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                  <text>Fall hunting

Voter guide, Insert

edition, Insert

Commissioners transfer funds for deputy salaries

SPORTS
• Southern run ends
against Notre Dame.
See Page B1

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYOA1LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners voted
Thursday to lransfer funds
from their own departmental
budget for sheriff's deputies'
salaries.
·
Meeting Thursday, commissioners approved a $ 10.000

transfer from lheir maintenance and operations fund to
lhe deputy salaries· line item.
The fund is used to pay for
repairs and maintenance lo
the courthouse.
Earlier this month. commis·
sioners approved the transfer
of $38,000 within Sheritl
Ralph Trussell's budget for
employee salaries. At the

time, commissioner' said tht! $225.372.50
for
deput y layoff nolices bec au'e of a
funds. including · $ 10.000 salaries. In January. Tru"ell term in the negotialed con·
from the contract repairs line.
$20,000 from the prisoner&gt;
medical line and $X.UUO from
contract services. were no1
needed for their intended
expenses .
Commissioners appropriat·
ed $537,217.9 1 for Trussell's
operations tl1 i.s year. including

sai d he would need ~3_10.000
in salary fumh . alone, t(&gt; keep
his current staff on the JOb for
the entire vear. Thur\ddv·,
lransfers wiil alluw the sh~r­
iff" s department to make three
payroll s al $ 12.500 each.
Trussell said he ma y be
requ ired to issue two-week

lract with depul ie.s.
the layo ff; probably
actually take 11lace.
cmp lov' 12 deptttie&gt;

hul sai d
will not
He now
and one

ofrice a..,..,i ..,tanl.
Tru sse ll 'aid if layoff&gt; are
indeed averted. he will have

Please see Funds, AS

Field Trip

Pomeroy police news:
shoplifters should beware
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAlLYSENTlNEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Pomeroy

Page 8 •

Drug Awareness 2004

Page AS
• Madge E. Brown

INSIDE

The issue of drugs can be very confusing to young children.
If drugs are so dangerous, then why is the family medicine cabinet full of them?
And why do TV, movies, music and advertising often make drug and alcohol use look so cool?
We need to help our kids to distinguish fact from fiction. And it's not too soon to begin.
National studies show that the average age when a child first tries alcohol is 11;
for marijuana, it's 12. And many kids start becoming curious about
these·substances even sooner.
Kids who feel good about themselves are much less
likely than other kids to turn to illegal substanc~s
to get high.

• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Huntington school,
homes evacuated after
rail tanker leak.
See Page AS
• Ohio voters
empowered, knowing
they may decide election.
See Page A7

POMEROY - Pomeroy Police responded to a suspecled
shoplifting-cal l from Fruth's Pharmacy on Oct. 19. a ca ll that
is resulting in more and more arrests because of new sur·
veillance equipment at the store~
Upon arriving at Fruth's, Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
Profitt and Patrolman A l an Queen witnessed Katrina
Snodgrass. 39, of Racine, place items into her purse after
opening lheir containers.
Snodgrass was arrested and charged with theft. posses·
sion of marijuan~ and disorderly by intoxication. Also
arrested in connection with .lhe incident was David
Snodgrass. l'l. of Racine. who was charged with po sses sion
of marijuana.
Protltt commends the Fruth's employee's quick response
and the store's new surveillance equipment.
"'lt"s been a tremendous help lo us.'' said Jennie Littl e.
Fruth 's assistanl manager. "'If we suspecl someone ha' stolen
something we play it back on the tape.'"
Little al so credits her fellow employees for keeping an
eye out for suspicious behavior.
Since moving into their new store. the surveillance system at Fruth's has also result~d in sending three residents to
prison who bought chemicals at the store used in the making
of methamphetamine.
Currently Profitt. lhe pharmaci sts and the survei llance
system are monitoring prescription fraud al the store.
" The people at Fruth's have a high degree of profession alism when il comes to deterring crime.'' said Protitt.
In olher Pomeroy police news. Dale W. Hoffman. 52, of
Pomeroy wa s arrested and charged at 9:27a.m. on Thursday
wilh intimidation of a crime viclim which is an F-:1 felony.
and gross sexual imposition· which is an F-4 felony.
Hoffman 's bond was set in county court at $25.000.
' - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - _ _ )

WANT A BOO(K)?

WEATHER

Think Responsibly.
Don't do Drug~. . .

As parents, we can do many things to enhance our
children's self-image. Here are some pointers:

·-

* Offer lots of praise for any job well done.

*
*

*

*

Third-graders from throughout Meigs
County have enjoyed a day out of the
classroom this week, thanks to a program sponsored by the Meigs County
Retired and Senior Volunteer Program
and its Seniors in Schools program.
The field trip included a lesson in
civics. a lesson in architecture and a
lesson in local history. On a tour of
the county courthouse. elected officials explamed the work they and
their staffs do to maintain public
records. At Sacred Heart Church. the
emphaSIS was on the 106-year~o ld
Gothic church and its striking archi~
tectura l details. At the Chester
Courthouse,
Chester /S hade
Historical Assoc iation vo lunteers,
dressed in period costume. shared
stories from the county's earliest
days. Here . some of the 70 students
from Eastern Elementary School are
pictured enjoying a break at the Civil
War Monument on the courthouse
steps. Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz. pastor of
Sacred Heart, is pictured as he gives
students a lesson on the church·s
famous Barckhoff Organ, made 111
Latrobe, Pa ~ by a firm which.later relocated to Pomeroy. The program
serves 280 students in three el€7
mentary schools with weekly in-class
programs and a hol iday craft project.
(Brian J . Reed/photos)

If you need to criticize your child, talk about the
action, not the person. If your son gets a math

(Brian J. Reed/photo)

INDEX

problem wrong, it's better to say, "I think you
added wrong. Let's try again." ·
Assign do-able chores. A 6-year-old can bring her
plate over to the sink after dinner; a 12-year-old
can feed and walk the dog after school.
Performing such duties and being praised for
them helps your child feel good about himself.
Spend one-on-one time with your youngster.
Setting aside at least 15 uninterrupted minutes per
child per day to talk, play a game, or take a walk
together, lets her know yuu care.
Say, "I love you." Nothing will make your child
feel better.

SEcnoNs- t6
Calendars
2

Classifieds

PAGES

A6
B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A6

Editorials

A4

Faith•Values

A2-3

Mo~es

As

Nascar

B8

Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

Weather

A8

© 2004 Ohi,o Valley Publishing Cu.

While Thursday night was the time for boys and girls in scary
and cute costumes. adults enjoy Halloween. too. On Thursday.
employees of the Pomeroy Library came to work in costume s
of their own. Debbie Wiggins , Darlene Hoschar. Peg Carpenter. ·
Amanqa Bailey and Kimberly Barrett are pictured.

Time to 'fall back' is Sunday
.

.

Of cour,e. il al'(' means an
exira hour of wmk ttl those whn
work the O\ernigiH 'hift. And
GALLIPOLIS Backy ard the change mcan .s it ''ill he
barbecue season is winding to a dark an hour earlier Sunda\
.
.,
clo;e and it's time to say good· mght when the )'!lUll~ ghn~h
and
ghoulmaJ..e
their
bye to day light-saving time ~
Clo&lt;:ks shift back 10 ' tandard ·Halloween rnund,.
Da~ !ight -...,a\ ii1g time return"
time al 2 a. m. Sunday. loc·al
tim e. gi\'i ng mn~l people an the rirq Sunday 111 .-\pnl
Tile official time d 1.1 n ~ e 1h i'
extra hour of sleep SaturJay
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@ MmAILYTRIBUNE.CO M

Fire on Swick Road destroys home
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT® MYDAILYSENTINELCO M

RUTLAND - A house on
Swick RDad in Rutland was
totally des1royed by lire early
Thursday morning.
The
Ru1land
Fire
Department received a· crll al
5:35 a.m. on Thur" lay &lt;:on·

cerning a struclllrar fire on
. Swick Road . al the two-s tory
home of Dave Miller. his wife
and four chi ldren .
Luckily, the fami ly already
had left for work and 'l"hQol.
and no onti was in the home at
the time of the fire .

Please see Fire, AS

'

ni!.!lit.
Thai means sci the clock hack

I an hour.

Fall back '
Turn your clocks back an hour
to standard tJme at 2 a.m
•
Sunday

\\eekend i~ abo the n ~ ht lli..' L' ~ I ­
..,iun w rhan ~e the hatll'riL' . ., in

Please see Time, AS

Holzer Medical Center salutes

Red Ribbon Week 2004

These helpful tips brought to you by:

entinel
111 Court Street •

, Ohio • 992-2155

October 23-31

·

Red Ribbon Week is a national awareness campaign that was created to take a
collective stand against underage use of alcohol, tobacco and illegal drugs.
Sponsored by Ohio Parents for a Drug-Free Youth and FACTS in Gallipolis.

�Page A2

,•.

A3

FAITH • VALUES
A Hunger For More Church to host 'I Love To Tell The Story'

The Daily Sentinel

As we race through the
"home 'tretch'' of thi s election towards ih finish line
thi s Tuesday. th in k well on
what an act of worship that
the c;bting of your vote is.
Is it any accident that
you are born imo this ge neratio n ' Is it sim ply a
coiiKi dem:e that yo u li ve
where yo u- do''
Not at dll ~
In 1-act. a
wealth ol 1nfl ue nce has
been ent rusted In you th.11
you n11giH help nudge thai
which 1s ea1thl y towards
that whic h i, he&lt;t,en ly.
From t h ~ 1ntl uence that yo u
exert upon your acqu amtances to the opportuml!es
yo u ha ve bee n g1ven to
he lp other' tn need. you
are im m·d dail y to joi n
God ;n " orl around you 111
H1s m1 sW1 n to "seek and
sa\e th at " hich has been
lo-t" (Lu l.e 19: \0).
This fallen and broken
world needs the help of
God and yo 11 and I are
1n viteJ 10 be a pan ot the
remedy. Your vote consequeml y 1s not your ov.n.
but is .1 gift entrusted to
you . You ha• e been made
a stewan.l of th is vote thai
the vui ce of God might be
uttered through you in thi s
elec tion Your vote i.,.- not
about ha ving your say
I wha teve r popular culture
tells you).
It is a powerful means
by wh1ch you may "tlcsh
out" th ~ life of Chnst JU
you to mtluence this t:ultu rc wh1ch in 1ts turn profo undl y mlluences the rest
•
of the world
II 1s true 1l1at you and I
can use our votes selfis hly.
of course
We can use
them
to
make
OURSELVES be heard. We can
push forward with OUR
OWN •·special interests."
After all. the God Who
made the heavens and the
earth and has appointed us
to li ve in th is day and
hour. has given us the freedom to choose to use all
our facultie s in keep1ng
with Hts will for our indtvidual lives or to use in
keeptng with our own wills
for our own selves apart
from H1s grace.
But let . us then not use
that freedom to push for
our own way. While it is
indeed "natural" to lqok
out for, what we want
(stn ce the beg mning o f

Friday, October 29,

I

Pastor
Thorn ·
Mollohan

time when humamty chose
it s own way over God's
\ovmg direct Jon to the 21st
Ce ntury. when we dail y
make choices on how to
spend our lives). selfi shness
in our c hoices generates
onl y di sharm ony. distrust
and destruction for ourse lves and al so has the
unlortuna te side-effect of
harming others 111 the
proce ss.
As you vole thi s coming
Tu esday, make it your
intention to lei God speak
throu gh you . As you seek
to "render to Caesar what
Caesar' s"
(Matthew
is
2 ~ : 2 1 ). do so in such a
way that God wi II be honored and pleased. Those
things which He esteems
highly then should preempt
those thmgs thai personally
benefit us. Let our choices
be shaped by God' s holiness. His regard for the life
that He has created (of
th ose born and those
unborn). His establishment
ol the mstttuiJon of marri age between one man and
one woman . and such
&gt;irtues as integrity and
grace
Democracy is wonderful
and freedom is joyous but
onl y when they restde
under the shadow of God.'s
will.
Let us therefore
choose in this election to
abide under the shade of
His grace lest we be
scorched by the rays of
self-will ajld sin. You may
have but one vote to cast,
but if it is cast wnh the
desire to please God, it
matters a great deal after
all.
(T~om Mollohan has
ministe red in southern
Ohio the past nine years
aitd is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church. He and his wife
are the parents of three
children with another. on
th e way! He rna) be
reached by email at pastorthom@ pathwa ygallipolis .com).

POMEROY - In times
long gone . people entertained themselves by sitting
on their porches and listening to stories. or the neighbors came over and all
played
mu sic
together.
Now. with TY s. DYDs ,
satellite
computers
and
radios, the art of storytelling IS rapidly fad1ng.

Also scheduled to appear
is Me1 gs Count y's own
Donna Wil son. who is
heavily involved in the
craft of storytelling.
Mu sical
guests
"The
Monday
Ni ght
Get
Together" also will appear.
The group ge ts together
every Monday night at a
member's home to si ng.

On Nov. 4, the First
Southern Bapti st Church
wili present "I Love to Tell
the Story.." Trevor Thomas
of Trevor Thomas Drama
Ministries, Tampa. Fla. will
be · featured .
He
has
appeared in various churche s and at the PolJleroy
Amphitheater two years
ago.

2004

Grace Church plans weekend event
Grace
GALLIPOLIS
United Methodist Church.
600 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
will be having a lay witness
weekend Nov. 5 through 7.
Th1 s weekend brings a
team of vis1ting lay people
and a coordinator to the

sharing fmth stori es. worship and prayer. The team
of visiting lay people gUJdes
the adivi ties for all ages.
Food will be provided for
goers.
Activities throughout th1 s some me.ils at the church.
The first actt vny will be
event indude small group
di SC USS\OilS, a potluck meal al the
gatherings ,
church to share their faith
in a vari ety of settin gs
Laypersons are not clergy.
but are ordinary church-

F.ellowship
Apostolic

play and have a good time.
The entertainment begin&gt;
at 7 p.m. The church 1'
located where the fo ur-lane
highways cross near Meigs
High· School. Informatio n 1s
av mlable by call ing 9926779. Thi s event is free to
the publil: , and a love
oflcr ing will be rece ived.

church at 6: 30 p.m. Friday.
Nov. S. All members aml
visito" are encouraged to
att end as much o l thi s
weekend as they can. For
more detail s. call the church
office at 446-0555 .

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

•

Chureh or Jesus Christ Apostolic
VanZandr a nd Ward Rd . Pa"hlr' Ja m~'

Mrllcr, Sunday School
Evcmn g. 7 30 p m

pm

Wcdm:sday 7 00

BY RICHARD N. OSTLING
M' RELI GION WRITER

In terms of Americans and
the Bible. 1t is the worst of
times and the best of times.
The worst because ignorance
abounds
about
humankind 's most intluential
book .
And the best because people who want to explore the
Bible can enjoy unparalleled
richness in resources produced in the decades since
World War II .
· There's a Bible translation
to fit every taste and reading
fevel (!;Ome would ' say there
are far too many) and, perhaps more importan,t, the
fine st imaginable array of
Bible reference works. Four
works, cooperative proJect s
involving hundreds upon hundreds of scholars, stand out:
- The
Anchor
Bible
Dictionary (Doubleday, 1992.
$390, also available in CDROM for $269.95). This work
of 7,000 pages in six volumes
is , a monumental. indispensable treasure.
-The HarperCollins Bible
Commentary
(HarperSanFrancisco, 2000
revised edition , $49.50). This
passage-by-passage discussion of the entire biblical text,
from the professional society
of Bible professors, summarizes the consensus of "higher
criticism" at secular universities and seminaries they influence .

For comparative purposes.
it 's valuable to have handy
two high-qualit y volumes
from Protestants who, oppose
Iiberal conclusions from
·'higher criticism" (also generally
refl ecting
many
Orthodox Jewish and older
Roman Catholtc opinions).
These companion books have
heavy representation from
Bntons following a moderate,
thoughtful strain ol evangelicalism :
- The
New
Bihle
Dictionary
(lnterYarsity
Press, 3rd edition. 1996. $45).
- The
New
Bible
Commentary . 2 1st Century
Edition (lnterVars1ty Press ,
4th edition. 1994. $45 ).
It's obvious that good reference volumes aren't cheap.
Most people m1ght not buy
them for home libraries. 3ut
serious .students should insist
that they are available in
every public library and at
large churches and synagogues.
Yes, synagogues, even
though these are essentially
Chri stian
products
that
include the New Testament,
for two reasons: The materials
about the Hebrew Bible are
first-rate; and it's valuable for
Jews
living
within
a
Christianized culture to know
the New Testament basics.
The
Anchor
Bible
Dictionary was the firs Vsuch
encyclopedic work in .English
since Abingdon produced the

Interpreter's
four-vo lume
Dictionary of the Bible in
1962 (the 1976 revision 1s still
available).
The Anchor. edited by
David Noel Freedm &lt;t n (then at
the Universit y of Mich iga n).
has deta iled art Jt:ies on evel) thin g from Aaron (the brother
of Moses and M1ria111 ) to
Zuzun (one of the peoples
defeated in Genesis 1-1:5 ). It
explmts schol ars· increased
interest 111 cu ltura l hi story.
new finds in archaeology. anJ
the De.1J Sea Scroll s. Nag
Hammad1 tex ts and other
rcdtscovered numuscnph
The Anchor rcllects the
style ~ f caution that had crept
mto relati ve ly liberal ac.Jdemtc circles by the l'JliOs. mI me
with what the nllrodu ct wn
calls "res ponsible cri11cal hihlical
scholarshi p. ·
Conclusions are lrc4ucntl )
hedged and .competin g theories are explored
Readmg those options
alongstde the pomts ra1sed Ill
the two evangelical v. ork s
provides a broad, balanced
perspective on current biblic al
ISSUeS.
For example. Christians and
Jews who joined the debates
about Mel Gibson 's film "The
Passion of the Christ" w1ll be
interested m the treatment of
Caiaphas, the high priest who
presided at Jesus' tri al before
the Sanhednn .
In the 1962 Inte rpreter' s.
Samuel Sandmel of Hebrev.

Un ion College in Cmeinnati
surve.ved differences amono
t h~ four Gospels and concluded llatly, "Since the tri .il
' ccnes Ill the Gospel s arc
sc.1rce ly accurate history. the
det&lt;nls .H e scarcely apt to be
~

'
Emm11nuel Apostolic Tahernade In('.
Loop Rd ~ ,jf N~ ,.. Lrma Rd Rurland.
Sen •rccs Sun 10.00 ~ 111 &amp; 7 30 p m..
Thurs 7 00 p m . P..~,r,,r Man} R Hutton

Assembly of God
libuty Assembly or God
PO Box 4(,7, DudUm~ Lane , r-.\a'i[)Jl .
WVa
Pa~ tor . Neil Tcnnam. Su n d ~y
Service ~- 10·00 a m .md 7 p m

Baptist
C arpent~r
S ~ houl

Sun d.1y
Scn·1cc

10 ~Oam
E\enmg S~nt~c
7.00pm WL'Cincsda) B1hlc Siud ) 7 00 pm
Fl o~ d R o~~

lme nm Preacher

Ch!!shire B11ptist Church
Pas tor Steve Lmh: SumJa)' Sr.: hool

JO

Hope Baptist Church {Southerm

Rutland First B111ptist Chul'('h
Su ndit)' S..: hool . Y i O .tm Worshtp
10.45 a m.

26 vears in local business
"'
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Located less than 30 mmmes from

-

Pomeroy, OH .
740-992-6215

SUNDAY

11 :4-17

MONDAY
Ptcllm 10

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man'."

TUESDAY
Ptcllmll

Acts 24:16

WEDNESDAY
Ptcllm 12

l•on~erov

In the Anchor. howc1·cr.
Rruce Chilton of New Ynrk· ,
Bard Coll ege is more c.Jre lul
less JdeoJog Jcal. He 's lul l\.
pre pared to see h1 s1onca l
errors in the Gospels but
cx plnres more of the compk xt ti es in vol ved. n o ti n ~
altcrnall ve explanations th.n
experts otTer for some or the

-

~ee min g c ontradi c tion~ .

Note Bes ides c on s ulu n ~
d Jcll onane s and commcnl&lt;~ri es. eve ry sertous B1 blc
reader shou ld own a concortlance. a ti rne~av in g \\ll Jd
mdcx II'Jth 1erse reference'.
keyed to the translation bclllg
used.

E 11 ~ 1

Sunda\ Sl ho ol - 9 iO am .

Ma m St

1.'21 (1 C l nl th e u ·~ I hum· R.d . Sumla)
Sdii)Ol · II a m. \\ut, lnp · I(),, 111 6 p m.

F:.,;

-76
SAlVRDAY
P"'*"97

•
•
•
•

•

Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd .
Racine, OH

FIIIDAY

•
•

209 Third

P.O . Box 683
Pomero . Ohio 45769-0683

ou ar"l! stmvting in line -:r;;::;::-;;-;;:::-~~-=::.::~~
l:d the MJpt•nnarkc.-t-a lonM linu. ThtR iw t.;tnJ
to
prcpan~ and ,. ~i'* at l&lt;l&lt;l.'Vt!n. you ~mbcr, tApping ~our foot •nd
hili"'( your Jow &lt;•r lip. Th• "exp...- lan&lt;!' i• nolln _..;"" Bvhlnd you a
'~"""rwai t&gt;o with two II&lt;...,.,. and"""" In hand. What will you do&gt;?
Th f,. '"" y.Jur opptJMunUy to t\.."'MOVC the'Tm" t.rnm~'impati"~·
The two mlnut.,. yuu will k..,, by looklrqf.,..l&gt;;i;t.. yw ......1f and lettl"'(
that &lt;'-""&lt;&gt;tn&lt;Jr alwoo ,,r yuu mll(ht ""far outwdl(hoo by th• ""'wllll
~iko ynu &lt;Aifl "-~iVl! and lht.~ warm ~(tow in your hL'"Ilri. ThiN PITI\BU
dc mo nM:ratiiJil of patit..'floo ooukl be th(l&lt; l'llOfj.t mt.!a.ninfcful momunt In
your hu.•y My...Arod will ma!W littlu dllf&lt;&gt;t'&lt;&gt;fl&lt;'"' in )"'Ur&lt;M.'nl"'(
!dt~&gt;ilulc.
·
.
And whc., mil(ht you find t hi• patlc..,..,? In God'oo 11&lt;&gt;....,, )'&gt;U will
lc...-n &lt;Jf our F •!her'• !&gt;"tJ..-...,, rr.:n:y, and lov&lt;&gt; for UJi...Ris clllkb.m.
Thi• • P&lt;-'Cial time of prayCl', praJ"'' Md fclloWIIhip wiD IKo t l t c m.:llllihlll\ll in y&lt;&gt;Ur ""-" k. We 1'\.-ad In Luke tkUi, "they.....,,......, who,
hcAI"i"'( thQWord, hold It fMt •..nd brintcforth t'nrit with patiL'nOO." You

740-949-2217
S1zes ava1tabte 5x10 to 10 x 20
If ye abide ill Me, a11d My

499 Richland Avenue. Athens
740-594-6333
1-MIHJ-45 t ·9806

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

hll\'c nu time t.o k_.. Won't yuu v."Onthfp thfR Wut!k?

•
•
•
•
•

words abide iu you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it ,·hall
be do11e unto yo11.
Jolr11 15: 7

F'Jnll Southern Uaphsl

4 t 87:! Pnmcrn) P1k c Paslor E

0 Br) Bnt. Su nday Sl·hool · 9 30 a m .
Wo r ~htp · S l i a.m .. 9 45 am &amp; 7 OO p m
Wcdu c~du ) Sen 1 ~ c ~ · 7 (}() p 111
First

Hap~st

Church
Pnsrm Mark Morrn w 6th ,md Pol mer Sr
Mh.ldlc rl\lrt , SunJa} S~ h O tll ') 1;. a m ,
1 0 · 1 ~ .1m . 7 00 p m
Wnr\ hi p
\\ ~ Jm: ,J. i ) SeJ \ I ~ C -

7

onJl dll

Rose or Sharon Holiness Church
Keno Church of Chn ~ l
. 'l ~{) a 111 Sund.t ~ Sdw11l

~ rd Suuol .t ~

Ut•a nutllu11 Ridt,:t (" hun·h uf Christ
U1u u· !ern . St111d,,, Sr. ll •'"l . y 10

S11\cr Run Raplist
Pa~ t n r Jnhn s.,., u n ~o n SunJa) SchPnl
10.1m . Wor~ h 1p
ll arn , 700 pm
, Wc~Ju ~·,J.I\ Sen 1n·,. 7 00 p m

St

Slhool
THtu-duy

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

17401 992-3279
Toll' ree 1-877-583·2433

7

I

m.

1)111Per~

Sunda) SdH,ol

\O,.pr o., lup

I0 I 'i :.1 Ill , \'ill llh · &lt;i ~0 p111 SunJ
Stu J1 \\b lnc-,d,11 7 p111

'W

BJ!•Ic

1\rmlhurJ Chmd1 ill ( hn ~ l
,\ IL m., lct T01 11\ Run)Oll 1 1J 'i 'i ~ H r.u.H-•Lll\
Rt1aL.! ~ II J Jkporl 'llllll l ,l ~ Sd1P01I •) &lt;tl
\\ "1' h1p

I ~J ,~;,:

I \ ,lll )!&lt;' li' l

\ 1,,,,,l. \ untl.l) 'i ~ hnol
\\ ,.r,IILp
111 1m h •If I' 111

•; .1 m

\\ ~• IIK•,J,i\

i

lit' I' Ill' '

pIll

Nt·t•lh\ ill(• ( hu r(h nf I hrh l
P.l''"' l'h1hr 'ollum o.,im.l11 -.~ h ·~ · t •r &lt;r 1
\\ or,Jur ..,lfll•• IU \11 ,1 111 . Bt bk
Stulh \\ o;,tn._·,d. l ~ r1 li • p 111

Su nd.lt 'l lliu d 'J lil " 111
• 111\1 1 1111

'Wl·d nc'd ')

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

•o :.m

Bethel Worship Center
Chester Sc hool. Putor· Rob Barber,
Asmtanl Pastor · Karen Davia, Sunday
Worship 10 am , Evenlna: Wqrship: 6 pftl,
Youth 11roup 6 pm, Wedncsda~ . Power in
Prayer , and Btb!e Study · 7 pm

.\linHNViiJ~ ' ~

Boh R oh1n ~on Sunday Schoo l .
\\. ~'r' hl p · tu a m

P&lt;.~, t ur

Sund a~'

p m.

I)

Pearl Chapel
Sl hli(JI · 9 a m . Wo r ~h 1p • 10 OJ m

Pa ~w r
J

be
~ ll

·7

R u. ~

m \\'QfShJ [l
7 00 p rn

Pomrroy
Pusltlr Brum Dunham Wnr~ h lp · 9. \ 0
a m . Sunda y s~· h oo l JO 35 ~ . m

Rock Sprinxs
Kd th Roder. Sundar Sc hool · 9 15
ll 111 . Wnr ~h 1 p - 10 a m . Youth
Fcl lo\\ sh1 p. Sund Ely . 6 p m
P.L ~ t n r

Rutland
P a ~ l(lr RL
Ck Bo urn e. Sundny Sc hoo l ·
9 ~ 0 a 111 . Worsh1p. 10 1() a m . Thursday

Sno~

\ille

S..:huo l · 10.1 m.

\Vo r~ lu p -

9am

hn ~ l

ll•ll' lup

\ u th l. o)

l.uun.'l CliiT t"r{'(• Methodist &lt;:hurch

Carmei·Sutton
( .t rmc l &amp; Ra '\han Rd s R.1 C1t1l' Ohto,
P.t, I•H J•1hn Gtlmll rc, SunJuy Sc hool ':l lU a 111 . \\.oo rsh1p . 10 4;. ~ m , B1 blt'
Sn1d) \\.-cJ 7 00 p m

Mkldleport Com.nunUy Church
:'\ 75 Pearl St , Middleport , Pastor· Sam
Anderson. Sunday School 10 a.m .
Evemng 7..30 p m. Wednesday Service 7 30 pm

l\lornin~ Star
PNnr l&lt;lhn GJimorl!. Sun da ~ School II
,1m . \\. ur ~h1 p · 10 o1 rn

Failh Valley Tabtrnadt Churtll
Ra1le) Run Road . Pastor Rev Emmett
Raw ~o n
Su nday Evening 7 p m .•
Thursday Servtce · 7 p m.

1'.1\ IPr ( &gt;1 ~ 111 1 Rl•l&gt; l' S umi .L ~ s~ houl .
o.; 111 \ .1 11 Wtlr ' hiJ' · \0 1(1 .1 m c~ n d 6
7 l it I r 111

lilltld.il l.idL&lt;l Lll Ill~~~ 11 .I Ill ' R ~ llcl
SHlll"(\ l l'rl e'&gt;l llPud
II ( I~ 12 11 0 nu~&lt;n

' 1- IH 1., 1 ill
tlll'dlllg 1-t Thur., 7 p rn
'\lrl lll

1l • •lll l' lll :t ~ mg

P 1\l&lt;lr Sum! , , ~ S ~ h nnt ttl am . Wur~h1p
'&gt;' .1111 . \\.o ~ d nc'IJ a~ 7 p m

Lutheran

P .~~wr

Sh.tft cr S und&lt;~ y School 10
n 111 , \Vor- ht r
II ,1 m . \\' ~ Jn c~ da y 7

Sl John I utht•rnn (hurrh

Jllll

HtLth

Cool\ lilt' L mlt'rl M1• thodi~1 Parish
Hl'l.::n K l t n ~ Cou l\ ill c Chur.: h.
M.un ,\: l rt1h St. Su111la} Sch,llll . 10
.L IJI Wn1,l11 p - IJ am .. Tuc,J a) ScnL~ C ~ ·

llu r sa, lflllr I uthl·ran ( hun:h
\\,d!rll l md l lcm ~ Sh R .Li l' lh .,., Oil d
\\ \ ,r fl h1 !1i D.1\ 1d Rth'l' ll Su n d,t ~
.., ,IJ&lt;ll ll I!J U0 ,1111 \\ ,,r,h lp - I I a 1~ 1
l'a ul l. ulheran t: hurch

~~

( .,, n, r \ \l.ll l hiiL' ,l;.o Sn .,nd 'it Po m crm
SunJ.t\ 'od1il11l 9 -1~ .1m \\nr&lt;.hip II
.t 111 \',t, t ~&gt;r J , m w~ P Br.tlh

Hnt.•kingpnrl Church

S.LI l tl\l pm C u tllctn i'OI,IJ\ Sl l l l l~

Gr&lt;.t ml Stree t.

~

1

I ' ' .X

~nd

9

~0

::t m ,

Seventh-Day Adventist

II

Snenth-Da)

Ad"~rntist

Mulberry H1s . Rd, Po mc rvy Pa ~wr
Bennell L uc k1es h. Saturda~ Scnl l~ '
Sabbath School · 2 p m . Worsh1p - 3 r m

Faith Goipd Cburd.
Long Bottom Sunday School · 9 30 lUll ,
Wo r ~ h1p · 10·4:'\ am
'? ·JO p m ,

United Brethren

Wednesda)' 7 30 p m

ro1ch Church

Sun ), .

l{d fl 1 'iun d.i\ S,• htHll · '} '0 a m .

10 l() am

r m

Christian Union

1m

1~-1

1lpli

t hun h n l C h r hllll

\~nr - lllj'

I 111011

&gt;,U li \L"'

l'.bl•&gt;l I) ,, \ Ill ( ,1,'1"1
9 11 1 ,1111 \\t 11'h ' l'
\\ n llll"' &lt;.LII

\

!'cl11nLl \\ ,llc,, tlk. P:l~ t or Rc\
Snnd.l} Sl h•lLll - 'I "l.() a m,

"ip 1 r~'

10 IO .1 111. 7 p m. l hur,J.I\
"' p 1H

' lt ' l ).!~

( tw•pt• rul hl' Purlsh
' ''l th ~. l '&gt; l l hL,ll"l
\Ifi lL.! p,,., tur Jane
lh 111 11'. Sund .tl lo. ,·!l&lt; H'I
9 l O ;~ 111 .

Church of God
I hrstu

I m._ B c ,LIII ~ \\ 11hl11r
'i tt rlll.L\ '-;, l111u l
\0 .. 111
"i~l\l(l'~
pill

I' 1.,1,11

lJ u Ill

Nreds,tlle Fr llo\uhip
111

lh ~

, ,1/ llrc nc

P a~hW

Jam1 e

j oppll
~

1' •·I• 1 Ji, ,h

( hun hu\ ( ,nd
111

tndutph, \\ n1-.t11p

I Ill 'i UTkl.t\ 'l o. hll\11
l.un~e

S\ rucu'e I i1 ~ I l lun1 h ul I .ud
-\ ppk o111J 'lc~• ' thl '11, P·L.,l&lt; &gt;l !{ ,· ~ l) 111d
R u ~,dt SLiTid,l\ ..,,. 11 .. •11 .md " "''hip 1,1
am 1-. l l.' lti !IJ Sl'l \l l."' fl\ 0 1•n t
\ \ t.:dlll''L!.II Sl II llC' • 1• \( I J' Ill

Wc dn c ~ t.l a\

9

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'

ol

~~ rat · u ~r Churt'h of !he 11\azarene
Pu' t•'l \l 1k.:: t\ dkl n\ Sunda y S~ h0{1 1 9 JO
1m . \\ o r~ h•p
10 JO a m , 6 p m ,
\\ l- d i iC '~.t.. l Sl' l \ I CC~ ~ 7 pIll

Pumrro.' Churt'h of the Sazarenf

'

IJottom

\ und ,,, &lt;.; , tnH d- 4 II) ,J m

\\ nr ,h rp

Ii i 11 1 11 11

Plhlt\f J,m La ' c n d ~ r Sun d a~ Scho11l ·
•J '0 a m \\ tlr,hl p . 10 Jll am and 6
rIll \\ clhW\d,\\ Sc nK c~ . 7 p m

H t·•· d ~ \illt-

\\ ,. r ~hq•

j1 j &lt;t) ,1 111

•n

11!1. SunJ.ty S, hovl
h1 ' 1 'III IHJ I\ ll [ ,\ltolllh · 7.(111

t}

7 pm
Edell Unlltd BrethrYn m Chris1
State- Route 12 4. Rceds,dle.

Su nday
School • l l am , Sunda\ V. ors htp • 10 00
am &amp; 7 DO p m. Wcdnt''\da y Ser\ u:cs ·
7 00 ~ m We dne sd a~ ) outh Ser,· t ~; e ·

S1l ve r R1Jge- Pastor Lmda Damewood,
Sunda) School - 9 am , Worsh1p Serv1ct
t 0 a m 2nd and 4th Sunday

i

OO pm

Sl!f l • ~ c s

J0. J(I ,l.fll

\ \ l\hll ...t II Sl'rl ll l '

Pill

IU45 ~~ Ill 7 p m ,
- 7 Jllll

f1111r~da\

rm

Full Gospel Li&amp;hthoun
33045 H1l and Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Roy
Hunter. Sundar School · 10 am EventaJ
7 IO p m , Tu e ~day &amp;: Thur~day · '7 :30
pm

South Bethel Community Churdl

PcHII S un d .1~ Sdltl&lt;ll 4 1U am , Wo r ~h 1p

\it. \l ur iuh ( hu1 d 1 &lt;1! (, ml
\ l tlc llt ll l{d K.1.1111' I',L ,Jt 'l L11n c ~
S.LII ll llc ld '-.1Lin l.11 S-.!1""1 l) -l"'\ .1 111
I 1&lt;" 111111! (, I' ill \\ ,• dn ~ ,J .ot 'i cl ll u ' "/

P.t-11&gt;1 1&lt;1•11 l k.uh \u uJJ, \\ oq•l11 p

\hddlt'porl Churc h nf thr 'azarene
-\tl('Tl ,\-ll d l ap Sunda1 School
9 '0 a m. \\'t•r-hlp 10 JO a.m. 6 ~0 p m.
\\cdn t'~Ll a\ Sc i I J{l''o • i r T1l ' P a~w r
\lien \liJ l.lf1
Pa., tnr

lh u r ~ h

I I .1 m, r, 11) p m

Mt. Hennon United BrethrE"n
in Chnsl Church
Texas Communtty 364 11 W1{kh::t m Rd.
Pastor Peter Manmdale. Su nda} St·h no l ·
9 30 a m .. Wors h1 p . 10 30 am . 7 00
p m , Wed nesda) Ser' tees · ? 00 p m
Youth group mee tmg 2nd &amp; 4t h Su r; da ~s

Mt. Oli\'e Community Church
Pa stor Lawren$)Bush. Sunda) School ·
9· ~0 a rn , Evenmg • 6 30 p m , Wedneda.y

Serv1ce - 7 p m.

Nazarene

\II . 1111\ r I mlt•ct \lrthrl(h st

pIll

Sund u ~ S ~ h ou l

w,,r.,htp · 10 I () a 111, Pusr,lr Phtlllp Bell

\\ pr,hlp

.I Ill ' h

Middleport Presb\lerian
Pastor Rober Cro-w . Wor~t·up - t 0 ~ m

s~· r1 1 n ~- IO J m

\i l pm

Ill

Harrisonville Preshyter1an Church
Pasmr Robert Crow. Worshtp 9 a m

Griihllm I nilcd \le!hudtsl

]( I 1(1 1 Ill ,md (1 lf)

]1

S)'racuse First l lnited Presb~trriun
Robert Crow, Worsh1p - II a m

Pa~tor

7 30 p m.

Mont Chapel Ch•n:h
Sunda y school · 10 am .• Worship
a m Wednesday Strvtce · 7 p.m

'i c'l'l cl"

Sun d,l) ,l.,,ho •L&lt;I

Presbyterian

Haul Community Churth
Off Rt 124 . Pastor : Edsel Han. Sunday
School · 9 30 a.m , Worshtp · 10:30 a.m ,

Rtthc\ t::hurth
r,w. n' h'Jl Rd . -16!\C. SunL.!a ~ Sl hool · 9
a m, \\ o r, hlp · 11) ,1m. \.1.- cJ ne ~ da )

4 HI till

l ~r~, tum

Pentecostal Assembl}
St Rt 124. Racme Pa~t o r Wil ham
Hohack . Sunday School · 10 " m ,
E~ em n g 7 p m. Wedne ~da } Sen tees. 7
pm.

Syracuse Mlalon

7 pIll

lt'

I

Pentecostal

\4 11 Brtdgeman St . Syracu se. SLtnda)'

Dye.nlllt Community Ctlurth
Sunday School · 9·30 a.m.. Worshtp ·
IOJOam , 7pm

I \ Jd 1'v. 4111 \u n ). \l.'rJnc,Ja\

\\ \,1

Langsville Chnstian Churrh
Full Gospel. Pastor Raben Mu ~ ser
Sunday School 9 30 am, Worsh1p I 0 30
am • 7 (}(] pm. Wednesda) Ser. JCe 1 DO

P;~ ~ w r

'J 10 .l lll

I Liri iP!l l

Hooper Road. Athens. Pasmr
Lonme Coats, Sunday \.\o on hip 10 00 am,

P l' l ~

1'nll ( olll\c' \\m ,lllp · '} U!l .1111 'iu nd.t\
S,h,,ll]
Ill 00 ,t 11 1 \' J ~ lH r J.tm .::' P

United Methodist

F\1hk 'lntd\

RestoratiDn Chrlst1an fellowship
93 15~

Sc hool - 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p m,
Wedne~da~ Servtce - 7 p m.

R11.dnt'

7 \() r Ill

" "'tr"·,.J.,\

Hot:.on Chrb;tlan Fll'lln"·shtp Chui"C'h
Pastor Hersc hel Whue Sunday School\0 am. Sunda} Church serv u:e · 6 _,0 pm
Wednesday 7 pm

East teh1rt

\\, ,i,IJ ip

\\ , ,r&gt;ohip

Salem Community Church
Back of West Columb ia ~ Va om Ltev mg
Road, Pastor Charl es Roush {304 1 6752288, Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am. Sunday
evemng serv1ce 7 00 pm 81 bly Study
Wednesday ~rv 1ce 7 00 pm

Wednesda. y 7 pm

](II) -1-&lt; (' 112-li " r -1-lfl 7-l !\6

Kl

Full Grnpel Church
of the L\vina Snlor
Rt 338 AntiqUity. Pastor · J e~ sc Mom s,
Serv1ces Saturday 2 DO p m

pm

I tw ( hurd1 nf ,lesus
t hn stuf lallt'r-na \ Snmh

( hurrh ol" Chri' t

]I]

S c r\ J lc ~-7p m

Be thAny
Pa&lt;; lnr lohn Gdmn re. Sunday School

Harrisonville Community Churr:h
Pas tor· Theron Durham , Sunday - 9 30
a m and 7 p.m.. Wednesday · 7 p.m.

\\ olr,hrp

Haptist

Chun-h

10
.1m . 'W nrshtp - 9 a.m , Wednesday
Sen • ~c " · IO.t m

'It

Youth 7 p m

Faith Full Gotpel Chltt't,h
Long Bottom Pastor· Stue Reed , Sunday
School - 9 30 am, Worshtp · 9.30 a.m.
and 7 p m , Wednesday · 7 p.m , Friday fe llo wship semce 7 p.m.

Rc1 L tn\ Lc ml ~ ) Sund.i) Sdl(lo l
- 9 •o u m \\ 1•r- lu p- 10-l ~,. m 7 pm
I h 11r 'o d&lt;~ ~ Bt hk "ilu d) and You lh · 7 r m

-

New Lite Vktory Center
3773 Geor~~:es Creek Road G a llipu h~. O H
Pastl&gt;r. B• ll Staten, Sunday Ser.·1ces · 10
a m &amp; 7 p m Wednesda y - 7 pm &amp;

Abundant Gnce R.F. I.
92 3 S Thtrd St , Mtdd.lep_)n, Pastor Teresa
Dav1 s, Sunday service , 10 am ,
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Sxh:m Center
Wil liam K Marshall , Su nday
s, hml\ · Ill li a m . Woro; h1p . 9 l 'i a m.
H1 hk Stud} Monday 7 00 pm
Sun Ja~

P.1~ to1

r m \\ cLilw ..d,, ~ s l r1l l"~

Wonhtp . 7 p.m , Wednesday Serv1ce · 7

pm

Pa ~ t11r

pm

C nmmunit~

Clifton Tabernacle Churth
Cltfton, W, Va, Sunday School · 10 a m ,

Alb StrHI Churr:h
Ash St • M1ddlepon~ Pa91or : Greg Searr
Sunda y Schoo l • 9 30 a m., MornmJ
Worship - I 0 30 a m &amp; 7 pm, Wedneldly
Serv1ce • 7 00 p m , Youth Setv1ct:- 7 00
pm
A11ape Lire Center
"Full-Gospe l Church", Pa11ors J ohn &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 Second Ave Muon , 773·
50 17, Servrce time Sunday \0 30 am ,
Wednesday 7 pm

Scmccs 7 p m

11)

Rejolcina Lift Church
N 2nd Av ~ , M1ddltpon . Pa5tor
Mike Foreman , P~stor
Ementus
Lawrence Foreman, Wonh1p- 10 00 am
Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 p m
j ()O

p.m

Wors h1 p I I{H"la m

llll l' J\('!_ [Il l) "? olll ll j~.j \\ I \ lll)!l j"{
lkl lll l' li ll!!l" ll; '\un.l.tl ll1hl, \ I Li d \

1

Rudund Fn.•c Will 8uJ•li!&gt;tl
Salem St , P,1,tu1 Jant 1c F"rtncr Sumt 1 ~
S~ h o o l · 10 a Jl1
\. ICill ll£ • i p !II

740-992· 771 3

[l

\ h~l·

j () 1() ,1 Ill
7 1 11
s l" I\ JU'' ~ tli J 1, m

SunJa :r Sl hl· ~·l · 1J JIJ . o~ 111 \\ or, h1p ·
1(14 5 am . Su mb ~ h r nmg · 600 pm
l' n~lnr Don Wnt ~er

lltmu Cuoked .\ft•lii.~ &amp; /Jai(\' SJ~t'ciah
Open 7 d.ly~v d \H'l' k

\\ ,·diw ...d ,l ~ S ~ n ~ ~'

I{

II .1 Ill
~1onah

pm. S unJa)

\ &lt;i ~ l. l lll ~ ll l

8 t.1dhun RJ
1\\i rH ~Ic r Dnu_g '\h,unhhn ' ''lith \ h nhk f
Bill -\mhctgc- r Sund.1\ S.:lh•ol •; 111,I m.
W,1r-.lup X Oil .1111 ]() 111 .1 111 ~ iWJ
j' m Wt•dnc-,d,n Sc•r \ lt~'
.., \~1 1 ' 1 11

7 p m.

.\nliquil~ Bll~ll s t

Hom emade Desse rts Made Da1ly

7 1\J

J( l am ,

7,1()

Latter-Day Saints

Hn•dfurd ( hurdtuf ( "hmt
C1•rr1c r 111 St Rt

~L H l 11 11 d

Mime's 'l(estaurant

lO~'i

IO 111.1 111

Rutland &lt; hurth nf( hri st
S un d.t ~ Sdlt"''l 9 Ill .1111. \\ 111,h1p .LilJ
Ct• mlllllllll'll HI IO" m Bnh I, \h11'
\ lilll ' ll'r

p 111

h•Li rtll &amp; \l a111 St ~ l 1dd l qmrt p,, , tm
Rc\ G1 tlk·rl Cr111t! 1r Sunda;. Sd wn l
LJ 10:1 111 \\ nr,ht p 10 4~ a Tl1

ll our'n .u11 - ~ pm

I)

um,

\\rsll'.\1111 niblr Holiness Churth

P:ISll~ r · J.un c ~

-\r ill' lt urt Su nd d ~ Sdlllt'l

Mt

(740) 992-6472
Faxl7401992·7406

\\ ,um f nu11ih
1l/l iillf&gt;/1{ 11 1

1~

Forest Run Rupltst
P~ ~ t m

I ~ "i L:fl I U.' •

11.\ scll Run

I ll ol ill. Su nd.LO Sdw&lt;•l

(onHtllllll \111

I lu i'"• t."hu n h ul (

Sc11 ll e• . 7 p m

.1 111 , \\ op,I\Jp

1\111)

·

75 Pt:.Lrl S1. \l aklkpun
li••u 1 n~. Suud.11 Sdw,,J · 10

l'hun t.'hu rd 1 ,,f ( hr1st

1n, \r tllll tlll.ll \\ o&gt;r ,h iJl "i l" I \IU.' · tj ,\Ill.

no

i\ 1ml St :\lii.ldlcpMt ,

W~!l ln c.,d :t ~

Chrster Chuffh nf the Nazanone
P h l n r Rn 1-k rhcn Grmc . Sun duv Sc hool
'J \0 .1111. \\ ,lt., hlp
I I .un .. 6 p m

C)/ttend

Carleton lnterdenlllllin.aloMl Churd1
Kmg sbury Road, Pastor . Robert Vu4;t.
Sunday School - IJ 30 am , Worslhp ••
Sen·tre 10 ~0 am , Even1ng Serv1ct 6

(3Aawlt

pm

Ft"ffiiom Gospel Ml•lon
Bald Knob, on Co Rd 31 Pastor Rev
Roger WLI!ford , Sunday School · 9 30 am

Worship- 7 p m
While's Chapel Wnleyan
Coohll le Road, Pastor R~v Ph111ip
Ridenour, Sunday School · 9 30 am ,
\\orsh1p ~ 10 JO am , Wednesday Servlor

~~------------------------------------------------~------~~7
your li ght so sh ine

h P ICm.• l

K&amp; C JEWELERS

th at the) may -.ee
wor k&gt; and glon ty

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

212 E. Main Street

IFa1hcr in heaven...
Matthew 5·1

.1ilbtt .1uneral Jlome
lt4111111S...III.•Plls lM
41180

7u.tft-5M1

Pomeroy

lniCil ..........
580 IAIIIIIIIInll• ,_.., M 41111

992-3785

14HI2-6444

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER

Ler your light so shine before
men. that They may see your

The cart _rou destn·e, close to home good &gt;I'Orks and glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
7 40-992·6606

Father in heaven. "
Matthew .5:16

740·992-6128

Davfs-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye a!Jide in Me, and Vly
URANCE
Full lme ol
word., abide i11 you, ye sltall
Insurance
Products + ask what ye will, audit shall
"
Ftn ancial
b'e done unto yrm.
Servrce~
AGENC IES Inc
]ohu 15:7

Local source for trophies,
Ia ues t-shtrts and more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES

Bill Quickel

An Incom e Tax &amp;
Finaucial Servit-es Pirm

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

6 \8 E M;.l! n Street • Porn l:roy

040 i 9n-n 7o

7 40-667-3110

•

ttl
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
1 7~ 1. ~1111' Stn•t'l • PO llu\ 271J

\e~ II11Hn. " \ 25!~~
H AndH,un, I irl· n~· d ~ un c ral Uim tur
Heid1 S. \ ndtr&gt;.on. F Hrl'lhtJu~h t t unerwll'lunmnr:
J a m f~

I

'

Brogan-Warner

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure ··s o l ' uwc always to keep
in heart; for they tn) co nsc ience clear before
GoJ and man ."
shall see 'God.
Acts 24: I
Matthew 5:8

Meigs County's Oldest Flon st

East Matn
Pomeroy, Oh
~lsii.IE

111"11t your tllo~o~,alttJ with

740-992·2644

Middleport, OH

'' Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceiv e one another."
Le viticus 19; II

•

p

.\ll

Heath ( ~llddleport J
Bnan Dunh am. Sunday School -

Pine Crow Hihlt• l~ulmt·ss Church

,till

Rt 7, \.\ idJic pu n . Sun d ~ !
10 .1 m . [ ,~ nm g 7 00p m.
s ~n IH''

I:J

Sdfth\'Uit Community Apo~tolk
Church
Putor Wayne R. Jewell. Sunday Serv11.:e •
6 00 p m., W~dn c sda ) · 6 00 p m

Community ol Chrllt
Portland-Rac1ne Rd , Pastor: Jlm Proffitt,
Sunday Sc hool · 9:30 a m , Wouhip \0 30 a. .m . Wednesday Servi~;ea - 1:00

R ~\

I C nll k n lf KL J~i. Pa, tur Rc\ O"lk ll
~ l.mley

r,

Rd , Rul land 1'&lt;.1\lOf

D.::I\ CY Km,11. Su nd.1~ &lt;,t hno l 9 10 a m,
SunJ ,n
\.\ L&gt;f"hlp -7 p m . \'v cU uud.1~
pi u)cr mcetmg· 7 p 111

.lllJ

R11dnt' tlr!!l Haptist
Pastor Rid ;: Rule SunJu y Sl h(l(l l 9 'O
am. WM, hlr
10 40 am , 7.0ll p 111
w~ d ii C \tlal Scr I ll e' . 7 ()() p IU

~ g (l [l l

1-'..L ,tnr

l ahun 1•11grim C hupel
ll.u n "1111 1llc \{,1.1J
P.t- lnr
C h.1 rl e~
~k K~ II / IC
S1mday St htllll 9 10 a 111 .
\\ or, lu p 11 &lt;I Ill . 7 00 r Ill.. \.\ocdn.:sda)
s . ·rl l l'~ 7.00 p.m

C n.:~ k

Ke1th Rade r. Sunday School · 10

Fo rest Run
Bob Rohm .,on Sunday School . 10
u m Wu r ~ h1p · 9 a m

3 1057 St.Llc Rnu t ~ !~&lt;i. L&lt;.~n g&gt;o~llc, Pa\1&lt;11
Vi&lt;. l•Jr Rou'h "iu nJ,,~ ,._ho.. t - lJ l(l ,1m
Sunday v.o1 ~ l up · 10 1,0 II Ill &amp; 7 p m
Wcd n es d a~ pra1'cr ,1!1' llC 7 p m

I c,Ldmg

0Mhl ChrtJdan FtlloWihlp
(Non-denommational ftllowthlp)
Meettng m the old Amerlr;:IJl Lepon Hall
South Founh Avenue, Mlddlepon
PMtor· Chns Sttwan 10:00 am Sundl~
Other meetina• in homes

L am:~r

llillsldl' U11p11sl {"hurc h
SL Rr 1-n JU ' l nfl Rt 7 P,1q ,1r Rl'\
J.tmc ' R A ~ l\.'~ . ~ r Sun d J~ L u111 ed
Sc1vK c \\o tlr , ht p . HI •o " m r, p m .
Wcdne, d,1;&gt; Sn\1~~, 7 p 111

1\lkhae\ L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Cummunity Services
~
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of life "

190 N Second St

rm

1-lttknn lliltd hunh ul ( hr1'1

Meigs • 992-2156

333 Page Street

~ll

Jo,h L'lm Sumla ) Sdl&lt;'nl - I.J

y,,,r,tu r- K t ~ - 10 lft 1m 7
\\ c dn c~du~ Sen 1r.:c' 7 p 111

Pnmao\

10 JOam

Pa~ tor

Calvary Biblt Church
Pomeroy P1ke Co k d , Pascor Re~
Blackwood Sunda)' Schoo l · 9 30 a. m ..
WorVup 10 30 am , 7 30 p m.,
Wcdne&amp;day Servtce · 7 30 p m

Sunday School

10·30 a m, W11r ~hip • 9 JO a.rn . B1ble
S tud ~ Wed . 7 ~0
Fill I Woods

~ m

i\lidd lcpor l Ch urd1ol C h r i ~ t
5th .mL.! 1\l.un . P.l., l\1! ··' I 1-l.u h•' n. Youth

Ar l~nd K1n~ .

Pa~ t or

\\'cdnc,J.L\ Sc: n llC' · 7 p 111

Zlun l hutt:h ul Ch l iSI
11Lrn " ll1111k t&lt;d tR T 1-I IJ
P.1't"1 ~ "1:'' 1 \\ ,1hon Su1u l.t~ Sdllllll
9 i ll am \ \ ur., hlp
tO .1L I .1m ~ 00
p l1l ' \\h l lll''JU \ SL' I \ I l~' 7 pIll

Wor ~ ht p

Rl'thlehem Baptist Chun·h
Grl.',l\ lh" nd. Rullll' I ~ -l Ra c1n ~· . OH.
P.L,mr D.111icl \ l t·lc;J Sum..la 1 S ~ houl ·
9 &lt;o .1111 SunJ .•, \\ nhhip . 10 W .1. m
V.e J n~ ,d ,11 B1hk StuJ1 · 0 IKl p m

Sunday
Times-Sentinel

Middleport OH

Holiness
Communit y Church
Pa ~ tm .
Stc.l.C .{fmnd .. tl lam Slrct"t
~ utl and Sumby Wnr,h 1p- ltJ UO .1 m
SundB) Ser\ltC-7 J1 II\

1-' int Uaphsl

Pastor Jn n Bmckc r1

Enrtrprise

Tuppers Plainm, Worshtp 10.00 am,
Thuuday Bible Study 7 00 p m

Friday. 7 p m.

Pastor. Wayne Dunlap. State Jill , 681 .

a m Wo!'l hlp · \1 am

Dun\illt• Unliuco;s Church

um

Old Rl'lhd Frt'e \\II!Raptlst C hurch

"Nest a11d Rest"

G rllr EISt'opal Churth
'26 E Mam I . Pomcm}. Su nL.!,I} Sl huul
anL.! 1-!nly Eu t.lll't I I (KJ &lt;1 m

Scn ll C, ·7 pm

P.t ~ I U I

Mt. l lnion Hapli st
Pus tu r DB \ 1d WI ~Cil1.1t1 Suml.lj Sl huol9 -1 :. a m , E H'Il ll l ~ . (&gt; JO p 111
\h• dn e~J.1 ~ S en i le ~ - (J 1fJp m

Keeping
Meigs
informed

We offer physJl:al. occupatumal ,
speech, art &amp; mu s1c the1ap1 cs
740..667-3156

Home People "
(7..1.0 ) 99 ?: - fl~ " I

•

Alhens , Pomeroy or Parkersburg

Scl'onJ &amp; L) 1111 Pomeroy, Pastor · Rc1
Jom11h:m Nntllc. Worsh ip 10 2~ a.rn,
SunL.!a) Sdwol ~ l.i a m

\\ cdlll ,d

a c~: urat ~."

Amulq Gn~ CDm.lllunhy Clllllft

Sunda~

Episcopal

( hu rc h uf Chri ~ l
~1:! W M:un St. . i\ l 11mtc r. Anthtm)
\.torr I' · SunJ,n Sdwol · !) JO a 111
\\,lr,h tp· 10 Itt ,I JH . 6 p ill . 'WcJ nc,J a ~

I 0 Ill .1 Ill

p.m , Wednesday 8 1ble Study · 7 00 p m
faith Fdlowshlp Crusadr tor Chritt
Putor· Rev Fnmk hn Dtckt:ns Serv1ct

Other Churches

rSyracuse 1 P~ s tor Bob Robm son,
Sc hoo l · Y 4 ~ a.m , Wo r~.h 1p · 11
am, Wcd11~~ J a y Sc n lt e~ • 7 30 p rn
A~hu ry

l"ri nlt y Chu~h

Pa ~ t nr

lO·Jil •1 111, l'.i'tor- k ttn:~ W,tti. ILC J.,t .md

570 G•an t St , M1ddk purt , Sunday Sl hllul
• \:1 30 a 111 , \\'o r ~ h 1 p - I I am and 6 p m ,
Wcdncsc\ay Sen 1cc . 7 p m

Faith Rapti~ tl hurth
R.ulro,td St , ~ l a,P n . SunJ a\ Sd1o1•l J(l
.1 m , \\'o r,h 1p · II .1 111
(, r 111.

REMOVING THE "I'M" FROM' "IMPA~ENCE"

'J ~0

Pn m ~ rn~

llurll&lt;~nl

OhiO

'illll

Ht'! mlrn.- k (;ro\e Cllrlstian C hu rch
Mnmtcr Larr} Brow n, Worsh ip I) ~0
.I ll\ Sulllia&gt; s~ hno l . 10. ~0 a Ill. Bihlc
l.i illd ) . 7 )1111

W0 r~ h 1 p

E K l'C~C l'. Wo r ~ hl p · lOam
\\ cJnc-da} StT\ Il( \ . 7 r m

Coolville,

5H9K,
&lt; nn

Church of Christ

am M nmm g Wor-; l11p HI ~0 am Sunday
cv~ n m g 6 l !l pm \\ ed n l·~d fly 6 10pm

i.:!~

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER

Congregational

Sllcrt:d llt:arl Cuthnlic ("~_lfn· h
161 Mut t&gt;cm A1e. Puu~''} · 1)1)2
Pa ~ tnr ltc' W,Jit er I. l kllll "t.1t
4 .4 -'i :'\ l~p m M u~r, 'i W p m
Cnn ~ -\ 54 15 t1 m Sun Mas'
a 111, Dmh 1&gt;.1a "~ - K:10 am .

.1m
I)

FaJnitw Bible Churdl
Lrwt. WVa Rt I. Pastor Bnan May,
S\lnday School 9.30 a.m , Wors hip · 7 00

Centr111l C!w;tr r

i•omerO\' \\ t"itsldc t: hu n h or Chr ist

lhtplist Church
· q ~O a m , P rc&lt;~l h lllg

Services · 1 p.m.
Ruiland ChurdloltlocSunday School - 9 30 am , Wonhip •
10 30 a m., 6·30 p.m , Wrdneldly
Servtces - 7 p m.
Wednesdl~

Thppen Plains St. Paul
P a~w r Jane BcJuJr , Sunday School
9
"m. W(1r~ lup • 10 a m . Tut' ~da y ScniCt'l&gt;
- 7~0 p m

Yourh Fn . 7 10 p m

\ ic-tor~ Haptis t Independent

Young's CiJrpenter Seruice

Church ur God of l'rophec3
O J \\hltl· I-I.J ull "it Rt 1F-.CJ. Pa,t&lt;lr P J
Ch.tpman \ unJ ,l&gt; S..h nnl
Hl a m .
\\'nr,hrp 11 am. l,'; cJ nt· ..J~ y Scr\l ce' 7

rm

Catholic

Mt n l ~ l er

For reference works to enrich Bible readers, it's the best of times

Church

WV. Su ndJ} S{houl 10 Jill
. Mtlflllll!! '"' ' •~h • p II &lt;~ Ill b cnmg-' p111.
W~·d n l"'&gt; d .l } 7 p m

I0 10 a m .

Ri\ fr Valle~
Apostolic Wor;;hrp C~ ntc r, ;;171 S 1rd
A11e , Mr dt.!lepon . Kc\'Jn Konkle , Posror
Sunda). 10.30 u.m

Bapt l~ t

Second
Ra \C il~Wlii.Kl ,

God so loved the world

he ga ve his only
lbe )iOI'ten SOl! . ..
•John 3: 16
i&gt;n~t~ffrr'l

;firt It 6altt!'

..............,
roowns

t\*flll CIIM!"

740-992-6298

llrace is sufficient
for thee: for m!i
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
•
II Cor. 12:9

Office SeNice &amp;Supply
131.C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

.,

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
P.ublisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

· Co11gress s/ra/1 make rro law respecting an
esta/JlishiiH'Ilt of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speeclr, or '?f the press; or the rigllt of the
pl'ople peaceably to assemble, and to petition
rite Gtwer11metlt for a redress of grievances.
•
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
-,,,d,t&lt;

~&gt; ~"d")·

Oct 29. tl1e 303td day of 2004 There are

kit 111 the vcar
h ki.I~ . . H1t!hlt~ht 111 H1 slory
On Oct c9. 1929. · Bldck Tuesday" descended upon the
Nell 't ut' Stock Exc hange. Pnces collapsed amtd panic sell d,l\'-

"' ~ .md

thllU,,lllUs of 111 vestors vvere tinancially Wiped OUt as
\mem.t·, (irc.tl Depte"ton began.
On th~&gt; &lt;idle
In 16~2. the tounder ol Pen nsylvanta. William Penn , landed
11 \\h.!! 1\ no\\ Che . . tel. Penn sy lvania
I11 I&lt;J() I Prest dell! McKmley's assassm, Leon Czolgosz,

\\ .~-. clL·LtJnLuted

Itt I&lt;Jc3. the Repub lt c of Turkey was proclaimed
Ill 194 7. t01mer tiN lady Frances Cleveland Preston dted tn
[ l,dll ! IIO I \~ ,11 .tgc 8).
Ill 1'156 Juttng the Suez Canal cnsts. Israel launched an
ttt\.1'""' ol Egypt's Smat Penmsula .
Ill l&lt;Jh-+. thte'e' made off wtlh the Star ot lndta and other
~em' Irom the Amencun Museum of Natural History 111 New
Ymk &lt;The Sw1 .md most of the other gems were recovered.
three men \\Cfe conv icted of stealing them)
In 1966. the N.tllonal Orgamzatton for Women was found- ·
cu
In IY67. the counter-culture mustcal "Hatr'' opened offBro.td 11 "1
In 1979. on the 50th anmversary of the great stock market
ll ,t,h. ,tlllt-nucle.tr protesters tried but failed to shut down the
'\e11 Y&lt;H k Stock Exc hange
In I'J98. Ohto Sen John Glenn . at age 77, roared back mto
'P.tce .tbo.trd the shuttle Dtscovery.
Ten ! e.t" ago· Franci sco Martin Duran of Colorado
Spnng1 Colo .. fired more than two dozen shots from a semi.tutomatt c rifle at the Whtte House while standmg on
Penn'}'' .tnt a Avenue. Duran was later conHcted of trying to
.t"·'""'·'le Prest. dent Cli nton and was sentenced to 40 vears 111
pn,on
f'11 e ) ear' ago A panel of European Umon sctenllsls ruled
tll.ll Brlltlh beet was safe for ex port. rejecting French scienttttc .trgumen ts to contmue a ban because of fears of mad cow
dt 'ea\c Some 3.000 people attended a memonal servtce in
Orl.mdo Fla . f01 golfer Payne Stewart, who was k11led along
"nh t 11 e other people in the crash of thetr Learjet.
One ) e.tr ago lnternaltonal orgamzatwns contt.nued thetr
cxodu' !rom Iraq tn the wake of car bombings m the capt tal
.md att.1cks agamsl coahtton troops A powerful geomagnetiC
'iotm ",til oped the Earth, knocking out some airline communic,Iltflll' but apparently cau smg no large power outages or
othct maJor problems Opera star Franco Carelli died in
'v1 tl.u1. lt,tl)' at age 82
Thought for Today: "Moral indignation is in most cases two
pcrcclll moral. -+8 percent tndtgnauon. and 50 percent envy."
- Vmono De Sica, Ital ian mov te dtrector ( 1901 - 1974 ).

Friday, October 29,

One could tmagme Edgilr
Allen Poe sitllng .tt a table in
the candlelll tavern tn the
dark basement ol the Buxtun
Inn . quill in one hand. glass
of ale 111 the other. composmg what wou ld lafer become
tmmonal lmes
"A h. dtslmctly I remember. it was tn the bleak
December./ and each dymg
ember wrought ih ghost
upon the tloor"
Not lh-Jl the tamous 19th
century Ame1 ican poet had
ever vtsited the histone
h.wmed 11111 111 the ptcturesque college town of
Granvtll e. Oh to. home ul
Deni~on Uni ve 1s1ty
But the eene surroundtn gs
vvould have .tppealed Ill the
macabre 111 Poe who scm
chil ls up and dow n our
sp1nes with sud1 sc.uy ta le..,
as 'The Telltale Heart" anu
"Murders 111 the Rue
Morgue."
My ed!lor had read a magazine .t!l tcle o~bout tim
haunted house that hdd
ghosts ilvmg the re Ghosts
are sptri ts an d sp111t s are the
preserve ol reltgton writers.
So my dsstgnmeot on
Halloween - the sponk tcst
mght at the ycat - was to
Vt&lt;lt the Bux ton Inn anu. tf
posst bl e. tnterv tew the
ghoqs
I phoned the 11111 and "'ked
the hotel clerk to 1cserve
Room 7 t01 me. It would be
more than d month befm e I
was £ZOJI1Q tu ar nvc. but
Room-7 ,; alvvay' th e most
111 demand tor that ts where
the ghosts slept No, change
that Th,tl is where the ghchts
'leep Presem tense They_
are still there
Accordtng to legend. two
of the ghosts - the sp111ls ut
one MaJOI Buxton and one
Ethel (Bonnte) Bounel l.

doors were open.
The
evening
passed
uneventfully for me. After
dmner I made my way down
to the tavern, a basemem
rooms
An oc.:upam ol Room 7 room that once housed the
once told " rapt .tudtence coach dnvers of the mn's
that .• ts he was prepa11ng f01 prosperous client ele The
bed one mght. he took oft his room's hewn beams, stone
trouseiS ,md latd them on the fuepla.:e and stone walls are
,e.11 ot the red-upholstered still tlll&lt;tcl II ts the same
10ckmg clwr Next his shin stone rtoor on whtch the
came ott. "htch he latd 01 cr co.tch m~n slept 111 I ~ 12 and
h" trousers. Then he put hi' later
I telutned to my room
underwear on lop ot the pile.
In the morntng he was shollly beti&gt;re mtdnighl As I
st.trtkd to ftnd ht' !rouse! s shu t ·my "chamber door. '
on top ol the pile of clothes Poe's lmcs were nngmg 111
tll l the chatt. hts shtrt my eltr~ ·
"O nce upon a mtdntght
beneath 11 .md hts unJcrwe.tt
whil e I ponuered.
dreary.
on the lmlttllll
Jt Wd"i Cl10ll!!h tO COilVl ll l'L' we.tk .md weary./ Over
the nervnu' ~L~cst thdl he h.td m,my a ·4uatlll and curious
not spe nd tl~c mghl .tlone 111 vo lume ol lmgollen lore./
While I nodded. neatly napRoom 7
I mtght be \\ tllmg to ptn!!. , uddenly there ca me a
dllltbute my uedulny con- tapptng./ As ol someone
gently rapping./ r.tppt ng at
cern in ~ the Buxton Inn
gho:-;ts . . 10 stay111g up ldtc .tl mv chamber door... "
·In my room. all was quiet
tughl tedding Fctgar Alkn
Poe Ex&lt;:cpt fot tim L&gt;ne ltll k A' I n.tw led into 'bed. the
room was pitch dark except
tnctdcnl
I once met .t '' omL1n '-" hn for ,! sltvet ot lt ghl COmll1g
had stayed one mgh t .11 the 111 bcne,tth the wmdow
Buxltlll Inn She had gone 111 sh.tdc.
Not reall y lrtghtcned. I
, leep 111 het room .11 hct
usua l hou t but .twokc 111 the IlL'' L' rlhcl e" lound 111} se ll
nuddle ut the mght "Tiw .111 ICCll tn g my old chddh ond
WdS stlllmg." she ~did. 'but
pra)Ct. "Now I lay me d0\\11
one stele ol mv I.tee v. as 10 'lecp ."as I doLed ot t.
cold It l\ a,n't ltke o~nv othet
Th~ next thtn g I knew. 11
co ld I h.tve e\ er tell It \\as '"" mmnmg Honeqy comlhts clamm y cold you a"ou- peh me to say I slept hkc a
atc w1th moss ~md !JL hen bdby Se ldom has my night\
growmg on a tock. I w.uncd sleep been more restful and
to ope n my eyes hut I \1 as undtsl urb~d.
too fri ghtened I m.m,tged ,,
H.JII nwe~n
ca me and
squmt bu t there was no one vvem Had I bee ntncked ' Or
thete In a moment the leel- h.td I been treated to a btl ol
mg was go ne."
h,mnlc''· scary fun~
Others at the Bux10n Inn
I c.t n unders tand th e dt s·
tn the p.tsl have ,,ud some m.ty ol the lnlle gtrl who
wh.tt the sd me thing abou t asked 111 her lelle1 lo God.
teehng cold .ttr tn " warm "Arc ) ou reall y invt sible or
room when no \\ tndov. s or " that JUst a tnc k''"
places 111 the 11111 too The)
have been seen or heard 111
the corridors. on the balcony
or in one ot 1hc duung

George
Plagenz

known ,Js the Lady in Blue
- arc satd to 11111 trequenl
the htslOt iC 18 I 2 hostelry
Whether Major Buxton or
l11e Lady 111 Blue hdd evet
gone In the1r graves or not 1s
,lll open qucstton The populat bclte l " they loved tillS
place so much whtle they
li ved here 111 the rtesh each had ow ned the Bttxton
Inn at sep.trate umes - they
dectded to 1emai n after
pulltng off this mortal cm l.
Harmless. even lnend ly
lor the most pwl. these shadowy I igures h,tve been seen
on numerous occasion s not
only by the present proptt·
etot s ;mJ those who work at
the mn but by paytng guests
One room occupan t. who
must h.tvc had hi s doubts
o~boul the ghosts' fnendhness, was see n a few yeats
ago boh mg. ternfied . lrom
the tnn .tfter bemg pttshed
out ol h1s bed onto the floor
111 the mtddle of the mghl by
.tn unseen presence Tha t. at
any rate. was hts story.
The room he was occupying &lt;1! the time was Room 71
Mure ghost-, ighllngs have
heen reported in Room 7
than 111 ,my other place mthe
tnn Somettmes 110 ghost
w.ts observed in the room
but lis red-upholstered rocking chat r would be seen to
rock when nobody was sll·
tmg 111 tl
The ghosts had reportedl y
made appearance s at other

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p81Cl at Pomeroy
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Postmaster Send address corrections
to The Da1ly Sent1ne1 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy Ot110 457M

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1

For the record

Madge E. Brown

Highway Patrol

GALLIPOLIS -Madge E. Brown. 79, Galltpoli;, dted
Tuesday. Oct. 26. 200~. at HolLer Medtcal Center m
Gallipolis.
Servtce; wtll be held at 2 p m. on Friday, Oct. 29, 200-1 . at
Cremeens Funeral Chapel 111 Galhpolts with Rev. Alfred
Holley offictating. Bunal wt ll follow at Centenary Cemetery
Fnends may call from 7 to 9 p.m on Thutsday at the funeral home.

DARWIN - Detmls on
the Tuesday accident at the
mtcn,cctton of U.S 33 and
Ohto 6R I were made available Thursday by the
G,1llta-Me1gs Post of the
State Hi ghway Patrol.
Troopers said Angela D
Shockey, 27 , 42906 U.S
.13. Shade. failed to yie ld
tile n gh t ot way to a car
driven by Stepha111e E.
Bl.tkc. -+4. Apdrtmcnt 6,

Huntington school, homes
evacuated after rail tanker leak

HUNTINGTON. W Va (AP) - Emergency officials
evacuated .tbout 500 homes. at least one school and several
businesses Ill the western part of the city Friday .titer a
22.000-gall on fdi llu.td wnker leaked chemicals tnto a c1eek
and sewer systen •. promptm g te.us ot a polenual explos10n.
Bv CHRISTINE CozZA
Shuttle buses we1e brought m to ttdnspon people unable
CCOZZA@M YOAILYREG!STER COM
to drive and " 'helter was set up dl the Big Sanctv
Superstore Arena, where some rcsiuetm expected to have to
POINT
PLEASANT.
spend the night Most m.tde plans to slav with familv .tnd W V.1
The Moving
fne nds
·
Wall'"· the traveling hal fAn official wtt h the Emetgency Operauons Ccnlet II)) stze repli ca of the Vtclnam
Cabell and W.1yne wunt1e s s.ttd the cvacuatton otder prnb.t·
Veterans Mcmm tal lo&lt;:aled
bly would not be ltllcd unul 1omcttmc Fnd,ty.
111
WashmQIOn. wtll olttc talThe tanker. le.tsed by M.tr.tthnn A,hl.md Petroleum . st.trled leaking co,tl t.tr light otl ,11 :tbout X am. sdtd comp.my 1] be op~n tu the puhhc
spokeswoman Linda C.tsC)' It om her olftce 111 FuHJ: "~. Oh"' toiiC\w tn g a dedtcauon ceretoday
al
the
The t,mker \\'ots on a std111g at the TechSol Chcm tc. d Co .. mony
and the leak o.:currcd as workers vvcrc uansternn ~ the otl to Rtwrtront P.trk 111 Po tnl
Plc,JS.tnl
trucks
· ~
'I he wa ll wtll be open to
Jason Townson. one of the TechSnl employees. told
WSA Z-TV th.Jt it appe.1red lh.tl " vahe on the l.tnke1 w.ts vtst tors 24 hours a day
tuptlllcd 01 broken
·
tht ough Wcdne1day, Nov 3
The ml ts preJommantly a mt xlu tc ol benzene. to luene .tnd p.trt ol the day
and xy le ne and ts used 111 the productton ol petrochemtcal' rllll rsda y. 1\nv 4
at Marathon' s Catlettsburg. Ky .. reltnery. Ct,ey s;ud The
A closm~ ceremony wtll
com pany sent response ledn" to US\1\1 the Hun tington Ftre l.tk e pl.tce at 7 . p.m
Department with the cle.m up
Wednesday. Nov . 3.
Crews used a ne utr all11ng agent 111 the de&lt;.tnup ~md
History
planned to !lu sh the sewer system
The Movmg Wall' " was
Because an exploston can result lrom .t chemtl'a l butl dup. cre.tted bv John De vi tt.
Huntmgton Ftre Ch tel Greg Fuller asked Wayne Coumy When he &lt;illended the dedischool otTtnals .tl .Jhout 10 .1111 to send home the .1bou1 500
' ludems at Kellogg Elemenl&lt;IIY Sc hool TechSol .t nd d lew calion of the Ytelnam
, Veteran s Memottal tn 1982,
home s were also evacuated
"He satd he would tecl bcncr tl we moved the ktds out nl he smd tllat he te ll the
the butldtng," satd schools Su penntende nt Gat) Adkins
A little after noon. officials dec ided to Chtcuate an enure
two-mil e radtus - an area th .tt tn cluded .tpproxi matel y 500
homes and a co uple of bu smesses 1 h.tl .1rc.t h.td prev1ously
been under a shelter tn place advtsm y
The ex ac t number ol restde nt s alfec ted m the evacu.tlton
order was not tmmedtately avatlablc.
Several streets, tncludtng a sec uon ol U S 60. were tcmporm ily closed No in tune' were reported
ANNAPOLIS Md (AP) An .mtm;~l advocacy group

Decision time for America
Well. the pol!ltct.tns and
the medt.t have don e thetr
best (or thetr wo rst, dependmg on your point of vievv ).
and now tl's the 1oters' turn
I have always fe ll that 1t\ a
little un fat r to force voters 10
choose. every fou t years
between one of two preselected c,mdtuates tor prestdent, and hy th at act to tmh·
cme how they wam Amenca
lo be gove rneli Mavbe thev
don 't ltk e ell her c~ ndtd.tte
very mu ch Or maybe tl1ey
like X s fote tgn pohcy bu t
prel er, Y's domestic agenda
No maller. they get 1ust one
shot .tl a chotec. and that\ 11
So we're fo rced to dectde
'\vhtch 1\suc I' most unportam to us ,md cast our ballot
on that bdst'. Most ltmes n\
the economy - and th. t1 's
lwr enough The econom iC
he.dth ot th&lt;t n,tllon all ects
pracucally evayone. and we
n. ttlll all } tend to prefer the
candidate who sce nb It kelt est to produce good results
tn lh.tl qu.utcr
But every "&gt; ollcn. some
other tssuc - typtca l l~. 111
the !teld ollotc1gn ,dfatls -

William
Rusher

Virtuall y the enure journ.thsIK commentan at. to havtng
mtsseu the grovv ing tlu eat of
mtltl ant Islam. When the
21st century dawned, I
pouned solem nl y to China as
1he chtel problem with
wh ich Amenca WOLIId have
to grapp le. And no doubt
ChuM wtllmdeed loom la rge
111 our concenl\ But there ts
another enormous problem
th.1t has b11skl} danned pnOtlly. When 19 sut ctdal
Musltm tandt tcs h11ackeu
fout plan es on Sept II ,
200 I. and slammed three of
them 1111\l llld tor butldings tn
New York and Washtnglon,
they were lonna l\y dec laring
war on the Umted States.
PreSident Bush ret.Jii ated
hy at ldck mg and topplmgthe
comm(lndr... our dllcntton We • T._1l1han
re g11ne
rn
hve 111 d dangcrOLI\ wor ld. Alghantstan. which had
.tnd the n.tlton\ ' "lcty n'ltt\1 shc heteu the AI Qaeda tertake pnom y O\er othe1 con- romts And th en , 1denttlymg
ccrns, 111cludtng the ecotlll· S.tddam Hu&gt;Setn s lr.tq ·" ,,
my. As luc·k wi&gt;u ld have 11 . maJor factor tn the dead ly
that" the C.J\C th iS year
hosuln y of the Arab Mtddle
, I ple.td ~u t l 1 y. al11ng "'lit La \t Ill the Unncd Sidles he

'

rese rvauons about Pre,tdent
Bush's dectstons on thts or
that aspect of the maller. but
few Ame n ca ns douht ht s
dete11111nal tOn 10 !tght th iS
war. and to wt n it.
Sen . Kerry ts a ni ce man
Few Republtcans feel th e
hatred toward him that so
many Democrats procl,um
toward Bu 'h But h ts plans
for the W.tr we are 111. as far
as he has clt sc losed them .
appe.tr to constsl ol holdmg
a "summ tt" with Fr.mce and
Germany, to cnltsl their help .
and maktng sure that
Ame n ca's luture tniti,Jiives
~" .t "g lob,tl test," whatev·
er th.tt may mean. before
they .tre put tnt o effect.
It 1' betvveen these men
tlmt Amenca must choose on
Nov 2. and tiler~ ts st mpl y
no ga in ~cty in g th e unportance ol the chotec. Even 1f
Ameri c.t vvere to cut and run
lrom the Middle East, the
rep1 1eve would be onl y temporary. The noted s.:holar
Bernard Lewts ha, .1lready
Western
pred tctcd that
Ett ropc wd l pass llllO
Musltm comrol before the
end of lim centu ry After
that. 11 will be Ame'n ca's
turn.
( Wlilwm RtHii er 1&gt; a
· Dllllllgllllhnl Fello11 of tlw
Clmcmont ln .1 tilllte for tile
St11d1 of Srut n mwtslllfl and
Pol/Ileal Pllltolaf'ltv.)

Shockey's car, was taken to
O'Bicnc&gt;&gt;
Memonal
Hospital. Alhen&gt;, by EMS.

•••
POMEROY - Charles B
Wtltamson , 18. 36604 Dye
Road. Rutland . was ctted
for failure to yteld from a
slop sign by the patr111 fol lowmg a two-vehicle acctdenl Tuesday .tt the mlersectton ol Ohto H33 and
County Road 25 (Pomeroy
Ptke )
Troopers said W1lliamson
pu ll ed onto Ohio 833 from

Pomeroy Pike at I 07 p.m
as an unknown car made a
nght turn onto Pomcro}
P1ke from
Ohto !133
Wtlllatmon 's L:ar then collided with a car behmd the
unknown veht cle driven b)
Anna I Clme. n6. Albdn~
A
passenger
111
Wtlltamson ·, cw. Casey A
Winter. 16. IIK.:I Mtll St..
Mtddlepoll , Wd' InJured and
transported
to
Ho lter
· Medtcal Center hy EMS
Damage to both car' "as
dtsabling

posmve power of the wall.
Hts goal was to shdre that
ex penence wtlh others who
were un ab le to go to
Washm gton
Devtll,
Norns Shears,
Gerry Haver and oth e r
Vtetnam vercran vo lunteers
built The Mo ving Wall' M
It went on dtsplay fo r the
first time in October 1984.
111 Tyler, Texas Two structure s of The
Movt ng
W,tlll M now travel ftom
Apnl throu gh November
ac toss the United States.
The Ofl!!tnal "A" Wall
was retired and two addtttOJJ.tl Wall s, "B" and "C."
now travel the country
trom
Apnl
through
November, mdudmg 44
sto ps in 2004
Jerry Bam. local Vtetnam
veteran and cha trman ot
The Mm ing Wall commt ttee . has worked th ree years
arrangtng for the wall's
vtsll 111 Poml Pleasant.

Hts wall was over on
Wednesday. when the wall
arrtvecl b.y truck . tls sec li ons packed sale lv aw.ty tn
Conta tn e1s
·
When Bam saw the wall
hemg del ivered, he was
overcome wllh emollUII
"I can't believe 11 It's
here It\ 1eally he1e ..
Sevet ,tl hust nesses and
OJganizaltons 111
M.tson
Co unty have ge nerous ly
contnbuted toward the cost
of procunng the wa ll and
vo lunteers ha ve stepped up
to help ,ts v,e ll
Shuttle service
In dntt c tpation ol the
thousands of people ex peeled to Vtsll the wall. " ,huttie serv 1ce has bee n org:.tntzed by Btl! Kmght. a
volunt eer
Km ght cxplat ned that
indt vtdu als may uttltze public parkmg spaces on M,11n
Street and walk to the wall
when possible.

II

there ate no p.trkmg
sp,~~:es availo~ble downtown .
the p.trktng lots at the
Moose Lodge .111d the boat
ramp \\til be open lor vtst tors. and .t shullle servtL e
~&lt;ill olkr mund-111p lta n'purt,li!On llllm the parktng
lots to the entrance ot the
R11 ertront Park . where the
11all 1\tll be located
The shullle 'erv tce w11l
be ava1l ,tl1le I rom l) ,, m. to
6
pm
Fnday
and
Wednesday. .md 9 am. to
3 p.m Thursday In addtllo n, M.un Slrcet Bapltsl
Church wtll also pro"de a
shullle serv.ce nn other
d.t)' 111 needed
It addntonal tn!mmauon
&gt;- needed regMutng the
\\all or parktng. contact the
Ma1on Count 1 Coil\ en lion
and VtsliOts Bureau at
(304 ) fi75-67HR or Je rry
Bam at (30-+ ) 675-1905 .

Citing video from Md. chicken plant, animal rights
group pursues complaint against Perdue Farms

TUPPERS PLAINS -The 17th Annual Eastern Fall Craft
Show wtll beheld from 9 a m to 4 p m ell E.1stern Elementary
School. Approxtmatcly 100 crnfters wtll pa&lt;ltctpale Food and
dn nks wtll be a1ailable. The eve nt ts sponsored by Eastern
M ustc Boostet s.

Advisory lifted
REEDSVILLE - Tuppers Platns-Chester Water Dtslflct
has lifted .t boil .tdvtsorv tor customers on Ohto 6H I bel\\een
Rye Road and Eden Ridge Road.

POMEROY - An Elec uon Day dinner ts planned tor
Tuesday at Forest Run Un tied Met hocltst Church on County
Road 30 Homemade vegetable soup. broccoli soup ,md be.m
so up, sandwtches , p1es. cakes and beverages wtll be scrl'ecl
Take-out orders are avatlable.

POMER OY - God's NET Youth Cen tet vvt ll hold an
Elccl!on Day dtnn er 11om II a.m. unlll 6 p.m. on Tuesday.
Soup. , and wtc hes. desserts and dnnk' wt ll be ,ened.

Office closes
mvaded Iraq and overthrew
Saudam
Stn ce th en. tn both
Afghamstan and Iraq. the
Cntled St.ttes ha s been
obl tged to cope wtt h te11onst
tnsut genc tes th at are able to
intlt ct small but stcadv cas uallies upon our forces. It "a
strange new lorm of warfare.
tn whtch the enemv has no
c-ap1tal, wears no ~u niform .
.tncl doesn't even expec1 to
'vvm." R.tth er. he sees the
Untied States as weak. and"
henmg that hts sutctde car
bo mbs and obsce ne beheadmg' Will 1ap OUr uelenninalion to a pomt whete we wtll
.thaRdon the M1ddle East
altogether
In thts gttm sidle of alfwrs.
the Unt ted States has been
able to count on the support
ot some Western n.tlton s. but
not ot hers France and
Germally
111 parttcu lar.
understandc~bly edger to cut
."the world's only superpower" dow n to size. h.tve wnhheld se nott s help. sectetly
heltmg tll.ltthc tcrromts wtll
tgnore them and IoLIIs exclu\IVC I)' on the Untted States
They cou ld not he more mtstakcn . hu t 11 wtll be dec.tdes
helnre they realtte mtlttant
lsl.un ' pl.tn ' lm them
rhat IS th e st.tlC ot &lt;tflat ts
that Amenc.t lace' tod.tv
and 11 "mply llvctwhclms :(ti
other tssucs One c.tn ha&lt; e

2181 Thtrd St, Syracuse,
which was northbound on
U S 33 at 9 54 a m
The vehtcles colltded.
causing severe damage to
Shockey's car and d.sabhng
damage to Blake's car.
Shockey was transported
to
Cabell
H untmgton
Hospital. Huntington, W.Va.
by MedFhght. whtle Blake
was taken by Metgs EMS
· to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Potnt Pleasant. W.Va.
Isabella M. Shockey. 4, a
in
Angela
passenger

Vietnam Moving Wall will open today

Plan dinner

•

The Daily Sentinel

Deaths

ens being shoved and throwri produ cts from Perdue, both
down a processmg lme They com ames sa id none of
'ell's chtckens go to KFC.
Wdl1b pro ... ec utors to press are shown hangi ng upside Sh
an1m ,!l
cmclly
charge s do~"'lfSflteit~tluoat ~e ~ht a ubstdt ary of Louisville, Ky ·
against Perdue Farm' Inc .. Afferward, the cut btrd~a~,...sed Yum Brands Inc
Perdue officials say they
.tfter an ac ll vtsl secretly wtlclly
"
From
the
very
flrst
day
our
saw
no "mtenttonal cruelty"
vtdeotaped ch tckens llappmg
'"Idly d!l er their throats were mvestigator worked, he saw in the vtdeotape, and that the
am mal crue lly on a regular worke rs have si nce been
'Itt on a processmg line
The acl!vt st worked tram ba,ls," satd Paul Shaptro. shown how to handle the .tlll·
Sept 16 to Oct I at a pro- .campaigns dire ctor for the mals wit h more care
"There are some mctdent'
cess tng plant tn Shovvell. a nonprofit Comp.tsston Over
m the v1deo m whtch assoctcomplex that Perdue IS clos- Killmg.
The group says tt wtll use the ates should have handled btrd s
tng nex1 week to streamline
opetat10ns The animal rights tape to press KFC to requtre with greater care. and we have
group ftled a complmnt thts humane ,mimaltreatmenl by Its counseled th ose associates,"
whtch
mclude satd Bruce Stewart-Brown ." a
week wi th the local sheriff suppliers.
Salisbury-based Perdue KFC ve terinarian who serves as
and state's anorney's offtce
The seven-m mute vtdeo- ottictals satd Thursday the y Perdue's v1ce president of
l.tpe shows plies of ltve chtck- purchase only 2 percent of their food safety and quaht y.

Election Day dinner
•

The Daily Sertti'nel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Craft show planned

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
he le1s than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editrn~J and must be signed and inclttde address
U/1(1 telephone number. No unsigned letters will
he puhli 5hed. Letters should be in good taste,
uddreHing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expre.ued 111 this column are the
1 on 1ensus of the Ohio Valley Publi.1hing Co. s
editurial hoard, unless otherwise noted.

Friday, October 29, 2004

Local Briefs

.

i

2004

Legend of the haunted inn

The Daily Sentinel

h;

PageJ\4

POMEROY - The Metg&gt; Count y Tuberculosi' O!Ttce wil l
close at noon on Tuesdav for Electton Da) and Will re-open .tl
8 a m. on Wednesday

Man sentenced to 50 years
for shooting two officers
DAYTON (API - A judge
se ntenced a m.tn to 50 year'
in pn so n for 'hoot tng two
poltcc offtccrs, calltng hts
ac'tons "1cpre he nstble...
Mall hew Gnmes, 34. pleaded gutlty Oct 15 to chilrges
he
shot and "ounded
MolllJ0111ei)
Count)
Shenlf' s Deputy .lohna tb,lll
Mtller and Trotwood OltJLct
Brent R.tsor. who migi n,tll)
too k htm tnl o c ustody 111
January on su'P" ton he
robbed .t Trotwood home
Gnmes tired at R.N1r .md
Millet with .1 small h.mdgun ,md
lled m a Trotw&lt;,&gt;od pollee cn11 ,.
e1 He crashed the crutscr and

pomted a gun at ,mother poliCe
olficer hclntc he vv.ts ' hnl.
Rasor was shot 111 the th1 n.tl
and , utletcd two sh.tll,cted vettebt.te tiM! c.tuscd nuld bt.un
d.llll.tge. ""tst.ullcounl} ptosccutor Tt&lt;~cey B.dl.ud ,,11d
Mdlet sllll h&lt;~s ,1 bullctlod!!ed
behmd l11 s Jo"'· Ball.ud s,11dAssil l.t tll proscc:lllnr Jctl 1ey
P.tltcr ,,11d both nlfiLer' h,t\C
IC !Uflll'U 10 \IOrk
~ Nl'llhci otlicet 'poke ,11 the

Time
from Page A1
home 1moke detectors. the
lntern,nional Associauon bt
Ftre Chte" recommends .
U1c th e "~xl ra hou r" to
ten11 nd lam ily , frtends
.tnd netghbors to change
thetr smoke alarm ballertes and make ftre safet y a
prllll'lty. said Bob DiPolt .
prcstdent ot the I AFC

"The peak ttme for home
lire fatalitie s ts betvveen I0
p m. and 6 a.m . when most
sleeping."
tamthe s
are
DtPoli satd. "Smoke alarm
mamtena nce ts a si mple,
eflec ttve way to re duce
home fire deaths. Chtldren
and senior citizens are most
at ri sk. and a worktng smoke
alarm can give them the
extra seco nds the y need 10
get out safely."

(The Associated Press con·
tnbur ed to lhts sron.)

nl

Montgot ncr ~

Count\ Cumt t1&lt;111 Pkas l'Ptll1
Grllllc's dclltnc·d to 'pe.t' .tt
the /w .n r n ~

Funds ~ -·
from Page A1
q

-

acce" 10 lunds 'ct a&gt;tde lm
uncmplo) mcnlcompen,,tlt on
tor deput ies · for s.tl at ies.
lll SICJU.

the1ie ld from Advance Fence
Co . ' in th e amount of
$16.857 65. was reJected.
because 11 exceeded the origllla l esttmate by more tha n I0
percent. The sealtng and
fenctng project at the fteld ts
bemg patd for through the
Community Deve lopme nt
Block Grant lormula progrdm

Other business
Comrn is . . rone r:-; .tpproved a
btd lmm Davtd Wtllt.tms ,mu
A"tlL'I.ttcs fDl bleachet s and
bcnchc, .11 the Rac ine
Ballltc: ld. 111 the .tmoum of
~ .\.fltJ.1 r\ htd 101 tenctng at

Followmg J vtewmg and
publtc heal tllg yesterday,
co mmt SSIOIICfS VOted tO
1acate a portiOn of Sht:ets
Road tn S.!letil Townshtp.
The portton ol the road 10 be
vac.tl ed h,,, hcen nut of use

SUTTON TOWNSHIP

•
At a Tailgate Party
on the Pomeroy Parking Lot
Saturday October, 30th
(o.:-ttO il C
free
1-3
jood
.'ltllliJtnH
.

Da nny Davt s ol th e
Rutl and Ftre Department
descnbeclthe f1 re as a "hot
one" and satd the home
was a total loss Da1"
also satd the ft re dtd not
appear susp tctous and th e
state ftre Marshall was not
cal led
to
tn ves tt gate.
Davi s s,Jtd there is a possihtltty that a cloth es dryer
' "lC ~

the 193(),
Commtsswner, also:
• Appr01ed tt.m'fer' for
the Common Pkds Court and
treasu rer
• Appro,ed a btd fm hllu muJous
matenals
lor
November from A'ph.tll
Matenals. In c.
• Approveu es tajl lishment
ol a nevv lund tor Common
Pleas Court
Present
\\ ere
Com mtssto ners
Jefl
Thomton. Mtck D,t\ en port
and Jm1 Sheets and Clerk
Gloria Kloes

Offtee Opens il 6·30PM Ntghtly
&amp; 12 30PM lor Sat &amp; Sun Mallnees

Please support your Township
by voting

Meet Your
Democratic Candidates

from Page A1

sta rted the fire. but he
could not conft rnl th at theory
Davis said the Mtller famtl) had 111su rance and adde d.
.." e can replace houses . not
ll\es ..
The
Rutl and
Ftre
Department "as as&gt;tsted on
th e call by the Pomeroy.
Salem Center and Mtddlepon
tire departments. In total. 24
tire men fought to 'a\e the
Miller home .md exung u1sh
the ttre

-it'

"~l'llh..'llLIIlg he.mng. but ... ubmlt ted le1tc" h&gt; Judge B.llb,u.t

Gornwr1

Fire

But the .tmmal nghts gro up
he lte,·es footage and dat ly
logs kept by tls tnvesttgator
show enough evtdence ol
tnhumane treatmelll to ment
prosecul!on under Maryland·,
animal cruelty statute.
State's anorney Joel Todd's
offtce
satd
prosecutors
wou ldn 't handl e tlie case until
It
was tn vest tga ted by
depul!es Worcester County
Shenff Charles Marlin was
out of the offtce and unavat l·
able for comment
The Showell plant proces~­
es 25 5 million chtckens a
year Perdue ts the thHdlargest poultry producer m the
Umted States

FOR the 0.5 . mill

-REPLACEMENT TAX LEVY
for the Purpose Of Operating and
Maintaining Cemeteries
~1'!1'!

Sutton Township Trustee
Kenny Wiggins, Clerk

FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS (pgtJ)
3.30 7.00 &amp; 9:30

n~nn, oxrGr\
\\D \IEDIC H EQLIP\IE\T

SALES/RENTALS
SERVICE
Locally owned and operated

Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Free Back Up Oxygen
Portables Deltvered when
you want them
7 days a week 24 hrs servtee
Complete ltne of resp11atory
products •
Nebulizers, C-pap, Venttlators
and much more.

�The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND

Internet poseur is
~cheating on his
real-life partner

Commun,ity Calendar

DEAR ABBY: l am 36
and "Vito:· my significant
other. is 44. I recen tly
learned that he has been
posing U&gt; a woman on an
Internet swingers· site. He
sends people naked photos
of a girl - and once I
found a picture of a naked
man. (Not him .) One of his·
objectives is to recruit couples for a threesome. and I
believe he is also doing
cybersex.
When I confronted Vito,
he said it was ju&gt;t a joke.
But it isn't the first time
he has done this. and it is
very hurtful.
Abby, Vito is sneaky.
passive-aggressive and an
alcoholic. I . have always
believed if you had 10 hide
something from your part'ner or spouse . it was chearing. Is cybersex cheating?
BLONDIE IN DAYTONA BEACH
DEAR BLONDIE Yes.
cybersex is cheating. When
someone hide s so meth ing
.from a spouse or partner,
·it's usually with the knowledge that the spouse or
partner would disapprove.
Now, l have a question
:for you : Why are you
·wasting yo ur. time with
someone
who
sneaks
around looking for other
sex partners? Romances
like yours don't have
happy endings. Be smart.
Get checked for STDs and
call it quits with Vito.
. DEAR
ABBY:
My
younger brother. who is 53,
recently lost his job. His
wife has nev er worked.
They have spenJ their life
traveling, driving expensive
.cars and entertaining lavish1y. They never saved a
nickel.
I. on the other hand.
have aLways lived frugally.
My wife and I put our
.kids through college. we
live in a modest home,
drive older cars and have
never vacationed out side
the United States. We have
saved diligently. and plan
early retirement in a year
or two.
My mother and sister
think we should help my
brother and his wife out by
lending them money that
we know will never be
repaid . My brother has put
me down for my thrifty
ways, saying I could die
tomorrow, then what good
wou ld all that money be ·~
Well , tomorrow is here.

Public meetings
Saturday, Oct. 30
PORTLAND - Lebanon
Township trustees will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the township
building .
Monday, Nov. 1
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. Monday at the office
building .

Dear

Abby ·

SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse
Vill age halL

Friday, October 29,

2004

Sunday, Oct. 31
Association will meet at 8:30 p.m. throu gh Friday at the
RACINE
Carmel
a.m. at Peoples Bank 1n Middleport Fir&lt;l Baptist
Sutton Church will host a
Street.
Middleport.
charge- wide
Meigs
Nov.
3
Cooperative
Parish
hymn
Wednesday,
Thursday, Nov. 4
MIDDLEPORT- Revival sing at 7:30 p.m. at the
CHESTER - A specia l
meeting of the Shade Ri ver services will be held at the Carmel Building.
Lodge #453. F &amp; AM, wi ll Middleport Church of the
take place at 7 p.m. with work Na1.arene throug h Nov. 7.
Monday, Nov. 1
in
the
E.A.
de gree. Services wi ll be held
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Refreshments will be 'ervcd. Wednesda y thro ugh Saturday Center for Co mprehen sive
at 7 p.m. with Sunday s~: hool Weight Loss Support Group,
at l)J() a.rn.S unday morning 6:30 p.m .. Holzer Medical
worshi p at I 0:30 a. m. and center
Education
and
Sunday even ing service: 6:30 Con ference Center Rooms .
pm The Rev. Davtd E. , AB. Information at 446-5825 .
Brown tteld will be the evanFriday, Oct. 29
gelist,
do ing both preaching
LONG BOTTOM - The
Saturday, Oct. 30
and
sing
ing. The Rev. Allen
Passion of the Christ wi II be
POMER OY
- Meigs
shown at 7 p.m. at the Faith Mtdcap i&lt; pa&lt;tm.
County Delllncratic Party will
Full Gospel Church.
have a ~ Ic,., the Candidates
tai lgate party from I to 3 p.m .
Sunday, Oct. 31
on Suturuay at the Pomeroy
CARPENTER
-One
Fri da\'. Oct 29
Pu~kin~ Lot. A costume conHeart will prese nt concert :~t
I'IJ ~IH&lt;(d- f'rce blood te't wiiJ he judged and free
the Mt. Union Baptist dlll rch prc'&lt;urc' 11 ill be ta ke n at
near Carpenter. (J:30 p.m . f'uiiL'il '.' h1od fu ir from 10 refreshment&lt; provided.
Re fre shments to foll nw in kl - a.m. to noo n. by the Meig s
lowship hall. . Ca ll D;l\ iJ COUll (I ( 'oupc rut ive Pari sh
VViseman for m ol·c.:.~ informa- nur"c I L"o~)f; l Leith!it.
tion. 7-+2- 256 ~.
Tuesday, Nov. 2
Fridny, Oct. 29
MIDDLEPORT - Manley
MIDDLEPORT - A free Christy will observe hi s 95th
iJinnc r will be &lt;e rv ed from birt~.day Tuesday. Cards may
Friday. Nov. 29
.JJO tll fdO p.m. Fnday at be sent to hun at 40 Custer
MIDDLEPORT - Revi1 :r1 the \I iddlcpon Church of . Street. Middleport , Ohio
servi ces will continu e at 7 Chri't Family Life Center.
45760.

Birthdays

Crowned pageant queen PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

Caldwell gives
UMW program

For
Experience''
~~vote

V07E

ROBER! E.

gBEEGLE

Elect Kay Hill for Meigs County Recorder.
With strong qualifications that have been ·
acquired through 22 years of experience &amp;
dedication to my position in the Recorders
Office . Your vote would give me the
opportunity and pleasure to continue to
serve the residents of Meigs County.

KAYHlLL

MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF

I would appreciate your vote on November 2nd.

The Daily Sentirrel
Subscribe today • 992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

Jeff Thornton
Meigs County
Commissioner
As your Commissioner, I CARE ABOUT YOU! and work hard
to make Meigs County a better lace to live.
WHAT MAKES ME A GOOD COMMISSIONER?

My past education, experience and what I have done to
help the citizens of Meigs County.
EXPERIENCE:

*

First started my Community Service in church working
with the youth.
* Racine Village Councilman (4 years)
Elected twi~e as Mayor (where t first worked on grants .to
1
receive close to one million dollars)
* Board of Directors at the Meigs County ·chamber (4
years)
Working with State Legislature (2 different State
R~ prese n tatives - 4 yeazs)
Presi dent of the Me1gs County Board of Commissioners
(4 years)
.County Commissioners Association of Ohio (Economic
Development Committee- 4 years)
* ARC Buckeye Hil ls Board Member (4 years- Buckeye hills
is an orga nization that helps with grant funding)
* Successful gra nt writer: Wrote grants for Chester Court
House ($46, 000) , also gave ($20,000) in CDBG funds ~nd
found a ($15,000 ) grant through a foundation totaling
$81,000 to help restore the Chester Court House. I recently
wuked on a grant and received $15,000 to put a new roof
on the Chester Academy and I am currently working on a
new grant to help restore the building.
Wrote Grants for Recreation for:
* Middleport Scioto Township * Rutland
Gave money to Racine $5,000 for ball field tights.
Gave money to Syracuse $5,000 for swimming pool
* Gave CDBG $20,000 to--;;outhern High School for ball
fields.
* Gave over 1 million dollars in CDBG money lor: fire
departments (turn out gear, equipment, fire trucks and
bu1\dings); Senior Citizens (Meals on Wheels);
Townshtps (Paving and Water); all Villages (Various
ProJects~ and gave to 501 C3 non-profits for Historical
Restoration.
* Ove r $1,500,000 for Housing Projects
* Over $1,000,000 for new water lines
Over $800,000 to all three schools (Southern, Eastern &amp;
Meigs) to help with youth programs.
·•
·
·
* Over $500,000 for a summer youth jobs program to
help teenager~ with money for school clothes and
other (7 year program)

*

*
*
*

*
*

*

*

'As yo ur Commissioner, I am dedicated to YOU and 1will
work to help Meigs Countians any way I can.
In my next article, t will tell of other programs, more
educational programs and tell about jobs and jo. bs to come!
JOBS are one of the most important issues as a
Commissioner.
Same place tomorrow,

Paid polit1ca l ad by candi date

a-~;1)~

((Living Life With Diabetes"
• Tuesday, November 2, 2004
• Pleasant Valley We\lncss Center
• Light refreshments will be provided
• Public is cordially invited

Friday, October 29,

2004

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

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

(AP Photo)

(AP Photo)

Democratic Presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass .. greets the crowd at a rally at the
University of Toledo in Toledo. ·

Supporters of Pres ident Bush hold signs dur ing a ral ly and his visit to Hara Arena in Dayton.

Ohio voters empowered, knowing they may decide el~ction
Bv JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TROTWOOD - Many 111
OhiP say they arc relishing
the ~:hance to cast votes
becau&lt;e or the pOSSibility that
the state may de~: ide the pre&gt;idential race.
"It\ a huge re,pon&lt;ibility."
sa id Vicki MLnri, . a John
Kerry supporte r who 'tood
Otltside a &gt;Uburba n Davton
arena where Pre&lt;ident Bu&lt;h
campaigned Thur&lt;day.
"We fe el more compel led
th·is ye~r to go out and ra lly
our neighbors and rally our
friends because it is an impor-

tant situati'on here in Ohio,"
she sa id.
Ron Hittle. a Bush supporter. &gt;aid he feels hi&lt; vote will
mean more than it did in past
elections.
"It 's exci tin g that we are
part of the process," said
Hittl e. 65. of Kettering.
" Peop le should realize after
what happened in Florida
how close it ~:an be."
Bush won the presidency
four years ago after winning
Florida by 537 votes.
Ohio has become the Center
of attention because polls
show the race is too close to
call and both campaigns have

targeted the state and its 20
electoral votes as a must win .
Both Bush and Kerry campaigned in the state on
Thursday and each one has
more trips scheuuled in the
coming days before the election Tuesday.
"People are taking the
respon sibility very seriously. I
would even say almost passionately." said Gene Beaupre.
a political science professor at
Xavier University.
·'Bring it on," said 70-yearold Cora Jackson. a Kerry supporter outside Hara Arena near
Dayton. "I look fotward to it."
Nancy Martorano, assistant

Firefighters say they did all possible to save seven kids
TOLEDO
1AP)
tire that killed six siblings
Firefighters 'aid they didn't and a c.:ousin on Sunday.
hesitate after arriving at an
The fire started on a mal apartment fire where seven tress in an upswirs bedroom
children were trupped in two where some of the children
upstair&lt; beuroom,.
were playing .
"We were getting up there _ The children, ages six
as fast as we could to get to month s to 7 years, all died
those children."
Dexter from smoke inhalation.
Baker said.
Normally, there would
Mark Frankforther. another have been two other fire. firefighter who was one of fighters with the crew. But
the three to arrive fir st, they were without a couple
pulled a fire hose up the of crew members whq . w.ere
stairs to the second floor.
out on an emergency run
He had to stop for a called in before the fire.
moment at the top of the
Frankforther and Baker did
stairs to spray water on not spot any of the children
flames that were blocking the in the first, smoke-filled bedsecond-tloor hallway.
room they searched.
Baker caught up with him
Next, Frankforther crawled
and they knocked down the to another bedroom and used
flames in their path and a flashlight to spot two chilbegan searching through the dren lying together on the
four bedrooms for the young- floor near a bed.
.
sters.
Baker felt one of them,
All were found but none crouched ·down the hallsurvived.
way and carried the child
Investigator s announced down
the
steps .
Tuesday that a child playing Frankforther followed car.
with a cand le. lighter or rying a limp .girL .
matches started the apartment
It was the ltrst ll!ne enher

South
Lebanon man
dies in fire
SOUTH LEBANON (APJ
- A man died in a fire that
destroy ed hi s two-story
home, and a firefighter was
injured trying to battle the
blaze .
The . Montgomery County
cnr.oner's office iuentitied the
victim as Jamc&lt; A. Taulbee.
49. of South Uhanon. An
autopsy to detcrmi1\e tbe
ca,t se of death wa' pu nned
for Thursday.
Warren County arson
in ve&lt;tigator&lt; and the state
fire marshal were inve&lt;tigating the fire whid1 was reported ahnut I p.m. Wednesday.
Fire official&gt; 'aid · the first
floor of the hou'c was fully
engu lfed wllcn the fi rst crew
arriveU.
The victim. who wa!'- th~

-COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR-

e!Oa.m .to2p.m.

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Other events

Church services

INTEGRITY. HONESTY. EXPERIENCE. FAIRNESS
and EDUCAnON are lmuonant auaiiUes In a
person. esoeclallv a Sherin.

PageA7

Concerts
and plays

Wednesday, Nov. 6
PAGEVILLE -The Scipio
My wife and I are pre- Town ship Trustees will meet ·
pared for whatever life at 6:30p.m. Wednesday at the
Pageville town halL
may deal us in the
future. Mom and Sis are
angry that we refuse to
give money to my brother
and hi s wife . They made
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .
their bed now they
MIDDLEPORT
can lie in it.
Middleport
Lodge
363.
. Abby, please tell me if F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30p.m.
I'm right. - ABLE BUT at the temple.
UNWILLING IN ALABAMIDDLEPORT
MA
Middleport
Community
DEAR ABLE: Your philosophy of financial planning has paid off, while
your brother is now paying
dearly for failing to proPOMEROY
- Jasmine
Diana
vide for his future. Far be
Brewer was crowned Queen of the
it from me to raise Cain Sunburst Beauty Pageant held recently
with you about your deci- in Athens.
sion, but if you felt comShe wm~ a crown and three medal- ·
fortable, you wouldn't be lions for best attire, prettiest smile and
best personality. 'Her $250 entry fee was
asking me to endorse it.
paid by the pageant, and she will now
DEAR ABBY: I work compete at the state competition in
with a man named James. June.
We have become fr iends
She is the daughter of Stephanie and
over the past few weeks, Charlie Brewer. Jr. , the granddaughter
and it' s obvious there is of Lady and Ronald Davi s and Diana
an attraction between us. I and Charlie Brewer. Sr. , and the great
granddaughter of Pearl and Fred Scott
would never want to and Mary Kay Young.
Jasmine Brewer
break up a marriage, and
l don· t want to change
our relationship. Is simply
flirting with a married
man who flirts back
- OK if neither of you
has any intentions? LIKES THE ATTENTION
IN NORTON, MASS.
ALFRED
- Sarah Mary Jo Barrin ge r filled
DEAR
LIKES
THE Caldwell had the program. out the UMW Local Uni t
ATTENTION: You say the "World Thank Offering Member&lt;hip form. Thelma
two of you are "obviously'' Gratitude and Service," Henderso n was appoint ed
auracted to each other. when the Alfred United Memhership and Outreach
met chairwoman .
Women
That's how office romances Methodist
recently
a
t
the
church,
with
The
Prayer
Calendar
begin. You are playing with
birthday card wa&lt; &lt;igncu
fire. Listen to your gut nine members present.
Caldwell read the focus by all member&lt;. and leiter'
(and nothing below) and
scriputure and statement from re cipient&lt; of 1"''1
you won ' t be sorry.
and the group participated Prayer Calendar card&lt; we re
A NOTE TO PARENTS in reading . A World Tha,nk read .
OF YOUNG CHILDREN: Offering was taken .
The meetin g time fo r
If yom littl e ones will be
The meeting was opened winter wa&lt; changed to (dll
trick-or-treating thi s week- with prayer by Mary Jo p.m. from 7:30 p.m.
Barringer gave a report
end, please be sure the y Barrin ger. with everyone
are supervised to assure reading "The Purpose.'' on UMW Annual Day aml
Roll call was taken with Sarah Cf!Jwell ga~e a
their safety.
Dear Abby is written by 91 friendship calls reported. report on UMW Women in
The secretary and treasurer Weirton , W.Va .·
Abigail Van Buren, also
gave reports.
The next meeting will he
known as Jeanne Phillips,
The group and president held at 6:30 on No v. 9.
and was fourzded by her
mother, Pauline Phillip.~.
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearAhby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Lo!· Angeles,
CA .90069.

Clubs and
organizations

PageA6

had carried a child out of a
burning building .
Once outside. one used a
bag to artificially fill the
child's lungs with 'clean air.
The other started performing
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
Baker helped the other
children after his was taken
to a hospital. Frankforther
stayed with the child he had
all the way to Toledo
Hospital.
Firefighter
Michael
Fuelling, a father of two
boys, did the same after
helped ·a toddler out of the
apanment.
Fuelling said the toddler
and three others were near a
bed .
"That 19-month-old was
like my baby for 40 minutes." he sai d. "I did not
leave that child until she was
pronounced."
Fire Chief Mike Bell said
the first crew arrived one
minute after being called.
"We .did our job.'' Baker
said. 'We did the best job
that could be &lt;lone."

,. £, ~~£

Pd . For By Candidate

;

Vote For Experience

!:

•••••

Howard Frank

!:

MEIGS COUNTY
TREASURER

..~I

Jw.:ksun Cuun ly.
·
; • First treasurer in Ohio to rc~..·L~ivc . ccrtiricution !"rom tlw ~t all: '

s~n· c

I

.
I
1
to operate in the
on tlK'

Bud;~,.·yc

:

:,f.

·

.

•

Pumcrnv Rntary Cluh and a lru"ce of the Mcig' County

'

I am a mcmher of the American .Lq; iun . the .Midcl lcrort-

l;

.. ·• ......, ... ·•

•

:••• .••••

,.
••
•••

~,.

2005

,.

Pet Calendar!

•••

••

\f.

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cove·r.

•·•••

Tuesday~~ election wil! he appreciated!

,(

~f.

---- -------------- --------.&gt;
~.

·

·~

.

-·

h

I

p one: ________________________

I

I

I

,,~
'I
'• 1
..

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4

1

~:

Pl.ease send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
.« (( . , . m ·r
Jf:\ . t lt'l &lt;i:'J t
wa
tpo IS 7-!Qat !'
-t'-0111 +' l%mll
.

l'rgistrr

U:::riUIIIl~

"Pet Calendar"
825 Th"•·rd Avenue

"Pet Calendar"
200 Mal·n St.

r

Daily Sentinel f •
·
. ~
I

~

"Pet Calendar"
111 Court St.
O

1'

:$.G..a~I!~01i~~ ~~ _4?~~! ~ ~~e~~~~t~ ~-2_5?~~ •• ~~~~r~!'. • ~ -4~~~~ ~:
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l(mr vote in

.&amp;.... •• ,.

1

l•
1

.t•

Deadline for entries is: November 15, 2004

~; Address:

111

"""'·

MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
1-.t.o\.l'"K YOI

•C Your Name:

j.

, • Only Sheriff in Meigs Cou'nty to

Candidate For

,f:-N~~~ ~-{ p~t:---------

Mayor of Racine when the first tire truck was purchased for ·
!the village .
,
1
• • County Treasurer. the fir&gt;~ one in the State of Ohio 10 invc&gt;t ,
public fund
s. A\Sistcd in &lt;euing up a si milar invc&gt;t mclll I.
.

Iprogram

the elcc1ion.

"It \ britlging an ex uberance to a prnL'C" that in pa&lt;t
years has been mundane:· she
said. "I thin~ that·, a good
thing ...

•·

''

VOTE

' Sheriff's A"ociation Board.
I
'
Investment oro\!ram -Over $2 million ge nerat ed thro~1gh th e.
invc,tmcnl pro~ram has heen ·added 10 the ~cneral · lund ut
' Meigs County. along with $ JOX.I~OO a year in ''" l'llilcciHlll

miles nocth of Ci m.:innati .

•••

~ urrotmd i n!!

,

Chief Gary Arnold .
Arnold said " Deerfield
Town,hip firefi ghter injured
hi s knee tryi ng to break in the
front doOJ' and W[IS taken to
Bethesda Nort h Hospital.

~O

.r••

. ----..-·-·------·"1 •••

auditor a11d treasurer IO invc'l pub lil' fullJ,.
; • As Auditor realigned coumy government
I black without an increase in ta&lt;es.

South Lebanon i' about

~:

out t h ~ \·ote.

Send us a
photo of
your
favorite
pet and
they
might be---=~~~ •••
~,.
voted into our

,. . : • •

only pCNln in the hoUSC, IV US
found slumped against the
door. said Sout~ Lebanon fire

~=l\p':l~ figt~~~hc ~~~~:rtmctlls

:!

l!.Ct

en ar

•••••

•'ii&amp;\Qt·.
·s :· .~ ~·::.···.~
.. .....
-~ ·

r. -·=---------- -·-

.1.

Democ rat-.

,ai d the re\~ ~ lot of intensity

po-e 'Kt~tdtt, S~t.

e

~:

e-..:ape the election and ib importance.
And ,llc 'aid &lt;he was very
careful to make &lt;urc she tilled
out her ab,cntcc hallol correctl y.
Juanita Price. a 1oluntcer in
To ledo whu , will help

Your Vote and Influenced Appreciated
Write-In

~· .....,·., ~• r

l

Hard Working, Long Term Commlttment

Ill

.r:!

~:

Meigs C•nty Recorder.

.......

••• :Q •: y---'••

:!

LOWERY

Carol Zientarski, 68 , of
Lorain. said the interest in
Ohio was frightening because
of the prospect of voter fraud.
"We know Ohio is going to
be very important and yet I' 111
very afraid that everything is
going to be fraudulent" she
said. "You know there \ go ing
to be a lot of problems."
Meg&lt;m Whitney. a junior at the
University of Toledo. got up
early Thursday to see Kerry
speak on ca.n1pus. She said that
this year, it\ impossible to

•• .......&amp; •• •• &amp;.... .... ......... :•

"\~

8 TOM

t

professor or political science
at the University of Dayton.
believes Ohio voter&lt; feel their
vote mailers more this time
around.
"A lot of voters in this state
feel empowered. and I think
we·n see a record tumout." she
said.
But she also thinks that
some vo ter&gt; will be turned off
knowing that lawyers and
ob&lt;ervers from hoth parties
wi II be watching over the voting in selected polling places.
"I'm sure there will definitely be some people who
will be intimidated." she said.
Walt . Wognar, 38. of
Lakewood. said before a Bush
rally in Westlake on Thuriday that
he's excited about Ohio's place in
the election.
"I don' t ne~:essarily know if
I feel empowered. It shows
the power of one's vote," he
said. "I feel good my vote
means maybe a little bit more
than California's vote."

•

-------~

•• .,., ........., •• ...

,.,

•

�.PageA8

WEATHER • STOCKS

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 29, 2004

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Red Sox raise World Series trophy, Page 92
Browns still a tough read, Page B3 1
James, Cava have eyes on playoffs, Page 94

Local Stocks
NSC- 33.26
ACI- 32.01
A DAY ON WALL STREET
AEP- 32.90
Oak Hill Financial
10,750
Akzo- 37.12
Oct. 28, 2004
38.76
Ashland Inc. - 56.65 OVB - 31.90 Dow Jones ),.~:"'"""0?-±---=-lf.!t!l't:!¥oo.YS\f"""
...---10,250
AT&amp;T- 16.81
BBT- 40.97
industrials
9,750
BLI- 12.35
Peoples - 28.24
+2.51
Bob Evans - 23.77 Pepsico - 49.54
----,-c-:--==-~-=oc-:-T::-- 9,250
10,004.54
JUL
AUG
SEPT
BorgWarner - 47.06 Premier - 9.10
Hi(ll
Low
Rteord hi(ll: 11 ,722.98
Pet. change
Champion - 3.51
Jan. 14, 2000
from preYiOYO: +0.03
10,044.95 9,952.48
Rockwell - 41 .66
Charming Shops - · Rocky Boots 2,200
Oct 28, 2004
7.59
19.50
Na'sdaq
City Holding - 34.74 RD Shell - 54.11
Col- 35.75
composite
SBC- 25.35
DG -19.33
+5:75 - "
Sears - 34.65
DuPont - 42.80
- - - - - - - -- - - 1,600
1.975.74 '
Wai-Mart - 53.99
SEPT
AUG
JUL
OCT
Federal Mogul - .15
Pet. change
Hi(ll
Low
Roc:ord high: 5,041!.62
Wendy's
32.51
USB- 28.39
from preYiO&lt;JS: +0.29
1,980.36 1.959.57
Morell 10, 2000
Worthington
19.55
Gannett - 83.06
- - - - - - - - - - - 1,200
Oct. 28, 2004
General Electric
Daily stock reports are
Standard &amp; - - - - - - - . , . - - - - - - - , . - - 1,150
34.03
the 4 p.m. closing
Poor's 500 .:;;.l&gt;l!.""".--.....~~~:::-...ll!l""- 1.100
GKNLY- 4.14
.::_.,.c__..:..::_ _;;;.:;_+"--- 1,050
quotes of the previous
Harley Davidson
+2.04
day's transactions,
- - - - - - - - - - - 1,000
. 58.32
1'127.44
JUL
AUG
SEPT
OCT
. provided by Smith
Kmart- 92.18
Hl(ll
Low
Record high: 1.527.46
Pet e"-'!Je
frOm previous: +0 ,18
March 24 , 2000
Partners at Advest Inc.
1,130.67 1.120.57
Kroger
15.03
of Gallipolis.
Ltd.~ 24.60

Friday, October 29, 2004

Prep Football

Eastern, Southern set for week 10 showdown
BY ScoTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent
RACINE - This Saturday
nig ht, the ancient cross-cmmty rivalry between · the
Eastern Eagles and Southern
Tornadoes enters its 43rd
vear when the tw o adversaries meet at the East Shade
River stadi um turf at Eastern
High SchooL
Eastern (6-3, 3- 1) leads this
series 29- 13, a two to oneplus margi n of dominance
between the two schools.
Because it has alwavs been
a torrid rivalry, the Eastern Southern ga me will once

.saturday's ·garne

Cuba's banks, exchange houses,.gear up· for
~tart of large scale conversions to dump dollars
BY

ANITA SNOW

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

HAVANA - · Cuba·s banks
and exchange houses began
large-scale conversions of
U.S. money into a local currency on Thursday as Fidel
Castro's communi st natio n
moved to dump the dollar
from general ci rcul ation.
Cubans lined up seveml hours
before exchange hoi1ses opened
to convert the American dollars
widely used here for II years for
the local Cuban convertible pesos
that will now be the main currency accepted for consumer goods.
"I'm not going anywhere. I
don't need dollars," said 68year-old port worker Ramon

that won't be applied to other
foreign currencies.
"It's good news that there is
now a currency for obligatory
use in the country," said wellknown dissident intellectual
Manuel Cuesta Morua, adding
it was impol'tant for every country to have its own currency.
"The bad .news is that it will
hU11 remittances received by citizens from abroad because it
wi U reduce their buying power."
Authorities, meanwhile, said
they were con.,ideting wider use
of the euro as Cuba began
rebuilding the hard currency base
built mostly on dollars for more
than a decade. Foreign tourists
were advised to leave American
money at home and bring other

Gonzalez, among about 80 people lined up outside the main
exchange house in Old Havana.
"For me. it's j ust the same,"
Gonzale7 said of the co nvertible pesos, tied at one-to-one
to the U.S. dollar. ''It just has
a different face." .
"As long as it keeps the
same val ue, there is no problem," added 57-year-old custodian Alberto Serra.
Respondi ng to stepped-up
U.S.
sanction s,
Castro
announced Monday that within two weeks, U.S. currency
would be not be accepted at
stores and busi nesses.
After Nov. 8. changing
American money will carry a
I 0 · percent commission fee

foreign currencies instead.
Since the government
decided to replace the dollar
with the local Cuban convertible peso beginning Nov. 8,
authorities "have been studying coordinating with Cuba's
Central Bank to extend the
acceptance of the euro in
other areas of the country,"
Tourism Minister Manuel
Marrero said Wednesday.
"It is recommended that after
that date that visitors to the country don't caJ1)' United States dollars," Marrero said at a news conference. He said visitors could
exchange ewus, Canadian dollars, British pound~ or Swiss
francs into convertible pesos after
;miving here.

Expect a cloudy morning. Temperatures will linger at 60
with today's low of 58 occurring around 6:00am. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the southwest.
Afternootl (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will rise from 65 with today's high of 71
occurring around 5:00pm. Skies will be partly cloudy to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds from the southwest turning from
the south as the afternoon progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will hover at 68. Skies will range from
partly cloudy to cloudy with 5 to I 0 MPH winds from the
south turning from the southwest as the evening progresses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m. ):
Temperatures will remain around 68. Skies will be mostly clear to cloudy with I0 MPH winds from the southwest.

Saturday, October 30
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It will be a breezy and cloudy morning. Temperatures
will stay near 69. Winds will be 10 to 15 MPH from the
southwest.
Afternoon· (1·6 p.m.)
It will remain breezy and cloudy. Temperatures will hold
steady around 72. Winds will be 15 to 20 MPH from the
southwest.

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West Virginia's I# I Chevy, PonHac, Blick, And Custom Van Dealer. ·

Monday • latunlay I am • I pm • Iunday 1 pm • 7 pm

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

I'· . . , __

sian \ upper
rank,.
Regardless
of Saturday's
outcome, the
league title
goes through
Trimble.
who defeated Southern
last week 66Newland
0.
Eas t e rn
claimed a 27- 12 win over
Waterford last week.
After starting slow, Eascern
exploded in a big way for 180
yards on the ground and 114
in the air. Eastern stil l holds
some hope thai perhaps a

playoff bid is on the horizon.
Common opponent s lie in
Waterford, who defeated
Southern 3'!-6, while Miller
defeated Southern 35-6. and
Fedei·a J Hocking defeated
Southern 76-22. Trimble was
the only league team to
defeat Ea; tein. 53-14.
Toss out all the statistics
and ell the records. heca use
much of the time the EasternSouthern game is a hardfought battle. and just occasionall y there is a .wrprise.
Perh aps
because
its
1-lalloween and the spirits are
stirrin g, or just perhaps
because it stirs a little pride in
the Southern fie ld general. no

one know' for sure. but
Southern coac h Bob Grueser
hw, ca lled upon the gho,ts of
victories past to try to pull orr
a win in the coveted Eastern-

Southern &gt;cries.
Because back in the day.
1965 to be exact. the game
meant something more than
just a game. Pride and bragging righh were at stake.
Grue,er wa&gt; the quarterback
of the 1965 team that pulled
otT the first win over Eastern .
Southern was proud.
On the opposite ' ideline.
Coach 1\ewland knows what
pride means as he himself

Please see Battle, Bl

Volleybllll

.
Friday, October 29
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

'.

~:

again be on
Saturday
ni ght,
as
both teams
take
center
"'". . ·:-~.r·~ _
for the
... · /jj:-' P('!&gt;; _ stage
whole cou n,•
ty to see.
Last week,
Eastern took
sole possesGrueser
sian of _second pl ace in
the Tri- Valley Confe rence
Hocking Division .
After a couple of down seasons the past couple of years,
Eastern Coach Pat Newland
has his club on the rise and
poised for a finish in the divi-

Take 1-77 to Ripley FAIRPLAIN Interchange
(exit 132) Turn North on Rt. 21,
Dealership is 3 miles on left

Dlvtllon IV- Dlttrlet Flnlll
11 Wollolon High School

· Rudavlll8

Eeatern

(i8·4)

Prep Volleyball
vs.

Frankfort Adena (20·4), 5 p.m.
Winner advances ra regional at
Lancssrsr High School.

Notre Dame ends Tornadoes' magical run in three
middle tilt.
Notre Dame took the lead
back for good at 14- 13 and
WELLSTON
extended the score to 22- 15
Southern's magical volley- at one point.
ball run came to an end
Southern pulled within
Thursday night with a 25 - one at 24-23, btl! co uldn ' t
· 23, 25-23, 26-24 loss to muster another point and
Portsmouth Notre Dame in allowed the Titans a 2-0
the District semifinal s of games lead.
the Division IV tournament
The Titan s jumped out to
leads of 5-2 and 9-5 in the
at Well ston High SchooL
The Tornadoes (lJ- I 3 ) third ga me , only to see
were not overmatched by Southern respo nd with a
the Tit ans. but simply barrage of offen se that
couldn't p,ain control of yielded th e Lady Tornadoes
momentum- when they had a I0-9 lead.
their chances
Both teams tr aded points
"I thoug ht ~e co uld have back-and-forth to a staleplayed better. but 1 thought mate at 13. t~en Southern
we played well ," comment- made . one t1.nal _run at
·e d Sayre. "At times we did,:::-&lt;:xtendm g.,thelr season til ·
, , h d
four games.
b t
e~."we
a 1so a some 1apsSHS held a 24- 19 edge
BY BRYAN WALTERS

OSU's Santonio
Holmes among
Biletnikoff
semifinalists
TALLAHASSEE,
Fla.
(AP)
Ohio State's
Santonio Holmes was among
the semitinalists announced
Thursday for the Biletnikoff
Award, symbolic of college
football's best receiver.
The other candidates for
the honor, named after
Oakland Raider and Florida
State great Fred Biletnikoff.
include Mark Clayton of
Oklahoma;
Michigan's
Br.lylorr o ··Edwards; West
Virginia's Chris Henry ; Ohio
State 's Santonio Holmes;
Purdue's Taylor Stubbletield;
Colorado State 's David
Anderson; Arizona State 's
Derek
Hagan ; UNLV's
Earvin · Johnson ; Hawaii 's
Chad Owens; Ball State 's
Dame Ridgeway and South
Carolina 's Troy Williamson.
Three fin ali sts will be
named Nov. 15 and the winner will be announ ced in
December at the annual
ESPN awards show at Walt
Disney World and feted at a
February
banquet · in
Tallahassee .
A panel of writers and
broadcasters and a handful of
former receivers. including
Biletnikoff. make up th e
panel selected by the
Tallahas see
Quarterback
Club Foundation , which
sponsors the award.
Pitt sburgh's
Larry
Fitzgerald , now a rookie with
the NFL's Arizona Cardinals,
won'the 2003 award.

Elarton agrees
to one-year deal
with' Indians
. CLEVELAND (AP)
Scott Elarton, who pitched
. effectively late in the season .
after a slow start with
Cleveland, agreed Thursday
to an $850,000, one-year
contract with the Indians .
Elarton, who can earn
another $150,000 in performance bonuses, had been eligible for fre e agency.
.
The nght·
hander, who'
went 3-5 last season, signed
as a free agent w'lth the
Indians on Mav 25 after he
was released by Colorado.
He went 0 -~ in eight starts
with the Rockies.
Elarton, 28, didn ' t get his
first win of the season until
his 17th start, the first pitcher
to go winless in his first 16
starts since Oakland's Matt
Keough in 1979.
However. in hi s last 14 outings. Elarton was 3-3 with a
3.93 ERA. On Aug. 29, he
pitched hi s first career
shutout, a two -hitter against
the Chicago White Sox ..
Elarton has a 3'!-38 cureer .
record. In 2000, he wont 17-7
lor the Houston Astros.
·

t

bwalters@ mydaily1ribune.c6m

SHS held a 4-1 lead earlv after that. run. bu! . Notre
in game one and extended Dame agam ran ott seven
the advantage out to 15-3 un answered to w1n game
behind dominant serv in g three_ and advance to the
and stellar net play.
D!~tn c t fmaL
. ,
The Titan s re sponded
We should ha\ e _PUt
with a fury of net attackers th em away 111 that lirst
thac swun g the momentum, gam e when we had ,th~
and the deficit. to within upportumty and d1dn t,
fi ve at 23-18.
satd Sayre. "Regardle ss.
Then, it was all Notre I'm still ve ry proud of thi s
Dame .
team and what we did thi s
The Titans finish ed game season "
one out with a 7-0 run th at
De spite the outcome and
gave the Scioto Countians a the di sappoi ntment of not
25-23 come-from-behind advancing, Sayre was
asked if she thought thi s
victory.
The Tornadoes jumped year's team would always
out to an early 7-2 edge in be proud of what the y
ga me two, but again could- accomplished in th e Ia"
n ' t seize controL
week.
Notre Dame rallied to , "I would hope th at th ey
reclaim the lead at 10-9. would," she said.
only to see SHS bounce · Notre Dam e will play
back with a run that pushed Pike Eastern in th e District
th e ' Does back in front Finals aher !he Eagl es
with a 13- 12 ad va nt age. It defeated Paint Vallev '25was also the last lead ttt.lt 13. 25-23. 25-18 ii1 the
Southern enjoyed in the other district sem ifinal.

Southern's Jordan Neigler. left, watches her spike ·attempt bounce back toward the Tornadoes:
side of the ne t. Kristiina Will iams (23) and Brooke Kiser (11 ) are lookmg on. (Bryan Walters) ;·

College Football

College Soccer

Ross situation latest in string Rio Grande trounces
of Ohio State player problems .Shawnee State, 12-1
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press
New
COLUMBUS -.
York City has Wood y Allen ,
th e Je rsey sho re ha s
Sprin gs tee n and LA . is
known. as Jack Nicholson ·s
tow n. Ohio's capital city.
however, belongs to Ohiu
State footb all players .
The Buckeyes are adored
in thi s ma jor cily wi th a
small -town attitude , whi ch
treats them the same as
other cities do famous rock
stars, actors or states men.
Every newscast has a sizable seg ment on what"s
new, or what isn't. with the
team. There's a story a dav
on the Buckeyes in the local
newspaper - year around .
It 's "Friday Night Li ghts"
on Saturday afternoons .
Those same lights arc just
as bright when thi·ngs go
wrong. of course .

,

Lydell
Ross.
th e
Buckeyes' leading rusher
the last two years and this.
is currentl y cooling hi s
heels on the sco ut team
whi lc · trying to avoid
charges that he paS&gt;ed
bogus coupons at a local
all -nude strip dub. He was
susr cndcd from lust week's
game against Indiana .
"Peop le make mis!&lt;lkcs."
said quarterback Tw)
Smith . " I'm not gumg to
ho ld i( agai nst him because
of one mi stak e that he pos-

sibly made."
The jo k ~s about Ross·
pli ght are predictable.
What 's not predictable is
the rcspon ~e from coach
Jim Tres., el. who in four
years as the Buckeyes' head
coach has won a ·lot of
ga mes and also had a lot of
players ' names come up on
the police hi enter.
Tressel tries to treat h ~&gt;
players ·like me n e1·eil
though they sometimes act
more like th e teenagers they
are. The Buck eves don.,
ha ve cur few' eiclled in
gra nite. nor is their close
ove-rsight O\'er what L'ar~
thev dri1 e or who the\ han ~
aroimd wi th.
~
"
"We .have a general statement that we make that we ·
would like them to remember who tl1e y are and that
th ey rep rbent eve ryon e

Please see Tressel. Bl

+

ST~FF REPORT

sports@ mydailysentinel .com
PORTSMOUTH - Recbhin
freshman
fon,·ard
Gu1

i

1
1

.

minute of the ~•unc. He assisted
Hunter on hi,:- tiN goal in the
IRi h mmute making the 'core
~-0.

Sha\\nee State {.1- 1~ - 1. ()-7
its onlv ~ oal in
He vwnod scored fnur ~nal.. . an~l tilL' I Sth minure whei1 Josh
ha1ided out three assist, in kad - Kcem·' fmmd the back elf the
ing NAIA No. I Ri,, Grande llC' l
116-0-1. 6-0- 1 AMCS 1 "' a I~ Juni&lt;1r mid-fielder
Ben
1 'ictorv over Shawnee State 111 Callnn cu1d 'cniur fll l'\lard/midAmerican Midea&gt;t Confere n,·e liciJcr PhiIlip Lance ' cored the
South Divi ~ ion ~fll:cer ~11.:tion nn nt hc'r two Rc·dm,:n g&lt;lal, in the
Wednesuav aftemoon .
3'itlt and 6Jrd minutes respecThe Preston. En clanJ nati,·e tn·elv. Calion al &gt;o haJ two
'cored in the .15th~ 67th . 70th a"isis.
Senior mid-fie lder
and ~Ot 11 minu1e&gt; . ll1e las! three lN'n_ llaiYey and . sophomore
~na b fur He\'\\ t •rKJ \\ere the nlld-llelJcr Paul F1ddler also
~inal marker; of the came. IH 'il'hed a"i''' for the Redmen .
SPphomore J&lt;,n, ard · Ben
Grande
ou t-shot
R in
Hunter addeJ a hat tricl and an Shall nee State. ~~- 6 with a 19assist and senior forward Simon 2 eJ!!e in ~hots nn goal. Rio had
Carey deli vered a pair of goal&gt; one saw in ~oal and SSU had
and one assist. The hat trk ~ for I I.
"
.
Hunter was the second m nsecRio (;rande will cl&lt;he out th~
uti ve game ·that he pulled otr rc i!u lar -.ca~on on ·th..:: road
that teat.
ag:.11n"' Tiflin. Saturday at '
Sophomore detensivc bad p.m. The Dcq!om are just
Conar Dawson began the scor- below tile Rcdmen in the standing wi th a goal in the ' econd tn g: ~ .
A~1CS 1 ' cored

:l

�· Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friaay, October 29,

2004

National Football League

~eeing

Browns still a tough read

is believing: Red Sox raise World Series trophy

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS
Keith
Foulke squeezed the hall
tight. After all those years
~
•md
·all that heartache, the
·Boston Red Sox had the
-World Series firm tv in hand.
;
_A couple of quick 'teps
ott the mounu.
a lrttle
·1·
..
d
h
d
d
1
u~ ;r an _e . tp 0 trrst ,
.b.tse , and rt w,ts encl. t-.:IVP
M~nny Ramtrcz tore 111 !rom

.!

onship in 86 years, finished
And, they'll get to celeoff with a four-game sweep brate in style. They start
in which they never trailed next season at Yankee
Stadium,
the St. Louis Cardinals.
then get to
"The game is over and
raise the
1918 is gone forever." said
Trot Nixon. who hit a twoW or I d
Series tlag
run double in the clinching
on Apri l
3-0 win. ··we're not going to
have .to hear about that
I I in the
agam.
h o m e
~.. A
ny t.nne you don a Red opener at Fen way Park - in
Sox uniform. you have to front of those eternal rival s
talk about the history of this from New York .
team and not having ·t World
"Congratulations to the
Boston Red Sox. to their
h
h·1d t
t .. h .. ·d ownership and to the people
.. ex •
o sop. .e s.u · of Boston. The Red Sox
Everybody thought rt was a deserve all the credit fur
c:urse. but to use .~I was JUSt a what they have accomltve- letter word.
plished ," Yankees owner
F
Y·
y k'l '
. rum
az to
ou t ts. George Steinb.renner said in
!rom Buckner to Bellhorn, a statement. "B ut make no
I rom Lon borg to Lowe, no mistake about it. We are
more talk abou_t how th e Red hard at work ·and will be
Sox cou ldn t win
tn back with a strong team."
October.
.
For sure, but Boston is too
They are now forever a busy ce lebrating at the
part of New England lore , moment. Spring trai ning is 3
names such as P~key Reese 1/2 months away, and
n ght up there wt th Paul there's plenty of time for the
Rev ere and Plymouth Rock. Red Sox to enjoy what th ey

-~r~nd~~~~\~~~~~g~~c~~~~ ~~~i~s sc,~~~~i~~sl!~fers\t~~~

111 stght and Curt Schtlltng
shot out of the dugout.
And for the fans sitting in
ri"ht at Bu,ch Stadium on
·"
. .
·
:Wednesday nrght. there was
this
curious
sight:
Outfielders Gabe Kapler
·and Johnnv Damon runnino
to join the celchration. th~
number., 011 th~ir jerseys lining trp next to each other_
·19 and 1g.
· ln the end. it all seemed so
simp le for th e Red Sox. No
dire moment&gt;.' · no close
.ca ll s. Their first champ i-

OWINGS MILLS, Md.
When Deion Sanders came out
of ret irement to join the
"Baltimore Ravens in late
-August, it seemed unlikely that
-he would be anything more
than a minor contributor to a
'defense that was already sound.
He was 37 years old, hadn't
-played since 2000 and was
.asstgned the insipid role of sup. plemenli ng the backtield on
passing downs. Then, after he
strained a hamstring and missed
_two /?.ames, there was some
·queslton whether Neon De ion
would ever shine again.
Sanders erased some of that
doubt by intercepting a pass in
_.the end zone and brin ging it

:back 23 yards in a victory over
:Washington on Oct. I 0. Then.
·following a bye week. Sanders
had two li1terceptions anu a pair
of tackles last Sunday agai nst
Buffalo. a performance that
.earned him NFL defensive
:player of the week honors.
· " Ho~fu ll y. that quiets the
critics.' · Baltimore safety Ed
Reed said. "It showed Deion is
serious about what he does. We
have a lot of people that can do
:it. For Prime to do it. it means
·even more to us." ·
: . Sander.s has turned out to be
:far more than merely a nickel
back for the Ravens. He's
become a leader. someone war-

have never trailed at any
point. joining Oakland
(1989), Baltimore (1966)
and Los Angele s ( 1963 ).
That Athletics team was
guided by Tony La Ru ssa.
but was then swept !,he next
year by Cincinnati·. This was
La Rttssa's first lime back
since then, and he 's ·saddled
with eight straight Series
lusse&gt;.
Martinez, one of Boston \
18 potential fr'ee agents .
emerged from the dugout
soaked in champagne an
hour after the final o~t and
hoisted the World Series trophy. Several thousand Red
Sox fans cheered and chanted- loud and long.
And why not? What if it
takes decades - till 2090to do it again?
"They 've gotten to ce le·
brate a lot of other · world
championsh ips, but never
the Red Sox." pitcher Tim
Wakefie ld said. "Now, we
are proud to say we're world
cha mpions."

.

I

thy of quoting when it comes to
defining the philosophy of a
brdsh group of defenstve backs.
"I believe it was Deion who
said. 'When they throw the ball,
they're not really throwing it to
the wide recetvers. They're
throwing it to us, so go get it,"'
Baltimore cornerback Chris
McAlister said.
That's
precisely
what ·
Sanders has done. He's tied
with Reed for the team lead
wi th three interceptions, and his
48-yard return for a touchdown
against the Bills gave the
Ravens a lead they never lost in
a 20-6 victory.
After a slow start. Sanders
has become an instrumental
part of a team that hopes to
reach 'the Super Bowl. The way
coach Brian Billick sees it tt
was on ly a matter of time
l:ietore Sanders became Prime
Time.
" If he could have showed up
and pla~ed that way immediately. you ve got to rethink training camp as a coach." Billick
said. " It takes a while. and basically he's gotten throu gh training camp. He looks like he's in
starting-season fonn and ahead
of that. so what he 's doing does
not swvri se me at all.''
Instead of boasting about his
accomplishments wi th a
resounding "[ told you so,"
Sanders showed his maturity by
high-stepping his way around a
clear-cut opening to gloat.

BY

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II
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Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or i
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.Battle ~
from Page 81

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past few weeks.
William missed almost a year
In Sunday's lo&gt;s to the beca~se of personal iss~es and
Eagles, the Browns posted sea- stuff (an NFL suspenston for
son highs in first downs (27), violating the substance-abuse
yards ru sh- policy). Lee didn't play but a
tng (165) smattering of plays last year.
and third"The ·upside for both these
down effi- guys: They're going to continciency (9- ue to get better as blockers as
for - 16 ) . route runners and as pass
The per- catche". They'll do nothing
formance but improve."
came on
Defensively. the Browns
the heels of a 34-point, 449- ·need to stop the big pass play,
yard outing in a win over which will be the main point of
Cincinnati.
emphasis heading into next
Garcia finally seems com- week's game at Baltimore.
fortable in first-year coordinaEafles quarterback Donovan
tor Terry Robiski e's system . McNabb completed a 65which needed to be reworked yarder on his first throw
when rookie tight end Kellen Sunday and had four more
Winslow Jr. broke his leg in passes over 20 yards. This seaWeek 2 and was lost for the son. the Browns have given ttp
season.
21 paS&gt;es of 20 yards or more
Garcia passed for 236 yards compared to eight through
· and ran 4 yards on a broken . seven games in 2003.
play for a game-tying TD in
··we have ~ot to el imin~te
the final minute as the Browns the brg plays, Davts satd. A
forced the unbeaten Eagks year ago. it was the run
into OT. Slowlv, but surelv, the defense. Everybody was on a
three-time Pro.Bowler is -play- crusade; ' You can't stop the
ing the way the Browns hoped run . You can 't stop the run.'
when they signed 11 im as a Iree We're doing a good job aga inst
agent.
the run. but we have got to stop
''He reall y swned clickinn in the big passes. That's the No. I
the second hal f of the New thing we have got to elimiYork Giants game." Davis nate ."
sard. " He reallv .stancd feel in~
Davis wi ll tweak his defense
comfonable ati&lt;.l since then ha~ by replacin~ start ing safety
made strides and improve- Earl Lmle wuh Chris Crocker.
Cleveland\ sched ule over
ment. To 'LTamble for tile
touchdow n the way be did was the next li ve weeks includes
&lt;t gutsy move. That was :1 the Ravens (-\-2j. Steelers (5courageous play."
I ). J~t s (5-I) and Patriots (6-0) ..
Even
the B e n~als (2-~) will be
Perhap' more significant
a
sli
IT
test. ~
than Garcia\ progression ~
If they're still in the playoff
37-of-54 for 546 yards and live
hunt bv December. the Browns
TDs in his past two games is th at the Browns may have mioht.need to win road games
figured out how to best use al Buffalo. Miami and Houston
Green and Sug"s . Their vary- to have any chance of making
ing sty les - Orcen pounds. the playoffs.
Davis' job could hang in the
gives
Suggs slashes
Cleveland a two-headed attack balance. too.
Owner Randy Lemer is fru stou~h to defend.
It the Browns needed some- trmed by the Browns' slow
thing to hang their helmet on progress and a collapse like
over the remaining nine games. last year - Cleveland fi nis hed
the Green-Suggs duo wuld be 5- 11 - would likely lead to
Davis· dismissal.
it.
'
The tinal nine weeks won't
"!hey' II_ delinitely, ~.et better. Davr s s:nd. ..'1 hev re he easy. For the Browns. it
young. People forget thai seems nothi ng ever is.
Southern transfer Phil
Pierce ha' had :n1 exce ll en t
seasot1 and led Eastern last
week wi th 14 carries for 71
yard&gt;.
Bryan Minear ha s com~
back strong after working
hard to overcome the effects
of a life-threatening disease
th at. . attacked him last
sprm g. Minear ad mi rab ly
ru shed li2 yards bq week
on ten carn~s for a 6.2 aver-

excelled on several quality
teams in the Green and
White. He was also part of a
coaching staff that made it to
fhe state playoffs.
With a team that looked to
be turn ing the c:orner earl y,
Coach Grueser hopes th e
learning curve continues age.
Other weapons in th e
and perhaps make s a sha rp
arsenal are Terry
Eastern
incline toward the top with a
.' wreu a touchDurst.
who
good showing- no, a great
show ing against the Eagles. down 1a:-.t we~k. ;!nd k ev
Coach Grueser wants to receiver Chris tvlye rs. whil
make th at turn thi s Saturday. grabbed a 46-yard touchdown pas s from Amsbary
not next yea r.
Eastern comes at op po- · last week. Myers also had a
nent s from all directions. three recep tio n game aga in&gt;!
Quarterback Ken Amsbary Trim bk. v.here he io!ai ned -15
threw for 11 4 yards last yards.
Eas tern also flaun ts a
week in a solid 7- 14 performance. Amsbary is a grea t solid line led by senior Russ
field leader and his experi - Holter and several ntl1cr vetence has made him o ne of eran Eag les.
La st
week
agains t
the top backs in the league.
Trimble.
Sou
thern
otlense
He has seve ral games of l 00
continued a la te season skid.
yards or more passing.
Am sbary pa ssed for l 16 Southern 's Jesse Mc:Knrgh t
yards in the league opener had a 15-vard return &lt;llld 22
yard ki ck:oiT return. "ilile
against Trim ble

•

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:

WITHERS

CLEVELAND - There is
no middle ground for the
Cleveland Browns. From
Sunday to Sun&lt;;lay, the Browns
swing tram one NFL extreme
to the other.
Ri,ght now, they have hope,
but tt 's mixed with the usual
doses of de spair. And, as
Cleveland entered its bye
week , it was difficult t{) gauge
how good the Browns (3-4), tn
their fourth season under coach
Butch Davis, truly are.
They've had the good: the
William Green-Lee Suggs
backfield tandem; an improved
run defense; kicker Phil
Dawson's perfection; quarterback Jeff Garcia's play making,
and a 3- 1 record at home.
And there's been the bad:
damaging injuries: a leaky secondary prone to uiving up big
plays: the lack of an offensive
tdenti ty: not nearly enough
pressure on opposing qmu1erbacks, and Davis' continual
roster shuffling.
In his fourth season with
,J::leveland, Davi s still dott;n 't
nave the Brown s where he
wants them.
"From a won-loss standpoint, I don't feel very good at
all." Davis said a dav after the
Browns were beaten 34-31 in
overtime by the Philadelphia
Eagles.
But all is not lost. The
Brown s. who wo n just five
games last season. were al so 34 in 2002 when they' fini shed
9-7 and made the AFC playoffs.
Despite their troub les, offensive tack le Ryan Tucker
believes these Browns cm-1 get
back to the postseason.
"Absolutely." Tucker said.
'Two years ago, we were 2-4
and everybody was writ ing us
. off and we ended up makin!l
the playoffs. It 's not over unttl
xou .~e out.' That's the bottom
ltne.
Tucker's positive outlook is
du e in part to Cleveland's
improveme nt on offense the

i

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1

ToM

Associated Press

. -··-··-··1

Reaeh 3 Counties

Sanders shows he's I
not past his Prime .
Associated Press

"W hen you have the aspiration as a little kid of,playing in the World Series,
throwing the ball up and hitting it, you at least sneak
one hit in there in your
backyard, "
Rolen
said
Thursday as the Cardinals
cleared out of Busch. ·
What the Cardinals rea ll y
d idn't have was a true ace.
Five pitchers reached double figures in wins this season, led by Jeff Suppan's 16
victories. Chri s Ca rpenter.
at l 5-5, might've been the
best among them , but he
was hurt and not on the roster.
No one in the rotation,
however, was overpowering. So when St. Louis
needed a strikeout to strand
a runn er, it didn't get it.
In stead, Pedro Martinez
and Derek Lowe and
Sc hillin g shut down the
team th at led the majors
with I05 wins.
Bo ston became the fo urth
team in Series hi story to

r·~···-··-···-···-··-···-···-···-··-···-· -··-···-···-··-···-···~·

National Football League

BY DAVID GINSBURG

achieved, starting with a
downtown parade Saturday.
Shaggy-haired
Johnny
Damon will be in New York
next Monday to appear on
David Letterman 's show.
The bat Damon used to hit a
leadoff home run in Game 4
is headed elsewhere - to
th e Hall of Fame - for
immediate display .
The Cardinals could have
used his bat.
After leading the NL in
hitting. slugging and scoring, St. Louis looked feeble
in the fina l th ree games.
Following an I l-9 loss in
the opener, the Cardinul s
were held to three runs the
rest of the way- their lowest total for a three-game
stretch this season.
Alben Puj ols. Scott Rolen
and Jim Edmonds, all mentioned as MVP candidates,
combined to drive in only
one ru n. Rol en went 0-for15 in hi s fir st Series , and the
Cardinal s batted .190 over·
all.

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: ®alhpohg llatlp m:rtbune The Daily Sentinel ~oint flleagant l\egtgter
l._,_J~~.~:~~---·-.. -··-·~~-~~.~?.._,,_,,,_.,_~~..~:!12.~.-... -...i

!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

Major League Baseball
BY BEN WALKER

•

Friday, October 29,2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

Ryan Donaldson had a ISyard return and 46 ya rd
retlltn for So uthern . The
Southern o,llense had onlv
-19 pos iti ve yards both on
the ground and in the air.
Butch Marnhout has continued to be hampered with a
sho ul der injury and his play
was limite&lt;.l last week.
Derek Teafo rd steps in as
the Southern quarterback for
the last time . Teaford.' the
·Southern sparkplug. wou ld
lik e nothing more th an a
wi n. Teaford has had a
' good pass ing game going of
l:tte, but with a couple big
horses injured on the lin e
(Jake Nease a nu brother
Dar in Teaford) Tea ford's
time to throw has been very
limited.
,
Besides
Marnh ou t
Southern has a solid run.ner
in Je sse Mc Knight and a
wo rkhorse in Donaldson.
lfli Defen sively.
Jonny
McDaniel and We s RitTle
had sacks.
whi le Chris
Tucker had 12 tackles in a
good defe nsive effort.
Game time is 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at Eastern High
School.

Palmer looks good when he
gets a little help from Bengals
Bv Joe K.l.v
Associated Press

C INCINNATI - Carson
Palmer stared right at John
Lynch, freezing the Denver
safety in the middle of the
field, then turned to his left
and let it tly to a wide-open
target.
Chad Johnson caught the
ball in stride and went into
the end zo ne untouched,
putt in g the Cincinnati
Benga ls ahead to stay in
their most eagerly awaited
game of the season.
Finally'
Palmer had a breakout
ga me on the NFL's biggest
&gt;tage Monday ni gh t, leading the Bengals to a 23- 10
vic tory that go t him and his '
team back on track.
"Going into it , there was
a lot of pressure o n us to
win that game because it
was the first Monday night
game in Cincinnati (i n l 5
yea rs) and the fa ns had
been waiting so long,"
Palmer said . "So to get a
win. it was kind of like getting a monkey off your
back and rei ievi ng a lot of
stress and pressure." •
Much o f it was on
Palmer, though the novice
quarterback never showed
it.
Afte r an
impressive
debut in New York again st
the Jet s~ 18-of-27 for 248
vards and two touchdowns
-- hi s first year as a starter
took a pronou need downturn.
The Bengals are 2-4 with
Palmer near the bottom of
the league in pass in g. Most
of it isn' t his fault - · a
lou sy defense has forced
him to throw too often ..to
try to c'atch up, and a balky
runnin g game has put too

much pressure on the kid
quarterback.
Worse, some fans were
starting
to won·
der about
h i m
becau se
of what
rookie
quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger was doitig
in Pittsburgh - leading the
Steelers to a 5-l record and
fir st place in the AFC
North.
The difference is that
Roelhlisberger
who.
attended nearby Miami
University - has gotten a
lot of help from a solid
defense and running game.
Instead of having to win
games by himself, he only
had to play a part.
It hadn't been that way in
Cincinnati until Monday
night , when · a national·
audience saw what he
cou ld do with a little help.
Palmer was 12-of-21 for
198 yards with one interce ption and two 50-yard
completions to Johnson,
one of them for that tone~
setting touchdown .
"He really has done
well," coach Marvin Lewis
said. " We haven't done
enough around liim to help
. ."
htm
The biggest assist came
fr.om the defense, which
was one of the league's
worst heading into the
game. For the first time all
season, Palmer had the lux·
ury ·of a halftif[le lead.
It was so much easier
than playing catch-up.
"You don't have to press,
you don't feel like you
have to make ~ertain plays
in certain situations,"
Palmer said. " You know

Honor Our

Heroes
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay trib•te to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served tlliir country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, The Daily Sentinel will 1uWilh a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You can join in 011r salute by including the
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or is currently
serving i11 any bra11ch of the U.S. Armed Forcn.

Your choice of Two Styles ...
Ad Only $7.00
(s hown actual size)

In Honor Of
'

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $14.00

"We do &gt;ay that if there's
problems after I o'clock .'
there's going to he bigger
prublcm.s here·· at the team
from Page 81
fac ility, Tressel s.aid . "Bu t
there are ~o many circurn else around them and the
~tances behind thirlgs. I get a
sc hool,"
Tresse l
said Bramlen Jue wa-. arTe..,!ed on little c:oncerned to ser hard
Wednesday " after a practice an alcoho l-related ch:rr~c . as and fast pnl icic&gt; and hide
' for thi s week's gmnc aga inst was defen~ive
lin~man hehind them when you h;11·e
Penn State. " I guess l stop Quinn Pitcock. Tight end tn &lt;.leal with indi,!idual situa short of where you ought to Louis lri zarn .ond tailhct&lt;:k 1inn s."
be. I don't stop s h o~ of when Ira Guill'urd. · bllth lll "11&lt;1111
On Saturday. Rms "iII
you ought to be there. We were expected t\l pia) pi\'Ot.tl likel y . be on the sidelines.
don &gt;t· have a curfew. but we ro les for the 13ude\ cs this dressed in hi s uniform and
tell th em often that we year. ·are no longer ~' itll the fam iliar No . JO jer.sey and
haven't see n too · many good team after hcin!..! L'llan.:c d ready to play. Tressel is
thin gs happen pa st 10 (p.m. ) with robbin~ a l'elhl\1 ~tu
uncertain if the se nior l'l~ ­
and certainly past the stroke dent.
'
captain wil l sec action.
of midni ght lots of bad
Tre"e l said Ro ss l1as
Almost nery pia' er ha&gt;
things ha ppen."
gonen a ~cr.:ond. (lf ~omc ­ already pard .,. a penalty h)
Ross is accused of using times third or fmrrth. chance. being kept awa) from · the
the purpl e and white Tressel occasional!\ 'a' ·' the team.
Pl atinum dollars - used to dis ci pl ine \\ill he' hc;mlkd
"While his ,u,pcns ion may
tip dancers and buy dan ces wi thin the "famil y.. nf the . he still in pl:occ com petition - even though they were team. There are on ly vague wise. it's not &gt;til l in place (in
counterfeit and did not ha ve gu idelines for d isc ipli nan 1ern1s of) being with his
se ri al numbers. Custo mers prob lems. witl1 cacl1 ca&gt;c ll'al11111illl'' ... Treswl said .
normally get the currency. dealt v.ilh on ;m indi\ idu.d "Thai \\as the har,k&gt;t part
which comes in $10 incre - basis .
lor him .··
ments. wi th credit cards.
Tre"el aducd. " Hc's •anxHe said playcr&lt;arc 11 am ell
A club mana ~er said Ross that if the\ ~ct in trouble . !uu . . to get h:tl'k with hi.-.
refused to say where he got they 1\ ill t'irst ha\'C I&lt;\ deal tL'crmnHitc·';. a11d I think it·,
the fake bilb and did nol with authllrit rcs and then .oppmprial~ ' " h:r\·c hiri1 &lt;.lo
offer to re imburse the cluh .
I hat. "
\\ ith tlll' co a~h_L' '

Tressel

• Katherine Heartburn played by Ms . Karen Vuranch
A tough and no-nonsense lead detective
1

Cedi B. DeMise played by Mr. Do ug Adkins
An accomplished Holl ywood producer and director

•

1

A well-known le ading mao who has been married nine times
t

•

Charleton Hasbeen played by Mr. Rob Sanders
Gloria Swansong played by Ms. Lynn Hopkins
An aging actre ss who was once a major star but her career is over

Set in the style of Old Hollywood, a production company has set-up shop at
Mount Vernon Farm to film a movie based on a famousj~wel heist that took place in
the mansion 19 years ago.

. E()th

t~i~hts 3re

s()fd-()ut! ·

•

Pre-re9isteretl 9uest s are asked t~&gt; arri'l'e at 6:30 p.rr.

•

f~&gt; r ~~&gt;rsedrawt': nrrias_e rides at~tl a

•

•
•
•

pre- rr':l ster':l t~&gt;ur ~&gt;f f-1out~t Veri'! of\

farrr.

t

Monlque DeMise played by Ms . Brandy Barkey
CecWs daughte r and a buddi ng Hollywood s-tarlet

• VIncent Vlte played by Mr Brandon Sweenev
A&lt;!ullen cameraman forCec)! B. DeMise
• Hedda Hapless played by Ms. Susan Smith
AJO urnalist, gossi~ columnist and all-around busybody
• Madame Pasquala Zahnra played by Ms . Stacy took
A psychtc who attaches herse lf to ri ch Holl ywood types ,

, : ~--------------~,-------------------------,~------------------------~------~~~~----------~
•

Rus s is j u&gt;t the late't
Buckeye to get in trmtblc. On
the current team. Smith was
fo und gui lty of diso rder ly
cond uct after a campu s fif)ht
during the 2003 'L' :t 'L&gt;n.
Backup
running
hack

when your defense is playing that way, you can take a
sack once in a while. You
don't have to force it in
there."
The biggest change on
offense was that Palmer's
receivers got a lot of manto -man coverage for the
first t·ime all season.
Whenever the Broncos
blitzed, Palmer let it fly.
Johnson beat cornerback
Champ Bailey for seven
catches , including the two
50-yard plays in the first
half.
"We haven't had the long
game happ en like that
because of the way teams
have pl ayed us," Palmer
said. "That 's the first time
Chad has had one-on-one
coverage for the majority
of the ga me , and that's
when you take your shots
downfield."
Given the res ults, it's
probabl y the last time
Johnson gets single coverage. He hopes that Palmer
continues to throw deep
when he gets pressure.
"I think after Monday
night it was a sig n to him
and to my coaches that we
can be aggressive as far as
the play calling. no matter
who is out there ," John son
said. "It is all about build·
ing tru st, and I'm sure I
built trust Monday night. "
Palmer go t excellent
reviews for the way he handled him self, but was much
harder in his se lf- assessment. The Bengal s had five
trips in side the Denver 20yard line but managed only
three field goals.
"I didn't feel that I
played very well," he said.
"As far as it being my coming-out game. l definitely
hope it 's not because I can
play much better."

rp;;;Fmo~A;dA~w;-~;,
Your Payment to:

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P.O. Box 729
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In Honor or-•name and rank)
Dates of A~e Duty

Branch of Service
Conflict/War

(S hown actual size)
Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

Photo of
Your
Veteran

AD DEADLINE FRK&gt;AV, NOV. 5, 2004
12 Noon Tributes must t&gt;e prepaid.
Photos mAY be picked up after Nov. 11th

YourName: -------------------

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Address: - - - - - - - - - - - Phone:- - - - - - - - - -

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Marines Desert Storm
Low, Your Family

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 29, 2004

www. mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 29, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e tster

Nextel Cup

National Basketball Association

James, Cavaliers have eyes on playoffs NASCAR gets back
BY ToM WITHERS
Assoc1ated Press
C LEVELAND - Believe
1t m nnt. Le B10n l.tmes does n' t ha1e 11 .til Not vet
Ju , t ' hv nr hts 20th bmhJ .t \ ,

J ,un ~~ !1.1~ mote money

th an h~ II cw r spend He .-s
got .1 nl.lllstlln. a Rook1e ot
the Yc,11 ll o phy. the public's
t,"unatltlll. tclcbnt v fnends.
.ut Ol ymp tc meda'i. anti d
newhorn ... on

T here " some thmg mtssmg
fro m hts n ch .md fam ous htc.
ho\1 e1 er Thts season James
plun s to go get It
" I want to m.tke the playoffs..
th e
Cleveland
Cav,tlt et' st.u sa td "That's
my only goal ..
I t'~ 11ell w11h 1n J.tmes·
rc,t ch
Led b) theu toakte phenom ,t mf Ill st-ycar coach
P.t ul Stl as the Cavalters
11 e nt 15--+7 last season . an
18-!:!Llllle turn.1 round from
200'2 -0J But a lostng streak
111 \l,t rLh cau,ed them to ftn"h one game away from
m c~ ktn g thetr ltrst tnp to the
pns tsc,tson ,mce 1998
Unk " , omet hm g un foresee n h.tppens - and keep 111
mtnd th.tt these are the IuckIe" C 11,tltets who haven't
tnack tht• NB &lt;\ Fmals 111 the u
14-1e.u hts tory - Cbeland
shnnld be nne of 16 teams
"' hlhL~ .., C' .J 'on goe:-, beyond
X2 l!dtne'
J:imes 11hn lt\ed up to
e'en. ounLe ot h1., humongo u" hype b) ,Jveidgmg 20 9
pomts . 'i 5 rebounds and 5 9

.tsststs in hts- first season, wtll
agatn lead the way.
Last year. the Cavaliers'
playofl hopes were dashed
by a 6-19 start and a late
InJury to pomt guard Jeff
Mdnnts Cleveland went out
and added help tor James.
who's rnovmg from the back~ourt to small forward
" Now
there's
people
around him," said Mcinni s.
whose arn val from Portland
111 a trade last Janu ary transformed the Cavaliers nearly
a' much as James dtd " It 's
not JUSt you stop LeBron and
you stop the Cavs. You got to
pl,ty us now We· re a dangerous team .,
Not long ago. the future
didn't seem qu.ite so rosy tor
the wme-and-gold
Most upsettmg was Carlos
Boozer 's messy departure tor
Utah as a free agent. The
Cavahers say the power forward told them he ' d s1gn a
long-term co nt rac t wah
th em
" I wasn ' t happy at ftrst
I' m not gom&amp; to he," James
said '' I didn 1 want to lo se
Carlo s But they dtd the 11
best JOb to ge t some players
around me to help We
p1cked up some key playe rs
"Booze IS out the wmdow.
we can' t worry about htm.
He 's my guy, but I've got to
move on ··
C leve land's roster was
ove rh a uled by trades and
stgnmgs Guards Enc Snow
and Lucwus Hams as well as
forward s Scott W1111ams,
Robert Traylor and Drew
Gooden gtve the Cavaliers

better depth th,m they ' ve h.Jd
m years - plus pl.tyoff expcnenee
T h e y
should blenu
tn
ntccl y
W
I
I
h
Zydrun.t s
llgauska s .
who
averaged
15 I
po tnt&lt; a yc.tr
ago .tnd "
the E.tstelll
James
Conteren~e\ best oltenstv e
centet thts stde of ShalJutll e
O' Neal.
1t ,,
Newb le.
Da1uan
Wagner ~md DeSdg.mu Drop
wtll come ott the bench.
The C tvd!ters are also
count1ng on Jook 1e Luk e
Jackson. shootm g guard
Sash.J Paliovtc and rookie
fot wat d/project Anderson
VareJ.lO to p10duce
But the hcavtcst burden
will fall on Gooden, the No
~ ove rall ptck 111 th e 2002
dralt Now wtth hiS th trd
team 111 three years. th e 6foot - 10
lon1ard
sees
Cleveland as .t lt esh qa rt. a
chance to ch,mgc the perceptiOn th .lt he's anunderachtever
'Thts ts .t gre.t t chance for
me," Goodeii' sa td . "And as
Coach Silas says. n·s ltme to
put up ot sh ut up
II llts play dunng th e ex ht -

bJtiOil

"ett-..on 1s .wy lllda.: .l-

tt on. could make Ca1alt ers
la th torget about Boo zer
Gooden .tvet.tged 13 potnts
and I I .j tcbounds 111 hts ln st

"x pre sea&gt;on game;. !tercely
pLu 'umg every loose ball.
" He\ a lot better athlete
th.tn I thou ght he would be,"
St!as s,tid "He 's a good outstde shooter, and I didn ' t
know th,ll about h1m. o\nd
he's .1 tclentless rebounder
" But the mam thmg IS that
he's really tceltng goou
.tbout humelf That's what 1s
most tmpmt.llll I don't tlunk
h~ felt th at good m the other
pl.tL es
he's
been"
Me mph" and Orl,mdo
James is m a new frame of
mtnd. too The kid has grown
up
S1l.ts swttched James to
small lorw.trd. Iu s more natural spot and one where he
c.lll use hts athlettcJSm to create
mtsmatches.
James
worked on hts defensive
sktlls - the weakest part of
hts g.un e - wh ile playing
wah th e U S Olympic team
thts summer, and Silas has
never seen httn shoot better.
" He's a lot more conststen t." Stlas satd "Last year.
guys could run at him or
scream at hun and he'd m1 ss
No t thts yea r He's an amaztng man ..
When l.tst se;t&gt;on ended,
J&lt;tmes took a tnp to Denver
to ~ h eer on good It ten d
Carmela Anthony In th e
playo lt s As he sat 111 the
stand s. James had JU St one
th oug ht lastbre.tk tn g through
hts head
"I wanted to be a part of
11. .. he satd
There's no 1eason why he
should n't soon

Cavs pick up Gooden's option for '05-'06
C LEVELAND (AP)
FLH\\ .t ld Dt e\1 Gooden·scontrdLt opu on tot 2005-06 was
r•ck ed up Thursday hy the
Cle1el.md C.ll'.thers. who are
co ummg on htm to replace
C 1rlo' Boozer
Gooden \1 til make $3 2
mtll ton thts season and the
option I\ worth $4 06 million
Pte kmg up the option gtves
the Ca 1alt ers control ot
Gooden throu gh 2005-06 and
matcl1 111g 11ghh Junn g th e
sum met ul 06 "hen he cc~n

become a restricted fre e matldget J11n Paxso n sa td
"He h,ts been ,, gre,lt Itt lor
t~ge n t
Gooden has been " Ioree u" diKI we ex pel t h1 m to con
tnstde dunn g the prese.tson unuc to de velop .ttlll grow ..
Gooden. the foUl th ovet .Ill
tor the C tvalt ers The 6-foot10 forward averaged lJ ptck by Memphts Ill the 2002
potnts and II 2 rebounds 111 NBA Dtaft . played tn 79
g.tme-.; \.1-..t se.tson tnt
hts ftrst exh tbttton games
" In ht s ' hart ttme here . Orl.mdo The M,tgtc ttaded
D re ~&gt;. has been very produc- htm to Cleve l.tnd 111 Jul )
tive on the court and qutckly along with tm w.nd AndeiSnn
unpressed us wtth ht s work Vat eJ .tO tnr IOII\ ,nd Ton)
ethtc and dedtcatlon to Battle .md two llltUIC dr.ll t
hecomtng the best pla)er he pt cks
The C.l\,tlt eiS we1e despe1 ca n be ... Ctvalters general

.nc tor,, qu.tltt) lorward alter
lostng Boozer as ,t free agent
gt,en
C leve la nd
has
Gondcn d l tesh start and hts
new te.unmates ha ve been
tmptcssed by hiS pl.ty so ldt
"I' m expect1n g h1g th1n g"i
ftom hun.' potn t gu&lt;1rd Jet t
Mdnms sc~ u.l · I told hun .
you've

go t

e \eryth1ng

hcl1111d ) ou. The lan s 111
Cle1el.t nd .n e gte.tt Go out
.1nd pl .t v · H e·., g umg to he
g r c ~tt

CLASS I,F IE D

to work after tragedy
BY PAUL NEWBERRY
Associated Press
HAMPTON , Ga. - The
NASCAR famdy paused for
a tew days to mourn
Now it's back to' business
The seventh stop 111
NASCAR 's champtonslup
chase ts At l.mta Motor
Speedway \Vhetc Kurt Busch
w1ll try to extend hts ledd
over Jell Gordon and Dale
Earnhatdt Jr .11 Su nd ay 's
B,tss Pro Shops MBNA 500
Not that n's busmess as
usual
The spm1 Wds rocked l.tst
Sunday hy the pl,111e crash
that ktlled the son. brother
dnd tw 111 meces of promment
car owne1 Rtck Hendnck
They were trave lmg to the
race 111 Mattinsvtlle. Va- ,
when the team plane
slammed 11110 the s1de a t a
mountmn

All 10 people abowd were
k1lled. mcluding the general
manage1
of
Hendric k
Motors ports, the team\ cluet
engme builder. and a ptlot tor
NASCAR
dnver
Ton v
Stewa n
•
"There w1ll be a somber
teelmg to thmgs." satd
Bu sch. who holds u 96-poull
le.td over Gordon w llh JUSt
tour r~Ke s remam1ng •• Jt \ d
llght-kmt COilllllUill ly ,md
we're all got ng to be here to
support the Hendnck fami ly"
NASCAR and at least one
m,qor sponsot cut bdL k on
thetr promotional e'ents dw mg the week ou t ot respect
lor the 1 tllim, Candlelight
vtgtb wete he ld 111 Not th
Caroltna But thts ts a sport
th,tt's ,tccustomed to dealtn~
with de.Jth. 'o c.dltng oil the
ne xt r.tLC w.ts never an
ortton
All ol Hcnd11 ck 's dnvers
- Gm don. Junmie Johnson.
Tctry Ltbonte .tnt.! Bnan
'vtcker' - wtll be ,,temg on
the lu ~ h - bankcd. I 54-mile
oval thin usually produces the
f.l'test speeds on the 'Jextel
Cup cuuut
Gotdon. alre,tdy a loLutune chJm pton, ts the te,tm 's
best hope lor .t tttle 111 2004.

though Johnson has JUmped
up to fourth by winning the
last two races.
The 26-year-old Busch IS
dearly in the driver's seat,
pmsed to become the secondymmgest
champton
111
NASCAR 's modern era. The
onlv dnvcr he can't surpass "
Gordon. who was 24 when he
won the fits t of his titles 10
!995
Earnhardt tratls by 125
pomts. while Johnson ts a
whoppmg 207 pomts behmd
Everyone behmd Busch 10
the IO-man champi onshtp
chase needs the leader to
ha ve a major meltdown .
Fot tnstance, tf Gordon
wms the ldst four races and
ptcked up the max imum
number of pomts, Busch
could still clmm the tttle by
one point tt he averaged a
fourth-pl.tce ti ntsh and led
only one lap the rest of the
way
Earnhardt's title hopes took
a maJOI blow last week when
he got caught up 111 a v. reck
and h nts hed 33rd tn th e
S u b~&gt;. .ty 500. But he's always
done well in Atlanta
"Matttn svt l!e W,l' dtsappotntmg. but 1t's behmd us
no".'' he satd "We're movmg on ,md st,tyt ng focused on
what we have to do. because
v.e can't atlord any more
shp- ups We'te a testhent
team Nothtn g keeps u' down
for ton lon g Usu.tlly ,titer a
bad week we have .t good
"eek.
E.nnhardt 11011 the March
ra~e 111 Atl .111 t.t .tfte t a 15thpl&lt;lce lintsh at Lts Vegas the
11eck hefore - IllS v.orst
s huv.. 1n ~ ol tile \Ccl.,Oll He
.11 so bounced h.tek Itom 19th
dt C.dt forn t.t to 11 111 at
Richmond .111d hts Bnstol
VIC!Of\ c,une fU SI SIX days
.tl tet he pi .teed 2 1st at
Mtcht~.m

' It dtdn't used to be ltkc
th.tt bu t '" II C.IC m.ltu rcd
\Vt!

ve

r ed llLCd

v.. e

We call do II clgd lll

.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Southern

Public ~olt&lt;es tn Newspa~•rs.
l oor Rtghtto Kno•. Delli! red Ri•l1t tol'oUlr Door.

days

following

the

tion of thts nottce.
Written comments or

37-QS, the director or

requests for

an

Infor-

mal conference may
be filed with the
DIVISIOn Of Mineral
Resources

Management,

su bmitted an apphca·
tron to revrse coal
mm rng Permit tR ~

Fountam
Square
Court,
Columbus ,

Townshtp, Sect1on 32
The
perm1t
area
encompasses twentythree (23) acres and IS

1855

Ohto 43244, within
thtrty (30) days after
last date of publication of this notice
the

(10) 8,15, 22,29 4TC
Public Notice

The Meigs County
Floodplain Variance
Board will hold a variance request meeting

located
on
the
Wilkesville 7.5 minute

Nov 5, 2004 at 2:00
PM. In the Metgs
County

map approximately 2
miles southeast of
Wrlkesvrlle , Ohro on

Commissioners

US G S quadrangle

!he

properly

of

proposes to make a
post ~ m1nmg land use
change to prov1de for
the permanent reten·

hon of an offl celbathhouse
bUIIdmg,
potable water systems 1nclud1ng a
water storage tank
paved
and stoned
access r oads , and
parkmg areas
The
twenty-three (23) acre
area assoc1ated with
the revtslon had a
prem1nmg land use of

pasture land",
but
will now be changed
to allow for post-mmlng

land

use

as

on file for public vlewtng at Meigs County

County Health D1strtct
on
OhiO
EPAs
Approved Ltst(s) of

health
diStriCtS
authorized to adminIster and enforce the

Solid and Infectious
Waste
and
Construction
Demol1t1on

laws and
accordance

and

Debris
rules In

wllh

Sections 3734 08 and
3714 09 of the Ohio
Revtsed Code (ORC)
This approval Is sub-

action was not pre·

Public Notice
The Meigs County
Sub·Commlltoe for
Round 19 SCtPILTP
ProJects will meet
Friday November 5,
2004 at 9:00 A.M at
the Meigs County
Commlsloners Office
In the Courthouse on

Second Street In
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
purpose ol this meel'"g Is to assign local
pnonty Jo Meigs
County applications
submttled forRound
19 SCIPILTP
t0/29
Public Notice

Metgs
County
Courthouse, I 00 E.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Meigs County
Annual Survey
Solid &amp; lnfecllouo

Second

Street,

Waste

and shall remain so

1s m substantial compliance and hereby
place
the
Meigs

conditions This final

Office,

lor at least thirty (30)

Hts .. P.O. Box 631 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

10129
1113

Recorder's

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Department, Mulberry

Office

a

" commerctal stte
The application 1s

Ohio EPA have deter.mtned that the Metgs
County
Health

ject to all rules, regu·
lations, and specified

Franklrn Real Estate
Company
The
apphcaUon

in accordance

With OAC Rule 3745-

Ohto

Department
of
Natural Resources,
Dtvrsron of Mineral
A e s o u r c e s
Management
This
perm 1t 1s located 10
Me•gs County, Salem

2004

last date of publica-

Coal Company has

0463-55 to the Ohio

Auction

Announcements

Announcements

c ~1ur Ad,
a

Today...

Program

C&amp;DD Program
Notice Ia hereby
given on October 27,

ceded by a proposed
action and may be
appealed to the
Envtronmental
Review
Appeals

CommiSsion, at 309
South Fourth Street,
Room 222, Columbus,
Ohto 43215. Persons

Wishing to be on Ohio
EPA's interested parties ma1llng hst for

We have bee n comm1sstoned to sell the
Estate of the late Dale &amp; Lucile Jacobs of Mtddleport
FURNITURE &amp; HOUSEHOLD: Half octagon !tghted cu rta, oak
flatwall, drysmk, server, sideboards. table &amp; 6 chatrs, Q. Ann
chatr, 2 kttchen cabtnets, 2 old farm tables, red kttchen table,
oak serpentme front dresser w/ mirror, (ongmal patma) corner
cabmet, gosstp bench, assorted wood chatrs, corner shelves &amp;
wall shelves, step back bachelor w/mtrror, whtte dresser
w/mmors, full stze tron begs, pedestal, sewmg machtne, large
assortment of p1ctures &amp; P.iaque, plates (Eng!tsh &amp; Avon),
assorted book cases, beautiful mantle mirror, ramps, consore
stereo, stools, stands, assorted clocks (keywmd, electrtc,
anniversary), too many small pteces of furniture to ltst all.
GLASSWARE: Hull, Fenton, etched, pttcher &amp; 5 (frosted glass,
hand patnted) stlver S&amp;P, Assorted USA pottery p1eces, clear
glass, Carntva1. chalk, paper wet~hts, Bavartiln-German, blue
Jars, Melmac set, ftgunne s, mcnac s
TOOLS: Assorted nand too ls, large spotltght, hardware AT AD
TIME WE HAVE NOT BEEN THROUGH THE GARAGE - who
knows what IS in th ere!
.
MIX; Old Delta Queen poster &amp; others, old post cards, paper
ttems large assortment of books &amp; magaztnes, cameras,
double wash tubs w/stand, Columbta scales, Radto flyer,
wishing well, rorch furniture, bird bath, concrete planters,
yard cart, dtese engtne books,
One of Mr. Jacons hobby was rocks (Laptdans) there's a 111ce
collectton of these. He collected from all over the world.
He also worked for ratlroad
Plan on spend111g th e day brtng a lawn chatr' Ratn or shtne
Announcements day of sale take precedence over all pnnted mat enol

'
John Jacobs - Executor
From Belpre Take Rt 7 5 to flashmg light at Middleport Ex1t
From GallipOliS Take Rt 7 N to flash~ng light al Mtddleporl Extt,
follow

s1gns Sale 1s ne d door to Fam1ly Dollar stare 1n Middleport, Oh1o

ye.trs ago on !he t 1r sl ot Nov ItJK4
The two lme hml..; m..1cle .t l1le together
,md he knew that ..,he \\.Is the une he
w.mted to share h1s l1fc With :..md sh ~,.· kne\\
he was tlK' ani.! tiMt she wantl.!d too And

they both knm; that they are meant fur
ont' another 20 years

1s

a long ume

for Ime h1rds So
1 'Tweet, Tweet 20 years !01 e bi rds ')
Lee ann

Robb1e
Frank
Tma
Chester
Announcements

Announcements

HUGE YARD SALE

Old Glory Auction House
467 5 Thtrd Street- Mtddleport, OH

lim Taylor. Auctioneer
Shop . (740) 992 -9553 Home (740) 742 -0226

lhts project must sub·
mit a request In writ-

Ing to Ohto EPA,
Dlvtslon of Solid and

Infectious

Waste

Management, Attn
Systems
Management Unit,
PO
Box 1049,
Columbus ,

Oh1o

43216-1049, Tat· (614)
644-2621.
(10) 29 1TC

'.

'

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

Oead~/r~
~

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

In Next Day·s Paper

Publication

Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p .m .
Frtd ay For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display: 1:00 p .m.
Thursday for Sunday5 Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

any ad at

mu51 reported on the day of

anr loss or (lllpllnae that results tram the publleatlon or oml181on of an advertuntmant Correet10n will be made In the f1rst available ed1t1on
•Current rata card appllaa •All real ntate advertisements are
to the Federal Fau Hou11ng Act
•Thi s
t~ccepla onlr help wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda We will not knowtnglr ac eept an~
In violation of thl! lew

1

11r11 always eo nfldanllal

r

I

VA Nils ILE·

1233 - - - - - Free 1/2 Per s1an klftens

G \U

110

I WI'JI-t 'fH I&gt;

An E)(cellent wa y to earn
C a r Port Sal e 11 /0 1 &amp; money The New Avon
11 02
ra1 n or sh1ne mus1c Cal l Manlyn 304 882 2645
(740)256 141 7
equi pment ot all kinds bath
Small p1a no needs repa1red room h)(tures many other AVO N' All Areas' To Buy or
and tunmg Call (740)446- th1ngs 864 2 St Rt 7 South
Sell
Sh1r ley Spears 304
1542
9am-5p m
675 1429

(Jllo'l l~ll
Fm ~ ~~

J074

y \Mil S,\1 1'Po\t~ Rm/1\ lmm .E

Large garage yard 1st hme
1n years m sc 1terns Fn 10
29 S.'lt 1030 Mon 111
45657 State Route 124

Found 2 Black labs Letart RaCine between Syracuse &amp;
Ractne
Area Mal e &amp; Fem ale call
(304)89 5·307 4 orchec k w1tl1 Po rch Sale Mon Tues
An1mal She lter
Wed never used work out
equtpme nt unusual 11ems
LaC11es Watch Found at
posters. clolhmg ,etc
H amb r1ck
Church
Southstde call to tdentt ly
Al 'l'I'ION ANIJ
(304)675 7868
..., F. \
Lost
around
N1bert
Rd /Popta r Rtdge area 1 112
year
old
male
blue
Doberm an lamtly pet very
fnendly no collar
SSOO
reward (740)367 7673

MANKf'l

RI VERSID E
AUCTIO N
BARN Rt 7 Soul tl 5 m1les
be low lhe Dam EV E RY
SATU RDAY
~
6pm

17401256 6989

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

Camping Equipment
Cards of Thanks .
Child/Elderly Care .. . ......
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeralion.
Equtpmenl for Rent
Excavating .
Farm Equipment.

Farms lor Rent. ... . ... ... . .....

Farms lor Sale
For Lease..... .......... ....... . .
For Sale
For Sate or Trade.. .. .
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....
Furnished Rooms
General Hauling... .......
Giveaway
Happy Ads.......... .. .....
Hay &amp; Grain . . . . .. .. . .... .
Help Wanted.... . .. ..
Home

Improvements... .. .... .

. 725
..... 030

530
440
080
760
........ 770
.. 710
.. ... 750
550
. . 340
210
. 140

........790
. .. .780
.. .. 010
.190
........ 840
480
. ........ 830
610
430

330
490
585
590
.. ......... 580
450
850
.. 040
050
... 640
.. 110
.. 810

Homes for Sate..
. ............. 310
Household Goods .. ....
510
Houses for Rent.... .. ........................ 410
In Memoriam ......... .. ....
. . . 020
Insurance . ... . .. ....... . ...... ... . ......... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. . . .. .......... 660
Livestock ...... ........ . .....
...630
Lost and Found ..
..... . . ............. 060
Lots &amp;Acreage.... .......
...350
Miscellaneous. ................... . .
... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
... 540
Mobile Home Repair.. .....
.860
Mobile Homes for Rent
................ 420
Mobile Homes for Sate ...
..320
Money to Loan . .... ........... ... ...... .. ... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
..... 740
Musical Instruments..... .....
570
Personals ...... .
...005
Pets for Sale....... ........... .....
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating . ........ ......... ..... 820
Professional Services ... .
. ... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair.................. . ... 160
Real Eallte wanted.
. ... 360
Schools Instruction . ...................
. ....150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ..... .
..... 650
Situations Wanted ....
. 120
Space for Rent
..... . .......... .. .. .... 460
Sporting Goods . . ..
520
SUV'a for Sale .
. 720
Trucks for Sale ... .........
...715
Upholstery......
... 870
Vans For Sale. ....... . ..... ...........
. 730
Wanted to Buy
. ,.... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .
... 620
Wanted To Do .. . ......... ...... . ....... . . ... 180
Wanted to Rent ....
.. ... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis . ....
..... . 072
· Yard Sate:Pomeroy/Middle .... ..... . . .....,.074
Yard Sale· PI Pleasant
.. 076

t oS1"vM6 41'Hri
WlfH ITS
. oWN 1Au...

PHIO VAL LEY PUBLI SH
NG CO recommends th a
ou do bu s1ness w1th peole you know and NOT 1
end mo ney th roug h lh
m ail Until yOU have IO V9S]I ·
ated the offenn g .

~

PROFE_
'-."ION \ 1.

SF_RVI('!:'

CASE MANAGER
NEEDED
Pos1\lon ava1lable n1 Md~On
Co WV to prov1de case
ma nagemen1 serv iC ~'&gt;S n
the home and m the cc.m
mun1ty lo severe ly emotion
ally dtslurbed cr lrlren ano
E!dolescent s al nsk o! betrq
placed outs1de 111e rome
Musr possess val1d dnver s
ltcense and ac::ess to reh
able tr ansportat1on
Experience m pmv1d1ng
case management serv1ces
pteft:nred but not requ•red
Postllons reqw·e a four year
degree 1n Psych SW
Co unselmg or Cnm Jushce
We offe r an excellenl bene
111 pacl..age and compet1t1ve
salary Apphcal ton may be
made 111 person 01 obta111ed
from our webSite at
www pres l era org or a
resume 1nclud1ng cover let
IN 1:\&lt;ly be 5Ubmitled b) fn x
to 399 0053 by ema11 to
msumes @prestera org 01
by mall to
Prestera Cent er
HR' Mason Case Manager
3:F5 US Route 60E
Hunlinglon WV 25l05
EOEIAA

CUST SVC REP
NEEDED'
Work From Home

800·2 10 4689
S50b S 1 S001Month
Pan ttme
$2 OOO·S8 OQOIMon lh
Fu ll tune

Desk c leri&lt; needed Ple ase
at
Bud get
lnn
apply
Jackson P ke Galltpol ls No
phone calls please
Free k1ttens to good home
Male
gray
1 m1xed
{74014 46 8924 or (740)709

1880
Make 50"&lt;&gt; selling /Iovan
Llmtl cd
t1me
ONLY
(740)44 6 335 8 F1rs t 5 to call
recetves a g1ft
Man ager needed for mobile
home park 1n Shade send
resu me to Country Park
Inc PO 1033 Logan Oh
43 138
Medt Home Hea lth Agency
lnc see kmg a full ·t11ne AN
Pallen! Care Coordmator for
Ga llipoliS Oh10 and Su
roundmg area
~ Du11eS
mclud e establish ng and
mam 1am1ng open 11nes of
communtca11on Wit h aroa
phystctans and heal th care
fac1hl1eS 1n the deltvery ol
Home HRallh SNViCeS We
oller ~ compet1 t1ve salar~
E 0 E Please send resume
to
St epha111e
Rogers •
Otrector of Marketing 352
Seco 1d A.vent.e Ga111po11s
OH 45631
c_c:__ _ __
Needed Part l1me )Workers
tor ch1ld care center hours
tle• tble HS or equ valen t 18
years ot age e)(per1ence
Wilh pre·schoo! .::htldren pre
!erred Ma11 or laiC cover let
ter &amp; resume to Director
Crlldte ns Vtllage
2122
Jefferson
AvenuE!
Pt
Pleasant WV 25550 304
675 6575 EOE
Paramectcs
&amp;
EMT s
needed App ly fit 1354
Jackson P1ke Ga 'hpolts
Pa rt t•me medtcal offrce
worker enlry level pOSIItO'i
ask for Johr
(740)388

8086

ATTENIION!
GET YO UR LOAN TO
BUY O R REFINANCE
YOUR HOME
FREE APPROVED
HOME LO ANS•

NE W PURCHASE S'

~

"'

II~)IJS

long ha1red Wh1telbl ack ht
rer tra 1ned To good home

To good home 4rn111 olel
lemale Cocke'
Span1el
Grea 1 w11h kids (740144 1
92 17

BustN~"-'
()ppoR11.1"m

H EI.t•\hN'tl-:IJ

Ho\lf.~

RE FINANCES
$0 DOW NI SO DOWN
CASH OUT' HOME
IMPROVE r..1EN f S NO
C RE DIT; BANK RU PTCI ES
WELCOME'
U NITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1-800·370-4965
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U S
VETERANS

MB 5263
tOhto Lo ans Only)

/O · 1-1

~~
by
Inc.

© 2004

www com1cs com
110

110

lit I I' 1\ "

110

NEA,

HnPW.wnn

' lliJ

12 M0 11th s Free
Pr oq rarnmrn;t 130
Char nels pus Fr ee
EQU ipment Free
Professional InstallatiOn up
to &amp; Rooms Free Call 1
BOO 523 7556 lor details

TURNED DOWN ON
Pari Ttme
Computer
TechniCians
ne eded
tn
Galhpolts area Musl have
reliAble 1ransporta11on Pay
based on expenenced Must
have knO\\ Iedge 111 ull oper·
ntmg systems &amp; hardware
configuratiOns Appl can ts
mus t be ou tgotng have a
good personnllly P l ea~e
subm1t resume to CLA Box
572 c 1o Gall po 1s Da tl y
Tnbune
PO Bo)( 169
Galltpol•s OH 4563 1

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
Po_.t ng

D~lt-

October 27 2004

Mamtenance Worker
Tr&gt;e Untverstty of Rto
Grande IWites appl•caliOns
1or the pos1tton of
Matntenar,ce Worker
Re sponstb1l111es olth ts full
t1me 12 month p0Sil10n
mclude but CUE! not hm 1ted
to ttu; performance ot
rrcuntenance dut1es such as
serv1cmg upda ti ng an d
rc]Jwnng ol tunent and new
plumb1ng systems repa1rs
and monttonng ot curren t
and na;\ HVAC systems
and pnoumaltc ~ys1ems
matnta1n1ng control sys
tams mstcllhng and servtc
mg heat pumps trou
bleshOo!lng and repa1nng
bo1ler systems performmg
vat10us bu1ldrng repa1rs
p.:llntmg and snow removal
functtons Gener al el ectn·
cal bac kground 1s teqw ed
May requtre haa\y liltin g

POSTAL JOBS
$1 4 62·$20 92/ hr Now htr·
1119 For ap phcat1ons &amp; free
governm ent JOb 1nfo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor
1·9 13·599·8042 24 hrs
emp serv

Wanted
Med1cal Ollice
Ass1stant wtth ex p e r~ence tor
phys1c 1an olf1ce A un1que
pos ttiOn reqw1ng knowl
edg e of computer s and data
enlry· also lCD and CPT
codtng Reliable transpona
liOn needed No weekends
or
holidays
reQU ired
BenefitS available Salary
negotiable With exper1ence
A lle:oble employer Mall
resume to Bo~ 558 c /o
Gallipo lis Oa11y Tnbu ne PO
Box 469 Gallipolis OH

We are a well res pected
na ttonal prachce dealing
wrlh ger atr1cs We are m
need of a licensed psycholo
gtsl who IS 1nteres1ed m
work1ng part t1 me We offer a
good s1artmg salary and the
ab1l1 ty to part1c1pate 1n our
40 1K Call P s yc h o l0~1st
Trans1 t1ons at 877 734 2031
or tax res ume to Bn -734-

110

MISCFJ MNf.C It S

2030
Htg h
School
Junto rs
Semors and Pnor Servtce
you can 11 11 vacant posmons
1n the West V1rgm1a Arm\/
National Guard 11 you a1e
(7 40137 9 9083
between th e age s of 17 35
R1o Grande McDonalds now or have pnor mll1tary serv
1ce you wont want to pass
h1nng all sh1ft
thrs \J p For Opportumlles 1n
TELEM~RKETERS NEED
your area call
304 675
ED No Expenence OK $7· 5837
9 Per Hour Easy Work 1
Seeking 39 People
888 974 JOBS

Res den t1al
Treatment
Fac1l1ty for boy now hmng
Youth Worker post llon C all
between
9 oo am 4 OOpm

Lac any

-----·---

877~463-6247

ext 2659

uk tor

f

10

Smoot.s
INSI'RI'L'IlON

1o

1

IU \1 ISI\11

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

All real estate ad11ert1smg
In lhis newspaper 1s
subtecl to the Federal
Fa11 Housmg Act of 1968
whrch make!. rl1llegal to
advertise any
preference hmlta110n or
dtscnmrnatron based on
race co lor reltgron se~
familial sletus or nahonal
orrgm or any rntentron to
make any !.Uch
preference llmltatton or
dn1crlmmatron '

2 Bedro om 1 Barn 1 Acre
Lucas Lare ne ar PPH S
Garag e Gas Furnace C ty
Water Make Oller (304)675

8636
2 S1orv 3 Bedroom t Bath
f ul Bss..:;JT~ent 1200 Mam
Sl PI Pleasant Vli'J call
T1m (304) 675 6052 or
(304) 593 1912

odd JObs ac ound lhe house
692 6

www.orvb.com
Home Listings
Ltst your hom e by callrn9(

17401446-3620

3 bedroom
housE!
Syracuse w1th g ar age on
n1ce lot Ftnan c1ilg avatlable
No down payme nt wtth.
approved credit (740)992·

'"

3595
3 bedroom l ull basement
garage app ro&gt;~ 1 acre of
!anci 5 mtles from town on
SR 7 @ Ftve Po nts call
740 4 16 0768 or 304-882·
2299
JBA 2BA 5 129 acre s.
Green Townsh 1p clo5e to
schOol Prrced to sell More
tnlo (740) 446· 7377
5 be droom house Pomero y
(to wn ) 3/4 acre new roof
wmdows c a lurn ace stdlng porch 1nsulahon 31 4
re modeled no lana contrac t
$48 000 OBO (740)208-

7080
Home Fo r Sale
Hand bu1lt log home 6 yea rs
old Pnvate w1 1h 10 acres
Stunntng v1ew' 3 Br 1 1 2
bath Ope n loft 1
Financing available with
NO DOWN PAYMENT' II
[740)388 0164

Make 2 payments rrove 1n 4
years on note tJ04J736:l409

New Oakwood mega store
featurmg
Homes
by
Oakwooa
Fleetwood /!.
G les One stop shOOOIIig
onl y at OaKwood Homes of
Barnoursv1 11e WV (304 1736
3409
Pnce Aoduc ed localed n
John sOl s Tra1ler Perk 1985
W1ndsor exce lent cond1110r:
14 x70 tra1fer w1th 14 ~ 26
add1110n I'Jit'1 mas te1 bed
room and oath New berber
carpet dtshwasher storage
bUIIdtng
$13 000
Calli304 )593·3768
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Slock models at Otd pr ces
2005 models arnv ng Now
Coles
Mob ile
Homes
1~266 U S 50 East AYhens
OhtO 4570 1 (7 40)592 1972
Where Yo•J Get Your
Moneys N or th

V1ew photos/Info onl1ne
Bedrrom Bnck. Home 2
Bath 3 Car B rtck
Unattached Garage 2
tor y outbuild ing Code
2704 or call 1740 446

566
Bedroom 1 1 2 Ba tr
Full Basemen!
~ lddleport OH Code
17 or call (7401992

743

p Bedroom

3 Bath
ocated 1n Gall pvlls over
ookmg the Ohto A wer
~ ver 3000 SQ 11 on 3 94
ta cres Code 8:25 or call
740)44 I 0323

j320 \IO!lll F I (O\If:S
FOR S~l E
14X 70 Mobtle home 3 bed
2 bath all appliances sam€
furntture $6800 (740)245

Lo t.., &amp;
Acllt.\(,1

2 acres on Ingalls Road
$ 15 000 740-245·0133
R1ve r proper ty 1 67 acr es
232 teet shore 11nE 10 m11es
south ot Gallipolis SR 7
8 U1Id111g pe1 m 1 avail able
(740)256 8823

Rut E-&lt;1 II&gt;
\\ "-'~ IJ
Want to buy a 3 bedroom 2
bat'l rtome Garage base
ment 3 10 acres 1S aes1r
abl e All casr Close n 2
weeks Me gs Galha or
Athens County l740)992
6300

IU .'\;1\1""

10

o~6

Hot !'!ES
IUH. Rt ~l
Down

Paymdnt and
avmlable w1th
3pproved ctedlt
A"erage
cred t quai•IIE!S yo~_, I' doNn
pAymP.nt nAs kopt you from
:&gt;uymg th•s s your chance
to own vour :;~wn home II
yoJ have a down payment
bul v.ould l1ke to conserve tl
we offer low cown pa) ment
programs .tlso Grea 1 1nter·
est rales 1 Local company
Mortgage
_ocators
!740)992-7321

I nanc1ng

2 story Colon1al 3 bdrm 1
bath Gas heat Cntrl AJC
$600 mo (740\446 3481
2 story 2 bedroom 1 5 ba th
ktlCMn v. 1tr1 s1ove &amp; refrrger
ator 233 Second A11 e
Conve~tent
loca t or
no
pets $565 month plus re fer
ence &amp; depos t \7 40) 44 6
4926
2br
house
for
rent
$350 month
water aM
trash pa1ct no oets Depos1t
and retere nce requ1red
(7 40)388 1100
3 4
5t&gt;oroo m
House
Gal11CO 1s O.:;ao Erra St
S4 50 mo f'l'~ S250 depoSit
Siove /!. F&lt;- g 740\446·3761
or 1304\675 4107
4 bedroom hO\.JSe lor renl
0 ortlano area totally rernod
flied
5500
oer
mo
\7401843 5546
4BR 2 oath house m
Galhpol s
S650rmon t'1
d6PCSit reQlll rad 1740)441
0194 o•t740\4411184

CHAR MING 3 bedroom 1
bath Localed •n Rodney
1990 t 4x70 3 bearooms 2 Village Depos 1 reoweo
full SIZe Mtns Heat Pump Call (7 401446 3128
By Owner US 35 m Mason ( 1Y' old) newly pa1nted
County 5 Rooms &amp; Balh f 2 1304)88 2 2355
Conllo 3 bdtm 2 baths w
Bedroom s\
Large Sun
D"SeiT'Bnl VICV. of fiVer
Room
12k 32
all new 2000 &amp; 2001 Doubh~w1de Cnll
&lt;\ C
$700
mo
Carpet Fun Bas emero1 1 2 l:'oth 3 bedroom 2 bath Cal. Gallipols Ferr\ t7401446
acre lot $38 500 (304!675 (7 40)70 9 1166
348t

9040

2933
Fm sa le or rent 2 bedroom
$1 0 000
mobile homes st at!mQ at
from
Forc losure VA H ud tor list $270 per month Ca ll 740
tnQ 1·8;00 749 8106 ex 1709 992-2167

w ,u do mleno• pa•nllng o• f4o mes

1-------.-.JI .1•"1740&gt;992

Mason WV Bank Owned
Home 2 bedroom Flat-Lot
$24 900 Mtke Slack
~ 304 )542 5888
Old Colony GMAC Realty

' """P''P•• I

~IOHII I H!J\11.,
HJKSAt E

350

0°o Down Payme nt and
This newspeper wil l not
flnanc1ng avatl abl e w1th
know rngly occept
approved credit
Average
ad\lerttsements for real
cred it quahf1es you If do wn
estate whtch 1s 1n
V!Oiatton ot the law Our
payment has kept you from
readers are hereby
buy1ng thiS IS your chance
rnformed t h .'!l ~ ~~
to own your own '1ome If
dwellings advertised rn
you have a down payment
thiS newspaper are
but would like to COI"'serve 11
available on an equal
150
we offer low dow n payment
opportumty belieS
programs also G1eat tnter
est ra1esr Local company
Locators House 1n Kanau~a 01(l
Gallipolis Career College Mortgage
Farmers Ad GAIIIPOI s Oh
(740!992 7321
(Caree rs Close To Home)
SdO 000 2 tra1lers Krodel
Call Today ' 740 446 436 7
2 bedroom hOuse Pomeroy Park
on
Neal
Rd
1· 800·21 4 0452
$ 18 000 00 Less l or cash $675 month
uwestment
www gall POl scareercanege com
traders
S35 000
Accreclled Member Accr!!d111ng May take trade for motor Bot h
Courc I ror lnOopoMent Colleges hOme or 1n1ck (7 4:11992 (740)441 5725
a ld Schools 12748
2306

TM
Syracuse
Racme
whO want to earn money
Reg1 ona1 Sewer D1sfnct wrll
wh1 fe los1ng we1ght showmg
have a JOb openmg ava1lable
others how
Mus t have h1gh schoo l
n Janua r~ 2005 tor lhe pos1
17 40)441 1982
diploma or eqwval ent
11on of maintenance laborer
FREE SAM PLES
Cert1f1cat10n m HVAC sys
Job cons ists of ass1stm g
www famousnutnt1on com
tems reqUired
Supenntendent w1th da1ly
Appllcai!Ons wtll be
actiV Ihes general cleanmg
re\llewed as rece1ved
and mamtenance of eq uip·
men1 Apphc attons may bo
All applican ts musl submtl a pKKul.i up at the D1sl r1c t
Care
Ope nmg
teller ol mterest and resume otf .ce at 5th and Ma1n Ch ild
Shltl s
Li nked
Ftex1bl e
mcludmg H1e names of
S!l"eets 1n Ra cme at lh e
acce pted !304 )675 8883
th1ee references on or
Muntc1pal Buli dtng Please
belore Novem ber . 12 2004 attach sa lary req LHreme nt
w•th
app 11cat 10n
DH't"\ r\1 I
Appl1ca!IOns w111 be acce pt
Ins tall F1n1sh Pat nt1ng ,
Ms PhylltS Mason SPHR
8C unt1! Thursd ay November
Ca rpenten t1f Bathrooms
D1rec tor Of
11 2004
Res1den11a1 Commerctal
Human Resour ces
INSURED
Wan
ted
Live
1n
Care
G1ver
UnlvSISII\o at R10 Grand e
NOTHING TO SMALL
for
El derly
Lady
PO Box 500
Fla t Pr1ces
Housekeepmg
Cook tng
R c Grande OH 4567 4
Steve (740) 388 873 1
Fax number 740 245 4909 reQutreo call (3 04)675 5578
or (304)675·2178
e.-.aii!W.asoo@no edu
Housecleaning $1 0 00 per
Wanted
Dm1ng
Room h; (7 40 )446·338S
EEO AP. Employer
Serve'
Mu st be outgomg
u~, ~~''" ty ol Ro Grande .9nr:1
House
R•o Granoe Com~•vrtl l\ Colloge servtce onented A Sr'ntllng Wanled 10 Do
lace s a mus1 No expen CleanmQ $10 per hour
ence necessary Will tram (740 }2 45·5859 Good reler·
tl'le r1ghl candid ate Apply rn ence
Positions ava il able now!
person a1 Holida y lnn ol
Gallipolis
Wanted lo do Clean oHtces
Up IO $9 25 hr 1\ll h
I ha11e references &amp; exper1
quaht1ed expe r1ence''
er1ce {7401256· 1227
E)(cellent pay anrJ Dene f1ts

CaJI NQw'

SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1 888 582 33 45

Pnvate owned Beau ty Salon
needs
styli st to work
Mondays Tue sdays and
Wednesdays Wtll pay 60°o
ana w1 ll buy aU supplies
Cl1e n1 ele preferred Send
resumE&gt; to CLA Box 555 PO
Bo x -t69 G&lt;JII1p ohs OH
4563 1
4563 1

I'S YC IIOI OGIS I

20

fOKS\11

To Do

J2 10

\11'1.0\ \lEVI
" ,' 1{\1{'1- s

ol1968

Jto

Wwrm

'"\'\(1\1

hllllSAII

VISA

ed1t
cancel
anv t1me Error•
be
flrat
will be re aponalble for no more th8n !Me eoat of tMe apace oceupled by tne error and only tMa llrat tnaenJon. We

(304)675·8635

•

•

(.;;r_

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

W1ll naul S a nd &amp; Gr avel
Pnced
Re asonably

Fe male Boreler Col lie to
good home Call (740)256

CHARGE IT!

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclossifiedods
1m
Borders$3 .00/perod
~
Graphics 50¢for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

Display Ads

lwnghti@1c net

Business Tratnlng .... . .....
Campers &amp; Motor Homes

~0

Word Ads

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

6 Klttel'1s to gooel home only
13041895 ·3943

JUST SAY

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

~=::::~~~:~~~:.:.P~ub~h~oh~l~ng~':":'~"'~'~':~•7.•:•1g;h:l~to reiect,or

Announcement

Mr. a11d Mrs. Weddle

~----~~~~~~~

' Start Your Ad!l With A Keyword • I.nclude Complete
Dest:rlptl on • ltwlud e A Pri ce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Nu mber And Addr ess When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Antiques
Apartments for Rent .
Auction and Flea Markel
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
Auto Repair
Autos for Sale ..
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale .....
Building Supplies
, Business and BUll dings ......
Business Opportunity ..

90 5. Second Street, Middleport, OH

..

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

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

4x4's For Sate

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30 10:00 AM

l\egtster

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (749) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Offtee llo~.s-

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ESTATE SALE

PUBLIC
NOTICES
ADDENDUM
TO ITEM NO. 8
PUBLIC NOTICE
SOUTHERN
OHIO
COAL COMPANY
RACCOON MINE NO
3 - SALEM SHAFT
PERMIT 0-0463

Auctton

\!Crtbune

To Place

can

bounce back trom ,mythm g.
Ea1n hmdt s,uu "Atl.mt .t " .1
ttack we've &lt;tllld}S bec nte.llly good .u E1cry ttme I go
thete I lee! lt ke l h.l\e "
ch,ll1ce to \1111 We d1d n last
lJtne

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

flOO

Auctton

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Huge Duolex clean 3 bed
roof! 1 bath d1n1ng stor·
age No pets/smokmg $610
Call Kelly (74014 46 9961

�Friday, October 29, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 29, 2004
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
NEA Cross w ord Puzzle

BRIDGE
Nice 1. 2, &amp; 3 bedroom Ett1c1ency apt for rent.
Apartments/ reta1l space $350/month includes water,
also tor rant (740)992-3702 sewer &amp; trash . No pets.
(740)446-4313
Nice 2 BR house SR 160 4
mi N of Holzer $400 mo + Gracious hvmg 1 and 2 bed·
fBC . deposit. no pets. room apartments at Village
~740)446-6865 or (740)379- Manor
and
Riverside
2923 .
Apartments 1n M1ddfeport
· $295 -~
•••4
11 740
N1ce home St. At. 160 $400 From
· a
·
month
$3 50 . secunty 992-5064. Equal Hous1ng

Ant1que B1rds-Eye Maple
Chest of Drawers and 29~
High Oak Clover shape
Table must see bolh $100
each {304) nJ-6163
--------Buy
or
sell. Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Ma1n
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore.

c

depostt. No pets. (740)4466865 (day) or (740)3792923
-Rental m Pomt Pleasant
1400/month (304)675-5540
or {304)675-4024 ask for

•r

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

.o!:l
wl\'
ne_r':'
. ~~~~~~.,

_o,..P_Po_r_
1u_n_lti_e_s.____
Middleport,
North
4th
Avenue 2 bedroom. furnished apartment. Deposit
and references . No Pets.
ci7_4_0_I9_9_2_·D_16_5_ _ __

----

~~~
JVu.Ku~·u_...,.,..

I

·Broad Run
Gun Club
Sunday, Oct 31
Outlaw/Slug Match
12 Noon

,

Bowflex Extreme, new condillon . Paid $1500. asking
$600. (740)388·0366

Nancy.
Broker

Homestead Realty One bedroom apartment., Computer with Speakers
no pets,
1r1
Pomeroy, and Printer. 5 piece Dining
1740
)992·
5858
Room se1. Ladies 10 speed
MOBILE Ho~m;
81cycle Call (740)446-2188
FUR Rmr
One bedroom garage apart·
sa l e
Fire Wood
me nt. kitchen furnis hed . For
bedroom in Letart. fur- $400, (740)992·3823
(304) 882·2537

NRA Concealed Pistol
Classes
Now Forming for
Saturday, November 13th
For info call 740-992-9444

1420

nished. all utilities paid. 5

Gray Couch &amp; Love Seat
$150, Black Swivel TV
Stand $10, Green Glider
Rocker $5 (304)882-3129

from power plant, Pleasanl Valley Apartment
$350.00 a mon + $350. dep Are now taking AppliCations
304-882-2858
for 2BR. 3BR &amp; 48R. ,
Applications
are
taken
2 bedroom trailer tor rent- Monday thru Friday, from
Tuppe rs Plains. S3d0 per 9:00 A.M .-4 P.M. Office is
month plus utilties &amp; depos1t. Located at 1151 Evergreen
(740)667-3487
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
2 bedroom. 2 bath. availaOie Phone No IS (304)675-5806.
now. Green township close E H.O
m1les

to town .

(740)446-6890
more intormation.

lor

3Br. Trailer w/Washe r &amp;
Dryer. Rel ndg &amp; Stove
included SeCtiOn 8 Approved
(304)576·2934

BeaUtiful R1verv1ew 1deal for
1 or 2 people ,'ho pets. refer-

ences. (740)441·0181 .
Clean 2BR mobile nome.
next to town . (740)256-6574
New 2 bedroom . 2 bath, pn·
vale lot. $450.'month . negotiable. Call (740) 441 ·9755
or (740)339·2856

Nice 2 bedroom mobile
home
2003

No pets_ (7 40)44 6-

Trailer for renl $300 month ,

Middleport OH on SA 7.
across from saw m1ll. behind
KC Auto Sales. (740)4 468 172

t

APARTMENTS
FUR R.:~·r

Hotpo1 nt dryer $160, Maytag
washing machine $75, 5
drawer chest $20, beige
couch $20. orange recliner
$10, entertainment center
S25. 4 chair &amp; table S5D. 5
520 .
shelf
bookcase
Small 1br Apt. $300/month
(740)446-4426
plus Deposit No Pets, on Mt.
JET
Vernon Ave, Pt. Pleas.
(304)773-606 1
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Tara
Townhouse Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
Apartments, Very Spacious, 800-537-9528.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA, 1
112 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
collection
over
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool. Marble
Pat10. Start $385.'Mo. No 2.000. from the 1930's and
Pets. Lease Plus Security 40's, lot of rare ones $2500:
Deposit Required , Days: Remington 1100 ,6 GA,
740-445-3481 : Evenings: Vent Rib $750: also some
Chicken coops, wooden
740-367-0502.
rounds. with spring loaded
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- doors.
excef.lent
$45.
Ing applications for wailing
(7401533-3870
list for Hud -s ubsized, 1- br,
NEW AND USED STEEL
apa~tment, cal l 675·6679
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
EHO
For
Concrete ,
Angle ,
\II IH II\ \DI &lt;.;I
Channel. Flat Ba r. Steel
Grating
For
Drains .•
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Holb·EHow
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Gooos
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam- 4:30pm. Closed
Th ursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446--7300

Appliance

1 and 2 bedroom aparlme['lts. furnished and unfurnished, security deposit
required. no pets. 740-9922218.
1BR apartment wld hookup
$290 per month + deposit
Sun Valley Apartment. new
owners (740)339-0362
I BR. washertdryer hook -up
near
Holzer
Hospital.
$299/month . (740)339-0362
2 bedroom apt. Centenary
Road close to hospital, bath.
stove,
refrigerator.
washer/dryer
hookup,
$400/month .
security
deposit required. reference
required. no pets, call
(740)446-9442 after 5 :00.
2 bedroom . unlu rn 1shed
apartment, all utilities paid.
$500/month . S5001deposit.
(740)446-1637 until 5pm .
{740)446-46 16 atter 5pm.
2BR, C/A, retrigerator/stove
included,
washer/dryer
10 min from
hOok-up.
Holzer
(740)441-0194 or
(740)441-1184
Applications being taken for
very clean 1 bedroom in
country set1ing yet close to
town. Washer, dryer. stove.
fridge includeD. Water and
garbage included. Total electric with AC . Tenant pay electric . $300 deposit. $375 per
month No pels. No smokmg. 740-446-2205 or 740446-9585 ask tor Virginia .

r
r

r

r___

I'E:.or_
rs _

FOR SALE

Stop &amp; Compare

on 2nd Ave
!\lidJil'j11li'L Ohitl
~l'umd \'l'.
Open D:til~· 111:00-:\( 1[1
Sun . 12:00--+:00

14"i:\.

r

_.JI

. -

45760

OU~f:N'S ltSI'IOP
,., Tl'l~~t. ANl&gt; S"nP

ON IT/

,'\,. II\ I Sf()( k.

FARr.l

r

Ll~

1997 Gray 15.1 AOHA
Geld1ng Dash for Cash Bugs
Alive 75 on papers. 30 days
barrel
trainmg
52000
1740)446· 1310

r.

For S.ele: 1200 lb Round

r

Fou SALE

$25.oo. pe.e:.~month!
'•

P~ily ,.·

·Sentinel·

&lt;

992·2155

1-800-822-0417

WELL!!

BODE

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

THE BORN LOSER
v-\-.11-\l&gt;&lt;'i :S if'E
~PEC 1
.. ·~....-, _...___

2000 Honda 4-whee ler. 4
wheel dr1ve. 3 ODD miles.
excellent cond1110n S2.900.
(740)446-3117
2000
Honda
Foreman .
$5001 Honda's. Chevy 's,
450es, yellow. w1nch. new
Jeep's,
Ect .
Pol1c e
tires. lock in/out. 4x4. great
Impounds! Cars from $500
condition S3 ,200 (740)245for listings 800-391-5227
9099
EXT 3901
2002 Honda 400 Ex , good
1985 Ford T-B 1rd. V-6 2dr. cond1t1on 53.500 080 Call
good body &amp; in ter. S6 00 (740 )256 -1526
740·6.l5080 (304)576·3080
0446 .
1988 Dodge Aries LE . must
see to appreciate, well
optioned, asking $1095
080, (740)949-2693

·

2002 XR 70R Honda d1rt·
bike Runs good. like new.
rode very li ttle.
51.000
(740)441-1417 after 5pm or

'ferry 's Bnglnss
r;~DI : .t•d

!\bin

~I .

p ,llll&lt;.Crtl\,

lw~idl'

l..IIT\

·~ r rui l Sl:md

Are you in the market
anewcar

La\\ 11

!'ractt ll'

See · ···
Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

&amp; J'u,h

1\ h l\\l' r ". ( 'h.1111 Sa\\..,,
Ch;un Sh;!rp~..·II!.:J
~.-\. Part'
:--..~·'' G~..·nl.'l\tl Sl.tndh'

CIL'Ilt'la !lll~ S)~\1.'11'.~ ;lild
H,-,j·:\ 1r ,\1 r Ct 1111pr~ ''tll'\
Ojlcn R:JO-fdiO 'I-F;

Nc\\

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy.

99 Hyundai Elantra S3.995
miles 96 ,391
95 Olds
CUtlass SL $3,995 'Til lES

87.857
-99 Geo Metr o S2.9% m1tes
78 836. 4 Brush Hogs 5fl
$400 each 5ft &amp; 6tt Blades
$175
Southern Auto Sales
2nd Ave nue
(740)446-8554
Ford 87 Mustang. 2 3 5
Speed . wrecked. $500 OBO
call (304)675-8872

l5

T RUCKS

rou SAI.E
1988 Chevy S 10. Good
Conaition , Camper Top.
Auto Transmission . Power
Steer~ng, Power Brakes A1r
Cond Call qo4)675·3579
1989 Dodge 1/2 ton p1ck ..JP
8 f1 bed. 3t8 VB 60 000
miles. new rubber tow1ng
package, new pa1nt. excel·
tent cond1t1on . 3 speed over·
drive
$3 .000
Ca ll
(740)446-4514 8am-5prn
740-446-3248 after 5pf11

MY DAGGER ... GOT MY
KADO W ... BUr WHERE.' S
MY PIXIE DUST.., ANYONE

SEEN 1'1Y PIXIE DUST?

• Vinyl

29670

Racine. Ohio

Siding • Nc\v Gaw.gc~
• R~p la~..'l.: ment
Windu\\'\ • Roofin g
COMMERCIAL and

FREE ESTIMATE S

740·992-7599

Bashan Road

PEANUTS

4577 1

740-949-2217

s"" 5'x1 o• .1',

..,

• Room AddiTion s &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gu"ers
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Oecks
We do it all e~~:cept
furnace work

to 1,0'x30'

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
1!1 4/t mo. pd

-~ ~-

i!JJ

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

(X)

YaJ 11--11 "-JK WE.'LL

f.\IER 8£ VI.SITED BY
INTELUGUJT AU8JS
fl&lt;O'v1 CUTER SPACE..
PROf IJOODLE. '!

1-800-822·0417
"W.Y"s # 1 Chevy. Pontia c. Uu ick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van DealE"r"

992 -62 15

GARFIELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month
Barnhart
Builders
.\11 .H' lll"'ll'\ J)CI"i~nt'l'

•:"--t'" llumc~
• l.u~ llumc.,
• Po, l

~

ranw

•( 'nmpktt· lh· moddin~-t
•l{qJI:u ·t'llh·nt \' i ndou"

•Ruoh
l 'uauucrdal ami
H: c-.idl'nlial

Free l·:slimatcs
7411 -Mt 7-loiiKII

I

~N. W~V

DOD065UKE
PEOPLE WI-IO
AREN'T NICE
TOTJ.IEM?

SUNSHINE CLUB

V.C. YOUNG Ill

'&lt; t'\,{1

OF COURSE!

DO '(OU i~ I N K
A PARENT CAN
REALLY LOVE A
KID W~ O
DOESN 'T 6ET
STRAI G~T A's?

Dean Hill

CARPENTER
SERVICE

NO MA TTER
WHAT YOUR
STYLE
...
.,.....,....-_... ,

!&gt;EE ... I'VE GOT

Hill's Self
Storage

RESIDENTIAL

740-992-5232

YOUNG'S

H nnu·~

TONIGoH"f WE'RE SPE: AKINC::.
WI"IH A BIC::., FA"f, CREEPY
MON5"f ER

..
Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.68 1 Darwin. O H
nll ,9'!2-7111.1 or N O-'J'!2-5553

llr•.•lor/.irlfJ ' " 1£· \todd .'Ia /l n,ge
u rorl \ rtl'l" \ lu r·kl'l Pu r·b&lt; .
Sl:~ Brent nr Brian Whalc.y
.\1 -Fri H:.l0-5:00
Sui. X::lO·N(IOil
Sun. Clo\l."tl

Q6

.
•

AQJ67 4
3

•

K J 7 4

Sou th

West
, .

North
3 ofo

Pass

Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

,.••
East
PBS$

Speed is rarely
of the essence
In 1909, Tommaso Marinelli , an Italian
playwright, penned , "A new beauty has
been added to the splendor or the world
- the beauty of speed."
Then, in 1949, five years after Marinetti 's
death, Aldous Huxley wrote, "Speed, it
seems to me, provides the one genu1Tiely
modern pleasure.·
Speed wa s new in both I 909 and 1949 strange.
At the bridge table. speed at tnck one is
rarely beneficial. In today's deal, look only
at the North and South hands. How would
you plan the play 1n f1ve spades atter West
has led the heart king? Stay in first gear
-or park!
The auction was conducted at breakneck
pace. There is a saying that the five-level
belongs to the opponents, but five hearts
doubled IS only one down.
Declarer too~ trick one with dummy 's
heart ace. fed ·a trump to hand, played a
club to dummy's ace, and continued with
another club. He was hoping that West
had started with king-doubleton (or that
East had the diamond queen). But East
took the trick and sh1fted to the diamond
1O; one down.
Soutll needed to establish dummy's club
suit without letting East win a trick. To do
that, decla rer had to hl1 the brake at trick
one and hold up dummy's ace.
When West continues with another heart.
South discards a club lrom hand. He
cashes dummy's club ace, ruffs a club
high , plays a tr ump to dummy, ruffs another club high, draws trumps ending in the
dummy. and cashes th ree established
clubs. His 11 tricks are s1x spades. one

-... 'lllrthdity:
LET

:\P\1 •WII' In~ ~~ftl, ~tlC ikjlCT'

Self-Storage

93 Pont1ac F1reb1rd. el(cellent 'condition {7 40)742 7004

LIKE JOUR
PETEF&lt;- PAN
COSTUMC,
DI\.D 1 +-{AYE
FUN AT
PAR'T Y'

Athens

l't l l · llfl ,l!ld dd)ll.'l ~ 'l'l I IU'

·--iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiio,...J ~~~ BISSELL
High &amp;Dry BUILDERS me.

K

- -~ Astro,~ Graph

BIG NATE

IMPORTS

SaL K:.lll-2:1111992- lll.l.l

•

49 Deal in

trout

5 Foul-ball
caller
8 H ad a tLnn
12 Laid off
13 Perjure
~ 4 Askew in
Edlnbur9h
, 5 Vegas 11ght
16 Blacken
17 Repair a sock
18 Hombre's
address
20 Tenel
22 Pie-mode
23 Tire IIIIer
24 Analyze

a senten ce
27 Sleek
30 Prior to
31 Badminton

SO Every one
52 Sierra Club
founder
54 Hunter's
q uarry

55 Oro. "'10190i
'Qih1bibo&lt;or
56 Coastalllier
57 Walked
heavily
58 Stone Age
tool
59 Vet patients

DOWN
24 Boa, possibly 44
Shark
25 Sheik,
45
warning
usually
2 Fateful day 26 City on the 47
3 Gin-fizz flava
Truckee
4 Reddish
27 Nibble away 48
tints
28 Milky Way 49
5 lmmoelerate

need
Spasm

32
34 S h oe color

35 Ms. Th..,.,

unit

29 ··omigosh! "

6 Hamm
of soccer
7 Sheet fabric
8 Storks, e.g.

33 Intimidate
35 CoHee

Eavesdrop
Adm.
- Zumwalt
Lir'a
successor

Warble
Top NCO

51 Barker
at Tarzan
tpme
53 Legal matter

servers
9 Maj . Hoople"$ 36 Helena 's
Get a mo rtword ,
home
gage
10 Caligula 's - 39 Inveighed
loog-snoutnephew
against
odmammal ~ 1 Dice throw
40 Brut
Miller or
19 Bullllghl
41 Finished a
~ h eridan
skirt
yell
Sweater
21 Laugh-a43 Trombone
fr ont
minute
slide

37 Gl mail drop

38
40

43

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~felxtly Copher cryplog!it'n!i

are uea1ed I!om quol ill oO~ ~ ~ f il! nc J~ ~ ~;; '!
Eac., tetter~~ tn! CIPI'll!l Slan&lt;J~ for anwe·

roday's clue: L equals

EYU

U GNM U N E

RS A . E

IUE

H SGA

ES

AU UR

NSZUEVMAI

EYUZ "

·w S P

ME

E YUK

EYGE

TMRN

P U GB 8 K

ES

MN

~·

'

ZK

OSALMAOU

J GK

u~s1 ~··o :.1~ "11

OS B BM A N

heart and four clubs.

.W .ItT:mt: R ~..· pair •

1994 Lincoln Continental leave message.
Executive. · 87,000 rri11es . m::--A~l-'_
ll.;.J~I'~A-1&lt;-rs-.·~&amp;~
exce llenl condition ins1de
ACUS.~ H:J ES
and out.
$4,000.
Call
(740)379·2531
Leer Crown used fiberglass
1996
Cadillac
Deville. topper-fits 8 loot long bed.
89,000 miles. eJCcellent con- Chevy or GMC 88-97 $250
diilon $6,000. Long Burner firm Extang 111nyl tonneau
wood
burner
$500. cover for 73-83 Chevy or
(740)379-9405
GMC long bed lruck. new
tns talle d
S 100
never
2000 Z24 Chevy Cavalier, (740)44 1·1 971 M-F days
48,000 m11es. Auto, Runs &amp;
(740)44t-0816 nrghts aM
Looks
Great
$5.000
Oh1o
weekends
(304)675·5828
Sl I&lt;\ 11'1-S
2002 Buick Century- Special
Edition. Color- light sanddrift
BID
H OME
metalliC, mileage- JUSt under
1.\R'RO\'Et.II·
S I'
53,000 miles. interior- cloth
seats, loadedconcert
BASEMENT
sound system II. exceptionally clea n car
(740)446WATERPROOFING
0925.
UnconditiOnal lifel1me guarantee Locnl refe[ences t u~·
2003 Ch rysler Sebring LXI n1shed Established 197 5
loaDed still under warran1y CaU 24 Hrs j]40) 44 625,000 miles. 2002 1911
0870. Rogers Basement , - - - - -....- Outt;:hman
travel tra1l er
Waterptooltng.
excellent cond1tion used 4
times . (740)379-2331

93 BMW 325i. Custom
cover, new tJres . &amp; eJCtra
wheels. Priced to sell under
blue
book,
$3,500
(740)446-9555.

,

TODf\'(2'~-·'

MO'Illllt'YCI£-.'

4 WHEEI.EI&lt;S

89 Ford Escort, 2 door. ru ns
good, $3,500, call (740)992t958

thi$ paf!o~tot· f!~low as

Ty Hill

UH- OH I!
THAT
-I)ON'T

Tree Service

1998 GMC J1mmy SLS.
grea t cond1t1on . pwr seat,
wmdows. locks, sunroof,
t06K
miles ,
askmg
$6,350 DO (740)446-89 10.
740

BARNEY

JONES'

4x4

2003 Tracker, 4x4 . 3.000
miles. All electric, alum .
wheel . Will sel l below book
value. (740)388-8432

'

COME BY 6 SEE ME FOR
YOUR BEST VEAL ON A
NEW OR USE1J CAR

Dodge
Dakot a
96
owner Red 72 000 orig
miles. auto 2 wheel dr , new
tues. clean truck 304-6757375 or af1er 5pm call 304674-0098

"' 9 8

46 Peak&amp;

1 Scout for

42

out of PAINTING!

Lw-------,...J

1086 52
10 9 8 2

FRANK &amp; EARNE~T

Licensed in Ohio and

[7401 985-4180

5

¥
•

Opening lead: ¥ K

Midd leport

740-843-5264

Tilt '( K~
FOH S.\I .E

•

,.1.

Ta~e the PAIN

LI\'K'&gt;IUCK

East

• 6 3 2
¥ KQJ94
• ,A Q 3

"' 5 2

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

Antiques

West

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable: North-South

Rocky Hupp Insurance

-~-~--~·~;,.

A7

South

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

LINDA'SPAINTING

AKC Black Lab. puppies Angu s
Bulls Top
Male &amp; Females, must go Perlormance Lmes. 40 Years·
Artificial lnsemmat1on. Slate
$150 each (304 )773-5 103
Run Farm {740)286-5395.
AKC Boston Terrier pups
www.slateru nfarm com
7wk .. wormed. &amp; shots. 3
fo r sale
female $198.00_ {740)388- Club calves
Reasonably priced . Contact
8743
Baughman ShOw Cattle.
AKC Golden Retriever pup- (740)256-6535 or (740)256pies, both parents on prem- 8884
ises.
Ready 11- 16-04.
$300. will hold w11h depos1t. Polled Hereford Bulls &amp;
Herefords call (•304.)882 (740)256·1688
2426 atter 6pm
German Rolfs 6 Female lett.
HAY&amp;
$200 Parents on premises
G RAIN
(304)937-2310

SUPPLIES

.

Driveways • Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots • Playground s
t Roads • Streets
t

140-992-1611

15

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
AKC Beagle pups. good
Townhouse
apartmenls. For Sale Steel traps fu r huntmg stock. $100. Call
and/or small houses FOR stretchers good shape (740)256-6278
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 1740)379·2380
AKC Black temle Lab puptor application &amp; 1nformat1on . ..-t":C. Smith double barrel. 20 pies. Shots, warmed &amp; dew
Modern 1 bedroom apt. gauge, ven1 rib, field grade. claws
$200.
removed .
Phone (740)446·0390.
(740)388·0386
(740)441·0130.

- ~n

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

Let me do it for youl

BtmJliNG

.

MONTY

Box 189

AKC Beagle puppies $125.
can see at 1473 Hannan John Deere A 1948 2 stick
Trace Rd ., Patriot. or ca ll Puller, rebuilt, very competi(740)379-9063. No Sunday tive, $3,750, (740)742-3020
Sales.

Gooffi

• New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

IO-:t9-04

• 6 5
tt. AJI0743

875-2457

Saturday, Oct. 30,
6:30 pm ·
at AMV ETS in
Kanauga. Adoption
fund raiser for Andrew
and Jolene Carter.

Block , brick, sewer pipes,
EQl!U'\IENT
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande , OH
2001 John Deere 790. 4x4 .
Call 740·245·5121 .
30 HP tractor with front end
Pl:rs
loader. 3 pt. h1tch &amp; PTO.
460
hours
$12.000.
FOR SALE
(740)245·9044.

BEAUTIFUL
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
S)
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wesiwood Wooden chest-o-drawers,
Drive from $344 10 $442 . light brown. good condition ,
Wal~ t9 shop &amp; mov1es. Call $50, (740)949·2607
740, 44 6-2568.
Equal
Housing Opporluni1y.
SPORilNG

¥

Henderson, WV

and Financial Services

' Pole Barn 30JC50x 10FT
$6395. includes Pai[lted
Warehouse Metal, Plans, Instruction
Book, Slider, Free Delivery
m Henderson , WV. Pre- (937)559·8385
owned applicanes sta!ling at
REAL ARMY
$75 &amp; up all under warranty,
CAMOUFLAGE
we do service work on all Sam Somerville's. Since 1964.
Make and Models (304)675- by Sand}'\lille, WV PO. Satellites. German Shepherds for sale.
TV Sales/Installation (304)273· Pups, and Adults. Train1 ng
7999
5655
Breeding
(304)937-2310
Good Used App liances.
Sears pu ll behmd dump www.tristatek-9 .com
Reconditioned
and
cart, Amana 18 It refrigeraGuaranteed .
Washers.
Mt Kerr puppies . Will make
tor. mobile home steps
Dryers .
Ranges ,
and
good squirrel dogs. $100 DO
30"x27" . (740)388-8997.
Refrigerators. Some start at
each J740)742·9217
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Singer Slant-0-Ma tic sewing
Vine St., {740)446-7398
mach ine 500 in 3 drawer Please s1op in &amp; give one ot
cabinet,many extras, button these dogs a home- Meigs
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark hater, even teed decorative Co_ Dog Pound or call 740&lt;;:hapel Road, Porter, Ohio. stitch disc&amp; more .
992-3779. Oalmat1an. male,
(740)446-7444 1·877-830· Glass punch bowl w/ 30 4 yrs: Rottweller. male, 3 yrs :
9162 . Free Estimates , Easy assorted glass designed 2 Jack Russell , 1 1/2 yrs . 2
linanc1ng. 90 days same as cups 304-675·2827 or74D- 1/2 mos .. m1xed Br1ttany
cash . ViSa/ Master Card 709-0620.
Spaniel pupp1es : Collie.
4yrs. SharPae puppy, 5 mos.
Drive- a- little save alo1.
Vent Free, 3-Piaque Gas
Sofa, makes queen size Heater. (p ropane or Natural) Registered M1n Pin puppies
bad, $76, (740)992-7565
for sale. Black and Rust 5
Manual Control $143.95
Vent Free. 5-Piaque Gas weeks-old, 3 females. one
Thompsons App liance &amp;
Heater,
~( A u t o matic male $250 Will be very
Repair-675-7388 . For sale.
Thermos tats
Control) small, father 71 lbs mother
re-conditioned
automatic
911bs, Mother AKC AND
$239.95
washers &amp; dryers. refrigeraalu minum Fibe ra ted Paint CKC , Father CKC 576-2002
tors, gas and electr ic
(Great for Mobi le Honies)
Wolf/S. Husky pups, parents
ranges, a1r conditioners. and
5·gel. Bucket $29.95
on prem1ses. call (740)742wringer washers . Will do
Paint Plus Hardware
1121 or 740-742-3019
repa1rs on major brands 1n
675-4084
shop or at your home.
1 \lnl"'ll'l'lll .""i

Used Furniture Store 130
Bulaville Pike , appliances,
dressers, twin, full , queen,
King mattresses. dressers,
couches, dinettes, recliners,
grave monuments. much
more
(740)446-4782
APART·
Gallipolis, OH. Hrs 11-3 (M-

MYERS PAVING

ROBERT
BISSELL.
CONSTRUCTION

Basket Games

Tickets $20 for 20 games.
Special game prizes include
new Longaberger pu rse
and housekeeping basket

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GRIZZWELLS
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IF 11-IEY'RE NaT SMARTER
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Kt-J:lW KW lD GET HEJ!.

I

Sa turday, Oct . 30, 2004
By Bernice B ade Osol
In the year ahead, you may lind yourself
preferring to wor~ 'in close association
with others rather than operate inde pendently when it comes to career-related mailers. There's a chance you coul d
establish as many as four partnerships.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Today
may be payback 11me tor you because ot
sorneth1ng nice you did fo r someone in
the past. You could be invited to pa rticipate in a successful endeavor another
already has going.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) - The
thing that makes you such welcome company today is your ab1l1ty to get alqng harmoniously with everybody. An 1mportant
group might recognize thiS and Invite you
to jo1n them .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - You
have the rare responsiveness today to
step in Md help others when you see
that they cou ld use some help. Ma'king
1hem look good 1n the eyes of their boss
refle cts favorably on you .
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- There IS
a poss ibility that you might be a bit
assertive tod ay. but your friends will we i:
come I his because, when strong-mindedness is needed . they'll know you 're there
push1ng tor their good.
PISCE S (Feb. 20- March 20) - Your
thought s Will be focused on what you can
acqwre for th ose around you today.
Someone who witnesses and admires
lh1s could 1nv1te you to tom h1s or her successful operation .
ARIES (March i i -April 19) - Although
your instincts may impel you to be direct
and frank today, much to yoi.Jr credit you'll
do 1t so charm ingly that no one w1fl be
offended, even when rt entails handling a
volatile issue .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Put both
your intuition and reasoning powers collectively 10 work to r you today and watch
how well you can sniff out a profitable situation that has gone completely unnoticed by everyone else.
GEMINI (May 2 t -June 20)- Adhe re to
your instincts that tell you to do what IS
best for the greatest number, because
that's when you'll be the luckiest. The
more unselfiSh you are. the surer your
chances for success are.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Success
and calmness w ill be inter.related today.
so let important ma"ers unfold 1n their
own way at their own pace. Lucky thmgs
can happen when you create a relaxed
and sociable atmosphere
LEO (July 23· AuQ . 22)- Your powers 01
observation are especially keen tod ay
and you ca n learn more than usual by
watchinQ otner people you~mlre Laler,
you'll be able 1o Imitate what they did. but
even better.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept , 22 ) - Someone
who th ln ~s hiQhly of yov may ta~e it upon
h1mself or herselt to introdu ce you to a
person tod ay who will be a valuable contact. It'll be to your advan1age to develop
thts relationship.

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SCRAM-LET S ANSWERS :c, ;o , ,,

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AWvi'L.L
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PREVIOUS SOLUTlON- "l'm so happy Such good fr iends So 'iuch 1r. \o"e
with lite. but roman11c love IS ove· for flle - Jon1 rv lchell

RoYBoY. .. WHY

IS 'lbUR .

iW; 5o MUCH U6~TtR ?

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BLOS·

�B8 • The Daily Se ntinel

.,. If you have a question or a comment, write:
NE:KTEI. . CIJP SEI.;tiE.S

.,. Hendrick Motorsports' loss ·
· from the craSh near Martinsville
is almost impossible 10 measure. Owner Rick Hendrick lost
his son and brother in the crash
the team's Beach 200 air:.- ctaft. He lost his father earlier
. tllis year.
!·, .,.Air travel is crucial to the ad:· • ministration of this sport , and
not just in terms ot\he drivers.
The rapid growth of NASCAR has
created a schedule in which
nuge numbers of people fly
around the country to test
'. equipment, make promotiona l
appearances, negotiate contracts and, yes. staff the races.
.,. The Hendrick tragedy brought
Inevitable comparisons to the
1993 aviation disasters that
claimed the lives of 1992 champion Alan Kulwicki and Davey Al-

of

Race : Bass Pro Shops MBNA
500
Where : Atlanta Motor Speedway. Hampton, Ga. (1.54
miles). 325 laps/ 500.5
miles.
When : Sunday. Oct. 31
Last year 's winner : Bobby
Labonte
Qualifying record : Geoffrey
Bodine. Ford . 197.478 mph,
Nov. 15. 1997.
Race record: Bobby Labonte,
Pontiac, 159.904 mph, Nov.
16. 1997.
Last week : Jimmie Johnson
won the Subway 500. his
sixth victory of the season.
He then left Martinsville

Speedway quickly whe n informed of the crash of a pri-

•

vate plane that killed.lO pas·
sengers, included among

them Hendrick Motors port s
President John Hendrick, and
owner Rick Hendrick 's son.

Ricky. Johnson received bnef
congratula tions from hi s fathe r and left the speedway,
accompanied by his cre w
chief, Chad Knaus. Th e other
Hendrick drive rs- Jeff Gordon, Terr y Labonte and Brian
Vickers - all left immediately, as well. The Martinsvil le
victory was Johnson 's first on
a short track - NASCAR jargon for a track shorter than a
mile in length - and sixth of
the season. He led 67 laps,
the most notable being the final61.

· · ·

NASCAR

This Week, c/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

.. ..

BUSGII.. SERIES

-

GR,\FTSMAN
. - TRUCii.

.

Race: Aaron's 312
Where: Atlanta Motor Speedway, Hampton, Ga . (1. 54
mile s), 197 laps/ 303.38
miles.

When : Saturday, Oct. 30
Last year's winner: Greg Biffle
Qualifying record: Greg Bitfie, Chevrolet, 192.300 mph,
Oct. 24. 2003.
Race record : Mark Martin ,
Ford, 151.751 mph, March
8, 1997.
Last week : Martin Truex Jr.,

in a Chevrolet. won for the
sixth time thi s season, this
time at Memphis (Tenn.) Motorsports Park.

Race: Silverado 150
Where: Phoenix International
Raceway, Avondale, Ariz. (1.0
miles). 150 laps/ miles.
When: Friday, Nov. 5
Last year's winner: Kevin
Harvick
Quallfylnll record: Ted Musgrave, Dodge, f29.427 mph,
Oct. 30, 2003.
Race record: Kevin Harvick,
Chevro let , 108.0t4 mph ,
Nov. 8, 2002.
Last week: Jamie McMurray
drove a Dodg_e to victory in
the Kroger 200 at Marti~sville Speedway.

l"i: UIJ ,-. ,. till WI t: l\

- IN
- ·n-tE SPO "I' LIGI-tT
"

JOE NEMECHEK

NEXTEL CuP SERIES, No.

01

v

U.S. ARMY CflEVROLET

E
R

s
Ryan
Newman

The Mart insville vict ory was
Jimmie Johnson's first on a

Nemechek not in the 'Chase,' but he's driving like a man on a mission

short trac k, sixth thi s season

and second in a row. f or th e
first time in memory, no on e
knew how he did it. That's because a grieving Johnson Immediately left the tra ck upon hea rIng word of the cras h.
1&gt; The winner's average speed,
66.103 mph, was the slowest at
Martinsville since a pa~r of
Richard Peny victones in 1969.
1&gt; Although a Chevrolet won il.
DOdge lntrepids captured six of
the top 10 spots at Martinsville.
· - Trailing Johnson's Monte Ca rlo
across the finish line were Dodge
drivers Jamie McMurray. Ryan
Newman and Sterling Marlin.
II&gt; in Saturday 's Craftsman Truck
Series race, Jamie McMurray became the eighth driver to win in
each of NASCAR 's three major
touring senes.
1&gt; Dale Earnhardt Jr. came to Martinsville as the year's most successful driver on short tra cks.
He left it 125 points out of the
points lead, thanks to a 33rdplace flnish .
1&gt; The victory lifted Joh nson from
eighth to fourth in the points
standings. It's hard to make up
207 points in four races . though.
1&gt; Robby Gordon's day was miserable. He was involved in a number of spins and crashes , although he managed to fin ish in
23rd place , on tile lead lap.

11&gt; Who'•

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Some driver's have complained that the "Chase for the
Nextel Cup" focused too much attention on the 10 drivers
competmg for the championship.
.Joe Nemechek did something about it.
Nemechek, 41 , won
the Oct. 10

race at Kansas Speedway and finished seventh or better in
four races- Kansas, New Hampshire, Talladega and Charlotte- during a span of five weeks. Only a mechanical failure in Dover, Del., marred the stretch.
For Nemechek, whose early-season woes put him in a po·
sition where making the top 20 in the standings by season's
end would be an accomplishment, the Kansas victory was
an affirmation of what he had been saying all along.
"Make no mistake, this is not a surprise to our team,"
said Nemechek. "We've been knocking at the door all year,
but never could get those finishes to go along with our
strong performances. So)Jiething would always seem to
happen. But recently, things have been going our way. '
"What is gratifying is to see all of the guys being rewarded with this success. I've always said I'm surrounded
by a talented group of people who possess an excellent
work ethic."
His No. 01 team- sponsored by the United States Army,
no less- was capable of winning races. It's capable, Nemechek said, of contending for a championship next year.
"That pretty much says how strong this team has been
running as of late," said Nemechek. "We've been hanging around with some good company. We're on a roll
and having plenty of fun."
Nemechek utterly dominated the Kansas race, winning both pole and race. He also triumphed in ' the
Busch Series race, _driving the No. 87 Chevrolet he
owns. He also won back-to-hack Cup poles at Talladega
and Kansas, marking the first such occurrence of his career.
The Lakeland, Fla-., native was the Busch Series champion in 1992 and debuted in Cup on July 11, 1993, in Loudon,
N.H. Nemechek's first Cup victory also occurred at New
Hampshire International Speedway in September 1999.
The Kansas victory was his fourth, and he has won eight
poles.

Contact Monte Dutton at hmd4858@peoplepc.com

hot? Jimmie Johnson

.haS won two races in a row and
leads the top series wrth srx
wins this season . ... Kurt Busch
has finished in the top 10 in
each of the six "Chase· races .
and has a commanding points
lead with four races left. ...
Jamie McMurray has finished in
the top 10 In nine of the past
10 races .

s

Rusty
Wallace

Ryan Newman
vs. Rusty Wallace

lison.
11&gt;

u

Late in the Subway 500, Wallace
attempted to make a pass for the
lead . It fai led, to Wallace 's way of
thinking, in part because teammate
Newman took advantage of the situation and bumped him. wallace fell to
lOth place. "I don't guess Rusty and
I are on speaking terms right now:
said Newman.
NASCAR Tills Week's Monte Dutton tlves his take: "Wallace. out of
the title race , was trying to win at
Martinsville for the second time this
year. Newman was anxious to pick up
ground rn the points standings. Perhaps conflict was inevitable."

V -t ")iU it "i' cii'l' N
1c .II ...
r.n~ rHUIIt llll~ I!~At•t: tt~
' "
. '' .. . . '

.

~

·~

I

have a few words to say. I think
NASCAR. has ruined racing the way
they have lost touch with the history
of 11. tt was started here rn North Carolina. and they have closed _.. tra~;ks
here.(and) I can't undersland how the
dnvers can stand for the way they are
being done around. The fans shoula
let Brian France, etc. , know they are
supposed to ~ve credit where credit IS
due. North Carolina has made them
rich to start with and now their greed
is all that counts .... Now the championship is being ruined. Why didn't they
leave it alone? ...
The way they are going, they might
wind up being the losers in the long
run .. ..
M.l. GuiRn
Burlington, N.C.

The only way any!hing is going to
change is if TV ratings continue to decline and fans stop filling the stands
at tra cks across the country.

I
Joe Nemechek'a recent surge

11&gt; Who's

not? A 33rd-place finish
was devastating to Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s title hopes . ... Elliott
Sadler was 32nd after crashing
and fell from fourth to seventh
In the standings.

Venue

Race

New Hameshire
Dover
Talladega
Kansas
Charlotte
Martinsville

S~lvania 300
MBNA 400
EA Sports 500
Banquet 400
UAW-GM Qua li!)' 500
Subwa~ 500

Start Flnlth
25
6
24
1
1
8
29

35
7
1
5
30

•

Valley

n reference to a letter about too
many commercials on TV: To solve
your problem, do what I started doing this year: Get a radio. Tune it in to
the race .... They create excitement
that, I hate to say, our good old boys
of TV don't have. It's worked for me to
the extent that I only li sten to the TV
at the very beginning, or during commercials, or (in the winner's circle) •.. .
Ken Bradford
Hillsboro, Ohio

It's not uncommon for fans to su,r
plement their coverage oy tuning in radio accounts of the races while they
watch the TV feed .

&amp; Supply
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

252 Upper River Rd.
GallipQiis, OH
I
-------------------------- --~-

~

------~----

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