<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5536" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5536?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T00:11:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15466">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1d098196ef1471b0dfa0e48817dd7ad8.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fbeaa3ad42918baa37778e970df85719</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="18726">
                  <text>. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 18, ·2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

r

NASCAR: Nextel Cup

It's USC
and ... Miami?, Bt

Busch bounces back from everything to hang on to points .lead
BY JENNA FRYER

UAW·CiM Quality 500 .

Associated Press
CONCORD, N.C tAP\- If Kun
Busch goes on to win his first
NASCAR title, he can ]1&lt;&gt;int to the
500 miles at Lowe·, Motor
Speedway as the dellning rac·c or hi'
season.
Busch rallied from a fender-bender
in practice. a wreL'k on the li rsl lap of
the race. battled with a temperamental call and avoided two ncar disasters.
All in a day's work for Bu,rh. who
emerged from the UAW-GM Quality
500 on Saturday night with a ti&gt;urthplace linish and his lead in 1he poims
standings intac:l.
"To be able to do this with dodging
so many obstacles - it was the
adventure of Kw1 Busch and le&lt;im ...
he said. "We did a good job of _j ust
avoiding disaster as m:my times as it
did .strike. We had to avoid thi s and
avoid that and l'Untinue tu ·make
adjustments on our car."
·
That Busch and his Roush Raci n£
team were able to survive, and leave
Charlotte with a 24-point lead over
Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the standings.

Results
1. (9) Jmroe .Jol'nsoO. Chevrolet. 334, $191 .450.
2.1'23) Jefl Goolon. CheYrole&lt;, 334, $161 .678.
3.
Dale EamhaJdl Jr . Chevrnlat. 334. $155.928.
4 (21 Kurt Busdl. Ford. 334, $110250.
•
5. (8) ..00 Nemechek. COO\Iflllet. 33&lt;1. $112,750.
6 (39) Dale Jarre~ Foro, 334, $1 13.992
7. (5) Elloft SaOOr. Foro. 334. $112,158.
8. {241 Jame McMU""Y, Dodge, 334, $80,625.
9. {351 Jefl Burton. Che;rolet. 334, sn. 700.
10 l1 51 Tony SteWart, Chevrolel, 334, $113.903.
11. 361 Matt Konseth, Foro, 334, 5113,003
12.(311 Smng Marin. Dodge. 334.$100.525.
13. (12 Marl&lt; Ma&lt;tin. Fold. 334 . $74.500,
14.{11Ryan
Dodge, 334.$136,117.
15 (11 1Bobby Hamllon Jr.. Chevrolel333, $88,150.
16. (411 Ricky Ac.dl, Fom, 332,$89,006. .
17.(341 BobbylBbonte. C - t . 332.$103.483.
18.( 191 Actll&gt;{ GO!don, Gr&lt;Molet. 332. $93,137
19.l43 Ward Buf1on. Che;rolet. 331 , $61 ,350.
20 3) Casey Merus. Dodge, 331.$79,400.
21.(301Ken Sch&lt;ader, Dodge, 331. $60,550.
22. (201 John AndreW. Ford, 330. $06,675.
23.(16)- Gaughan. DoO;!e, 329, $69,375.
24. (291 Jolmny Sauter. Dodge, :!29. $60,455.
25.(401 Teny ltlbon1e. ChevrOlet 328, $88.325.

251

N""""".

doesn't bode 11cll rur the rest of the
Chase contenders.
He's snmeh(m managed to avoid
mi,take' and overcome bad breab
thruu~h all rive nf the rirsl 10
NASCAR playorr races. Busd1 ha'
lini,hed in the top I tJ in each of the
events. and head&gt;. imo the stretch run
with victories on three of the remaining five tracks.

26.1421 SooitWinmer, Dodge. 327, sn,375.
27. (32 Kyle Flltly, Dodge. 326, $66.934.
28. t6) Michael I'V!IIOiJ, Chevrolet. 319, a:x:idont.
$91 .991.
29. (22) Jirrvny Sperolr, Ctelrole1. 310, a:x:idont.
$58,050.
.
30. (131 .Jeremy Maylielj. Dodge, 2n. aocidwlt,
$66,425.
31. (14) AuslyWal..... Dodge, 274,$96,633.
32. (21 Kasey Kame. Dod!le. 267, """'"""· $133,050.
33. (18) GAI\l Biflle, Ford, 265, $63.550.
34 {38) KYJe Busch. CheYrolet. 264, accident.
$54,575.
JS. (33) Jefl Groen, Dodge. 238. ecgi1e lailure.
$00,750.
38. (7) i&lt;e.&gt;in H~ ~. 221, ecgi1e lailUre,
$00,793.
'
37. (10) o .... Blane,: Ford. 218, aociden1. $88,007.
38. (4) Scott Riggs. COO\Irolet 30, ergme laHure,
$EI2,022.
'
39. (27) ~n Lepage, Dodge, 25, t;lnilion, $54,290.
40. (17) Brian Vickers, Chevrolet, 22. aotident.
$62.255.

41 . lOTlG~Sad&lt;s, Dodge, 10,acciden1. $54.220.
42. 26 Jeff uller, Dodge.?,- . $54,180.
43. 28 Tony Aair&lt;ls, Cf1evrolel, 1, aocidenl $53,499.

Asked Saturday night as if it was
starting to seem like destiny that he
would win the Nexte\ Cup championship, Busch wasn't sure.
"You've got 10 have the whole
package, and right now we're very
hlessed to he in thi s situation." he
said.
The weekend gu t otf to ominous
start for Busch during Friday's prac-

Major League Baseball: NLCS

Astros even series with Cards
the Houston Astros like this is
a great team.
Bcltrun exacted reven~e
with his bat. He reached d01vn
HOUSTON - By the time and golfed a 2-2 slider over
Carlos Beltran's shot landed the wa iL sending the crowd at
in Houston 's bullpen. this Minute Maid p,lrk into a frenmuch was clear: At least base- zv.
ball had one competitiv ~ · Beltran
broke
Jeffrev
playoff series still going.
Leonard·, 19~7 mark fnr cnriBeltran did it again. homer- secutive po .... tseuso n game:-.
ing in a record fifth stra ight with a home run . and matched
postseason game and lifting Barrv Bonds· 2002 record for
the Astros over the St. Louis homers in a single postseason.
Cardinals 6-5 Sunday to even
Tcl\·arel further an~ered the
the NL championship series at Astros when he thre\1· a fast2-all.
ball ove r the head of the next
Beltran's tiebreaking shot hiller. Jeff Ba £well. Thev
in the seventh inning off exchanged words.
plate
Astros nemesis Julian Tavare7 umpire Mtke Wimers warned
·ensured the teams will gu against further troub le and
back to Busch Stadium to set- play resumed without any
tle who goes to the World problems.
Series.
Dan Wheeler wound up
Meantime. there's Game 5 1~ith the win. pitching one
Monday night. with Brandon inn in2 in relief.
Backe starting for Houston
With Rov Oswalt on the
against Woody Williams .
motJnd. the -A "rn' really liked
Sluggers aga in dom.inated. this pi tching matchup. Yet.
Not quite the way they did at the righty whD led the league
Fenway Park , where th e with 20 wins wa., far from his
Yankees obi iterated Boston be&gt;l - he hun~ around for si.\
19-8 Saturday night for a 3-0 innings and clidn 't s.trike out a
lead in the ALCS.
single hitter for the tirst time
Albert Pujols homered for since .!Ltly 20D.1 .
St. Louis. then came close til a
o~walt \V ~ Il l 2-0 ll!!i.linst St.
go-ahead two-run homer in Luui-, thi . , ..,ea~on. tT1en \vun
the ninth against Brad Lidgc. the clinchin~ Game 5 of the
But the ball was caught on the first round &lt;ii Atlama. But he
warning track. and the Astra' seemed too eager and too
closer .struck out Scott Rolen excited at the stan and neve r
for hi s second straight save.
fpund hi' rh yt hm .
Lance Berkman also homeFnrtunate lv for the Astros.
red for Houston. giving the Ja,on Marquis wasn't much
teams a combined 19 home better. Bumped do\\·n in the
runs through only four games. rqtation after getting hit hard
The exc itable Tavarez upset bv Los An~elcs in Game 2 of
his opponents last week by the opening round. he was in
remarking. ··we don ' t look at constam trou blc aga inst
BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press

Houston.
Cardinal&gt; manager Tony La
Ru"a kept looking for edges.
and a couple of lineup shifts
paid off John Mabry started
in place of left fielder Reggie
Sanders and hit an RBI single.
and rookie catcher Yadier
Molina
replaced
Mike
Matheny and threw out Craig
Biggio trying to steal. and
added a hit.
For the fourth straight
game. the visiting team horliered in the first inning. It was
Pu_jols' turn this time. and he
lined :1 two-run shut into the
Crawford boxes abDve the
left-field wall.
Rolen followed with a double and later 'cnred on
Mabry's single. marking the
first time in 20 innings that St.
Louis scored on something
•
besides a home run.
Pujols was in the middl~f
the Cardinals next two runs.
He walked and scored on Jim
Edmonds' 'acrifice fly in the
t~ird. and hit an RBI single in
\he fourtil for a 5-.\ edge.
Even though he was pitclling with a lead all game.
Marquis stru gg led.
•
Bagwell hit an RBI double
in the first and Berkman doubled home two more runs in
the third.
Berkman 's third homer of
the NLCS pulled the Astros to
5-.f in the sixth against reliever Kiko Calero . •
Houston tied it later in the
inning nn an RBI single by
No. 8 hitter Raul Chavez he is Oswalt \ personal catcher and not known fur hi s hitting. and he c h~ercd himself
all the way down the line .

Major League Baseball: NLCS

Red Sox not finished just yet
BY RONALD BLUM

Associated Press

rice session. With his younger brother. Kyle. in the race and stmggling
with his car during practice, Busch
plilled up to his bumper in an effort to
assess why Kyle wasn't running welL
He lost concentration for a split
sewnd, and bounced off the waiL
His crew was able to make enough
repairs to keep him from going to a
backup car, but it was a very close
calL
Then it took just I0 seconds of the
race for his team to figure oui what
kind of night it was going to be. Scott
Riggs missed a shift on the start, and
his car became an ob;tacle for the rest
of the speeding field.
It started a chain-reaction nash that
damaged the cars of both Busch and
third-place Chase driver Jeff Gordon.
Alter tixing the damage. Busch
found the car w;ts difficult to drive.
Then Kevin Harvick blew an engine
and dumped oil right in front of him,
and Busch had to scramble to avoid
it. He did, but Chase drivers Matt
Kenseth and Jeremy Maytleld could
not, and both crashed.
Then. late in the race. Jimmy
Spencer and Brendan Gaughan
wrecked, and Busch had to dart
through the infield grass to keep from

becoming a participant. Chase drivers Mark Manin and Ryan Newman
didn't, and both were collected.
"It was a tall order of adversity to
overcome,'' Busch said. "I was just
far enough behind some · of those
accidents to stay away - , having a
blown motor in front of us, to have a
few wrecks and just being able to
avoid the disaster. It was an adventurous night and we were able to come
away with a good fin\sh."
Qordon had just as many problems
as Busch. and he too came away with
a strong finish . He ended up crossing
the finish line in second place right behind teammate Jimmie
Johnson - and left Charlotte 74
.
points out of the lead.
Gordon battled back from the firstlap crash. came back from two laps
down. and wasn't significantly damaged in a spin that caused Rusty
Wallace to hit him in the rear.
"That's why this team is so incredible," Gordon said. "I don't know
what in the world happened at the
beginning. We were junk. I got loose,
I got a lap down. and all of a sudden
it just came to life. We didn't gain a
lot of points. but we didn't lose a lot,
either."

" It's like two-a-days." he said.
His campaign literature ties into the football
theme. He distributes 4-by-6-im;h cards with a
photo of him in his Bmwns unifonn wearing
No. 52 on one side. and on the reverse the 2004
Browns schedule and a smaller photo of him in
his /·udge's robes.
" thought that that was obviously something
that would be an altention getter," Ambrose
said. ''It was set up like a football card."
Ambrose. 51. faces an opponent, John l
Russo. who also has some . name recognition
goi ng for him . There are five Russos on the
bench in Cuyahoga County and his cousin
Frank Russo is the county auditor.
Some attribute the political power of the
Russo name to inspection stickers on gas
pumps and cash registers throughout the county that bear Frank Russo's smiling mug.
"That is some form of advertising. It's probably better than being a fom1er Browns player.' Ambrose said .
John Russo. 39. a criminal defense attorney.
said he doesn't deny hi s name has political
power. He also docsn 't fault Ambrose tor using
his Browns career to promote himself.
But with eight contested common pleas
court races on the Nov. 2 ballot in Cuyahoga
County. Russo hopes voters will Jake the time
to look at judicial ratings by various bar associations and not just vote on name recognition.
"I'd like to think that voters are educating
themselves," he said.

MtLtCIA
Associated Press
JoE

CLEVELAND - Judge Dick Ambrose
wants his name to stand out on the November
ballot like an orange Browns helmet in a sea of
Steeler black and gold.
That's why the former · linebacker. who
earned the nickname "Bam Bam" by cracking
his shoulder pads in practice. is using his glory
days with the Browns in his campaign to be a
cmmty judge.
•
A political rookie. Ambrose already knows
name recognition is key to vtctory.
"Unfortunatel y. it is important in a judicial
race. just because a lo\. of people don't have
e.xpenence wnh JUdges. Ambrose smd. "They
don't know who thev arc."
He acknowledges ·his high proJile was a factor in him getting the Republican rarty's nomination and the appointment by Gov. Bob Taft
as a Cuyahoga County Common Pleas judge
four months ago.
'They were looking not only to qualifications ... but also somebody who has the abil ity
to get elected." he said.
•
Ambrose faced Hall of Fame running backs
Earl Campbell and Franco Harris as a linebacker for the Cleveland Browns from 1975RS. He said hi s new job. combined with the
pressure of campaigning. is even more difticult.

USC extends lead over Oklahoma
in AP poll; Auburn moves to No. 3
!API - On the eve of the season's tirst
Bowl Championship Series standi nos. No. I
Southern California increased its leaJ on No. 2
Oklahoma in The Associated Press Top 25 on
Sunday.
Auburn slipped ahead of Miami to No. 3 in
the media poll for the ftrstiime this season .
Last week, the gap between the Trojans and
Sooners had closed to 19 points - the smallest il has been all season - alter USC edoed
Cahtomw and Oklahoma shut out Texas. !3ut
on Saturday the Trojans played their best
~ame, beatmg previously unbeaten Arizona
:.tate 45-7.
The voters_ apparently took notice. USC
recetved 50 hrst-place votes and 1.6 10 pomts
and now leads Oklahoma by ~3 points.
The Sooners recetved 13 IIrst-placc votes.

__.,._

down 10 from last week. and 1.567 points.
Oklahoma beat Kansas State 31-21.
_ No. 3 Auburn received the remaming two
IJrst-place votes and slipped by No. 4 Mmmi
itfter the Hurricanes had to rally for a 41-38
v1ctorv over Lolllsville last Thursday. The
T1gers were 30 pomt s ahead of MI&lt;mlJ Florida
Stale is No. 5. and Wisconsin is sixth after
· winn ing a battle of unbeatens at Puodue.
Auburn .received its highest ranking in the
AP poll smce 1994. W&gt;Sconsin had its best
showing since Sept. I0. 2000. when the
Badger's were No.4. California. Texas. unbeaten Utah (6-0) and Georgia round out the first
I0. Notre Dame moved into the rankings for
the first ume thts season at No. 24, while Ohio
State dropped out for the first time in three sea&gt;Oils.

plenty

(lf cner~y

in

o!J sco red and Ri vGla

~wung

BOSTON _ Down to the ir Fenw&lt;11 Park .
right arm in dis~usl. H ~ ha'
last three outs of the seaso n.
E1·cn Ortit danced home to . bl~&gt;wn just lmu·",avcs in 34
the Boston Red Sox r:lll ied his wailing teammates at po,t,;cason chances. but two
_ agamst Mariano Ri vera . home plate.
have come thi ., year. lie has
the New York Yankee.s and
,This game lasted 5 hours. 2 ]o,l to Boston twice to •
decades of di sa ppointment.
minutes and ended at 1:22 Bo,lon during th e re gular
Bill Mueller si ngled home ·a.m. EDT.ju'i one night after 'sea,on.
· run o f'R'
·
~cw York \ 19-8 win took
Doug- Micntkiewicz fo lt he tymg
t 1ve ra mthe
ninth inning and David Ortiz 4:20. The teams have little lowed with a sacrifice . and
against
Pau l time to get ready for the next . Johnny Damon hit a hopper
homered
Quantrill in the 12th. leadjng one: Monday·, game st~rt s at to fiN that Tony Clark. play Boston to a 6-4 victory over 5: 10p.m.
ing in place of injured John
Of the 25 pre 1·ious teams to 0\erud. fumb led fur an error.
the Yankees on Sunday night
that avoided a four-gam e fall behind 3-0 in a best-of- That left runners at firs t and
.
sweep in the AL. ch&lt;imp i- seven serie'. 20 were s11ep1. 1l1ird.
onship series.
three ·]o,l in fi\e games and
Orlando Cabrer&lt;~ 'truck
Pedro Martinez will start the other two ]o,t in six.
uut. the Yank ees lei Damon
for · Boston iri Game 5
Quantrill. New York'' fifth take seco nd ~llld RamJreL
Monday
against . M i k~ pitcher. relic~ed Tom .Gord,un walked. loading the ba,es for
Muss ina. trying to force the . to '-lart the \_th .md aii O\\Cd Ortl7, who llted to n ght.
WJth ~lme r Ke1th Foulke
series back to New York the a leadotf smg.le to Mann}
following night. If the Sox Ramtrez. Ortt/ '·shot on a 2- · already ha ving pitched 2 2-J
win. injured Curt Schilling i; 1., ptlch landed 111 the nght· mmngs. Alan Embree came
expected ti&gt; be ready to start IJdd bull pen. .
11; and got throu gh the lOth .
Game 6
Bo,ton wa' lac tng the end Curtis Leskantc CSI:apcd an
· Red Sux fans 11 ho had of a di,arpoillling em\ to a \ !th -inning i&lt;tl1l hy getting
been praying. holdin g hand s scas~&gt;ll 11hcn Rtlc:ra \\.tl,cd lk rllic Willianh on a b:"c'and hop ing aga in't hope a Kev1n M1llar v.alked k:tdtng loaded llyoul. then ,lrandcd
few inning' earlier bur'i into oil the Ill nth .
a runner at second Ill the
cheers when on 11 ron nected
Pinch -runner Da1e Rohc n' 12th h)' "riktng IIUI .'llligucl
stole second on the first pllch Cnro.

'

..
'

'

FEMA sets deadline for applications

SPORTS
• Current skid isn't a
first for Ohio State. ·
See Page 81

BY BRIIIN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The Federal
Emergency Management Agency has
received 138 applications for individual assistance from Meigs County
residents affected by the Sept. 18
flood, and has set a deadline of Nov.
18 for those applications.
FEMA observes a 60-duy application period when a disaster is
declared. Since President Bush issued
a disaster declaration on Sept. 19. a
total of $ 191 ,609 in grants has been
awarded to Meigs Countians who
were left homeless or without essen-

DAY, OCTOBER 2
Advertising Deadline is
Wednesday, October 20th.

To Have Your

Business Included ...

~omt lllrasmtt l\egister

(304) 675-1333
&amp;&gt;allipolis tnailv
. . m:ribune ·
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156

tial goods &lt;llld services in the aftermath of Hurricanes Charley. Frances
and Ivan last month.
Gene Rom;mo, public in format ion
officer with FEMA. said Monday that of
the 138 appliratio1b from Meigs County.
60 housing ao.;sistancc grants totaling
$98,922 have already been approved.
Those grants. said Romano . arc
considered the greatest priority and
cover temporary rental assistance and
emergency essen tial s.
Twenty-six claims have also been
approved for other needs a"istance
grants totaling $92.6X6. he sa id .
Those grants cover medical. dental.

personal property losses like appli-

ances and heating equipmc.nt. alon~
with tran:-.portat ion.
. ._
"This hring' a combined Iota!
amount nf grants to Meig' Cu~1nty
thus far of S 191 .609 ... said Romano.
Acco1:Liing to Mcig~ Emergency
Mana~emcnt Direc10r Robert Bver. at
least ·six homes were t(H all y·
de stroyed in the fla sh and river flooding which devastated areas or the
county in September. The tloods arc
the wor., l to hit Meigs County 'inc·e

c!Jgihlc for ca'h for home repairs and
utlter flood-related needs, including
mcdic:al and dental expenses, personal property repair and unemployment
hencfits. FEMA has awarded more
than \ 19 mill i11n in grants and lowimcre't disa.&gt;ter loans in 18 counties,
including Athe1h. Gallia and Vinton .
Applicaills may call FEMA al (800)
1\21-FEMA between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m.
A FEMA spokesman said Monday the
agency
has begun tll receive a high num! 964. and cau:-.~d sn mc damage to a~
ber
llf
cal
b. reganJing a lack of tempordl)'
many a' 50 humes , and over $2 mil linn in damage to infra~tructurc rental housing in some communities, and
including roads. bridges and culvert,. 'aid FEMA i' equipped to assist those
Those residents affected arc also needing rental housing in tinding it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Alice Garnes, 69
• Darrell Cecil
Hoffman, 77

LoTrnRIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-2-9
Pick 4 day: 3-3-3-4
Pick 3 night: 7-4-6
Pick 4 night: 1-2-6-1
Rolling cash 5: 16-25-28-31-39

West Vll'ginia

Several who came to Bend Area Crank it Up had extensive and
expensive systems: otl1ers were less elaborate. (Charlene
Hoeflich /pho to )
Fan a Smith. owner of Riverfront Past and Present. inspects a replica of a Confederate uniform
made for Civil War re-enactors. It is one of many unusual .antiques and craft items that fil l her
store in a variety of rooms with different themes. (Beth Sergent/photo)

What's old is new again in the antique business

· Dally 3: 2-4-8
Daily 4: 4-5-5-6
Cash 25: 10-15-16-18-20-23

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAI LYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY- The antique
business is booming and
what was once old is new
again. Just ask Fona Smith.
owner of Riverfront Past and
Present at 204 E. Main St.
When customers initially
walk into the store they are
fooled by the small sales
floor. In fact, that room con nects to several back rooms
full of antiques that have different theme s.
For example. one room
has a Christmas theme.
another a Victorian theme.
while still another has a late

-WEATHER

Detallo on Page A6

INDEX

v
2 SECI10NS -

hi\

up

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

12 PAGES

Calendars

A~

Classi fi eds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

1800s feel next to another
decorated to re semble a
kitchen from the 1930s .
Each of these rooms has
been filled with furniture and
figurines from estate sales.
Sometimes the item' are
brought
111
by D:u:ny
Thomas. who has opened up
hi s own amiques store on
Avenue
in
Second
Middleport. Smith credits
Thomas with helping to stock
her store with unique items.
but she also attends estate
'ales as does her daughter to
gather inventory.
•
At time s Smith has even
purchased antiques from clhtomers who visit her store.

During one of thDsc 1 i' its 1ile
purchased an old ,ted whose
unu..;ual runn~,:..., \\ere rounJ

instead of lla1.
Un usual antiques are intermingled throu!!hmttlhe store.
A framed intact Wapakoneta
Dailv 0kws dated Jul v 21.
1969 h:m ~' on the ,t;tirc&lt;tse
leading ur to the loft. The
ncw . . pt~per\ headline rl.'ad"i.

"Neil si~P' &lt;'n the m"on" to
commemorate tile nlllnn
landin g.
P a~t till· \lairca-..c j, a loft
full of a 1ariel} "f antique'
including a baby carriage.
retrn furniture and a Formira

Crank It Up rocks Bend Area
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MY DAILY SE~ TIN EL. COM
PO~IEROY Pom~rov·,
riverfront 11as tile liveli est
and loudest place around
Saturday evening .ls I (I cars
equipped with stereoS} stem'
nuised into 1o11n for the second annual Bend Area Crank
II Up competition.
For the \50 or ."' who

turned out to see and hear
what's new in audio. it was
all about who had the best in
qual it,· and intensity of sound
as well as 1·o!ume.
Spon,ored by the Southern
Baptist Church. 92.1 WVYK
and Mountain Dew, the event
was judged by H&amp;K Sound
Professional Car Audio of

Please see Crank. AS

EHS Homecoming Court

Please see Antique, AS

Bloodmobile coming Wednesday

I

Long after Sunday turned to Mueller. who lined one up
into Monda y. there was 'till the middle as Roberts easil y

camJl;:ns

at

Former linebacker uses Browns
glory days in judicial campaign
Bv

Presidential
•
•
nng
spen
in Ohio, A6

A6

© 2004 Ohi_o Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - A goal of
60 productive donors has
been set by the American Red
Cross bloodmobile for its
visit to Meigs County
Wednesday.
The bloodmobile will be at
the Senior Citizens Center
from I to 6 p.m.
"The recent llonding.
power outages . and displaced
households have continued tu
interrupt the normal blood
collection sc hedule , stifl ing
efforts bv the Red Cross stall
to rebuild the blood invemories," said Kathryn Solmon.

regional public relatiDns specialist. " ln crea~ing · those
inventorie' is crucial for the
Great Alleghenies Reeio n to
be able· t&lt;; re main re"ady Ill
support blood needs in other
parts of the country also feeling the effects of the hurri c~mes."

Solman ,aid that continued
community support i' needed
Ill help rep leni'h &lt;nid main tain needed bluod 'upplie, .
Over I00 hospitals in a I00
count y r~gion that reaches
into part s of six states. ·arc
serviced through the Red

Holzer Medical Center

Cro" whic:h supplies about
70 to~() JJelWJll of the needs
of all h\ood types exrert 0
ne1:!atin~

\\ hi ch

i~

onh he itH!

filled at 50 percent . ·
•
The inventory supply
charts ar~ showing a critical
need lor OA and l3 positive .
A and [l negative. 0 negati,1·c
remains at an extremely critica l need at a I 0 pcrc:ent
ir'l\ entorv le\'e l.

lndiviZluah who would like
to donate mu:-.t

P~

at

lea~t

17

vcars old. wci~h at least 105
j1ounds and b~ 111 ge nel'ali &gt;
good health .

Eastern High Schoo l's Homecoming Court is pictured following
half-ttme ceremontes on Friday: Juntor Attendant and Escort
Kelsey Clark and Jini Wlll: Queen Candidate Chelsea Young
and Adam Di ll arti. her escort: Queen Candtdate Morgan Weber
and her escort. Ryan Sm1th. Queen· Kayla N&lt;Jve and Robert
Cross . her esco rt: Queen Candidate Abbie Chevalier and her
escort. Andy Franc is: and Krista White and her escort. Cody
Dill: Sophomore Attendant Erm Weber and her escort. Alex
McGrath: and Freshman Attendant i\1ki Young and her escort,
Joe l Lynch. Jordan .Chadwell and Lau ra Pu llt ns. crown bearer
and flower attendant. are also pictured. (Brian J. Reed / Photo )

Respiroto~y Therapy Department's 4th Annual

Respiratory ·Fall Symposium
Friday, October 29 • ·7:30 am - 4:00 pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center - Gallipolis
A one-day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the opportunity to learn and review different aspects
and concepts in the respiratory fiekl. ..

.J)iscm ·c ,. I hc. 11 ()izer Difference
www.holzer.org

For more information, or to register, call Sandy Moore at

(740) 446~5919
'

�PageA2

COMMUNITY
Pfizer ·donates to HMC Kerwood-Hill reunion

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,Octobert9,20o4

RACINE -The 2004
Kerwood-Hill reunion was
held recently at the Star Mill
Park in Racine.
Prayer was given by Roy
Ervin before the covered dish
dinner attended by 77 relatives and friends. After dinner
a short meeting was held and
prizes were awarded to Dana
and Bernice Winebrenner, the
longest married: Harvey and
Jametta Martin , the newest
married; Dana Winebrenner,
the oldest person attending:
carol Peel family who trav-.
elect the farthest; Zane

Rietschlin, the youngest per- ·
son: Sally and Buddy Ervin,
the youngest grandparents;
and Howard and Nancy
Ervin. the most grandchildren attending.
Winning door prizes were
Jack Off6nberger, Tom Hall.
Mick Winebrenner, Bernice
Winebrenner. Nancy Ervin.
Sara Ervin, Kay Hawley.
Charlotte
Hunt,
Bruce
Hawley, Janna Wicks, Barb
Koker, Devin Brown. ·Amy
Hysell, Heather Dailey, and
Teresa Wilson.
Roy Ervin has traced back

Community Calendar

the family tree and is putting
together a booklet that can be
ordered for the price of $60 a
set. Anyone interested in purchasing one needs to get in
contact with him.
A four generation picture
was taken of the family of
Ora Bass. These included
Bass.
Cherri
Rinehart ,
Stephanie Rietschlin, and
Zane Rietschlin.
The 2005 reunion will be
held at the same time and
place next year.

Public meetings

OVBC continues earnings growth

Pfizer National Healthcare Operations recently presented a check to Holzer Medical Center as
an educational grant for an upcoming continuing medical education (CME) presentation at the
Hospital in Gallipolis Saturday. The topic, "Readiness to Change · How to Improve Patient and
Phys ician Compliance in the Treatment of Chronic Illness", will be presented by Jan Kavookj1an,
MBA. Ph.D .. of the West Virginia University School of Pharmacy. Joel Jagers, continuing educa·
tion specialist. accepts the check from Marty Mekkelsen. regional account manager for Pfizer.
The CM[ activi ty is available for all physicians and interested healthcare staff. For more information, call Jagers at (740) 446-5057.

Hospital offers diabetes education class
ATHENS
O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital will otfer
Diabetes Education Class
Sessions. The class sessions
consists of an individual
assessment prior 1o Tuesday,
Oct. 26. ' and two classes,
Tuesday. Oct. 26. and
Thursday, Oct. 28. from I
p.m. until 4 p.m. to complete
the entire American Diabetes
Association-recognized pro"
gram.
The class sessions will be
held in the hospital's ' basement conference rooms
Tuesday. Oct. 26. and
Thursday. Oct. 2~. from I
p.m. until 4 p.m. each day.
Participant s are advised to

attend both session., of the
class. The class sessions are
designed to provide education
and management skdls to
individuals with diabetes or
recently diagnosed with diabetes, so they can have fllll.
healthy and productive lives.
The goal of the class sessions is to offer information
that will help people with diabetes make positive choices
about their lifestyle and diabetes managenicnt. Barb
Nakanishi.
R.D..
L.D ..
C.D.E.. O'Bicncss' registered
dietitian/certified diabetes
educator. and Laura Ballinger.
B.S., R.N .. O'Bieness' education coordinator. will lead the

class sessions.
The diabetes education
class sessions are held monthly. Resources and educational
lit erature will be available at
the classes. A physician's
referral
using
written
O'Bieness' diabetes self- man&lt;Jgementtherapy referral form
is required to attend cia,,
The referral should include
diagnosis and hemoglobin
A Ic test results if available.
For assistam:e with the
refen'al process or more information. call Barb Nakanishi
at (740) 592-9205. Nakanishi
can also provide information
about the dates and times of
future cla"es .

Senior citizens invited to celebrate
SeniorBEAT•s anniversary
ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial
Hospital's
SeniorBEAT program will
celebrate its etghth anniversary later this month, and all
area residents who are 60
years old or older are invited
to come to the party.
This free anniversary celebration will be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday in the hospital's
basement conference rooms.
The party will include
refreshments, door prizes and
entertainment. Senior BEAT

coordinator Peggy Irwin will
serve as master of ceremonies.
Those who are already
members of the SeniorBEAT
program as well as those who
may be interested in joining
are especially encouraged to
attend the anniversary celebration.
More than 800 people are
members of the program,
. which is aimed at keeping
senior citizens active in their
daily lives and educated about

the issues that impact them
most. Membership in the
SeniorBEAT prog·ram is free.
The only req uirement for
joining is to be 60 years old or
older.
Benefits of SeniorBEAT
membership ·include educa·
tiona! seminars, discounts at
the hospital's gift shop and
cafeteria, social events,
newsletter su bscription and
much. much more.

O'Bieness offers CPR course
ATHENS
O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer a Cardiopulmonary
Resu ,c itation (C PR ) course
6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Wednesday
in O'Bleness' basement conference room B-7.
This American Safety &amp;
Health Institute course teaches participants the skill s needed to administer CPR to

adults. children and infants.
Participants also learn how to
recognize a life-threaten ing
emergency. how to provide
basic life support, and what to
do in the case of an airway
obstruction or choking.
Upon successful completion of the course, participants
receive a card to confirm that
they attended and completed

the course.
To register for the course,
vis it O'Bieness' community
relations office. The course
fee of SIS per person is
payable with registration.
The fee is waived fo r anyone
unable to pay. For more
information, call O'Bieness'
community relations department at (740) 592-9300.

GALLIPOLIS
Ohio
Valley Bane Corp. (Nasdaq:
OVBC) reported consolidated
net income for the quarter
ended Sept. 30, 2004,. of
$1,670,000 representing an
increase of 5 percent over the
same period in the prior year.
Earnings per share for the
third quarter of 2004 were 48
cents, up 4.3 percent from the
46 cents earned the third quarter of 2003. For · the nine
months ended Sept. 30, 2004,
consolidated net income was
$6,487,000, or $1.87 per share,
compared to $4,622,000, or
$1.33 per share. for the same
nine month period a year ago.
The year-to-date earnings
include the previously disclosed sale of OVBC's investment in ProCentury Corp.
(Nasdaq: PROS). The second
quarter sale resulted in an
after-tax gain of $1,625,000
or 47 ce nts per share.
Excluding the sale of the
ProCentury investment. operating earnings for the nine months
· ended Sept. 30, 2004, were
$4.862,000. up 5.2 percent compared to $4,622,000 a year ago.
Operating earnings per
share were $1.40 for the first
nine months of 2004 versus
$1.33 last year, an increase of
5.3 percent. On an operating
basis. return on average
assets and return on average
equity were .90 percent and
II .92 percent for the first
nine months of 2004, versus
.89 percent and 11 .95 percent
for the prior year.
The increase in operating
e&lt;mlings reflects the reduction
in provision for loan loss
expense which was driven by a
decline in nonperformin~ loans
and net loan charge-ofts. The
company's ratio · of non-performing loans to total loans
decreased to .45 percent at Sept.
30, 2004, as compared to .96
percent at Sept. 30, 2003, and
the ratio of non-performing
·assets to total assets decreased
to .63 percent at Sept. 30, 2004,
from I. 18 percent the prior year.
With improved asset quality
in commercial and consumer
loans, the company's net
charge-offs for the ftrst nine
months of 2004 were down
$\Jf)(),OOO from the same time
period the prior year. Based on
the evaluation of the adequacy
of the allowance for loan losses.
management
provided
$1,6 12,000 to the allowance for
loan losses for the nine months
ended Sept. 30. 2004, a
decrease of $2,015,000 tiumthe
same time period the prior year.
Management believes that
the allowance for loan losses
is adequate to absorb probable
losses in the portfolio. The
allowance for loan losses was
I. IS percent of total loans at
Sept. 30. 2004, as compared

to 1.32 percent at Sept. 30,
2003
For the nine months ended
Sept. 30, 2004, net interest
income decreased $248.000 or
1.2 percent from last year. For
the third quarter of 2C&gt;p4. net
interest income decreased
$20,000 from the prior year
third quarter. The decline in
net interest income was in
relation to the net interest margin for the nine months ending
Sept. 30. 2004, decreasing to
4. I0 perCent from 4.33 percent
for the same time penod the
prior year.
The lower net interest margin was attributable to lower
asset yields due to the company's desire to shift from higher-yielding fixed rate assets to
variable rate assets.
Partially offsening the
impact in net interest margin
compression was the growth
in average earning assets. For
the first nine month s of 2004.
average earning assets grew
$26,902,000, or 4. I percent
from the same time period last
year. Comparing sequential
quarters, net interest income
for the third quarter of 2004
was up $145,000 or 2. I percent from the second quarter
of 2004 as the net inter~st
margin began to improve.
Non-interest income totaled
$6.486.000 for the nine
months ended Sept. 30, 2004.
as compared to $4.458.000 for
the same time period last year.
For the three months ended
Sept. 30, 2004, non- interest
income totaled $1,375,000
compared to $1 ,485.000 for
2003's third quarter.
Included in the year-to-date
increase
in
non-interest
income was the pre-tax gain of
S2,463,000 on the aforementioned sale of ProCentury.
Gain on sale of loans for the
first nine months of 2004 was
down $404,000 from the same
time period last year caused by
a decline in the sales of secondary market real estate loans
due to lower mortgage refinance volume and a shift to
variable rate mortgage originations which management does
not intend to sell. Offsetting a
portion .of this decline was a
year-to-date increase in service
charges on deposit accounts of
$112.000, or 4.8 percent.
On a year-to-date basis,
non-interest expense totaled
$15.879,000 in 2004. an
increase of $765,000 or 5. I
percent
compared
to
$15.114,000 the previous year.
On a quarter-to-date basis.

non-interest expense increased
$194.000 or 3.8 percent from
the third quarter in 2003.
Salaries and employee benefits grew $684,000 or 7.9 percent for the first nine months
of 2004, as compared to the
same time period in 2003. The
increase was related to annual
merit increases, rising benefit
costs and additional employees. With the renovation of the
Milton, W.Va., office and
upgrade in personal computers
within v;irious departments.
furniture and equipment
expense was up $174.000 on a
basis.
The
year-to-date
remaining noninterest expense
categories were down $93,000
collectively from 2003.
Total assets increased
$22.719.000 from year end
2003 to reach $730,046,000
at Sept. 30. 2004. Driving
asset growth for 2004 was
loan growth of $28.024,000.
which equals an annual
growth rate of 6.5 percent as
compared tu the 2.5 percent
growth rate for all of 2003.
Conslllner loan growth of
RJ percent and real estate
loan growth of 5.2 percent
were the primary contributors . Total deposits grew
$32. 192.000 from year end
2003 to fund loan growth ami
to redu ce borrowed funds.
which are down $16.5 13.000.
The growth in deposits was
primarily in certificates of
deposit originated from local
and national markets.
"I would like to thank our
employees for their hard work
and dedication in continuing
the earnings momentum
through the third quarter." said
Jeffrey E. Smith, president and
chief executive officer.
"I continue to be pleased
with the significant improvement in the company's objective of enhanced asset quality.
With the efforts to reduce
non-performing loans, our
provtsion for loan losse~ was
reduced to less than half of
last year's amount."
Ohio Valley Bane Corp
common stock is traded on
the NASDAQ Stock Market
under the symbol OVBC.
The holdin~ company owns
three subsidiaries: Ohio
Valley Bank, with 16 offices
in Ohio and West Virginia:
Loan Central. with five consumer finance offices in Ohio.
and Ohio Valley Financial
Services, an insurance agency
based in Jackson. Learn more
about Ohio Valley Bane Corp
at www.ovbc.com.

Show Off Your "Pumpkin" ~
In The Sentinel
~.':

PUMPKIN
PATCH~
·~
~

,,·~
-~

-----------, ~, :·,

Pictures will run:
Thursday,
October 28

~
.,,';f Deadline for Entry:
'~
~
•·'~
"'·

Thursday,
October 21

Qn\y
$8.00

~

'"'...
' ·~·

per

Gillian

-

The Daily Sentinel

.. 992-2155

Wednesday, Oct. 20
POMEROY -· Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star. will have installation of officers, 7:30p.m. at
the hall.
Thursday, Oct. 21
POMEROY - The Meigs

Church services

Homecomings/
Reunions

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
Grains are a staple of diets
around the world. They are
located at the base of the
USDA's Food Guide Pyramid
because they serve as the
foundation of our diet. This
is due to the large number of
serving s of breads, cereals,
rice and pasta that we should
eat each day.
Grains fumish several verv
important nutrients - complex
carbohydrates. protein. vitamins. minerals and tiber - that
are invaluable to our health.
Complex carbohydrates are
needed for energy. Protein
provides the essential amino
acids that build, maintain and
repair body tissue . Vitamin B I
- thiamin - helps make energy
from carbohydrates in the
body's cells. Vitamin B2 ·
riboflavin - not onlv encourages energy production in the
cells, but also assists the amino
acid trytophan tum food into
niacin. V1tamin 83 -· niacin aids in the body's use of sugars
and fatty acids, contributes to
enzyme function and helps
make energy. Folic acid, a Bcomplex vitamin, promotes
cell propagation, including red
blood cells, and prevents birth
defects and heart disease. Iron
facilitates in the prevention of
anemia by making up part of
the blood's hemoglobm, works
in developing the brain, and
contributes to a healthy
immune system. Fiber aids in
digestion. helps lower cholesterol, reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease and may
help prevent breast and colon
cancer: An added nutritional
bonus is that grain products are
naturally low in fat (but
beware that fat may be added
during processing, preparation
and serving).
In the American diet the
most common grain is wheat.
ll1e wheat kemel consists of
the bran. the germ and the
endospem1. The bran is the
nutritious outer covering that

Woman waiting in wings is ready for main stage

DEAR ABBY: " Mitch "
and I have been best-friendswith- benefits for nine years.
He has a live-in girlfriend,
Wednesday, Oct. 20
"Edna,"
and they have an II·
LONG
BOTTOM
Revival services are under- month-old son together. The
way at the Faith Full Gospel two of them are always fightChurch and will continue ing and yelling. and I'm
through Friday. Brian Adams always the peacemaker. I
of Jackson is the evangelist. helped in raising their child
There is special music each so often that the boy called
evening.
me Mom before he said it to
Saturday, Oct. 23
Edna.
LONG BOTTOM - A
Two years ago. I told
hymn sing featuring the Mitch I wanted to be with
Golden
Tones
of him - something more than
Parkersburg, will be held at 7 just his girl on the side. He
p.m. at the Mt. Olive Church. said he already knew it, but
Long Bottom.
had been waiting . for me to
BIDWELL - Gospel con- say it. He said he felt the
cert will be held Saturday at same way, but he wasn't
the Poplar Ridge. S.R. 554 ready to go from nne relaner Bidwell. The Builders tinnship to another.
Quartet and the Christian
When I first told him how
Echoes will be sing ing. For I felt, he told me not to wait
more information. call 740- for him. He said if I did find
Sunday, Oct. 24
593-7390.
MIDDLEPORT
someone, I shouldn't hold
Sunday, Oct. 24
Homecoming will be held at
POMEROY - A gospel back because of him. When I
the Ash Street Church , 398
finally did meet and date
Ash St. , Middleport. The musk fest will be held at 2 someone. Mitch got into an
schedule includes: 9:30 a.m. p.m. at the Pomeroy Seventh uproar about it and said he
Sunday school; 10:30 a.m. Day Adventist Church. didn't like the guy. I ended
morning worship: noon, din- Scheduled to participate are
ner and fellowship, I :30 p.m. Ree Faccmyer. Amanda the relationship to please
Earthen Vessels : 2 p.m. Rev. Wears. The Mclntyres, Junior him.
So here I sit, committed to
Calvin Minnis speaking: 3 and Rita White, Treva
p.m Glorybound Quartet. for- Caldwell, and several others. someone who can't do the
The church is located at 250 same for me. and feeling
merly JoyFM Trio.
confused . and lonely. I
Mulberry Heights.
believe I am in love with
Mitch. We sti ll have a sexual
relationship. I have tried to
cool things down , but whecLL
whole-grain foods . Don't see -Mitch , I just melt. Do
automatically think that if a you think he means what he
bread is brown it is whole says, or is he just telling me
grain. It may have molasses what I want to hear for what
in it that will give it that color.
You should eat between six
Becky
and eleven servings of grains
Baer
each day. This wide range is
due to differences in age.
ATHENS - A classroom
level of physical activily and
course
aimed at helping older
gender. Most people don't
get enough grains. Small people refresh and improve
children. women and some their driving ski ll s will be
has fiber. B vitamins and min- older adults should have the offered
at
O'Bienes s
erals. The~ gem1 is the seed that lower number: older children. Memorial Hospital in Athens.
would sprout if it was planted. teenage girls, active women
O'Bleness is offering ·55
It
supplies ' antioxidants, and most men will need eight ALIVE/MATURE DRIVING
Vitamin E and B vitamins. or nine servings; teenage boys from I to S p.m. Monday, Oct.
The endospem1 is the inner and active men require the 25. and Tuesday, Oct. 26 p.m.
pw1 that provides energy, car- maximum eleven servings.
in O'Bleness' basement conbohydrates and proteins.
room
B-7.
A serving is composed of ference
Whole grains use the entire one slice of bread. one-half of Participants must anend both
kernel. keeping all of the nutri- a bun or bagel, .:. cup cooked sessions. All drivers, especial:
ems. Examples are whole rice or pasta. _ cup cooked ly those who are 50 years old
wheat tlour. oatmeal. rye cereal. I ounce of ready-to- or older, are invi ted to particibread, popcorn, bulgur. gra- eat cereal, three or four small pate in the program.
ham tlour. brown rice and crackers. one 4-inch pancake
Developed by the American
whole cornmeal. Foods made or waffle or a 6-inch tortilla . Association
of
Retired
with whole grains are the most Several of the servings of
nutritiou s. Read Nutrition breads, cereals, rice and pasta
Facts labels to be certain a each day should be whole
food is a whole grain. The grains for optimal health .
words "whole grain" will
POMEROY
Dale
There are a variety of ways
probably be listed before the in which you can incorporate Hoffman of Pomeroy has
mgredient, and it should be more whole grains in your started a collage indu str y
recorded first. There may be a diet. Have cereal for break· called Dale 's Creations.
whole grain health claim on fast, eat breads for snacks and
Currently he is selling fruit
the label as well.
des sert s, include cooked butters and chutney at the
The bran and ~erm have grains in soup, casseroles and Farmers Market in Athens.
been removed in retmed grains. stir-fry dishes, use wholeHe is being assisted through
This
only
leaves
the wheat pasta or brown rice, ACEnet in Athens who is
endosperm.
The milling choose cookies made with assisting him with commerprocess removes most of the B oatmeal or whole-grain flour, cial jars and labeling of hi'
vitamins, iron and f1ber along make snack miX,eS using products. Hoffman ha, hccn
with the bran and gem1. Wheat ready-to-eat whole-grain cere- canning since the early I97th
!lour. white bread and white als, have whole-grain cracker and through the years has
rice are examples. If the or bread crumbs in stuffing exhibited his products at the
relined grains have been and meatloaves. or serve a Ohio State and Meigs County
enriched, then the thiam in. whole grain as the meal's Fairs, winning numerous blue
riboflavin, niacin, folic acid main entree. Add variety by ribbons.
and iron have been added back, trying different pasta shapes
For now he is doing his canmaking the refined gmins more and flavors, different form s of ning at home, although he
nutritious. Relined grains are rice and unfamiliar gra ins. says he hopes in the ncar
usually not forti tied with fiber. Read labels to find the grains future to do part of it at the
If the label says "mu lti- and cereals that naturally have ACEnet facility in Athens.
grain...
"stone-ground." the most vitamins, minerals
Hoffman is currently work"100% wheat." '\even-grain." and tiber or that have been ing on creating a new recipe
or "bran." they usually are not forti lied with them.
for Hawaiian chutney. He
County Retired Teachers
Association. noon luncheon,
at Trinity Congregational
Church, Second and Lyn'n
Streets. Anit Moore, volunteer coordinator of Holzer
Hospice Care to · speak. For
reservations call 992-3214 or
949-2601.
POMEROY - Wildwood
Garden Club. 6:30p.m. at the
home of Beny Milhoan on
Flatwoods Road.
Saturday, Oct. 23
CHESTER
Special
meeting of Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will he
heli:l at 9 a.m . with work in
the Master Mason degree following a 8 a.m. breakfast.

Dear
Abby

he can get'' - MISERABLE
IN CONNECTICUT
DEAR MIZ: Let 's review
what Mitch has been saying:
He said he has known for
years ihat you ' re in love with
him. He also told you not to
wait for him . If Mitch loved
you, do you really think he 'd
be living with someone ehe
and telling you to move on? I
don't.
Now let's lonk at what
Mitch has been g.ening: He
has someone who has continued to sleep with him in spite
of the fact that he lives with
someone else and fathered a
ch ild with her. On top of
that, you're a.free baby sitter
and peacemaker. Eno'ugh
about what he's getting. All
you're getti ng is heartache.
I'll give Mitch high marks
for sa lesmanship. But you
shouldn't ·'buy" everything
he sells you.
DEAR ABBY:
am
employed by a national company to tutor high school studeuts, one-on-one. For various reasons, I suspect that
one of my students - with
whom I meet every one or

two week' - may he ,mo~ ­
ing pot.
From a profe" ional perspective. I feel this i' none of
my bu'i ne". From a per,mal per,pective , and "' a parent my,elf. I am agoni£ing
over whether I 'hou ld bring
my &gt;u,picions to the attention of hi' parent. If I 11en~
hi' parent. I would cert;lin ly
want to know. Then aga1n.
my suspic ion s cOldd be
wrong. 't?&gt;hat i' the ethical
thing to Jo'1 - UNSU RE IN
CO"JCORD. CALIF
DEAR UNSURE: Your
student\ welfare IS your
business. It \ refreshing to
know tha t someone is debatin g the "ethical' ' thing to do
the 'e da ys: If meuia reports
are accurate . they lead us to
believe that ethics have gone.
the way of the dino,aur.
Before approaching yo ur
student\ parent. talk to the
hoy ahout your concern,. Hi'
prohlem may be something
other than pot . At least give
him a chance to explain . .
However. 1f your ~ u...,piciun~
persist. hy all means tell his
parent what you ha ve told
me. You'll he doing both of
them a fav or.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, al.w
know11 a.~ Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Paulin e Phillips.
Dear
Abby
at
Write
www.DearAbby.cum or P.O.
Box 69440, Lo.1 Angeles, CA
90069.

Hospital offers driving refresher course
Persons
(AARP).
55
ALIVE/MATURE DRIVING
is a comprehensive classroom
refresher course geared
toward the specific needs of
drivers who are 50 years old
or older. According to AARP,
the course helps drivers
update their driving knowledge and skills. prevent traffic
crashes and violations. and
maintain mobility and independence. As an added bonus.
those who complete the
course may be eligible to
receive a discount on their
auto insurance costs.
Burton DeVeau. instructor.
will present in form ation

about the following topics:
the impact of aging and medications on a per&gt;on's dri,·ing
abilities. basic dri,·ing rules.
license renewal. local traffic
hazards. adverse road conditions, "road rage." energy
conservation measures. proper vehicle use and maintenance. and accident prevention tactics . More than 6 million people have com;Jleted
the co urse since it began in
1979.
To enroll in the course,
which has a S I0 enrollment
fee. call (740) 592-9337.

Pomeroy has new cottage industry
says his products are all natur- things seasonal. Currently his
'at. made without preserva- emphasis is on six different
tives. and he hopes to keep kinds of chutney.

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today.¥ 992-2155

2004-2005 Valley Artist Series

;;..,.;=-:-=7-:-~-;:;

_..;.._

·~

·-~

Celebrating special
days with you!

Clubs and
organizations

•

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

' Thursday, Oct. 21.~ 2004 • 8 pm

Fine and Performing Arts Center
University of Rio Grande
Additional individua l tickets available at S20
Call 740·245·7364
'.

· ~

., ·:r'7

Gillilan recently completed 30 years of employment with the Belpre
Plant of Kraton Polymer s.
He join ed the plant in
19 74 as a pa c kaging tech ni c ian in the polystyrene
department.
He
1s
presently a supervisor of
operation; and mainte ~

Wednesday, Oct. 20
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education, 6:30 p.m. , library
conference room.
SYRACUSE Sutton
Townsip Trutees, special
meeting, 6 p.m Wednesday at
the Syracuse village hall.
POMEROY
- Ohio
Department of Transportation
District I0 public meeting
from 5 to 7 p.m. to discuss
future plans for the section of
State Route 338 located
between the new li.S. 33 and
State Route 124. Meigs
County ODOT Garage, Ohio
7. The public may attend any
time within this frame. The
meeting will be held in open
house format.

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Ad

(One sub)ect per

..

'

I~
,."

Khloie Billings
"l...ove Ya!''
&amp; Daddy

Mail or drop off at the Daily Sentinel
111 Co u rt St ree t • Pomeroy • OH 45769

' I

~

.
Pum.p\l.in)

r

•

Child's Name:
From:
Your Name :

'
~.

•

"

.

•"

Address:
;1I . Phone:

...

''
'.,;
. ..
,.,

.

'·

i:2

·". .

Ads must be pre·paid

', ••

'

•

'

•

Club members make floral
b~rthstone arrangements
and Rehab Center.
She also announced that
Wildwood Garden Club had
received a check from the
Ohio Association of Garden
Club' for having the largest
perccn1age increas~ in mem bership f&lt;&gt;r Region II . Lin d.1
Ru "cll reminded memhcr , ,,t
the Master Gardeners · pl&lt;~lll
excha nge held at the Senior
Cititcns Center &lt;~nd . ,he
encouraged everyone lo take
perennials for the exchange.
Members also suggested
possihle gardening prograr'n .~o.
fur I he coming ·year. A cum mince made up ,,f Ewl~n
Hollon. Sar.r Rmhh , Shiric\'

SYRACUSE - Birthstone
arrangements created from
flowers growing in their own
gardens were made by members of the Wildwood Garden
Cluh held recentl y at the
home of Joy Bentley.
A wide variety ol flower.,
and herbs were used in creating the beautiful arrangemellts: sunflowers, ~org hum .
Jerusalem artichokes. goldenrod. spider mums. asters.
artemisia, salvia, hyssop, mallow. fern. baby's breath. basil.
ageratum , magnolia leaves.
gladi olas, obedient plant, and
Gaill~rdia.
·
Debbie. Jones, tre&lt;Nirer.
reminded members that tHe
county. regional and .st;lle

.In\

a~sociation du~\ ll~l'd

l lll 'l'l .t!ld

~c nl

t"&lt;l he
'
'
to t hc rl.'.'\pcctJ\'C
organJ-

H 'lt\1111.

Pc~!.! ,. i\1uorL'. un~l

lh' ntle \ . . ~\~ du nll'\' l l'd tn

1 \..'~_t!)

t

\ h Hlll

1 1 ~~· t'l II·"·
\i d '- ll.l!ll L' d

Lation s.
Eve lyn · Hollon new : l'1 .1b prc,iLknt with
advised mcmber.s that Evelyn Shirley Hamm '" 'icc pre,i ·
Holter was presently residing dent.
.Nancy Neulll.i.ng and Jov
at Pleasant Valley Nursing

.

'

B~ntlcy served refreshments .
Russell won the door prize.
Barbara Koker was welcomed
a.s a guest.. Others attending
\\ere Chris Chapman. Tammy
K1c s. Dchbic Jone s. Shirley
I lallllll. Pc!..!~\' Moore. Sara
!&lt;''"'"·· .la,IIC.t Thei's and
b ·ch 11 ll t&gt;llon .
Mcrnbers were reminded to
invit~.: a guest for the visit to
Gla"hnuse Works at Stewart.
The next regular meeti ng will
be held at 6:30 p.m. on Oct.
21 at th e home of Betty
Milhoan .

Y, OCTOBER 29th

Q --

dve rtising Deadline i~
ednesday, October lOth. .
.

To Have Your
Business Included...

~omt l:llra£iant i'rgi£itrr
(304) 675-1333

cf&gt; ,l llq.Joli~&gt;

Prorrd to he apart of

your 10ce.

Subscribe today • 992-2155

Jlatlv l!:ribunr

1740) 446-2342

Daily Sentinel .
(.1 40) 992-2156

·-·

�•
'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today IS Tuesday. Oct. 19. the 293rd day of2004. There are
: 73'days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On Oct. 19. 1781, British troops under Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown, Va. , as the American Revolution neared
its end.
On this date: In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting in
· New York, drew up a declaration of nghts and liberties.
In 1812, French forces under Napoleon Bonaparte began
, their retreat from Moscow.
In 1864. Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early attacked Union
forces at Cedar Creek, Va.; the Union troops were able to rally
and defeat the Confederates.
In 1944, the Navy announced that black women would be
allowed into Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency
Service (t he WAVES ).
In 1944, the play " I Remember Mama," by John van
Druten, opened at the Music Box Theater on Broadway.
In 1950. United Natmns forces entered the North Korean
capital of Pyongyang.
In 1951. President Truman signed an act formally ending
the state of war with Germany.
In 1960, the United States imposed an embargo on exports
to Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies
and certai n food products.
In I 977. the supersonic Concorde made its lirst landing in
New York City.
In 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones Industrial
Average plunged 508 points. or 22 ()percent in value.
Ten years ago: Twenty-11\ o people were ki lled as a terrorist
bomb shattered a bus in the heart of Tel Aviv's shopping district. Entertainer Martha Raye died in Los Angeles at age 78.
Five years ago: Legi slation to overhaul the nation's campaign finance laws fell to a filibuster by Senate Republicans
for the fourth straight year. The Atlanta Brave s won the
National League pennant by beating the New York Mets, I09, in Game 6 of the ir championship series.
One year ago· Pope John Paul II beatified Mother Teresa
during a ceremony in St. Peter's Square. Former Bosnian
President Alija Izetbegov ic died in Sarajevo at age 78. The
New York Yankees defeated the Flonda Marlins 6-1 to even
the World Series at one game apiece. New York magician
David Blaine emerged from 44 days of isolation in a clear
plastic box suspended over London.
Today's Birthdays. Actor John Lithgow is 59. Former
National Organization for Women President Patricia Ireland is
59. Singer Jeannie C. Riley is 59. Talk show host Charlie
Chase is 52. Rock singer-musician Karl Wallinger (World
Party) is 47. Singer Jennifer Holliday is 44. Rock singer-musician Todd Park Mohr (Bi g Head Todd and the Monsters) is 39.
Actor Jon Favreau is 38. Amy Carter is 37. "South Park" cocreator Trey Parker is 35. Comedian Chris Kattan is 34. Rock
singe r Pras Michel (The Fugees) is 32. Actor Omar Gooding
'is 28. Country singer Cyndi Thomson is 28. Actor Benjamin
Salisbury is 24.
•
Thought for Today : "Three passions. simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for
love. the search for knowledge and unbearable pity for the
suffering of mankind." - Bertrand Russell, English philosopher ( 1872-1970).

ADVISORY ON
ELECTION LETTERS
Letters to the editor on the Nov. 2, 2004, general election will not be published or accepted

by this newspaper after Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2004.

The Daily Se:t;ltinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-96o)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories IS to be Published every afternoon , Monday
accurate. If you know of an error m a through F{iday. 111 Court Street .
• story, call tl'1e newsroom at (740) 992- - Pomeroy, Oh•o. Second-class postage
2156.
pa•d at Pomeroy .
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
-

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed. Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ex1 13

Advertising
-

Outside Sales: Dave Harns, Ext. 15
Outskte Sales: Brenda Davts, Ext 16
Claaa./Circ. : Judy Clark, E&gt;l 1a·

Circulation

._,

District Mgr.: Jason Pallerson. Ext 17

'

General Manager
Charlene Hoefltch. Ext 12

E-mail:
news@mydatlysentinel cam

Web:
www.mydatlysenhnel .com

Oh10 Newspaper Association .
Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The DMy Sentinel, 11 1 Court Street.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month . ...........'9.57
One year . , .. , , ......1114.40
Dally •........... . ..... SO'
Senior Citizen rates
One month ..•..••..••.•a. 70
One year ... ; .........'96.70
Subscribe rs shouk:l remit in advance
d•rectto the Daily Sentinel No subscnptlon by mall permitted in areas where
home camefseiVICe tS ava•lable

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
t3Weeks ....
. . ' 30.15
26 Weeks . .
. '60 00
52 Week s
' 118 80

Outside Meigs County .
. 13 Weeks .
'50.05
26 Weeks
'100 10
52 Weeks
.. '200.20

PageA4

OPINION

Tuesday, October 19,

2004

Christopher Reeve's cause wasn't just
stem cells, but research
Christopher ·
Reeve's
shocking death at age 52 is
cause for deep mourning
over the loss of a remarkable
human being and for rededication to the cause he fought
for: medical research across
the board.
Reeve, as the whole world
knows. was the victim of a
horritic spinal cord injury.
But he did not limit hiS
activism to finding a cure for
his own affliction. He was an
advocate for everv disease
victim -and everyone who
could be cured of a disease
in the future.
In the midst of this presidential campaign, his death
is legitimately focusing
attention on his backing of
embryonic
stem-cell
resear~h, but it's getting lost
that he also was a stout
advocate of ge neral increases in medical research funding.
Reeve spoke at the
Democratic
National
Convention in 1996 not
about stem cells - which
were only theoretical science
then - but about the revolutionary potential of 21st century bio-research.
Whenever Reeve traveled
111 the years immediately
after hi s 1995 spinal injury,
he ri sked his life. A sudden
change in elevation or temperature could set off possibly fa tal adverse reactions.
Yet he traveled repeatedly
to Washington and elsewhere to urge expansiOn of
medical research. I got to
know him as an advocate for
Parkinson's disease research
and for doubling the budget
of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH).
He was a Democrat, but in
the late 1990s the greatest
impediment to sigmficam
NIH increases was the
Clinton admini stration.
Clinton
wasn't
Bill
opposed to medical research
- he added funds for politically important diseases like

Senate
Appropriations
Committee has voted for a
3.9 percent increase.
Medical researchers say
that the abrupt reductions in
the growth of federal fundMorton
ing will severely inhibit their
Kondarcke ability to expand labs, mount
innovative
projects
or
encourage young investigators .
Democratic
candidate
AIDS and breast cancer and John Kerry has promised to
lifted the first President significantly increase NIH
George Bush's ban on fetal fundi ng as well as to undo
tissue research - but 11 was Bush's limits on federal supnot a priority.
port for embryonic stem-cell
Once Clinton personally . research. It's no wonder that
promised Reeve an increase Reeve backed him before he
in funding for spinal cord died.
re search, but the money
There's no question that
never came through. Reeve Democrats have hyped the
seethed ih private. but said Immediate prospects for
nothmg publicly.
stem-cell research. Kerry's
It was a bipartisan group running mate, Sen. John
in Congress - including Edwan.b. D-N.C., said after
Sens. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., Reeve's death that "when
and Tom Harkin, D-lowa John Kerry is president, peowho pushed through a plan ple like Christopher Reeve
to double the NIH budget are going to get up out of their
from $13.5 billion in 1998 to wheelchair and walk again."
$27 billion i~ 2003 , calling
That's
nonsense.
for an ave rage annual Embryonic stem-cell research
increase of 15 percent.
is still in its infancy and·it will
Clinton accepted the plan be decades before it actually
- and took credit for it fulfills its potential to cure
and the current President people with diseases like
Bush promised during the Reeve's or Michael J. Fox's
2000 campaign to complete Parkinson's or Mary Tyler
it. And. he did. NIH's budget Moore's juvenile dmbctes.
is now $28 billion.
But the potential exists,
However, the Bush admin- the research IS under way
istrat io n. be sides limiting and it ought not be inhibited
stem-cell research, is now by ideology. Bush opposes
also advocating severe aggressive embryonic stemreduction s
in
medical ceD research because he
research funding.
opposes the destruction of 5From annual 15 percent day-old embryos to harvest
increases, Bush is recom- their stem cells - • even
mending 2.7 percent increas- when
those
"surplus"
es - including significant embryos are destined to be
and necessary new outlays to discarded at in vitro fertilizacounter b1o-terrorism tion &lt;.:IInics.
which represent '! cut after
The Bush campaign falseintlati on. Next year. accord- ly states on its Web site that
ing to widespread reports, Bush "d1d nut in any way
the administration will call limi t or r~strid' the research
for only a 2 percent Increase. when in fa&lt;.:t he declared that
In Congress. the House fede ral lumls could not be
has approved the adminis- used to cond uct research on
tration's 2. 7 percent request. any -rem cells hmvested
At Specter's utging, the after Aug. 9. 200 1.

KI•Ji&lt;/ rucke

Hill.!

Eledions
Voting our
foith
Dear Editor:
There have been few elections as hotly conte sted or as
important as this year's presidential election . There are a
mynad of Issues that concerns many of us. such as:
Taxes, unions, social securi ty, environment. and the
pressure of party loyalty.
However. I believe there are
moral issues more important
than all of these .
Both presidential candidates claim a religious
belief, but there is a stark
contrast between the platforms of the DNC and RNC.
It is these moral issues that is
truly revealing. One platform supports aborting the
life of infants while the other
protects that life. One platform defends homosexul]l
marriages... while the other
desires to constitutionally
defined marriage as between
one man and one woman.
One party is on the same
page as ACLU , an organization that WORLD magazine
rev iles has formed ·a.
"watchdog gro up" for the
purpose of intimidating
preachers who mi ght link the
candidates to their opposi tio n to Christian moral
issues. That patty is saying
faith is a "Sunday thin g"
mcamng. we should stay out
of pol.itics and the Ch.urch
should be silent.
Years ago, there were a
block of states cal led the
"Solid South" named for
their · solid su pport of the
Democr-atic Part. The "Solid
South" no longer exists: The
reason for its demise i'
because the co nservative
'1ew' of the old Democratic
Party have been ahandoned.
That i' why Ron;dcl Reagan
left that Party and the rea,on
Zel Miller, Democrat from
Georgia, is ashamed of it.
'f.he present day Democratic

are a detriment t"o our soCI-

ety. That olfends me.
The man who serves as
President for the next four
year~ will appoint federal
ju(lges throughout the United
States. Th~&gt; is important
because libera l judges no
Iunger Interpret the law but
are bent on making new
laws. Some or their decisions
have been· No public prayer
in
school,
the
Ten
Commandments can no
longer be displayed in public
buildmgs. and the enactment
of "hate-crimes" dealing
especially with the protection of homosexuality. As
recent as this month
Louisiana voted by a majority of seventy-eight percent to
outlaw same sex marriages.
One man, a federal· judge.
overruled the will of the people. These things make this
election very important
Liberal judges rule over matters of Christian ethics.
I know there are other
issues, such as yielding control
of our national defense to the
United Nations ( over half of
whom do not support America
on any issue). higher taxes and
more gove mmen~ control of
our lives. It also bothers me
that we have a confessed "war
criminal'' running for the
oftice of our Commander-i nchief. As bad as this is looming
larger still, fnr the Christi.an. is
putting only those in oftice
who support and defend our
religious convictions. I want a
man who says what he means
and mean' what he says and
who supports "fai th-based"
involvement in national
affairs.
Neither c&lt;md idate is perfect any more than you. and
I. Ho"'cvc r. we need one
who . . upporh our rcligu1u...,
and moral convictiom . He
Will do that by appo.inting
j11dgcs who hold similar
moral convict ions. If our

laith doesn ' t dictate the
expre-,i ml of our politics.
then po ltttc ians will dictate
how we express our fai th.
Denny Cob11m

Freedom
Pray for
soldiers
Dear Editor:
As we decide who we are
go in g to vote for thi s year,

there arc many issues to be
considered : Jobs , schools,
health care, moral values,
homeland security and the
war in Iraq.
I would like to make some
comments on our freedom
which was threatened on
Sept. II, and as a result,
almost 3,000 people were
ki !led. and now more than
I ,000 in Iraq. The freedom
we have has been paid for by
sacrifices and the shedding of
blood. Our history tells of the
Revolutionary War, Civil War
World Wars I and II. Korea,
Vietnam and the Gulf War.
and how some of these lasted
for years and as many as
3,000 were killed in one day.
I remember as a young girl
growing up in AP,ple Grove.
during World War II, the
nei ghborhood
children
would hear gunshots across
the river in West Virginia
and wo uld be frightened that
it wa; the enemy. Our par- ·
ents would comfort us and
tell LIS it was just some
hunters and our · so ldiers
were across the ocean, keeping them from coming here.
How comforting that was. I
pray we can always give our
children that same comfort.
I remember the death of
my un cle, killed in Germany,
how sad my Dad was. and
my grandmother crying as
she continued to work on the
farm I ha,·c IIC\'Cr taken my
frl.':cdom .for ~ ranted . Tl1e

freed om· ·we have in our
Savior. the Lord Jesus
Chnst, wa' paid lor by hi s
shedd in g of blood, so we can

become a

"' li\'111 ~

samf1ce ...

Lei us as fre~ A mt:rh:alh.

Democrats and Rcpubl icans .
pray for our 'oldiers and 0111
chOice of candidates. ami
exercise our freedom to vote .
and let God ca't the IIIla!
vote
Lillie Hart
Raci11e

Elections
Consider
Christian
vtew
Dear Editor:
A littLe more th an two
weeks before the . general
election, 71 influential evangelical Christian leaders
have issued an open lette r to
the American people , urging
reliance on Biblical value' 111
their selection of candidates.
The letter addresses the
defense against terrorist.
abortion, same-sex marriage.
embryonic
ste m-ce ll
research and Supreme Court
justices. The obvious con- ·
elusion would be the policies
of President George W. Bush
best represent the beliefs of
Christian values.
•
"We urge all Christian'
that they have a moral oblig-.
ation to learn about the candidates' positions. to be
informed. and to vote." the
letter say5. "We urge all
Christians to pray that truthful speech and ri ght conduct
on both sides would prevail
in this election:·
I would also encourage
Christians to consider doing
even more for the. good of
our nation , by talking to
friends and nei ghbors and
urging them to do the ri ght
thing, Christians ha ve an
obliQation to th is nation that
was.fougiit f'nr and di ed for
by 'm;m y hra'c men ;md
women to ke~p the princi ples of our founding lathers.
Mary I. Hoffilla/1·
New. Haven, lV. Vi-1.

with
Pastor
Donnie
Quesinberry
officiating.
Burial will follow at Old
Salem Cemetery. Friends
may call from 5 to 8 p.m. on
Tuesday.

He is survived by his wife
of 54 years. Audrey Thelma
Hoffman of Letart ; a daughter and son-in-law, Shelby
and Larry Davis of Letart ; a
son, Donald Hoffman and
Le&gt;a of Point Pleasant, W.
Va.; a granddaughter, Katie
Ju Davi s, and grandson,
Joshua Davis.
He 'is also survived by a sisLETART. W. . VA .
ter and brother-in-law, Kaye
Darrell Cecil HotTman . 77. and Joe Keathley of Pomt
of Letart , W. Va . died Pleasant, W. Va.: sister.
Saturday, Oct . 16, 2004 at Barbara Gerlach of Mt. Alto.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
W. Va.; a brother and sisterBorn on Dec . 3, 1926 at
in-law, B. Gary and Bunny
Letart. W.Va .. he was the son
Hoffman of Letart, W. Va.; a
of the late Oris Hoffman and
sister-in-law. Sylvia Bright of
Velma Taylor Hoffman. He
was a retired supervisor from Marion. and several nieces ·
and nephews.
A.E.P. Phillip Sporn Plant.
Funeral services wi II be
He attended the Guiding
Star
Advent
Christian held at II a.m. Tuesday at the
Star
Advent
Church. was a Hall of Fame Guiding
Christian
Church
at
Letart,
member of the West Virginia
Bowhunters Association, and W. Va. Pastor Mike Martin
the
National
Rifle will officiate and burial will
Association, a graduate of be in Letart Evergreen
Wahama High School and a Cemetery. Military graveside
United States Army veteran rites will be conducted by
Smith-Capehart American
of World War II.
In addition to.hi s parents he Legion Post 40 and Stewartwas preceded in death by an Johnson VFW Post 9926 .
the
Infant daughter. Jennifer Friends called at
Huffm an, an infant sun, Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
Stephen Hoffman, and a Home in Mason, W. Va. from
brother-in -law, John Gerlach. ()to 9 p.m. Monday.

Darrell Cecil
Hofhnan

Local Briefs
Correction
POMEROY
- Selena
Honaker. a st udent at Eastern
Elementary School. was
mistdentificu tn The Daily
Sentinel last Tu esday. She
was pictured witl1 volunteers
from Farmers Bank. who
worked at the schoo l on
Columhm Day.

Anderson
endorsed

11

executive edilnr o( Noll Call.
the ne&gt;l'.\fWpei of Caplin/

Our reader's view
Party has been hijacked by
radicals like: Barnev Frank.
AI Sharpton . and· Hillary
Clinton. Others of that party
believe the Church should be
mu zzled 111 relation to politi cs and some even believe
conservative rcli~ious views

Obituaries
LANGSVILLE - Ajice
Garnes, 69. of Langsville.
passed away Sunday, Oct.
17, 2004, at O'Bleness
in
Memorial . Hospital
Athens.
She wa' born on Sept. 9.
1935, in Point Pleasant.
W.Va .. daughter of the late
Fannie Doss and Pearl Anna
White Betzs. She was a
homemaker.
Surviving are her husband,
Walter F. Garnes ; her children:
Teresa
(David)
Grigsby. Vickie Strickland,
Walter F. "Bub" Garnes Ill,
Brenda (John) Dunfee, and
Becky (Clyde) West; 10
grandchildren and three great
grandchildren ; a sister, Linda
Jacks; a brother, Jim Betzs: a
cousin. Rev. Ray (Sharlotte)
Benson; and a special friend,
Gail Meade.
Besides her parents, she
was preceded in death by two
sons, William Lee and
Robert Harlow Garnes: a
grandchild, and two sisters.
Mildred Bishop and an infant
sister
Serv·ices wi II be held at I
p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 20.
2004. at Bigony -Jord ,m
Funeral Home in Alhany

ATHENS
- Terry
Anderson. Demon:~lic c:~ ndi ­
datc for Ihc 20th District
Ohio SciMte. h;" recei\'eu the
endorsement
of
th e
Communkattons Workers ol
America State Council of
Ohio. and the CWA Local
4321.
representing
Zanesville,
Coshocton.
Marietta, Ironton, Gallipolis
and New Lexington .
·

Vision clinic
scheduled
· POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will be having a vision clinic
on Wednesday, Oct. 27.
The clinic is provided free

by the Ohio Department of
Heal th to children through
the age of 21 who have
defined visual problems or a
posSible vision problem.
Appointments . are to be
made with Sherry Weese,
at
the
health
R.N.
Department. 992-6626 not
late r th an Wednesday. Weese
may he contacted for further
informal ion .

Wiener roast
planned
POMEROY - A wiener
roa.st will be held at 7 p.m. on
Oct . JO at the Hysell Run
Community' Church. For
more information call 9205275 or 992-7442.

Art classes
offered
MIDDLEPORT The
Riverbend Arts Council,
Second Avenue. Middleport,
will offer acrylic painting
classes on Tuesday afternoons 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. and
evenings, 6 to 8 p.m. beginning
tonight.
Rhojean
McClure is the instructor. For
more information . call 992-

3~42.

Cost is $32.

Revival slated
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
services will be held a( 7 p.m.
Oct. 24-29 at the First Baptist
Church of Middleport.
On Sunday the Rev
Marvin Sallee of the Vinton
Baptist Church will be
preaching and Keith Eleam
of Vmton Baptist will be
singing: on Monday the Rev.
Gilbert Graig of Mt. Moriah
Baptist will be preaching
Peopl e
with
Ordinary
. . inging; on

Tuesdi.ly,

Joe

Rife. assistant pastor, World
Christian Outreach, will be
preaching with Jody R1fe
singing; on Wednesday.
Pastor Les Hayman of
Common Ground will be
preaching and Rief Herman
and The Joy FM Quartet will
be singing.
On Thursday, Pastor Rob
Barber of Bethel Worship
Center will be preaching and
the Bethel Worship Center
Singers will be singing; on
Friday, David Wiseman, pastor of Mt. Cnion Baptist will
be preaching and music will
be by the First Baptist
Church singers.

Couple reaches plea deals in sexual
assault of 4-year-old handicapped girl
CAMBRIDGE (API Prosecutors reached plea
deals Monday with a couple
who fled to Canada after
being aCCLI'ed of raping a 4year-old handicapped gi rl.
John Stonem;m. 39. ;md his
girl fiiencl . Patricia Kelley. -10.
both of Kipling each &lt;.:ould be
sentenced to lile in prison on Dec.
13. "lid D•m Padden. ctssistant
prosecutor 111 Guemsey County.

Antique
from Page A1
kitchen table fro m the
1950's.
Smith also has five
crafters that make ongma l
pieces to sell in the store.
These crafters con tribLitC
candles wnod cral" 'uch as
potato bms and J,u;ndry ham-

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

19, 2004

Alice Games

Opponents of stem-cell
research also have hyped the
prospects for so-ca lled
"adult stem cells," derived
not from embryos. but a
patient's own fat. skin or
blood cells.
Some dramatic progress
has been made with cord
blood stem cells obtained
from the umbilical cords ol
newborns, but claims that for instance
spinal
injuries have been Cl\red in
Portugal through adu lt cells
obtained from eye cells have
not been validated by scientific review.
The senior vice president
of The Christopher Reeve
Paralysis
Foundation.
Michael Mangi nello. told
me : "You know Chris. If
there had been any credibility to these claims, he'd have
been on the next plane. But
the overwhelming consensus
of scientists is that it's not
documented, not repeatable
- in fact, is scary. "
The Bush administration is
devoting $24 million this
year to embryonic stem-cell
research and $184 million to
adult. That is letting ideology outweigh science. Both
kinds of research deserve
full funding.
And so does medical
research in general Since
1980, largely because of
research, the average U.S
life
expectancy
has
increased by four years and
disability rates for people
over 65 had declined by 25
percent.
Polls sho"' that voters
overwhelmingly
prefer
Kerry's stance on stem cel b
to Bush's. They also favor
increases in research fundmg. If not to honor Reeve.
then to do the public' s will.
Congress should do"' i1 did
111 the 1990s increa se
research fundi n~ ,111d kl the·
pre,ident take ,.;edit f,, 11
( Mono11

Tuesday, October

Kelley, a former home-care assault on the girl and other
nurse "'ho cared for the girl. evidence in a search of the
and Stoneman were charged cmiple's home about 80 miles
with abusing the severely east of Columbus. The couple
handicapped child who i' !led after posting bail and were
blind and suffers from spma arrested March~ in Toronto.
bifida. diabetes and seizures.
As part of the plea deals.
Stoneman initially was arrest- se ntences fur the lesser
ed on weapons and obscenity charges will be served at the
charges on June 23: 2003.
same time as the punishment
Tor
the rape pleas. Padde n
Following his arrest. authorities found a videotape of the said.
pcrs. and original art work.
. Along with antiques and
crafts Smith se lls Longaberger
products in her store. She is a
Longabcrger dealer and feels
the brand recognition helps
keep' the door' ope1i due to
their loyal following .
Word of mouth has he! peel
Smith draw customers from
the Bend Area, Ripley and
Ravenswood. W. Va . and
eve n Ashland. Ky. The per-

son from Ashland was on a
quest for " Longabe1ger
purse she could only find at
Smith's store .
Smith has been in business
for 14 months and at her lat est · locat ion Sl nte April.
During the recent !loading
she had 38 inches ol water in
the front of the store and JO
inches in back . She lost a
computer an.d refrigerator hut
no antiques. Thanks to the

Challenge to Georgia
•
gay marr1age measure
goes to state's top court
ATLANTA (AP)- A poll
show; huge ' upport in
Georgia for a proposed constitutional amendment on the
Nov. 2 ballot banning gay
marriage . But to get to a
'ote. the measure must clear
at least one more legal challenge.
Just two weeks ahead of
the election, the Georgia
Supreme Court was scheduled Tuesday to hear arguments in an appeal seeking to
prevent the votes from being
counted.
Gay ri ghts supporters say
the amendment is invalid
because it contains more
than one subject. Voters will
be asked whether marriage
should be defined as just
between men and women .
but the full language of the
amendment could al so have
bearing on civil unions and
legal disputes between gay
couples, opponents say.
The gay rights advocates,
including two state legislators, are appealing a lower
judge 's ruling that the
amendment
cannot
be
thrown out until the vo te is
taken . The Supreme Court IS
expected to rule before election day.
The court fi ght may be a
last-ditch effort to prevent a
same-sex marriage change to
the state constitution, which
does nut address gay unions
even though they ' re already
illegal.
A survey of 503 likely voters commissioned by The
Atlanta Journai -Con,titution
last week found that more
than 60 percent intend to
vote in favor of the amendment. Th'e survey was conducted last Wednesday and
Thursday and had a margin
of error of plus or minus 4.5
percentage points.
At an Atlanta doughnut
shop Monday. voter' thou ght
the amendment would pass
with a greater majonty than
60 percent.
"The culture in the South is
very conservative. To allow

or accept gay couple .s in gay hookqore' and barl.
mainstream society is a little people said the polh are
bit of a shock to people,'· mi"ing the many young gay
said Claude-Raymond Rene. and lesbian voters who have
28. a doctoral 't udent at never voted before and thereGeorgia Tech.
fore aren't considered lik ely
Some political science pro- voters.
At Outwrite Boobtore &amp;
fessors agreed. In 'outh
Georoia
the
gay
marria~e
Cofleehou;e.
several thou"
"
vote won't even be clo,e. sand peopl e ha ve regi stered
said
Valdosta
State to vote 'i nee May. sai d manUniversity politi cal 'cienti't ager Topher Payne . Most of
Richard Saeger. He 'd 'een them cited the gay marriage
no campaigning against the amendment as a top reason
amendme nt.
for .becoming active voters.
"This is m1 issue that\ not
"These are people that
an issue because there's no have never participated in
other side," Saeger &gt;aid.
puiiucs before now:· Payne
Gay rights campaigners said. "We"re going to see
have said they aren't count- skewed numbers in the polls
ing on the lawsuit to keep a because It 's harder to predict
marriage amendment out of with all these new voJer' ..
the consti tut ion and that peoBut Payne and other gay
ple may vote against it Nov. voters conceded It's still a '2.
longshot to defeat the
They point out th at the 60 amendment. At a nearby
percent margin b lower than Mexican restau rant. waiter
the margin in Louisiana. Rick Chastain said he
whi&lt;.:h approved a similar thought the amendment
amendment with 78 percent would pass unle" the courts
of the vote last month. (That blocked it. He hoped th at
amendment is now tied up in some type of le~al &lt;&gt;av union
'
would be appro,' ed"later.
court.)
''They don't have to cal l it
Gay rights supporters also
say Atlanta has a large g.1y ma111age. They can call tt
cummumty that may have gay unions or whatever they
heen missed hy the polls . In want. as long as we have the
the city's small distnct of same righh.". he "'aiU.

.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

"P~aeeJ f6 ~ &amp;
T/trmgr$ f6 JP@"
Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the tri-state

Crank
from Page A1 ·
Jackson and Chillicothe. A
microphone placed inside the
car and hooked up to a computer which registered a qualIty number was used in determining the winners.
The trophy winners were
Tim Dexter, Paul Will, Kevin
Deemer, and Jim Hudnall. all
achieving first places in their
respective categories. Steve
Vance took the trophy for
best light system and Aaron
Thomas for best installation.
Ted Dexter received the
peoples choice award. and
Kevm Deemer the best of
show troph y.
Bill Quickel and M&lt;Irty
O'Bryant were chairmen of
Crank It Up . Those attending
were served free hot dogs and
pop. and re gistered for several priLes
·,Attracting lpts of attention

help of a few friends. she was
able to reopen the store in I0
days and is open for business
Mo'nday throu gh Saturday
from I0-6.
When asked 1f she has C\'er
been surprised at what sells
in the ant ique business Smith
quickly answered. "Yes. You
think. 'who
buy '"methin g like that' but there's
somehody out there for
everything. like there 's some-

"'II

USY PAYMENT PUll*
$10 DDII •$10 PEIIONTH FOR OlE
·mmaE fiiiETIIII .

A crowd gathered round while the computemed JUdging of the

stereo systems took pl ace.
from stereo buffs "'"' the
Classic Sound' \'iln from
Athens which carried oul a

demonmatmn not only With
sound. hut ll a,hmg lights and
\'Ideos

acred Heart
Church Bazaar
P o m~ r\.W.

""'"'"'

0 11

Thursday, October 21st, 2004
Dinn~rs sta11 at ~:30 pm
Dtt, p, .
57.00 adults-S:&gt;.OO children under lc
~
tlltl'jl~l

.'Wtnu ; cn·.mud bllkt•d drickt&gt;fl ,,r 'ram llt~~u,l
• Hmnt' "Mdt• um,JI.·s-rtltlSI!f'd pot~lOt'.S &amp; ,f.!nll')'
.l!rt't"n bt'dtf.S, uJh' ~ltW ', rrlls [.. dt"sserl
~..fp ...

,,, ,.:•• $500.00
2.1 ,.:.. $200.00
$.l, 41, , Sl' ,.,; •., $ruo.uu

�..

P~geA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

· Tuesday, October 19, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
BCS Standings, Page 82
Astros one win from World Series, Page 86

Presidential campaigns ring up ~pending in Ohio
ELYRIA, (AP) - Whether
it's box lunches for traveling
staff members or a six-ligure
advenising budget. the presidential campaigns are dropping small and large amounts
of money as the candidates
compete for Ohio's 20 electoral votes.
The economic boost gets
multiplied with cam paigns up
and down the ballot as the
election race enters its tina!
two weeks.
Matt Szychowicz, 20, said
things can get hectic at his
job at Anchor Advertising &amp;
Printing in Elyria. The staff
has been working seven days
a week printing political
materials that are mailed.
handed out or posted on billboards and in front yards.
"This 1 is the best job I've
ever had." Szychowicz said.
Skip Skolnik, who operates
the company with his wife_
Amy, said his company has
mailed about 250,000 campaign pieces since Thursday.
"In total. we 'II probably
mail 1.3 million pieces of
mail for the election,'' he said.
Skolnik's company must do
the fast-order campaign work
;unid the regular demands of
corporate printing jobs. His
staff was busy preparing a
gutter system mailer scheduled to be sent in time for the
leaf season. ·
The presidential campaigns
occasionall y offer one-shot
deals for businesses to ring up
a sale , including car rentals
for traveling campaign staffs.
meals for national press corps
members and placards for
high-visibility exposure when
television covers a campaign.
The big-ticket item for the
campaigns of President Bush
and Sen: John Kerry is broadcast advertising: The candidates and their parties combined have each spent at least
$18 million in Ohio on TV
and radio ads since March .
The impact can be considerable, even in smaller markets such as Youngstown.
According to an estimate by
The Busi ness Journal of
Youngstown, TV stations in
the city are in line for $7.5
million in political adverti sing, with 65 percent· coming
from the Bush and Kerry
campaigns and their respective parties.
ln Cincinnati, the E.W.

NewsChannel

Tuesday,Cktober19,2004

Marshall's Spann
earns special
teams honor
HUNTINGTON (AP)
Marshall freshman Emanuel
Spann was named the speCial teams player of the
week in the Mid -Ameri ca n
Conference 's East Division
on Monday.
Spann had a punt return
for 28 yards and a kickoff
return for 24 yards in a 2717 win at Kent State .

Earnhardt Jr.
loses appeal on
25-point penalty

(AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Weather forecast

Volunteers distribute signs before the crowd arrives for a rally
Thesday, October 19
for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry at
Morni11g
(7 a.m:-No01r)
Lorain County Community College in Elyria: Whether it's box ·
lt will be a cloudy morning.
lunches for traveling staff members or a six-figure advertising
Temperatures
will hold steady
budget, the presidential campaigns are dropping small and
around
67.
Winds
will be 10
large amounts of money as the candidates compete for Ohio's
MPH from the southwest.
20 electoral votes.
Afternoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
It's going to be a humid and
Scripps Co .. whose holdings passed on an ice cream treat cloudy afternoon. Moderate
include newspapers and tele- when he couldn't find a rain is forecasted. The rain
vision stations. reponed last Haagen-Dazs bar.
should start by 3:OOpm.
Harlan Diamond, who runs Accumulations of 0.26 inches
week that its profi ts for the
July-Se ptember period were a Cleveland-area catering are predicted. Temperatures
up 7.2 percent over the same business. has provided offsite will r,ise from 72 early afterperiod in 2003 with the help meals for Bush and Ke rry noon to the high for the day
of '"strong political advertis- campaign stops and said the
ing" at its stations.
campaign staffs tend to- be
Overall . Scripps said third- money-conscious and avoid
q~arter political advertising extravagance.
He said catering visiting
of $10.2 million was about
the same as the July- candidates was a small part of ACI- 34.2 1
31.92
September 2000 period but his business. but a welcome AEPAkzo- 35.34
sharply ahead of the $1 mil- one . "You always see a little Ashland Inc. - 55.33
lion for the same period in bump from the campaigns," AT&amp;T -15.69
2003, an off vear for federal sa id Diamond. who has BLI- 11 .62
elections.
·
served every president since Bob Evans - 24.69
BorgWarner - 40 .74
Sometimes the campaig n John F. Kennedy.
- 3.64
If campaign events are. run Champion
coffers open slightl y, as when
Charming Shops- 7.38
Bush picked up a frozen cus- on tight budgets, fund-rai sing City Holding - 33.46
tard in Chagrin Falls east of events are even more thrifty, Col- 36.20
Cleveland a·r Kerry paid $140 Diamond said . "Fund raising DG -16.64
last weekend in Chillicothe is to raise funds. not to spend DuPont- 43.05
for a hunting li cense. Kerry a lot of money," he said.

of 76 at 3:OOpm as they drop
back down to 72 later this
afternoon . Winds will be I0
MPH from the southwest.
Eve11i11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
lt should be a cloudy
evening. We are predicting
moderate rain. The rainfall
should end around IO:OOpm
with total accumulations for
thi s event near 0.53 inches.
Temperatures will diminish
from 68 early this evening to
61. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the west turning from

the south as the evening progresses.
Ovemight (1 -6 a.m.)
There could be a few raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will linger at 60
with today's low of 58 occurring around 6:00am . Skies
will be mostl y clear to cloudy
with I0 MPH winds from the
north turning from the northwest as the overnight progresses.

Federal Mogul - .1 6
USB -29.44
Gannett- 81.50
Ge neral Electric - 33.89
GKNLY- 3.90
Harley Davidson - 57.69
Kmart - 91.02
Kroger - 15 .13
Ltd. - 23.59
NSC -31.77
Oak Hill Financial - 37.40
OVB- 31.25
BBT -40. 17
Peoples - 27 .36

Peps1co- 48.99
Premier- 9.02
Rockwell - 38.85
Rocky Boots - 18.91
RD Shell- 52.60
SBC- 26 .91
Sears - 37 .39
Wai-Mart - 52.92
Wendy's- 33 .50
Worthington - 20.02

Local stocks

Daily 1Stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes of the previous day's
transactions, provided by· Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

$207 million program aims to
reduce soil erosion, protect water
JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The goal of a new $207 million conservation project is to
reduce pollution and protect
drinking water along the 231mile long Scioto River and its
tributary streams. But environmefitalists say they are
concerned that the program is
temporary and questioned
whether thfefire_ is eno~gh
1
money to su
. tctent Y mom tor
I
water qua Ity.
· 1
State an d f edera I oflitcta
s
M d
1 d d t ·1 f
ohn on ay re eashe he at sold
t e program, w tc wou
Pay fa rmers to tak e their
. for 15
crops out of pro ductIOn
years and create conservation
buffers on 70,000 acres by
planting trees or grasses.
The Scioto River Watershed
runs through 3l · central and
Southern Ohl-0 counties and
has more species of fish and
mussels than any other watershed in the state, said David
Hanse lmann, chief of the
di vision of soil and water
conservation for th e Ohio
Natural
Department
Of
Resources. Erosion and the
ru noff of pest·1·cides and herbicides pollute· waterways and
threaten aquatic life.
The number of acres
illvolved make the program
ohe of the largest of its kind in
the nation, Hanselmann said.
While environmentali sts
praised the program, they said
$1 million earmarked to monitor water quality is not enough.
A lab in Chillicothe run by
. Heidelberg College will monitor water quality as wi ll
Columbus and smaller cities
that draw water from the
watershed, Hanselmann said.

"The problem is it's not permanent,'' Dan Binder, watershed program director for the
Ohio Environmental CounciL
said of the program. "So by
the time we figure out
whether it's doing any good.
it's goi ng to go away."
Deputy U.S. Agriculture
Secretary James Moseley and
Sam Speck, director of the
state natural-resources department. talked about the pror,ram Monday at a news conere nee next to the Scioto
River near Circleville.
. The federal government
wi ll supplv. $ 15 I million for
the program with the rest
coming from the state. city of
Columbus and various conser~ation and wildli fe or~anizattons.
To qualify for pay ments,
farmers must have grown
crops on the ·land for at least

fa~ of ~h~ six years between

01 · The payments
°
average between 175 d

19 6 an

00

~$~ 1 1

$

10

an acre a year an
depend
on soil Han
quality
and
crop history.
se lmann
said. The land can stretch severa! hundred feet from the
.waterway, he saict.
Many farmers are likely to
continue to keep the land out of
· even after the payproductton
ments end. Hanse Imann S31'd .
'' lt will help farmers and
landowners do an even better
JOb with environmental st~wardship to protect the water
resource;, including drinki ngwater supplies," he said.
Th e Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation supports the program because it. makes it
financially feasi ble for farm. ers to take cropland out of

production , said Constance
Jackso n. the grou p's vice
president of agricultural ecology.
''It's onl y going to take that
land out that's absolutely neeessary to protect the environment," she said.
Todd Sims, who grows
corn , soybeans and wheat on
about 4,000 acres near the
Scioto River in Marion, has
already taken about I00 acres
·
out o f pro d uctton
un der a
local conservation program .
He wo uld not say how much
money he receives but said it
is J·ust enough to make it
worthwhile.
"It's definitely a good program. It's good environmentall y." he said. "But they need
to make sure they continue to
pay enough money so we can
. . 'd ..
. ..
JUStI 1Y setttng It ast e.
In 2000, a sim ilar watershed conservation program
was started near Lake Erie .
The goal was to have 67,000
acres set aside for conservation. About 25 ,000 acres have
been enrolled so far.
Hanselmann said enroU-

Send us a
••••• photo of
your
favorite

Forward Mike
Pilgrim leaves
Cincinnati

:f. "might be -----==~~~ !:

~:

I

voted into our

~:

':,~

2.0 05

•••••

Pet Calendar!

\

••

•••

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

!f.

It

The w1'nning pets Wl'll _be featured in th1's
•
:..
unique calendar.
~~~~ ~~~d~~~ddo~~~ aPf~~ ~~~ '·:
The winner will be highlighted on the cover. -:.•
••
money for sign up bonu ses ~~ ·N·a·m·.e. ·O·f·p·e·t·:· •••.• ••••• • ••••••••••••• • •••••• • • •• •J;.
from $2 million to $1. 1 million . However. he said the
state still has until 20 10 to
meet the enrollment goal.

1

,.•

~

••

&gt;

1

US.
Department
of
A g r i c u I t u r e :
hrtp:llwww. usda.gov/
Ohio Deparrme/11 of
Natural
Resou rces:
hrtp://www.dnrstate.olwsl

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

Subscribe today¥ 992"2155

91

~.

Address: .

••t

On the Net:

The Daily Sentinel

N
all. Your arne:
•ii;

•

Phone:

1

1

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
1
d:lt [[ •
[ · "llll ' [
Jt:\ · t Jt:\[
t
·~ lll?il IPO HS 1'tlill !'
--IF'Otn -IF' easan

•....

•• I

)

C:

Ut:ribune

''Pet Calendar"
825 Third Avenue

)Register

"Pet Calendar"
· 200 Main St.

~.•'
~

I

Daily Sentinel ••
"Pet Calendar"
111 Court St.

L

1"

:!_G_a~l!~o~i~:. '?~ .4.5~~!.!! ~~e~~~~t: ~-2·5~~~. _~~~~'~!'. ~~ -4~~~~ ~:

'i

'} ii yA iiAw 'i

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP)- Dale Earnhardt Jr. lost
hi s appeal of a 25-point penalty and $ 10,000 fine for usi ng a
vulgarity during a postrace TV
interview.
Instead of leading the Nextel
Cup standings Monday by a
point with live races to go,
Earnhardt trails leader Kurt
Busch by 24 point~.
"NASCAR had iss ued
repeated warnings to contestants regarding the use of inappro(,iriate language du.~ing: live
event
broadcasts ,
the
National Stock Car Racin g:
Commission said Monday.
"The infraction occurred onair at the racetrack dltring the
Ji ve broadcast of a NASCAR
event , not in a casual private
conversation or offsite activity."
NASCAR
puni shed
Earnhardt on Oct. 5. two days
after he won a race at
Talladega and was interviewed
by NBC
ln its denial of the appeal .
the three-person panel called
Earnhardt an important
ambassador of the spon and a
role model.
There was no immediate
re sponse from Earnhardt or his
team . They have the .option of
making a final appeal to commissioner Charles D. Strang.
Meanwhile. the Parents
Television Council. an advocacy group to protect children
against sex. violence and profanity in entenainment. tiled
an indecency complaint
against NBC with the Federal
Communi c ation ,s
Commission.
lt wants the FCC to levy a
line against every NBC affiliate that aired the interview.
Attempts to reach someone
at NBC Sports were not
immediately successful.

•ivA 'i .i.., 'i iiv&amp; :.t

CINC INNATI (AP)
Sophomore forward Mike
Pilgrim has decided to tran sfer from the Un ivers ity of
sc hool
Cincinnati ,
the
announced Monday.
The 6-foot -8 forw ard didn't
play as a fre shman, concentrating on academics instead.
Pilgrim, a Cincinnati
native, averaged I 3.5 points,
9 rebounds and 2. I blocks per
game at Brewster Academy in
New Hampshire in 2002-03.

Cavs beat Nets
in preseason
CLEVELAND (AP) - Jeff •
Mcinnis scored 22 points.
Drew Gooden had I 5
rebounds and LeBron James
had I0 points. seven rebounds
and five assists to lead the
Cleveland Cavaliers to an 8869 exhibition win over the
New Jersey Nets on Monday
night.
Mcinnis scored 14 poiills
and James got all 10 of his
during the third quaner when
the Cavaliers' start ing unit
dominated. pulled away an'd
spent the fourth watching
from the bench.
Gooden had his third
straight double-digit rebounding game . for Cleveland.
which hi s counting on him for
boards fo llowing Carlos
Boozer's departure as a free .
agent.
·

urrent skid isn't a
first for hio tate
BY RUSTY MILLER .

Associated Press

i.l gam~:·

Assoc1ated Press
The
new
Bowl
Championship Series formula
i, creating the 'arne old confusion.

While Southern California
took the top spot in the
reworked
BCS standings' debut
Monday,
look who's
seco nd :
Miami . The
Hurricanes
e d g e d
Ok lahoma,
a strong No. 2 behind USC in
both The A,-,ociated Press Top
25 and the coache' poll.
Put in place after Ja,t sea'on\ 'plit national champil&gt;n,hip. this year\ strippeddown BCS fonnula relies more
on the AP and ESPNIUSA
Today polls. The idea was to
ensure that when there i' a clear
cun-,erhus top two in the polls
- '" USC and Oklahoma have
been all 'easun - the BCS
'landings would refl ect 11.
Instead. BCS ofticials again
had to do some explaining.
"It's obviou, ly very early. It's
important that there not be an
overreaction to this poll." BCS
coordinator and Big 12 commr&gt;Sioner Kevin Weiberg said.
addin~ that when he saw
Miami ahead of Oklahoma. "l
wa' a little surprised. to tell you
the ttuth ...

said

Jim Tressel. Ohio State's
head man for the past four
sea,.ms. "We haven't
deserved to win any of our
Bi g Ten game-,. That \ a
fact.''
Tressel is not alone in
such misery. Research by
The Associated Pre-,s
shows the Buckeves have

Please.see BCS. Bl

NFL

lost at least three games in

Siren
startles
Browns
crowd

a row 16times in a season.
• had two
Woody Hayes
teams that did it. as did
Earle Bruce and John
Cooper.
NFL and coll ege hall of
farner Paul Brown's 1943
team lost fou r games in a
row - the last time Ohio
State has strung together
so many defeats in a season.
"You could have beaten
us 100-0 if you had wanted:· Brown said to Iowa
Seahawks coach Don
Faurot for not running up
the score in a game earlier
in the 1943

~easo n

'

Please see Skid, Bl

Ohio State's Lydell Ross (3 0 ) is ti\¢'.1ed by Iowa's Abdu l Hodge. left. Chad Greenway. nght.
and Jonathon Babineaux. bottom nght. during a f~rst half run. Saturday 111 Iowa C1ty. Iowa .
The Buckeyes lost for the third-straight time. i AP)

Ohio State's longest losing streaks
COLUMBUS (AP) collegiate football:
Strea~

Year

Ohto State's longest los1ng streaks in 115 years of inter-

Slngla Seaean
Notes

5

1897

Coach
David Edwards

4

1943

Paul Brown

4

JohnWilce

4

1922
1898

3

2004 .

David Edwards
Jim Tressel ·

3

1999

John Cooper

3

1988

3
3

1982

John Cooper
Earte Bruce
Earle Bruce

1987

iAP l - An emer~~llC) ,Iren re,embling an
air-raid warninu that was
accidental!\ tun'ied on surpri,ed f:1 n~ and players durin~ Sunda,.·, game between
the CJc,·cian,f Browns and
Cincinnati Bengals.
Early in tk second quarter.
the noi'e wailed through
illu,.bpeakcr' in the 7l000-,cat ,tadium for approx imately I 5 'econds. leaving
people. to womler if the y were
· .being 11 :I rned to evac uate.
--(,er) &lt;&gt;ne was looking at
ea.-h other 'aying. 'What the
heck is that?'" Brown s tight
'end Aaron Shea said Monday.
"\\'e reall1 didn't know what
_it wa's. I thought it was a torBEREA

against

the Buckeyes, whose best
players were either fi ght-

It's USC
and ...
Miami?
BY RALPH D. Russo

COLUMBUS - On a
late spring day in I 890,
about 700 people showed
up to' watch a curiosity
known as "Foot Ball"
being played at Ohio State.
The players sent a letter
to a sporting-goods co mpany for a copy of the ne w
game's ru les and then had
to take up a collection to
buy a ball.
Jose ph H. Lange scored
Ohio -State's first touchdown - worth four points
- to polite applause by
the bemused onlookers in
wha t became a 20- 14 victory over Ohio Wesleyan.
The rosv start to the
Buckeyes ··
I IS -year
odyssey in intercollegiate
football was misleading.
They lost their next five
games over two seasons.
Now. 759 wins and 29
Bi g Ten championship s
later, Ohio State is aln]Ost
back where it started.
A 33-7 luss at Iowa on
Saturday
was
the
Buckeyes' thi rd in a row.
all in conference games.
Headi ng into thi s week's
game at home against
Indiana. the fans are angrv.
the pl ayers are discouraged and the coac h is
searching for an swers.
·'You stop I the streak) by
ge tting better and deserving to win

BCS

Outscored 6·172 during skid
Wartime; lost two by TO or less
Lost last two 14·9, 12·9
•
All tour vs. Ohio colleges
Current, vs. lnd, Saturday
MSU, Ill, Mict:l to end season
Routed by IIUni, Hoo.si,ers ·
By total 10 pts.; led to firing
Ouch : Stanford. Fla. St., Wis.

3
3

1971

Woody Hayes

1966

3
3

1940
1924

Woody Hayes
Francis Schmidt
John Wilce

3
3

1904

E.A.Sweetland

lncl toss to No. 1 Cornell
2·0·3 the n 0-3 finish
Lost 4· 2 at Oberl1n

1901

3

1893

John Eckstrom
Jack Ryder

Was 4-0-1 when s~id carne
Followed with three-game w1n streak

Margms: 7. 4. 3
WWH's last losmg season

5

1890-91

3

1977-78

Two SeatQna
Coach
Notes
Program record fell to 1-5
AlaxanCler Lilley
Sour start to Hayes' last season
Woody Hayes

3

1956·57

Woody Hayes

3

1893-94 Jack Ryder

Streak Year

FOllowed by 13-game w1n streak
By combined t 4 points

Please see Siren. Bl

National Football League

Chad Joh_nson ,tormented by poor showing
BY JoE KAY

. Associated Press
- - - - - - - - - - c - - --:_.:::-

CINC INNATI - Those barking
Brown s fa ns don· t need to 'end Chad
John son any antacids. He's doin :! a
tho rough job of tormenting hitme :r.
The Bengals receiver didn 't get
much sleer followi ng a ~4 - I 7 1,.,, tn
Cleve land that wa' as humh lii iU "'
any he\ ever endured . He droppc~J a'
many rasses Js he caught - three
e;tch - while Browns fa n' howled in

de Iight.
"I c'uuldn 't under,tanJ it. will' I
played like that. " a cha\lci1cd
Johnson 'aid Monda\, ,inin~ ''n &lt;t
Wooden &gt;tool in a nearJv V&lt;tC&lt;lllt Jock a room .
What mi~ht ha1e bee n one "f hi'
fine'\ mon'ients in the i\IFL turned
into one that will h&lt;&gt;thcr him for a h•t
lunl.."!er tha n nne to ... -.. ~~ 1!11..1-t urn llll.!hl .
John,(m rai,cd the ,take&lt; for
Sunday·, gc~mc "ith a fric·ndh I" '" '·
-..,ending. l\.:ptn-13 i'-111lu1 10 '1\.lllll' ut' hi-..
rric~ld"' t lll ti1C . Bro\\ ll'\ with ,l IHlll'

warn in!!. thcv \\"ntild !.!L~t " ll' k tn 1111.: lo
flil11 . •.
- •
1-lah. hah .
ln -t~ad. tlw Pro Bo11 I r~cei1cr !'~It
,i,·k uwr the wa~· he rl:ll Cll. He
dmppcd a C&lt;11Iple of third -dPwn p;h\ e-.., in one of hi~ \\ or'l gan h.~ ..... Pill' he
r~lived \lonJa,
11 hd e 11 &lt;Itdll n~
\l ame film throutlh hl0ar\ ~o.'\C..,·.
~
· "Yll u kn';" h~i\1 I It'·~! ;,hout tlw
game : · he ..,~1iU in it \Uit tnllL' . "1 kt
~' er~ htKi:-. d·nv. 11 - l,'( 'ct d1~o.'"' · pia: cr~.
c1cn tile fa il&gt; . Th .It', the"·" l'ml .ok l ll f! it. s() it\ 'I l l! in ~ tln m: ~hnuldt'l"\ .
ClliW

l:lcnbo,!l·, ,a1in~ let it go. but I
L'an'lkt ii ' l!C' ."
..
.lohn'''n ' lol&lt;'' c:hallenges and
repeated!) guaranteed-victories earlier in hi, four-\ ear career. before
toad! ~!an in L~w i ' put a stop to it.
,\, Lewi' ,cc' it. there's no point. in
n ling up an orp,lllent.
·
I &lt;''"' think' that -John,on put too
muc:h pre"urc' &lt;'n him,elf hy sending
the antacid to Cle1 eland. Johnson .
rc te,·tc·J the suggt•stion. but cou ldn't

Please see Johnson, Bl

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

usc stans at No.1 in first acs standings
USA TodllyiESPN

Games through

Oct 16

from Page B1

Avg

BCS

Comp

TEAM

Rank Point•

t

2 Miamt (Fla.)
3 Oklahoma
4 Auburn

4
2
3

5 Florida State

5

6 Wtsconsm

6
9
7

7 Utah
8 Callforma

t5 VIrginia
16 Texas A&amp;M
17 Louisville

,
10
8
12
13
19
14
17
151

18 Anzona State

21

t9
20
2t
22
23
24
25

18
151
22
20
24
27
23

9 Tenneuee
1D Georgta

t t Texas
12 Purdue

t3 Michigan
14 Botse State

Louisiana Stata
West Vtrglnla
Oklahoma State
Florida
Notre Dame
UAB
Virginia Tel:h

t,6t0
t 448
t,567
t.478
t ,304
t 240
t,072
t,215
999
1,040
t .08t
957
895
467
738

561
627
305
528
627
273
450
t34
41
t93

Pet

Rank

Points

Pet

991
891

1
3
2

1,514

.993

964

910
802
763

4
5

277
082
025

7
10
8
t3
6
9
12
It
16
t5
20
t8
23
17
14
21
19
25
32

tt9

22

560

748
6t5
640
665
589
55\
287
454
345
386
t88

325
386
t88

ing m World War tt or pre vented from playing
because of Army ROTC duty.
Twtce the Buckeyes have lost live consecuti ve g,unes 111 I 897 and in those next live
starts over two autumns after the program
chalked up that first wm
Bruce was an Ohio State player, an assistant
under H.1yes and, had been a s uccessful head
coach when he took over after Hayes was
tired tor sluggmg a Clemson llayer on the
stdelme at the 1978 Gator Bow . In mne seasons as head coach, Bruce won more than 75
percent ot ht s games, captured four Btg Ten
tttles and had a winnmg record over Ohw
State', nem esis, Michigan.
Yet the three-game losing streak late m the
1987 season culnunated m hiS tiring by the
umversny's president at the ttme. Edward
Jennt ngs.
" I just don ' t quite understand how we can
lose hke we lose, but we keep doing tt ,"
Bruce said at the time.
Bruce's Buckeyes had lost three games in a
row before, but they were to Stanford (led by
John Elway), Ronda State and Wisconsi n all at home - m 1982 Bruce survtved that
but not the fire storm that came live years later

Computen
Rank Pomts Pet.

1

1 380 905
1,470 964
1.359 891
1.234 .809
1,088 713
1,0t5 666
1 07t 702
815 534
1,124 737
t,026 673
832 546
943 6t8
557 365
665 436
404 265
482 316
194 127
489 321
669 439
272 178
447 293
92 060
19 012
253 .1 88

Ave rage

990

6
8
4
12
7
14
13
15
t6
10

99
96
82
91
8t
70
85
57
75
45
47
44
35
64

17

34

340

11
20

61
30

9

66

22
NA
18
NA
21
19
NR

20
0
33
0
22
32

6t 0
300
660
200
000
330
000
220
320

0

000

2

5
3

.99t2
9187
916t
9036
.8072

960

820
910
8t0
700
850
570
750
450
470
440
350
640

Prev1out

NR
NA
NR
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA'
NA
NA
NA
NR
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NR

7255

.725t
6733
.633t
6090
6027

5248
5064

4309
4t0t
4067
3340

3250
2819
2748
.2255

1900
1209
1192
.0951

nearly as many JUmbled thought &lt; m his head
"Three balls? 1 dropped two all last year out
of 16 ~ames," he said "That 's why I'm slill
here. t m gomg to keep stg mng cards unlil 1
from Page B1
figure out why 1 played hke that "
He got a visttor shonly after he started s tgncome up with an alten\auve exptanatton.
mg. Lewis, who rarely meets players one-onThat's what tormented htm
one in the locker room. pulled up a stool and
''I can't have a bad game," he satd. "There's talked to him pn vately for several mmutes,
no room for error right now My JOb IS to trying to understand hi s confused star.
make everybody's jobs easter. We're t-4 right
When they were finished. Lewts gently patnow I don't have ume to drop a ball on third- ted John son on the back and rested hts hand
and- I I can't do it."
on ht s shoulder.
Johnson thinks he fell into the trap of takmg
Lewis think s the chatty receiver has fmally
hts eye off the ball and trying to run with it learned that tt 's unwi se to give an opponent
before he caught tt. He'll fix that during prac- extra mottvattOn by spoutmg off or playing a
tice this week leading up to a Monday night
JOke
game against Denver (5-1).
"You don't need to hetghten their attenuon
Putting the Cleveland game behmd him will · m any way," Lewt s satd Monday "It doe sn't
be tougher.
help you at a ny point So, lesson learned ."
John son went around the locker room
Well, sort of.
Monday and asked several veterans if they' d
"I, understood where he was commg from ,''
ever had a terrible game. After the meetmgs Johnson sa1d "I can't change me , beca use
wtth coaches. Johnson returned to his locker, bemg me has made me successful He JUSt
plopped down on his wooden stool and startsatd next time 1 have any tdeas about sendmg
ed signing a box full of Chad Johnson football thmgs or anythmg - a guarantee or whatevcards to fulfill an obhgation.
er- JUSt make sure 1 talk to hun first."
There were 1.200 cards in the stack and

Team percentages are denved by diVIding a team's actual voting po1nts by a maximum 1 625 poss1ble points 1n the AP Poll

and 1 525 poSSible potnts tn the USA Today/ESPN Coae(&gt;es Poll
s~ computer ran~ngs cak:utated tn tnver;e points order (25 fllf #1 , 24 fOf #2, etc) are usee to determtne the overall computer
component The best and worst rank1ng for each team as dropped, and the rema1mng four are added and d1v1ded by 100
(the max1mum possible po1nts) to produce a Computer Rank1ngs Percentage The s1x computer rank1ng providers are
Anderson &amp; Hester, Rk:hard Btlhngsley Colley Matnx, Kenneth Massey Jeff Sagann and Peter Woffe Each computer
rank1ng accounts for schedule strength 1n 1ts tonnula .

The BCS Average ts calculated by averagmg the percent totals of the Assoctated Press, USA Today/ESPN Coaches and
Computer polls
AP

BCS
from Page B1
Wetberg noted that the top
two teams m the tirst BCS
standmgs of the season have
never played m the system 's
champ10nsh1p game.
''I've never really unde1stood
the BCS process.' USC coach
Pete Carroll smd "And at tirst
look. thts vear' s updated
process contuses me once
agam. t' m not sure how some
of the other team s worked out
to bcmg where they are. It
doe sn't make a lot of sense to
me
The AP and coaches polls
each count tor one thtrd of a
team 's total score under the
new fomlUia The other th1rd
comes from"' computer rank-

mgs, and that's where Mtamt
made up the difference over the
Sooners. The Hurricanes are
ranked fourth in the AP media
poll and third m the coaches
poll. but have the second-most
pomts m the computer . rankmgs. Oklahoma, the chtef benefict;rry of the old system last
season, came out fifth m the
computer rankings
"Our philosophy is that the
only thmg '.'e can control ts
how we play," Miami coach
Larry Coker satd. "Because we
have been named the No. 2
team in the first BCS standmgs.
our JOb now IS to respond and
move forward "
Last season, USC tim shed
the regular season ranked No I
m both polls but th1rd m the
BCS standmgs - knocking It
out of the BCS title game.
Oklahoma fintshed first 111

the BCS standings despite losing the B1g 12 championship
game and droppmg to thtrd m
the major polls. The Sooners
were beaten m the Sugar Bowl
by LSU. "'hich was voted No.
I by the coaches USC tinished
No. 1 m the AP poll.
Under the new system, LSU
and USC would ha\e met m
the Sugar Bowl
"At th1s pomt m the season, tt
JUSt ge nerates a lot of discusstan among the people who
hke to talk about colle~e football. '' Sooners coacn Bob
Stoops said "In that sense, it's
a posnt ve because u keeps people talkmg about our Sp&lt;Jn . But
It really makes no dtfterence
where anyone ts ranked today
There t&gt; too much of th1s season lett to play for dnyone to
get too '.'orked up about th1 s

Siren
from Page B1
nado But 1 thought. tt' s too
cold for a tornado, so what
was it?"
George Veras. the Browns

now.··

dtrector of scoreboard opei atton s, satd the . not se was the
re sult of a techmctan 111 the
sladwm's sound room acc tdentally pushtng the wrong
button
Veras tnitially satd the
ctvtl-defense alarm was mt stakenly turned on Such an

alarm could warn tans 1n the
stadi um about potential
seve1e weathe r
Ho,. evet, Veras later coi rec ted hunselt. saymg the
s1ren was a pon10n o! a song
thc~t w.ts c ued tmproperly
"Thev took an ettecl and
dtdn't litt the nght cue potnt,"

www.mydallysenti nel.com

\!r:ribune - Sentinel - 3ae
CLASSIFIED

And Mll80n
CcHintl" Uke
NoOQ

El. . eant

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

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

\\\111\1 I 'II \I..,

r

ANNO!JNCEMI'NTS

r
I

GM:AWAI'

Vnur ~

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
Mortgage Electronic
Reg1strat1on

Systems, Inc solely
as

nom1nee

Lender

for

1n case No 4 V 089,

regular places of vot-

on the docket

the

ing therein, the ques-

Court, and the oblect
and demand for relief
of which pleading ts

tion of levying a
renewal tax outs1de

to foreclose the hen

tuttonal hm1tatton for

of

the beneht of the
Metgs Local School

or

plaintiff 's

mort·

of the ten-mill constt-

efit of Olive Township

each one dollar of

for the purpose of
Fire protection Satd
tax being·

amounts

valuation,

which

to five cents

for each one dollar of
valuatton,
wh1ch

($0 05) for each one
hundred dollars of
valuatton, lor five (5)
years. The Polls for
satd Election will
open at 6.30 a.m. and

A renewal of a tax of
1 5 mtlls at a rate not

exceedtng t 5 mtlls

Otstr1ct for the purpose of permanent

amounts to fifteen

remain

Inc . and U S. Bank

cents (S0.15) for each

National Association,

to wit

improvements

as Trustee of CSFB
ABS Trust Senes
2001-HE 11 c/o Select

Property Address.
124 Mulberry Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769

rate of filty-ftve hun·
dredths (0.55) mill for

one hundred dollars

7 30 o'clock P.M of
said day.

Portfolio

and be1ng

Servicmg,

Servicmg,

more par·

Inc
Platntiff,

tlcutarty described in
plaintiff's mortgage

VS

recorded 1n Mortgage

Pamela G Bentz aka

Book
Offictal
Records Volume t39,
page 769, of thts

Pamela L

Bentz aka

Pamela Bentz, et at.

Defendants.
•
Case NO 04·CV.089
Judge. Fred W Crow
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Jane
Doe ,
unknown spouse of
M 0
Russell
on

March 7, 194t , James
Doe ,

unknown

spouse of Cora Belle
S. Russell on March
7, 1941 , Julie Doe,
unknown spouse of

Edward A. Stark on
March 7, 1941 , Jamte
Doe,

unknown

spouse of Margaret
Stark on March 7.
1941 , and Jenni Doe ,
unknown spouse of

William Stark on
March 7, 1941 ,whose
last known address

.

November, 004, at the

gage recorded upon
the
followmg
dascrtbed teal estate

Portfolio

c/o Select

of Meigs county, Ohio

are
ADDRESSUNKNOWN and all of
whose residences are
unknown and cannot

by reasonable diligence bo aocertalned, will ta ko
notice that on tho
19th dey of July, 2004,
Mortgoge Electronic
Regiatratlon
Syatoma, Inc. aololy
aa

nominee

for

Landor c/o Select
Portfolio Servicing,
Inc. AND U.S. Bank
National Aaaoctatton,
ol Truatea of CSFB
ABS Truat Serloa
2001-HE11 clo Select
Portfolio Servicing,
Inc.
flied
Ito
Complaint In the
Common Pleas Court

County

Recorder 's

Office.
All ot the above
named defendants
are

reqUired

to

answer w1thm twenty·

eight (28) days alter
last publication date

Dec 7, 2004, which
shall be published
once a week for SIX
consecutive weeks ,

or they mtght be
denied a hear~ng 1n
thiS case.
Jenmler
K. Ross,

Attorney

LEANER, SAMPSON
&amp; ROTHFUSS
Attorneys lor Platntiff
P.O Box 5480
Ctnclnnall, OH 452015480
(513) 241-3100
attyemall @lsrlaw.co
m

(10) 5, 12,p 9, 26, (t1)
2, 9
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION
Notice 11 hereby
gtvon that purautnt
to • reiaotutlon adopt·
ad by the Board of
Education of tho
Molga LOCII School
Dlotrlct, County of
Motga, Ohto, on tho
10th day ol Auguet,
2004, there will be
oubmiHed to tho qualIliad olectora of told
achool dlttrlct at tho
election to be held on
the 2nd day of

at a

of valualion , for five

(5) years. The Polls for

open

By order of the

until

Board

said Election will
open at 6:30 a m. and
rema1n

open

until

7:30 o'clock PM of
said day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Metgs
County, Ohto
John N.lhlo
Chairperson
Rtta D. Smith
Director

Dated Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 5, 12, 19, 26

look who's

40

10116104

Julie Cobb .
Borthwick

($1 00) of tax valua-

will
open at 6·30 am and

of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N lhle

tton, which amounts

rema1n

Chairperson

SISters tfJemse

to five and one-half

Atta D. Smtih

Jfol{aru£, Laura
5heets &amp; Tam10

penod ot ltve (5)

7 30 a clock P.M of
satd day
By order of the Board
at Etecttons, of Metgs
County, Ohto
John N lhle

years,

Chairperson

each

one

dollar

cents ($0 055) for
each

one

hundred

dollars ($t 00 00) of
tax valuatton , for a
commencmg

said

Election
open

unt1l

Director

Dated Sept 5, 2004
'(tO) 5, 12,19, 26

Dated Sept 5, 2004
(10) 5 12, 19, 26

p m. on satd date
By order of the Board
of elect1ons of the

NOTICE OF E... ECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Public Not1ce

ttons 350t 11 (G),
5705 t9, 5705 25

Metgs,

Rtta D Smtih
Duector

Rev1sed Code , elec·

NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Director

(tO) 5, t2, t9, 26

Reoolutton of tho
Board of Townohtp

Trustees

of

a

the

Trustees
of the
Township of Salem,

vote of the people of
said subdivision at a
General Election to
be hold tn the

Revised Code, elec-

a

of

w1H be submitted to a

given

of

of

Resolution

the

1s hereby
that m pur·

Not1ce

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

suance

that

suance

t)ereby
m pur·

a

lions 3501.1t (G),
5705.t9, 5705.25

tions 3501.t1 (G),
5705.19, 5705 25
Notice Is hereby
given that In pur-

g1ven

IS

Board ol Township
Trustees ol the
Township of Sutton,
Racine, Ohio, passed
on the 2nd day ot
August, 2004 , there

Rev1sed Code, elec·

Public Nottce

NOtiCe

suance

of

Resolution

of

Board of Township

Langsville ,
Ohto,
passed on the 1Oth
day of August, 2004,
thoro will be submittad to

a

vote of the

people ot oald subdi-

the

vision at a General

Township of Olive ,
Ohlo,
Rsedavllto,
paoaod on tho 5th day
of August, 2004, thoro
will be submitted Io o
vote of tho people ot
oald oubdlvlalon at a
General Election to
be hold In tho
Townahlp ot Olivo,
Ohio, at tho regular
places of voting
therein, on tho 2nd
day of November,
2004, tho quaotlon of
levying a tax, In
excess of the tan mill

Election to be hold In
the Township of
Satom, Ohto, at the
regular placea of votIng therein, on the
2nd day of November,
2004, tho question of
levying a tax , In
OXCOII Of thO ton mill
limitation, for tho benefit
of
Salem
Townohlp for Iho purpoae of Maintaining
and operating cometorlao. Said tax baing
A replacement of tu
of 0 5 millet a rate not

limitation, for the ban-

exceeding 0 5 mill for

Township of Suncn,

Ohio, at the regular
places of voting
therein , on the 2nd
day of November,
2004, the quoatlon of
levying a tax, In
exceu of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit
ot
Sutton
Townthlp for tho purpose of Maintaining
and operating comotorloo Said tax being.
A replacement of lox
of 0.5 mill eta rete not
axcoodlng 1 mill for
each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amount• to flva canta

($0.05) for each one
hundred

dollars

aren't only for
buying or selling
items. you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Metmory"'
~~ a loved one.

Grave Blankets Hand craft·
ed artifiCial aprox 3ft long

Gall (740)446 1714

r

GIVlCAWA\

740 245 5029
Reward Lost
area on Wed
L1ght Yellow
female dog

1n the Mason
Oct 13 2004
Part Chow
was wearmg

For more Information, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publlshlns oftlce.

~alltpohS3

(7 40) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(7 40) 992-2155
~oint

.$lleasant 3Regtster

(304) 675-1333

of

vsluatlon, tor five (5)
yeers The Polls for
f

'

Y\llll S\lJ
1wnght@1c

10

(304)773 5094

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale..........
Announcement.... . ...

Junk cars w1th or without
7401388 0011
motors (
Old m•lk bottles from Galha
Co Da1r1eS Call {740)446
' 1714 \\lth pnces

.. ... 725

.•..•. • .

.030

Antiques.............. . .
.... ........ 530
Apartments tor Rent...
. .. ... 440
Auction and Flea Market.
. ... ... .. .. .. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .................... 760
Auto Repair ............. ............................. .. 770
Autos for Sale ......................................... 7t 0
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ..... ....................... 750
Building Supplies .................................. 550
Business and Buildings ... .. .................. 340
Bustness Opportunity.............................. 210
Business Tratnmg .
. ................ 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
.. .. .. ... 790
Camping Equtpment
...... .... 780
Cards of Thanks
. .. . . . .. 01 0
Child/Elderly Care
...... ..... . 190
Electrlcai/Aelrlgeratton.......... . ... ..
840
Equipment for Rent .................. ... . . .. . 480

BR on Sandhill Ad 1r1.
Letart l1v1ng room N !tre
place k1lchen nas dtsh
washer stove &amp; relndg
cham lmk fence carport
glassed m back porch
$28 000 l1rm (304) 882 3011

2

. .•810

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED!

room dlnnmg room fur
ntshed
kitChen
2 car
garage 2 outbulldmgs 6
plus acres close to schools

$94 000 1740)742 7200
3 bedroom full basemen t

0

I 0 _ 1~

"JAa.£1..1\

garage approx 1 acre ol
• land 5 milF!S from town on
SA 7 @ F1ve Po1nts call
740-41 6-0768 or 304 882

•

2299

~

~Ott\
© 2004 by NEA,

Inc

www .com1cs com

m:i!""-------,
110 HI:'T II w.\N'"llAU
LLI!

W I\N'fl:J)

To Do

...,.

TELEMAAKETERS NEED· you locally also available 2
ED· No Expenence OK $7· days :1 ""~,,I&lt; for data
9 Per Hour Easy Work , 1· entry '1\ rJ 11 '0 1985 3620

_88_8_9_7_4_J_o_ss_____

W•l!

c«re

ror elderly full or

The Me 1gs County Counc 1t part t1r-1e N1ghl Shift have ref
on Ag 1ng 11..accephng apph &amp; ext:: 304 675·796t
caiiOnsJ re!llines for Home
Ca1e
A1des
Applicants ;;;;:;::=::::;;==;;;;;;;;;;~
should have a h1gh School
10
'SI~'E~~
Diploma or G E D re liable
0PIJOR11JNIT\

------,.1
Bl

transportation lelephone m ~. .
tile home and w•lhng to work Absolute Goldmme•
60
week ends &amp; llohdays Mu st
be motivated and lle)(ttJi e vending machines J excel-

Wtll tram Expe nence m pro- lent locallons all for $10 995
VIding dir ect care or workmg (S00) 234 6962
with older adults a plus r--;;:;-...,...,.,.-T.'-'l
State tested nursmg assts
1an1s encouraged to apply
ApplleaiiOns are ava1 labla at
ou do bus1ness w1tll pe J
the Me1gs Multipurpose
le you know and NOT t
Sen1or Center Mulberry
end money through th
He1ghts Pomeroy Oh an
a11 until you have 1nvest•
EOE employer
ated lhe ol1enn

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITV 1551?
No Fee Unl ess We W1n 1

1·888·562·3345
IH \I I .., , \II

HOJI.w;
mRSALE

G•lllpoll• C1reer Coll•u•
(Careers Close To Home)

Gall Todayl 740·446·4367
I 800 214·0452

(2) 3 bedroom houses for
sale 2 bal hs f• replaces on
www ~II poi.Carearco~egt com
• '
"~'40)709·
4.ccrldlt•d Ma m~r Accredlltng acre aqP
Counol lor ln~fandenl Collagn 11
and Sc~ll 12748

POSTAL JOBS

Manager needed lor mobtle Private owned Beauty Salon
home park tn SMade send needs stylist 10 work
resume to Country Park Monclay s Tuesdays and
Inc PO 1033 Logan , Oh Wednesdays W1ll pay 60%
and w111 buy all supplies
4 ~138
Clientele preferred Senti
Po•ltlona available nowl resume to CLA Box 555 PO
Up to $9 25/hr with
Box 1169 GallipoliS OH
qualified experience!
45631
E~ecell en t pay and
benefits
Propane truck dnver need
ed lor Rutland Bonlee Gas
Call today lor more
Rulland
Ohio Must have
resume ~COL llcense and
ntorma110n
HAZMAT c;ome lo tha store
1·877-463·6247 ask fo r
e.nd p1cM up applicatiOn
ext 2457

176
1,

MISCELLANF..OUS

I ;;, '
,

High
School
Juniors
Seniors and Prio r Service
you can f1ll vacant posluons
In the Weat VIrginia Army
National Guard If you are
between the ages of 17·35
or have prior m1lltar y serv
Ice, you won I want to pass
thiS up For Opportunl11es 1n
your area call
304·675·

5837
!lee kina 39 People
Locally
whp want to earn money
while tosmg we1ght showmo
others how

(740)441 ·1982
FREE SAMPLES
www tamousnutnt1on com

YOUR HOME•
, FREE' APPROVED
HOME LO AN S'

Home L1sltngs
L1st your home by calling

1740)448·3S20

Bedrrom Br t:k Home 2
ath 3 Car Bnck
nattached Garage 2
tory outbu1ld fl'J Code
2704 or cnl {7 ~0)446
566

Bedroon, 1 1 2 Bath
Full Basement
Midd leport OH Code
11 or cai ii740\ ~&lt;J2

Bedroom 3 Bath
ocated 1n GallipOliS over
ookmg the Oh10 R1ver
\€r 3000 sq tt on 3 94
acres Code 825 or call
!7 .10)44, 0323

320

Moun • HU\u,
mKS\1.1

14 J~70 w1th 7l0:2t manutac
lured expando 3 bedroom
1 5 bath all appliances
newer 1urnace Great cond•
t1on (7 40)388 0498

1987

~4~e70

mob•le home

NEW PURCHASES/
3B A 2 bath appliances
REFINANCES
some 1um•lure SeriOUS calls
SO DOWN/ $0 DOWN
only $8 000 (740)245·9040
CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENTS NO 1995 Redman 14x70 1
CRED IT1BANKRUPTCIES owner non smoker cenlral
a1r 1nter therm gas !urn 3
WELCOME'
UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800·370·496S
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY US
VETERANS

H&gt;H
Rfsr
HOLISf.'

10

0°'= Down Paymer,• t'ld
tmancmg a11ailable
•;1th
approved cred•l
A ~e1age
cred1t quahf1es you If down
payment has kept you !rom
buy ng thiS IS your chance
to own your own home ll
you have a down payment
oul would hke to conserve 11
we offe1 low down pay,~•ent
programs also G1eat mter
e~1 rales' Loca l comp any
Mortgage
Locators
(7401992 7321
2 story Colon1al 3 bdrrr •
oath Gas rea t Cntrl A G
$600 mo (740) 446 3481
2br
house
lor
rent
S350 . montn
water ano
trash pa1d no pets Deposll
and relerence requ•red
(740)388 1100
3 bedroom basement 2 car
garage newly remodeled
No pets $650 month plus
depostl (7 40)446·4824
Available Nov 1 • 2BR 1 5
bath central a•r gas heat
$450 monl "l + depostt

(740)446 1079
Co ndo 3 bdrm 2 baths w1
basement V1ew ol r1ver
Cntrt
AJC
S700
mo
GallipOl iS Ferry (7 40 )446
3481
Huge Duplex' clean 3 bed·
room 1 bath d1111ng slor·
age No pets/smokmg $610
Call Kelly (740) 446·9961

In Pomeroy 2 3 bedroom
1
1on Coleman heat pump 2 fence 1n yard c. a heat $375
pe
r
month
1
month
depos1t
pressure treated decks &amp;
reqUired
very
n.ce
home
appliances (740)245 5071
2000 Claylon 14M76 M
Home SJt on 4 62 acres 1n
Mason Coun tv 1734)654
2237 or (734]1693 9696

28x52 Doublew•de (con,r;. 1
ed to real estate\ 3 beo
room 2 batr ea• 1n h. Iehan
(OhiO Lo ans Only)
5+ acres Barn w1lh enced
Beau11fi11- A Frame Slyle 1n tot shed carport Pr111ate
Home B acres 2 balh large seltmg on Adam s\ tile Road
wh1rlpoo1 tub 2 car garage Must see to apprec1&lt;1te
All electnc home natu ra l $85 000 (7 40)2 45 5157
on For sale or rent 2 bedroom
gas
ava ilable
Sassafras/L1ev ng Rd 1304)
mob1le homes start1ng at
675-6809 after 5 00
5270 per month Ca ll 740·
;=;;;:;;;::;;;;;:;;;::;;;:;;;:~ 992 2167
MB 5263

1. r

;,;::=:;=::=::,

17401992 3522

Large farmhOuse
3 bed
r~m 1 bath $450 per
secunty
"'on th
plus
,40)992 62 44
1 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
A.partments 1 reta I space
also lor rent (7 40)992 3702
~J ~e

N1ce home on SA 160 1
rn11e tram Holzer $650 per
mon1t1 {7 40)446 6865 or

(740)379 2923

Rental m Po•nt Pleasant
$400 month {304)675 5540
or (304)675 4024 asK tor
Nanq Homestead Realty
Make 2 payments move 1n 4 Broker
years :~n note (304~736
1"20 MoBILE Ho' tt:s
3409

t'OR Rl-.,1

! real est ltle adlltH !I'In 9

m th1s newspaper I!
su bJect to the Federal
Feur Housin g Acl ol 1968
wh1ch makes It tllegal to
adwertuut any
preference hm!tatlon or
dlacrlml natlon baled on
race color religion sex
fam lllelllllut or na11onal
ori gin or any mt•ntlon to
make any such
prelerenc. Umlllllon or
dlacrlmln•llon
This n1wap~~per will not
knowingly •cc•pl
edvet11tsmsnta tor rMI
eat1te which Is In
wloletlon Of ttlt lew Our
rHder~ sr• tle,..by
Informed lh1t all
dwellings ldvsrtiH(\1 tn
ttlla new•peper Ire
tvllleble on an ~ue l
opportunhy baHt

Ne"\ OakWood mega store
!ea tur rg
Home:.
by 12X65 Trailer •n Country all
Oaio;wood
Fleetwood &amp; Electnc
CA
Hand •cap
G !es One stop shOppmg ready
$200,month
only at Ca~&lt;;wood Homes of (304)675·4088
,
Barbou rsvtlle \NV (304)736·
1bedroo m Tra1ler .n Letart 5
3409
miles trorn Mounta1neer
SAVE·SAVE·SAVE
Plant furn1shed
u11l1t1es
Stock models at old priCes
pa1d
S350 'm on1h
2005 models amv1ng Now
S350/depos•l (30.t)882·2858
Coles
Mob1le
Homes
15266 u S 50 East, Athens 2 bedroom trailer for renl
OhiO 45701 (740)592 1972
hookup no pels $350 .
Where
You Gel You r month plus deposit Ca ll
Moneys Worth"
(740)256 1008

w. o

r

3 bedroom mob1le nome no
pels (7 401992 5858

2 acres on In gall s Road
$15 000 740·245-0133

Ca rdhl
Par~ co

3

n·

e home 1n
loMe Home
f75 3818

2000 square tt Cedar S1d1nQ BeautifUl R•ve 111 ew dear tor
Hom' Ba rn 8 100 acres 6 1 or 2 people no pets reter
acres tillable property bar ences (740)441.0181
ders Com stalk very prlva le
1
B1dwel1 area clean remod·
dwellm~
Homt For Sale
eled .2BR $400 montn
appro ... ijd ... tdl~
Average Ha nd bu ilt log home 6 years 30 Acres 7 ae·es t1ileble mcludes water &amp; sewe r
Meta l
credit quaiiiLt~S you II down old Private With 10 acres Hey Barr 48 x60
Oepos1t 'references No pets
Barn
42
~e70 Souths•de WV
payment has kept you from Stunnmg v1ew l 3 Br 1 112
(304)576·4037
25187 (304)675·5490
buy ing this '' your chance bath Open loft'
to own your own home II
Flnenclng ev1H1bte with
2001 mobUe home 16x80
you have a down payment
NO DOWN PAYMENTlll also two acres land 1 m1le
but would like to conserve it
(740)388·01 ~4
irom Rt 7 near E ureKa
"'e :&gt;Her low down payment
$65 000 Call (7401256 1 and 2 bedroom apa rt
pro,g•am s also Great tnter· House m Kanauoa Old 9234
ments lurn•shed and unl ur
est rates Lc-c al company Farmers Ro Gal lipolis Oh
n• shed
secu -•ty depos1t
Morlgag e
I OC I'IOrS $40 000 2 tra11ers Krode l Al\1er prooe~ty 1 67 acres reQUired no pets 740·992
PerM
on
Nea t
Rd
(740)992·7o.
232 teet shore l1ne 10 m11es 2218
$675/month
1nvestment
south ot Gallipolis SA 7
2 Or hv1ngroom dtnmg Bot h
uauers
S35 OCO B. q ng oerm't ava11 ab•e 1 bed•oom ept W 0 hOOkup
room kitchen I 2 basement (7401441 5725
S}Q ... &lt;'T1onth .. depos•t Close
... A)~~r ~=)21
on 1 ac1e ground
10 holzer Hosp tal Ca. 1 740
1J4 of a mtle on Bua Chatt1n New ly remoldeCI HOIT'e
339·0362
Locel'ed m Hartiord 2br t
Ad 3()4675·3144
3 rooms &amp; bath stovelretng·
belh computer room all
erato r down steu'rs utLlltt es
Homes
!rom
$10 000 1. el&amp;etne ne et pump central
pa1d $450/month No pets
Forclosure VA Hud for 11sl e1r $40 000 call (304)882
46 Olive St (740)446·3945
1ng 1·800·749·8106 ex 1709 2762 c ell day or even1no

er

$14 62·$20 92/hr No"' htr·
lng For applications 8 tree
go11ernment ]ob Into call
Amenean Assoe of Labor
1·913·599·8042 24 hrs
emp serv

r\TTI .N 110~!

GETYOURLOANTO
BUY OR REFINANCE

Retail sales clerk 27 hours Dr1ver Needs Work Class A
or more per week must be CDL All Endorsements Call
able to work some evenmgs (740)367·7899
No Sundays $6 75/hour
I&gt;R\WJ\.LL
P1ck up appl1ca110n at
lnslall F1n1sh Pamllng
Sw1sher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Carpententry Bathrooms
Pomeroy
Res•dent•al Commere1al
--------:-:Satellite Installe rs needed
INSURED
State Wuje (304)674-0058
NOTHING TO SMALL
Flat Pnces
Super 81s see kmg a ma tnle·
Steve-(740)388·8731
nance person
Qualil•ed _.::::.:.::..::.:..::::.::::._::.:_::_:__
- - -- - - ---:-:: applican t needs to have Georges Portable Sawm1U
Need so meone to live m &amp;
basic repa1r and pool knowl· don t haul your logs to the
care
lor elderly
lady
edge Apply 1n person No m1U JUSt ca ll 304·675 1957
House~ee om g cookmg &amp;
ca ll s please
Let me run your errands for
phone
TLC (740)379·2291

The Arbors at Galhpohs •s
seekmg dependable ener·
get1e carmg indiVI duals for
fuiHime and parH1me pos1
!Ions We currently are utthz
mg 1.2 hour shifts We offer
compel1t1ve wages mclud1ng
pay for experience E)(cel'ent
health and dental •nsurance
401 K and pa1d vaea l •on II
Interested
call
Jtmmy
Snyder Staff Development
Coordmator at (7 40 )446·
7112 or come apply In personal

3BA 2BA 5 12SI Heres
Green TQ\. r:;~h ~ close 1o
school Pnced to .:;e I More
1nfo (740)446'7377

HI \1\IS

www.orvb.com

"t"eo.--------., - - - - - - - - -

lPNs

Make 50% selling Avo n
L1m1 ted
f1me
ONLY
(740)446 3358 F1rst 5 to call
rec eives a g1lt

~=======~

II

743

307 Spnng Ave Pomeroy
Double ( 1) 4 bedroom
wlbath and ( 1) 2 bedroom
w/bath Full basement 2
lots
N ew met&lt;J1
rc Jl
$15 000 00 (7!0 985 &gt;613

New Hor1zons Ch ldhood
Ennchmenl Cen ter IS takmg
apphcat•ons for Teach1ng
Ass slant and subStit ute
pOSitiOnS New Honzon Will
operate
Septembe·r-May
M
onda~s
Thursdays
9am·
DATA ENTRY
11 30 am and serve ch1ldren
Work from home
ages 3 5 Applicants must
Flexible Hours'!
have at least a h1gh sc hool
SSSGreat Pay'$$$
diploma e~e penence m early
Personal Computer
Ch
ildhood preferred For
Requ1red.
more 1ntormat1on or to
1--800·913· 2823 ext #1
request an appllcahon lor
Desk clerk neeaed Please employ ment packet call 740
apply
at
Budget Inn 949 2381 or 740.992 2712
Jackson P1 ke GaU1polls No
Overbrook Center w1ll soon
phone calls please
be offenng the State Tested
JaMonal serv•ce has 2 Nurse Atde classes lr you
1mmed1ate open1ngs 1n the are Interested please come
Gall1pOI1s area E~epe n ence 1n and 1111 out an application
1n stnpp1ng and waxmg hte SPACE IS LIMITED" EOE
floors Call 800·988·7847
Rehabthta11on
Overbrook

EOEIM/F/ON

HO\US
IUH S.\1 f

V1ew photos/ •nto online

Work From Home
800 210 4689
$500 S1 500/Month
Parlt1me
$2 000 $8 OOOtM on lh
Full t1me

Arbors at Gal11pohs
170 P•neerest Ortve
Gelllpolls OH 45631

310

3 bedroom 2 bath llvmg

~. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~
Chester area Preapproved 740 949 21 94
fi nancing (
)
Mechan 1cal Techn 1c1an
I '11'1 0\ 'II\ I
Must have hands on expen·
ence usmg power tools ,
Sft!\ (( l· S
electnc saw dnll press an d
110
others Must be able to read
eng1neer1ng
drawmgs
Some machme shop knowl·
edge helpful
ElectriC and
An E~cellent way Ia earn
gas
weldmg
a
plus
money The New Avon
UTAON Inc
Ashton wv
Call Manlyn 304 882·2645
Fa~e resume 10 (304 )5763376
AVON• All Areas • To Buy or
Sell
Sh1rl ey Spears 304
_
675 1429

IIOMI~

net

~~-------,
Wan ted 213 Bedroom house
110
I
w1garage Tuppers Pl&lt;uns or
HELl' W-\NTED

Homos lor Sale ........................................... 310
Household Gooda ........................ ............... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
· tnsurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equlpment.. ...................... 680
Llveatock........................ ... .. .. ..................630
Loat and Found ........................................... 080
Lola &amp; Acreage.......... . .. .... . ...................350
Mlecollaneous.. .... ........ . . ................. 170
MIIColltnOOUI Merchandise .................. 540
Mobllo Homo Ropalr. . . .
. ............... 880
Mobile Homee for Rent
. ... .. ..... 420
Mobile Homee for Sate... .. ..................... 320
Money to Loen............. ..
.. .................o•• 220
Motorcycloa &amp; 4 Whoelora ....................... 740
Mualcallnatrumonta ............................... 570
Poraonala ................ ............. . . .......... .. ... 005
Pete for Sale .......................................... 560
Plumbing l Heating ................................... 820
Profeaalonal Sorvlcoe .................................230
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Ropelr .............................. 180
Real Eatelo Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoola lnatructlon...................... .... .. . 150
Seed , Plant &amp;Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sltuatlona Wonted ...................................... 120
Space for Rant ................................. .. ..480
Sporting Gooda ......................................... 520
SUV'e for Sola ........................................... 720
Trucka for Solo . . ............................... 715
Upholatery . .
. ...... ...................... 870
Van• For Sole. . . .... ... . . .... . ....... 730
Wanted to Buy
. .. .. .. .... ..
. . . 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .. . . . 620
Wanted To Do
.. ... ....... .. .... .. .. .... 180
Wanted to Rent.........................
.470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla.. . .
. .... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle... .. .
.074
Yard Sala·Pt Pleasant...............
076

1.I9nilp -atrtbune

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

purple co llar 11 seen call - - - - - - - - -

Home Improvements. ... .. .....................

MAKE
SOMEQNE'S
DAY!

~

POLICIES Ohto Valley Publlahlng reaef"llll the right to edit reject, or cancel any ad II any time Errors must be reponed on the hrst day of publtc8tton and the
Tribune Sentlnal..flegllter will be reeponelble tor no more than the coat of the space occu pl11d by the errqr and only the flnt Insertion We ahall not be ltab le for
any lots or a11pense th11t raeutta from the publication or omtsaton of an adl/ertiaement Correction wt ll be made rn the ftrat a11a tlable edition
are alwayl confidential • Current rat11 card appltea • All real eatate advarttsemanta 1ue aubjecl to the Federal Falf Houatng Act Of 1968
ac:cepta only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda W&amp; will not knowingly accept any adverti1mg 1n V1olat1on of the law

e;;;.,.:;;::;::,::;;:::....--..._.,

Farm Equipment ........................................ 6t0
Farms for Rent . ............................... . .. 430
Farms for Sale .
. ........................ ........ 330
For Lease
.................................. 490
For Sale
....................... ............. 585
For Sate or Trade . .. ....... .. . . ..
..590
Frutts &amp;Vegetables........ . .......
. 580
Furnished Rooms.. .... ..
450
General Haultng...........
.850
Giveaway.......................... ......
..040
Happy Ad~............ ........ .. ...
.. .. 050
Hay &amp; Grain........................ .... . .... . ..640
Help Wanted .............. .......................... .... 110

THE
LASSIFIEDS

• All ads must be prepaid•

t.,__.Lur ,.r,.11ouN,,\N,;;v~on-•l r ~~~~

Excavating .. .......................... ........ _ .•.....• 830

Public Notice

wtlh tax year 2004,
collection year 2005.
The polls wtll be open
from 6 30 a.m. to 7 30

County of
Ohio
Rita Smtih

1/applj 'lJtrtlufay

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 ·,.,,p•.r
Thun;day for Sundays •

•

Help Wanted

Ohio Valley Publishing Company
825 third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: J1m Freeland

In Next Day ' s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.
Friday For Sunday5 Paper

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r

How you can have borders and graphics
ILJ
added to your classified ads
(. ~
m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

All Display : 12 Noon 2
BuSiness Days Prior To

needed lor ms1de 1074
YARD SALE•
cats Jackson the Alcove
I)O:\lF.ROY/1\'IIIIDl E
SS REwARD $i
Book store eat 3 yr old
S4 00
neulered
male
t1ger
For mtormatlon leading l o stripped wtth while Call Hug e yard sale Syracuse
Monday Oct 18 23 50e bag
the arrest and convte110n of Jack •e at ( 740)446 "2700
sale , coats free
the pe rson or persons that
reiTIO'IIed the porlable gener·
alar !rom the property of
John E Carroll 1142 Ol11er
Ad Gallipolis OH dunng Fou nd
10/ 11 /04
Btue RIVERSIDE
AUCTION
the penod of Aug 23 to Oct Heeler/Collie m1x VIC inity ol BARN R1 7 South 5 m1les
1 2004 lnlormal1on may be Pleasanl H1ll Ad (740)245 be low the Dam EVERY
forward to Gallia County 5366
SATURDAY
@
6pm
ShenH s off1ce at 740·446·
7 40 256·6989
Lost Reddish brown Beagle
1221
m1)( w1th purple collar
W\Nil.JJ
01d anyone who attended Female small medium stze
ro BUY
the Franc1s E Shaauffer s Answers to "DIMie Very spe
Auchon on 9·11·04 lmd an c1al fam1ty pets (740)441
Absolute Top Dollar U S
mstruet•on book and I 1269
S1 lver and Gold Cams
aceessor1es
lor
a
Proofsets Gold R1ngs U S
Monlgomery Ward sewmg Lost Male black &amp; while Currency ·M T S Com Shop
mach1ne Model UHT-J1980 Australian Shepard has col 151
Second
Avenue
I would hke have (need) •t lar on answe rs to DuKe Gall1pol1s 740·446 284~
Please call 740 245 9469 or
Call Lucy (740)84 3 5260
___

· Free to good home Male
German pu ppy (740)643·

We are looktng for so meone sktlled and
expenenced tn both page destgn and copy
edtttng Thts person Will need to destgn
front pages, pagtnate tnstde pages, and
wnte great headlines Expenence wtth
layout , knowledge of Quark and
PhotoS hop IS a must Flextbtlily with work
schedule 1s a must
Send a cover letter and resume to

Datly In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

1

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Home

3200

Copy Editor/Page Designer

l•uhlh.: Nnti&lt;CCN In Nc'INSI:JUpcrs.
1-t.h.J:.hl 11•• Knc .....v. l)cli-vcr cc::l Hl~hl ••• '\~uur IJnnr.

Oe-arllf;,~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Get Response, ..

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Or Fax To (7 40) 992-2157

Oftfee lloar-cS'
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD_

l\egtster

Sentinel

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

Call Today•••

1002
Help Wanted

mrtbune

To Place

2 250 gallons fuel 011 tanks
1n basement no! rusted
must take bOth (304)882

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Mnp County OH

We Cove

Mefp, Galllla,

Johnson

Explanation

SOURCE The Nat1onal Foolball Foundation and College Hall of Fame Inc

•
Tuesda~October19,2004

The last time before 1982 that Ohio State
had lost three m a row. Hayes put on a mem orable dtsplay of fury and lack of self-control Dunng the Bucl&lt;eyes' third loss tn the
stnng, a 10-7 loss at hated Mt chtga n, qu arterback Don Lamka threw an tntercepttOn.
Hayes prote sted to off1ctals. that the
Wol ven ne s· Thorn Darden had mtcrfered
on the pass. They weren ' t listening. so he
ru shed the field and was assessed a penalty.
Completely losing it, he grabbed the downs
markers and snapped them over ht s knee
and then threw the pieces on the field
be tore npptng up the orange ftr st-down
indicator with ht s hands and hurhn g tt o nto
the field .
The detached Tressel , as emotional as a
robot , did not blow up m Iowa City
" It 's hke hfe.'' he said " You 've got to keep
gnndmg, keep believmg m each other and
learn what tt takes to wm games. Perhaps we
cognittvely know 11, but we haven't demonstrated it "
The players, however, expressed shock,
embarrassment and anger.
"I hate losmg more than anythmg else m the
world," linebacker Bobby Carpenter satd
" Right now it mean s more to so me guys on
our team than 11 does to other guy s. That's not
good enough "
Times ha ve changed At least he didn ' t
attack the cham gang.

Skid

Southern Cahfornta and Mtamt took the top two spots Monday tn the college football
season's first Bowl Champtonshtp Senes standtngs under a new formula whtch
places more emphasis on the human polls than ever before

Southern C.l.

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

;;,~; ;~~

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

r

APAIOMENJ'S

~

FOR

RENT

r

1
. trrjlllo-':':H'OUSEHOW
"'-,- ---.

2 bedroom apts. 10 mmutes
from Holzer Hospital on St
Rt 160 Water/Sewer/Trash
Included S460Jmo DepoSit
allowed
requ1red . Pets
(740)441 -1t84 or (740)4410194.

AppHcalions being taken for
very clean 1 bedroom in
country sening yet close to

·

~

Metal bu11dings In Hartford WV. Spacial
axe $895.00 or 101112
$1295
Completely fu rnished 1ns1de
&amp; out. Floor ,wall &amp; root
made w/ 1 3/4 inch metal
panels, 5/8 plywood on
2in.x6 in. treated Uoor joints,
4x4 treated runners for easy
moving. 2 metal doors tor
easy access. different styles
&amp; sizes, will build to your
spec. , panels are primered 1
ready to paint: liancing avail-

Warehouse

Henderson, WV. Preowned appllcanes starting at
town . Washer, dryer, stove.
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
lndge included. Water and
we do serv1ce work on ·all
garbage included. Total elec·
Make and Models (304)675-

tnc with AC. Tenant pay electric. $300 depos1t, $375 per
month. No pets. No smokIng. 740-446-2205 or 740446-9585 ask for Virginia.

1n

7999

able 1·304·532·8943.

Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
GUaran1eed .
Washers,
and
Ranges,
Apt 4-Aent clean 2br, Dryers.
Refrigerators, Some start at
Wa sher/Dryer
hookup,
Ref/Dep !'I&lt;&gt;..Emo (304)675- $95 Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine St., (740)446-7398

5162

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

APART·
BUDGET
JACKSON

I\ Ill )\

Auros
FOR SAU:

$5001 Honda's, Chevy's,
(937)559·8385
Jeep's,
Ect.
Police
REAL ARMY
Impounds'! Cars from $500
CAMOUFLAGE
for listings 800-39 1-5227
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Sam SomeNille's, Since 1964, EXT 3901
Chapel Road . Porter, Ohio.
by Sandy\lllle, WV PO, Sa1ellites,
1740)446·7444 1·877-830- TV Sales/Installation (304)2739162. Free Estimates, Easy 5655
financing. 90 days same as
8UHJ&gt;ING
cash . V1sa/ Master Card.
SllPI'LIE'i
Dnve- a- little save alot.

r

repairs on major brands in

North

MYERS PAVING

Whaley's Auto
Parts

St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
&amp;"HfOl"king I ate Uwlel .&lt;;,I.-age
1111d ;\fter· ,Ht.,·ke-t l&gt;arbl

Twin Rivers Tower IS accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apa rtmen t, call 675-6679

EHO

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

60

TRUL"KS
mR SAu:

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

Aco~RID;

r

Used tires 4- LT 265x75
R16.Firestone AlT.
FoR SALE
4- P245x7A17 M1chel1n LTX.
3- P265x7DA17 Goodyear
2000 Dodge Dakota Sport Wrangler RTS.
4x4 , club cab, CO, 51 ,000 304-675-3354
mtles, L.C., till , Tonneau
C.\J\U"ERS &amp;
cover, V-8. auto, $12,900,
MmoRHoMES
call (740)992-2459 or 304-

4x4

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle.
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
882-3407
Grating
For
Drains ,
GRAIN
(740)446-9555.
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
VANS
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
99 Voltswagon Beet le. Red,
FoR
SALE
For
Sale
Ear
Corn
(304)675Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
5 speed, CO changer,
1506
Frtday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
62,000 miles, $6.500 080.
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Round bales and squares (740)256-1618 or (740)256- 1995 Chevy Astro Van . 3
seater, tront'rear AJC $4.700
Sunday. (740)446-7300
6200.
bal es. Call (740)441 -7390.
OBO. Call (740)446-17 14

Are you 65
or older?
If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!

r

40 MOlURO'CIJ·: si
4 WHEELER~

1972 Chevy Tow Truck , 1 1/2
ton, exce llent working condi- 1984 Honda V65 Magna
tion . wench works oH PTO. Black, 1-owner. new condieverything
new.
over tion. rebuilt carbs . 19.500
$13.000 00 invested. will miles. 53.800 (304)882 uike
$8,500.00
080 1102

1995 26 foot lnsbrook
Gulfstream
5th
wheel
camper. Sleeps 6. greal
shape . $5.000 (740)441 0804.

20Ft Bumper Pull Bonanza
Camper for Hunting camp
$1 ,100 ca ll for details
(304)675-5724

Sl·ln H 1-S

(740)992·0622

1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11ft 2001 Kawasaki- 300, 4x4,
utility bed , welder and air excellen1 cond1tion . $2.700
compressor. S1 5,500 OBO fi rm . (740)446-6 11 5.

(740)256-1526- 740-645·
0446.
2002 Honda 400 Ex .. good
condi1ion. $3,500 OBO. Call
2000 N1ssan pickup, 5
(740)256- 15296 740-645speed, AM/FM ai r, Super
0446.
ConOition. $5,500. (740)446-

1·740-843·5382

810

HOME

L\1PRO\'I-~~1ENTS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondi11onal lifetime guarantee. Local references lurnlshed
. Established 1975.
4782.
2003
Custom
Harley Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446200 1 Dodge Dakota Quad Davidson Sports1er 3,000 01:!70. Rogers Basement
Cab. 4x2 . Call (740)44 1- miles ,
$7,000.
Call Waterproofing.
(740)645-3331.
I
0712

BARNEY

\

WHATTA
'&lt;A
NAME
'&lt;A Hm&gt;S ,J
LUKE'&lt;?

I':

""'WI-\'&lt;, lr l-It: w"~ OI'\E O\'"'i\\t: ...

...

I 1-\E.I\~ '(QU~ BOSS va:BLEFE~iE~

AA~ 1&gt;. P\~1\101-1 Tf-11&gt;,\!:l 1&gt;. LITI~C

St.IJE.t-1

, I-llS AAtA.(.
1-!0ULD \:&gt;E.

L.eO U\i&gt;-t-1

·sul&lt;.l'&lt; !'

:;llt-11'\'( I

'fBity's Englnn
~](] Ea~l Main St

Warranty Repair •
Lawn Traclm &amp; Pu sh

~M;:-"r,

'

~~i\

Chain Sharpened
&amp; Part:-.

'·

:'\Jl'w GcnNal Sta ndhy
Generatin g Sy~ l cm .~ and
Rol-Air Air Comprc~&lt;,or~ ·

AstrcGraph

No\'.

~micinl!

BIG NATE

Hupp

HEY

,.HE.
-rH E

1

Kl D~

WHAT'S

.-ll·l £:.Y
SAY IT
DOESN' f

PI&lt;:GBLE.Mo "' WHY
LONG

FACE,

LOUk

NORMAL

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

740-992-5232

Hill's Self
Storage

New Homes 1 Vinyl

29670 Bashan Road

Siding • New Gamges

Racine , Ohio

1

Replaceme nt

Windows • Roo fing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-9'92·7599

45771
74().949-2217

Is A 1-fSYEAIZ - OLO

INTERES tIN GLY E tJQl)G!I_
1'1~

FRIEND, · YOU'RE

GRAPPLI NG WITH A N
!?SUE f HJ\T ~ MUST
CctJFR.ONl- EACH AND

f. VERY DAY OF MY

1

Kcrn•ene Hemer-..

BISSEll
BUILDERS InC.

•. NO RM.A.L" '?
W~Ar
!S
" NOR M AL" :&gt; \JHO
I~
THE
ARBITER OF

" NORMAL""

Athens

~c r vi ~.:c

~'R~

dOOFIN&amp;
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GUTTER

LIFE '

rr·-::-:-'
0
0
0

HAN LI\/1Nid IN
HI&lt;;, MOTHER'S BA-::.EMENT

'' N ORMAL"

'------.;~c

PEANUTS

''itifi'li10~

M'&lt; PARENTS ~INK f
5140ULD 6ET PERI=ECT 6RADE5
IN EVER'fTI41N6 EVER'( DAV !

SEE 1-lOW M'&lt; HANDS S~AKE .
C14A~LE5? iT'S BECAUSE
OF ALL i~E PRESSURE .. :

to 10'x30'
Hours
7 :00AM-8:00PM
111411 mo pd

City/State/Zip ----~---

Barnhart
Builders

Phone ________~-~----

-· .. ·---- --·-· --······- ···---···
I

Ripley, WV 25271

WAVE. SON\E1HIN6

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's #I Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van

GARFIELD

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Ohio Valley Publl~hlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

WELL LET'S GO HOME.)
SWE.ETIE , I'LL N\ICI&lt;P -

949-1405

Subscriber's Name - - - - ' - - - - - -

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to

SUNSHINE CLUB

475 South Church St.

992·2155

30 years experience
•New Homes
• I .og Hornell ·
• l'oo.:t Fnsme
•( 'ompll'te Remodeling
•Repl&lt;lt't'rntnl \\ indo\\'i
•R oof\;

Cummcrt:iHI ami
Re!&gt;.idcntial

Free Estirn•tes
7411-667-6080

..

WHt,&gt; IS A t&gt;OCS'5
NOSE 50 COL-D

?

.

'

rr(

L_~~_

_jl

GRIZZWELLS

ROBERT
BISSELL
• AOCilm Addltlonl &amp;
Remod•lng
• New GlrJVII
• EIKtrlc•l &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp;·P•Intlng
• Pallo 1nd Porch Dech
We do h all except

CONSTRUCnOrt
• New Homes
• Complete
Remodeli ng

992~15

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Yelrt Local Ex lence

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

r----~--rl

A\:!£ Al\NA~
C~PLAit-\lt-\6

Ai!CIJT

~t.ll-\l~

55
Object to
Cornstalk tip 56
Elegant
57
" Bien"
58
opposite
23 Royal
pronoun
DOWN
24 Play the

guitar

deposit
2 1 Dirt road

features

material

25 Far Eas1
cuisine
name
26 Violent
LeN Bank
downfall
chums
27 Boxing wins
Shriek
28 Riverbank
Tiny shrimp
plant
Tasty tuber 29 Philosopher
31 Reapers '
-uno
Nile .
tools
goddess
33 Go bad
Kesey and
35 Woosnam
and
Follett
Vortex
Fleming

2 Lamb's pen
3

4
5

35 PC scre:en

6

image
36 Construction

8

7

37 Dental
fillings
39 Mllllary "

9

10

camp site
38 Victor's
wreath
39 College unit

41 Objects

24 Very last je1 42 Those

1 Written

27 Teaches
privately
30 Padlocked
31 Goes
downhill
32 Hoop si1e
34 Mai-

36 Summer-

people
43 Dog-owner's
shout
44 Complain
46 Fr. miss
47 Lampreys
48 Tiny
amounts
51 Dater
answer

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce:ermiy C1orer cryptog·ams

~re

c·ea1ed 1rom cuo1at1ons or 1a.,o~s oeopie caS1 an.:l :rese1

Each letter r me crone· stanos 'oren:li,E'

Today·s clue R er;:;uals M

"M W

RW J F

ZCW

HWYHVW ' O

ZCW

SB

RYDZ

SADOFWDC
-

' HYVOZOKC '

J TVJO

SADOFWDO
ORHYXZJFZ

ZCWXW

00. "

DZWNWFCVF

W.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'·Statist cs can be used lo scpport anytr~ng
including statistic1ans ,. - P'lladeloh1a InqUirer r epor~e· 811 Lyon
lc) 2004 by NEA Inc

THAT PAILY

I

Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
It's qu1te possible that stronger than
usual amb1t1ons will be aroused in you 10
!hfi! year ahead There's nolh1ng wrong
with drivmg yoursel 1 hard to ach ieve your
ends, but do try to take some time out to
smell the roses.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Irs •mperalive 1hat thOse whO work at your s1de
have an input in decis1on -makmg 1oday
1hat affects them as well as you . Th etr
1houghts could correcl flaws you've overlooked.
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22)- Expect to
rneet with pro1ests if y.ou dernand others
lo do things tha t you wouldn't clo yoursel1
if the roles were reversed. Your concern
lor thetr comfort zone wil l be questioned.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Subdue temptations today 1o take longshot financia l risks . It you're heading ou1
tor the racetrack or b1ngo parlor. don '1
carry any more cash 1han you can at1ord
1o lose
CAPR ICORN (Dec l2- Jan 19) Others may f1nd you d1tftcu lt 10 comprehend today in s1tua t1ons where you are m
a pOSition of authoflty. You may tell them
to do thmgs one way. then expect somethi ng completely dit1erent
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb. 19) - Be care ful what you tell and to whom today when
1n co nversations with o1hers. II you lmd a
perfect opening to repeat somethmg !hat
has been told to you 1n confidence , yoU
m1gh t squeal .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Have fun
and enjoy yourself 1oday but don 't do so
at lhe expense of o1hers. II you have htlle
feelings lor 1heu sensrhvt11eS. 11tey'll end
up hav1ng l111le to do w1th you .
ARIES (Marc h 2 1-Aprit 19) - Coun1 to
10 before responding angnly to anybody
1oday, but especially wi1h an au thor11y f1g·
ure. II doesn't matter who IS ng h1 or
wrong . you 'll lose before you beg1n 11 you
lose your coot
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May· 20) - The end
re5ults of events Will turn ou t exact ly as
you envision them m you r m1nd. So 11
behOoves you to thmk pretty thOughts.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Keep your
guard up today when dealings w1th oth ers concern in g fmanctal matters A fnend
or a stranger IS hkely to try 10 1mpose
upon your generosity today
CANCER (June 21 -July 22 ) - It 's highly
unhkely 1ha1 your ObleCtNes w1ll be
achieved today 1! you and your spouse
are no1 in complete harmony w1th one
ano1her Be 1he firSt 10 try to tune 1nto
your mate's waveteng1h
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Chances are
thiS Will be 1M wrong day for you to
attempt a dO·It-yourselt prOJeCt where
you lack the expertise . BroKen l')alls and
a lrayed temper may be atl tna1 you 'll be
'·
able to produce .
VIRGO ( Au~t . 23·Sept 22) - Don't tle
too open-handed 1oday and lend som eth ing lo ano1her who 1sn 't k.now n lor
be1ng a respon!ilble person . espec1 ally If
1he property belonQs to someone else .

'UlZLU

10-19

S©~dtl1A-~J?.~~s ~~~~

----~- ldhod by ClAY • . 'OLLAN - - - - - -

0 four

~•orror1~e .ie!ler! ·of

1ha

sc rambled words b, .

low 10 form for.u words

I

NUBRRE

I

REPOG
r
, r --;;:--rl'
1--,--11'

I

~. I' I I I; ._
.....,.R_A...--WrO_Rrll ;c:.'

Medic;; I advances make it
for a doclor not to
find som.e!h 1ng-- ·.--with·-i m;:~ossible

..,Y..,E:-'1

r~-..,K,....,.,N..,O,...,.M,..
,
7

1
&amp;\

I

F~ ·~ T

I

_

I

Ia

.

_

Co:T.o le:e :he chr..dl~ ~uc1ed
by l dlinl; in rhe min ing ""ords
you deve lop from J1ep No , :; below .

()

NUM5Eii!ED

'-" lETTE&lt;S IN SQU&lt;&lt;ES

I WITH

III I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS " ' ' ' · "

Motive- Climb · Uncut- Cooent- BOTTOM

Humor shows that no matter hew h1 gh the thr~ne one
si:s on, one sits on one 's BOTIOM .

ARLO &amp; JANIS
[,()()K AHHAT r Stlf.E.OOC
STOLE, OOR WIIJDCHIMW

THAT /o\E.AIJb fH~'f wti&lt;E
6TAiJDIIJC. ~IGHT HE~~
I~ OUR BACI&lt;~ARD.'

I DOJJ'f KIJOW-THE. YAIW I
FULL OF f,TUFF ,II,Oit VAllll.l.!!..
THAIJ fH~ OLD WIIJDCHI

You 'll be sorry.

01-\ , -ru~r. , ~ll\ I

ALWA'Y5 ~E:itt\D
LII&lt;E I OoNT

SOUPTO NUTZ
I T~T WIS ONL."r' 1-+oaD

A l~~.e -F&gt;.ffy sv,;l!:l-1 .

v

• Garages

furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill

~.~E\-1

7

TO SOME PEOPLE ,
APPARf.NTLY NOT!

*Free Eltlmltel*

Advertise
in this
space
. for
·$50 per
month

54

17
18
20
22

'1llur &lt;Birthday :

IMPORTS

Open K:JII-6:00 M-F:
Sat. S:JII-2:00 992-IO.'J
anJ Jclivcry

,

See
~Rop!W ''RJ" ,

C hain Saws,

HOWARD£.
WRITfSfl

p••···--···········-------······

Master Poinl Press has published three
more booklets m 1ts Practtce Your Bidding
series: "Four-Su it Transfers," "Jacoby
Transfers," and "Stayman Auctions." The
fi rs1 two are co-written by Barbara
Seagram and Andy Stark, the last by
Seagram and Linda Lea.
Each begins with an explanation of the
biddi ng methods. Then, 11 you are flying
solo, you are given 40 hand s, each with
several questions. If you are working with
a partner. you bid 40 pairs of hands. In
bo th cases , you then read what the
authors think you should have done.
These booklets are good , bu t there are
some sequences that are not "main·
s1ream." For my integrated method of bidding using Stayman and transfers. go to
www.phillipalderbridge.com.
As an hors d'oeuvre. look at only the
Soutll lland. Your partner opens one
strong no-trump. What would you do?
If you do not transfer , bid two diamonds. a
weakness signolf (drop-dead sequence) .
H you transfer only inlo lhe major suits.
respond three diamonds as a signolf. II
you have adopted lour•suitlransfers (rae·
ommended). respond two no-trump, a
transfer to diamonds, then pass il partner
rebids three diamonds, or sign ofllt1ere if
he rebids three clubs.
How does the play go? In one no-1rump,
North can win five tricks, but would probably take only four. Two diamonds Is laydown a success for old-lash1oned
methods - but three diamonds down one
is acceptable because East-West can
make a partscore.
But the key point is this: As South, don't
even think about passing over one notrump. W ith a weak hand. get 1nto you r

~

New&amp; Used

The Daily Sentinel
6uttba!' Qtlme• -6tntinel·

·Pass

, Opening lead: • 2

he,iJe Larry\ Fruit Staml

Mow~..· r~~.

12 Zodiac

Listen to
Gazed at
Grassy field
Huron
neighbor
Teamster
rig
Atto rney 's
de g .
Shou1
LAX hours 13 Tent
Feminine
dweller
ending
19 Chimney

long suit.

Dean Hill

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon·
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID. ·
flallipoU• Jlail!' fltrtbunt
•oint .tQlea.-ant B.tgt•ter

East

1 NT

Pu 1m:roy

P l (~ - up

2003 32 It Cougar camper,
1 slide out. used 2 mon exc
cond .. at a good price 304675-3818

North

Thinner booklets
about bidding

wATCI'IING AN
OPilAI'I TAPE
fMC~WAill&gt;S --SO S"I'IE'S
I'IAilPO.

THE BORN LOSER

Auro PARTS &amp;

West

atraet

toy

1louse Cfeaning Service

88 Ford Ranger, good tires looking for engine or transruns good, .$800, (740)992 - mission? Give me a ca ll at
2070 or best offer
(740)446·0519

.

"

!4nnette)s

Free Estimates

TRUCKS
IURSALE

South

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

eldlldiPimerav, lhla

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

15

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

Box 189
Middleport
1... 45760

IEPIIRS IN OCTOBER!
WI hm••m and accessarles lor
lllllllrlniiS. llelled on It 711J11ass

Tree Service

J 9B
Q109R762

"' 3

lsiiiJ;hiiUuoFFFFillll CHIINSAW

JONES'

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
Applications are tak en
Monday th ru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M Office is

HAY&amp;

•
t

Let me clo il for youl

$400, (740)992-3823

NEW AND USED STEEL

• J2

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

l-800-822-0417

Q 10 4

South

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

Ty Hill

•

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

,.~

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

9 5 4

... A LO 7 6 4

furnished.

lmpou nd sfRepo's
from
20 beef cows. 2nd calf to 8 $500! li stings 800-391 -5227
year old. 15 blac klbaldies, 5 ext. c548
reds. Bred to a black MainAnjou bull, $1 ,000 each. 93 BMW 325i . Custom
740 245-9315
cover, new tires &amp; eldra
wheels. PriceQ to sell under
blu e
book.
$3.500.

with

49
50
52
53

16 Hoarfrost

•

... J 9 8

One bedroom garage ap ar t-

Tara
Tow nhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1
~ 12 B ath, Newly Carpeted ,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required, Days:
740-446-348 1; Evenings :
740·367·0502.

41 Harass
42 Songbird
45 Was rife

animal
14 Not new
15 Seneca's
dozen

t A4

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

~USIUMENTS
-

AI063
K 7 6 2

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

1998 Oldsmobile "Cutlass"

E.H.O

•
•

K Q8 7
A 53
J 3
KQ,52
East

t K5

Sun. C lmed

$4,500.00 (740)985·3613

Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive ~oi nt Pleasant, WV
Phone No is {304)675-5806.

West

I0·19-ll4

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

(740)992-5858
ment, kitchen

MONTY

8711-24&amp;7

Sec Brent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sal. 8:30-Noon

Efficiency apt. tor rent. ~
sh,:o:;,p.;o_
r ;a;,t:'iy,;,
ou;..r_h;;,
om_e;..._.., AKC BlacK fernie lab pup- Pwr Seats, Windows, Dr.
$350/month includes water,
SPORTING
pies. Shots, wormed &amp; dew locks. Tilt, Cruise, AM I FM
sewer &amp; trash . No pets.
Goons
claws
removed .
$200. Ste reo, Tape and CD
_17_40_1_44_6_-4_31_3_.- - - ..__ _ _ _ _ _... (740)44 1·0130.
Leather
Interior. Alum .
Wheels.
Keyless entry.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedAKC Boston Terrier pups
Excellent Condition inside
: room apartments at Village
Shots &amp; wormed . Black &amp;
... Manor
and
Riverside ir.]~.;.;;;;o;;-..-~...., white $250. (740)388·8743. and oul 101 .000 miles
$4,000 (304)882-2796
• Apartm ents in Middleport.
ANI'IQUE'i
- From $295-$444. Call 740Woii/S. Husky pups for sale.
992-5064. Equal Housing ..__ _ _ _ _ __ , 1st liter ready ~0/15/04. 2nd 1999 Mercury Coug ar LS,
V6, loaded. (740)446-0946.
Bu'y or
se ll . Riveri ne litter ready 10/2 1/04. For
Opportunities.
Antiques , 11 24 East Main information call: Paren1s on 2000 Dodge Dakota Ex.
Middleport,
North
4th on SA ~ 24 E. Po meroy, 740- Premises. (740)742-1121 Cab, aulo &amp; air, $5,495; 99
Avenue. 2 bedroom, fur- 992-2526. ·Ru ss Moore. (740)742·3019
Mountaine er.
Mercury
_ nished apartme r:~t Dep osit owner
$5,295;
2000
Dodge
Strauss, $2,595; 2000 Neon,
• _an_d_re-le_r_•n_c_e_s._N_o_P_•_ts.
70
•••
CAL
$2,595; 98 Dodge Dakota
• (740)992-0165
"""'
• ,
""'"'
E)(. Cab. $4, 195; 98 Pontiac
Modern 1 bedroom apt.
Guitar Show Sunday Ocl Sunfire, nice, $2,695; 95
Phone (740)446·0390.
84 Ford D iesel 314 ton . Gas 24th , Holiday Inn, 600 Ford F250, $2 ,995; 96 Geo
Nice upstairs apartment. &amp; oil well swabOer: 14-10 Kanawha Blvd ., Charleston Tra cker. $1.395: 98 Olds
case diesel tra ctor. almost 10-4 $5 Adm . (2 17)529- Bravada. $3,695: 97 Probe,
quiet area, (740)992-6849
new pop- up camper. Can
$1 ,695; 96 Dodge work van,
One bedroom apartment .. crusher-separates
steel
$895
no pets, in Pomeroy. cans (740)245-5535.

r ~~CHAND.LANI'OlSISE. I

•
•
•
"'

Henderson, WV

GLS. V6, Auto. PS. PB, NC

·r

1 Mold brew
4 Wild blue
yonder
7 Running
shoe name

Wmters, R•o Grande, OH 1996 White Lincoln Town
Call 740·245-512 1.
car.
Good
Condition.
FOR SALE

Phillip
Alder

student
40 Kitchen
pest

11 Horror-film

B~ock, brl?k, sewer pipes,
Wl~dows. ll~tels. etc. Claude

n.
.
n"I'S

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

!

r

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

'
BRIDGE

I

Od.

II~\ \...,1'( II ~

www.mydai lysentinel.com

I

Square bales- m1xed grass,
Alphapha and clover. $2.00
Round bale- Oats &amp; clover.
Barn kept, $18.00
Round bales- 1st culling,
ml)(ed grass. Alphapha and
clover, $12.00
Round bales- 2nd cuttingm1xea grass, Alphapha and
clover. S15.00
Round bate ~ wheat hay,
$12.00
Last years round bale,
$6
(740)245-5047 .

Pole
Barn 30x50)(10FT
$6395. includes Pai nted
Meta!. Plans, Instruction
Book. Slider. Free Delivery

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shOp &amp; mov1es. Call
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repai r-675·7388. For sale,..
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT • re-co nditioned
automatic
EO 6. AFFORDABLE!
washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraTownhouse
apartments, tors . gas and electric
and/or small houses FOR range. s. air conditioners. and
RENT. Call (740)441-~ 1 11 wringer washers. Will do
for application &amp; information.

r

Tuesday, October 19, 2004
ALLEY OOP

~
HAY &amp;
MERO!ANDISE 1- ~-,_ _oiGi iRAINii i'- _.1

1 Koles Insulated

Appliance

Tuj!aday, October 19, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

I

i
I

.,

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Major League Baseball: NLCS

Astros one win away from
first World Series appearance
But he showed off all his other attribut- . first 13 batters before walking Jim
es. making two outstanding catches.
Edmonds in the fifth, and did not allow a
Sluggers had ruled the f(rst four hit until Womack pulled a single past
games, combining for 19 homers. Backe divin g first baseman Bagwell.
HOUSTON - On a night when pitch- put a &gt;top to the Cardinals' fun. limiting
After Larry Walker walked, Backe.
ing suddenly took over th e NL playoffs, them to Tony Womack's two-out single faced his first jam when Albert Pujols
someone was bound to get a hit. in the sixth.
.stepped to the plate. That brough~pitch­
Forturiately for the Houston Astros. Jeff _Williams matched him for seven ing coach Jim Hickey to the mound, and
Kent stepped up.
innings. allowing Jeff Bagwell's sing le he'd just gotten back to the dugout when
Pujols popped up to end the inning .
After Brandon Backe and Woody in the tirst.
The Astros , won for the 22nd time in
The final out brought a roar from the
Williams dueled in the greatest games of
their careers - and among the best in their last 23 home games. And if this was crowd and chants of "Back-e! Back-e!"
postseason history - Kent launched a going to be thei r last showing at Minute His father. Harold, was so fired up he
three-run homer in the ninth inning ·Maid Park. it was a great one.
charged over from his scat and gave a
Monday night that lifted the Astros over
While pitching dominated. Beltran loud high-live to the ballpark publicSt. Louis 3-0 for a ~-2 edge in the NL provided the highlights.
address announcer.
championship series.
The All-Star center tielder and soon" It was a strong, almost miracle perEach team had only one hit until the to-he-free agent made the play of the formance from a guy who was born to do
. o. outs a11d no one in the this " his dad said
final inning. But that quickly changed g,·1111 e w1'th tw
''
· meanwhile,
· ·
when Carlos Beltran - who else? seventh. racing to his right for a diving,
Williams,
quieti) and effiopened the ninth with a single off Jason backhanded catch to rob Edgar Renteria. cientiy. went about his business in front
· second with one out.
Be 1tran rmse
· d h'IS gave,
I
Ie ft fite ld er of a s1za
· bl e c heenng
· section.
·
Born and
lsringhausen
Beltran stole
Craig Biggio lifted his mitt and Backe raised in Houston , he'd gotten more than
prompting an intentional walk to Lance punched the air. To a standing ovation, 50 tickets for family and friends when
Berkman. Kent then swung, !lipping his Beltran casually trotted to the dugout the NLCS returned to town.
bat after he connected.
Williams gave up a sharp single_up the
Kent tossed otf his helmet as he head- and flipped the ball into the seats.
In the eighth. Beltran ran back and middle to Bagwell in the first inning, and
ed home and said, "One more, one halfway up the quirky hill in dead center little else. He worked around a couple of
mo~e." He was right, because one more to haul in Reggie Sanders' shot in front walks. and escaped his only problem by
victory will put Hou ston in the World of the in-play flag pole. about 420 feet retiring Jose Vizcaino on a grounder with
Series for the first time ever.
t'
th 1 t
two on to end the t'ourth.
Backe. who started the season in the rom ePa e.
Ahout the only thing Beltran did not
As always, the Cardinals· stellar
minors, allowed one single in eight • do was hit another home run. He made a defense helped out.
innings and Brad Lidge worked a perfect bid for it. hitting a long tly bali to left
All-Star third baseman Scott Rolen
ninth for a combined one-hitter.
Now. Game 6 will be back in St. Louis that Sanders caught on the warning made a diving stop and easily gunned
wd d
·hM M .
.
track.
out Bagwell from his knees, and Pujol s
on e nes . ay, wil
att orns startmg
Backe and Williams both looked far made a diving stop and quick !lip to
" for St. Louts .. Roger Clemens may P 1 ~ch from overpowering, mainly relying on Williams to get Beltran. In the seventh,
on threedays rest lor the Astros -man-_, breaking balls to get outs. Even so, they Sanders cut over into the gap and
a~er Phil Gamer had not yet confmned were virtually unhittable.
reached up to grab Kent's leadoff liner.
hts chmc~.
. .
Backe. a former schoolboy football
Then again, great gloves are another
Beltran s record streak of homenng 111 star in Texas and an outfielder in the hallmark of the Cardinals. They have not
five stratght postseason games ~ nd~d, Tampa Bay system, bamboozled the made in error in nine playoff games this
though he gave It a nde 111 h• s f•rst at-bat. Cardinals from the start. He set down the year.
BY ·BEN WALKER

Associated Press

Major League Baseball: ALCS

BoSox win again in extra innings
BY RoNALD BWM

Associated Press
BOSTON - After the game
that seemed like it would never
end, Boston's season goes on.
David Ortiz' RBI single on
the 471 st pitch of the game
with two outs in the 14th inning
Monday night capped a second
straight amazing comeback and
gave the Red Sox a 5-4 victory
over the New York Yankees in
the AL championship series.
The Sox, down to their last
inning Sunday night, now are
one game away from climb.ing
out of a 3-0 deficit and forcing
an anything-can-happen Game
7.
Game 6 moves to New York
on Tuesday night.
This time, Boston waited
only until the eighth inning,
when Ortiz's home run and
Jason Varitek's sacrifice fly tied
the score 4-4:
The next si'x innings were
filled with double plays, three
passed bail s in one inning, two
Red Sox runners thrown out
trying to steal and I 0 runners
left on base.
When it was over, the teams
had played back-to-back
marathon games that totaled
almost II hours - 5 hours, 2
minutes on Sunday and 5
hours, 49 minutes Monday the longest by time ·in postseason history.
Boston was six outs from
elimination in this one betore
· Ortiz's leadoff homer off Tom
Gordon and Jason Varitek's
sacrifice fly off Mariano Rivera
in the two-run eighth.
Mike Timlin, Keith Foulke,
Bronson Arroyo, Mike Myers,
Alan Embree and winner Tim
Wakefield combined for eight
shutout innings after the
Yankees scored four nms off
starter Pedro Martinez.
Waketield wiggled out of
trouble in the 13th when Gary
Sheffield struck out leading off

Tuesday, October 19,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

last week.
On HBO's "Inside the
NFL", Owens said he would
have posted better statistics
BEREA - Quarterback in San Francisco if he had
Jeff Garcia didn't even have played with a strong-armed
to drop back to pass on quarterback like his new
teammate,
Monday and the Cleveland Philadelphia
Browns were protecting Donovan McNabb .
" He (Garc ia) threw the
him.
With outspoken and out- bail behind me, out of
land ish wide receiver Terrell bounds," Owens said. "I ]eft
Owens and the unbeaten a lot of touchdowns on the
Philadelphia Eagles coming field throughout the last two
, to town for a game next or three years."
Sunday. Garcia's teammates
Browns safety Earl Little
are already in a protective defended Garcia and said he
mode.
wished Owens would move
Since
leaving
San on to something else.
"He is a good quarterFrancisco as a free agent,
Garcia has been rip]Jed back ," Little said . "He's
repeatedly by Owens, his been 10 the Pro Bowl a couformer teammate with the pie time s. 1 don't think he
49ers who is off to a great (Owens) was saying he was
start with the Eagles.
a bad quarterback wben he
In his recently released was out there with him in
autobiography, in magazine San Francisco ."
interviews and on television, . After' throwing four touchOwens
has
criticized down passes in a win over
Garcia's ability. He has also Cincinnati
on
Sunday,
questioned the quarterback's Garcia was asked about his
sexuality.
feelings as he prepared to
·
0
f
h
Six days before the 1
Brown s (3-3) host one of the Pay agamst wens or t e
first time.
NFC's strongest teams, the
·
b
If
Garcia-Owens issue is tak"It s not a out my se
playing T.O. ," he said. "It's
ing center stage without not about a one-on-one bateither of them say ing any- tie. It's about the Browns
thing juicy -yet.
playing the Eagles. He has
Browns tight end Aaron . moved on and he's doing
Shea dismissed Owens' non- great job for Ph illy. I've
stop criticism of his new moved on and I'm trying to
QB.
handle my own .here."
And - whatever Garcia
"You hear it because he's
got a big mouth. he"s one of can't handle, his teammates
those guys," Shea said. "It's seem willing to take care of.
unfortunate some of the
stuff that he said that isn 't Little said the Browns are
determined not to let the
true."
Owens-Garcia rift be a disIn an interview with traction this week.
Playboy
magazine
in
w·
·
Augu st, Owens was asked if
.. e re not even worrymg
he thinks Garcia is gay. about what TO. has to say,"
Owens responded: "Like my he said . "Other than you
boy tells me: 'If it look s like guys asking me about it
· right now. we're not even
a rat and smells like a rat, by
.going to let it come into our
locker room.
golly. it is a rat." '
" Jt" s not about TO. , it's all
Garcia, who frequently
battled with Owen s while
the pair played together in about
the
Philadelphia
Eagles
playing
the
San Francisco. called the Cleveland Browns . We don 't
comments "ridiculous and want this to be no kind of

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
, tO

(I'\ I s . \ ol. ·'· ' ' "\o

I

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
. The Tri-County Marketplace!

I
I

I
I
Rams defeat Buccaneers I

\\I.,~.

I•

Sl, \\ ' CH ltHU · I( :! 0 . :t UU . J

\\\\1\

• Marauders beat 'Does,
Raiders in season finale.
See Page 81

STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - A Meigs County
grand jury indicted two Pomeroy men
for their involvement in thefts at
Pomeroy Exxon and Valley Lumber
in Middleport,

Johnn y K. Shaffer, 27. and Timothy
~. Swanson , 29, were charged with
receiving stolen property. a fifthdegree felony. two counts of theft. a],o
tifth-dcgree felonies. and one count
each of escape, a third-degree felony.
The charges relate to an Aug. 27 inci-

dent. according to indictment' filed in
Meig s County Common Pleas Court.
Also indicted were:
• Larry J. Via. 60. addre"
unknown. on a count of having a
weapon under disability. a third degree felony.

..
Antique tractor pulls are popular events in Meigs County. One
will take place Saturday afternoon at t11e fairgrounds.

Antique tractors used to
entertain and educate

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Carl Platter
• Franklin D. Leach

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFI.ICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Brian Collins, Eastern Class of 'B3, and Cody Hannum, Class of 2009 , play side-by-s 1de in the
half-time show at Eastern's homecoming game on Friday evening. (Brian J. Reed / photo) ·

'Classic' band
hits
.
.., Eastern field
. ,·

LO'ITERIES

•

. "

BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
BY

Ohio .
Pick 3 day: 0-0-8
Pick 4 day: 5-4-8-0
Pick 3 night: 7-0-9
Pick 4 night: 6-Q-7-9
~oiling Cash 5: 2-7-9-23-37

West VIrginia .
Daily 3: 6-3-9
Daily 4: 6-4-6-3
Cash 25:4-9-15-16-17-18

WEATHER

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A2

Editorials

A4

Obituaries .

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

TUPPERS PLAINS - In
the words of their old fight
song, "they're from Eastern
High School, as proud as they
can be."
For the 10 members of th e
·'Classic" Eastern Band.
made up of former band
members and EHS graduates
from 1969 to 2001. it had
been a while between fig ht
songs - on the fie ld at least
- but they haven't lost their
touch, or their enthusiasm for
a good time . Joining the 13
current band mem hers. the
Eastern Alumni Band took to
the field .al Homecomi ng pregame and half-time on Friday
night, to show they still have
what it take s.
The school's first marching
band tield com mander. Teresa
Carr Courtney (' 77), led the
alumni musicians and their
current-band counterparts in
the school's fight song before
the game began. and in a halftime show. while her sisters.
Marcia Carr Guess ('73) and
Sonia Carr Jarvi&gt; (' 801. carried the school' s banner
across the field.
Other "C lass ic Band"
members were Bri"an Collins
('83), Karen Reed Lodwick
('75), Jt1dy West ('99).
Marilyn Karr Spencer (' 6'1) ,
and Sarah Mansfield ('02).
Another alumnae. Cris
Morlan Kuhn ('7ti ). the
school's band director. led
the combination band. and
two band moms, Jane Russell
and Becky Maxson. abo
joined the show. standing
next to their sons. James
Russell and David Maxson.
"We rmcticed four tim es,
and a couple of those prac tice &gt; were marching drill

POMEROY - The Big
Bend Farm Antiques Club
has been playing a role in
Meigs County entertainment
and cducati&lt;m for more than a
dozen years now.
The members take part in
parades, displays , shows. and
pulls as a way of promoting
antique farming and farm

equipment and educating
about the importance of pre·
serving the pa't for future
generation ....

The club is , annually
responsible for an extensive
display at the Meigs County
Fair. \-~ e mbers also active ly
partic1pate in othe r, county
events .
Current ly the group is

Please see Tradors. AS

Meigs Industries clients (from left) B1ll Brewe r. Ollie Young. and
Robert Lance assemble boxes that auto parts will eventually
be shipped in while staff member Jenny Warth helps supply
the men with the material. (Beth Sergent/ photo)

Meigs Industries to make
products for golf courses
.

Karen Reed Lodwick .was one of th e 10 "Classic" Eastern
Band members to play at Homecoming on Friday evening.
(Bnan J. Reed/ photo )
rehearsals. so the alumni
members really put some
time and effort into their perfonnanc es ... Kulm said. "'I'm
not sure whu had the best
time, the cla,ic band or the
current band members. It was
a lot of fun for all of l " ...
Kuhn &gt;aid the homecoming .alumni hand i~ a good

experience for her current
band members. who learn
fro m the alumni the long-

term \'alue of a nul&gt;ic· education .
"Some school acti\'ities
end when a studenl !!raduate~.

but mu~i c i~ an activity

that you can learn in school
and cnjO) your \i hole life."
Kuhn said. ··That thc&gt;c alumni band member' arc interested in cominc har~ after all
thc'c years 1, pwnf of the
lonf!-lt'nn 'ttluc of heing in
band ...

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
SYRACL'SE ·- The mentally retarded are &gt;ometime'
,hun ned b\' "xiet' and Ji, e
their li\c~ &lt;h a "minorit\.
t'xcept at Mei g~ l nJu~tri~-... ·
M~i~~ lm.h1~trie" i-..

more

th;\n ,a \afcty-net for people
with mental retardation and
phy,ic.tl di .-abilitk&gt; The
nrgani1~1tinn -,uppJie, their
L' li t:&gt; n t' \\ ith nppnrtunitie ... fpr
empl(l~ llll'llt and ..,c]f- c.,t~ctn
ro,iti\ ' C I~ affcctin_g thl' t..' Oill 11\llnitl :h a 1\ lwle . .

\h:.ig'~

..:re\1 &gt; lhat clean the road,ide
rc&gt;t' on U.S ..1). the ODOT
~araee on Ohio 7 a' well as
the Ga ll ia ((&gt;unt\ highway
garJge anJ f\)i.h.hide rest also
on Ohio 7. The be&gt;t paying

JOb for nev. &gt; ~&gt; mowing
along 1hc ri\'c'r in \1eigs
Count\.
~tdg,
lndu&gt;tries also
operate' a \\llrkshop for adult
client" \\ 1th ret ardation and
ph' &gt;ictl handicaps. From
~ :.10 a.m. to ::! :.&lt;0 p.m. each
wed.d;n. 50 client' an·ive at
the W(&gt;rh , Jl&lt;lp the way de,·el-

lndu . . tric... train . .

I

used a .bu nch of big play,,
inc l.uding
forcing
four
turn overs; they came into the · •
·game with only two tak eaways.
.
The victory gave St. Lol!is
sole pos,cs,ion of the NFC
West lead. a hall'-game in •
front of th e Seahawks'. It
also was coach Mike Martz's
first win in four tries against
Tampa Bay - all Monday
night games.

I

I

For more
in formation .
call

l®aUipoliS' J)ai[p urribune The Daily Sentinel · ~oint ~leaS'ant l\egiS'ter
I..._. ,_J~)..~:.~~.-...- ...- ... -.~~2.~:.~?..-... - ...- ... -~..J.~..~:~~~.-:._..1

I

1°11fl

• Ronn ie Lee Lamhcrt. -W. Racine.
failure of a 'ex offender to report
cilange of addre". a tifth-degree felony.
• Ja"m G. Qui vey. 23. Pomeroy_ on
counts of burglary. a felony of the
'econd degr~c. and gross sexual
imposition. a fourth-degree fe lony.

•

ST. LOUIS (A P) - Looks
like the Greatest Show on
Turf is in high gear - on
offense and 'defense.
Torry ·Holt caught two
long touchdown passes and
Adam Archuletta returned a
fumble 93 ya rds Monday
night, keying the Rams' 2821 victory over Tampa Bay.
One week after a 'se nsational
late comeback in a victory
over Seattle. the Rams (4-2)

lll\4l. uh··· uluul

Meigs County grand jury indicts two theft suspects

SPORTS

:

I

I

.
at

ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

Reach 3 Counties

Browns, Cowboys
swap receivers, B1

,

BY

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

i

•

Browns protecting
Garcia from
. Owens

but reached on a passed ball, out of trouble.
the lop half with runners on
and two more passed balls by
Ortiz hit an opposite-tield second and third - New York
Varitek on Waketield's knuck- liner over the Green Monster would have scored if Tony
ler leti nmners on second and leading off the eighth, Kevin Clark's two-out drive to right
third.
Millar walked and Trot Nixon didn't hop over the low fence
"untrue. '~
But after the ball nearly got . had a hit-and-run single that for a ground-rule double.
Owens backed off on that distraction or anything like
away from Varitek again, pop- sent
pinch•runner
Dave
Johnny Damon reached on a
that. We're trying to go 4-3.
ping out of the catcher's glove Roberts to third.
broken-bat single leading off remark , saying, "I'm not and win another ballgame."
Shea doesn ' t think Garcia
but staying near the plate.
Yankees manager Joe Torre the bottom half, beating Cairo's sure if Jeff is gay or not. "
Wakefield struck out Ruben brought in Rivera, who threw throw from second. Damon. But Owens hasn 't mi ssed a will allow Owens or hi s
Sierra on a 70-mph knuckler. 40 pitches the previous night. just 1-for-22 in the series before chance to take u shot at mouth to shake his focus.
"I think Jeff is the bigger
leaving tile Yankees 1-tor-13 He threw two balls to Varitek, that hit. tied to steal second on Garcia at every chance.
Owens, who has already
with runners in scoring posi- whose sacrifice ny to center the first pitch to Orlando caught
30 passes for 487 man ," Shea said. "Why get
tion.
easily scored Roberts with the Cabrera but was thrown out by vards and six touchdowns into a war of words when
Johnny Damon walked with tying run.
catcher Jorge Posada.
ihis season, renewed hi s stuff isn"ttrue. I think that's
one out in the 14th to start the
Rivera blew a save for only
Bronson Arroyo came in to anti -Garcia trash talkin g late stupid and childish on hi s
winning rally and Manny the tifth time in 37 postseason start the IOth 'and. Boston
(Owens') part."
Ramirez walked with two outs. chances- but the third time in retired the Yankees in order for
Ortiz then fouled off eight two- 13 days.
the first time in the game. With
Boston closer Keith Foulke, fatigue setting in, sluggers took
strike pitches. including one
that just mi ssed a home run who had thrown 50 pitches in wild swings in an attempt to
down the ri ght-field line, before Game 4, got Miguel Cairo on win it in one shot.
dumping a soft single into cen- an inning-ending toul pop in
Subscribe today -992-2155
ter field_
Half of the Red Sox ran to r·-···-··-···-···-··-···-··-··-··-···-··-···-···-···-···-···-··-~·-···-···-·1
greet Damon coming home; the
others met Oniz halfway · to
second base. Raising his arm in
triumph. as he did the ni ght
before with his winning tworun homer in the 12th, he
leaped for joy.
Now injured ace Curt
Scililling is slated to start for •
tile Red Sox in Game 6 against
Jon Lieber. but there cou ld be a
holdup: Rai n is forecast for
New York on Tuesday night.
None of the other 25 teams
that fell behind 3-0 in a postseason series has ever come
back to win- and only two of
them pushed it to a sixth games. .
But for the second straight
night, the Yankees-failed to finish off their old ri va l.
Derek Jeter's opposite-field,
three-1un double to ri.ght on
Pedro Martinez's IOOth pitch
had given :-.lew York a 4-2 lead
in the sixth. It turned out to be
the only hit for the Yankees in
13 at-bats with runners in scoring position.
Mike Mussina left after Mark
Bell horn's leadoff double in the •
seventh. but Tanyon Sturtze
and Gordon combined to get

I

Smith likely to
start at QB, but won't
talk a&amp;out it, Bt

National Football League

(740)
446-5679

Please see Golf. AS

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="496">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9947">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18728">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18727">
              <text>October 19, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="854">
      <name>betz</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="68">
      <name>garnes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
