Guard It you are
1 800-869 8975
CONTINENTAL SECRET between the ages ot 17·35
or have pnor mtlilary seN·
SERVICE BUREAU INC
tce you won 1 wan ! to pass
EOE
thiS up For QpportunFIFSS 1n
TELEMARKETERS NEED· your area call 304·675·
EO No EKperlence OK $7· 5837
9 Per Hour Easy Work 1·

889 -974 JOBS

An EXTIO:":
GET YOUR LOAN '0
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOME 1
FREE "" APPROVED
HOME ~,.QAt~S

Seeltlnli 39 People
Locally
who wan! to earn money
wh1le los1ng we~ghl show1ng
others hOw
(740)441·1982

FREE SAMPLES
....ww lamousnutntton com

Onvar Needs Work Class A
CDL .All Endorsements Calt

gaiage, app rox 1 acre ot
land 5 mtles from town on
SR 7 @ F1ve Po tnls call
740·416-0768 or 304 882·

2299
307 Spring Ave Pomeroy
Double ( 1) 4 bed room
w/bath and ( 1) 2 bedroom
wlba!t1 Ful l oasernent 2
lots
New meta l •oct
$15 000 00 (740)985 3613
3BA 2BA 5 129 acres
Green Townsh ip close to
schoo l Pr1ced to se ll More
1nto (740)446 7377
Ranc h style horne w1th f1n·
1shed basement 3 be o·
roo ms 1 bath larg e hving
room and d1n1n9 room
k1lche n w th 2 car garage
atta c hed and a 30,.,60
garage and a 16x24 s'l elte r
house 1 5 m11es oul Cher')
A1dge Ad on the nght
(7401245 5102

Home For Sale
Hand bu 11t lo g horne 6 years
old Pr1va te w1!h 10 acr es
Georges Porlable Sawm1ll StunnmQ \'lewl 3 Br 1 1'J
don t haul your logs to the bath Open !ott
FlnanclnQ ave llable wtth
mti1JuStcall304 6751 957
NO DOWN PAYM ENT!FF
(740)388.()164
I would hke to babys1t you r
children m my home on S1de
trom
510 000'
Hill Ad 1n Rut land I m LPN Ho mes
&amp; mother of lour (740)742· Forclosure VA Hud 101 Its!
1ng 1-900 749·8 106 eiC 1709
2257

www.orvb com
Home Listings
L1 st your home by cal ling
17 40)446·3620
V1eW PhCIOS 1nto on11ne

f3 Bedrrorr

Br1cK Home 2
Bath 3 Car Bnck
Unattachecl Garage 2
tory outb..J 1Id1ng Code
~2704 or C'SII (7 40)446·

~56 6

pBed r~r

, 1 2 Bath
Full Bast e...,t
M1ddleport OH Code
17 or call (740)992

743
Bedroo,.,.., 3 Bat..,
Located m Ga llipolis over·
OCto. ng ll"'e o~IO Rivet
ve 3000 sq ff on 3 94
eras Coj:le 82 5 or call
(7 40)441·0323

fl20

!\10RILE H OMFS
FOR S ,\1.£

(7401367-7899

t987 lJ'l ~ o mob1le home
3BR 2 bath aopilances
so"1e furn ture Senous calls
only $8 000 t7401245·90.40

1991 14 x-o 3 bedroom 2
balM heat pump A C cathe·
aral ce11ings oecl( S11 000
Naeos moved \304 1882·

3682

�•

Friday, October 15, 2004

www.mydailysentinel .com

Friday, Octobe~ 15, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

ALLEY OOP
1993

Mans1on
Mobtle
Home-14X60 2 bedroom 1
bath total electrtc. good
, condct1on. central a1r, stove
• refngerator and mterowave
' included
sa SOD 00
: (740)949·9016

_____

..,__

-1995 Redman 14x70 1
owner, non smoker. central
a1r. mter therm gas !urn 3
ton Colema~ heal pump 2
pressure treated decks &amp;
~ -appliances . (740)245-5071

4br
m Syracuse. OH
S600tmonm SSOO depoSit &amp;
3br 10-Syracuse S475 month
Hud Approved both no Pets
(3041675-5332

Apphc&lt;ittons bemg taken for
\lery clean 1 bedroom tn
country setttng yet close to
town Washe1. dryer. stove
fndge mcluded Water and
garbage rncluded Total elec·
A\la•lab•e Nov 1 - 2BR t 5 trc w1th AC. Tenant pay elecbatt1 central acr gas heat tr.c S300 deposit 5375 per
S450 month + aeposrt month No pets No smok(740)446- 1079
Ing 740-446-2205 or 740Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths wl 446-9585 ask foJ V1rg1n1a
oasement V1ew of nver
Apt 4-Aent clean 2br
Cntrl
AC
5700
mo
WashertDryer
hookup
Galllpolts Ferry (7401446·
RetiOep. ~CUS (304)6753481
5162

: 2000 Clayton 14x76 M·
· Home. Stl on 4 62 of!Cres rn
Huge clean . 3 bedroom . 1
Mason County 1734f654bath dtnmg storage apro~
2237 or (734)654-9696
2 500 sq It No pets/smok$610
Call Kel ty
28x52 Doublew1de (Conv,en- Ing
(74.0)446·9961
ed to real estate ) 3 bedroom . 2 bath , eat-m k1tchen .
5+ acres. Barn w1th fenced
in lot. shed. carport Pn .. ate
sett1ng on Adamsv1lle Road
Must see to apprectate
$85,000 (740)245-5157

In Pomeroy. 2·3 bedroom
fence m yard . c •a heat S375
per month 1 month depostt
reQuired. 11ery mce home.
(740 )992-3522

Ntce 1 2. &amp; 3 bedroom
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom Apa rtments retatl space
mobtle homes startmg at also tor rem (740)992-3702
$270 per month. Call 740-992-2167
Rental m Pomt Pleasant
5400/month (304)675-5540
Make 2 payments move 1n 4 or \304)675-4024 ask lor
years on note (304f736- Nancy Homestead Realty
Broker
3409.
New Oakwood mega store
featunng
Homes
by
Oakwood , Fleetwood &amp;
Giles. One stop shoppmg
only at Oakwood Homes of
: Barboursville WV (3041736, 3409.

MOUIL£ H o\11-:.'\
FO H. Rfxr

Lw---liirliriiiirrii.-.-J

ut ·u ' '

HolSEHow

2 Oec:troom apts. 10 mtnutes
from Holzer Hosptlal on St.
Rt 160 Water/SewerfTrash
Included $460/mo Oepostt
re qu tred
Pets
allowed.
(740)441-1184 or (740)441 0194

3 rooms &amp; bath, stove/refrig3 bedroom basement. 2 car erator down statrs uttlittes
garage. newly remodeled pa1d $450/month No pets,
No pets $650 month plus 46 011ve St (740)446·3945
depoSit. (740)446-4824.
Mtd dleport ,
North
4th
4 Bedroom House tn Mason. Avenue 2 bedroom. fu rCentral Heat/Atr, Al l Etec1ric ntshed apartment, Deposit
$450/month , $300Jdeposlt and references No Pets
(304)682-2858
(740)992-0165

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
..j

r

Parts

Henderson, WV

St. Rt.68 1 Darwin. O H
7~0-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

875-2457

Reslocklug lnle .\lode l Sa h n,_qe
a lld ..trtr r .Harkel lbrls

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Sec Bren1 or Brian Wha ley

M-Fri 8:30-5:00

Sal. 8:30-Noon

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
COME BY 6 SEE ME FOR
YOUR BEST TJEAL ON A
NEW OR USETJ CAR

liNDA'S PAINTING

1·800·822·0417

~.,r_....;miriiii:;Ori~ii'r·E-...1
i i ~r.·s_..,;,•~iiRiiluSciALEiiiKS.i --"
Good, IO\Itng homes. Dusty,
Wetmaraner, ~ year, lots of
fun on the run!; Brody.
chocolel Lab, neutered.
loves water &amp; retre1ving,
waiting to be your loyal
friend , 740-992-3354; Benji ,
Terner brothes Bert &amp; Ernte,
1year, very smart &amp; loyal.
740-667-9712 (Donatton)

t

FoR SALE

0401985-4180

1972 Chevy Tow Truck, 1 1/2
ton, e~~;ce ll ent working cond t·
!ton. wencl1 works off PTO,
every tl1mg
new,
O\ler
$13.000.00 invested . will
take
$8 ,500.00
0 80
(740)992 -0622

,\II\ I 'dO( k.
FARM

EQuiPMENT

1999 Ford E~~;plorer XLT
4X4 Red , CD, excellent con·
dttion, 54,000 miles, $9,aoo
(740)367-7090.

year old 15 black/baldies. 5
reds Bred to a black MamAnJOu bull $1 .000 each .
(740)245-9315.

F40

4

\¥,~R.s!';us'
.,. n~

I

1978 GS750 Suzuki Faring,
Bull baby cal\les, S 100 each. backrest and new seat, 14K
No Sunday calls. (740)388- miles. Excel lent condition.
$1.200 , (740) 441 -0638
8524 .

r

1984 H onda V65 Magna
HAY&amp;
Black, 1-ow ner, new cond•GRAIN
tion , rebutIt ·car'bs, 19,500
Block. briCk , sev-.er pipes. For Sale Ear Corn (304)675- m iles. $3,8 00 (304)8821102
wtndows. l1ntets etc Claude 1506
Wmters R1o Grande, OH
Round bales and squares 200 1 Kawasal&lt;t- 300, 4x4.
Call 740-245-5121.
bales Call (740)44 1·7390
excellent cond1110n $2,700
ltrm . (740) 44 6-6115
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road . Porter, Oh1o.
FO R S -\ LE
8oA1S &amp; MUillR5
(740)446 -7444 1-877-830·
10
n&gt;RSAtE
2
beautiful
mat
e
Stamese
9162. Free Esttmates. Easy
roR SALE
ftnanctng . 90 days same as tabby pomt kittens . pet qual200 1 CaraveUe Interceptor,
cash. Vtsa/ Master Card . tty. $25 others available.
(740)992-6236, 740-992- S500' Honda's, Che\ly·s, 21FT, 56/hours, 9 passenDrive- a- little S&lt;!_Ve alot.
7680
Jeep's.
Ect.
Police ger, like new call (304)674Thompsons Appliance &amp;
lmpoum:ISI Cars from $500 0102 or 304 882-2840
Repa lt- 675-7388 For sale, AKC Boston Terrier pups lor listings 800-39 1-5227
60 AlJIU PARTS &amp;
re-cond 1li0ned
automatiC ShOts &amp; wormed Stack. &amp; EXT 3901
A CCESSOKmi
washers &amp; dryers. relngera- whtte . $250 (740)388-8743
1992 Chevy Lumma Z34.
tors
gas and electric
ranges. a1r cond1t10ners and Border Collie mt&gt;: pups . good cond , White CD player 4 new BF Goodwrench
wr1nger washers W111 do black &amp; wh1te. 550.
$1200.00 080 304-576 - P235-70-A 16 tires. wheels
repatrs on maJOr brands 1n Pygmy Btlly goats. $25 . 4107 or 304-674-3768
and
chrome
hubcaps
shop or at your home
(7 40)388-1520
Wheels fit tate model Ford
1994 Ponttac Ftreb1rd 6cyl.
F- 150 $375 (740)446-6 137
runs &amp; looks good.
000
080 &lt;304 )675 -6986
-L-o-ok-,-ng-fo_r_e-ng-in_e_o_r_1-ra-n-s-

PET~

Amus

Rocky .Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

$25.00 per month!

The
Daily
Sentinel
992-2155
..

1996 Whtte Lcncoln Tow
car
Good
Conditt
$4.500 00 (740)985-36 13
1998 Pontiac Grand AM. 4Door. Ps. PB, AC , 97.000
mtles
Excellent condttlan
1ns1de and out, $4 500 or
best offe r call (304)892 3773 or (304)895-3045
1999 Mercury Cougar LS.
V6 , Joaded. (7401446·0946.

•

A 3 2

·

J - 10765

16

21

Q

23

6

.

K1083

......ce~.~"t

Middleport

740-843-5264

I,
·.
IS UIVIDU

mcsston? Gtve me a ca ll at
(740)446-05 19.
Used tcres 4- LT 265x75
A16 .Firestone AfT.
4- P245x7R 17 Michelin LTX
3- P265x7DR17 Goodyear
Wrangler ATS
304-675-3354

rlll:'r""":~---::'-.,
C AI\U&gt;ERS &amp;
HOME.'!

BARNEY

REPAIRS IN OCTOBEBI

we have parts and accessories tor
most brands. Localed on Rt 1 bv•ass
pmslda Pomarov. Ohio

cOBJECI \0 \OUR."'I

WATERPROOFING
Un cor&gt;dthonal hfet1me guarantee local references fur
ntshcd Established 197~
Cal l
24 Hrs (740) 4460870 Roge•s Basement
Wateroro.ol1ng

I JU:'l\ \-\1\\'\'E.I'I 10 -.,
E&gt;E. WIZONG f&gt;.. LOT I

CJ\1\Rf&gt;..CTE.RI'Z.I\\ION
OF r&lt;'£
!&gt;..\ lfl.E
1'\E.OtNG 0"'
"'- ----'

101:&gt;1\'&lt;'

M.li n ~t.

See ·
Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

Mowers. Chain Saws_
C ham Sh'-lrpc ll t'd

&amp; Part-;
Nr'' Gl'nrral St.mdhv
Gt'tKr.tllll!.! Sv,1..:111., a;ld
Kol - ,_.\11" A1~· c"umlm·..,~or..,

Pltk-urolll,IJI.'IIH"I) •cnH.c
~011 'en tl'in!! Kt'ro~t'n~· Ht'&lt;~lt'f\

740·992·5232

BIG NATE
~G OOF'(" 7

AL L RIG.HT
GU'(S , Tt-\.A.T"S
ENOUGH' NO

IMPORTS
Athens

Op,n K:J0-6:110 M-F;

Snl. 8:.10-2 :110 9'12-1033

Pomeroy, Ohio

DESCI&gt;.ii&gt;ED
I'ND
lT AS
"F I&lt;EAI&lt;Y'

USED
THE

I'IOR&lt; COMMENT S
ABOU l
M'1
GOOF'( HAt!&lt; I

~

WE
NEVER
WOI'.D
"GOOF Y"

r SAID t r ·s
.. DORK.Y:' '"u\ t"\E"
A f't tl "" t)t':&gt;TURBtNG ."

I

r

BISSEll

Hill's Self
Storage

Nev. Hom ~~ • V1 ny l

29670 Bas h an R oad
Ract ne, O hi o

BUILDERS tnC.

S1di ng • Nt:w Garages
• Rcp laL'Cilll' lll
WinJl)\\.., • Roofi ng
COM MERCIAL and
RES IDENTIAL

4577 1
740-949-2217

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

FREE ESTIMATES

Hours

740·992·7599

7:00 AM - 6:00 PM
1/14

1

CA LLED IT " BIZ.ARRE ·,·
-C ARTOONI SH" A ND
" MISGU I DED"

"-----~

PEANUTS
IT WAS COMPOSED B'(
ELLEN ZWI L1 CH Wi-10,
INCIDENTALLY, JUST
HAPPENS TO BE

TI-llS NEXT PIECE 15
A CONCE~TO FOR FLUTE
AND O~CflESTRA ...

mo po

GOOD 601N6, ELLEN

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

HOWARD l.
WRITESEl

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*&amp;EAMLESS
GUTTER

1·800·822·0417

SUNSHINE CLUB
, 11-\IS IS A

~PEAT.

WALlER, WE SAliJ -ntiS
ONE BEFOR~

SO WHAl"?
Al"OUR
AGS ...

"WYs #I C h evy. Pnn 1iat·. Buick. Otds
&amp; Cus1om Van Dee

*Free ISII11818b

949·1405
QARFIELD
t'VE EA'fEN
ALL 'fHE

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•( "t•t rtpli·tt Rtn t r• dl'l i n ~
• N.epl tli't•mt·u r \\ indou ~

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rool1n9 &amp; Gvlters
• V1nyl S1dmg &amp; Pa1nhng
• Pat1o an'd Porch Decks
We do tt all e~~;cept
furnace work

• New Garages

( "om nlt•t·dulu nd
K c~idt• n l iu l

Free Es l i mut cs

740-Mt7' r.IISII

FL.AW\..E55 ' L.OGIC,

fF:

EVER I'VE HEARl:&gt; IT'

ll

• Room Additc ons &amp;
Remodeling

.

NOW 'fHEY CAN'T 'fEMPf
ME 1"0 CHEA'f ON MY I"IEf

DONU'f!i .,.

• LH~ ll nmc\
• Vw. t I· ra mc

•H.o•1l\.

Rene Daumal , a French poet and critic,
wrote , "Truth IS one. but error prollte rates
Man tracks it down and cuts tt up mto linle ·
p1eces. hop1ng to lurn it into gra1ns at
truth. But the ultimate atom will always
essentially be an error. a miscalculation."
At the bndge table. we track down truth ,
often afler mak1ng an error or a miscalculation Thts deal occurred during the Ltfe
Master Pai rs Champto nship at the
Summer Nattonals m New York Ctl y last
July LoOk only at the West hand You
open one 11eart. North passes, your partner raises to twQ hearts, and South
makes a pre-empli\le jump overcall of
three spades Wha t wou ld you do?
Have you decided? If you wo uld pass or
double. everyone else passes Wl1at
would you lead? Had you bid four hearts
over three spades. North would have doubled , and probably you would have gone
two down.
At the table, Wesl doubled. led the diamond ace, and greedily shifted to his singleton club. He was hoptng to defeat the
contract by winning the ftrst spade trick.
putltng 11 ts partner on lead w1th the hear!
ace, and recetvmg a clu b rulf.
Jay Apfe lbaum (South) saw what was
threatened He won trick two on th e
board. ca lled fo r the d1amond quee n, and
diSCarded hts heart queen
Tl1is Scissors Coup held West to four
trtcks : hts two ace·kcng holdmgs.
If West had led hts st ngleton at trick one,
11e would ha\le defeated tl1e contract, but
only a result merchan t would take him to
task tor that. However. his actual defense
assu med that East held the heart ace;and
if so, a swttch to that suit at 1nck two

G

Wa rramy Repa ir •
L aw n T rac to r &amp; Pm.h

33795 Hiland Rd.

5I Parts hub
52 Oelrich

coualn•
53 Conine

34
36
38

41

55

ea::~rv

diems
56 Part
of a pump
57 Kung fu
expert
Bruce 9 PutsiOwork
58 Alfalfa
12 Register for
59 Plano part
13 Peak
Om~.
60 Take one 's
IB Foul-ball
caller
In speech
breathe
Walerproof
away
22 Mlnua
cover
23 Cabbie's
Insert mark
DOWN
income
Floe or berg
24 Poker card
Obtain
1 Air-safety
25 l&lt;&gt;- Dividend
org.
graphics
earner
2 World"s lair 27 Egyptian
"Home
3 EKtremely
sun god
Alone" actor
Intellectual 29 Shell out
NATO cousin 4 Showy lily
31 "Have you
Mall-motto
5 Botany or
- wool?"
word
physics
32 Decompose
Pizzeria's
6 later on
33 Before
appllcances 7 Injured at
35 Rabbils
Tech
Pamplona
37 Usually
magazine
8 Clamor
{3 wds.)

brance
Huron
neighbor
Rich
Capone loe
Boy ,
eventually

40 Snako
shapes
41 Flour

holder
42 Tallchlef
of .,.1111
43 Cui-de-He
45 saunter
along
46 E1-frooh
48 On a
rom49 Lavish
party
50 Mlwi.iepo,..UIIInt•
54 High note

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C!llebrily C1pher cryp:ogram6 are crealed !rom qwtanon5 by famous people , past and present
Eact- letter 1n the etphsr stal'(js fer aoother
Toclay's clue · J squa1s C

w

UT L

" F X

U G XWL

WJLTG

LFVPDVPU
P XC l

GXAKLWLVTP
B K NL

FWGR

w

WN

HM

WHTKL

l FX

E V P X ,"

DVPU

SVRTG ,

TP

UWGM

JTTAXG

wouldensure one down .

P1!111erov
bt',tdc L1rry":. Fn_.ll St;md

Barnhart
Builders

BASEMENT

BUT I RECkON
THAR'S A KETCH
SOME:WHAR !!

MIGHTY GENEROUS !!

THE BORN LOSER

.\1uroR
Lw-lririiirrOiiilriiiliiii-,.1 1- - - - - - - - ,

hii'KOVEMEN"IS

SILAS SHORE: HAS GOT

'FREE POOl.
AN' SAl.TY
SNACI&lt;S

'l'•rry'tt-BnglnB

Self-Storage

All pass

F.a st
2•

It's "locks" of fun
to cut their hair

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

1·740·843·53 82

~'R~
High 8l Dry

North
Pass

26
28
29
30

39

Serving: Meigs. Mason.
Ga lli a &amp; A thens Co.

R~O E.t~t

1¥
Dol

45760

Advertise
in this
space
for ·
$50 per
month

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

3.

West

17
19
20

QJIOH652

Ope ning lead:??

No Job to Big or Small

2000
Hyundai
Good 1986 511'1 wheel Wilderness
Cond1tion, 34.400 mile s Ctmarron trav el tratler 36
$3.500 (304)675-1810
leet long severa l new parts.
1740)446-1759
2003
Mercedes-Benz .
24,000 miles. Loaded
1
1995 26 foot lnsbrook
1975 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Gulfstream
Slh
wheel
24.000 mtles. all anginal
camper Sleeps 6, great
(304)675-4399
shape $5 ooo (740)441- ·
88 Chrysler F1lth Aven ue 0804
Body good. new t1res
brea ks. shocks. battery. rUn s 2003 32 ft . Cougar camper,
gooo
$ t ,200
740-645 - 1 slide out, used 2 /non. exc
cond ., at a good price 304·
1 165
675-3818
89 Honda CIVIC $800
lmpounds/A epo·s
trom 20F1 Bu~per Pull Bonanza
$500! list1ngs 800-391-5227 Camper lor Hunttng camp
ext c548
$1 100 call for detatls
_..:.c_:__ _ _ _ _ _ (304)675-5724
0
95 Chevy Blazer, 4X4 , 4 3
"il In H IS
Vortex . all power. auto. run] U ~can cxperil' OCl'
nmg boards $3,500 00
~ Nt" Homc11
10
(740)992-6864
Hm1r.
99 Voltswagon Beetle Red
5 speed. CD changer
62,000 mtles, S6.500 OBO
(740)256·1618 or (740)256·
6200

South

Box 189

·--riiiiiiiiililiiiii-_.1

'

•

+

event
47 '-land lltlre

long arms

Vulnerable: Neither

_qnnette )s
J{ouse Ckaning Service

2000 Nissan ptck up, 5
speed. AM/FM atr, Super
Condi tion $5.500 (740)4464782

New Idea Two Row Narrow 2000 Dodge Dakota Sport,
AEAL AR MY
Corn P1cker 1304 675-5724 4x4, club cab. CD, 51,000
CAMOUFLAGE
miles. L.C.. till. To nneau
Sam Som!lrvtlle·s. Smce 1964 ,
LIYISTOCK
cover, V-8, auto, $ 12,900,
oy Sandyv1lle. WV PO Satell•tes
call (740)992-2459 or 304TV SateS/Installation f304i27382
j655
20 beef cows. 2nd calf to 8 ~8~
!1-.3~40•7_ _ _ _ __,

'

•

friend

46 Red-tag

I 5 Encum-

2
.

4 lowe hra.
7 Veldt gr_,
10 Fireman'•
tool
11 Throb
13 Where
I 4 Whoa

South

Let me do it for youl

Ty Hill

Pole Barn
30x50x10FT
$6395 . mcludes Patnted
Metal. Plans lnsHuctton
Book, Slider Free Delivery
(937)559·8385

on this page for as Jow as

•

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

j

ADVERTISE YOUR
-BUSINESS

96764
K 9

42 Currycomb
targeta
1 Not hungry 44 left Bank

tlgere pace

3

Ta~e

200 1 Dodge Dakota Quad
NEW AND USED ST~EL
Cab. 4x2 Ca ll (7 40) 44 1Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Firewoo d for sale. $30 pick· 07 12
For
Concrete,
Angle, up or $50 delivered 1n most ~~---:"-:"---,
Del1very
starts
4x4
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel areas
Grat1ng
For
Drains Se pl6. 1740)388-8738.
~---F·OiiiRIISIIALEiiliiiroo.-J
Onveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Seasoned
Oak
fi
rewood
for
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
1971 Chevy 1/2
ton , 5
Tuesday. Wed nesday &amp; Sa le Split. and Deti11ered speed, flat be d, 4WO, 350
Locally
$50
a
true!&lt;
load
Friday 8am-4·30pm Closed
engme. Runs good , good
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; (304)675-3508
ttres. 304-675-1295 or 740Sunday (740)446-7300
I \H\1 'I 1'1'1 II'
446-3344 $1,300 firm

r

.

10 15 o~

Dealer: West

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired . New &amp; Rebwl t In
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1800-537-9528

~

East

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Sun .. Closed

Hamtlton Railway spec1al
Pocket Watch- 950-B. 23
jewels $995; also black bear
rug has felt backtng, wtth
head and claws- S250
1740)533-3870

Sohd maple 2 pc hutch,
good couch. wnt1ng desk. 3
pc table set w 1sol1d marble
top glider chatr wlonom an ,
new Zentlh color TV mtcro
oven. new Ntntendo game in
box call (740)99! -7527

West
• A K H

+A

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

Wood

Kales Insulated Metal butldmgs 1n Hartfo rd WV. Spectal
8&gt;:8 5895 00 or 10x 12
$1295
Completely furncshed inside
&amp; out Floor wall &amp; roof
made wl 1 3/4 1nch metal
panels. S18 plywood on
2tn.x6 in treated floor jotnls.
4x4 treated runners for easy
mov1ng. 2 metal doors for
easy access, differen t styles
&amp; Slt'es, will bu ild to your
spec .. pa nels are prtmered 1
ready to paint. !lancing a\lail able 1-304 532-8943.

No rth
• '3
¥ K J JO 5
• Q4 2
• A Q 94

MYERS PAVING

Whaley's Auto

For
sa le
F1re
(304)882·2537

I

'

992-5064 Equal HOUSing
Opportuntttes

:z

3 bdrm house- 1 5 baths
close to hospital off Jacl&lt;son
Pike $600 rent wl$600 sec
dep. You pay all utthties
References reqwed Call
(740)446-3644 tor application .

Butav1t1e Ptke Dressers,
couches, mattresses, rechn·
er~
relngerato1. washe r,
drym gas electriC range .
Grave Monuments. much
moret
(740)446-4782
Gall.pohs. OH Hrs 11-3 (MSJ

Buy
or
sell
Riverine
Anuques. 1124 East Main
on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 7 40·
BEAUTIFUL .
APART· 992·2526 Ru ss Moore ,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET owner
PRICES AT JACKSON
MN.H.I . \SUIVS
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
\ lERCHA~IlL'E
DriVe tram 5344 to 5442
Walk to shop &amp; mo\ltes Call
Equal 2T TV treadmcll. bar stools,
740·446 ·2568
6- 16" 10 ply ttres. Apsen
Hous1ng Opportuntt)l
wood stm•e Troy t1)1er. a·
CONV ENIENTLY LOCAT· state pool table , tow bar. 2
ED &amp; AFFORDA BLE!
btkes . 1955 cub tractor.
Townhouse
apartments. Phone [740)446-1352
and1or small houses FOR
REN T Call (740)441·1111
for apphcat1on &amp; mformat1on

N1ce upstatrs apartmen t
l2X65 Trarler 10 Country. all
qutet area (740)992·6a49
Electnc. CIA. Hand1cap
ready
S200 month One Bedroom Apartment for
(304)675-4088
Rent S325 •montr Landlord
pays
wate r &amp; trash cal l
: SAVE-SAVE -S AVE
14:.:70.2 bedroom. CIA total 1304 )675 _6668
• StCJdo: models at old prtces electr 1c.
S350/depost t. _ _;__ _ __ _ __
· 2005 models arnvtng Now. S350/rent Call t740 )245 - One bedroom apartment ..
· .Cole's
Mobtle
Homes .9491 . No calls after 9pm no pets. m
Pomeroy
~ 5266 U S 50 East Athens please
(740)992·5958
o()htO 45701 , (740)592-1972
: 'Where You Get Your 1bedroom Tratler 1n Letart. 5 One bed room garage apartmtles from Mounta ineer ment. k1tchen furmshed,
• .Money·s Worth"
Plant. furnished. uttlilies $400 (740)992-3823
paid
$350/monlh _ _ .:__...:.__ _ _ __
$ 350 /depoSJI (30 4 )882 _2858 Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taktng Appilcatmns
2 bedroom trailer for ren t for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 48R .
acres on Ingalls Road
W D hookup no pets S350 Appl!cattons
are
tal&lt;en
-$ 15,000. 740-245-0133
month plus depos1t Call Monday thru Fnday. from
(7 40)256-1008
9·00 AM -4 PM Ollice IS
"l00 1 mobile home t6x80
Located
at 1151 Evergreen
also two acres land 1 mtle 2 bedroom. all electrtc. 4
Dnve Point Pleasa nt. WV
fro m At 7 near Eure ka mtles north of Holzer $350
Phone No is 1304)675-5806.
$65,000. Call (740)256- month + sec deposit &amp; refEHO
9234.
erences. (740)446-6865 or
(740)379-2923.
Tare
TownhOuse
FS-Approx. 25/Acres MIL.
remote,
rough 3 bedroom mobtle home. no Apartments . Very Spac•ous.
P rivate,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors CA 1
access , good-hunting . no pets, (740)992-5858
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted .
marketable-timber Mt Alto
3 br mobtle home m Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
a rea $35.000 (304)a9sCaruthers Mobc!e Home Paho Start $385/ Mo. No
3390
Pets. Lease Plus Secur1ty
Park call 304-675-3818
R iver property, 1.67 acres. Applicattons accepted for .Depos tt Requtred Days
740-446-3481
E\lenmgs
232 teet shore line. 10 miles
ntce two bedroom on prJVate
740-367-0502 .
south of Gallipolis SA 7
lot No pets. $400 pfus
Burldmg permtt ava tlable.
depoSit (740)446-6890
Twtn Rtvers Tower !s accept(740)256 -6823
Beauttful RIVerview tdeal for tng applicattons for waiting
Ill\ I II .\
1 or 2 people no pets reter- hst tor Hud·substzed, 1- Or,
ences. (740)441 _0181 _
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO
Btdwell area, clean. remodHOUSF.s
\IIlll"\1
eled , 2BR. S400 month
FORIID.T
includes water &amp; sewer ~10
Deposivrelerences No pets
0% Down Payment and
GoofliS
(304)576-4037.
financmg available with
approved cred,lt. A\lerage For Rent or Sale 2br 2ba.
credit qualilies you II down Mobile Home in Mason
payment has kept you lrom (304)773-575 1
buying, th is IS your chance
Appliance
to own your own home If Trailer for Rent $400/month
plUS10epos11 (304)576-224 1
you have a doWn payment
Warehouse
but would like to conserve 11.
AmR'I ~ IEi'IIS
we otter tow down payment
FORRHH
in Henderson , WV.
Preprograms also Great 1nter·
1
owned applicanes starting at
est rates Local company.
Mo rtgage
Locators 1 and 2 bedroom apart- $75 &amp; up all under warranty.
(740)992 -7321
ments. furnished and unlur- we do service work on all
nishea, secun ty deposct Make anc:t Models (304)6752 story Colon1al 3 bdrm 1 reQwred no pets. 740-992- 7999
bath. Gas heat Cntrl A/C . 2218
Bedding queen &amp; full 2
$600 mo. (740)446-3481
1 bedroom apt WID hookup large rugs . 6 small throw
2br
house
for
rent. $290 month +- depostt Close rugs. new mattress set, cup$350/month , water ancl to Holzer Hosp1tal Call 740· board 304-675-2801
trash patd, no pets. Oeoosit 339·0362,
and reference requt red 1 br second lloor apartment Good Used Appliances .
ReconditiOned
and
(740)388·1 100
tn Pomt Plea sant water &amp; Guaranteed
Washers .
t rash ptck-up mcluded 1n Dryers.
Ranges
and
2br House tn New Haven
ca ll 304-675-2144 Refngerators Some start ar
App liances Furntshed No rent
Pets
$300/depostt , before 4.00 cal l 304-675- $95 Skaggs Applrances 76
vme St (740)446- 7398
$325/month (304)882-3652 3653 afte r 4:00 .

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6i15
Pomer,oy. Ohio
22 Years Local Ex erience

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
· New Homes
• Garages

~~~:::.JI
GRIZZWELLS
'MIIJ l1lolt.

Remodeling

140-992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare ·
I

"'our 'lllrthday:

Saturday, Ocl . 16, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Don·t be hesitant or reluctant to accept
greater responsibi lities in the year ahead
where your work or career is concerned .
There will be commensu rate rewards to
go along with your added dulles
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23)- Put a llm1t on
what you 1ntend to spend today 1t you are
pla nning an evenmg out on the town with
friends. If you don't your spendi ng could
qu1ddy get out of control and yau·tl regret
11 la ter.
SCORPI O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You're
likely to be en a gregartous mood today
and do a lot of visitmg "tia the te lephone
Your 1nends may be rn te rested in whal
you ha\le to say. but try not to dommate
the conversat1ons.
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) - Be
\IEJ ry select1ve of those w1th whom you
associate today. because you·re not like·
ly to have much Pattence With those persons who make you !eel uncomfortable
when in their prese nce
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Just
because an tnvestment or a commercial
\len ture has worked out well tor one ot
you r trrends doesn"t guarantee that rt Wlll
do so for you Timmg IS everythmg. and
you rs m1ght be off today
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19\ - Before
you begtn any proJect today that can t be
left unfrn tshed. be sure that the people
you are coun tmg on for sup port wtll be
there to back you up when the~r help 1s
needed
PISCES (Feb 20-Ma1c h 20)- It's generally wise to sti ck to tested procedures
when perlormin9 a ted1ous task and
today 1t could be more Importan t lhan
usual that you do so E~pe n ments could
blow up rn your face.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprr l 19)- If you"re
short of cash today, try to make due with
what you have rather than borrow money
from others. It you have to. however, turn
to your lam1ly for it and be sure to repay
rt promptly
Don 't
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ma~~ promtses today to your assoc~ates
lor the sake of expediency or merely to
get them off your Dack.. ll you ta11 to stand
beh1nd your commitment you 'll causa
problems !01 tllem
GE MINI
(May
21-J une
20)
Respons1brlilies cannot be swept ur1der
the rug or done 1n e shoddy tas hcon
today. so subdue tomptallons to do so
The mass you leave behtnd will be noted
by the powers that be .
CANCER (June
21-July
22 )
Occastonally your ex-travagant Urges get
the .tletter of you . Thcs could be one ot
those da~s when you start out w1th good
Intentions and a hdld on your wallet but
weaken as the hours roll on .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You may be a
good starter today, but your .nterests 1n
that which you attempt to do could wane
rather qu1 ckly as so.me th1ng else Cliplures your fancy You "ll leave unfinished
projec ts in yOi.Jr wake .
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22) - Normally
you ·re very much a realtst and anus situations wlttl a practiced eYe. but tOday
you might have a tendency to v1ew things
as you would like them to be tnatead ot

T~~~:t~~T S©R~lA-~£~s·
_ _:.;.:_:.:__::__: Edilt4 Oy CLA 'l'
POLLAN

1:.NfiD A .
'1/A&lt;:ATIDN

Yo.:iR~ GONN.&amp;. PICK
A N,ICI&lt;NAM~ ~ 'tbuRSELF
wHY'o 'rbJ PICk A STuPID

Na M'i: li~E 5ERG£a,l I
I1C.HYPANTS~ ~

,C.:C...,:-\

WOlD
UMI

J;.

0 ·fou r

Re :m~::Mg e

l1tte r3 of the

scra mbled words below fo f orm l our llmpl e words.

I

I

K L y N Fi

I

A fe~enc of ours seemed \o
b\· mac at ihe worlo His wife
6Jd n·ii. t~~a~ the heavies! 10ad
.-- - - - - -----, une :an :aery is a chip on h1s
D -~ L PC D
--- - - - --

~,...::
I' ...:1 .;:._:
1 ..-::--&lt;
1• O

.:ome iete tl'le chuckle q1.101ed
by idlir.; 1n tMe ITIIlSi:\g words

you c eve!oo hom step No. 3 below.

I'

t•

i

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS , o-1

•- o •

Vic tor- Grass - Duily- Jester· OURSELV!?:S
"Doesn't 1\ seem strange," a friend mused , "that 'N e
loudly declare \hat we want )U S,t1:e. but it's usually jus\
for OU R SELV ES."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

W~I CH LoCfUR ~

DO 'tOO 11.1JUK,
"!iTICK Wl'f" IT'
OR•1T"S O~LY A G.A/1\f,'~

SOUP TO NUTZ

'(dJ $\l~~

&gt;

·Complete

Graph

peo ple I pl ay for The goal is to make the people nappy " - Les flaul
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 10-15

as what ttley are ,

co

IT \5" ,...:.' ~.W~&gt;--~~

Astro-

"
PRE VIO US SOLUTION - " .. my whole lite wha1 keep• me g01ng are 1he

So '-""'T

NICKNAM E
IM:X.lLO '(cU
PtCK
~SELf

�•

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALONG THE RivER

I.l\'fN( ;

Citizen Corps stands
ready to help out, Cl

2005 Honda Accord, Dl

un
~

If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c,lo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia. NC 28053

one. but two maJOr NASCAR

points st andings, and t he

Race: SpongeBob
SquarePants Movie 300
Where: Lowe's Motor Speed·
way, Concord, N.C. (1.5 mi.),
200 laps/ 300 miles .
When: Friday. Oct. 15
Last year's winner: Greg Bif·
fie
Qualifying record: Kevin Harvic k, Chevrolet. 184.445
mph, May 24, 2003.

four t h vi ct ory of his career

Race· record : Mark Martin ,

races. Hts VICtory in the Ban-

quet 400 - settled mostly
among drivers who won't be
invited to the one at the end

of the year - fo llowed by
one day another vtctory in the

Busc h Senes. The 41-yearold Chevrolet drive r began
the day ra nked 24th in the

only lifted him up three Ford, 155.996 mph, May 25,
spots. Nemechek held off an- 1996.
a back seat at Kansas other vete ra n, Ric ky Rudd , Last week: Joe Nemec hek,
Speedway as drivers Wi thout who arrived and left Kansas 1n a Chevrolet , won the Mr.
a hint of a chance at the in 26th place in th e stand- Goodcents 300 at Kansas
champ ionship took center ings. Greg Biffle finished Speedway.
stage. Joe Nemechek , who third and moved up to 18th

i'' li·Ma~

drivers have'COillplained
about all the attention going to
: lO drivers. Joe Nemechek fixed ·
~:.:· .,~· Wltll a vlcto!)' at Kansas. tn
~-· fact, the 10 drivers'racing for
i''··the championship raced mainly
~·;: tlach other. They ted a grand to~·iillll of 11 1aps between tllem.
~~•· If the otd points systel)l was
;,:.still In effect, Jeff Gcrdon would
~i'. new leaq Dale Earnhardt Jr. by
?-'·· ~ne point. Jamie McMurray .and
· Dale Jarrett would he in the top
: ... 1(). Ryan .Newman and Jeremy
~i Mayfield wouldn't.

Oh io \ ' all&lt;·~ l'uhli,hin~ l'o.

Race: Silverado 350k
Whore: Texas Motor .Speed·
way, Justin (1.5 miles), 146
laps/ 219 miles.
When: Saturday, Oct. 16

SPORTS

Last year's winner: Bre ndan

• Rebels break into win
column. See Page 81
• Blue Devils tops
Warriors. See Page 81
• Anglers work to keep
trout stream clean. See
Page 86
• NASCAR Weekend.
See Page 85

Gaughan
Qualifying record : Scott Riggs, Dodge, 181.953 mp h,
Oct. 4, 2001.
Race

record:

Brendan

Gaughan, Dodge , 131.736
mph, Sept. 13, 2002.
Oct. 2: Todd Bodine drove a
Toyota to victory at Cal ifornia
Speedway in Fontana.

hadn't won a race all year. ar- in potnts.
rived in Ka nsas and won not

" ··

· ... ,

·IN THE SPO'TL:IGHT ..

·

" · f'EUO OF THE WEEK ·

· ·•
NEXTEL

JOHN ANDRETII

v

CuP SERIES

Kurt
Busch

By Monte Dutton

he had won in neither series this

John Andretti,
a two-time
whiner in
NASCAR's
premier
circu~, will
drive the
No. 14 car
next season
in the Nextel
Cup Series.

NASCAR This Week

Trussell: Meigs deputy layoffs not likely
Bv BRtAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

POM EROY
Sheriff
Ralph Trussell beli eves a
wholesale layoff of deputi es
will not be necessary th is year.
partl y because Meigs County
Commissio ners have authorized transfers in his budget.
Sheriff
Ralph
Trusse ll
requested the tmnsfer of$3KOO:l
from vmi ous accounts in his
budget to his employees salaries
fund, and comm issioners
approve&lt;.] d1e . transfers at their
regular meeting on llmrsclay.
Those · tran sfers in c!uded
$10,000 from the sheriff's

cxpcn&gt;oes li lt' cou nty pri,on~rs. keep his cu.rreill staff on the
but' Cornrni"ioncr Ji m Sheets job fo r the ent ire year.
said ·nluNiay he expe&lt;:h those
Thursda1 \ transfers will
~:os t s to be met wi thout using all
Cil low Tru;sell to make three
of the funds set aside in their payroll&gt; at S12.500 each.' He
respective line item.... ha...cJ on said he may be req ll ired to
the ye,~\ spendi ng to date.
i" ue t 11 o-w eek Iayo ff notices
TrtN,.!II has spent S5.21 Xho lar because of a term in the negollll medi cal ~u..;t~. lea\ ing t.Ull1lher
tiated cuntrat:l with deputies,
$5.CXXI in the account ;~ ier th~ bu t said the layoft'.s probably
mmskr to the salaries fund.
wi ll not actually take place.
Comm is:-. ioners appnlpri atTile sherilr now employs 12
eJ $537.2 17.9 1 for Trusse ll's derutics and nne ollice assistant.
operat ions th is year. incl udTrtl'&gt;d l said if layoffs are
ing $225.372.50 for J eput y indeed averte&lt;.l. he will have
salari es. In Janua ry. Tru ssel l acce» to funds set aside for
saiu he would need $330.000 un em ploy ment .:ompen sa111 salary fund s .. alone. to
tion for deputi es

contract repairs line. $20.0&lt;Xl
from the me&lt;.Jical line. am!
$8,000 from cnnt ract sei·vices.
Trusse ll sai d Frid&lt;ty he ex pects
aduit io nal reve nue . to come
into hi s ofli ce before ye ar's
end to help make up his payroll delicit . incluuing res ti tuti on from a criminal cnse.
T m confident at this point
that a layoff can be avo tdeu: ·
said .
Tru sse ll
. ;Co mmi ~s i o ne r s are workin g
clo.sely with me to prevent a
layoff from happe nin g."
Commis.sioners are directl y
responsible fo r the costs of
housing, food and medical

Earnhardt Jr. by pointedlycntlcizing NASCAR officials for penaliz·
~: ·1ngEamhardt for using profanity.
Stewart said NASCAR was "fantasy land.' How so? "A lot of
what NASCAR does contradicts
what they say: Stewart said.
1&gt; Stewart. by the way, dominated
the Busch Series race only to be
knocked out in a crash with Ne-

mechek wilh only a cou ple of
• taps to go. Stewart has never
won a Busch Series race. and it

doesn't seem to be in the cards.
Rudd was as hungry for a
win as Nemechek, but the veter-

·. 1&gt; RiCky

an was a model of sportsman-

ship when 'his Ford caug ht Nemechek's Chevy at the end . "I
~ wasn't going to take a cheap
• shot at Joe," he said.
:. 1&gt; Greg Biffle finished third bu t
7 · thought he should have been
don't wan t to act

like a baby; he said , "but I'm
disappointed bad."
WHO' S He'T · · · ·
ANO WHO ' S NOT · ..

Joe Nemechek has
, finished In the top 10 three
; · times in the past fou r races ....
• ~ Ricky Rudd has finished In the
: • 'lop 15 tllnie weeks in a row. .. .'
·• • Elliot Sadler jumped four spots
;·; to fourth place In the "Chase for
: .. the Championship" with a
.. fourth-place Uni5h In Kansas.
; .,.Wha'l hot?

•"

: .,. Wbo'l not? Jimmie Johnson

. has slumped to ninth in "the
Chase," 247 poi.nts behind Kurt
, Busch, lie's been 32nd or
; · worse In !hree of -the past five
· races. As many critics feared ,
; ... the man'WhO led the po,lnts race
,.. for mGst of the season ~es
~- ·been stluflled w the back In the
i'\:;~':':',:•
·· !1!lW
playoff format
·, ..
....
,.,, .. ,. ,

~·.

s

Dale
Earnhardt Jr.

ty for us1 ng profanity in a television
int erview at Tall adega . hlf we get a

top-10 (finish) at every one of these
last races. I'll be real proud of my
team and myself,' sa1d Earnhardt after finishing in Ka nsas. "That's what
it's go ing to ta ke to win the cham pi·

on sh ip. and tha t's probab ly what's
going to happen ."
NASCAR This Week's . Monte
Dutton gives his take : "Th is is evolv.
ing into quite a battle between talent·
ed drivers. One, Earnhardt, is quite a
bit more popular with the fans than
the othe r. but winning the champion sh ip would help Busch 1n th at department. Oh . yeah , there's this Gor-

do n guy wh o's not too fa r ba ck, eith er:·
·

• · ...FAN · TIPS
NASCAR fan1 gat chance
to 'Race to the Polla'
Thirty-s ix percent of America's eli·

gible voters we re not reg1 stered for
the 2000 presiden ti al. state and local elections. With that in mind , Ne&gt;-

Bob Kincai d of Racine. left. donated this 1994 Chr ysler m1 ni.van for the Make a Difference Day auct ion to be he ld Saturday
at the Senior Citizens Center. With Kincaid. from the lett , are
Beth Shaver, Meigs County Council on Aging di rector. auctionee r Dan Smith and Debbie Jones. center activity director.
(Charlene Hoeflich/photo ,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Vena Evelyn Parker
• Ona Emmett 'Buddy'
Sheets
• Rilla J. Luckadoo
• Lester M. Hawk
• Anthony Perry
Watson
• Eva Jean Mankin ,

"Race to the Polls." a nonpart is an
voter regi strat1on program de signed
to encourage and mo bil ize NASCAR
fans to registe r to vote in th e upcommg Nove mber elect ions. As part of

WEATHER

the Race to the Polls program. Nextel
wil l use 1ts at-track fa n destination,
The Nextel Experience, and on-site
kiosks as hubs for voter registration
booths.
• LEGENDS ANO t..ORE •

Lowe's Motor Spaadwll)' Ia
center of NASCAR universe

Daytona Beach, Fla., may be
NASCAR's headquarte rs. but Lowe's
Motor Speedway, in Concord , N.C. , is
located at the sport's epicenter. The
1.5-·mile track ha s·been around si nce

1960, tiut th1ngs neve r get old there.
More innovations have occurred at
LMS than at al l the sport's othe r
trac ks comb ined . Master promoters
Bruton Sm ith and ' Humpy" Wheeler
have kept the track perpetuallyahead

•

::"'·'·

Detalto on Page

Professional musician and e ducator Mick Soute r vis ited students at Point Pleas a nt Primary
School on Friday to give a mus ical presentation about "healthy bodi es and healthy lives. "
Souter si ngs and plays a variety of instru men ts while al so providing an important message
about healthy lifestyle choices. (Stepha nie Je nki ns/photo)

Musician teaches kids to have
'healthy bodies, healthy lives'
The West V i r~ i nia BoarLI
BY STEPHANIE JENKINS
SJ ENKINS@MYDA ILYR EG ISTER.COM of Educ atiu n as ' well as th e
State Leg islature have identi ·
fied the pro blem of obe sit y
POINT PL EAS ANT We sl Virginian ~ are hl!&lt;:um- among chJIUn: n as a se rio u~
ing more health con scious proble m and have been di suu e to the growi ng probl em
with obesi ty among adu lts . cussing sol utions throu ghout
and childre n.
the year.
Mick Souter,' profession al
The
program
titl ed
mu~i c ian and West Virgi nia "Health y Bodi es. Hc ulth y
resident. visited Point Pleasant Li Yes,'' foclr&gt;es on goo d
Primary School on Friday to- mr trition, exe rci se. and
teach stuuents the impm1ancc harmful substances.
of making healthy lifestyle
To make it more entenainin g1
choices.
Souter aLIJs music. He plays the

tel Communication s Inc. ha s devised

of its time..

Valley

u

They're runn1ng neck-and-neck for
the Nextel Cup championsh ip, and
while Busch's edge is 29 points, 25
of themstem from Earnhardt's penal-

John Andretti , who won races at
Daytona in 1997 and Martinsville in
1999, will return full time to
NASCAR's premier series next .year
and will give his new team a trial run
this week at Lowe's Motor Speedway.
Andretti will drive a Ford carrying
No. 14. That number is often associat·
ed with the 41-year-old driver's godfa·
ther, A.J . Foyt. John is, of course, the
nephew of another Indy-car great,
Mano Andretti.
: The new team will be entered by
PPC Racing, with primary spon sorship from Victory Brand and APlus at
Sunoco. This year Andrelli has competed in five races, with the best finish occurring in the Daytona 500,
where he wound up 13t h
"We're giving birth to something
new that is extremely exciting with a
lot of great people,'' said Andretti.
"For me to be part of it , I'm overwhelmed in a lot of ways and delighted and looking forward to being part ·
of all of the success we're going to
have in the future. It's good to be back
in the saddle."
Andretti downplayed the fact that
he will represent a one-car team in an
age in which stock-car racing ha s
come to be dominated by multi car
groupings.
'
"At fir st the question was a fair one,
John Clark/ NASCAR This Week
but now we feel like we're not a onecar team," he said. "We're part of
Ford, which is a huge camp. Robert there ," he said. "Also, · you have has to happen pretty quickly, and so
Yates Racing has been tremendous in· friend s at the race track. You work · I'm pushing hard and they're pushing
their help . It's been phenomenal to · with so many different people. I got to hard and we know the hill is huge."
work with them, and they actually had go to a lot of soccer games and horse
During his career, John Andretti
a couple of people come out and talk shows, but there's still something 'has won at many levels. He won a
us through some of the things they've missing. It's not the case like a Mark CART race in Australia in 1991 and
worked with. "
Martin or a Rusty Wallace, those guys was on the winning team at the 24·
Andretti hasn't been a full-time who really have completed their ca- hour endurance race at Daytona in
competitor in Cup since 2002 , al· reers and have gotten so much out of 1989. He finished fifth in the 1991 In·
though he ran 29 races for four differ- it. I feel like I've left so much behind dianapolis 500.
ent teams in 2003. Returning from the and still have a lot that I need Ia acsideline s is quite a relief.
complish, and my window is short. "
"It bothers me a lot to see all those
Contact
Monte
Dutton
at
"We don't have a lot of time to build
guy s having a lot of fun and not be because what I want to accomplish hmd4858@peoplepc.com

Gordon - are within 100 points.
• 1&gt; Tony Stewart went to bat for pal

.ll•·:•.'
t!J:·,"'.:'

$1.2!) • Vol. ;lH . :'\u , Ho

Kurt Busch vs.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Andretti will have a full-time ride next season with PPC Racing

year when the weekend began.
1&gt; The "Chase" field is becoming
increasingly stretched. The diStance from first-place Busch to
10th-place Jeremy Mayfiel d is
257 points. Only three drivers Busch, Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff

·

Pum&lt;·•·u~ • ~1iddl&lt;•l""1• Gallipoli, • Oduh&lt;·•· 17. :wo4

s

tost control of his Ford early in
'the race but managed to come
back because, miraculously, his
spinning car didn't hit anything.
"I'm disgusted with myse lf because it was the same mistake
I've made before: sa1d Busch . ·
1&gt; Talk about a long shot? Joe Nemechek won both Kansas races
- Nextel Cup and Busch - and

~,

'

R

plaCe. He's lucky to be there. He

the winner.

:'&gt;"&gt;

E

f:frt·Busch, of course, is the te'ader
In the system that is 'actually in

t

~

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs connties

BUSGH StRIES

Race: UAW-GM Quality 500
Where : Lowe's Motor Speed·
way. Concord, N.C. (1.5
m1les ). 334 laps/ 501 m11es.
When: Saturday, Oct. 16
Last year's winner: Tony
Stewart
Qualifying record: Jimmie
Johnson, Chevrolet, 187.052
mph. May 27, 2004.
Race ~ecord : Jeff Gordon,
Chevrolet. 160.306 mph,
Oct. 11. 1999.
Last week: "The Chase· took

,,i

' me

Ll ulcimcr. bc111ju. guitar. and
p li.UlO.

" Music helps get (the me&gt;sage 1 through to the ki ds.''
Souter said. " It's one of the
best tcm: hers. It in l'll lves the
kids in th e program an u that
i-, mean in gful to them··
Souter beg;m playing instrtr ments for a living when he was
18. In urder to support ilimself.
he had to eventual ly pursue
other things.

Make a .Difference Day
benefit auction set
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYS,ENTINEL .COM
rv1ei &lt;=
POM EROY
Co unt y Sentor Ci tilcn'
Center · per,o nn el
we re
&lt;.leli Qhted with the do nat ion
of a' I99.J Chrys ler Town and
Country van . and the donor.
Bob Kin caid of Rac ine. said
he was "del ighted to get it out
of hi , driYe way. "
The van. which run s fin e
hu t has lots of miles on it. is
probably the bigges t of hundred, of it ems to be '&lt;JIJ at
th e Oct. 2.1 "\1 ake a
Di ffere nce Day" h~ n e fit au&lt;:ll"

tio n to be held at I0 a.m. in
fro nt •Jf ti)c Seni or Center.
Dan Smnh will be the auctioneer.
The muncy rai,ed will go
towards providing a match
fnr a ne w 1·an to be used in
tran sport ing th e elderly to
and from th e center. to do
grocery an d other shopping
anJ for med ical care.
Th ~ 1 an i, he ing secured
through the Ohio Department
uf Tra nsport ati on but does
requi re a matc h from the
Inc OJI agene) .

Please see Audion, AS

EHS Homecoming Queen

Please see Healthy, AS

A2

Hottinger to address Gallia Republicans
INDEX

Hott inge r. of Newark : represe nts the 3 1st stat e Se nate
.
District
of
Li cking.
GALLIPOLIS - . State Fairfield. Hockin £ and Pe tTY
Sen. Jay Hottin ger will be co unt ies . and a "port ion ,)f
.the main speaker for the Pickaway County.
Galliu County Republi can
He serves on th e fo llow.-ing
fall rall y and hog roast set Senate co mmittees: energy...
for 6 p.m. Thursday. Oct.. 2 1 natural resou rce' and en'V.iat th e Galli a County' Junior ro nme nt (v ice c hairman).
Fai rg rounu s.
fi nance and f(nan cial in sti tu - ·
Entertainment will be pro- ti on~. fin ancial in ~t i t u t i'on~
vided by John Grubb. The subco mmilt ee . ins ura nce.
event. fe aturing loca l anu co mm en..:e ;.md tabor. ci\·il
ru les.
Joi nt
reg imi'al GOP can didates in ju sti ce.
th e Nov. 2 electio n. is free to Cummill ee on ,' \gene) Rule
th e publi c.
Rev iew and the Ohio
KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

4 SECllONS -

24 PAGES

Around Town ·

A3

Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics

C4
D3
insert

Editorials

&amp; Supply

A4

Obituaries

Co.

Region

As
A2

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohi'o Valley Publistting Co.

Leg islati\ C

Se n ·ice

Com rni ..,:-.ion.

The 1988 gradu ate of
Newa rk High Sc hool graduated sum ma cum lau ue lro m
Capital Uni l'e rsi ty in IQ'l 2
with doubl e majors in politi ca l sn ence and pub! ic
~tdm i n i st r~1 ti o n .
Hottin ger began hi s politi ca l career as a se ni or in co llege wit h hi' e le ct ion to
Newa rk Citv Co un cil. In
1994. he wa; elected to the
fir't of two terms represe nt-

Please see Address, AS

Kayla Nave was crowned Hornecommg Queen at Eas tern High
School on Fnday n1ght. She was escorted by Rober t Cross.
2003 Queen .~ lyssa Holter crowned Nave dunng halftime ceremontes Fnday flight. (Bnan J . Reed 'photo)

555 Park St • Middleport

'992-6611

An Online Well ness Center.

..

HMC Community Health and Wei/ness
"Dedicated to Promoting Wei/ness · ·

'ftluWQaiQC!e. . .Mijl
_-., ..... Gai:AI"-nL

.

106 North Second .Ave. • Middleport,
OH
.

252 Upper River Rd.

•

At Your Fingertips!

http :1/holze r. well sou rc·e ~com.

Gallipolis, OH

• Health tips • Health related articles • Resources for better living • Wei/ness sectwn ·And everything in between!
I

.

,.

--·- --·----·----·-- ---·

___ ___ ___ ._
...,....

,

•

J

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