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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 26; 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Too good to be true? Red Sox halfway home
BY BEN WALKER

Associated Press
ST. LOUIS-Curt Schilling and the
pitchers are clicking. Little Mark
Bellhorn and the hitters are delivering.
Manager Terry Fmncona is making all
the right moves.
And despite a defense that can't
quite seem to catch the hall. the Boston
Red Sox are halfway to capturing
something that's slipped just out of
reach since 1\IH! - the World Series
trophy.
So with a 2-0 lead and Pedro
Martinez set to make his Series debut
against the St. Louis Cardinab on
Tuesday night, could it really be thi,
easy tor the Red Sox"!
Hah!
"We are not going to fall into the trap
after winning the fiN two."" reliever
Alan Embree said. '·You saw wllllt
happened with the Yankees ...
Besides, Boston fans rememher all
too well what happened the last time
the Red Sox reached the Series. After ,

winmng twice at Shea · Stadium in
_I'lX6. they lost to the New Yr&gt;rk Met'
111

seven game\.

Now on d~ck: a tantalizing treat lc1r
this oh-so-dose dub ... or a cmeltrick.
··\Ve'\,e gnl Lo win four gamL~, to be
the champs and we can't relax ."" left
fielder Manny Ramire7 said.
The Red Sox have already won six
in a mw in October. stming with the
'tirring comeback from a 3-0 delicit
against the New York Yankees in the
AL ch;unpiolhhip series.
Then. before the World Series
began. a curious l-ittle note appeared on
the Green Monster. In small leners.
someone haLl scribbled on Fenway
Park's lct\-ticld wall: "The Curse is
Over'""
The Cardinals will have plenty to

,ay about that. They're detennined to
force the Series back to Boston, perhaps for a Game 7 on Halloween night.
"Our fans are going to be crazy and
look to give us a boost," St. Louis manager Tony L1 Russa said after Sunday
nig.ht 's 6-2 loss.
The Cardinals are a perfect 6-0 at
Busch Stadium this postseason and
certainly looked a lor different than
they did in Boston.
The last time they were home, Jeff
Suppan outpitched Roger Clemens,
and St. l..AJuis beat Houston in Game 7
of the NL championship ·series.
Suppan will start Game 3 against
Martinez.
Suppan tinished last year with the
Red Sox. making their playoff roster
for the ALCS but not getting to pitch
against the Yankees. This season, he
settled in nicely and led the staff with
16 wins.
·we've been making good pitches
all year:· Cardinals catcher Mike
Matheny said. ''Overall, I think things
are just not going our way right now."
One big hit certainly would help.

especially by Scott Rolen.
Rolen c01merted for the go-ahead
home run that beat Clemens and the
Astros. Now, the All-Star third baseman is stuck in an 0-for-8 slump
against Boston. ,
Rolen popped up with the bases
loaded late in an 11-9 loss in the opener. He hit a line drive that almost
knoCked over third baseman Bill
Mueller - who later made three errors
-in the first inning Sunday night. He
then came up in the eighth with St.
l..AJuis down 6-1 and runners at the corners and only managed a sacrifice tly.
The Cardinals are still waiting for
Rolen, Larry Walker, Albert Pujols and
Jim Edmonds to contribute in the same
game, a~ they've done so often.
"I thought we had a bunch of terrific
at-bats," La Russa said.
Edgar Renteria kept fouling oil fastballs from Schilling leading off Gan1e
2 and wound up grounding out on the
12th pitch. Helped by Boston's second
straight four-error performance, .the
Cardinals got some opportunities but
went 0-tor-6 with runners in scoring

position.
While La Russa hopes to see a few
timely hits, Francona would like to see
a few more balls caught cleanly.
In setting a record for most errors in
the fii"St two games of a Series (eight),
the Red Sox have dropped a popup and
fly ball, skipped a throw into the
stands. botched grounders and overrun
a basehit.
"We made some errors. I didn't actually think we played a sloppy game,"
Francona said Sunday night. "Maybe
that sounds like I'm contradicting
myself."
'The field was horrendous," he said.
"It's almost snowing out there."
The forecast lor St. l..AJuis calls for
temperatures a lot warmer than they
were in Boston when Martinez takes
the mound. The three-time Cy Young
winner, who turned 33 on Monday,
finally gets to start in the World Series
after a 13-year carei!r.
"I expect Pedro to pitch his fanny
off,'" Francona said. "I think he's got
rest. I think he feels good about himself."

Lady 'Does set to battle

·

Assocrated Press

BY MARK LONG

Associated Press
GAINESVILLE. Fla .
Florida coach Ron Zook wa'
fired Mondav after two-plus
years ·and a "stack of embarrassments on and off the field.
a
growmg
satisfying
groundswell tor his ouster that
began the day he replaced
Steve Spurrier.
Zook will linish uut t!1e 'cason while athletic director
Jeremy Foley and school rresident Bernie Machen search
for another coach.
'"In the final analysis, it was
apparent to me that something's not working here ,""
Foley said. "I know that's kind
of nebulous. but it's the truth.
It's hard to put a finger on it
exactly, but it certainly just
didn't appear to be working as
we all envisioned."
The Gators are 20-13 under
Zook with four games left that's just 14losses fewer than
Spurrier had in 12 seasons.
Zook's latest debacle. a 3831 loss to Mississippi State.
sealed his fate and brought
jubilation among thos~ in
Gator Nation who turned
www.fireronzook. com into
their Internet home page. The
site posted this message
Monday: '"It's happening' It's
happening! Oh my God it "s
happening t"'
Spurrier's return would be
welcomed in Gainesville.
''I' II cross that bridge if it
comes to that." Spurrier told
the Orlando Sentinel. ""The
thing I've tried to do all this
year is not be linge rin g
around, acting like l"m waiting for another guy's job. I
don't believe that' s the right
way to do it. But now that he
doesn't have a job. I gue"
there will be some discus sion.
We 'II see what happens."
Faley planned to talk with
Spurrier soo n but said he
won't discuss the opening
with coaches with jobs until
after the season.
Oklahoma coach
Bob
Stoops and Utah coach Urban
Meyer also could be possi bilities . Stoops was Spurrier's
defensive coordjnator for three
seasons at Florida, and
Machen hired Meyer at Utah
following the 2002 season.
Machen and Foley decided
Sunday morning that Zook 's
tenure was over. They
infonmed the coach Monday
morning at Machen's home.
Zook agreed to coach the
remainder of the season -

something Foley was counting
on.
""I can't begin to tell you
how much I appreciate and
re,pect the'e players:· Zook
read lmm a statement. making
li1tle eye contact and pausing
several times to collect his
emotions. ""They work hard
and tl1cv do what we ask. I
take a lc1t of pride in the fact
that we leave this program in
very good shape. with a lot of
good young talent and good
people.
""The future of Gator football is very. ve ry bright.""
When Spurrier left for the
NFL. Foley shockingly l1ired
Zook - a close friend he
called ""The Zookcr"" - after
being turned down by Denver
Broncos
coach
Mike
Shanahan and Stoops.
Almost all the concern '
about Spurrier's former de fen- .
sive coordinator - that he
was in O\ cr his head. had
never been a head coach · and
wasn't composed enough tn
manage a game from the sideline ....::.. became reality.
""When the 'ituation stuns
going downhill. it's hard
sometimes to push it back up.""
Foley said. ··1 think the ;ituation !!Ot out of control. even

BEREA
Give the
Cleveland Browns credit for
one thing: They 've got the
heartbreaking. tca r-out-yourguh losses down to a science.
~ The Browns suffered yet
another painful defeat to add
to a legacy of them with
Sundav·s .1-1-3 1 overtime
crushe-r to the unbeaten
Philadelphia Eagles.
··rei rather QCt beat 50-0 and
have my teettl kicked in then
to lose like that."" tight end
Aaron Shea said . ""l"m not
going to lie. that one really
hurt.""
And one thut felt oh. so
familiar.
Of Cleveland's 55 games
under coach Butch bavi s
since 200 I, 28 have been
decided in the final minute .
The Browns are 11 -17 in
those nail-biters with seven
ending on the final play and
five of the losse:-. coming in
overtime.
It was apparent on Monday
th&lt;ll Davis - 24-31 since
replacing Chris Palmer - and
Sllllle of his players had still
not come to grips with matching one of the NFL"s best
team s for four quarters only to
l&lt;"e hy a 50-yard field goal in
OT
The eternally optimistic
Davi s. whu normally spends
the majority of his Monday

new:-. conferences accenluatfor hi!,,:·
Just weeks before the ing the positives. was unusuMissi,sippi State loss. reports a II y downcast.
surfaced that Zook had a heated eonfmntation with fraternity member' on campus. Zook
initiall y dow nrlayeu his role.
""'ing he went there to defuse
the ,ituation. hu t Folev later
adnuwlcdged that · Zook
veiled at 'tudent' and called
the bella\ ior ··unacceptable .""
Foley "'id the same thing
about tile muuntinl,' losses many nf them late collapses.
HlJi'iTINGTON. W.Va.
The (jatnr' blew lo"lmhqu~trt~r
kad...,
again...,t ( AP) - Marshall defensive
Tennc"ee and LSU th" sea- end Jonathan Goddard was
son. and did the 'ame against named the Mid -A merican
Miami . \1i"i"ippi ' and CnnfercnL·e East Divi,ion
Florida State la't vear. There defensive player of the
a/\0 '\\Cre tv.- o near"me ltdov.n~
week, while teammate Ivan
against Arkan~a~.
Clark .earned the division 's
There were other debacles, 'peci al teams honor.
too. including con~ec uti vc
Goddard had nine tackles.
Outback Bowl losses to including a sack, and forced
Michi gan and Iowa - games two fumble s in a 48-14 win
in v.hich Florida loo ked over Buffalo. It was his
unprepared at times.
fourth such honor this seaZook showed resiliency son.
through it all. He led the
Clark blocked two punts,
Gator~ to four straight .wins in
one of which was recovered2002 and fi.ve in a row last sea- by
teammate
Denni s
son - after it looked like they Thornton in the end zone
could finish with losing for a touchdown. Clark also
records. He also hal two big had two tackles on special
wins over rival Georg ia. the teams.
Gators' next opponent.

Marshall's
Goddard, Clark
earn MAC
weekly honors

"I don ' t like losing," he
said. '"It makes me sick."
Maybe some of the PeptoBismol that Bengals wide
receiver
Chad
Johnson
shipped a few weeks back is
still around.
Thi s was another tough one
for the Browns (3-4) to stomach. Their offense was balanced, amassing 394 total
yards, picking up 27 first
downs and converting 9-of-16
tbird downs.
They made big plays. They
pushed the powerful Eagles to
the limit. They still lost.
"I took this worse that any
other game I played here
since that Pittsburgh playoff
game (in 2002) just because
of the team that we were playing." · said running back
William Green. "They were
undefeated. a really good
team. and we came that close .
lt"s a tough one to swallow."
But maybe one to build on.
too.
The Browns arrived at their
bye week in reasonable shape
considering they've had an
early rash of injuries that siuelined several starters including rookie tight end
Kellen Winslow Jr. for the
season - and · torced them to
_,tart third- and four1h -string
wide receivers against the
Eagles.
Cleveland's offense has
been gaining momentum the
past few weeks as quarterback
Jeff Garcia gains mure confidence in a new system and
with new teammates.
Garcia tinished 21-of-32 for

229 yards, threw a TD pass
and ran for a score Sunday. He
looks much more comfortable
behind Cleveland's offensive
line, which is finally healthy
and played its best game of the
season against Philly.
"Hopefully. we can keep it
rolling," tackle Ryan Tucker
said. "Any loss is tough to
take , but eventually those
small losses will turn into
small wins. We have to keep
our heads up and keep grind.
tng. "
For the second straight
week, the Browns found a
workable balance for running
backs Green and Lee Suggs.
who were once worried about
getting the ball.
Suggs gained 78 yards on
15 carries and had a 13-yard
TD run. Green picked up 64
yards on 14 tries and scored
from II yards . It"s a 1-2
punch the Browns hope to
throw even more in coming
weeks.
"We can run the ball even
better than that." Green said.
"I think we can have games
when we both nm for I00
yards."
While Cleveland's offense
is improving. its llefense is
regressing.
The Browns gave up too
many big plays to Donovan
McNabb, Terrell Owens ·and
Co. - a trend that has hurt
Cleveland all season.
··we had a lot of mental
errors," said defensive end
Kenard Lang, who estimated
there were 20 to 30 gaffes.
But for all the good things

)11

( I ' \ 1-.... • \e li .-l.l·

,II,

\\\\\\ mHLilh"t'lllllwl.e·um

Middleport to consider cruiser _
advertising

SPORTS
• Red Sox a win away
from ending 'The Curse.'
See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

. BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT
-The
village of Middleport could
receive new police cruisers .
through a private company
for just $1 each but
those new cars could sport
fast food, retail or other
advertising decal s.
Police
Officer
Randy
Smith mei with Middleport
Village Council qn Monday

to encourage them to consider a program offered by
Government Acquisitions,
Inc ., a for-profit company
based in Charlottesville.
N.C. The company offers
on-cur advertising tu other
for-profit companies. and in
turn sells the cars to police
and
other
emergency
departme.nts for $1.
Smith said the cars are
brand-new vehicles secured
from auto manufacturers

specifically for the program.
and become the property of
the village. The advertisers
appearing on cruisers are
companies doing business
within I00 miles of the
community, and pay $5,000
for a three-year advertising
contract for decals on the
hood. trunk and roof of the
cruisers.
According
to
Smith.
Middleport
ha s
already
been accepted into the pro-

gram. He erKmr ragcU coun cil to discu" the program
with
Village
Slllicitnr
Ruberta Hill , and to consiucr rc,placing th e village·,
ag in g crui'e". which have
traditionall y been purcha,eu
through a sLate-pu r cha~ing
program . \.\ ith new car~
from
Government
Acqui,ition .,.

or

h~l\

without

g 'n ~rn rncnt

.

rat...,IIH.!

ing tn
fundi ng
Smith

. t;JXC.\ .

'aill. ·· it cou ld ,a,·c the 11 1lage "' mud1 as ~4.001) per
~ear

JLI .~o,t

on

car

mairlle-

nanl't'.

Counc·il l1lllk no action to
aprnn·e Smith·, propo., al.
but Jill recommend that
.. The program g i ve~ u~.o Mayor Sand) lannarelli di'the vehicles and eq uipment cu" the program with Hill
we need to serve th e com- and report back Ill council.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MY DAILYSE NTI NEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Cheryl
Crossan turned a hobby of
writing stories for her friends
into a career in publishing.
Two of her short stories
are being published in two
anthologies of short stories
called '"Emerging Voices,
Part I and II" on Dec. 5. Let's
Be Frank fLBF) Books located in Pittsburgh. Pa .. is publishing and marketing the
anthologies. LBF sells buoks
in all 50 states and in several
foreign courltries.
Crossan often writes stories fur her frienlls and decided to post one of them on the
Zoetrope Internet site that is
associated with Franci s Ford
Coppola.
Zoetrope encourages postings of original writing with
the stipulation that anyone
who posts also edit others
work to give feedback.
During this process Crossan
met another writer named
Michael Graves who enjoyed
her story and asked if she
would be interesting in
searching for a publishing
deal.
Crossan. Graves and other
writers visiting Zoetrope
banded together, edited each

INSIDE
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3
• Malva admits 2002
sniper kiHif!Q; gets life
without parole.
See Page A2

Please see Author. AS

Sandra Fultz Brown has returned to Middleport f:o,r. Columbus
and has opened Antiques on Second. a large r€tAII antique
sh&lt;;&gt;P in the forme : Bahr Clothie rs build1ng.

Antique shop opens in Middleport
BY BRIAN

J.

an ant1quc ,hor 111 the
Columbus .
,uhurh
of
Climom illc ,·;illl'd 01erbrook
Antiques.
LocoijeJ at 14'i 'iorth
Second A1·c .. the 'h''P is open
from I0 a.m. to ' 5 p.m ..
Monda)· til&lt;\&gt;Ligh Saturday.
&lt;md 12 to-+ p.m. on Sunday.
Th e 'h op i' c(n,eLl on

REED

BREED@MYDA!LYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT -A ne"
antique store has openeLI in
the Bahr Clothiers building in
downtown
Middleport .
Antiques on Second i' ov. ned
by Sandra Fultz Brown. who
has moved back to her hometown after living for year' in Tue:-.Uav. Bnl \\ n·, '011. SL'O tl.
and "Dan
Tl~o rna'
of
Columbus.
Before moving bad, to
'
Please see Antique, AS
Milldleport. Brown operated

Beth Sergent/photo

Local author Cheryl Crossan poses witti her dog, lzzy. who was
the inspiration for one of her characters in the short story
"Imagined Loneliness· which will be published on Dec. 5 by
LBF Books.

Paving begins

WEA'J'HER

Long lines for flu shots

INDEX
'
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Sports
Weather

A3
B2-4
Bs

A3

(Beth Sergent/photo)

A4

Hundreds of people v.aited outsrde the Me1gs Count~ Health
Department on Monday to rece1ve flu shots ava1lable fo r the
first t1me to the general publiC. By noon on Tuesda~ all but one
of the shots for the general public had been used . and only 10
remained for at-nsk res1dents. Personnel suggest a cal l be
made to the health department t992·6626) to determ1ne avail·
ab rlity of vaccrne before coming to the offtce.

(Brian J. Reed/photo)
Crews with Shelly Co. began milling North Second Avenue in Middleport on Tuesday. in prepa·
ration for paving later this week. Middleport"s main thoroughfare is just one of several streets
to tle paved. includ ing Pearl, Vine, and Ar\ Lewis Boulevard. Though some major streets are
included, this th ird paving project in three years is designed to improve allilys and secondary
streets in town, according to Mayor Sandy lannarell i.

B1
A6

.

EASY PIIEIT Pllr
·$10PEI
fiR

A Big, Fat Zero.

Fs

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

That•s how much you PfiY In dosing costs
when you ftnance a home equity line of credit
at Farmers Bank.

~

Your Bank(o:tJile...

There's no better time to consolidate your credit &amp; reduce your interest debtl

'IE STill FIIIIU.

mupity
ohtain

Persistence pays off for local author

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co•

$11

\\Ill'\ I ~ll\'\ . ()(lOBI I{.! -. :.!tH)_J

th

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE
PROPERTY NOTICE

Nancy Parker Grueser
Meigs County Auditor

en 1ne1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

to have emerged from the
tough loss, it was just that: A
tough loss.
"'I'm not happy." snapped
tackle Ross Verba. "What positives? Who cares? We didn't
win . There's no positives to
take .~way from this game. We
lost.

In compliance with provisions of Section
5721.03 of the Revised Code of the State of
Ohio, there will be published on November
12th and November 19, 2004, in this newspaper, a delinquent land list containing the
description of the property as it appears on the
tax list, the name of the person in whose name
the property is listed, the ~mount of taxes and
penalties due and·unpaid.
·
Each person charged with real property
taxes and penalties may pay the full amount
of taxes at the Meigs County Treasurer's
Office by 4:00 p.m. on November 5, 2004, to
avoid publication.
.
To avoid additional interest charged on
December 1st, a taxpayer may enter into a
written agreement with the County Treasurer
to pay one-fifth ( 115) of the delinquent taxes.

~·

at

Zook fired but
Browns aching after another loss
will finish season
with Gators
BY TOM WITHERS

new highway, As

Notre Dame, Bt

National Football League

College Football

Crash on

Portstnouth

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446.2265
• www.lbsc.com Member FDIC

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-- ------.--.- - -- o---- - -- - -----.I

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NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Ferry takes passengers to Canada for flu shots
SEATILE (AP) - In an
enterprising combination ot
tourism and health care.
people are takin~ a high·
speed ferry crutse across
scenic Puget Sound to
British Columbia. and getting a tlu 'hot, too.
The company that operates the ferry has lined up
a supply of vaccine through
a Canadian company. and
provides the shots to riders
at the terminal on the
Canadian si&lt;.le OIH:C th~y
clear customs.
At $105. it is an expensive tlu shot. though it is a
discount from the nmmal
$115 round-trip fare to rille
the Victoria Clipper. But
there was a long line of
people waiting bel'ore dawn
Tuesday to board the boat
for the 83-milc trip that
includes views of bald
eagles. whaks. tree-cowre&lt;.l
islands and snow-capped
mountains.
Eileen Johnson. 80. satd
she and her husb,md. Joe.
had traveled 50 miles to
make the trip. Joe Johnson
is 8 1 and has emphysema.
"He's got to have that
shot. That's the on Iy reason
we· re gQing. Health care 111
America. yippee,., Eileen
Johnson said sarcastically.

The 2 1/2-hour voyage
on the Clipper is a popul~
excursion,
hut
demand
tends to fall otT as the
weather gets cooler and
wetter. The llu-shot package is helping fill a boat
that normally runs one-half
10
two-thirds empty on
weekdays this time of year.
"It's been incredible' As
soon :h the new s started
breaking we \\ICrc inundated
with calls," said D,trrell
Bryan, executive vice presi dent and general manager
of
Clipper
Navigation .
"We're ftlling what we fee l
is a needed void. but we're
not

trying

to

gouge

the

public."
The U.S. supply of llu
vaccine was slashed nearly
in half when Emeryville,
Caltf.-based Chiron Corp.
was barred from shipping
any or its
productiOn
because of contamination at
a plant in England .
The shortage has prompteel officials to urge he,\lthy
Amencans to forgo shots
so there will be enough for
those at risk of gelling
seriously ill from the tlu .
But aboard the Vtclllria
Clipper, anyone wl10 wa nts
a shot can get one. (Of
course. passengers ran the

'

.

PageA2
Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Malvo admits 2002 sniper
killing, gets life without parole

risk of another type of illness: seasickness, which
sometimes afflicts ferry riders croS&gt;ing the rbugh
waters of the Puget Sound.)
BY MATTHEW BARAKAT
Ed and Patty Dunn. both
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
in · their 70s. could not get
flu shots from their usual
SPOTSYLVANIA, Va . clinic in Seattle. So they Teenage sniper Lee Boyd
took the boat for the fun Malvo accepted . a deal
- and the llu shots Patty Tuesday in which he avoidDunn added that she would ed the death penalty and was
also have lunch at a fancy sentenced to life in prison
Italian rest,!llrant.
without parole for one of I 0
For some pa~sengers, the slayings that terrorized the
llu shot was just a bonus.
Washington area in October
Louise Carson. 62. of 2002.
Eatonvi lle. planned to see
Malvo. 19. is already servthe Eternal Egypt exhibit at ing a hfe sentence for anoththe Royal ·British Columbia er one of the killings, and
Museum and said she dropped his appeals of that
might get a flu shot while conviction in connection
she v.:as at it.
with Tuesday's plea bargain .
Bryan said the ferry serMalva cou ld still face a
vice\ supply of vaccine death penalty prosecution for
\:&lt;tme from a Canadian other slayings.
company that has rlenty
Malvo was 'e nl enced
and can get more. The Tuesdav for the Oct. II .
shots will be offered until . 2002 , killing of businessman
the end of the year.
Kenneth Bnd~cs. Under the
With
thn~e
Victoria plea deal. he~ also received
Clippers, ranging i11 size an additional life sentence
from 114 feet to 131 feet. for the shoottng of Caroline
the company can transpo11 Seawell on Oct. 4. 2002.
.ts many as XOO people a She recovered from her
day. The boats can go up wounds.
to 46 mph.
Malvo's gui lt y plea took
the form of an Allord plea,
111 whtch Malvo did not
admit factual guilt but
acknowledged the government has sui ficiem ev tdencl!
to convict him He cannot
1862 to protect U.S mer- appeal the sentence.
Malvo declined 10 make a
chant
shipping
from
Confederate raiders &lt;.luring statemem before he was senth~ Civil War. accordmg to
tenced.
musctll\1 records.
Spotsylvania
The ship is I X6 feet long. Commonwealth's Attorney
with a beam ot 42 1/2 feet. William Neely said he conThe hull . is made of white . su ited with the victims' fam oak.
ilies and they supported the
The Constellation served plea bargain.
as a training ship at the
" He's spending the rest ol
Naval Academy ftom 1871 his life in a maximum secttto 1893.
·
rity prison where he ' ll be
An earlier Constellation. locked down 23 hours a day.
launched in 1797, was a sis- seven days a week for the
ter sh ip to the USS rest of his life." Neely said.
Constitution : the oldest
Malvo was convicted last
commissioned warship still year and sentenced to life in
atloat. That 36-gun ship prisqn for the Oct. 14, 2002.
fought in the Barbary War murder of FBI analyst Linda
blockading Tr.ipoli. saw duty Franklin, one of the sniper
111 the War of I~ 12, killings over a three-week
patrolled in the Pacific and span in Maryland. Virginia
toured around the world. It and Washington. D.C. His
was broken up in 1854 and accomplice, John Allen
some of its timbers went Muhammad, is on Virginia's
into
the
current death row for one of the
Con .stellation.
sluyings.
-----------

Thursday, Oct. 28
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters , 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Ruth Riflle. Donna
Byer to present program.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW 9053 7
p.m. at the hall.

Concerts
and plays

150-year-old warship USS Constellation returns
to the Naval Academy after 111-year absence
BALTIMORE (API
The only Civil War-era vessel still atloat left its moormg in Baltimore's Inner
Harbor on Tuesday and
made its first voyage to the
Naval
Acadcmv
at
Annapolis in Ill years.
The
venerable
USS
· Constellation can no longer
make the 30-mile trip on
her own power. so the sloop
of war was moved to the
academy by tugboats. The
six-day visit is part of a
celebration of the 150th
anniversary
of
the
Constellation. laun c~~d in
1854.
.
It 's the ship's first time
out of the Inner Harbor
since 1955. said Christopher
Rowsom, executive director
of the USS Constellation
Museum. "The ship is in
. good shape for this. But she
" o ld"
.ts
, Rowsom sa1'd ,
: The Naval Academy band
·greeted the ship when it
docked on the Severn River
at Annapolis.
"The initial thought when
:I first saw her was 'Wow,
· she is pretty,"' said academy
spokesman
Cmdr.
Rod
Gibbons. "We're just so
pleased to see the return of

an old friend. · a ship that
trained a whole generation
of midshipmen in the 1800s.
She's a national treasure."
The ship was decked out
111
red. white and blue
buming and bristling with
large black cannons as it
left
Baltimore's
harbor
Tuesday morning.
As
the
Constellation
passed Baltimore's Fort
McHenry. where American
troops withstood the Bntish
bombardment during the
War of 1812 that inspired
"The Star-Spangled Banner."
four A-1 0 Warthogs from,,
the Maryland Air National
Guard tlew overhead.
The three-masted sloop
has patrolled some of the
v.orld 's most romantic and
dangerous ports of call.
The ship served in the
Mediterranean
Squadron
before bec(Jming the !lagship
of
the
African
Squadron.
which
was
charged with stopping the
illegal slave trade.
While
patrolling
the
African coast off the mouth
of the Congo River from
1859 to 1861. the ship captured three slave ships. The
Constellation was sent in

Texas inmate executed after reprieve lifted

I

HUNTSVILLE,
Texas
(AP) - A man convicted in
a 1992 murder case in
which the troubled Houston
pollee crime lab allegedly
mishandled evidence was
executed Tuesday eve ning
despite last-minute legal batties and pleas from relatives
of the murder victim that hi s
life be spared.
U.S. District Judge Nancy
Atlas
had
blocked
Dominique Green's execution after hi s attorneys .
argued that boxes of improperly stored and catalogued
evidence. kept by the crime
lad and recently discovered,
could contai n information
relevant to the case.
The ' tate attorney generat's office objected to the
reprieve. which was then
' lifted by the 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals. The U.S.
Supreme Court refused to
grant a last-minute &lt;,lay.
"There was a lot of people
that got me to th1 s pomt and
I ca n' t thank them all .''
Green said in a hMely audi ble voice . " I am not angry
· but I am dtsappointed that I
·was denied JUstice But I am
happy tha t I was afforded
you all as family and
friends. I love you all. ...
.Please keep my memory
alt ve."
Green gaspeu slightly a
couple of times '" the lethal
drugs took effect and was
pronounced dead nine minutes later. The execution was
the I Rth this year 111 Texas
and the fifth thts month .

Green's attorneys had
argued their client should be
kept alive until they could
look through all the files.
Harns County prosecutors
said all ev idence ,·n the case
had been accounted for.
The
exec ution
was
opposed by relatives of the
man Green was convicted ot
kilhng and by rehgtous leaders, including 1\obel Peace
Prize laureate Desmond Tutu
and
the
Rev. Joseph
Fiorenza.
the
Roman
Catholtc bishop of the
Galveston-Hou ston diocese.
"Texas is going to put a
righteous person to die like
an animal. pulling him on a
table, strapping htm up.
putting th ose needles in his
arms. puttin g him to sleep."
the victim's son. Andre
Lastrapes-Luckett. stud after
meeting with Green 1n
prison Monday.
Green was convtcted of
gunning
do wn
Andrew
Lastrapes Jr. dunng a $50
robbery outside a Houston
convenience qore 111 October
1992 Green admitted heing
at the store at the time of
the murder. but matntamed
he was not the gunman .
Green was arrested three
day.s after the shooting when
otticers spoiled a stolen car
and ran it off a highway.
According tu tcsttmony. a
gun in th e car was traced to
the slaying.
Defen se attorneys s:ud
problems at the Houston
crunc lah ra"cd question '
ahuul the &gt;alidity ol' some

(AP Photo)

Sntper suspect Lee Boyd Malva enters a courtroom in the
Spotsylvania. Va. Ctrcutt Court on Tuesday Malva plead gut lty
and was sentenced to two ltfe sentences for the murder of
Kenneth Bndges and shootmg Caroline Seawell 111 2002.
t\eely said after Tuesda~ ·s
hcarin ~ that Malvo appc:n cd
to be heavily inlluenccJ h~
Muhammad . When Mal1 u
was tried last )ear. his
la wyer" put on an in .. ,tnit}
Jcfcn~e.

~..·la111llll~

Muhamm.td hml hraiiJ\\ ashed
Mdlvu
inlo
a
kill 1ng
mach me.
Neely satd he douhtcJ
he cou lu oht :11ll a death
penalty a~,III\St Mall"
given his youth and the
sympathy that a hratnwashing
Ll.tilll
might
win.
But Malvo wuld lace the
death penalty 111 Prince
William Countv. as well as
in Alabamu wid LoUistana.
where he :md Muhammud
are charged with other mur-

dL'r..,

ill

the

weeks

and

ntonths hclorc tlte sniper
spree.
Prin,·e Willtam Coull!)
Cn 11111 H H1\\ L' Ld t h \ A l 1\ lrnL' \
l':ttd lchen. who obtatncd ;,
dc:tth
sentence
tot
~lnl~:llnl\\,td. has sa Ill,. he "ill
pn1 ' ue the tk,tth pen,tlt~
.tg:tiltst
tl-lal1o
tl
the
Supteme Court ruks 1h1s
fall til&lt;~ I the neullion ol' I(, and 17 -\L'Ltl'-{lld . . i" (\Jn-.,titu1inn:tl .
UcfL:Jl\l'

bwvcr

Cr:ll~

Cnnk\ . . &lt;~id hc..::lli...,L' \1ah 1l

f:IC\'S ·jl,l&gt;SihJe UCalh pcllall\
pro"~l' lltlon

cl . . cv. : herl·.

of the evidence, including
the gun. The lab's DNA section has been closed si nce a
2002 audit revealed possible
contam ination of evidence.
madequatc training for analysts and msuiTicienl docu-

ROBERT BEEGLE

Visit us
online at
lwww.mydallysentlnel.co

~

has the PERSONAL INTEGRITY.
HONESTY, EXPERIENCE
&amp; MATURITY to do the job.

Elect

ROBERT E. BEEGLE
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF

Your online
source for
news

Your VOTE
and INFLUENCE appreciated.
lud11h \ "•n

mentation.

God.Is Real
By David A Reed

•
•I
I

I

1t

""e to enter the Alford
plea. ~lallll "accepts respon stbtltty to the extent that IJc
" servmg lite in prison withnut parole," Cooley said.
ll&lt;ts

On the Net:

USS
Constellation:
http://www.cunstellatlon.org
First USS Constellation:
http://www.ussconstltutlon·
museum .org/faq/constella·
tion.html

Wednesday, Oct. 27
ATHENS
- Finance
Committee of Athens/Meigs
Educational Service Center,
10 a.m., at 507 Richland
Ave., Athens. Conference
Room I09, 10 discuss current
budget and general business
matters.
Saturday, Oct. 30
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m . at the township
building .
Monday, Nov. I
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. MonJay at the
office building.

I became a Christian as a young teenager.
While serving in Vietnam, I was wounded and alone, in a bunker wiU1 enemy soldiers on tt1e
outside .. ! prayed to God, making a commitrttent if he would spare my life I would better serve 11im.
God restored my body completely, but I fell deeper into sin.
Perhaps due to a mother's prayer, God pour-ed out his spirit upon my entire body of nesh , starting
from the top of my head and !lowing slowly down to the soles of my feet. This was the greatest
feeling of my life and proving God is real.
A Few days later, God used his anger on me, by causing me to yell without the ability to stop. About
the time I thought I would die, God stopped me.
I went through this procedure about three different occasions. Once completed, 1 became a
different person. Many of my sinful ways were taken away, and given the true plan for salvation. That
is, only those Christians who prove faithful shall be saved.
Our faith is measured by how well we keep God's laws. which can be found mainly in the New
Testament portion of God's Word.
I believe to be God's punished son. by having Feeble knees and a lam e condition as written in
Hebrews ·t2 , who has suffered man·y things and has been rejected by this generati~n.
If you desire to become a Christian, pray to God- kneeling if possible- confessing your sins. asking
forgiveness and accepting Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior and statin g "Amen!" ·
.
God desires us, as Christians, if possible. to be placed under water by a minister, one time . in the
name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
I believe we will live forever or die forever. '
God's Word tells us to work out our salvation with trembling and fear. I believe, 1 have, hul have
you?
•
May God add his blessing to l1is -message .
In Jesus' 11&lt;11111.:. Amen.

Friday, Oct. 29
LONG BOTIOM - The
Passion of the Christ will be
shown at 7 p.m. at the Fmth
full Gospel Church.
Sunday, Oct. 31
CARPENTER
-One

Hearl will present concert at
the Mt. Union Baptist church
near Carpenter. 6:30 p.m .
Refreshments to follow 111
fellowship hall . Call David
Wiseman for more information. 742-2568.

Church services
Wednesday, Oct. 27
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
services all week. 7 p.m. at
the Middleport First Baptist
Ctwrch. Speaker Tuesday,
Joe Rife of World Christian
Outreach with music by Jody
Rife:
Wednesday,
Les
Hayman. Common Ground,
with Rief Herman and The
Joy FM Quartet; Thursday,
Rob Barber, Bethel Worship
Center, choir and drama
team;
Friday,
David
Wiseman; Mt. Union Baptist
Church, singers First Baptist
Enc Chambers , Lawrence
Eblin, and Tom and Jean
Schoonover.
POMEROY -- Enterprise
United Methodtst Church
will host community prayer
meeting, 7 p.m. Wednesday.
The
Oasis
Christian
Fellowship prmse Band will
play. Prayer meetings to be
held on last Wednesday of
each month.

Other events
Thursday, Oct. 28
POMEROY- Ctring and
sharing support at I p.m. at
the Meigs Multi -purpose
Center. Meli ssa Gandee of

Family Medicine

Wednesday, October ·27, 2004

Pounding on basketball court
is echoing in neighbor's head

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations

·

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Public meetings

PageA3

Mid-Ohio Valley Alzheimers
Assocmtion will speak on
partnering with our doctor.
DEAR ABBY: My problem
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy United Methodist is my neighbor's home basChurch will be serving free ketball court. The parents are
oblivious to how far the noise
cookies, hut chocolate, and travels. My ears are constantcider to trick-or-treaters and ly assaulted by the thump.
their fumilies from 7 to 8 thump and screaming of chilp.m.
dren that goes along wtth the
Friday, Oct. 29
game. It's impossible on
MIDDLEPORT - A free most days and evenings to sit
dinner wtll he served from on my porch and read a book.
4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday at or in my living room without
the Middleport Church of closing the windows .
Christ Family Life Center.
Most people hate to comMonday, Nov. I
plain to the offending neighGALLIPOLIS - Holzer bors because they're nice
Center for Comprehen sive people, even though they are
Weight Loss .Support Group. clueless. Zoning board mem6:30 p.m .. Holzer Medical bers: How about outlawing
center
Education
and basketball hoops in neighborConference Center Rooms hoods where there's less than
AB. Information at 446- 500 feet between houses 0
Give us a break.
5825.
As
taxpayers,
we're
Saturday, Oct. 30
POMEROY
-Meigs assessed to provide bigger
County Democratic Party and better playgrotmds and
will have a Meet the school gyms. That's where
Candidates tatlgatc party basketball hoops belong.
from I to 3 p.m. on Saturday Driveways shouldn' t superat the Pomeroy Parking Lot. sede the local playground.
A costume contest will be Please. parents. unless you
JUdged and free refreshments live on a lor that's an acre or
larger, take down that horrid
provided.
noi semaker and take the kids
to the playground. Show
some consiueration for your
neighbors. - FRACTURED
EARDRUM IN THE SUNTuesday, Nov. 2
MIDDLEPORT - Manley BELT
DEAR
FRACTURED .
Christy will ohserve his 95th
btrthday Tuesday. Cards may Whether or not the sound of
be sent to him at 40 Custer children playing is an annoyStreet; Middleport. Oh10 ing racket depends tm one's
perspective. If you are a par45760.
em. the sound is music to the
ears - and when those days
are over, the happy sound
will be missed .
Sometimes being a good
neighbor involves striking a
co mpr01111 se. Since you're
being driven out of your
gourd; speak to the parents of
these buddmg basketball
st.trs and negotiate some time
limtts for the games.
DEAR ABBY: A treasured
There arc a few medications
friend
of my mother 's - a
currently undergoing clinical
lady
who
knew me from birth
trials that are showing some
hope for medical treatmen t of (I am now 56) - passed
away recently. I was brought
vascular uementia
Familv Medicine ® i&gt; a up to call her "Auntie." She
weekly 'column. To submit was closer to me than some
questions. wnte to Martha A. of my blood relatives. My
Simpson. D.O. , M.B.A .. children and I adored her. We
Ohio Universt ty College of called her long-di stance. sent
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box II 0, Athens. Ohto
4570 I, or via e-mail to readerg uestion s@ family medicinenews.org. Medical information 111 this column is provided as an educational service only. It does not replace
the judgment of your personThe Daily Sentinel
al physician, who should be
relied on 10 diagnose and rec- Subscribe today • 992-2155
ommend treatment for .any
www.mydailysentinel.com
medical conditions. Past
columns are available online
at
www.familymedicinenews.org.

Birthdays

Dear
Abby

her !lowers on spectal occasions, and saw her every time
she came to town - which
was two to tour times a year.
Finally it wc~s necessary for
her to go to a nursing home.
The last time we went to visit
her, the nurses said. "Oh. didn't you know '' She passed
away a month ago 1" Her only
son lives far aw:t )'. He never
bothered to call and notify us.
We had to find out the hard
way.
Abby. our number was in
her current phone and
addre" book . We were never
given the opportunity to
mourn. Her son didn't think
enougb of us to even pick ·up
the phone. He knew we loved
his mother and that we
includecl her 111 all our family
gntherings. I'm sad ,tnd ·angry
at his lack of compasston.
Auntie had four husbands
dte on her. We loved them c~ll
and called them "Unl'le:· and
planned all the funera ls with
Auntie's son 111 full agreement. So what could have
been the problem'?

Abby. won't you plea.se
rem ind your reader&gt; again to
call dear friend' about a
death in the family'! Thts "
Inexcusable . We .tre ·
MOURNING IN TACOMA.
WASH .
DEAR MOURt\ING : Your
problem IS more common
than you th ink . Often when
there's a death in the family. a
clo.se friend will assume the
sad task of phoning the people in the deceased's address
book to notify them .
Ob,iou , ly. this wa' not done
on the occasion of Aunrie ·,
death - and your leiter
poignantly illusfrates the pam
that can be caused by the
unfortunate oversight.
Please gtvc Auntie'&gt; son
the benefit of the doubt
Ass ume that he was so gnefstricken by the loss of his
mother that he was unable to
make the calls he should have
made When your anger has
lc'Sencd. write to tell him
how dee ply di sturbed and
saddened you w~re to learn
of hi s mother's death from
nursing home staff rather
than from him and offer your
condolences.
Dear Ahh1· 1.1 writ/ell hr
Al&gt;i~ail Vi1i1 Burm. alsr&gt;
kno\\·11 us Jeu1111e Phillips ,
" " " Ill/.\ founded h1
her
mo!ile1: Puul1ne Plulllps.
Write
Deur
Ahh1
at
ll'mr.DearAbiJ\ .com ,~r P.O.

Box 69440. Lf~, A118el"' , CA
90069.

......~ ..........................
I

ELECT

Vascular dementia causes
thought and memory problems
Question: Arc there anv
intervenltons to help a posistroke victim with cognitive
deficits - especmlly short or
long-term memory loss''
Answer: First let me talk a
bit about strokes. A stroke
occurs 11 hen the blood supply
to the brain is cut off or
slowed. thereby preventmg a
sufficient amount of oxygen
fro m reuching brain tissue .
The specific area of the brain
that's affected is determined
by which blood vessels are
involved. The brain cells in
this area may be injured or
die dependmg on the severity
of the stroke.
About 80 percent of strokes
are caused bv a blocked
artery in the 'neck (carotid
anery) or in the brain. Less
commonly, a stroke may be
caused by a ruptured blood
vessel in the brain. The injury
to the brain and the resulting
loss of function in the patient
depends on the location of
the decreased blood now.
Prevention is the key 10
stroke management.
Not
smok ing, lowering your cholesterol. managing your diabetes and keeping your blood
pressure under control. all
can help prevent a stroke. If a
stroke occurs. several things
can be done to help lessen the
effects. Early recogmtion of
the signs of a stroke can get
you to a hospital emergency
department quicker. If your
stroke is caused by a blood
clot. using "clot-busting"
drugs can help to reestablish
the blood supply to ' the
injured area and prevent permanent-damage. If this is not
possible, early rehabilitation
can help a· patient to improve
lost functions.
Rehabilitation should begin
in the acute care hospital with
24 to 48 hours of the stroke.
Passive movemelll of an
affected limh and frequcm

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Wortdng to ~et drugs and l'riminals ofT Ihe sln·cts.
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* ColfmUtment a11d Expentmcf! at .-. 1Jrk. for \.feig~ Cou llt}' ·~ Clti:em. *
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Paid po/lliCOI Ad by the Candidate

······¥·····················¥¥¥¥•
Jeff Thornton
Meigs County
Commissioner

I am a ltfe-l ong resident of Meigs County with
17 years experience in local Government. I was ratsed
on a farm, taught by my grandparents. aunt and uncle.
and llll'm how 10 work hard. be dedi~ated, and ~
rcsponsthle Knowing God at an early age brought me
my faith . lll),Jlty. honesty. a sense of sen·tce
I started ge tting involl'ed in community serl'tce "hile
in chu rc h by 11orking as a church trustee and 11hen
teachtn~ a summer Bible School cia" fnr the .youth.
While 11orking 11ith the youth we dtd a lot of outreach
programs to help the people 111 the Racine area. I soon
fo und ou t th, tl to h~lp more people I needed to get on
the msid,· and i111 uhc 11\\'self with I&lt;1Cal gowrnment.
I started m y pnlitic·.tl ca r~·c r h1 ge tting elected "' a
Racine Village c,,tll\c'liman. then 1\,ts e lected tll the
Board of Dtrc ct'"' ui' the \lci gs (\Juntl Chamber of
Ctlllllllerce 1-l ll'.tl's l. ck,·t,·d '"""as \la~or ol the
Village oi' Rac·ine. wlic'l'c I ftr.st 1\\lr~ed un grants and
recei\ed close II&gt; onc- mtllilln dollars tn help the
c iti zens of Racin L' . I "'"' worked as . \ktgs County
Coordtnator for Ste~tc Reprc,cntatll·e ~1ary .-\bel
(2 years) . . and St:ne Rcptesentatiw \l;uk lo,l alnne
t2 ye:trs) . As l'lHHdin atiH I 11nrked as a liais,,n
bet"een the StalL' Rq&gt;resentalt\es . and the pcopk of
f\.1eigs County. W~Hh.1ng with 'dri uu-. gruup-. :-. uch ,\,
the Vetcr.tns. Sen'"' Cttilc'lb. Fire Dep,trtmcnts .
Township Ot'i'iL' t,tls. l·.tnner, . l'll' While tr:ll c'ling
tht oughout th e (', Jtll ll~ . I II&gt;UilJ nul JUSt htm llllll'l\ till'
pe npk real!) ncc,kd the· help and that more p ro~ t.uns
I II nh 1\1\l\'l' nW I\c'\ I lll'l'd to he in place 111 hel p these
groups That's 11hcn lllr.st dCL'tdcJ Ill runlm c,,um:
Comm i ssione r:
As your Comml-.... ... inn~r 1 Llll1 dl~ Jil· atcd to l\h'Olg"'
Count:- . I care about you: anJ IHlrk hard ''' make the
County " he tin pJa,·e til 111 ,•. I ha1 e ne1 cr lmgPtt cn
that ):!ill. lh1.· m~n and \\nmcn t.)f '1eig . . Count~. arc m~
ho ..... (' . .
prnud of m: J'~l'\lnl ... in..:~ hccoming ~1 1 111
Commissi(llll'l' In till' next ,·ouplc nf day' I v. il l r,·ll
\'llU IIHli'L' lllil'rtll :ll t,, n of v.hat I ha1e done as
Cnmmt"inn,·r .tnd m: 1'1,111 fnr th,· future Thank 11111 .
:\1ore Income nn \\',·dnc:,Ja). Thur,da\ . anJ Fndav.

rm

Kyger Creek (' red it union. l,rim· In his pu~ilion. I sened as treasurer. \ 1 ke
president, and presidt•nt. Thi!oo rontrihutes tu Ill) t(Ualifil'atinns to sene a~
)'Our Count~· Trcnsun•r.
I urge you to vult• fur the hl'ltl'f ntndidalt• '~ho "ill strhe' tn do a better job
liS l\fl'ig~ Cnunl) ln·a!'!Urt~ r.

.

~

IX Plans to "orL; with ~t·hnnls initiating programs 10 edut:ale child~n in

~

Technology
Changed-The

Treasure.
,
I am a 1':152 :.llumnu11 of Radn~ HiJ,!.h Srhool. I am a Korean War ''eteran
und ulso rct·ehed a superior t·harurler cfficienc~ rating from I he united
Stall'S Arm~. Fornll·rl~. I "a\ e 1nplo~· ed b~· the Ohio Valle~· eh.,t•tric
Corporation (K~·gcr Creek) for -'1 ~·t•ar~ hefore retirin~ in 19'17. \\'hilc at
.J\.)·ger ,·reek. nl)' joh dutk-s ran~ott•d frum a purchasing m.sistnnt tu an offil·e

~£5
TJ,~ng~ f(9
.

com:ern~d,

I "Jouath on crime yt'l fair and impartial.

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

i\lrigs County Voters. I urge " YO U" to Cll"it ) 'OUr \Utl'S rnr ll better
qualified candidate fnr Count~ Trcwmn.•r thnn the t•urrenl inrumbent
treasurer. I, John Fisher. Jr.. urn that t'Hndidate.
Being born and rai.scd in \leigs County. 1.n~ number one goal is to give
back to and ~tcn· c m~· t·nunt) tu the he"it ul' my abilities as your County

Coming Thursday
in the Sentinel ...

. JP(9"

change of position in bed can
keep the limbs strong and
prevent bedsores . By mo\·ing
the hmbs. the brain is getting
signals to help reestablish
lost connections and help the
patient learn how to do things
in new ways .
Your specific qttestion has
to do with memory loss after
a stroke. When a person
becomes confused. has memory loss. utfficulty planmng
and organizing, decreased
attention span and/or other
signs of intellectual decline
after a stroke. thts is classified as vascular dementia. It
!S the second leading cause of
dementia after Alzheimer's
disease. About 20 percent of
the people who have strokes
will develop vascular dementia.
Vascular dementia can also
develop from chronically
decreased blood supply to the
brain. For instance, one type
of vascular dementta called "multi infarct dementia" - can uevelop after a
person has had a series of
small strokes. These 'ministrokes' can cause symptoms
such as light-headednes&gt;.
temporary blmdness and mild
weakness in the arms or legs.
Since the symptom s usually
clear up quickly. many people don't seek medical allention. That's unfortunate.
becmtse if preventive measures aren't taken. these mini stroke s, over tim e.
may
result 111 sufficient damage in
the brain to produce dementia.
Unfortunately there is no
treatment
for
vascular
dementia at thi s time. If it is
identified early and the vascular problems can be corrected. then the problem may
not progress. A person with
vascular dementia needs a
strong support system and :1

'•

1

Pa1d for

cand1date. Crew Road ,

--Jeff Thornton
OhlO

�'o,e A4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Octobct· 27, 2004

"The great masses of the
people." wrote one of history's most infamous propagandists, "will more easily
fall victims to a big lie than a
small lie ."
John Kerry agrees. As do
the 527 organizations that
support the Democrat presi·
dential nominee. For as they
slouch toward Election Day,
they have ginned up every
big lie they can think of to
scare the masses of voters
away from George W. Bu sh.
Just this week, in fact. the
Kerry campaign unveiled an
ad cl~
· ·n that th~ president "h sa plan to cut Social
Security enefits by 30 to 45
percent."
It's a shameless attempt by
the Democratic Party standard-bearer to scare the
bejcebers out of the nation's
seniors. And it's a big lie, as
attested by FactCheck.org, a
nonpartisan Web site producect by the University of
Pennsylvania's Annenberg
Public Policy Center.
"Bush hasn't proposed any
specific plan," according to
the site, but has received
three possible "reform models" detailed in the final
report of a bipartisan· commission studying ways to
strengthen Social Security.
"The plan the Kerry ad
refers to doesn't affect benefits for current retirees at all,"
it adds, and "Even for future
retirees, benefits will grow

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydaitysentinel.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 prollibiting the
free exercise thereoji or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably t'o assemble, and to petition
tl1e Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

Traffic
Be aware cf the situation at

US33/SR681
Dear Editor:
1 want to make sure you are aware of the traftk situation at

Joseph
Perkins

under the 'reform model' the
Kerry
ad
refers
to."
Meanwhile. the 527 group
America Coming Together is
circulating handbills on
Kerry's behalf suggesting
that Republicans are planning to attack black voters to
keep them from the polls.
The flyer reproduces a
Civil Rights era photograph
of a black man pinned
against the wall of a building
by water shooting out of a
fire hose. "This is what they
used to do to keep us from
voting," it reads. And "This
is how Republicans keep
African-Americans
from
voting nmv,"· it adds, listing
• several recent incidents in
which blacks supposedly
were discouraged from casting ballots.
"They make AfricanAmerican voters stand in
line for hours, and they turn
them away from the polls,"
the tlyer claims. "Now (U.S.
Attorney General) John
Ashcroft is trying to prevent
African-Americans
from
vot ing at all."

The America Cnming
Together handbill is rac:ial
demagog uery at its ugliest. It
is a big lie meant to keep
black
voters
on
the
Democratic plantation. Then
there's th e suggestion by
Kerry. and by certain activist
groups that support !he one·
time anti-war ac:tivist. that
Bush has a plan to revive the
military draft.
There is "a great potential "
forott'\.lruft if Bush is returneu
to the Oval Otlicc. Kerry told
The Des Moines Register last
week. ignoring that just one
week earlier, during the second presidential debate. Bush
stated un equivocally, "We're
not going to have a draft.
period ."
Meanwhile. the pro-Kerry
group Rock the Vote. whrch
claims to be nonpartisan, has
been sending out letters on
official-looking letterhead
readi n1' "Selective Service
System," and informing
recipients "YOU HAVE
BEEN DRAPTED. "
Of course, the letter
neglects to mention that a
bill proposing to reinstate
the draft , int roduced by Rep.
Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., and
co-sponsored by t"aur other
Democrats, was allowed to
come to the House lloor earlier this month, where it was
rejected 402 to 2.
But why should Kerry.
why should activist groups
supporting the Democratic

nom111~l'. kt tlte
fach ~ct in the '' &lt;t' ol th~n·
hig liC'! Thdr ~1illl. i" to gl.!t

after the highway opened.
1 went home !hat way yesterday and found that there is no
turn lane coming from Athens to exit onto SR 681 left. 1 had
to stop in the passing lane of a ~-lane section &lt;:&gt;f highway to
turn left, wondering if 1 wou ld get hi t from behind before the
car in front of me moved from the med ian section (which by
: the way docs not appear the·

"tl''''

1s

.

CHESTER- The Chester United Methodist Women will
sponsor an Election Day dinner at the church social room.
Serving will be from 4:30p.m. to 6:30p.m.

Pancake breakfast Saturday
CHESTER- A pancake brcak,fast will be served from 8 to
I I a.m. S'aturday at the Che,ter Academy. Funds raised will go
toward the renov ation of the Academy building. The breakfast
i.s sponsored by the Daughters of America and the Chester
Courthouse Association.

Syracuse plans trick or treat
SYRACUSE - Tric:k or treat will be held in Syracuse from
6 to 7 p.m. on Thursday. The fire siren will sound to begin and
end the event. All streets will be closed except for Ohio 124,
and those violating the street closing will be cited, according
to Marshal Kevi n Dugan.

Woodmen set meeting, breakfast
CHESTER - Modern Woodmen, Camp 6335 will meet at
the Chester Acad~my for a meeting and pancake breakfast
anytime between X: 15 a.m. and II a.m.

"

coltt1111/{S/for Tlw Soil n;ego
Union-Trihune (Ill(/ c·an he
reached ar J o.H'fJ/r. Pt•r/..n t.\ 0
Union Tri h. co111. 1

: that was destgncd fnr thi' at'ea (tile property for thi s has
· already been purchased 1.
· Do we
reallv. need to h;l\ c a mllnher ur fatal accidents in this
.

•

since the highway opencd J '""I the second accident just
Qccurred. One person lifelli ghtcd from the scene: one transported by squad ant.l two luc·kil) walked away.
Clruck a&gt;1d Terry Stotts
Darwin

There's no place like homework

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev slwuld
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number: Nu unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 's
editorial board, unless othenvise noted.

Abigail called at 8:03 this
morning. Abigail is the
neighbor's kid. · Her parents
just went tlirough a yearlong
divorce . Not as bitter as
these things go, but not fun,
either. Her Mom goes to
work at 7:30. the school bus
picks up Abigail at 8:10. Her
Dad lives in the next town.
Abigail is 12 going on 16.
Normally her Dad would be
with her when her Mom
wasn't, but now Dad lives 10
miles away. That's the new
normal. Sometimes she calls
for a ride if she misses the
bus.
"I neeu some help with my
homework. Can you use the
word 'adhesion' in a sen-

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPs 213-960)

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main conce rn in all stories is to be Published every afternoon. Monday
accurate. If you know of an error tn a throu gh Friday. ttl Court Street,
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- Pomeroy. Oh1o. Second-class postage
2156.
pa1d at f!omeroy

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

News
Editor: Charlene Hoethch : Ext. 12
RePorter: Brian Reed . Ex1. 14
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.

Advertising

Outside Sales: Dave Hams, Exl. 15
Outside sales; Brenda DaviS, Ext 16
Cla.-s./Circ.: Judy Clark. Ext 10

Circulation
District Mgr.: Jason Patterson Ext 17

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Postmaster: Send addresS corrections
to The Da11y Sentm~l. 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

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13 Weeks
26 Weeks .
52 Weeks

.. ' 30 .15
. ... ' 60.00

.'118 80

Outside Meigs CoUnty

13Weeks ..
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

•.

~.~5005

. ' 100.10
200.20

II

J'

I

Jim
Mullen

you wrrectly. What does it
mean'l" I asked again.
'The · intermolecular
attraction between substances that are unlike and in
surface contact , causing
them to cling together." .
"My God, 1 haven't got a
clue. What grade are you in''
Ninth? Tenth?" An intermolecular
attraction ? She\
ten ce?''
"Attention'' Sure. The gen- pulling my leg.
"Sixth."
eral made the troops stand at
"What does that say ahout
attention. There. Goodbye ."
"Not 'attention,' adhesion," our school system'? Is this
what they do with our tax
Abigail says forcefully.
"The general could add money'' That is a I Oth grade
· Hessians. but he couldn't word." It. is now 8:04 Why
subtract them. There. Thank is this kid doing her homeyou for calling. Goodbye ." 1 . work five minutes before the
must have military things on bus geh here'' Why can't she
do it the way 1 did when 1
. my mind.
"NO, not 'add Hessians,' was her age'' Ten minutes
ad· hes-ion. A-d·h-c+i-o-n, before the bus showed up. 1
suppose that was because 1
adhesion."
had two parents. And seven
"What does it mean?"
"You're the writer. That's other brothers and sisters.
why I'm calling you. You're That woulu be one parent for
supposed to know about e'ery !'our kids . No wonder
my parent&gt; never knc" wha t
wonJ..... "
I'm supposed to. but 1 we were doing . There was
no way they could keep
don't.
track
or us all . We used to
"Maybe I'm not hearing

gang up on them and tag
team them. Abigail is an
only chi ld, you'd think one
parent coltld handle that.
even if that parent is working 12-hour shifts to pay the
bills. Well. maybe that does
explain things.
But why is Abigail calling
me 0 Why doesn't she call her
Dad'! 1 know I live in the
next house and her Dad lives
in the next town , but he's got
a phone. It's just as easy to
call his number as it is mine.
Maybe he's even worse with
words than 1 am. Surely he's
not stil l drunk at 8 a. m.''
.1 think that's why they got
dtvorced, but who know., ,
it's really none of my business. But so many of my
neighhors are single moms.

"OK. Water hc:td s or

Oil

a

countertop hccttu:-.L' ui' ad h~ ­

"iitm.'' I ha\ C

IHI

idc;t \\IH

head :-. lip 011 i! CllU!ltCI:top. Adhc,ion is m)' stor)
and I'm sticking to it. Wit)
doesn't she call that ~U\'
who\ ahout to \\ i11 S2 J;liilion on Jeopard y'' He kno ws
everythin~.
I'm iUS! the
·
neighhnr guy.
It is now H:07 . The sc hool
bus just rolled past my house
on the way to Ahigail\. It
will be there in a rnimite.
We're neighbor!.o. but we're a
good quarter-mile apart .
"OK ," she says hrentlllc,sly. "Usc 'min er&lt;tl i1c' in a \L'lllence.
"I hope I he ghost ol' my
old s1xth-gradc tcac h~r dneo.;-

Water

n't material it.c ."

now. When soccer practice
" Thi \i i~ . . c ic ncc · cht\\.
gets cancel leu it throws their 'MineraliLc · not 'matcrialbest-laid plans into the wood ile."' She doe,n't "'v the
chipper. There's a flurrv or word "dttmmy" at the end or
cell phon e calls, an ad:hoc th e sentence. hut she left the
car pool is arranged. When space for it. "To tr,msl'orm a
the schonl gives the kids two metal into a mtncral hy oxidays off because or a dation." she said"' ithout my
J ea~hds conference their
asking.
whole live s get thrown out
"The bus to sehoul was ·so
or whack. The parents don 't ' low !thought it wou ld min get off work hccausc that\ eralilc befmc we got there."
not a holiday. Arrangcmems I heard the hus honk, she
lllU\t he maLie.
said bye and hung up the
" H ello~ Adhesion' I'm in a
phone . I \1 ondct wha t my
hurry here· ~" I can picture t!l"&lt;dC \\ il! hl.' '.1
.t\hi !;&lt;lll

\\ it h

one

arm

through her jac·ket ant.l a pen
in the other hand wai tin g to
write down my words of
wisdom.

A1rdlt '' n th( c11111wr
of · /, 'l(t"l'.l " \'illu.~,, ldi01.
Co 111fJ/iuu;ng !he .Simple
Lift' .. " You can rr)ach him w
1 /, lf

jiJ!I _ II/11//i' I/(U 111.\'\\ '(/,\'.COH/)

A two·vehicle accident at the intersection of U.S. 33 and Ohio 681 near the start of the new Darwin·tO·Athens four lane stretch
of 33 on Tuesday resulted in injuries to three people, the Gattia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reporteq. Details on the
accident, which occurred around 9:50 a.m., were not immediately available from the patro l. Troopers said the three individuals
were all transported to area hospitals, one of them by MedFi ight to Cabell Huntington Hospital. Huntington. W.Va. It was the
second accident at the same location since Sunday. The new four·lane was dedicated last Friday.

Middleport church has new pastor'

MIDDLEPORT Rick
Bourne is the new pastor
of the Middleport Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church .
He comes to M iddlepot1
with 18 years of pastoral
experience. He has served
as an assistant pastor in
Bluefield , W.Va.. and as
pastor in Bramwell. W.Va ..
Nellis , W. Y. Bluffton. Ind ..
and Floyd. Va. He is
ordained with the Bible
Methodist Co nnection of
Churches. Ohio Conference.
He and his wife, Mae,
have two children , a daughter. Constance Dewhurst
and a son. Ricky, Jr. who
is current ly emp loyed at
Overbrook Nursmg Center,
has a calling to the ministry. and plans to enroll in
Bible co llege next fall.
Constance is married to
Christopher
Dewhurst,
grandson of Buck and June
Dewhurst of Rutland. He
pastors
a
church
in
"We're making a special Fairmount, Ind.
effort to stock items with a
local connection," Brown
said.
from Page A1
The three · dealers at
Antiques on Second also buy
Middleport are also affiliated and sell antiques individualwith the store. A grand open; ng is set for Saturday. ly.
Brown said she has already
Refreshments will be served,
met
customers
from
and a store gift certificate
Illinois,
Texas
Pennsylvania,
POMEROY
The
will. be given away at 4 p.m.
The new store's wide and Washington, D.C., and Meigs County Pomona
inventory includes furniture that she will work closely Grange has chosen as its
dating from I 820 through the with other antique dealers in 2004-05 . female youth
1950s. as we II as art work. the community to promote ambassador to be Emily
' collectible items. toys ·and the area as a good destin~tion Ashley of Rocksprings.
primitives. Prices range from for antiquers.
She is the daughter of
"I have already talked to
·S2 to $1.400. Those who col·
some
of
the
other
dealers
and
Keith and Emma Ashley
lect items fmm Middleport's
we
will
se
nd
business
to
each
.
and
is currently a senior at
and Pomeroy\ past wi ll
other;·
Brown
said
.
"One
of
enjoy B'rown's offering of
Meigs Local High School.
local historical items. includ- the good things about the
Emily will attend the
ing Purity milk bottl es and a ant iqtte business is that the Ohio State Grange con framed tlnur sack from the ' more shops there are, the betvention in Hudson, where
ter it is for all of us."
Middleport Flour Co.
she will compete with
other youth chosen from
their respective countie s
in Ohio. The . competi tion
will involve a lengthy test
on Grange history. ritual.
programs. and legislation
'
alon g with parliamentary
www.mydailysentlnel.com
procedure.
Those scoring in the top
seven will then received
interviews by judges asking impromptu questions
on a wide range of topics
to determine the &lt;Jbi lity of
participants to r~memher

Author

. Possible so l ~tions In the problem might he a stop light in
Jhts area. 1 knn" th ere arc L\\P in Belpre for city &gt;treet cxtts.
Or better yet Route 6i\ I umlct' the t&gt;l'erp; t's as was t.lone during cnnstrul'lion. Or the b,•,L solutton woulu be the cloverleaf

and Congressman Ted Stric·i-1'""1
Update: It is nnw \1:.111 Tucsd"' · Oct 21i. Iunder 96 hours

(Dave Harris/photo)

no one ever does.
Crossan said she believes
"Imagined Loneliness" has a
universal appeal for both
from Page A1
adults and children. She is
other,- WtHk and in three expandi ng her Clyde and
Jones characters intt) a series.
mnntlts they h:tJ a publishing
"Surfing's Easier When
deal "ith LBF.
·Tm stil l in shnck.'' said There\ Water Involved" is a
Cru:-.~an .
who~C'
-..wries story about a woman under
" lmaQined Loneliness" ami stress who believes there's a
"Surfing's Easier W.hcn ghost in her computer.
There's Water In volved" will Cro&gt;San calls it an "openhe pubJi,hed in parts one and ended" ghost story.
"I' 111 not · boring and 1
two nf the antholu~ie~
don't
write boring stories.''
re,pect i ve Iy
•
·· Jma !.!i net.J Loncline-..o.;" is said Crossan . who submitted
a ~ton~ ahout a ~eriatric her stori es after co untless
super·Juo clllllposed of a rejections from publishers as
man nam ~d Clvd~ and hi&gt; an L"xcn.:ise in persistence.
"Emerging Voices" will be
clllerly dl)~. Jo.nc:-.. who i~
availabk
through Amazon ,
based on Crossan's dog. luy.
Clyde cl aims to heaF the Barnes and Noble and other
dog talk and is completely small bookstores LBF also
alone except for Jones. has agreed to supply Crossan
Each day they walk to get with copies of the antholoa newspaper hoping some· gies to do a book signing at a
one will speak to them but local library.

LAWYERS.

area before something can he June ·• I have wrilten to ODOT

-"·

POMEROY - The Rockspring &gt; United Methodist Church
will be &gt;erving dinner Election Day. Serving of soup, sandWiches, pte and cake wtll be served starting at II a.m.

'VOTERS'

DOESN'T
FIT.

I&lt;EEP

RACINE - An Election Day dinner will be served at the
Racine United Methodist Church. Serving will begin at I a.m.
and wtll mclude soup, sandwiches, ilnd desserts . Carry out is
available to those wl1o bring their own containers.

~ C.OLD111S05 Ol5ri!!CH ·
'CO'f,

:waiting:
. for oncomin2 tr~illil' li.l L·l~; 1 r.
. A letter cannot do tit,· pmhlcm.J Ustice.
~

Perki11 .1

Election day dinners scheduled

~AHLER

WHO 'WILL
DETERNIINE
THE OUTCOME
ON NOV. 2ND''
•

pl;~c· e to he either while

POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department will
be closed Tuesday from noon to 4 p.m. in observance of
Election Day.

y0i111g voters to the polls hy
fright ening tltcm into helkv·
ing they will be conscripted
into military :o.{.·n·icc otnd ~c nt
off to fight insurgent.s in Iraq
or Afghanistan.
Finally. there\ the KetT)
claim that. '" Alkr ncarl\ ft, ur
years onder George ·Bt"h.
the middle class is paying a
. bigger sh,tre of America\
tax burden. and the wealthiest are paying less. " That\
another h:~ lie . The fact is
that Bus '; lowered taxes
acro:-i S t lw :1nan.t.
And when 'til was said and
done, tl1l' ht ghest-carning 20
percent of Americans still
accounted for 63 perce nt of
all federal tax receipts.
accordipg to an analysis by
the nonpartisan Tax Policy
Center, compared to I0.5
percent rpr the midd le 20
percent.
The Kerry campaign. the
527 and activist organizations that support the
Democrat presidential nominee, arc persuaded that the
masses will easily fall victim
to the ir hig lies.
Just as the infamou s Nazi
propagandist ~.:ited ahovc
suggested they wou ld.

-the US33/SR681 exit.
: The first accident oc«trred here approximately 53 hours

Accident on new highway

Health Department to be closed

presidential

(./iJSfj'h

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

Local Briefs

Campaigning on 'The big lie'

The Daily Sentinel

READER'S

Wednesday, October 27,

Antique

Mr. and Mrs. Alck·aourne and eon, Ricky

-.-.
u

Grange chooses
youth ambassador

Visit us online at .
Your online
source for news

Grange knowledge as well
as to demonstrate quick
thinking under pressure.
Attending with her will
be her parents and her sister and brother-in-lawn.
Rachel and Brent Dennis.
Rachel is a· former member of Racine Grangt: . She
and her husband are the
current Ohio State Grange
Young Coup le of the Yt:ar.
Rachel wi ll als'o be one of
two youth delegates to the
state session. She is also
the president of the Ohio
State Grange G. R.O. W.
Club, which is · an organization for past male and
female
Grange
sta te
ambassadors . and .vuum!
couples or the year.
Rachel is also a past Ohio
State
Grange
female
ambassador. Her h11sband
is also serving as a · delegate from Franklin County
Pomona Grange and is an
assistant to office affairs .

.............-~Experie11ce the joy'
'-~-.
~~ · .._
of storytelli11g

Thursday, November 4th

@

7 pm

First Southern Baptist Church
•

•

presents

"I LOVE TO TELL THE STORY"

•

wfTrevor Thomas of Tam pa. Fl
&amp; Donna Wilson of Mtddleport
Musical guests ··Get Togethe(
Lon· ofTt•rinJ,t Takt•n

•' ree to Public
Pomrrol Pikt•

Ponu·ru~.

OH

740-992-6779
0

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0

•

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T(ease

Y\S'~ip

tr .'!CTITI!f at 992-.'00.'

by :\j!vcrnbcr 1st .
Limiter! tid;r•L&lt;~rc at•aililbii· i:!~.('Kif'''' pcr.&lt;on.

-COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR~

"Living Life Witli 'Diabetes"
j

• Friday, November 2. 2004

• I 0 a.m . to 2 p.m .
• Pleasant Valley Well ness Ccmcr
• Light refreshments will he provided
• Public is cordially invited

Vendors, FREE Healthcare Screenings,
Educational Information,
Promotional Items &amp; Door Prizes

·PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 27,

2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
OHSAA computer ratings, Page B2

Bush, Kerry reach across party
lines to attack on national security
ONALASKA, Wis .
.President Bush and Sen. John
Kerry accused each , other of
lacking
the
hard-nosed
resolve of Cold War presidents from Democrat
Truman
to
Republican
Reagan - reaching across
week before
party lines
Election Day to try to break
their campaign deadlock.
With
tensions
rising
Tuesday in both camps, Kerry
escalated his criticism of
Bush over explosives missing
in Iraq, asserting that the
weapons could be used
against American troops and
citizens. He accused the president of keeping the cost of
war in Iraq under wraps until
after Election Day.
"What else are you keeping
from the American people''"
Kerry said in Green Bay.
Across the state, Bush said
his rival favors ."the position
of weakness and inaction "
contrary to "the great tradition
of the Democratic Party."
A Los Angeles Times poll
showed the popular vote tied,
48-48, with Bush-weary voters open to change on Iraq
and the economy but harboring doubts about Kerry's ability to lead the nation against
terror.
· New state surveys showed
the race also knotted in
Florida,
Ohio
and
Pennsylvania, the three most
important battlegrounds in the
race for 270 Electoral College
votes.
Behind the scenes, both
campaigns tweaked their
stump speeches. advertising
strategies and get-out-thevote drives. In addition to
Wisconsin, Bush visited Iowa
while Kerry traveled to
Nevada and New Mexico all tossup states.
After spending weeks casting Kerry as a flip-flopping
liberal in TV ads, Bush
planned to close the race with
a 60-second commercial
designed to portray himself as
a trustworthy, steady leader.
The high point, according
to advisers, is a clip of a
choked-up Bush addressing
the Republican National
Convention about meeting the
children of slain U.S. soldiers
"who are told their dad ur
mom is a hero but would
rather just have their dad or
mom."
Kerry's latest ad accuses the

a

Bu•h administration of failing silly. A radio ad reminded
to serure nearly 400 tuns of Wisconsin voters that Kerry
explosives that are missing got the name of their beloved
from a military installation Green Bay Packers' football
south of Baghdad. "His Iraq •tadium wrong. Kerry recmitmisjudgments put our soldiers ed rocker Bruce Springsteen
at ri sk, and make our ruuntry to play at his rallies .
less secure," Kerry says of
In Wisronsin and a dozen or
Bush in the ad.
so other competitive states,
He said in Green Bay the mailboxes were being flooded
explosives "could be in the with campaign leatlets hands of terrorists. used to most of them negative.
attack our troops or ()ur peoA Republican National
pie."
Committee mailing features &lt;t
Vice
President
Dick picture of Jane Fonda and
Cheney responded for Bush Michael Moore, two anti-war
from Florida. saying, "It is not liberals supporting Kerry. and
at all clear- that those explo- the headline, "John Kerry's
sives were even at the · heart and soul of America?"
weapons facility when our
In Ohio, voters received a
troops arrived in the area of mailing with a picture of a
Baghdad. "
soldi er in camoutlage uniln the battle of past presi- form with the caption,
dents, Bush said Democrats "Supporting him in Iraq
·Roosevelt,Truman
and shouldn't mean shortchanging
Kennedy showed "con fidence working
families
in
and resolve in times of war America. "
Voters in New Mexico
and hours of crisis," asserting
that Kerry lacks such mettle. began getting recorded mesKerry said Presidents sages by telephone from an
Roose velt,
Truman. abortion-rights group, telling
Eisenhower. Kennedy and them Bush "has devoted four
Reagan all built strung years to dismantling a
alliances, a contrast 10 Bush woman 's right to choose."
who Kerry said "has failed in
In Pennsylvania. the state
hi s fundamental obligation as released figures that show the
COJTimander in chief to make Democratic Party registered ,
America as safe and secure as I 08.000 more new voters
we should be."
there than the GOP since the
Later. in Nevada. the April primary, good news for
Democrat appealed in both Kerry if they actually cast
Spanish and English to unde- , ballots.
cided voters. "We're in a bigBoth campaigns braced for
ger mess by the day and the a long Election. Night _ or
president can't see it or can't longer - with many legal
admit it, but ei ther way. fights. A federal judge in
America is less safe." he Miami
ruled
aaainst
0
said.
Democrats in saying Florida
Bush made a direct pitch to election officials will not be
wavering Democrats. particu- required to process incomlarly moderates unsure ahout plete voter registration forms.
Kerry.
First lady Laura Bush, who
"If you believe Ameri ca had planned to travel with her
should lead with strength and husband through Election
purpose and confidence and Day, abruptly scheduled a
resolve. 'I'd be honored to solo trip to Florida, underhave your support and I'm scoring the hard-fought battle
asking for your vote," he said. being waged in that state.
In a gesture of moderation
Former President Clinton,
aimed at the same voters, campaigning for Kerry a secBush told ABC-TV he sup- ond straight day. told Jewish
ported civil unions for homo- voters in Florida that Kerry's
sexual couples "if that's what commitment to the security of
a state chooses to do." The Israel "would be unshakable ."
remark upset some ronservati ves who not only want to
AP Political Writer Ron
amend the Constitution to ban Fournier
wrote
from
gay marriage. as does Bush. Washington, AP writer Deb
but also would bar state Rieclunamz contributed from
approval of gay civil unions. Onalaska, Nedra Pickler
Campaign pitches varied from Green . Bay and Scott
from deadly serious to almost Lind/ow from Washington.

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Prep Volleyball I Division IV District Preview

Lady 'Does set to battle Portsmouth Notre Dame
Todlly's gamH
,, .

SCOTT WOLFE

••lbllt
OMolon IV -l*l!ict - .

Sports correspondent

-tie

RACINE - This Thursday
evening at 7:30 p.m ., the
Southern Lady Tomadoe~ will
play the Portsmouth Jllotre
Dame Titans in the first round
of the district volleyball tournament at Wellston High
S~hool. Portsmouth Notre
Dame defeated LucasvilleValley 25-10. 25-15, and 2510 in three sets Saturday afternoon at Huntington High
School near Chillicothe.
After losing the first two
games last Saturday, Southern
fought its way out of the comer

d w.lt...... Hltlh 8aiiOOI

·~~Game

1 ' - Fra~ktort Adena v•.
Ht!nloCI&lt; MIW, &amp; p.m.
Gillie 2' .l!M..... WI.
- C l o y , 7:30p.m.
- p l a y Sa~al5p.m. !&gt;rille

.P/I41tld C/tllmpltlt1llhl.

.

'~~~-w·'~
~JoN. . .

Dtvtaloft tv

:IDtotrt.t ......

It well- Hltlh lldlool

Game

1 -

~nflfldgo

; :a- 2 -

,1

Pfko Eaotern vs.

Palnl Vllley, ep.m, ,
......,.. """"""'

.~Notre p,...,Mo ~-m·

vs.

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

It looks like a cloudy morn·
ing. It will be dry, except for
a spnnkle or two. The rain,
fall will finish around
7:00am with total accumula·
tions for this event near
0.29 inches. Temperatures
will hold steady around 58.
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the east.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be

cloudy. There might be a bit of
rain around the area.
Temperatures will linger at 60.
Winds will be 5 MPH from the
northeast.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)

It will continue to be cloudy.
Today's high o.f 60 will
occur around 7:00pm as
temperatures diminish to
52 by late evening. Winds
will be 5 to 10 MPH from
the northeast turning from

the north as the evening
progresses . ,
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It will remain cloudy.
Temperatures will drop from
51 early overnight to the
low for the day of 48 at
5:00am as they rise back to
53 late overnight. Winds
will be 5 to 10 MPH from
the north turning from the
northeast as the overnight
progresses.

Local Stocks
ACI- 35.28
AEP- 33.11
Akzo- 37.34
Ashland Inc. - 56.15
AT&amp;T -16.30
BLI-12.15
Bob Evans - 23.34
BorgWarner- 45.51
Champion --,- 3.56
Charming Shops- 7.46
City Holding - 33.7 4
Col- 35.82
DG - 18.57
DuPont - 41.40
Federal Mogul - .16
USB- 28.29
Gannett - 82.27
General Electric - 33.63
GKNLY - 3.97
Harley Davidson- 57.20
Kmart - 91.32
Kroger - 14.73
Ltd.- 23.95
NSC- 33.10

Oak Hill Financial- 37..47
OVB - 31.25
BBT- 40.37
Peoples- 27.15
Pepsico - 48.45
Prem ier- 9.06
Rockwell - 40 .93
Rocky Boots - 19.69
RD Shell - 53.15
SBC- 24.75

Sears- 32.91
Wai-Mart - 52.82
Wendy 's - 32.39
Worthington - 20
Dai ly stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Prep football
lhe weekly AP state
football poll list
COLUMBUS (AP) -How a state panel
of sports writers and broadcasters rates

Ohio high school football teams in tM seventh weekly Associated Press poll of
2004, by OHSAA divis1ons, with won-lost
record and total points (first-place votes in
parentheses) :

DIVISION I
1, Cin. Colerain (30) 9·0
2, Cin. St. Xavier (4) 9·0
3. Centerville (2) 9-0
4, Westerville S. 8·1
5, Cle. Glenville 6·1
6. Youngs. Austintown-Fi tch 8·1
7, Cte. St.lgnat•us 7·2
8, Lakewood St. Edward 4-5
9, Tel. St. Franc•s 8·1
10, Cin. Moeller 7-2

351
292 ·
264

I 82
160
14t
131
110
103

56

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 .
Warren Hardmg 35. 12. Uberty Twp.
La~ota E. 28. 13. Hudson 20. 14, Hill iard
Dav•dson 19. 15. Wooster 16 . 16 .
Lancaster 14.

DIVISION II
1, Avon Lake (25) 9·0
2. Cols. Brookhaven (6) 9-0
3, Macedonia Nordonia (2) 9·0
4. Springboro (2) 9-0
5, New Ph•ladelphia (1) 9·0
6. Amherst Steele 9-0
7. Cin. Withrow 9-0
B. Carrollton 6-1
9, Maumee 8-1
10, Uniontown Lake 7-2

336
310
267
223

199
148

147
104
64
40

Others receiving 12 or more points· 1 1.
Maple Hts. 23. 12. Tallmadge 18. 13. Akr.
Garl•eld 17. 14, Chardon 14 15, Day.
Carroll13. 16. LOUISville 12

DIVISION Ill
1. Steubenville (24) 9-0
2. L1sbon l;!eaver (7 ) 9-0

323
306
3, Napoleon (1) 9-0
211
4 , Cots Watterson ( 1) 8-1
199
5, Akr. Hoban (1) 8-1
184
6, Chardon NOCL 9·0
145
7. Washington C.H. Miami Trace (1) 9-0
8, Canal Fulton NW 8·1
9, Day. Chaminade-Jutienne 7-2
19. Cte. Benedletine 7·2

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

Jeff Thornton,
President
.
'

Meigs County Commissioners

looking forward to it
and I am
looking forwaru to thb
game. This
should be a
very good
game:·
Southern is led by four
seniors Brooke Kiser,
Ashley Roush, Jordan Neigler,
and Nikki Riflle. Kiser. who is
capable of the occasion kill
herself. usually finds herself as
the set-up man for the
Southern front row~veraging
over six sets ·for Kills per
game. Kiser has put up a career

of good ... etting and pav. ing

numbers for the; Racine cl ub.
Kiser is also a very good serv·Cr.
Ashcl y Rou'h i' a versatile
player who p.osse"es skills 111
all areas. but most notabl y
Roush is a good server at
crunch time. Roush had 'evera] big ..,erves from the se rvice
stripe in Saturday\ win.
Roush abo can spike well and
is good for a few kills a f!ame.
and can pass and set adnmahly.
Jordan Neiglcr is al.'&lt;t &lt;1 key
front line player for the
Tornadoes. where ~he average~
several kills a game. Shifting
roles at mid-season Ncigler has

heen a h'' ... ~n er f11r Soulhem
going Jmi II 1he 'tr~tch and ha.,
a goot.l trad\ rl'corJ of hiJ\ ing
\cry JC11 'iuc'-mth. while playinu gooLl Llckn"i vc hall.
the tina! 'cnior. N1kki Ritlle
is a solid utilitv player. getting
time in man\ area". Riffle\
milin attrihulc '" her pa ...... ing
and settinu ski lb.
Stati sti c:a II y. Kri q 1in a
Williams and Jenn1 Warner.
bt)thjllnior.... &lt;lCet)un"i t'or m:tny
of Southern\ kil" from lhe
fro m line. William\. 1er\ athletic and a greaHcapc:r.-pia;'
big up front. and can 'Pi~e

Please see Southern. 12

World Series - Red Sox 4, Cardinals 1

121

Sealed proposals for the purchase and installation of a Natural Cas
C.enerator and Electrical Supply Connections at the Racine Volunteer
Firehouse in Racine, Meigs County, Ohio, will be received by the Meigs
County Commissioners at their office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1:00 P.M. Thursday, November 18, 2004 and then at 1:15
P.M at said office opened and read aloud for the following:
Purchase and Installation of A Natural Gas Generator and Electrical
Supply Connections at the Racine Volunteer Fire Department in the
Village of Racine , M~igs County, Ohio Specifications are provided in bid
packet.
Specifications, and bid forms may be secured at the office of Meigs
County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Phone #
740-992-2895
A deposit of 0 dollars will ~e required for each set of plans and
specifications.
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond in an amount of
100% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners or by certified check, cashiers check, or
letter of credit upon a solvent bank in the amount of not less than 10% of
the bid amount in favor of the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners.
Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the official or
agent signing the bond. Bids shall be sealed and marked as "Bid for
Racine Fire Department Generator Project Bid" and mailed or delivered
to: Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Attention of bidders is called to all of the requirements contained in this
bid packet, particularly to the Federal Labor Standards Provisions and
Davis-Bacon Wages, various insurance requirements, various equal
opportunity provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and
performance bond for 1OOOfo of the contract price.
·
No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) days after the actual
date of the opening thereof. The Meigs County Commissioners reserve
the right to reject any or all bids.

to win three straight and put an
end to the Waterl'ord W1ldcats
sea•on to claim the sectional
championship.
Southern , 9- 12, is wachcd
by the husband-wife team of
Roma and Pete Sayre, with
Roma taking the Jeigns of I he
varsity program for the lifth
season. Coach Sayre heaped
praise upon Saturday's performance by the Tornadoes, saying "it\ the best team play and
most determination we have·
had all season."
·
Sayre added, "I am excited
about Thursday's game. We
are glad to be there (at the district).' I think that the kids are

114

73
59

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Hubbard 38. 12, Bellevue 29 . 13.
Thornville Sheridan 25 . 14, Cambridge 23.
15 (tie), Akr. Buchtel. Lima Shawnee 19.
H , St. Marys Memorial17 18, Cuyahoga
Falls Walsh Jesuit 16.

DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater (21) 9-0
2. Ironton {7) 9·0
3. Akr. Manchester (2) 9-0
4, Huron (1) 9·0
5, Martins Ferry {2) 9·0
6, Plain City Jonathan Alder 8-1
7, Youngs. Mooney'7·2 ·
B. Upper Sandusky 8-1
9. New Albany 8· 1
10, Orrville 7·2

327

295
244
233
222
130
102
88
41
30

Others receivmg 12 or more points : 11,
DeltA 25. 12. Bellaire 24_ 13 (tie). Urbana ,
Youngs. Liberty 23. 15 {tie) . Tontogany
Otsego, Clarksv•lle Clinton-Mass1e (1) 19
17, Versailles 14. 18. Garrett sville Garfield

For decades, a qualified team
therapists has beeh hel.pirzg ptilti1~f
from our community get from
to there as effortlessly as possible. An
· individual approach assists patients to make progress at their own pace.
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's physi~al therapy department and Ohio
University Therapy Associates have consolidated services in a larger modem
facility to provide an environment for improved continuum of care.
The new O'Bieness Memorial Hospital Rehabilitation Center is
conveniently located on the first floor of the Castrop Center at
75 Hospital Drive in Athens.
,
Progress is often marked by the construction of impresszve new facilities.
But our qua lified, caring staff measures progress in community h ealthone patient at a time.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
~~

HO!p1tal Onvc, Alhcn1. OH 4~70 1·ZJ02

(7-+0); 9 3·~.55 1

• 11\\'".ohltneu.orll

13
DIVISlONV
1, Amanda-Ctearcreek (24) 9-0
2, Marion Pleasant (5) 9·0
3, Hamler Patrick Henry (2) 9-0
4, Findlay liberty-Benton (1) 9·0
5, Gates Mills Gilmour (2) 9-0
6, Bluffton 9·0
7, Sl. Henry 8·1
8. Lees Creek E. Clinton (·1) 9-0
9, N. LimaS. Range 8-1
10. Mineral Ridge 8- 1

331
300
245
21 1
181
136
127
84
65
54

Others receiving 12 or more points: 1 1
Liberty Center 34. 12, W. Liberty-Salem
20. 13, Wheelersburg 18. 14, Columbiana

Cresi'Jiew 17. 15, S_mithvllle 16. nf' '
Johnstown Northridge 15. 17. Middletown
Fenwick 14 16, W. Latayette Ridgewood
12.
I'

DIVISlONVl
1, Columbus Grove (28) 9-0
340
2, Oola Hard1n Northern (4) 9-0
303
3, New Matamoras Frontier (3) 8-0 257
4, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 9-0 227
5, Sandusky St. 'Mary 8-1
170
6, Monroeville 8-1
167
7, Mechanicsburg 8·1
148
8, New,rk Cath. 7-2
69
9. Glouster Trimble 8·1
48
10, Hicksville 8-1
44
Others receiving 1:2 or more po1n1s. 11,
Danville 34 . 12 , Mogadore 24. 13 (lie).
Willow Wood Symmes Valley, R•chmond
Hts. 18. 15. leetoni·a 14
·

Red Sox a win away from endJng 'The Curse'
BY BEN WALKER
Associated Press
ST LOUIS - Get ready,
Boston. There's no other
Pedro
outcome
now:
Martinez, Manny Ramirez
and the Reel Sox will either
win the World Series or add
another historic collapse to
their le~end.
They II either reverse The
Curse that's plagued the
team since 11)1~ or they'll
fall apart, just as they did the
last tour times thev 'got this
· close.
Martinez made his longawaited Series debut a special one. bailed out when
Ramire7 and David Ortiz
uid as nwch damage with
their arms as bats. Backed
by the surprising show of
defense, Boston cruised past
St. Louis 4-1 Tuesday mght
for a 3-0 lead and · left a
crowd that
love• its
C&lt;trdinals booing the home
team.
Until .this October. it was.
considered almost impossible for any baseball team to
recover from slll;h a deficit
in the postseason. No one
had ever done it - that is.
until the Red Sox bounced
back to stun New York in
the AL championship series.
And now, after bemg only
three outs away from getting
swept last week, Boston is
on the verge of sweeping the
club that led the majors in
wins th is year and claiming
the ultimate prize.
Derek Lowe will try to
finish it off Wednesday
night, with Jason Marquis
starting Game 4 for St.
Louis.
Pitching a day after hi s
33rd birthday. Martinez
threw seven inmn~s of
shutout ball. holdin-g the

limp Cardinals 10 three hits
and retiring his final 14 batters.
Ramirel put Martinez
ahead with a first-inning
horner and the three-time Cy
Young winner held it.
helped by superb defense
and shaky baserunning.
Added up , the Red Sox set a
team record with their seventh straight postseason
win. bettering the streak of
six capped off by Babe
Ruth ·s win in the II) 16
Series.
That Martinez won was
hardly
amazing.
That
Boston's defense contributed was downright
shocking.
The Red Sox made eight
errors and still won the first
two games. This time, they
were flawless in the field -·
and maybe even better than
that.
Ramirez threw out Larrv
Walker at the plate frutn let't
field to end the first inning.
The lumbering Ortiz. in the
lineup because Boston did
not have the DH slot, alert!~
caught losing pitcher Jeff
Suppan later.
Combined with a muple
of more two-out runs. the
Red Sox were home free.
Ramirez wa., the MVP of
the first inning. by far.
After getting some pine
tar from the top of his gooey
batting helmet, he hit a solo
home run with two outs into
the loge level in left field.
Ramirez was familiar with
Suppan. going 7-for-18 with
three homers against hi s former team mate.
But Ramirez's arm did
even more d;tmage to St.
Louis in the bottom half.
A pair of walks wrapped
around a slow-rolling smgle

Please see Curse, 12

Boston Red Sox's Pedro Martinez pitches aga1nst the St. Louis Card1nals
Game 3 of the World Series Tuesday 1n St. Lou1s. (AP Photo I

Ohio Prep Football Notebook

1n

the first 1nn1ng of 1

College Socc~r

A fresh start beckons for Rio Grande sweeps
playoff teams next week AMC soccer honors
BY RusTY MtLLER
Associated Press
For three of every four
Ohio high school football
players, the season ends this
weekend. The rest are hoping
it's just getting started.
And some are already laying·the ground work for what
m1ght happen weeks from
now.
Cincinnati St. Xavier's
John Osbome kicked a 25yard field ~oal with 44 sec. onds left. gtving the Bombers
a 13-10 win over Cleveland
St. Ignatius last weekend in a
game pitting the state's No.3
and No . 4 teams.
Both teams have already
qualified f()r the postseason.
raising the possibility of a
rematch.
"In a couple of wee J..&gt;. our
retards will both be 0-0 and
then you really have to play."
St. Ignatius coach Chuck
Kyle said. "We 'll both see if
live weeks from now we can

get together again ...
STREAKY: Rootstown,
after going 4-36 the last four
years, is now 8- 1: Josh
Brooks ran fur 183 yards and
three touchdowns a;, Sebring
McKinley broke losing
streaks of 53 games in the
Tri-County League and 36
games at home with a 39-7
win
over
Salineville
Bascom
Southern;
Hopewell -Loudon has a
ch&lt;mce to go I0-0 for the first
time in school history when it
take&gt; on Fremont St.
Joseph's:
Cincinnati
Withrow has won its last 15
games since starting last seasun 0-4; and Middletown
defeated
Cincinnati
Princeton for the first time in
· 14 years, 31-2 1 -the most
points the Middies have
scored in the series since
1967.
RUSH TO JUDGMENT:
Sandusky's Ron Pickens
rushed for 347 yard;, to set
t.hc sch(XJI single-game
record - and also snapped

Please see Fresh, 12

sports@ mydailysen tinel co!n
CEDARVILLE
University of Rio Grande
tea mmates Simon Care1
and Andrew Moore wer~
named
the
American
Mideast Conference men·,
socce r Players of the Week
for the week of Octo her 17 2.1. The duo he lped tlw
NAJA's :-.in . I ranked
Redmen w hack -h' · ra,·k
'hutnuh in A~IC South
Di1·i,in n mat~·hc, .
Carn. a fo-.1 'cnior Jnr''ard. captured the top
o ffcn~in~ hon or hv ..,l·orinl!
four goal&gt; and hai1ding otlt
·twu u..,~i~t:-. on the \\eek. He
had two goals and llnc 'a"i"
in a 6-0 Yictory ove r
Malone and two goah with
an as&lt;i st in a 7-0 win ver""
L!rbana ,
Moore. a 6-1 ·freshman
goalkeeper. wa&lt; the defen ,i,·c Pi aver of the Week . He.

nne

rn;Jd L'

STAFF REPORT

the season mark with I. 756
yards- in a 4-l-24 win over
Lima Senior: Paul Bowen
carried 4 I times for 30J
yards and 2 TDs as Lakota
East moved to 9-0 for the
first time ever in a 38-15 win
over Lakota West: Logan
Moore ran for 270 vards on
30 can·ies tn -Castalia
Margarcua ·s 2~-25 loss to
Clyde: "Kenton Sneed rushed
for 247Jards and two TDs in
Fairlie! \ 40-1-1 win over
Hamilton: Bellcvttc 's Grc~
Keys had 246 rt!Shing yards
and three TDs in a 3fo-29 win
over Upper Sandu&gt;ky:
Jamarro
Spikes
of
Ashtabula Lakc&gt;idc nt;,hcd
'for 2-!4 yards on 26 carries
and scored 011 nms of 60 and
66 yards in a 26-20 victory
over Conneaut: Napoleon's
Brad Weawr gained 212
yards in a 21-0 victory over
Marion Harding ; Mansfield
Senior's Ton'v Shaw rushed·
for 202 yards'on 39 carries in

..,a,('
and
ro,teu the
'ilutout l'er"L~'- \L.tlnne .
\1 &lt;lore made

Moore

75 minute~
i 11 the dt·c:i . . in n agJirht
L'rr.tiHL
\1 oure haJ
p r ~o.' \ 1 1111.., l ~
tht:

\\011

.\\IC dckn ...,1\C

Pl~t\e r .

of th,· Week
hlHHH

Ill

Septemhe r.

R

I

0

Grande•

''

current!\·

er-

1-l·0- 1 ()\
alland5-0-1
in the o\\!C S0uth. ,.~ ,ring
atop lilc' d11 l'l&lt;' n
Th~
Red men Ia~· ~ Sh.111 nc'&lt;' State
Tu~:da\ . 1n ~" ri'~nnuth .
Kll:k-olt " set I&lt; 1 . I .m.
Carey

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Curse
from Page B1
bv Albert PuJoh loaded the
base&gt; wnh one out and the
ballpark hoped for somethtng
big With the crowd stand1ng
and the stad1um organ pump
mg catcher J 1son Varnek
made hJ&gt; second tnp to the
mound to 1 Jsll '&gt;1trunez
Edmonds lofted 1 tl} bill
to shallow lett ,md W tlker
dec1ded to make 1 run tor 11
but Ranmez w l' equ 1! to the
challenge md 111 1de a 1 Jctu
rate thro11 home V lfllck did
h1s part wllh 1 dew) st md
mg as t there 11 1s no pit)
before sudden!) catdu •e the
ball and slappm. on the ta.
MartJneL pumped h1s list

Southern
from Page B1
With authont) W lhams also
can Jack up the aces \lith a
Wicked and relt tbl e sene
Willtams 11oor pia) and se,er
a! dtgs on Saturday compl1
mented her great se r' mg
effort
On mghts "hen Jennv
Warner has her cont1dence she
ts as good as they come
Warner JS a solid sp1ker and
good defenSJ\e player tor the
Tornadoes She 1s among the
team leaders m ktlls and
blocks JOtnmg Wtlhams as a
good one two punch for

Fresh
from Page B1
a loss to Wooster Lockland s
Brandon Gnssom rushed lor
200 yards and 4 TDs and had 2
mtercepttons m a 26 14 wm
over Cincmnau Countf) Day:
and Jeff Carcell rushed for 206
yards and three TDs on 18 car
nes and 1unnm;mate Lu1s
Zayas addet.l ~{')) y 1rds and
four TDs on 26 c 1rnes 111
Geneva s 49 20 wm o\er
Ashtabula Edge"ood
MAKING ( \IRI WAVES
Lex mgton s Greg Thornton
tossed lour TD )lasses m a 41
16 wm over Mtllersburg West
Holmes Ben Hoyer threw for
311 yards and three TDs tor

then ga1 e a mce tr1 p 11 on
the b tck to Walker Ius old
their
teammilt€
fmm
Montre tl da) s
Ahead I 0 Bu&gt;ton thd ll
agam wnh dcteme m the
thtrd
Supp lll started t 11 1th 1
s11 1ng•ng bunt smgle md
Edgar Rentena hn .t double
that sent Ntxon shdmg feet
ft"t u1to a warnmg trtck pud
die a pr ttfall nght mit of 1
Wet&amp; Wild R1de&amp;Siide
A~ Jill the nowd t 1me to
1ts teet sensmg the bte h1t
that St Lou1s needed Walke1
1nstc td rapped a weak
" rounder to second basem 111
Ma1k Bellhorn wh ch should
h lW e tsily been enou h to
1d1 1ncc the runners and
score the tymg run
Supp 111 howe1er m tde 1
qL&gt;Jck break lor the plate and

.

-

Southem
Jumor Beth tn) Rtltlc 1s t
ke) component to Southern s
sconng attack She IS an excel
lent passer and a gre II setter
Rillle IS also t cap tble scorer
I rom the sef\ tee 'tnpc
Several other tumors otl the
bench are Selena Spencer
Kas1e Sellers Lmda Eddy and
Enn Wise Spencer IS a good
tloor player and 1 good server
"!tile Wise offe rs ex peruse m
those categones as well
Sellers tS a good t1oor plaver
and offers depth on the front
row Eddy 1s a mce sef\ er and
offers some depth m passmg
and settmg
Amber Htll who enJoyed 1
solid season on the reserve
team ts up on the lafSJty now
and gtves Southern more depth
Cmcmnatt Htlls Chnsttan
Academy m a 41 14 wm over
Hamilton Badm Pandora
Gilboa s Stephen G1ll complet
ed 24 of 37 passes for 374
)ards and 3 IDs m a 42 21
loss to Dola Hardm Nonhero
and Westlake s Jon Bro11 n 1s
compleung 68 percent at hts
passes thi s season for 2 433
ymds md 26 touchdown s
NOTEWORTHY H 1mler
Patnck Hen ry coach Bill
In selman earned h1 s IOOth
career wm when the Patnots
beat Delphos Jefferson 46 0
New Bremen s 26 0 wtn O\er
Delphos St John s guaranteed
the Ctrdmtls ltrst wtnnlll 0
regular se 1son smce 1997 and
the ltrst pltVotl appearance
smce 1989 md Applecreek
Waynedale s B1ll Sede1 wnn

stopped wh1le Rentena took
ott tor third OrtiZ c wght
Bell horns throw took a sec
oml and then not1ced the
Ca1 dmah confusiOn on the
b 1\C\
Orttz made a perfect throw
1u "" the dtamond to nml
Supp 111 tnd a grounder by
Pujoh ended the mnmg tnd
bl(mght out the boos
Btll Mueller and Ntxon hu
consecutll e doubles With two
outs 111 the loutth and Boston
scored twJcc 111 the I !I th ltlt
4 0 lead
R tmHel s1ng led home a
lUll and Mueller later ch tsed
Suppan wuh an RBI s1nele
&lt;\I th 11 pmnt I0 of Boston s
' 0 1uns 111 the Senes had
com~ "lth 1110 outs
St LoUis lone run w ts 1
homer b) W tlker oil Keuh
Foulke Ill the unth tnn11~

!1\t:\erd uets

Tl\o l1c shmen have \\Orked
the 1r "a&gt; mto the Southem
Ime up and h t\e put up some
1ery good numbers 111 a shon
penod ol tune WhJtney R file
IS l (;OOd p lS&gt;el llld hIS a
boommg dece1' mg sene
R1ttle helped Southern ~et Jnto
a rhythm 111 Saturda) s wm
while the 1 q athletiC Ashley
Robte 1s good tt man) pos1
uons Robie can JUmp and
defend t"O keY qu&lt;thttes of a
front line player She 1s also an
excellent sptker
Notre Dame offers a veteran
club that retlected 1ts strength
m
the
Southern
Oh1o
Conterence th1s past season
The Titans offur some SIZe and
play a.sohd 11oor game accord
mg to the scoutmg reports
hts IOOth oareer game 34 0
over Creston Norwayne
FRONTIER DEFENSE
In Ne..- Matamoras Front1er s
14 7 ftrst ever wm over
Monroe Central Jake Amos
broke oft 1 72 ) ard run at the
5 02 mark olthe thiid penod to
rail&gt; the Cougars from a 7 6
dehcil Twenty one seconds
later Amos mtercepted a
Dexter Hughes pass to thwart
the Semmoles It was Amos
second mterceptton of the
game
Teammate Mttch Wnght
&lt;tlso played a key role m the
Cougms defens1ve scheme bv
recovenng 1 fumble early m
the game and eommg up with
m mte1 ceptton the fourth m the
game With 18 6 seconds
rem unmg

Estate Case Number

04CV059
The Bank of New York
Plaintiff
vs
Pamela Bentz et al

Defendants
Court
Pleas

of

Common

Excepttng

there

from that part of sa1d
real estate occupted
by an outdoor chtm

ney being part of the
dwelltng house of
Ruth E Massar also
excepting an ease
ment to enter on the
real estate of Stella E

Meigs County Ohto

Kloes for the purpose

In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me

directed from satd

of mamtammg the
real estate of Ruth E
Messar and for the

Court In the above
entttled action I wtll
expose to sale at
pubhc auction on the

repa1nng and dotng
other work on the
present or any future

front steps of the
Metgs County Court
House on Fnday Dec

3 2004at 1000am
of satd day the fol
lctwmg descrtbed real
estate
The followtng real
estate $ttuated m the

Vtllage of Po me roy
County of Metgs and
State of Ohio and

purpose of pamtlng

dwelling house local
ed thereon all of
wh1ch was conveyed

to Ruth E Messer by
Stella E Ktoes by
deed dated 10 May
1954

recorded

1n

Deed Book 178 Page
245

Metgs county
Deed Records refer
ence to wh1ch IS here

by made

bounded
and
descrtbed as follows
Begmnmg at the
east part of Lot No
376 whtch IS a tnan
gular shapelet wh1ch

Current
Owner
Pamela Bentz et al

lien n the angle
between Mulberry

Prtor
Reference

and Anne Streets tn

satd

V liage

of

Pomeroy and whtch

was deeded to Millie
C Boett by Cathenne
Kuppu and Frank
Kuppu by deeds
dated 1877 and 1885
respectively except
the west end of said
lot no 376 whtch was
hereto fore sold to

Eve L Simms and
conveyed by deed
doted May 7 1919
For a full description
of
the
waatern
boundary Of the Ita!
arn port ol thta lot no
378 hareby conveyad
refarence Ia heraby
made to l!va ~
Blmma dHd racord
td In Volume 117
Page 543 of lht
record• of dHdt Of
Melgl Counly OhiO
Tne
foregoing
btlng lhl 11m1 ••
lrtntltrrtd 10 llelll
I Kloll !rom Mary A
M1111r by Certilloete
o1 Tl'lnlftr rtoordtd
In DHd look 171
1'1g1 403 Mtlge
Counly
Dttd
Reoordl reference lo
which 11 hereby
m1d1

Property at
147
Mulberry St
Pomeroy Ohoo 45769
PP# 16-Q1100
Deed
Volume

122 Page 276
Appratsed at $15 ooo
Terms
of
Sale
Cannot be sold for

less than 2/3rds of
the appra1sed value
10% down on day of
sale cash or cerhfted
check balance on
confirmation of sale

Ralph E Trl(ssell
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the
Plaintiff
Lerner Sampson &amp;

Rothfuos
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati
Ohio
45201 5408
120 Eaat 4th St 81h
Floor
Clnolnnetl
Ohio
45202 4007
113-241 3100
(10) 27 (11) 3 10
Public Netta•
lhtrlfl 1111 R11t
111111 Ctta Number
D4CV21
Home Nellanel lenk
Pillnllll

VI

Helra al Tony Wtlon
Delendlntt
COU"T 0' COMMON
P~I!AS
Mtlga

County Oh o

sa1d centerline South

In pursuance of an

Order of Sale to me
dtrected from satd
Court m the above

00 deg 58 27 West
pass1ng thru 518 tron
ptns set at a dtstance

entitled act on I wtll

of 17 421eet and at a
dtstance of 136 77

leve po nts per game (top e ght teams n each eg on advance

DIVISION I
Region 1-1 War en Had ng (7 2) 26 8027 2 Young
Aust ntown F tch (8 1J 26 7316 3 C eve St gnat us (7 2)
246575 4 Soon(81)228222 5 Cleve Genve(BI )
22 6666 6 St ongsv e (7 2) 19 0111 7 ShaKe Hts (7 2)
18 9165 8 Mentor (6 3) 16 6888 9 lakewood St Edwa d (4
5 149240 10 Noth0msted(63) 143666
Region 2-1 To DeSales (8 t ) 26 9777 2 Hudson {8 1}
22 5166 3 Mass Jackson (6 3) 19 2944 4 G een (7 2}
186833 5 Brunswck (72) 173111 6 Canl McKnley (63}
161444 7 Cant Gen0ak(63)153388 8 Tel St Johns(6
3) 14 2388 9 Tol Wh me (6 3) 13 9277 10 E Y a (4 5)
10 3 11
Region 3-1 Weste v le South (8 I} 24 2722 2 Dub n
Sc oto (7 2) 23 8500 3 Worth ngton K lbou ne (7 2) 22 0333
4 Lancaste (7 2}21 2111 5 HI ad Oav dson (8 1) 21 0756
6 Woeste (8 1) 18 2888 7 Toy (6 3) 6 6277 8 Gahanna
L nco n (6 3) 16 4444 9 Dubl n Collman (6 3) 5 4444 10
Newa k (7 2) 15 2500
Regon4-1 Cn St Xave (90)353227 2 Gene v e 9
0) 32 6558 3 C n Co e an (9 0) 28 2500 4 C n Moe c (7 2
27 8830 5 C n La Sale (6 3) 23 ~777 6 C n E de (6 3}
230611 7 LbetyTwp Lakoa E (90)2 1 7944 8 W Chese
Lakota W (7 2) 2 6666 9 C a)/ton No hmo I 8 1 20 0500
TO Mason (7 2) 18 54 44

expose to sale at
public auction on the

dtslance of 137 15

feet and gotng a total

DIVISION 11

DIVISION ll1

E-Mail
s p o r t s ® m y d a l l y t r f b u n e com
Fax numb•r
446-31008
Sport• lin•
446-231431
• x t 33

It's that easylll

Begtnning at a point

hundred

feet

from the East comer
of what ts known as

December 3 2004 at
10 30 am

of satd

South hne of Fractton

seda of Park Street a

day the followmg

No 1 North 83 deg
53 58 West passtng

distance of siKty two
(62) feet
thence

thru a 5/8 Iron p n set
at a diStance ot

descrebed real estate

SOLD SEPARATELY
AS 3 PROPERTIES
(EACH
TO
BE
APPRAISED
AND
SOLD SEPARATE~Y)
PARCEL NO 1
(Property Address
29337
SR
124
Langsvttle OH 45741}
TRACT ONE Beong
a part of a tract of
land transferred to
Leon Carol Pterce as
recorded tn Deed

Book 267 at Page 9
Meogs
County

Recorders
Offtce
Metgs County Ohto
also betng a part of
Fracl on
No
1
Township 8 North

Range

15

West

143 02 feet and gotng
a total distance of
150 33 feet to the
prmc1pal potnt of
begmnlng conta1nlng
0 3678 acres more or
less subJect to all
legal easements and

nghts of way
Bearmgs
are
assumed and are for
the determmatton of
angles only
The above descnp
t1on was prepared
from an actual survey

po nt on the South

owned by the Ohto

hne of satd Fractton

Power Company as
shown by the records

No

t

assumed

whtch
to

Is
bear

North 83 deg 53 58

West a dtstance of

3396 69 feet from the
Southeast corner of

said Fraction No 1
Township 8 North
Range 15 Wool
Thence
leaving
told South line and
along tha Weot line of
11id tract at recorded
tn Dttd Book 287 II
P1go II North 08 deg
03 47 E11t 1 dio
tinct a! aa 110 flit to
• point In lhe center
lint ol Stoll Aoutl
124

Thence
iuvlng
uld Wut line ond
olong thl oenttr line
Of IIIII Aoull t 24
North 74 dog 43 15
1111 puelng thru 1
P K n1li 111 11 1 dia·
lance of 2 74 flit 1nd
going I lOIII diiiiMOI
Of 148 31 !HI tO I
point
Thence
luvlng

In the Meogs County
Recorders Otftce
Reference
Deed

Volume 25 Page 269
Metgs County Off cia!
Records

Auditor s Parcel
No 13 00565 001
TRACT TWO

An

••••mant tor the eole

purpoota of place
ment of 1 public

w1ter t1p 1nd meter

end the ptaugo ol
Wlltr lbOVI lend
end/or lhrough 1 aye
lim ot plptt over 1
ltriP. ot land ttn 1111
tD) In width 11 more
utly dtacrlbtd In
Oren! ot luement
recorded In Volume
21 Plgt 271 Metgo
County
Otllcfat
Recorda
PARCI~
NO
2
(Properly Addrtlt
~41
Park ltrttl
Mlddltporl
OH
45780)

l

r-..... ••••• ._- •••
a &lt;I..'C.I

"-2

and that you make

JOYCE DAVIS ET AL

return of your pro
ceedlngs to our satd
Court Wlthtn SIXty
days from this date
and have you then
and there thiS wnt

Defendants

WITNESS my stg

nature as Clerk of our

said

Court

of

Case No 33129
Amended Nottce by
Pubhcahon

TO

Iva

Durst

Carpenter
Durst Mtldred
Circle Robert
Tom Durst

Rude
Durst
Durst
Olive

South and at nght

Marlene Hamson

Carpenter

angles with Park
Street to the South

Clerk
By Doane Leport
Deputy
CURRENT OWNER

line of property for

merly owned by
Moddleport Brtck Co
thence Northeasterly

along the South lme
of

the

former

Middleport Brick Co
property to a pomt
dtreclly South of the
beginning point for
thts
descrtptton
thence North to the
place of begtnntng

beong a lot lacing
stxty two (62} feet on
w1dth South to the

Excepttng the coal
known as the No 4
Clanon or Ltmestone
coal and certatn mtn
mg nghts that are

11 ....

27th Day of August
2004

C

Surveyor #6844

.:»"""

at Pomeroy Ohto thts

extending

Salem
Township
Metgs County State
of Oh1o and more
particularly
descnbed as follows
Begennmg at a

.:..__••••• .....,

Durst
Randall
Talbott Zelia Durst
Boyd Joy Boyd Reva
Jean Taylor Std
Durst
Eber

made on the 7th day
of December 1988 by
Thomas Smtih
Ohto
Professtonal

DIVISION 'II
Region 21- Man oev e (8
14 7000 2 St May Cell a
Ca hO c (8 1 4 3833 3 No v.a k S Pau 7 2) 12 5000 4
Ma ve n 6 3)
5055 5 Mogado e 6 3 t 4284 6 Lee on a
t7 2 10 5724 7 C e e C ya Hts (7 2 9 9833 8 A chmond
Hts(72 97 49Wndham ::.4 9083310Wesv e(54)
8 7256
Region 22 1 Co umous G eve 9 0) 6 3722 2 Bascom
Hopewe La don 9 0 5 6722 3 H ci( sv [e 8 1 14 0777 4
~27
::&gt; \lie Co no o 3 9 3833 6
A ca Seneca Eas {7 2
Pando a G boa 54) 8 59ol4 7 Duf Aye
e 54) 8 2500 8
Edge on 4 5 7 6055 9 Con y C es ew
4 "5055 10
De phos Jette so 5
6 26 1
Region 23- Ne Ma an v as F on e 8 0 7 6660 2
Neva k Ca (7 2 5 2777
W ow Wood Symmes Va ey (7
1 3 6890 4 Lane F she Ca h 6 3
3 4000 :J G o ste
T nb e (8 1 2 86
o Za es Rcsec ans 7 2) 12 0000 7
Ma on Ca h 7 2
2722 8 Bea sv e 6 2 0 2835 9
Danv e (7 2) 9 7166 0 Cen e bu g
5 9 2222
5 J3&lt;l4 2 Do aHa d n
Region 24- Meeha n csb g 8
Nothern (9 o 4 4000_._t3 DeG at R ve s ::le
2 0 7222 4
New B emen (6 3 0 3500 5
o~ C
&lt;; a
6 3 9 3500 6
Sp ng Ca h Cen (5 4 a 3222
C n Ct'J n y Day (6 3
8 0200 8 Lock and 6 3 6 8?68 9 Un on C y M ss ss nawa
Va ey 4 5) 6 7676 0 Way nes t P. d Go hen 6 3 6 3388

E-mail us, fax us or phonE In your game !EpOI'tsl

No 1
Thence along the

Metgs County Court
House on Fnday

feet to a pomt on the
South Ime of Fracteon

ta

Region 9-1 Ak on Hoban (8 1) 24 5777 2 C eve
Bened c1 ne (7 2) 23 5041 3 Cha don ND Cathect a La n [9
OJ 20 7266 4 Cuya Falls Walsh Jesu t (6 3) 19 9325 5
Hubbo d (8 01 9 3500 6 Mentor Lake Calh 17 ~1 18 9944 7
Hunt Va ley Un v School {7 2) 18 8524 8 Med na H gh and (7
2) 6 9335 9 Med na Buckeye (6 2 16 9140 10 Akron
Such e 7 2) 15 3333
Region 1o-1 Napo eon (9 o 25 2500 2 Cos Wane son
8 1) 23 7833 3 L ma Shawnee (8 1 21 5000 4 Be levue (8
1)214500 5 Cos Easmoo Acaa (81 189166 6 Cyde(7
2) 156277 7 Cos DeSaes (54) 150055 8 Sunbuy Bg
Wa nut (6 3 14 9055 9 Cos Beechc oft (8 1 14 ... 823 0
Pembe v 1e Eastwood (a 1 14 6722
Region 1 ~-1 S eubenv le (9 0) 30 3924 2 L sbon Be ave
9 O) 26 4972 3 Can a Futon N W (8 1 20 a555 4 Tho nv e
She dan (8 1 18 1333 5 Camb dge (7 1) 17 5460 6 Be o t
West B anch (31 ) 160055 7 MeA lhu V non County (7 2)
15 ta88 8 A ance (7 2) 4 8500 9 Dove {7 2) 14 5347 10
Wnesv e tndanCeek: 72)135198
Region 12-1 Day Cham Ju enne (7 2 20 0050 2 St
Ma ysMemo a 81 196000 3 Cn lndanH (8 1 190666
4 Wash CH M am T ace 9 0) 8 6888 5 Be book (7 2)
18 505 6 C c ev e 7 2) 17 4777 7 A chb shop Ate 7 2)

the McVey Brtck Yard
Lot on South side of
Perk Street thence
West on the South

front steps of the

DIVISION V
Region 17Ga es M s G mou Acad 9 0) 20 2444 2
M ne a A clge 8 1 19 5888 3 Roo stown (8 1 6 66 1 4
co umb ana C es v ew 8 1 16 5800 5 Sm hv e 8 )
5 5755 6 Da ton 8 ) 4 5802 7 Lab ae (6 3 13 93 6 8 N
L ma S Ra ge (8 1) 13 8075 9 Bu on Be ksh e 7 2
1 5698 10 New M dd e own Sp ngfed (7 2
0855
Reg on 18-1 Home Pa ck He ry 90) 193611 2
L be y c
8 1) 7 5333 3 Buff on (9 0) 6 6277 4 Ashland
c estv ew (8 t 15 8833 5 She wood Fa v ew (7 2) 14 6000
6 F nd ay L be ty Benton {9 O) 14 0555 7 Sycall)o e Mohawk
(7 2) 11 7944 8 De phos Sl Johns 6 3) 0 7055 9 Del
T no a (54) 9 3000 10 Hav and Wayne T ace (54) 8 8
Region 19-1 Amanda C ea creek (9 0 23 8058 2
Whee e sbu g 8 1 9 000 3 Johnstown No thr dge {9 0}
82011 4 W La fayete Rdgewood (at 162 500 5
Johns own Mon oe 8 ) 15 16
6 Chesapeake 7 2)
4 9653 7 Ne som e Yo k (6 3 14 66
a 0 d Wash
Buckeye T a {6 3) 14 4844 9 C ooksv e (7 2) 13 666 10
Steub Cath Cen 5 4 1 9683
Reg on 20- Lees C eek E C r. on 9 0) 19 9948 2 West
L be 1y Sa em 9 0 17 7277 3 Ma o P easa 9 0 17 3888
4 Ch
Za e T ace 8 ) 5 7055 5 Cos Ha t ey 6 2
5 2720 6 8 shop Fenw ck 7 2 14 9488 7 S Hon y B )
14 6888 8 Sh ode Pa de a Acaden y 7 2 13 9444 9 Anna
1 13 7373 0 A canum 7 2) 2 58 B

Region 5-1 Macedon a No don a 9 0 24 1 1 2
Ta madge (8 1) 23 3277 3 Ak on Garfed (8 ) 21 5222 4
Copley 7 2) 21 2666 5 Map e His (8 1) 20 8555 6 Gart e d
He gh s (8 1) 9 1587 7 W oughby Sou h (7 2) 18 4222 8
Chardon (7 2) 181944 9 Olmsted Fa s (6 3) 17 1111 10
Pa ma No mandy (7 2) 16 9000
Region 6-1 Avon Lak:e (9 0) 22 2000 2 Maumee 8 t
22 0944 3 Amhers S ee e (9 O) 21 6508 4 To Cent Calh
72) 215055 5 Sylvana Southvew (81) 191722 6
Oentangy Lbe ty (7 2) 191055 7 Sprng Shawnee (7 2
16 6166 8 Tlfn Coumban (7 2) 153611 9 0 egan Cay (7
2) 14 8944 10 Lew s Cente 0 en1angy (54) 14 7000
Region 7Cols B ookhaven (9 0) 22 5654 2 New
Ph adelph a 9 0 22 2720 3 Un onlown lake 7 2) 22 2 11
4 Ca o ton (8 1) 21 1055 5 Peke ngton Cent a (8 1)
2106116 CosMa onFankln(81)2025707 Canted 6
3) 60277 8 Lousvle [7 2) 131166 9 Cos We. nul Rdge
(54) 12 2717 10 Pataska a Walk ns Memo a (7 2) 11 0402
Region 8-1 Sp ngbo o (9 0 28 1 500 2 C n W throw 9
0) 26 9000 3 Day Ca ott (8 1) 23 0444 4 K ngs M Is K ngs
(7 2) 20 6722 5 C n G en Este 8 ) 19 2055 6 Norwood 8
1) 19 1222 7 C n Ml Hee thy (7 2) 17 3888 8 Jackson (7 2)
16 3888 9 Da)l Dunbar (7 2) 5 7833 10 Ch cothe 54)
15 3444

....,;;...-. • .,,"V~

Park

Street

at

and

that

ltne of the Moddleport
Brtck Company prop
erty

Setd property for
merly being Lower
Pomeroy but now a

part of the lncorpo
rated Vollage of
Mtddleport
Meigs
County Ohoo
Reference

Deed

Volume 16 Page 811
Metgs County Official
Records
Auditors

Parcel

Nos
15 01477 000
and 15 01478 000
(LOT 3) lltao a
1974 Cameron mobile
homo I D f0735788H
Ohio Certllictlt of
Title f5300048782 I
copy of which 11
11techod hereto and
made 1 plrt hereof
To m1kt tha oumt
11 hereinabove 111
out tudgmtnt with
the ttld tn111111
thereon and aolle
1foreeald end thlt
you 1110 ply the
cotta of lhia wril tnd
ail lncreue end
aoorutng 00111 and
lht r11ldu1 If ony
there be you bring
inlo thil Court to
obldt lht further
ordor of the Court

Common Pleas and

the seal of satd Court

Hetrs of Tony Welsh

Property at 1 ) 341
Park
Street
Mtddleport OH 45760
2) 29337 SR 124
~angsvtlle OH
3) 1974 Cameron
Mobile Home
PP# (1} 1501478 &amp;
15 01477 (2} 13
00565 001
Pnor Deed Reference

(I ) Volume 16 Page
811
(2 } Volume 25 Page
269
(3 ) Certtftcate o!Tttle
#5300048762
Appraised at (1 )
341 Park Street
$5 000 00 (2 } 29337
SR 124 $5 000 00 (3)
1974 Cameron Mobtle
Home St 000 oo
Terms

of

Sale

Cannot be sold for
tess lhan 2/3rds of
the appra1sed value
10% down on day of
sale cash or cert1f1ed
check balance on
confirmation of sale

Ralph E Trussell
Meigs County Sheriff
Attarney lor the
Plaintiff
Llttla Shatto &amp;
Worner 213 Eut
Second
Pomeroy Ohio 457811
(740) 11112 8588
(10)27(11)3 10
Public Notice
IN TH! COMMON
PLIAI COURT 0,
MIIOI
COUNTY
OHIO PAOS.TI DIVI
liON
JOYCI
CAVil
Adminlttrotrtx of the
!IIIII Of ,rtdl
Ctrponttr DtOitatd
Pie inti!!
VI

Carpenter

Dana

Eugene

Carpenter
Anna
Hatnes Dana Eugene
Hames
Anzona
Carpenter
Lemay
Gen Curt1s Lemay

Velma Lemay Scherr
Lloyd
~emay
Leonard

Lemay

Methyli

Lemay

Kmnear
Dorsa
Carpenter Deal and
Macel
Mtller
Schumaker tf hvtng
whose addresses are
unknown to Platnt ff
and w1th reasonable

diligence cannot be
found

ANDTO

The

unknown
hetrs at
law
legatees
devtsees executors
admtntstrators
ass1gns
unknown
guardians of mmor
and/or Incompetent
hetrs
survtv ng
spouse tf any and
personal represents
t1ves of the followtng
If deceased Iva Durst
Carpenter
Ruda

Durst Mildred Durst
Circle Robert Durst
Tom

Durst

•..C.•a.!:.l••

~'""-..~-.. ........ -·--~ ···--.• • • """•••••
I ••••••

entttled Joyce Dav s
Admtntstrratr x of the
Estate
of
Freda
Carpenter deceased
to author ze the sale
of the real estate of
wh1ch the sad Freda
Carpenter d1ed wh le
se1zed n tee stmple

and to apply the pro
ceeds from satd sale
toward the debts of
the deceased and the
costs of admtn ster
eng satd decedents
estate
You
are
requtred to answer
the complamt wtth n

twenty e1ght
(28}
days after the last
pub! cat on of thts
notice whtch Will be
published once each
week for stx consecu
ttve weeks The last
pubhcahon wtll be on
November 3 2004
and the twenty etght
(28) days for answer
wtll commence on
that date In the event
of your fatlure to
answer or to other
as
wtse respond
requ red by the Ohto
Rules
of
C v11
Procedure 1udgment
by default wtll be ren
dered on December

14 2004 all 30 PM
tn the Metgs County
Common
Pleas
Court
Probate
Dtv ston 2nd Floor
Courthouse
Pomeroy Oh1o
Judge L Scott Powell

9/29
10/6 13 20 27
1113

Chester Ohto at the
regular places of vot
mg therem on the
2nd day of November

2004 the question of
leVy1119 a tax
tn
excess of the ten m1ll
I mttat1on for the
benefit of Chester
Township for the pur
pose of Matntatntng
and operatmg ceme
tenes Sad tax being
A replacement of a
tax of 1 m II at a rate
not exceedeng 1 mtll
for each one dollar of
va Iuaiien
whtch
amounts to ten cents

(SO 10) for each one
hundred dollars of
valuat on tor f1ve (5)
years The Polls for
satd Election w1ll
open at 6 30 a m and
remam open until

7 30 o clock PM of
satd day
By order ol the Board
of Elect1ons ot Metgs
County Ohto

John N lhle

Chairperson
R1ta D Smtth
Director

Dated Sept 5 2004
(10) 6 13 20 27

--~t

lf!W

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR!

STYlE.

Ohve

Dural
Randall
Talbott Zelia Durst
Boyd Joe Boyd Reva
Jean Taylor Sid
Duro!
Ebert
Corpenter
Dana
Carpenter Eugana
Corpenter
Anno
Heintt Dana Eugene
Hoinll
Arlzone
Ctrpenter
~omay
gen Curtla Ltml~
Vtlma ~tmly Bohtrr
Lloyd
Lemoy
Leontrd
L1m1y
Mtthyll
Lemay
Ktnnur
Ooru
Carpenttr
Dtli
Mactl
Miller
Schumaker
and
'"dl Ctrptnter
You lrt hereby
notified thll you hove
blln n1m1d dlfln
denio in ologetoctlon

•

~rtbune

- Sentinel - l\egtster
CLASSIFIED

,

..

DIVISION IV
Region 13-1 Ak on Mancheste (8 0) 25 ~830 2 Or vIe
(72) 186 11 3 Chag n Fats (72)178 166 4 Garettsv e
Garleld (8 ) 6 3722 5 Young Mooney (6 2) 15 9 160 6
Young L be y (8 J 5 8225 7 Mass Tus aw (7 2) 15 3533 B
Young u su oe (54) 2 9398 9 Pe ry (7 2 12 0944 0
Sui van Back A ~e 6 3)
9053
Reg 1on 14-1 Hu on {9 0) 24 7777 2 Coldwater (9 0)
19 0055 3 u bana 7 2) 16 2833 4 Tontogany 0 sego (8 )
16 1563 s Upper Sandusky (8
14 9
6 Rossford (6 3)
14 4691 7 De ta
2) 13 7333 8 Shelf eld B ooks de (8 )
13 6888 9 Moun G ead (6 3) 12 0333 0 On a o (7 2)
1 7055
Reg on 15-1 on on {9 0 26 7777 2 Ma ns Fe y (8 0)
22 6455 3 Be a e (7 2) 2 0203 4 Po ts nouth (6 3)
5 5333 5 New A bany (8 J 15 3630 6 We stan (7 2)
13 8888 7 Zanes W Musk ngum 6 3) 11 8333. 8 Be mont
unon Loca (54
044 15 9 Wll arnspo Westal 63)
9 7833 0 New Lex ng ton (5 4 8 68 12
Reg on 16-1 Pan C y Jonathon A de (81) 177213 2
Sp ng Ke n on A dgP. (7 2) 5 2000 3 Read ng (6 3) 14 8000
4 c arksv e C non Masse (7 2)
4 520
5 Dayton
Oakwood (7 2 4 3472 6 Ve sa es 16 3 12 6000 7 Ca se
(53) 11 6525 8 C n F nneytown 54) 11 4890 9 C n N
Co ege H 6 2)
0640 10 C n Ma emon (5 4) 9 732 1

to egtonat quarte f na s)

•••-.z:I•L ... .,

The Da1ly Senhnel • Page 83
•

17 2365 a C rclev le Logan Elm (7 21 15 7222 9 C n
Wyomng (63) 142500 10 Geman1own Valley Vew (62)
13 4375

COLUMBUS ( A~)- Here are the s xth week 'I footba com

puter at ngs f om the Oh o H gh School Ath etc As soc a on
Ra ngs are by d v son and e';l on w th re&lt;:o d and average b

Sttuate In the
Vtllage of Moddleport
County of Meigs and
of
Ohto
State
two

2004

Prep football
Weekly football computer ratings

~... ._ • •

Sheriffs Sale Real

Wednesday, October 27,

www m) dallysentinel.com

•

www mydallysentrnel com

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

Public Nottce

NOTICE OF E~EC
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Ml~~ ~IMITATION

Revlud Coda alec
llano 3501 11 (G)
570519 570525
Notice io hereby
given that In pur
IUtnCt
01
I
Fltooiution of the
lloord ol Townohtp
Truelue of tha
Townohlp of Chntor
Chullr
Ohio
plttod on tht 1Otirdoy of Auguot 2004
lhtrl will bt oubmlt
tid to • vote ol lho
poopio of oold oubdl
vleton It 1 Otntrtl
!lectlon to bt hold In
tho Townohlp of

~\\\

it!)

I

THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOIJ/1

I

"'"n) 0

C.

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
'
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
m:rtbune
Sentinel • Regtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-aoos
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675 5234
Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
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HOW IQ WRITE At! AD
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and God Cons
home on y Gat (7 40)446
P oolsets Go d R ngs U S
2886 Leave message
Cur ency M T S Con Shop
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Ga po s 740 446 2842

Daily In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for Insertion

(...&lt;~1

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Found at
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I \11'1 0\ \II \I

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Los t
a ound
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12yea odbueDobe man
amty pet ve )llrendy no
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co Ia
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money The Nev. Avon
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Losl b ack ca ye ow eyes
name ol Ma c am y pe
m ss ng s nee Oct
5
L nco n H a ea Rev. a tl
cal (740)992 3695

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

• All ads must be prepaid•

•

Ad~

Should Run 1 oavs

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

10

HH r WANI'Elt
CUSTSVC REP
NEEDED'

3 bed com tut basemen
ga age app ox 1 ac e o
and 5 m es om town on
SR 7@ Fve Pons ca
740 416 0768 0 304 882

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800 210 4689
$500 S1 500/Month
Pat tme
$2 000 S8 000 Month

2299
G een To wnsh

o

c ose to
schoo P ced to se 'Mo e
no (740)446 737'1

Green Acres
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Has an mmed ate
open ng lor Treatment

5 bed oom house Po me oy
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•

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n Va ed se ngs
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AFIENIION 1
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lesage WV '25537
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llu

110

Hill W\NIH&gt;

1110

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physte an ott ce A un que
pos on equ ng know
edge of computers and da a
ent y a so CD and CPT
cod ng Re able t ansporta
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o
ho days
equ ed
Be ne t ts ava ab e Sa a y
ncgot abe w th exper cnce
A 1 ex be emp aye
M
esume to Box 558 co
Ga po s Day T bunc PO
Box 469 Ga po s OH
45631

r,1;il50:;;..--:S&lt;:~H-OO--l, - - ,

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UNITED SECURITY
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you enJOY e de y
peop e and warn o tJecome
a membe of ou hea lh ca e
team
please stop by
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Cen e
at
36769
Roacl
Rocksp ngs
Pome oy Oh o 45769 and I II
out an appt cat on lo the
c asses E11tend ca e Haa th
Se v cas Inc s an equa
oppo tun ty emp oye that
encourages
wo kp ace
dvest)l MFDN
p eked up a1 the D s1 ct
olflce at 5th and Ma n
&amp; EMTs
St eels n Rae no at the
Muncpa Bu d ng Pease
attach sa a y equ ement
w th
appl ca on
TeeM cans
n App cat ons w I be accept
Ga po s a ea Must have ed un Thursday Novembe
re abe 1 anspo tat on Pay 11 2004
based on expe encea Mus!
have Know edge n a ope
at ng sys ems &amp; ha dwa e
con! gu at on s App cants
mus be outgo ng Mve a
good pe sona y pease
subm 1 esume o CLA Box ----~---::-Room
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D n ng
572 co Ga po s Day
T oune
PO Boll 469 Se ve
Mus be ou1go ng
se VIce o anted A sm ng
face s a mus No e~pe
Ga po 5 OH 45631
TE LEMARKETEAS NEE;:D
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888 974 JOBS

Seeltln&amp; 99 People
Locllly

Home L st ngs
L s you home by ca I ng
(740)446 3620

V e 'I photos nto on

ne

Bed om 8 k Home 2
Bah 3 Ca B ck

2 sloy Coona 3 bdm 1
NC
oa h Gas hea Cn
$600 mo (740)446 348

aoo
Conven enl oca on
no
pels $565 month pus e e
ence &amp; depos
740 446
4926
hOuse
2b
$350 month

wale

00
2 Bah

Fu Basement
M dd epo OH Code
t7 o ca (740)992
743

Bed oom
HousP.
Ga po s Dead End St
S450 rnonl
S250 depos I
Stove &amp; F g 740)446 376
0 30&lt;1 675 41 07

B ed oom 3 Bath
Loca ed n Ga po s ove
oak ng the Oh o A ve
ve 3000 sq It on 3 94
c es Code 825 o ca
40 44 0323

eed

32(1

\

Po 1and a ea total y emod

ssoo

pe

mo

740 843 5546

(OR11 • IIO\ 11 s
I OR S'll

b
n Sy ac se
OH
S600 man h $600 depos t &amp;
14X70 Mob e horne 3 bed 3b n Sy ac s€: S475 mon h
2 ba h a app ances some Hu d App ovec bo tl no Pe s
n lu e 56800 7.10 245 (304 6 5 5332
9040
CHARM NG 3 oedroom 1

997 28x52 Daub ew de
conve tea to ea es ate) 3
oed oom 2 ba h ea n
k tchen Ba n shed ca oo
5 ac es Adams e Road

bath Loca e,d n Rodney
Vtage Deposl equ ed
Ca 740)446 3128
basemP.n v ew at ve
Cnt
A
S700
mo
Ga po s Fe y 740 446
348

c..,

US 35 ll Mason
County 5 Rooms &amp; Ba I" 2
Bed ooms)
La gc Sun
Roo n
12x32
a
e"'
Ca pet F
Bascme
2
ace ~ $38 500 304 675
2933

II'\\'\( I \I

10

BUSINIX~

Ot,'OKI1JN!n

nob e homes s a ng a
5270 ne month Ca 740

992 2 6
Abs o ute
60
vend ng mach nos
o11ce
en ocatonsa o S 0995
18001234 6982

"'

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H 0 VALLEY PUBL SH

ea eslaeadvetsng
n lh s newspape

s

sub1ec o the Fede a
Fa Hous ng Ac 61 968
wh ch makes t tlega to

N ce 2 BR Muse SR 60 J.
rn N o1 Ho ze 5400 mo
deoos t
a pe s
New Oa&gt;Cwooo m~ga toe sec
0 446 6665 0 740 379
Homes
by
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IH \I l'il\11

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eade s a e he eby

HOMI:S
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O,o Down Payment and

I

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CALL TODAY

nstat F n sh Pant ng
Ca pen ent y Bah ooms
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9 OOam 4 OOpm ~·~
""i:i';:;';;;";;:;:.
" ' ;.:2;:.;";:;"~--..., I nanc ng ava abe w h
(740)379 9083
M!SCEJI.ANEOl'S approved c ed Ave age
c edt qua t es you down
payment has kept you 1 om
buy ng th s s you chalice
--------to own your own home t
Sy acuse
Rae ne
The
Reg ana Sewe D str ct w I you can f I vacant posit ons you have a down paymen1
h&amp;¥e a JOb open ng ava abe n the Wes V gna Army but would keto conserve 1
n January 2005 to the pos Nat ana Guard I you are wa oHer low down payment
p ograms a so Grea nter
1on o ma ntenance abo e between the ages of 17 35
Job cons s s o ass s ng o ha¥e prior m lira y serv est ates Loce company
Locate s
Super nlendent w 1h da y ce you won 1 wanl to pass Mo 1gage
(740)992 732
act v t es gene at clean ng th s up Fo Opportun t es n
304 675
and ma ntenance of equ p you a ea C(lU
5837
men App cat ons may be
2 be
o
o se Pomeroy
between

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Ca Today 740 446 4367
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ny Sa espe son w
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Send esume to CLA Bo,.;
548
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10

HO\lfS
IURS\tl

SO DOWN SO DOWN
CASH OU
OME

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www com1cs com

CLASSIFIED INDEX

640
110
810
310
510
410
020
130
860
630
060
350
170
540
860
420
320
220
740
570
005
560
820
230
f 60
360
150
850
I 20
460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
t 80
470
072
074
076

10

Ho~n s
Hlll S\1 f

lwnght@1c net

ntoC son
Management
Pos t1ons ava abe now
Co p s cu ent y accept ng
now h ng sale app cat ons a au do"'
Up IO S9 25/hr w h
at
post ons town Ga po s ocat on
qua ted expe ence
Pom e oy
Pt Qua I ed app cants shOu d E ~ ce en pay a d bene Is
Peasant &amp; E eano cat be stable
gh y mo valed
sto e (304 675 5858 ro
ndvduas wlh good con
Ca Now
appl cat ons
mun cat on sk s We oHe a
1 871 463-6247 ask for
lu tJenef Is pat.:kage nc ud
ext 2659
ng med ca ovc oge 40 1K
weeky bonuses and vaca
POSTAL JOBS
4x4 s For Sale
725 ton eve~ s~ no s No S 4 62 S20 92 h Now h
Announcemen1
030
p ev ous exoe ence p aye s ng Fo app ca ons &amp; 1 oe
Antiques,
530
s necessa y We a e the
gave nment rob n o ca
Apartments for Rent
440
p ofess ona d ffe ence n A ne can Assoc of Labo
Auction and Flea Markel
080 te ese v ces and need g eat
9 3 599 8042 24 h s
Auto Parts &amp; Accessoroes
760 team payes o on us
emp serv
Auto Repair
770
nte ested
cand dates
Autos for Sale
710 pe ase ca 1 877 463 6247 P va e owned Beauty Sao
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750 e~o: 2458 o app y on ne needs sty s to wo k
Mondays Tuesdays and
Bultdtng Supplies
550 ~~son com
Wed esday s WI pay 60 o
Business and Buildings
340
Bustness Opportuntty
210 Loca company seek ng a and w buy a I suppt es
d ve wth a Class B COL C ente e p ete ed Send
Bustness Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790 w th HAZMAT to hau esume to CLA Bo,.; 555 PO
p opane and bu k fue s fo Box 469 Gall pots OH
Camping Equipment
780 home
ng o Two yea s 45631
Cards of Thanks
010 expe hea
ence s p e a ed
Child/Elderly Care
190
s nc ude hea th clen
ISH llfJl ()(,JS I
Eleclncai/Refrtgeralton
840 Benet
ta and 1 e nsu ance 401K
Equipment for Rent
480 pan
a d pad vacat on \ Je a e a we
espec ed
Excavattng
830 I tc cstcd
cand dates
na on a pract ce de a g
Farm Equopment
610
Farms for Rent
430
wth ge at cs We a e n
Farms for Sale
330
need of a censed psycho o
g s whO s nte ested n
For lease
490
wo k ng pa 1 me We o fe a
For Sale
585
good s a ng sa a y and he
For Sale or Trade
590
ab ty o pa cpa e n ou
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
40 K Ca I Psycho og st
Furnished Rooms
450
~ ans tons a 877 734 203
General Hauling
850
o lax esume o 877 734
Giveaway
040
2030
Happy Ads
050

Hay &amp; Grain
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Homea for Sale
Houeehold Goods
Houses for Rent
In Memoriam
tneurance
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
Llvoatock
Loot and Found
~ott &amp; Acreage
Mtocaltaneoue
Mlocollanaouo Merchandise
Mobile Home Repair
Mobile Homes for Rent
Mobile Hamel for Sale
Money to Loan
Motorcyclee &amp; 4 Wheotare
Mualcallnotrumanll
Pereonale
Pota lor Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Proloeolonal Sorvlcel
R,odto TV &amp; CB Repair
Roal Eetato Wonted
Schoola lnotruclton
SHd Plant &amp; Fertilizer
Stluatlona Wanted
Space for Rent
Sporting Goode
SUVa for Sale
Truckalor Sole
Upholstery
Vans For Solo
Wanted to Buy
Wanted to Buy Farm Supplies
Wanted To Do
Wanted to Renl
Yard Sale Gallipolis
Yard Sola Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sele PI Pleasant

t';l

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays Paper

'

Wapted 2J3 Bed oom house
w dbtage Tuppe s Pans o
Chaste a ea P eapp oved
f nanc ng 740)9492194

Now you can have borders and graphiCS
lL-'
added to your classtfied ads
""
Borders $3,00/per ad
'Graphtcs 50¢ for small
$1 00 for large

Otsplay Ads

• Stitrt Vour Adi W th A Keyword • Include Complete
Des(;rfptlon • Include A Pr1ce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

110

\'\'\Ill\( I \II '\I"

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Oead'/Jiru-

:s

JOO oo Less tor cash
Me~ a~o&lt;e
anA fo motor
home o t uck / 7 40)992
2308

who wart o ea n money
wh e os ng we Qht show ng
othe show
2 Bed oom 1 Bath 1 Ac e
(740)441 982
Lucas Lane nee PPHS
FREE SAMPLES
Oa age Gas Fu nace C ty
www famous nut ton com Wale Make OHe 30-4)675
8636

nformed lhat a I

ngs advert sed n
th s newspaper a e

dwel

a\la lab eon an equa
opportunity bues

\lo1111 f HO\tl'S
thH REliT
'2

2 bed oom a ee c 4
m es no n of He ze 5350
mon r
sec aepos t 8 el
e e ces (740)446 6865 o
40 379 2923

R ve p ope ~
67 ac es
232 tee she e ne 0 m es
south of Ga po s SA
Bu d ng pe m eva abe
(740 256 8823

r

Home For Sala
Hand bu og home 6 yea s ,!Ill-~-~---., :-~--:::-------:­
od P vale wth 10 aces
Jb:AI fsr.\TE

S unn ng v ew 3 B

12

~~---\oio\ii~iivrmtiiiiiiio-.,t

bath Open oft
Financing ev1il1b e with
NO DOWN P-.YMENTII!
7 40)388 0 64

=:-~":':=-~---

Want to bu)l a 3 bed oom 2
b8th hOme Ga age base
ment 3 10 ac es s des
able AI easn C ose n 2
Ho mes
tram
$10 000
Fo c osu e VA Huo to st Wf!&amp;ks Me gs Ge 8 0
A hens County 740)992
nQ 1 800 749 8106 ex 1709
6300
House 3 Bed oom 1 1 2
Bath Heat Pufnp
new
Ca pe W ndows &amp; Rool
Ave vew 2 Smtn S -No
Monsy Down to qua fy ng
Buye $425 month why Rent
(304)675 2749

home
2003

Hot'SES
1\IH R~l'IT

0°/o Down Payment and
fnancng ava abe wth
approvea c ed t
A.ve age
c ed qua I es you
down
payment has kept you I om
buy ng h s s you cnance
to own you own hOme t
you have a down payment
Ch d
Ca e
Open ng
but wou d keto conserve 1
F ex be
Sh fts
L nked
we otte ow oow n payment
accepted (304)675 8883
pogam!
a!o Gea nte
------------'"-------es a es loca company
. - - - - - - - - - Mo gage
Locato s
Mason WV Bank Ownea
(740)992 732
Home 2 bed oom Fa La
ence necessa y W
an - - - - - - - - $24 900 M ke SacK
the gn cand da El App y n
304 542 5888
pe son a Ho day nn ot
Od Co or,y GMAC Rea ty
Ga. po s
House n Kanauga 0 d
Fe me s Ra Ga po s Oh
$40000 2 aes Kode
Pa k
on
Nea
Ad
S675 man h
nvastment
S35 000

Tale lo en! $300 mon1h
Mddepo t OH on SA 7
ac oss from saw m bth nd
KC Auto Sa es 740 446
8172

1 aM 2 beCI oom apa
men s tu n shed ana untu
secu ty deoo s
n snea
equ eo no pels 740 992
2218
1BR aPt;~ tmen w d hookup
$290 pe man .,
deooe t
Sun Va ey Ape ment l"'ew
owne s (740 339 0362

�0

\
Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

r

10

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ho!SUKNJ&gt;
Goous

Wednesday, October 27, 2004
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
•I

'

owner

2BA. CIA. relrigerator/stove
MISCELI.ANf:OliS
included,
washe.r/dryer
Mt.]tLl-L\NUISE
hook-up
10 mm lrom
Holzer
(740)441 -0194 or
(740)441 -1184
Computer w1th Speakers
and Ptlnter. 5 p1ece Dining
Applications baing taken tor
Room set Ladies 10 speed
very clean 1 bedroom in
81cy&lt;.:le Call (740)446-2188
country setting yet close to
town. Washer, dryer, stove, C_ountry Flame wood burnfridge Included. Water and 1ng
fireplace
1nsert.
garbage Included. Total elec- Automa11c control and tan.
tric with AC. Tenant pay elec- $400. (740)446· 7692 ..
!ric. $300 deposit, $375 per
month. No pets_ No smok - Dell lap top computer like
ing. 740-446-2205 or 740· new, 6 hrs use. an!i v1rus
446-9585 ask for Virginia.
software. case. $700, 1·740·
508-0060 after 5 740-992BEAUTIFUL
APART- 0958
MENTS
AT
BUDGET ==:.:_~-:::--:;::--;
PRICES AT JACKSON For sale Fire Wood
ESTATES, 52 Westwood (304 )882-2537
Dri\ie from $344 to $442. Galilee telescope, new
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call never used. $350, 1·740·
740-446 -2 568
Equal 508·0060 after 5 740-992Houslng Opportun~
0956.
· CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441-1111
tor application &amp; in1ormati on.

Please stop 1n &amp; give one of
these dogs a home- Meigs
Co Dog Pound or ·call 740·
992-3n9. Dalmatian. male.
4 yrs: Rottweller, male, 3 yrs;
2 Jack Russell , 1 112 yrs, 2
1/2 mos.: mixed Brittany
Spaniel puppies; Collie.
4yrs: SMrPae puppy, 5 mos.

I Ill\! Sl 1'1'111 '
,\ 11\1 ... 1!)( ....

_P_ho_n_e_:(_74_0.:.)4_4_6_-0_3_90_._ _ ':
8-oo_k:_.~S-:Iid~e-r.-:-Fc-e-:e~D::e::liv_e-::cy
-:1937)559-8365
One bedroom apartment..
no pets, 1n Pomeroy. Rascal Scooter R230 3·
(740)992 -5656
Wheeled. New Batteries
$900 (304)675·1542
One bedroom garage apartment. kitchen furnished .
C~~~LU~~~E
$400, 1740)992·3823
Sam Somervrllcs. s 1nco 1964 .
Pleasant Valley Apartment by Socdy"'"' WV PO Sooellll".
Are now taking Applications TV Safes.'lnstalla1ron i30~1273lor 28R. 3BR &amp; 4BR .,
Applica tions are
taken Sears pull behmd dump
Monday thru Fr1day. !rom cart. Amana 16 ft . relngera9:00 A_M_-4 P.M Olf1ce 1s tor. rnoo11e home steps
Located at 1151 Evergreen 30"x2T (740)366-13997.
Dri\ie Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No 1s (304)675·5806. Vent Free, ~to-Plaque Gas
Heater. !_propane or Natural)
E.H.O
Manual Control $143 .95
Small 1br Apt. $300/month Ve nt Free 5-P aqu e Gas
plus Deposit No Pets. on Mt Heater.
1Automatrc
Cowol )
Vernon Ave . PI Pleas T'lermostats
$239.95
(304)773-6061
aluminum F1bera1ed Paint
Tara
Townhouse
(Great for Mobile Homes1
Apartments. Very Spac1ous.
5-g al. Bucket S29.95
2 Bedrooms . 2 Floors. CA. 1
Paint Plus Hardware
l /2 Bath , Newly Carpeted.
675-4084
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Hl iUJUN(;
Pets. Lease Plus Secuoty
Sl"l'l'l JE~
Deposit Requ1red. Days
740· 44 6-34131; Even1ngs Block bnck, sewer pipes
740-367·0502.
w1ndows. lintels. etc Claude

5655

Club calves tor sale
Reasonably priced. C0r1tact
Baughman Show Cattle
(740)256-5535 or (740)256·
8884

r___

oiHiiiAiiil,jj
'&amp;
__

GRAIN

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

\If H&lt; 11 \"IISI
H Ol'SEHOLO

Goous

Appliance

Aner6pm ~ ..,...,~,

JONES'

(Before 6pm

No Job to Big or Sma'll
Serving: Meigs. l'vlason .
Gallia &amp; A I hens Cn.

FoR SALE

CA11t.,.:RS &amp;

MiJIAiS!Uiii'ii+

_.~ =-~~-.....,

Lw--iioiiiiioi.iiiiiiiio,;;;,_.J

Warramy Repa ir •

passed on the 17th
,day of August, 2004,
lhere will be submit·

General Election lo

vision at a General

be held In the VIllage
of Rutland, Ohio , at
the regular places of
voting therein, on the
2nd day of November,
2004, the question of
levying a lax, In
Sola, makes queen size
excess of the ten mill
76
740
992
7565
bed, S · (
)
llmltallon, for the benWooden chest·o-d rawers, Pups, and Adults. Training miles. All electric, .alum . efit of Rutland VIllage
(304)937·2310 whe:et. Will sell below book lor tha purpoae of
light brown. good condition, Breeding
$50, 1740)949·2607
www.tristatek·9.com
value.l740)388·8432.
Current
expanses
Said lax being :

Election 10 be held In
the
VIllage
ol
Syracuee, Ohio, at lhe
regular places of votIng therein, on the
2nd day of Novembar,
2004, the queotlon of
levying a tax, In
axceaa of the ten mill
limitation, lor the benalii
of . Syracuse
VIllage lor the purpose of Fire protecllcm
Said tax being:
A renewal of a tax of
~ mill at
rete not
exceeding 1 mill lor
each one dollar of valuallon,
which

Resolullon

of

a

of

A renewal of a tax of
2 mills at a rate not
exceeding 2 mUla lor
each one dollar of valuation,
which

amounts to twenty
cenlll ($0.20) lor each
.one hundred dollars,
of valuotlon, lor live
(5) yaaro. Tha Polls lor
aald Election
will
open at 8:30 a.m. and
remain open until
7 :30 o'clock P.M . of
.uld day.
By order of tho Board
of Elactlona, of Melga
Counly, Ohio
· John N. lhle
Chalrparaon
Rita D. Smith
Dlreclor
Dated Sept. 5, 2004·
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27

&gt;,

RI~C.

t

1-.f!f. '&lt;OU
~RE:. \ WOH'i

I""WT

I5 Tfl,( "&amp;M\/E:.L"
AA~IV'U:.~i' 7

f} l)()\)(,1-\1
%fOR'10\J7

Ohio,

ted to a vote of the
people of said subdl·

a

amounta to ten cents
($0.10) lor eich one
hundrad dollara of '
valuation, lor ftve (5)
yeara. The Polls lor
aald
Election
will
open at 6:30 a.m. and
remain open until
7 :30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.
By order ollhe Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John N. lhle
Chalrperaon .
Rita D. Smllh
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2004
(10) 6, 13, 20, 27
'

See

L~\\

n T racl\1r &amp; Pu:-.h
rvl m~L... .... ("hall] S:m ....

Chain

Rocky "RJ"

Sh~!rpcnL:ll

&amp; P;lrl"
:\ c11 (il'lll'r.tl St.111d h ~
(;\'lll' f&lt;ll lll\' S\'.\I L'Ith .Jild
R,fl- ,\lr Ail· c~llllfli\C"~')f'­
Upcn S:J4H:IIII M-F:
Sat. N:.\0-2:00 11«J1- to.U
l'rd-up :111d lkllw l·~ ·.,·r·\ I&gt;'•'
:-;, r\1 '-l'r\ 1 1. 11·· ~ t\~r\"l'lll' I ktllt'r"

Shop the
Classifieds!

BIG NATE

Pass

Db I.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

+A

11 is amazing the way some things go.
Monday, J mentioned that one can wait
around for months witt1out seeing a particular card-play theme, but then two or
three will come along in quick succession.
No sooner llad I written that colu mn than
this deal cropped up.
South is in four spades. What should hap·
pen?
The auction was modern - difficult and
exciting. First, it is now standard practice
lo play thai In competnion. jump raises of
partner's suit are pre-emptl\1&amp; . So, East's
three-diamo nd response over North's
one-heart overcall is pre·emptlva. (It East
has at least a limit. raise, he bids two
hearts, a cue-bid raise. This is much bet·
ler than the Old-fashioned game·lorelng
cue-bid , which -never" comes up.) Then,
South wanted to act. but he wasn't quite
strong enough. However, when North
reopened with a takeout double; South
jumped to game.in spades.
West led the diamond ace. East knew
exactly what was requ ired : He played the
queen to guarantee holding the jack as
well. And West immediately saw the key.
At trick two, he shifted to his singleton
heart king. Declarer took the trick on the
board . played a spade to his ace (frqm
West's opening bid, he knew the finesse
wasn't working ). and continued with a
second spade. West went in witl111is k1ng.
led a diamond to East's jack , and received
a heart ruff to defeat the contract.
There is a temptation immediately to casl1
winners. But - espec•ally wherl the win·
ner(s) cannot evaporate- always stop to
cons1der 11 an alternattve plan migh t be
more product1ve.

Hupp
93 Columbus Rd .

~~~

I SEE
YOU MORE
A.S BOROMtR:

IMPORTS

HMM
j; Ot-( T

Athens

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised· Code, elections 3501 .11
(G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby
given that in pursuance
of
a
Resolution of the
Village Council ollhe
Village of Syracuse ,
Syracuse,
Ohio,
passed on the 11th
day of August, 2004,
there will be submitted to a vote of the
people of said subdivision at a General
Election lo be held in
the
VIllage
of
Syracuse, Ohio, at the
regular places of votIng therein, on the
2nd day ol November,

SASICI\LLY

I
K.NOW,

VAt&gt;

't'OlJR~

NOT

R.EA.LLV
HOBBIT

NOBLE, BUT
DEEPLY

AWE D!

COMMERCIAL and

Pomeroy, Ohio

RESIDENTIAL

dOORNG
' *HOME
MAIIITINANCE
*SEAMlESS
GlnER

11M WO~RIED, ABOUT POOR

I

WERE Ll!CK'1' ...

MARCIE .. &gt;!ER PM.ENTS INSIST
1~1\T S~E GET ST!i:AIG~T

tl.S ..

IT'S KIND OF Nl
LIVING IN A
US I-lOME

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
ll 4 "'"10f.J

SUNSHINE CLUB

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

WHAT'RE 1./C&gt;U OOIIJ6 I-tER£,

MR BUI\l1Y 7 'rOO DOI\l'T
I-lAVE PN APRJfhlTMHJT

I k NY.U t'lll' I
(#JTSL££PAT

TIME 10 Gq MR.f!/JIJTY ..
i.LE'RE ({f)51f.Y3 1f.l£ Offi(E

NiGtlT LAlELY

I

C hevy, Ponti ac. 13uicl&lt;. Olds

&amp; C uslom Van DealPr"'

0

*free Elllllllll*

949·1405
GARFIELD

Advertise
•
m this
space
for.
$50 per
month

MONS."fER
COUL-17 BIS
ANt,)WH ERE !

.. : HIA"f

Barnhart
Builders
30 )'tars uJ.erience
•Ne"· Homes
' 1·"R Homes
• l•nst frame

•(mnpleh· Remndeling
•Rc,~h· ~·cmcnt \\ imhm .,
•Huol\

__

..__740-667·(~180__._

...HE COUL.D EVEN'
6E RIG.HT 6EHIND-

HI, OOY5...

CUE. THE.
6t-0017CURI7L.ING.
5GREAM!l

)

;:;;~;;:;;;:::::

R ~s iden1 lul

'

Hours

PEANUTS

475 South Church St.

WRITESEl

Free Esti.mates

'

Sizes lYx1 0'
to 10'x30'

FREE ESTIM ATES

740-992-7599

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

\\'inJo \\' • Roul"in~

33795 Hiland Rd.

( ·nmmcrdal :nul

Daled Sepl. 5, 2004
( 10) 6 , 13, 20, 27

·

• RL"p l~tl"l' llll'l lt

HOWARD l.

7:30 o'clock P.M . of
said day.
By order of the Board
of E'lectlons , of Meigs ·

Director

29670 Bashan Road

Dean Hill
New &amp;.Used

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

John N. lhle
Chairperson .
Alia D. Smllh

\'c\\ Honh.'..., • Vin~ I

Siding • NC\\ GttragL·.-.

•

1.8 mills al a rale not
exceeding 1.8 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation ,
which

County, Ohio

Hill's Self
Storage

BUILDERS InC.

740-992-5232

2004, the question of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
llmlllltlon,lor the benalit
of
Syracuse
VIllage lor lhe purpose
ol
Current
expenses Said tax
being:
A renewal of a tax of

amounts
to eighteen
eents (S0.1B)'Ior
each·
one hundred dollsra
of valuation, lor live
(5) years. The Polls lor

BISSEll

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER'
SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION

• Roor Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Gar•gu.

ROBERT
BISSEll

·

'• Electrical &amp; Plumbin g
• Roofi ng &amp; Gutters

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Palntmg
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all exc~pt
furnace ~ J'lrk

V.C. YOUIJG Ill ·
992-6215
POmeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local Er rlenee

· New Homes
• Garages

· Complete
Remod eling

140·992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

•
~

r Y PE.

Puhlit Nolices in~; '''l~"~'m·ll!l
\our Rightlo Knu.. lklirm&lt;l Ri ghllo You r

on the 13th day of
Augusl, ~004, there
will be submitted to a
vole of the people of
said subdivision at a

suance

l"'"l&gt;ID t ~~r'R\:':&gt;E:.
'IOU Will-\

l 'llllll'f( l\

L;,-----,.1 -------:--:-

PUBLIC -

!¥

hl't-.llk Larl) -~ 1- ;ull S!ancl

r

tions 3501.11
(G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby
given that In pur-

THE BORN LOSER

7'erry's Engines

«»

Revised Code, elec-

=~..uA

K20 Ea"l M.1in ~t.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
MOTORa'CI..I·:s/
Unconditional lilet1me guar4 WHEEU:R"\
antee. Local referen ces turnished. Established 1975.
2000 Honda Foreman. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Roge rs Basement
1985 Ford T-Bird. V-6 , 2dr. 450es. yellow. w1nch. new
Waterproofing
good body &amp; inter. $600 tires. lock in/out. 4x4 , great
condition
_
$3.200
(740)245080 (304)576-3080
9099
1991 Pontiac Grand AM .
Good Condition. 4 cy1. 2002 Honda 400 EK .. good
$500/080 (304)675-2822
condition, $3.500 080. Call
17401256-1526. 740-6451994 lincoln Continental
0446
Executive . 87,000 m1les.
excellent co nd1t10n mside 2002 XR 70R Honda dirtand out
~4.000 .
Call bike Runs good. like new.
(740)379-2531.
rode very little.
$1,000.

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

•

1-740·843·S:l82

L;,----_.1 .__.. ,. .,...

2000 Dodge Dakota Ex . Cab
AKC Beagle puppres S125 $5495.
99
Mercury
can see at 1473 Hannan Mountaineer S5295; 97 Jeep
Trace Ad .. Patnot. or call Gr. Cherokee $41 95; 2000
(740)379·9063 No Sunday Ford Ranger $3695; 96
Sales
Dodge Ex Cab $4595; 2000
Dodge Caravan $3 195; ea
AKC Beagle pups, good
hunting stock 5100. Call Dodge Carava n $2695:
(740)256 _6278
2000 Dodge Stratus $2595;
200 t Gr. AM $4500; 96 Gr.
AKC Black fernie l ab pup- AM $2195 : 97 Chev. S-10
p1es. Shots, wormed &amp; dew Blazer $4500; 96 Dodge
claws
removed . $200 Dakota 4x4 $3500: 99 Pont.
(740)44 1-0130
Sunlire $2 195; 95 Ford F250
w/lilt gate $3 1OO: 96 Dodge
AKC Black Lab. pupp1es
work van $89!): 94 Jeep
Male &amp; Females. must go Wrangler 4x4 sharp $3 195;
$ 150 eac/1 (304 )773. 5103
96 Geo Tracker $1395. 99
AKC Boston Terrier pups Escort ZX2 5 sp. $2795; 98
7wJo;., wormed. &amp; shots. 3 Monte Carlo $2495.
female $198 .00. (740)388·
B &amp;. D Au to Sales
6743
Hwy . 160. N.
AKC Golden Retnever pup( 740~5.
pms. both parents on pramises.
Ready u .-16·04, 2000 Z24 Chevy Cavalier.
SJOO. w111 hold wrth deposit. 48,000 miles. Auto, Runs &amp;
(740)256· 1686
Looks
Great
$5,000
(304)675-5828
CKC Registered , _1 male
Jack Russell pup· 8 weeks 2002 Buick Century· Special
old· first shots· wormed· vet Edition. Color-light sanddrilt
checked . Ready to go, $175 metalliC. mileage- JUSt under
each . (740) 379·2634.
53.,000 miles, interior- cloth
seats. loaded- concert
German Aott's 6 Female ten. sound system II, exception·
$200 Parents on premises ally clean car. (740)446(304)937-2310
0925.
:G::e:.:rm::a::n:.:S~h::.e:.:ph:_e_cd~s-:t:-or_s_a-:-le. ~2"'oo"3"-T-ra-c-ke-,-.-4-••-.-3-,0-00

Il

Jiouse C~aning Service

4x4

95 Ford Aerastar XLT.
44,000 mrles, one owner,
excellent condition. $6.000
080, call (740)965-3571

I
I

THEN ..lEST SIT BACK AN'
WATCH 'EM FIGHT OVER
r----~
IT !!

I

~nnette's

For Sale: 1200 lb. Round 1998 GMC Jimmy SLS,
MmnR Ho~u:~
bales ot mixed hay. Call after great condition. pwr seat.
5:00PM (Z_40}_696-821 1
windows, locks. sunroof,
l06K
miles.
asking 1997 Prowler. 2411 .. Sleeps
6, Mini Condition. $6000
$6,350.00. 740)446·8910.
10
AlCJllli
30
VANS
FOH. SALE
f&lt;)R SAl .•:

S500! Honda's, Chevy's,
Jeep's,
Ect
Pollee
Impounds! Cars from $500
for listings 1300-391·5227
EXT 3901
- - - - - -- - 1960 Corvair Runs good,
good body. needs interior
work (740)446-7910

I
i

Bucket Truck

Syracuse,

Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio
(740)446·7444 1·677·830·
9162. Fra"e Estimate s. Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Drive- a- little save alot.

jli~ )

HERE'S YORE LOTTERY TICICET,
RECKON I'LL
GRAMPY !! WHAT'LL YA DO WIF
LET TH'
ALL THAT MONEY IF
YOUNG-UN$
YA WIN?
DIVIDE IT UP !!

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Rutland, Ohio, passed

Good Used Appliances ,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washers ,
Dryers.
Ranges.
and
Refrigerators. Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 7'6
Vine St. , (740)446-7398

' 11ost brands. located on Rtl bypass
outside Pomerov. Ohio

2001 GMC Sonoma Quad
Cab, Short Bed , lots at
extras , 86,000 Hwy miles,
. one
owner.
$10,500
(304)895-37 10 after 6 pm

_,1 i

BARNEY

we 11av1 Pins and 1ccessor1es tor

0

leoveMe~J;~

Tree Service

the
Village Council of the
Village of Rutland ,.

in Hende1son. WV
Preowned apphc'anes startmg at
$75 &amp; up ail under warranty.
we do seMce work on an
Make and Models (304)6757999

~,

Is Diving 10% OFF All
REPAIRS IN OCTOBER!

East

North

It happened again,
or once more

,

liNI'S PAINTING
l140J 985-4181r.r.

52

I. ,.
West

Opening Jeall:

Let me :lo it for youl

1-800-822-0417

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised Code, elections 3501.11
(G),
5705.19, 5705.25
Notice is hereby
given lha1 In pursuance
of
a
Resolution of lhe
Village Council of the
Village of Syracuse,

Warehouse

••

Me the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

1996
Cadillac
Deville. (740)44 1·1417 after Spm or
Twin
Rivers Tower IS accept- Wmters , Aro Grande, OH 89 _. 000 m1 Ies, exce nt con· leave message.
,,
5 21
1ng applications tor wMmg Call 740 "245 · 1 ·
dillon S6.000. Lon Burner
list lor Hud·subs1zed. 1- br
F-\.~ 1 ~
wood
burner
$500.
apartment. call 675 -6679
FOI~ SAtF
(740)379-9405
EHO

Pass

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

r

•

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Neither

Middleport
.......~~.~.. 45760

19813 Chevy 510, Good
Condition, Camper Top,
L!VE'&gt;-rocK
Auto Transmission . Power
Steering, Power Brakes. Air
Angus
Bulls Top
Co nd_ Call (304)675-3579
Performance L1nes. 40 Years
Artificial Insemination . Slate 1992 Chevy S-1 0, V-6 Auto.
Run Farm (740)286·5 395.
Low Miles $2,000 080
www.slaterunlarm.com
(304)593-1200

A K 7 6

J 10 9 8

• J0 3
... A 7 6 3

Box 189

1972 Chevy Tow Truck, 1 1/2
ton , excellen t working condi·
tio n, wench works oH PTO,
everythmg
new,
over
$13,000.00 invested. will
take
88,500.00
080
(740[992·0622

t

•

South

GRIZZWELLS
.W4RRI:I.( I \'J'.\Ai'S 11
L\l&lt;t !tit\ ...OU Hoi
\-1~\~G A mWr'
~IR\.~\EHD

'

'

vehicle

fattener

44 " Seinfeld "
network
46 Le~gy
swtmmers
49 Degraded
53 Album

6 Sefarl
lteaor
11 Pulp I rae
13 Cab!rwauled
14 Th ink
highly of

contents
54 Read
55 Cook 's
gadget
56 Gangpla nks

terms

South
. Al0985
• I0 2

Rocky Hupp lnsuran~e
and Financial Services

I Matal

16 Common
abbr.
17 Hearty

¥ 98754
t QJ854

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

42 BUI1'V'I\8d OU1
il3 Hired

15 Came to

East
• 6

¥ K

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

Sun. C l osed

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Efficiency apt. lor rant. Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
' $350/month 1ncludes water. Stock. Call Ron Evans. I · John Deere A 1948 2 stick
Puller, rebuilr, very competi·
sewer &amp; trash . No pets. 800·537·9526.
t&lt;Ve. $3.750. (740)7 42-3020
(740)446-4313
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle.
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Dnveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Middleport.
North
4th Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Avenue 2 bedroom. fur- Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
nished apartment. Deposit Sunday. (740)446-7300
and references. No Pets
Pole Barn 30 x 5ax 1OFT
1740)992·0165
$ 6395 _ includes Painted
Modern 1 bedroom apt Metal , Plans, Instruction

West
• K 4 3 2

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

A&gt;rl.~

t0-27-64

Q J 7

¥ AQJ63
• g 2
... K Q 4

675-2457

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

AVIUS
FOR SALE

Gray Couch &amp; Love Seat
$150. Black Swivel TV
Stand $10, Green Glider
Rocker SS (304)882·3 129

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
R1vers1de
Apartments in Middleport .
From $295·$444. Call 740992-5064 . Eq ual Housing
Opportunities.

and Arter Market

•

Henderson, WV

St. RL68 I Darwin. 01'1
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
Uesl~kii'(J l.a le .~kKiel Sa h119e

.

North

MYERS PAVING

Whaley's Auto
Parts

Letart Falls
Trick or Treat
October 28
6:00- 7:30
Please leave porch light on.

Buy or s131l
A1ver1ne
Ant1ques . 1124 East Mam
on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740992-2526
Russ Moore.

c.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

1BR. washeridryer hook-up Thompsons . Appliance &amp;
near
Holzer
Hosp1ta1 , Repalr-675-7386 For sale.
automat1c
5299/monlh (740)339·0362 re-cond1110ned
washers &amp; dryers relngerators
gas Md electnc
ranges, a11 conditioners and
wrlf'lger washers W1H do
repa1rs on major brands •n
shop or at your ~ome

10

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Astro- .
Graph
-...'Birthday:

Thursday, Oct. 28. 2004
Bv Bernice Bade Osol
In the yea r ahead , a co mmercial partnership may become quite desrrous tn fur·
thermg your aims. Howe\ler, take ca re not
to tea m up with someone who cahi"n1.1t
otlar talent. service or funds that you may
lack.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) ~ - Guard
aga~nst tendencies today to go to the
wrong person for advice just because an
indivrdual happens to be your friend. An
ineffective counselo r will only contr ibute
lo your confus1on.
SAGITIAAIUS (N0\1. 23-Dec. 21) - II
you calch yourself daydream1 ng or
rationalizing today when you have an
1mportant task to get done , give yoursetl
a jolt to sn ap yourself out of it, th en roll up
your sleeves and get to work
CAPRICORN (Dec 22- Jan _ 19) Unless you exercise contmua t self-control today regarding your expenditures.
you're apt to yie ld to extravag!ilnt whrms
for wh1 ch you'll have no eKcuses later on
when you 're broke .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19! - If you
don't want to be d1sappornted today. be
realrs tr c regardrng the demands you
make upon others. They may not be able
to drop everything they're doing the
m1nute you want something
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)- False flattery IS not an etfect1ve tool to use today rl
you wrsh to wtn over people to your way
of thrnk1ng Insincerity w111 be readily diS·
ce rned and resented by the' recip ients
ARIES
(March 21- Aptil
19)
Regardless of how bad thrngs mtghl look
for you be hopetul and opttmlstrc regardrng your financial alfarrs at thiS Irma . Thts
does not mean you should spend money
you dan t have yet
••
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Lrttl e of
conseq uence wrll be achteved today if
your goals are poorly def1ned. In order to
succeed . be a dreamer. but be a realistic
dreamer and be exact about what you
want.
GEMIN I {May 2 1-June 20) - It you.....take
important sltuatrons tor granled today
you could easrly lull yourself into a false
sense of secunty and fa11 to head off
problems rn advance Be cognrzanl at
what's at stake
CANCER (Jw1e 21-July 22)- Keep your
guard . up today 1n all your commercral
affaH s. Should someone wnh whom
you're doing business of1er you a deal
that appears too good to be true. search
lor ulterror motrves
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Unless lhe per·
son you team up with loday rs in comple te harmony with your goats and
desires. in all likelihOod you·ll both go ot1
In separate directions and achreve linle
as a result
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept . 22 ) - II you're
asked how to perform a specific tdk
today. don I pr•t'end to be knowledgeable
tl you're not. Just becauee you 're a5ked a
queation doesn't mean you nave to h.llve
the answer
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23)- Be axtrtml·
ly o1ut1oua tod•y where 1nve atment1 are
cor~c e rn ed and do • lot of reaearch rtrll
before plunking down vour hard·Hined
money on limited or htl rtay 1nlorm111on

laugh

DOWN

18 Styllal's
goop
21 Navajo
lodge
23 Dawn
goddess
26 Hydrocarbon
27
28
29
3t

20 Baking

Workou t
faci lity
2 Nol prepaid
3 En~ine stat
4 Wrtter
- Wiesel
5 Tusked

suffix
Shale exlracl

of " Fame"
. 46 Cast a vote
47 T'ai next
ch ' uan
24 Ontario city 48 Selleck or
25 Gol dirty
Landry·
28 Paddle
50 Grand lotal

ct1arger

Latch Bicker

30 Hammen

7 Function

detec t •ve

properly

letters

- Beaumont 52 -

8 Floor
9 Born

36 Sailed
through
37 -de mer
38 Wool
producer
39 Gollhe
trophy
40 Landscape

51 Mlndreader 's

cousin

6 Started

- SilUma11e
32 Present
33 Interest

45 Irene-

powder
22 Sparkles
23 Happens

Moines ,
Iowa

34 Short
snooze

10 Explain
further
12 Kick back
13 Empire
builder

35 Curdle
40 Fog or

steam
41 Stork

18 Tri,ket
19 Caruso 's
name

cousin

43 Dove 's
she lter

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cele!J"r~

" VX

Opher cryp:oQrilms !r~ creati!O 'ro, ~J013t o~s bl 'a"1CUS oecp e 095' 1110 oresem
Eacl&lt; lener or 1ne c C"e' sta"C!s •o• a oo t~l!r
Today s ~lu e T equals U

JXBXNM X

S N M X ."

" ALX

R . A .

BHIXJNUSX

PCOOXJ

H E

P HJ X

ALCO

V HJ AL

WNXJJX

VX

VL C A

GTA

SNMNDS

A LX

N R

SNEA.

8HJDXNIIX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Pol11ics are suer a tbrriert that 1would advtse
every one I love ne t to mix w•th them _· - Thomas Je!l er so11
[c) 2004 oy NEA. Inc
10-27

1

~~~:~;~'

S© ttJJ N\- -2 t- ~S"

WORD
OAMI
- - - - - - - Edihd b')' ClAY R. FDllA~ - - - - - - -

0 Re::ma!loe

!e tte·~ of
four 5{'Ct-~b!e C word~
low to form lour were,

D0 F

Y E KR J
r--;:C--;I;-;;G-:-1-;-N:---,1 ~
r--,--.,.,--rr,--,-~

'---''---'--'.--1...-.J

Ecor,Jr1. s:s ahva.·s con-

~

clude iratournation s economy
is rosy. Every:me knows t:--a ~ s

N

r
D

I

beca us-e the g J ve~'i'T· e~: s ~ un-

P L E UN I

ning --

the - - -

1--,-~-i~--~rll-'1'5-j Q ~cmo;e • e ·~ e
,

•

•

0 ".' I

I'

I'

i
UNSCRAM1LE A.SOVE LUTE&lt;\
TO (.EO

t "" ..-r , ·c c .,:;led

h. ~t; rr. ·~. c !"'&lt;!l•"l :J w:J·ds
yet/ de~ebp from ~·ep ,'\I':J 3 be low

_

A~'--.' S Vv E f.

I I

SCRAM· LETS ANSWERS 1 o- '6 •· cOrnate- Vi$CJT. F..1gid ~ Jocund. GR.A.VJ
My ole au~;t C"an;;ea 0.1 D!d say .;g ~:J sL··: her

pose. She says . "To err

IS f-. u:nar. bu~

to

11a've

f:..!~­
s:·r.leor.e

else to b!ame is real!v GRA:&gt;iD '"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
'l'OU A~£. ':&gt;0 fRWY
'l'OU Kf.JOW ffiA11

WHY 00 YOtl AI.-WAY'J 5A"(

'Tiilkluo LIKE. "fi'(AT .BefORt
I ISE:f At.!- DRE.!&gt;%D UP?

SOUP TO NUTZ
68CJ&lt; '!!liN IT WAf ....,_
1\'i 'Rs-.LlY lAM£' 1'11.'1041'1'
NIGH'!"

�c
Wednesday, October 27, 2004

_www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

Drug-Free Week
edition, Insert

Stargazers enjoy total
· lunar eclipse, As
JIG m STDIIDIGS
All Top 25

Big Ten
Wisconsin
5·0
Michigan
5-0
Iowa
3·1
Michigan St. 3·1

3-2

Minnesota

2-2
Purdue
Northwestem 2·2
Penn State
nunois

2-0
1-1
1·0
0-l
0-1
1·2
0-1
1-l
0-3
0-4

3-4

4-3
2-5
2·5
2-6

1-3
0-4
0-4
0-5

Ohio State
Indiana

z.o

8-0
7-1
5-2
4·3
6-2
5·2

PF
170
225
157
197
263
140
162
150
168
119
173

PA
68
147
118
154
153
103
170
138
211
110
226

la.UNQIS

t2004 Longwing PubliCations Inc.

GAME OF THE WEEK

Michigan State at Michigan

TEAM LEADEIIS
Average per game

lillom.IANA

P 4 UDIG0ii&amp;NR
......... - 314.9
Purdue
Northwestern . . . .
... - . - - 253.9
... - . 228.7
Michigan State .. .
. .. - . - . 222.1
Michigan . . . . . .
Iowa . . . . . . . . .... · .... - . 221.0
....... 207.1
Penn State . . . . .
Minnesota .' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1~8.8

find offense, ;coring a lone touchdown on

a 1-yard first-quarter run. Matt
LoVecchio was 14-for-25 for 156 yards
with an interception.
~A When the Hawkeyes defeated
..,.......
Penn State 6·4 last Saturday,
it was Iowa's lowest winning point total
since a 6-0 victory oveJ Northwestern in
1957. The points came when Kyle
Schlicher kicked two 27-yard field goals
in the first half.
For Wolverines
freshman Michael
Hart, another week meant another
record. Last Saturday, he became
Michigan's all-time leading freshman
rusher. passing Rldry Powers' re(ord of
148 yards in his first season. In running
for 206 yards on 33 attempts. Hart
~surpassed 200 yards for the second
straight week, becoming the second
Wolverines running back to accomplish
the feat since Jon Vaughn in 1990.

att~•••GOITDIU

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 278.4

Minne~ota.

Michigan State .
Wisconsin . . . .

. . . . . . . . . 212.9
. . . . . . 173.1

Northwestern. .

. . . . . . 169.7

lllinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162.6
· Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149.1
Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138.7
. . . . . . 477 .1

Purdue . . . . . . . .
. . . 453.6
Michigan State .... . .... .... 441.6
Northwestern . . . . . . . . . . , ... 423.6

Michigan . . . . . . . . ....... . 371.2
lllinois ... ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 352.8
Penn State . . . . . . .

. . 326.0

P ''1*GDD&amp;NA
8

Wisconsin . . . . . . .
Penn State . . . . . .

. . 14 7 .2
. ·. . . 172.4

Ohio State . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . 194.1

aU&amp;INGDUUil&amp;
Michigan . . .
. . . . . . . . .
. 71.6
Iowa . .
. . . . . . . . •. . .
. 72.0
Wisconsin
. . . . . . , . . . . . . 89.1

. 95.4

Penn State . , . , . . . . . . . . . . . 113.4

Ohio State ...... . , ........ 129.0

•a

Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134.4

TG'I'IIL

&amp;NU:

Wisconsin .

. . . . . . . . .

. 235.4

Michigan

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275.6

Iowa . . . .

. . . . . . . . .

. 279.9

Penn State . .

. . . , . . . . . . . 285.9

Ohio State . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 323.1
Purdue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331.4

Michigan State . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363.6

IJIDIVIDUAL LEADERS
PUIIIIO'IAUIIGI:
Kyle Orton. Purdue . .
. .... 2.090
Brett Basanez, Northwestern, . , . ..
Chad Henne, Michigan . . . . . . . ·..
Bryan Cupito. Minnesota . . . . . , ..
Drew Tate, Iowa . . . . . . .. . . . . .
lack Mills, Penn State . . . . . . . . .
Matt LoVecchio. Indiana . . . . . . . .

1.771
1.728
1,509
1,467
1.265
1,205

WWWIWG'IUID&amp;GI:
Laurence Maroney, Minnesota . .
. .
Michael Hart, Michigan . . . . . . . . .
Marion Barber ill, Minnesota . . . . . . .
Noah Herron, Northwestern ... , • , ..
Pierre Thomas. lltinois . . . . . . . ...
Tony Hunt, Penn State . . . . . . . . . .
BenJarvus Green-Ellis, Indiana . . . . . .

941

936
816

781
577

477
471

, .CUiiNG'IAUAGI:
Brayton Edwards, Michigan . . .
. .. 806
Courtney Roby, Indiana . . . . . . . . . . 671
Taylor Stubblefield, Purdue . . . . . . . . 618

· Mark Philmore, Northwestern . . , . . . .
Santonio Holmes. Ohio State . . . . . . .
Kendrick Jones, lllinois . . . . . . . . . .
Ernie Wheelwright, Minnesota . . . . . .
Clinton Solomon, Iowa . . . . . . . . . .

574
562
490
457
447

ftn'U.Oii&amp;WA
Kyle Orton, Purdue . . . . . . . . . . .
Brett Basanez, Northwestem . . . . . .
Chad Henne. Michigan . . . . . . . . .
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota . . . . . . . .
Drew Stanton, Michigan State . . . . .
Drew Tate, Iowa .. , . . . . . . . . ,, .
Matt LoVecchio, Indiana . . . . . . . .
lack Milts, Penn State . . . . . . . . .

2,173
1.923
1.650

1.543
1,497
1,452
1,324
1,256

Pf,»IN'I'S

Taylor Stubblefield. Purdue ........ 66
Mike Nugent Ohio State . . . . . . .
.
Noah Herron, Northwestem . . . . .
.
Marion Barber ill, Minnesota. . . . .
.
Garrett Riv.as, Michigan . . . . . . . , . .
Dave Rayner, Michigan State . ... , .. ,
Rhys Lloyd, Minnesota . . . . . . . . . , .
Ben Jones, Purdue .. . . . . . . . . . . .

60
60
60
59
57
57
54

MimmiiO. .
Markus Curry, Michigan . . . . . . . . . . .
Tracy Porter, Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .
Jason Harmon, Michigan State . . . . . . .
Anwar Phillips. Penn State • . . . . , . . .
Ukee Dozier, Minnesota .~ . . . . . , .. ,
Kelvin Hayden, illinois . . . : . . . . . . ,

Eight players tied at 2

3
3
3
3
3
3

,1

'\, 11

ntustration by Bruce Ptante e 2004

• The curse is over. See
Page 81

Bv BRIAN

.Ann .Arbor showdown
W

hen these two teams meet. the crowds are always huge_
and everyone in Michigan. it seems. ha~ declared their
loya lty to one team or the other. This scmon. Michigan
and Mich igan State arc both coming off strong performances a.1.
they prF.:"parc for a showdown in Jtnn Arbor.
The Wolverines have won three of th e last four mt:etings.
winning the last one at the Big House -l9-J.
Michigan State i~ coming off a 51-17 shellacking of Minnesota,
a week after Michigan handed the Golden Gophers •their first loss.
Last week, the Wolverines beat Purdue 16- 14. givin g the
Boilermakers their second loss.
Both teams still haw a .1.hot at the Big Ten tit le, V.'ith Michigan
undefeated and the Spartan!&gt;. with only one lms. Michigan State
controls its own destiny. with games against Michigan , Ohio State
and Wi~consin the next three weeks. Michigan will need someone
to defeat the B:.tdger~ if they arc to win the ..:unfcrcm.:e outright .
Both Mi..:higan amJ Michigan St:..~te lnst last year'~ !'Ienior
quarlcrhacks to graduation have had new signal-callers step in:
Michigan freshman Chad Henne and MSU redshin sophomore
Drew Stanton. who has become a star .
Michigan will try to pound the fo01ball and dominmc the
Spanans on the ground. Last ~cnson.thcy ran senior RB Chris
Perry 52 times in a 27-20 vic10ry. nnd this season will attempt to
do the same with frc, hman RB Michael Han.
"
• Re(ords: Michigan State4-3 (3-1 Big Ten): Michigan 7-1 (5-0

Big Ten). • Seriei' Michigan lead; 63-28-5. a Coaches:

Michigan State's John L. Smith ( 123-68): Michigan's Lloyd Carr
(93-27) . • Kickoff: 3:30p.m. ET Saturday. • TV: ABC.

Keys for Michigan State: Linebacker play. The Spartans
have struggled with tacklin£ at times this season and will have to
be defen.1.ively sound against Michigan and freshman RB Michael
Hart. who ha:-.. run for 200 yards in corl!'lecut ive games.
. . , Belitve. The Spartans must believe they are gpod enoug h to
llefe;.~t the Wolvcrim::-.. on Lhc road. MSU beat Minnesota 51 -17
and rnmt !&gt;.lay cunfitlcnt agai n!&gt;.! MiL"higan .
Keys for Michigan: Stop Stanton. MSU quarterback DrCw
Stanton has been an offensive force since he became the !'ltaner.
He had 410 yards of offense. an MSU record, against Minnesota.
. Controllhc dock . The Wolverine~ have used a good balance
of pa.\!'ll ng and running and mu"il contin ue to count on running
back Michael Hart to hold on to the football and the game.

The Rest of tbe _M atc:laaps
W1-.con'+i n ha~ th~ week off a ... -.cvcral Big Ten teams look 10
..,ah age their ~etlo,;on!'l. After running off impre!&lt;osive starts. both
Purdue and Minnesota arc hoping to improve their bowl chances.
The Boi lermakers travel to Northwestern to face QB Brett
Basancz. while the Golden Gophers travel to Indiana to face a
Hoosiers team that has lost f1 vc straight games. Purdue lo!&gt;.l close
gu mcs to conference leader~ Michigan and Wi~consin, whi le the
Golden Gophers lost to Michigan and Michigan State .
Three teams arc look in g for their firsl conference win thi ~
week, Illinois. ~ ho has lost 13 con:-..ecutivc Big Ten games, hosts
lo\\&lt;a. The Hawkeyes barely beat Penn State with the low score of
1

11//\ I) \(iF 1)/UJl D/.} SPO \ \ORUJ

nr f/11:"

6-4 and look like they may be a prime target for an upset. Indiana
and Penn State are the other winless teams. The Nittany Ljons
travel to strug.g ling Ohio State. hoping to save coach Joe Paterno's
job ami get a win. The Buckeyes are otlto a rough start and will
look to get buck into bowl contention .

Purdue at Northwestern
• Records: Purdue 5-2 (2-2 Big Ten); Northwestern 3-4 (2-2 Big
Ten) . • Series: Purdue leads 46-23 -1. • Coaches: Purdue· s Joe
Tiller (99-64- I): Northwestern's Randy Walker (86-74-5).
• Kickoff: II a.m.CT Saturday. • TV: ESPN.
Key for Purdue: Stay confident, The Boilermaker~ have lo~t
two stra ight games. and against a weak Northwc~tcm defense they
will need to ~core plenty of points.
Key for Northwestern: Pressure Onon. The Wildcats need to
limit the amount of time Purdue QB Kyte'onon has to throw the
ball. if he has too much time, he will pick apart the defense .

Minnesota at Indiana
• Records: Minnesota 6-2 (3-2 Big Ten): Indian a 2-5 (0-~ Big
Ten). • Series: Minnesota leads 33-24-3. • Coaches:
Key for Minnesota: Start tough. Indiana is an early-game
team, and if they get ahead. the Golden Gophers will have a tough
rime comi ng back.
Key for Indiana: Spread the ball around. QB t&gt;latt LoVecchio
ha.-.;n ·thad many options thi s season. depending too much on WR
Courtney Roby. The Huo~iers must find a ru~n ing game and other
n:ceivcr!'l tn beat good teams.

Iowa at Illinois ,.
• Records: lowo 5-2 (3-1 Big Ten); llhnms 2-6 (0-5 Big Teo).
Series: Il li nois leads 37-25-3. a Coaches: Iowa's Kirk Ferentz
(~8-12): lllinoi&gt; Ron Turner (41-58). • Kickoff: II a.m. CT
Saturday. • TV: ESPN Plus.
Key for Iowa: Find more offcflsive options. The Hawke yes·
top th ree ru~hcr:-. are out with knee injuries. and they haven't found
an cffcL·tivc replacement.
Key for Illinois: Avoitltumovcrs. Iowa intercepted four Penn
State paSses last week and won 6-4 because of the turnovers .
lllinoi!&gt;. must hold on to the football.

Penn State at Ohio State
• Records: Penn State 2-5 (0-4 Bi g Ten): Ohio State 4-3 (.J-3 Big
Ten) . • Series: Penn State leads 10-9. • Coaches: Penn State·s
Joe Paterno'(34 1-1 13-3 ): Ohio State·' Jim Tressel (172-67-21 .
'I\ Kickoff: 12 noon ET Saturday. • TV: ABC.
Key for Penn State: End the drought. Talk isJigain &gt;wi rling

INSIDE
• Bush appeals to
Democratic voters; Kerry
says Republican 'doesn't
get it'. See Page A2

about veteran coach Joe Paterno\, job security after an 0-4
conference start. Penn Stme dcspemtely need s to win .

Key for Ohio State: · Throw the ball downfield. The Buckeyes
have played conservatively and been stagnant. New QB Troy
Smith must find WRs like Santonio Holmes for big plays.

WEATHER

Wisconsin opened a season 8-0 was in

1998, when it won the Rose 8ov.;l. ·

FOliO\\/.\(/ /H'.)/.\ L\.\L\;

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Details on Page A8

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

A:3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4

Sports

B1

Places To Go

B8

Weather

AS

POMEROY - One state
issue will appear on Ohio
ballots on Nov. 2 - a ballot
initiative designed to amend
the state constitution to limit
state recognition of marriage
to that between a man and
woman.
The proposed constitutional amendment reads: ''Only
a union between one man
and one woman may be a
marriage valid in or recog nizea by this state and its
political subdivisions This
state and· its political subdivisions shall not create or
recognize a legal status for
relationships of unmarried
individuals that intends to
approximate the design,
qualities. significance or
effect of marriage."

LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPI1ALIZATION

188 EAST SECOND ST. • POMEROY, OH

992-3381

until al least May. 2005.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
said ·the company's decision
relates to the high liability
risk created by two hangings
in
the
jail.
Shane
Muodispaugh. a prisoner of
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department. and Donald
Sturgeon, a prisoner of the
Gallipolis Police Department.
committed suicide in the jail
in two separate incidents in
2003.
Miller said the insurance
company's decision also

relates to an estimate of prisoners to be housed there this
year made for the insurance
company. which he intentionally estimated high to prevent
just such a housing restriction .
The jail hou,es up to four
prisoners as a fi vc-day holding facility. It has generated
over $30,000 in housing fees
from the county and other villages so far this year $10,000 more !han was collected in housing fees in 2003.
That revenue direc.tly funds

the operation of the jail and
the salaries of police officers .
Miller said at least 90 percent of the prisoners housed
in Middiepon's jail by other
agencies stay no more than a
day or two. and are primarily
those awaiting court appearheforc they are
ances
released . Middlepot1 officers
often transport county prisoners to court appearances when
deputies are unavailable .
"There has always been a

Please see Jail, AS

(photo courtesy of Sandra Philson)

Members of the Meigs County Humane Society and dogs that had been adopted from the Meigs County Dog Pound visited residents of Overbrook Center during Make A Difference Day. Pictured in front are Kurt Crouch with Gracie. Prince. Overbrook resident Gladys Deem ho lding Pup . Gary Wilford, Humane Society vice-president with Himk. and in back. Brittany Phi lson, Humane
Society junior member, Phyliss May, Overbrook assistant, Vicky Baer, Humane Society treasure r. Not pictured. Sandra Philson,
Humane Society boardmember.

Issue One addresses-marriage issue

© 2:004 Ohio Valle)' Publishing Cu.

FARM • HOME • BUSINESS

MIDDLEPORT
Members of the Meigs
County Humane Society
decided to spe nd Make A
Difference Day with the residents of Overbrook Center.
T.he members brought
along dogs that had been
adopted from the Meigs
County Dog Pound to visit
with the residents .
The members and their
dogs moved from room to
room with a Polaroid camera
to pass out pictures of residents spending time with
their four-legged visitors.
Vicky Baer said at one
point she looked behind her
and several residents in
wheelchairs were following
behind
[heir
entourage
because they enjoyed the outside world coming for a visit
in the form of the animals.
Often residents in nursing
homes have to leave pets
behind because they were
unable to care for them. By
interacting with the animals
from the Humane Society
they got to reconnect with
their own animals and lives
iQ a way.
'The dogs were so open to
the affection:· said Vicky
Baer, Humane Society. treasurer. "These dogs were at
one time abandoned and left
alone and they made a connection with the residents."

Please see Visit. AS

Boilermakers lost their second
consecutive game with a 16-14l0ss to

~CONSIN By beating
.........
Northwestern 24-12
last Saturday, the Badgers opened a
season B-0 for only the fourth time in the
school's 115 seasons. The last time

li ability
insurance
carrier. has
orderet.l the
village to
s I o p
accepting
inmates
from
the
county
sheriff's
department, Jeff Miller
the Pomeroy
Police Department, and ail
other law enforcement agencies outside of the vi II age

BY BETH SERGENT

State·s·first lead of the season. The
Nittany Lions scored a second safety \ate
in the game.
~DUE After starting the season
~
with five straight wins
for the first time since 1945, the
Michigan. For the second straight week, a
fumble on their final drive cost the
Boilermakers the game. 08 Kyle Orton
threw a completion to Dorion Bryant on a
crossing pattern, but after the catch.
Bryant was hit by Michigan defe11sive
backs Markus Curry and Ernest Shazor,
who caused the fumble. Michigan's Leon
Ball recovered, leading to the Wolverines'
victory.

\\\1\\111\tl , .,h ·.,~~ t••"l'n'"

•not

8SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

lost to Wisconsin 24-12, they did
accomplish something that no other team
had this season. RB Noah Renon ran 19
times for 109 yards and became the first
player to rush for 100 yaris in a gam~
against Wisconsin this season.
-....u, ST.'A"'E By beating Indiana
~
nl
30-7, the Buckeyes
avoiding starting the Big Ten season at
0-4 for the first time since 1922. Running
back Lydell Ross was suspended for the
game, but replacement Antonio Pittman
ran for 14&lt;\ yards and a touchdown on 20
carries.

of the end zone. The 2-0 score was Penn

•S

Humane Society and their dogs visit Overbrook

IIIRTHWESTERN ~~~~a~~e

marked the Nittany Lions' lowest scoring
output since they were shut out by
Michigan 20-0 in 2001. Penn State took an
early 2-0 lead when the snap flew over
Iowa punter David Bradley's head and he
was forced to kick the ball out of the back

REED

MIDDLEPORT
- The
Village of Middleport's insurance company has closed the
village jail to all outside
inmates, placing a financial
hardship on the vi llage and
creatin g more problems for
local law enforcement agencies needing a nearby place to
house prisoners.
Jail Administrator Jeff
Miller . said
the
Ohio
· Municipal Pool, the village's

MinnesOta's Glen Mason ( 108-106- 1); Indiana 's Gerry DiNardo

(5X-72-1).11 Kickoff: I p.m.CTSaturday.•TV: Nunc.

J.

BAEEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

IIIPlNESOTA ~~~~;;:,~~-o
victory over ll\inois last Saturday was
Minnesota's first shutout in a conference
game since it beat Indiana 12-0 in 1g9o.
The Golden Gophers. the nation's thirdranked rushing team, ran for 319 yards
against the ntini. Marion Barber Ill
carried the ball 11 times for 138 yards and
two touchdowns. Laurence Maroney
rushed for 72 yards on 15 carries.

IIIIIC'-.1)\\ . CHI(ti~IH

1

Middleport jail closed to outside inmates

SPORTS

The Spartans
had a bye week
before facing archrival Michigan, leaving
several players free to collect awards for
the 51-17 victory over Minnesota the
previous week. 08 Drew Stanton was
named Big Ten Offensive. Player of the
Week. while Dave Rayner shared the
Special Teams Player of the Week honor
with Iowa kicker Kyle Schlicher.

Iowa .. .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 207.9
fllinois . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 231.1

Purdue ... , . . . . . . . . . . . .

,t•CI '\ 1 '-. · \ o l

-.u.t'HIGAN ST·
.......

Michigan State . . . . . . . .
. . 199.6
Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . 204.0

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

-.u.t'
N
......,HIGA

'I'GT.U. OITDIU
Minnesota. . . . . . .

The ntini's 45-0 loss to
Minnesota last Saturday
was its 13th consecutive Big Ten defeat.
After being benched the previous week
against Michigan, 08 Jon Beutjer again
sat out against Minnesota. In his place,
illinois redshirt freshman 08 Brad Bower
was 14-of-20 for 131 yards and was also
illinois' leading rusher, gaining 39 yards
on nine carries.
After winning its first
.....,..
two games, Indiana lost
its fifth straight 30-7 to Ohio State last
Saturday. The Hoosiers again struggled to
~

According to an argument
in favor of the amendment
found in the state's Ohio
Issues Report, prepared by
the Ohio Campaign to
Protect Marriage. the issue
is designed to exclude the
definition of homosexual
marriages. und lu prevent

the governme nt from using
tax dollars to give official
s!atus, recognition and bcncfi&lt;s to homosexual and olher
"dcviam" relationships th&lt;it
seek to imitate marriage.
The Catholic Conference
of Ohio, one of several religious organizations supporting the amendment, maintains the amendment due\
not discriminate against
.homosexuals . A statement
encouraging Ohio Catholics
to support the amendmenl
was signed by all ~4 Ohio
bishops

·'Our defense of marriage
must focus prim-arily on the
fundamental importance of
marriage for children. families and societies. not on
homosexuality or other matters:· the Conference wrote
in a statement dated Oc1. 5.
"The
church 's
teaching
about the human dignity of
is
clear.
homosexuals
Homosexual persons are to
be treated with respect and
compassion."
. "The (Catholic l Church
teaches thai marriage is a
fai thful, exclusive and lifelong union between one man
and one woman. Marriage
can only be !he union of a
man and a woman. This
truth ouglll to be recognized
as such in la w:·
Opponents of the issue say
the measure will harm heierosexuals and homosexual s.

Galli a
Democrats
to rally
Saturday

and even businesses offering
benefits
to
emp loyees.
Several compan ie s. including
Nationwide In surance and
The Limited. have come out
in· opposition to the measure.
"Issue I would e liminate
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MY
DliiLYTR IBUNE COM
the rights. benefits and protections for Ohio· s unmarGALLIPOLIS - Fonner
ried couples. both straight
U.S.
Sen. Bob Kerrey of
and gay," said Jan James.
~ebraska
will addre" local
political director for Ohioans
Democrat&gt;
"hen they gather
Protecting the C(11lstitution.
"Issue I would tl.ic-late to Saturd;ty at the Galli a County
employers how they mu't Junior Fairground~ for a pre: . •
operate by telling th em what election rail\ and rec,ruitmem
of volunteers 10 work ori
bcpetits they wuld otTer:·
"Issue I would also elimi- Election Day nexl Tuesday.
The rallv will be from II
nate health care covera£e h'
a.m.
until-~ p.m. in the fairforbidding domestic p~rtner ·
ground'·
Activity Building.
benefits and wou ld abolish
Kerrey\ appearance at the
propertv and inheriwncc
ra
ll
v
wa~
announced
rights for young and oiJ."
Wcdnc,dal'
bv
Chris
Bast.
" Issue I will hurl the
economy and t.:ost .ta.xpay~rs
Please see Rally, AS
more:· Jame&gt; said .

October is National
Physical .Therapy Month

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Holzer Medical Center salutes our physical therapists
and physical therapy assistants during their special month!
For more information, call the

,

Holaer Medical TheNP)' Center et (740) 446-51a1

or the
HMC Inpatient RehabUitatlon Unit at (740)446-507'0.

------ ---·-

/

1

•

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