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                  <text>Middleport holiday
promotions begin
Sunday, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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•

Federal funds awarded for VMH renovationS:

SPORTS
• Three former OSU
players back Clarett's
allegations. See Page 81

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Tuesday's
announcement of $240,000
in · federal funds for renovations to Veterans Memorial
Hospital was "a pleasant surpri se" to Meigs County
Commissioners, and may
change the scope of the county's search for additional
funding to open a health care
clinic there.

U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, DLisbon, announced the award
as a part of the U.S. House of
Representatives'
omnibus
appropriations bill. County
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport, who heads a committee dedicated to securing
funding for operations of a
community health center at the
hospital, said the funds were
requested several months ago,
but not really expected.
"It's a pleasant surprise that

the House approved the Center, defaulted on a 99funds ," Davenport said year lease agreement by closwill ing the hospital 's emergency
Wednesday. "This
breathe new life into our room and, later, the ex tended
efforts to secure a clinic and care unit.
emergency room in the hosStrickland
-,aid
the
pital building, and it may $240,000 appropriation has
grve us more leverage rn been set aside for renovations.
securing additional funding."
"We're encouraged that
The building, opened tn someone fina ll y put some
1962, ts now vacant. after money in place to help thi '
Health along," Davenport said. "We
Consolidated
Systems, Inc., the parent need .to find out what can be
company of Holzer Medical done with the money and

what can't be done with it.
But regardless. it will give us
other option' as we pursue
our ultimate goal: a critical
acce11s hospital and emergency room for the people of
Meigs County.
"The health care committee
will meet in coming days to
determine how thi s money
can and wi II be spent."
The county has been reject-

Please see Funds, AS

Keeping the Lions Club alive in Meigs County
makes you just feel better."
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Sti ll , there is a fear that the
need in Meigs County will
POMEROY
The outweigh fundraising efforts
Pomeroy/Middleport Lions by the Lions Club. All donatClub already has supplied 34 ed money raised for their prolow-income people with new jecb goes back into the comeyeglas.ses this year, which is munity.
just one of many ways they
"We fill the financial gap
serve their communiiies.
in Meigs County whe n it
Marty Savage. Lions Club comes to correcting vision,"
district governor from Perry said member Jeff Warner. "If
County, said he is amazed at we weren 't here the need
the number of eyeglasses the wouldn't be served."
Pomeroy/Middleport club
For thi s reason. the
has distributed.
Pomeroy/Middleport Lions
"Our club in Perry County Club is searching for new
has on ly given out two to members to keep their tradi-·
three pairs of eyeglasses this tions alive in Meigs County.
year," Savage said.
They meet at noon every secNot only do the Lions ond and fourth Wednesday at
Club suppl y the free glasses, the Senior Center.
but they also pay $150
"We're the best-.kept
secret in town" said Savage.
toward the eye exam.
"We·
re not out for the publicKenny
Utt.
Pomeroy/Middleport Lions ity and we do a lot of work
Club member, said "knowing behind the scenes."
we help indi vid uals get the
glasses they can't afford
Please see Lions, AS
Bv BETH SERGENT

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Chester G. Johnson
• Ethel Rife
• Terry lee Ferguson

INSIDE
• Area Choir rehearsals
off until spring.
See Page A6
• Portland Community
Center to serve lunch and
dinner to deer hunters.
See Page AS
• Explosion destroys
house, damages others.
See Page AS

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detail• on Paee AS

INDEX
2 SI!CfJONS- 20 PAGES

Calendars

A6

Classifieds

B6-7

Comics

BB-9
A6

Editorials
Faith•Values

·c hristntas arrives in Pomeroy
Bv BETH SERGENT

WEATIIER

Dear Abby

Beth Sereent/photo

Members of the Pomeroy/Middleport Lions Club already have provided 34 people from Meigs
County with new eyeglasses this year.. They recently met to recruit new members for their club.
Pictured from left are members Bruce Teafo'rd, Kenny Utt, John McDaniel (Zone 8 chairman),
Marty Savage (district governor) and William Middleswarth .

A4
A2-3

NASCAR

B3

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B1
AS

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY .- The Christmas season
will officially arrive in Pomeroy on
Sunday when the Pomeroy Christmas
Parade makes its way down Main Street,
complete. with Santa Claus.
Before the parade, the Community
Band will be greeting parade-goers with
popular Christmas carols near Court
Street. Their performance will then move ·
to Trinity Church where they will participate in a Christmas musical program that
begins at 3 p.m. and also features the
Eastern bell choir.
The parade kicks off at 2 p.m. Entries
in the parade are asked to assemble at the
Meigs football field at I p.m. for the official lineup.
·
Parade Chairman Toney Dingess
requests that those individuals participating
in the parade be dropped off along the main
road as opposed to parking near the football
field where traffic becomes congested.
Dingess is expecting approximately 40
parade entries which include cloggers,
twirlers, dancers, horses, local fire
departments, floats and the Meigs High
School Marauder Band.
Also, for the third year in a row, the

Please see Christmas, AS

Ttm Maloney/ photo

Trystan Shealey, 25. of Detroit. confers with his attorney, Ron
Calhoun, before Wednesday's hearing in which he agreed to
return to Michigan to face a murder charge.

Detroit murder suspect
returning to Michigan
of Pomeroy. the woman with
whom Shealey had been li.Ying
TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM
Beth Sereent/ photo
~ince he allegedly shot and
Christmas is not just for ,humans! This year. residents are
GALLIPOLIS - Trystan killed a man in Detroit on Nov.
encouraged to dress their pets for the season and walk Shealey. the Detroit man 22. 2003.
them through downtown Pomeroy during the Christmas arrested on a murder charge
Shealey had obtained an
parade. After the parade. People's Bank of Pomeroy is . last week in Gallipolis. Ohio driver's license in the
sponsoring People's Pet Parade where pets in costumes agreed in municipal court name of his brother, Tarrick
will be judged in categories of most Christmasy, most Wedne,da) to be returned to Shealey. who is in prison il)
original. and funniest. Pictured is Matt,ie, a Lhasa Poo Michigan .
Michigan .
·
'
who can have her picture taken with Santa at People·s
Appearing in court with ·
Bank of Pomeroy after the Pomeroy Christmas parade.
Shealey wa11 Carolyn S. Oli\er
Please see Suspect. AS : .
Bv TtM MALONEY

Memorial
Keepsake Ornament
.
.

\&lt;·

Memorial keepsake ornaments, to honor a special loved one , are once again available through
Holzer Hospice this holiday season . Each beautiful ceramic angel is gift boxed with proceeds benefiting
Holzer Hospice. Ornaments are $15 each. Snowflake ornaments from 2003 are also available for $10 each.

Please call (740) 446·5074 or 1-800-500-4850 for more details or to place an order.
"When someone you (ove becomes a memory, the memory becomes a treasure."
•

.,

---.

_,___ , .

•

�FAITH • VALUES
The essence of Thanksgiving Religion News in Brief
involves more than a meal

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

Friday, November 26, 2004

Friday, November a6, 2004

WORSHIP-GOD THIS WEEK
Fellowship
Apostolic

Protestants deliver Tabernacle's first non-Mormon talks In 105 years

Terry, the matriarchal hub
of the Bra nch family, ha s
so mew hat of an irntating
culinary philosophy. Certain
dishe s we especially enjoy
she purposely prepares only
for certain occasions, such
as holiday observances. for
example. She will not budge
from reservi ng these particular fo od preparations as
"special. ''
W1th all the sons. daughters-in-law. and new grandson
at the house thi s week. Terry
has once

dga 111

wowed us

With he1 "special" cooking for
our
fdmily-gathered.
Thanksg• vmg Day meal.
Thus, I '"Y thank God f01
Th,mksg1v1 ng Day' Terry has
certainly give n us particular
reason to have deep appreciatiOn lor 11
By way of contrast. the
Thanksgivin g holiday has
been de signated as the symbol" p,1use lor our nat1011 to
emphasi ze thanks to God for
Hi s "many signal favors." as
George Washmgton termed
It 111 hiS Thanksgiving Day
dec laration .
So. one day during each
year. speul ically set since
1955 .
as
the
fourth
Thursday in November. 91
percent of our nation traditiOnall y eats turkey. along
with all the many other
"special" family dishes. as a
gesture ot thanksgiving
remembrance to God for the
bounty He d1rects tov.ard us
and our nation . It is _certainly a good experience to celebrate
the
focus
of
Thank- givin g around the
table with family
However. the essence ot
thanksgiving to God mvolves

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - 1\vo leading ical churches that seeks improved relations
anyone anywhere anytime. conservative Protestants, author-evangelist Rav1 with Mormons.
Zacharias, a native of India raised in Canada,
There is never anything Zacharias and Fuller Theological Semlnary
wrong and always every- President Richard Mouw, preached at the was candid about doctrinal differences between
thing right to brag on God Tabernacle on Temple Square, the first time traditional Christiamty and Mormonism on such
aspects as sin, salvation through the cross and the
for what He has done for you non-Mormons had spoken there in 105 years.
"I'm not being melodramatic when I say d1vine Trinity
Ron
before others.
His message that Jesus Chnst is the ansv. er
Branch
But, the "sacrifice of this IS an historic occasion," Mouw smd. He
thanksgiving" suggested by said fellow evangelicals have "often seriously to the longing in all human hearts resonated
the Psalmist becomes more mi srepresented the beliefs and practices" of with both the evangelicals and Mormons.
"When you get the Son , you get the way, the
involved beyond the verbal members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
truth and the hfe," Zacharias sa1d.
Latter-day Saints.
considerations of it all.
Hope Pottenger. a Southern Baptist, called the
Nearly 5,000 evangelicals and Mormons sat
When out of his deep
more fhc~n -JUst a meal on one
nationally observed day of thanks for all God has done he together during the event. sponsored by event "a great act of grac10usness" on the pan ot
the year. Compared to the day avers "0 Lord, truly I am thy Standing Together, a network of 100 evangel- the Mormon church.
ot Thanksg •vmg, the Inherent servant ," the Psalmist mdiAfter 10-year struggle, Hawaiians win permit for chapel
expectation of thanksgiving cates that he is committed to
in its broader concern specif- liVIng out thanksgiving to
Se,eral neighbors opposed the chapel , sayWAILUKU, Hawaii (AP)- After 10 years,
ically transcends the particu- God.
ing
it would generate too much traffic.
Has it occurred to you two demals, a federal lawsuit and a contested
lar purpose of the holiday,
Hale 0 Kaula, a congregation of 60 affiliated
which truth we should never recently just why God bless- case hearmg. a small rural congregation won a
w1th the L1ving Word Fellowship. alleged that
es us? It IS because He wants permit to bu1ld a chapel on its propeny.
leave forsaken .
The Maui county planmng commiSSIOn first the county violated the fedeml Religious Land
As a matter of fact, one of us to reciprocate by hvmg in
the Psalmist posed the ques- a way which glories Him. denied Hale 0 Kaula a specml use perm1t to Use and lnstituuonalized Persons Act of 2000.
tiOn. "What shall I render Such embodies the thank s- bmld on us propeny, which 1s zoned f01 agri- which requires government to show compellmg
unto the Lord for all Hi s giving deSlfed by God from cultural use, in 1995. Last week the commis- interest. such as public safety, before denying
benefit s toward me''" What us The time 111 wh1ch you sion unanimously approved the permit. follow- such zoning requests.
The U.S. Justice Depanment's Civil Division
can I do to recognize grate- recognize the goodness of ing a nine-hour meeting.
Conditions for the permit mclude limiting ser- intervened to defend the fedemllaw and l&lt;e~t year
fully what God has done for God directed toward you is
me, he asks? One of hi s the time when, like the vice hours, and attendance at weekly meetings and filed its own d1scrimmation lawsuit against the
answers calls for the "sacri- Psalmist , you should com- four special annual events. In tum, the church county that w11l be heard in 2005 .
"I hope we can be good neighbors," church
fice of thanksgiving" on a mit to strivi ng to be what dropped a federal lawsuit against the county and
God wants you to be. This is will receive an undisclosed payment from the Elder Robert Poulson said. "We're gomg to try
day-by-day basi s.
to turn this around tor everybody."
According to h1m, in other one of the great principlc;s county, oovered by msumnce.
words,
our
thvme Terry and I have striven to
Providential
Caretaker instill 111 our sons.
Chapel owner pleads guilty after conducting 600-plus bogus weddings
Furthermore. smce God
deserves di l1 gent thanksgivJONESBOROUGH, Tenn. (AP) - The for- Internet churches'' that 1ssue clergy credentials.
ing from us. But, how can had been so good to him,
In a plea bargain. Gorst ~eived six years ot
this be accomplished ade- giving to others is also sug- mer proprietor of the local Wedding Loft
unsupervised
probatton If she behaves and
quately in a way which pleas- gested by the Psalmist as a pleaded guilty in county coun to impersonates God? The PsalmiSt makes means of practicing the sac- ing a professional in performing more than returns to her nat1ve Britain Gorst said she comit clear in what manners our rifice ot thanksgiving. The 600 nuptials in the 1990s The state legislatwe mitted no crime but didn't want to risk a Stifter
sentence from a jury tnal.
diligence for thanksgivmg blessmgs and providence of has smce legalized those marriages.
Gorst sold her chapel m 1999 and left for
Brenda
Gorst,
64,
claimed
clergy
ordination
God are to be used to benefit
should be offered to God.
One way he suggests rec- others in ways and at times through "World Chrisuansh1p Ministnes," England, but was cm1ght dunng a passport
ogmzing God for His great necessary. It is at such times which her lawyer smd was recognized by the check Ill New Jersey last April when she
providence IS by way of that our lives become IRS as a legitimate church. But prosecutors returned to visit a daughter.
Everything ··was done wuh lots of love."
speak1n g thanksgiving pub- "thanksgivings unto God," said nothing but money was required to
licly '·m the presence of all as Apostle Paul wrote.
receive its credentials and Investigators Gorst told the court. " I helped g•rl s who had
no money I helped put them In a gown and
As far as Terry 's "special" obtained ordmation for a child and a pet.
H1 s people." Do not be hesig•ve
them a bouquet ,.. the Johnson City
The "Encyclopedia of Amencan Religions" lists
tant to express thanksgiving foods are concerned - thank
World Christianship among 31 "mail order and Press reported
to God 1n the presence of God for Christmas Day, too'

Strond Baptist Church
Ra\Cil,~&lt;ll•\1.

Monun~ WM~h1p

VanZand t and WilrJ Rd
M1llt.:r, Sunday SdltJO I

Pastm

Jame'

AP RELIGION WRITER

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
With each signature on a parchment
document, a group of Dutch clergymen watched their churches pass
into history.
What emerged - a new church
combining three Protestant denominations - is now being watched
from India to Indiana as the latest
bid to consolidate religious energy

at a time of serious challenges for
mamlme Protestants: shrinking congregations, faith-snubbing youth
and deepening rifts about reconciling homosexuality and Scripture.
At least six initiatives are under way
around the world to bring together
various Protestant churches, ineluding
a looser, nine-member association in
the United States with such influential
backers as the Episcopal, Methodist
and Presbytenan leadership.
If successful, such movements

could reshape the ecclestastical landscape for many of the estimated 340
million followers of Protestant
churches - a worldwide array of hundreds of churches and splinter groups.
There are other, deeper religious
estrangements, including the nearly
1.000-year schism between Roman
Catholics and Orthodox Christians. But
theologians see a confluence of modem
forces encouraging mainline Protestants
to trim their dense family tree.
Historical rivalries appear to be

waning five centuries after the
Reformation
blazed
through
Christianity. Worries, meanwhile, are
rising. Non-denominational, evangelIcal "megachurches" lure away followers, especially in the United
States. Mainline leaders wonder
whether their fragmented fellowship
hinders attempts to remain relevant
and active in a hyper-drive world.
"The competition for people's attention has never been greater. Getung
people into the church to hear the

Gospel is what 1t's all about. [f we are
not umted and 1f churches continue
with fighting and suspicion, then we
are failing 111 our mission," said Rev.
Jan-Gerd Heetderks, president of the
synod of the Protestant Church in the
Netherlands
which officially
formed in May from the Netherlands
Reformed Church, the distinct
Reformed
Churches
m
the
Netherlands (which has a Calvinist
tradition) and th~ nation's small
Lutheran Church

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Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6215

We niter phys1cal, occupattonal ,
speech, art &amp; mus1c therapt es
740-li~7-3t56

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PO. Box 683
Pomero • OhiO 45769-0683

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"A Home Bank for
Home People"

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29670 Bashan Rd.
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Righteousness ·

.md uUt •~•mi ry f firA 'Jli .. ,lluf'¥hilf •• 11ymouth, M.u~.arluuelh N •t&lt;twd!nl lu
q'du t"! e Pu !wu•cy ~ viltrim i.o • ••yr~n-1" m tmto .:m .. p:!'Urntry, I!IJ'II'l.,.lly. i~mml!y l u ..

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If ye abide i11 Me, a11d My
words abide i11 you, ye sllall
ask wllat ye will, arrd it slla/1
be do11e Ulllo you.
}Ohll J5:7

,1.~1 .....

lli!NDAY

,HOl'lllAY

TUESDI.Y

'I'EilNllSDAY ' llfUIISDAY
0..

p..J,. l3l

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FRIDAY

SAnJRilAT

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v..l.o ll6

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

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( ~04! 675

Sum.l.11 Sd1ool lJ '0 llffi Sunday
~\dllllo! '\'f\ 1 1~ 7 00 pm Btbl y Study
w,·Jr ,~.- . .u1\ ~~•, rl~ 7 I)I) pm

') "l.1J ,L 111

rm

7

I rtd.11

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22~'"

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Hob!ol.ILI l hrL\hHil rdlo"J;hlp Church
lkr&gt;~.hd Wh11e ~unday SchooiI•J ,1111 Sunda\ Chwllr ~rr111:e- 6 '0 pm

P.htnr

\hdu~-..d,l\

7 pm

Rt&gt;,.:turntLOn Chrtst1an Fellowship

llurrlsunllllt· (ommuml~ ( hu nh
P.l'-lor lhcwn Dtuh.tm Smala\
,, Ill md 7 pIll \ \ ,·,l n~,d.l\
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I[)

Lhurch

\ltddlt· purtlnmmumt ~

'\7~

Lan~t~'

l'.t,t••r Sa111

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I ul l

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t

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II

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huth ( .n~pt'l ( hurdt
llr1Ulllll Sumll\ Sd1uol l1 1(1 1 Ill

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Church

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r

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•I
~ull ( ,o~ po.• IIIJ.:hthnu"t

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\11,1111 \\.,hlup Ill '~I~ rm h 1(1 1' 111

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1

Il l .1111 2rrJ .1ncl -lth Sund.t\

Ill
rulll ~ t·

p,,,lt' l L111d.t }),\lli~'\\P1 1 cl

SLmJt1Sd1n1 ll

11 J 111 SunJ.t\ Worship 10 00
m .\. i UJ p m \\cJnc~day S el'\ tce~ • •
1111 r m \\ ~·d n~ "tt.ll Yt1uth Servtce

Scht1Lll

Suulh Bdhel ( ummumh lhurch

\J

7 (}() '

Fd&lt;n lnllrd 8rtthrfn In Chri!lt
St.tk R""'' 1~4 R ~~dnllle. Sunday

Sli\L'I R1 Jgl

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lti Ill\ \\ur\111[1

10 lOam

\\n1, h 1p

pm

\lkn \l11k.tp

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l.tl 1111

~Ill

J'lll

R~ed ~ \illl •l'llu"~h•p

16411 WtdhJnl R.:l ,
P&lt;.'t•·r \1anllld,tlc Sundav School .

I' Ill \hdnt ,d,\\ Scr\'llC~
1 00 p m
'l••ulh !..l"lll' mcdln_!! ~ntl &amp; 4th Sundllys :

Ill \Ill

lul'&lt;l.l\ ,\: Tll ur-Ll.l )-

Sen11:cs
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1 ~' I ' (oHIHliUill\1

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nr

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..., ,111u~

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(] 11J pm

Past(l r

SJturJ~\

\It Hc-rmvn lmled Brethren

l...t i.lllll,,• l-\u ~h Sun' l '' ~lh•••&lt;l

') IO, t tn

l' nmau~

l&lt;d

United Brethren

\11, Olhc l 'ummunil\ ( hunh

Pt•hlr

HI~

Lul~lc~h

s thh.llh s .. h..ul

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Ill ~0 .1 Ill
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11\ 111 .I Ill

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\\n! ..tur

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p111

pIll

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11"1111' •l 1(1 ' 111 "und '' "•llnlll
10 111" m 111,1 sund.rl ••I \h•mh 7 (~\

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( nnl11llc l&lt;t\!1[ f'l ,h•r !1..:1 Phdltp

Nt t·d~' 1llt·
\\ 1

Crol!.

Seventh-Day Adventist

7 rm

111.111

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pI \ IPI

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s~·r\1\.\'

o1 111

Jill

[l Ill '&lt;.:I I

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1 111
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lhlhll( hunh
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lfllO 1111

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'I '\IJ .1 111

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p ll\

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s, 111 •••1

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10 am ,

-

llarr•~cm\lll e l 1 re~h~l er1an

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Sund 11

Pa~IUr

S~ hool

! 1cmng- 1 pm

P

ll~c~HIIc lummumt~

l010Jm 7 p 111

S\

'~h~~d

K.tun&lt;'

SunJa\

7 II! pIll

l•~trLsh

SunJ

1111

')'\I

12~

( 'hu n: h

P,t,lllf IJ ,o.'l 11 .111 Smul. l\

\l.un c\: l rllh Sl :-.und 11 S.. h &lt;~&lt;'l - Ill
1111 ''"'~lnp •J 1111 l lll.: .. dt\ S&lt;.T\ILc' -

lhurth •• I lh,

lut'l"'
llt•b H lltd•llph \\,.r,lllp

Mu s~er

Wm sh tp 10

Presbyterian

]~ , 1

( lu~hl
l'.h ltlr J 111 '- lk.ltlt•' \\or,hl\'
'I ' 111
':iiHJd,JI o.; , htHd
II! 1111
l illl1'd11

,

Pt&lt;ntecostal Assembl~
Rt

HolhJL~

I IC illllg

Conunuml~

Hn:td

f

Nazarene

1\1

Q ~U a111

Pentecostal

lil

Sd il 'll [

I

Church

Ro~n

[1111

1-111 Rr~J ~~ n•mSt

\\t.JTll\!J,t\

Chmti~tn

P11~1 or

30
:m - 7 ()IJ pm WcJncl&gt;da) Sen tee 7 00

•a1th \aile' l a l~t.·• na(lt· l hunh
B.uk 1 Run Rt~.ul I' I'll It l{ c1 t::mm~11
Rall'l'll Sumlao I IC\11 11)! 7 pIll
rhur~d,JI s~n ll~
7 [l Il l

II

illl'

fn"rll

Surrd:rJ Sdn~1 l

7 \()pIll

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W~ i ln~.·~dc~\

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rm

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ion~-:

rMcUJ;t' nrst Church

(,ru ~ c

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h(

pill
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( IU,( I' I
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:\&lt; irlhl

p , ,,.,r

p 111, \\ ctlrw..,d.t\ SLniLC~

6

Jesse Moms.

P&lt;i•lor

.\llliiJUit\

l,rf\ r,~,

'ltlhod1~t

pm

W.utland ( hun h or (;od
p_.,tilr Kun l k.uh Sun~.l . 1 1 \\11r~hrp

l. \)o(

1&lt;1

H.1d 1•l \\~,1 ( "luuJh la W Va o m Ltevmg

Lt•ng Hotllllll Pa ..u•r St~~~ Knd Smrda1

\\ L&lt; r'-lllp

~\11\dl\ \._h,.,LI

l'cll' -.1111111

Pl1111 Sund 11 "idiP••l

Scf\ ll c'

• ull (,mjWl Chun:h
of the 1,,, mg Sal tor

S1

1\ s .. hnul
10 I Ill
IJ 1111 \\Ldn .. "l'1:7pm

l' t'l••l \l lh

3m

s~ h trt•l -

P,L\(!11 Sund

\\,.Jn,,.J,\

H1 1111~

~~.hnnl

Gu.lli(XJh~ OH

1'.1-.11 1 Hill Staten Su nday Serv1ct's - lO
,1111 &lt;'J.. 7 r m Wednesday - 7 p m &amp;
)nu \h., p 111

l'.t'I'H' J"lm ,..,_

.,,, ..tl durl

llot.:kin~JM• r t

d]'h Sp1 n. ' 1\u nd 11 "'h' ,.] 'I\() I ll\
'~" r' hll'
ltJ'Il.ttll - p111 lhlll ,d n
SU\1\~-, "'pill

\h 1\ loriuh l'hurdt llr (,od
Hdl H,l l{,rlllll. l' .r~t m J ,ll\ 1 ~\
Sund.t\

(l ~0

qn c,~org~' lr~d; Road

7 rm

! IHrdSt

&lt;..;

s ~'l\lu

() 11

or ( lm 'il In

1 10 .11 11
7 no pIll

Sl'lll l~

~~

( .~rmcl Sulluu
(.lrtll t.l .~ ll1'-ir 111 Rd'
l&lt;r tl ll ~. tllr"'
I' t\I P r Jnlm (, Jin lt&lt; l l ..,und 11 S,hord
9 ~0 1111 \\,,r .. lu p 10-1-'i til l H• l•k
Stud) \\ul 7 (K t p 111

7 pIll

71M ~ p lll

S.t1tc r lidd

hl:mng

W~dul ' " ' ) Scr\ l l~~

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

II

" ''1\ltlp

Church of God

- Ill

S,tlcm St l'ol•lnr J.umc fMIIl l f Sundti\

740-992-7713

( ht·~tt r Chun:h uf lht "\nllll't'ne
1'1'1&lt;'1 Kc1 lkd,ut ( n.lk Surlll.11. Sr.h '" 'l
'J \tl 1111 \\,u,lllp
II .1111 r1 pm

U •ddl&lt;•lll

~und

\\ut 'hl)'

10 lll 1111 \\cdll\•d.t\ ...,l f\ 111.

"I

11

S.ht~•

I

" &lt;o

,t

m

p !II

area
•·Lei your hghl "' shme helme
Ihal lhcy may sec
works .md glonfy

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
SecoRd S1

\1)

S}

Will

I'!IIIIU"I

'\() ll Ill I l ttl .~ ltil '\till' \\l'lliK'·' ll
SLI ,,~ 7 \11]'111

10 -1-~.1m

Fr~

'! -l' .1 111

')II) 1 l1l 1],1 ,\

\\or . . tup

l)o.•n \\ ,tlkl!r

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10 .1111

l l'I\Jbhl]l

~

I (I 10 .1 JH .md (1 ~(J

1

f1 pnt Wnll1c-.d,tl

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1

Pt ~l••r !) .lii~Grllf

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Sund.t) Sd1•1nl

I I " 111

\\ tlt~lu p

Sc,••ltJ '\I

(.ruhum l nitul

Run Raphsl

Anttqmly Bupt1s1
Su nd.tv Sdi!'Ll l 9 l() a m . Wlor,h•r

Homemade Desserts Maoe Daily

190 N

B ..trlhlrJ

.~

s~.u,

~1nrrLIILJ!

l&gt;u11 '
Sund l) '1.:1\lt.C
Wcdnc,d 1\ 'l'fl llC 7 rIll

J 1111,, I' B1 .11h

\\,n ,lll]l

Christian Union

I(J

S~ht1nl

lJ.!'I

1J]~.IT11,

is111hl "itt~LI S\IIHI,tl "dt&lt; l&lt;ll

lhrtsllun l niun

I m1rt h &amp; 1\l,u n St M1dd lc pmt P.1st1•r
Rc 11 Gtlhc11 Cr,ug, Jr . Sunday S,hn&lt;ll

~{i[[ie's IJ(estaurant

Sl!l\11.1'

pn1t Plltd11J'"' 111 ..,, 1\\l'

\It

Church

Hu rt Su nd.l\

~Lil•11 1 1

~ m P.1 ~1&lt;•1

SunJ.t\ IHll'hl)'

li1hk Slmh

m

'""" l.ifl' \it tury Center

( r.. g

10 ' m

p 111 You th

Abundant

Slhu&lt;ll

1•••,1o1 J.,hn ( , lllllllll Sund.tl "ilhnol 10
I Ill , \ \ 1•1 ,hq1
1.)
l Ill
\\~Jil~'JJ\

~

MI. \lonah Rapttst

Hours
6am ·!!\ pm

Warm Fnnufl\

209 Third
Racine, OH

I!

United Methodist

\\ ~J iw"-l ,t\

Mil ~

lJ

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

\\, u,lup

( )I) L Ill

(&lt;lllll'tS\L,It1H•Il &amp;

7 .md IZ-1 \\ ~\ .IIII!C II ~ I
l.knm ' S.trg .. nt Sund.tl. lhhlc SiJUh

Sl!f\IU'~

(740) 992·6472
Fax 1740}992-7406

"'" K 11111"\\n, .. t
])111d Ku "•!l "und.tl

!'oil Paul lulhtrun ( hur{ h

Ill 10 .tm. B1hk

!m c • ~~·~ tt l• n

7pm

R~tplisl

~ort'sl

"A Celebration of Ufe"
333 Page Slreel
Middleoort OH

'West and Rest"

II!

:-,, 1\ot•l

( hnn·h nf ( hrLJ;I

7 p 111

I!Jd m

~uuJ.t\

ttJ 'l.O.tm "l hur,dal

H1bk Srmh MunJ '' ~ UJ pm
SnmHtllt•
Suml.t,Sch•&gt;&lt;•1- lll,,m w.,, ,h,p ll•n1

( tlllhllll'

Our Su\UJUr lulht r.111 ( hunh

l.O .1111

pm

R ul r1• 1d St ~1.t ,otl Su ndn s~huul Ill
.1m , \\,!r&lt;.ht p
II a m 6 p m

Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

~j,,utll~

V..or~hl[l

J Llll'' P

l' c~,lln

Jf ltltl 1111

\\ 1lnu t ,ll(d lk n11

tl 10 p 111

\\lohlllp

Ill

Sultm ( ommuntl\ Church

11)]'1;,\111 \\or\1ll[l

P.r~lnr

St. Joh11 I udw r.m ( hun h
W "'l11p 'II H) 1 111 Sund 11

Sund t\

10

1'

P.t"l" r l l1k11 1\.lllfl i uul\111• ( hurLh

l ' hunh uf llmst

Uartfnrd l hunh

Fatth

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Rll~

Slh&lt;IPI

B1 .1d\

nt'xlu (hurt h ur ( hrtst

I •C~ 7 pIll

Sen

w~.·dnc~d.l) Su\ Jt.c'

Coolville, Oh1o
Located less than 30 mmutcs from

\\cLln~~u.t\

-llh 7 ~Xfl

4 -lfr h24 7 111

\\\1 ,Pt\l&lt;fl

S und.tl ~~.houi 1J ~ 0 3 m

H1llsidl' 8upusl l hunh
14llu'l nll Rt ., P~ '\LlL Rc\

S1 Kt

Vtclory

Young's Carpenter Serulce

h--.u~

L.tllt•r-ll.u Smnl s

Ptlll C.u 11H

7 (IO p m

ll11ts Chur~h nl ( hrlsl
\lul'Jc Sun dd\ Sdl""l
9 .tm wor~lup
11) .1m. 6 ~(I p rn
\Vc Jn ~,d.rv s~I\ILL' 7 p Ill

.1111 , Wur'-hlp

l'mh I Ill

7 rm

( IIfton labt'rnatle Church

Rutland

Pa•lnr Ph d1p ~llnm Sun\ I.J\ Sd1nol ')~(I

Old Hetht'l Free Will

1000am

(Ilium \\ v .. Sund~} Sr.: hoo l • 10 am,
W11r\h 1p - 7 p m Wednesday Servu:e - 7

KutiiW

")2_'i N ZmJ St Mt ddlc po.nl P. t ~ tt• r Jam ~'

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Communit) Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.

I flU

,11,: Br tdhun Kd
Sh.nn hlm v ..ut h \ 111\l•h I

Rt•l'ti~' ttlt•

rl rnr

P.tlll \\ud~. 601. St.'\oud "'~ ~1N•n 7/l&lt;;017 Sen ILl 11111~ Sund.l\ 10 '\(1 ·• 111

\t•llllt

! 111

Slur
P.J•I •I I lnhn (•ilnH'II Sund.J\
,, m \\ur,h•p 10 1111

F \,lfi~Li l ' l ~ 1!!.. 1.

ll l~~pm

Itt

6 ~~~

Slhlllll

Btll 1\mh~fj;!l' f Sun\l:n SdiOtll 9 10 a Ill
\\n h ht p H 00 a 111 IIJ l t) tlll 7 till

9 liJ .1111

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER

• 11)
Sund.l) llpn1

\\111'-IIIJ'

St K1 124'

p Tl1. \\c dnc~U .t\ Sen L ~C'

\und.t}

\

SunLi t\ "' .. ho&lt;l 1 11~0 It ,1111
u ,•IJit
S"Lilii / Prt L\Ih•""l
II 0~ 1.!011 11&lt;"'11
St\I.LIIIL.Ill '-H'I llo. 1110 l'i .tm

r

lllckor~

StuJ\

7! tll pm

I ht ( hun It uf
hri~lol

(

~Li lu

Ul'lhlchrm H11pt1sl ( hurch
Gh·-•1 Be nd R1)Uil 124 R .tu nl 011
P&lt;htor D il rucl M ~~.~a Sund.t\ s ,hnol 11 ~ 0 u m Sumla' Wor~htp
10 ;( ~ 1m,
H1 h l ~

~&lt;Il l ("

pnr Wc-dll l',Jii\

S1

81111 J \\crr1

\\ c Jn~ ..J L) S1•n '' 1'' - f1 l Op m

\'-'cdnc,J.r\

:-.tmd •• , s~lwt d
Ill 'O 1 111 .md (,

1', .... ,, •• i tkllll l{t&lt;l\1.
I) ltl 1m
\\"1 ' lr tp

Hut lund Church nf Christ
Sun,l,l\ Sd~t lfl l 9 10 ,, 111 wnr,IHp .md

111

n,,\, ,

-\J!apt• ltfr ( cnlu

Latter-Day Saints
t nt

Ementus

Pa.~10r

\'-lJnc,da\ 7 pm

Ill ltl.1111

H1 10

'-1

~() ll

\\ or&lt;h•r
S..r\JlC

7 JHII

Utm yo ll

Mll.idlcpon. Pastor

tc or~1rum

Reth.ul\

P.l,l llf R~• 1 .Ill ) llllllll Su ndt \ Sdl!'"l
'J ,IJ,Lill \\or,hip 10-l~dlll 7 pm
lhlii \J,t\ IJ1hl~ St ud\ IIIli ' "u1h 7 p 111

'J .t m

Hartl ~r

WrLill~~·l. · \

l ull IJ"'P~I { hurd1

I'\

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( urucr

Mt.l 'nion Bwpt1sl
WI ~Cm an Sun..t.l\ Sd\PO\

Il l

(. hun.h

laun·ll'l•l1' ~n·t· \ll·thudl'l ( hullh

~~~ 111\ll

lJ!I YIJ

1) -1 ~

Ur l~

10 pIll

ummumt~

Run (

1\ l l~l

\\cJnc.,d.t\ Scr\ lte' 7 p m

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Emmanuel ApO!ilolk rabt•rnadt Inc

"'111

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Congregational

AposiUh~

Wt~rstup Center, 873 S 1n.l
M1ddlepurt KC\111 Konkle, Pastor,

Sd1trul

"ldn~"Ll&gt; s~n ,,l·~

11 ll m

Ill!\

161 Mulherr) All' , Pllli1Cr1oy ':IY::!·5lN8
Pa~lllr Rc\ Wa\tl! r I Hem/ ~at C'on
-1 4o;;- 'i t 'ip m M,1~-.- 'i 11) p m Sun

S!! rVLCC~

Su n Ju~

Chapman,

Su(red Ue11rt C11tholic &lt;.:burch

River Valley

Tuppt'r&lt;i l~am.. St. Paul
P ... lur Janl Hl"•lll l&lt; 'iUilll~\ ~~ h&lt;}lll

OJ Wh1tc RJ "II"' H.t 1611 PJ,htr PJ

Catholic

1030 am.

~Opm

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Ct.unh ofC:ud uf Pruph~n

Sd11•ol )(I am-

Wnr\htp

Mn11 ~(\' f 11o.·u~

BY BRIAN MURPHY

Su n Ja~

WV

Chun:h or Jesus Chri~l Apostolic

, " cdn{~d.l~ St. 1'\ KC~ 7 00 p m

Dutch church union hints of Protestant drive to join forces

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydallysentinel.com

•co... o, ... l ll

heave n."

Ma11hew

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

740-992-6128

992-3785

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Full line oi
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Produc1s + ask what ye will, and it shall
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Servtces
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Joh11 15:7
Bltl Quickel
992-6677

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Income Tax &amp;
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White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Ftfth Street
Coolville, Oh1o

618 E Mam Street • Pomeroy
(740) 9'12 -7270

"Do not ·steal Do not he. Do not deceive one another.''
Lev1t 1cus I &lt;J : II

740-667-3110

•

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).I

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Local source for trophies,
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j'i~Sbtr .:!funeral ~ome
ZM .... IICII!Ia• 7 TUI\M
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Itt
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17-t I a\Ue '-ltl"\'li•I'O lln1 171)
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Jaml'' H \ndH~on I tttJNd luntrllllhn•dnr
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214 E. Main

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Blessed are the pure "So I 'tm.: all\ .t)' to k~~p
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God c~nd man ..
sha/1.\'ee God.

Matthew 5.

· :~,I\

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Lr~ \ow·lt~.?llf \O ,Jum' he/ole

men. that rile\ mm 'ee

\( l/1 1

ork \ a !lei g/(J} '"

\'rill/

goud

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East Ma111
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or God 10 lm cd the
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�.

.

PageA4

OPINIO

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26,2004

A call to share Thanksgiving

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26,

Every

Thank~giving

and

Chri,rma&gt;. Ruth would pack
" holiday basket overllowing with good things to em
for her friend Olive, a
widow who lived alone a
few blocks away. The basket
had everything Ruth and her
family would he enjoying at
their celebration together
around a festive dinnt'r table.
Ruth would get her husband Lawrence to deliver the
basket to Olive's ·house
while the golden-brown
turkey. mashed potatoes and
..,tu ffin g were still warm in
rhe oven.
People remarked on Ruth's
unfailing kindne" and genL"ro., ity.
"Alway~
doing
things for others." they
would say.
They were right. of course.
exce pt thiit the really kind
and thoughtful thin g to do
would have been to invite
Olive to joint he family gathering at Rttt h\ hm~&gt;e.
To make Olive feel she
was a welcome part of the
happy occasion. Ruth might
have added. "Would yuu
mind making some of your
delicious banana bread'? It
will he a hig hit. " ·olive
wouilf have be'en overjuyed.

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 /a, respectitl~ all
establisllmmt of religiot~, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridgit~g tile freedom
of speech, or of tlte press; or tile right of tire
people peaceably to assemble, at~d to petition
tlte Governme11t for a redress of grierm11ces.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTOltY
Today is Friday. Nov. 26. the 33 I st day ot' 200-1. There arc
35 days left in the year.
T&lt;XIay's Highlight in History: On Nov. ln. 19-12. the ml\tion pic·ture "Casablanca:' starring Humphrey Bogal1 and J n~rid Bergman.
had its world premiere at the Hollyw(xJd ll1eatcr in Ne\\ York.
On this date In 182S: the fir&gt;l college social fraternit y. Kappa
Alpha. was formed at Union College in Schenectady. N Y.
In 1832. public streetcar service began in New York City.
The fare : 12 l/2cents.
In I940. the half-million Jews of W;trsaw. Poland. were
forced by the Nazis to live within a walled ghetto.
In 1942, President Roosevelt ordered nationwide gasoline
rationing, beginning Dec. I.
In 1943. during World War II. 1he HMT Rnhna. a Briti&gt;h
transport ship carrying Amencan soldicr.s. \H\s hit hy a
German missile off Algeria: I. I :lS men were kil leu. including
1.015 American troops.
In 1949. India adopted a constitution as a republic within
the British Commonwealth.
In 1950, China entered the Korean conlli&lt;:t. launching a
counter-offensive against soldiers from the United Nations.
the United States and South Korea.
In 1965: France launched its fiN satellite. &gt;ending a 92pound capsule into orbit.
In 1973. President Nixon's personal secretary. Rose Mary
Woods. told a federal court that she'd accidcmally caused part
of the I8 1/2-minute gap in a key Watergate tape.

George

Plagenz

yem-nld woman a&gt; 'aying
she has meals ddivercd or
gel\ takeout becau&gt;e "eating
alone in a re ... tauranl is a signal to everyone that you are
alone. I don 't like knowin!!
that other people are' feeling
sorrv J'nr me. "
"Meals for one" in supermarkets are not big sellers
bcca'usc. says nne ... reta ile r.

For many widows and
wiuowcrs like Olive who
live hv themselves and are
home ;,11 day alone. the dinner hour can be rhe loneliest
time or a lonely day. never
more .so than on family holi da)' "hen there is no family
arounJ.

We arc &gt;&lt;&gt;cia! anima ls by
nalllre who find t'ating
together the !llllSI t'ulfilling
of our ~uciaiL·.xp~riL'llces . Tu
haw to cat alone can seem
lik e the final indignity of
!.!etlini! nld .

. . To \ume 'inglcs (even
young l&gt;ncslthcre appears to
h~ a ..,tigma on l:ating alone.
A newspaper arl icl c reports

that bu .sincss in ta keout
restaurant s has .iumpe'u radictl ly as the number of lone
di11ers ha:-. ri..,cn dramati cal-

1\.
· The paper quotes one 26-

"people don't want to bl'
remindeu they're &gt;inglc."
But "1mc older dinas use
co nsiderable ingenuity to
make their ,oJitary dining
not only tolerable. but al.sn
plea"1rahk. They do such
things a.,. take out their best
chin a. linen anu silver when
they cat. They have dinner in
style in the &lt;linin)! room with
flower&gt; on the table.
Some make dinner a llH\1' able feast. fix ing a tray that
ca n be moved in front of the
fire on a cold winter\ night
or to the back porcl1 in the
summer where tlwv can
wa tch the nei.,hbor d 1i lu ren
at play in the "next yard.
Other.s will pack a box and
~o nn an out in~ with a book
~r erOS&gt;\\ (&gt;ret' pu11lc for
company.
Maybe the best iJea of all
is tn pttl ;111 extra potato in

Chester G. Johnson

the pot and cal I one of the
neighbors in for supper. One
woman says, "Anyone who
lives alone needs friends and
feeding them is a good way
to get them. The budget
won't suffer because you are
u&gt;ually asked back."
Not everyhody. of course,
minds eating alone. Some
find it a convenience to eat
what and when they like.
And a busy mother of active
young children would give
anyt hin g to eat alone and
have peace and quiet.
Eat ing alone can also be
lc" trouble. Two widows in
my parish in Boston were
discussing how easy it is to
cook fur one. "Why," said
one of them. "I just open a
Gin. heat the contents in a
.saucepan and then eat it right
out of the pun."
"Oh. dn you go to all that
trnuhle'l" said the other. "I
eat it right out of the can."
But back to Thanksgiving
dinner. If Aunt Mabel, Uncle
Julius or the grumpy widow
down the street is going to
be left alone on the holiday,
pid up the phone now.. Let
no one be left behind on this
of
wonderfu l
day
Thanksgivin g.

I'M

gEfN6
SENT HOME
To PROTECT
PLA'IERS&amp;
FANS AT

THINNER,

NBA
GAMES.

SLEEKERic
SIYIALLERIS

WHAT EVERYONE 15 LOOKIN6
FORI.l

Is the United Nations' worth saving?

ured the more gue&gt;h. the
merrier.
"We
had
done
Thanksgiving "ith ju.st the
two of us. and .it\ not a'
much fun as with a crowd
of people," Jan Daum \aid .
"When you c&lt;~n't be wtth
family, make a family. "
In Florida. re,ident.s sti ll
recovering from this year\
d~&gt;astrous hurricane &gt;cason
were taktng time to he
grateful for the little things.
"You're thankfu l for what
didn't happen to yuu. being
right here in this arcu. Yuu
just look amund and be
thiinkful .'' Richard Strong
said as he looked at the
barrier island of Sanibel.
which was pummeled by
Hurricane
Chiirley
111
August. "The damage "
still everywhere and wry
evident."
In Mich igan. an atrport
baggage area provided a
setting for family reun ion'
when about 70 member&gt; of
an Army Re,ervc wmpany
returned home from Ira~ for
the holiday.
Edward Silverthorn was
greeted hy hi s wtfe and
three children. age s I I . 9
and 5. who each wore a Tshin that said: "My Daddy
made it back rro m Iraq."

Suspect

surveillance, but that became
unnecessary when Shealey
was arrested in Gallipolis the
following morning .
According to the Detroit
Police Department. Shealey
allegedly went to a woman's
house in Detroit on Nov. 22.
2003. and got into a fight
with th e woman·, 3 \ -yearold boyfriend. The boyfriend
hit Shealey with a rock. and
he is alleged to ha\·e gone to
his car. got a gu n. returned
and killed the man .
Shealey had been li,tcd on
the most-wanted I i'ts of both
the
Detroit
Police
Department and the FBI. and
was known to be armed and
dangerou s.

Deaths

Ethel Rife

Terry Lee Ferguson. 46. of West Columbja, W.Va .. died
Nov. 24. 2004. at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington.
W.Va.
He is survived by his wife. Diane Ferguson, of West
Columbia. and children Amanda, Travis Lee and William
Albert . Also, his mother and father. Marjorie and James
"Biddy'' Stewart. also of West Columbia.
Services will be held at I 30 p.m. Sunday. Nov. 28.
2004, at Foglesong-lucker Funeral Home in Mason.
W. Va, with Rev. Pastor John Swanson officiating.
Visitation will be held at the funeral home Saturday,
Nov. 27, from 6-8 p.m .

Lions
from Page A1

Funds
from Page A1

For a gouJ many year&gt; . it
li as been a fair question
whether nr 1101 the United
Nations is more trouble than
it\ wot;th. For the first I 5
year' of ·it&gt; existence, from
1945 to 1%0. it served its
purpose '" a handy rorUin
for the world's variegated

srAHLER.

nation~.

:9 2004 by NEA. Inc

· Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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uc&gt;truction. And that is also
whv U.l\. Secrcta rv-Cic ncral
Koi·i' Annc111 j, h;diJ y contending that any American

William

Rusher

ally &gt;erved a usefu l purpose
-- as in I')50. when it Iem its
name to the Americ&lt;ln-led
war 111 defend South Korea
from the North Korean inv&lt;tsion. !Though even that was
possible only becat"e the
Soviet Union. which wuld
have ve toed the move. had
temporarily walked out of
the Security Council in a
hull over someth ing or
other. 1
But thc11. about 1960. a ·
1\oml ul new ex -cnlonial
natiom entered the wor ld
bod;. and quickly organized
themselves "' the Third
World. osten'sibly neutral in
the · epochal
struggle
hetween the Communist
power' .and .the Free World .
By virtue of sheer number.s
this new entity seized contro l of the Gene-ral Assembly
·-- and with it control of th ~
United Nations' central
bure&lt;jucracy -- and hcgan
,eJ.J ing it&gt;elf to· the higher or
the two glnhal hiddcrs :
and

~l lt\Cov.. .

.Slowly, however, unucr the
leadership of Indi a. the
Third World began .siding
regu larly with Mo,cow. and

militarv elTon is "illcual " il
Washii1gton doesn't' fi rst
n~ceiYe the Un it ed Nation&lt;
perml-"-"1(111 .

All thi' "uulu he more
than ~nou!1h rc:J"ion for the

and even nccasion-

Wit"-hinglltll

E-mail:

Bv JUSTIN BERGMAN

holiday sea,on.
tions made driving condiTim O'Connor risked total tion., treacherous !"or thouChester G. Johnson, 74, of San Francisco, Calif., formerly
exhaustion
by holding his sands of other travelers.
of Mason County, W.Va., passed away Nov. 9, 2004. at his
Despite 30-degree temper- 4-year-old grandsons Sean
" It' s not worth getting
residence.
atures
and
biting
wind,
Carl
and
Declan
in
his
arm&gt;
durupset
about - it's Mother
He was the son of the late Leonard and Gladys Johnson who
· Nature." said Theresa Pixler.
passed away when he was a young child. He was raised hy his Williams was up at sunrise ing th e parade. ·
''The atmosphere of the whose flight from Chicago
paternal grandparents, Morris and Florence Johnson of West Thursday to prepare turkey
legs,
bmtwurst,
hamburgers
· dl y. •· he to s·toux Fa11 s, S .D., was
parad e ·ts so fnen
Columbia. W.Va.
Chester was a talented pianist. He was retired from the and hot dogs on_ an outdoor said. " It makes it a nice ·canceled Wednesday night.
Western Car Loading Co., San Francisco, and was a graduate grill in Detroit before the event, and it gets them out She hoped to make it to her
city's annual Thanksgiving of the house so that parents tina! destination in Iowa in
of Wahama High School.
can cook dinner."
time for Thanksgiving dinIn addition to his parents and paternal grandparents, he was Day parade.
He
~ad
a
lot
of
cooking
The
Detroit
parade
took
ner.
preceded in death by his maternal grandmother, Ella Johnson
to do. Thousands of people place a day after the first
·'You have to take it all
of Letart, W.Va. ; and a brother-in-law, Richard Grinstead.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law. Duane and Vera braved the chilly weather winter storm of the season in stride. We'll get there
Johnson of Mason, W.Va. ; a daughter and son-in-law. for the parade before foot- hit the Midwest. But the eventually."
_,._, not stop Nick
Kimberly and Bob Jones of Darwin, Ohio; eight grandchil- ba ll fans from the Detroit · weat her ulu
Across the co untry, many
Lions-Indianapols
Colts
Nicholson
and
hi
s
family
families
opened their homes
dren , Nancy (Jam~s) Garrett of Point Pleasant, Tammy
(Marty) Cline of Pomeroy. Ohio, Emily (Jeff) Henry. Carey game across the street start- from watching the' parade in to se rvi ce members who
(Jim) Porter, and Alan (Aiisha) Johnson, all of Mason, and ed showing up .
person, instead of on TV as couldn't make the trips to
Robbie Jones, Alison (William) Cooper, and Amy (Terry)
"Shoot, this is the place they usually do. His daugh- see their own fa milies for
· 10, an d L'111dsay, the h_oI'd
Spencer, all of Shade, Ohio; I9 great-grandchildren; a broth- to be." Williams said as he ters, Katte,
1 ay.
er, Jack (Nada) Johnson of Englewood. Ohio; and ,his step- warmed his , hands over the 3, sat in a little red wagon
Joshua Flesher, a 20-yearmother. Voneda Powell. and half-sister. Margie Grinstead, glowing c&lt;ials.
at hi s feet , wrapped 1n old Marine based at Fort
both of Mason.
Across the country, mil- tleece from head to toe.
Knox. was one of four solA memorial service will take place at I :30 p.m. Sunday, lions of Americans gathered
"I wanted to sleep later, diers staying with a family
Nov. 28, 2004. at Clifton United Methodist Church, with the with family and friend s on but thi s' ll be fun," Katie in New Albany. Ind . "If it
Rev. Doreen Adkins officiating. Prior to the service. the fam- Thanksgiving to enjoy gut- said.
wasn ' t for them, I'd be
ily will greet friends and relatives at a luncheon beginning at busting feasts and take in
Meanwhile , travelers at standing duty right now," he
noon. Interment will be at the convenience or the family.
holiday traditions such as Ch'tcago ' s
O' Hare sat'd .
football and parades.
International Airport were
Most of the Marines
In New York, where the thankful just to get home invited to families' homes
weather was an unseas0n- Thudgay.
recently t"inished boot camp
ably warm 65 degrees. the
The
Midwest
storm and will likely ship out to
big hit of the Macy's stranded ' hundreds of holi- Iraq when they finish tank
Thanksgiving Day Parade day travelers at the airport gunnery school.
·
More than I00 serviceEthel Rife. !!9, of Dexter and formerly of Gallia was a giant yellow sponge overnight after nearly 50
County. Ohio, passed away in Holzer Medical Center in with a red tie.
flights were canceled. The members in Virginia also
Jackson on Wednesday, Nov. 24. 2004.
Thousands of onlookers National Weather Service enjoyed a home-cooked
She is survived by two son' and uaughters-in-law: jammed the streets to see said parts of Illinois go t up Thanksgiving meal thanks
Richard and Linda Rife, Newport. Tenn.: and James and
the floating
SpongeBob to 8 inches of snow. while to families there . Jan and
Vivian Rife. Goshen. Ind .
Funeral services will be held at I I a.m. Sall!rday, Nov. SquarePants and the scores up to 9 inches were expect- Steve Daum of Gloucester.
who were feeding two
27. 2004, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vinton , of other· gigantic balloons. ed in southern Michigan .
with Rev. Robert H. Hersman ofticiating.
floats and bands that mark
Strong
thunderstorms , Army National Guard prithe traditional kickoff to the high winds and icy condi- vates from Fort Eu stis. fig-

In fact, in Meigs County
the Lions Club has donated
35 park benches .. sponsored
two dogs that have become
seeing eye dogs, refurbished
the pavilion at Beech Grove
Cemetery and provided the
stainless steel sign that spells
out "Meigs County" on the
front of the courthouse .

Correction Policy

Thousands line streets for Thanksgiving parades,
Midwest travelers finally make it home after snowstorm

Obituaries

Terry Lee Ferguson

Moderately Confused

Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error 1n a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

!~e~ 5~~!1 y s7u~st2~~~1

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

the L:nitcd Nal i&lt; H" \ollmved
&gt;u it.
Thi' thoroughly un.sati'factor; .state ul allatr.s lasted
umil the Soviet Union col lapsed in I()') I. That forced
the Untied Nations. which.
like any bur~aucracy. i..,
interestetl first and foremo st
in ,clf-pre&gt;crvation. to &gt;ee k
a ne w &gt;pon.sm. lo the P"'t
decade. '" Frlll!cc and
Germany hll\ c iJlcrc;"ingl)'
seen thcm.sch c.s "' the leaders of l:.uropc in an effort to
cn:ate a ·courucrbalanc4.?" to
the American .supcqwwer:
till' l lnitcd Naliun.s I"" progre"l\CI\ yielded to their
guidan ce. Tod&lt;~y. it 'i.S little
1~1o rc than a margi nall y us~­

tul too l in their schemes to
rein in the L'nitcd State&gt;.
That i&gt; nne rca&gt;on whv. in
2002 'and 21XJ:l, the Utilled
Nations did it.s un.succe&gt;Siiil
hc.st to hlock the American
ln\'a.s ion of l r &lt;~q . dc,pitc
Saddam 1-tu"ctn \ dcfta,ncc
of
12 " Li l' L' L'' " l\' l ' L.N.
delllalll.h, Ihal 1r ~JhanJon it~

development. of chemical.
hinlog-ical and (i f rn"ihl~)
nuclear \\'t;aptlll' of

ma~...,

United St7ttcs to \\·ithdraw
formal!) from all participation in tile L'nited Natio n,'
hra1en cllorh tn run the
wor ld . But reccnt lv it ha&gt;
become , clear tfwt th e
Scnetat'iat .,f the United
1\'ation -'. ur at lea -"t man y

high ly placed olliciah in it,
are quite simply corrupt. The
Lnitcd Nation ..s' appalling
mi-.rllillltL!.!ellle!lt ur the lliuhmindcd 'Dil for Fond" p~·o­
gram. tmd cr which llusscin
wa' a\lm\cd to .sell ii'.KJ i oil
o.stensihl y in ret urn fnr de&gt; perately 11ccdcd fonu and
medical ;lid for hi&lt; Jicnplc.
may \\ell tumllutto ,hc the
bigf!C-"1 it1St:\J1l'C OJ' thieVI.!f)'

in the enti re world hi&gt;tory of
1he ft.
;\-., thl' prugralll actually
worked. the l 'nitcd Nat ions
all owed I lu"cinto .sell nil tn
chmen hcn~fic~;mcs at ~trti l' i ­
ciall y low pricc.s -- oil 11 hidt
the) could then re.scl l at the
lll&lt;!rket price·. J&gt; ll detln~ lhc
dilt'crcncc. The hcneJ'iciarie.s
"Jll""cntl ' " "·lud cd L.N .
olli(..:ial-, and ltiot "urpri-. ing,Jy J wd 1-pl" ced rrench.
German ;111d Ru"ian playc.r.s. Smal l Wlllidcr that their

go\'ernm cnts . and the United
Nat ion&gt;
itsel f.
bitterly
oppo,ed George W. Busht,
intention to topple Hussein!
The sc1&gt;pe of the corruption is now under investigation by the panel appointed
Atinan and led by Paul
Vokker. the former Federal
Rl:scn·e chairman. who is
person;t\ly above su,picion.
But Vokkcr see ms to be
having difficulty getting the
l'IH &gt;peration he needed from
An nan 's office, and he may
be forced to report that he is
not being alloweu to do the
job that needs to be done.
A better avenue of
inve stigation . therefore,
ma y he the Congre;sional
headed by
co mmittee
Minne ..so ta '.s Republican
,cna tor. No rm Coleman.
Thi.s cummittee. too, has
reported that it is running
int o root-dragging at the
United Na tion s. But it will
press 011. and there is reato hope that it will
come tip with· 'orne
an~wer...... however shocking they may be.
All of which make~ even
llliJfC urgent a ~c riom. rcevalualiotl of the · ability of the
United Nations. The time
may hemming wl1en Uncle
S·dm will hav~ to 'ay
"Enough'"
1 H'illifllll l?u.,!Ja is a
IJi.,rin .~ui.,/wd Feilml' of" the
C/armronr Institute ji1r the
Swdr oj' .I'!CIII'.\IIf(IIIShip 1md ·
Politi&lt; 11/ l'hilosopln.)

ed four times in efforts to
secure federal funds for operation of a community health
clinic - the first step in
developing a critical access
hospital and emergency room
at VMH. Earlier this year. the
Department of Health and
Human Services approved
the application but did not
award funds. because funds
for that particular round were
set aside primarily to provide
health care to migrant workers and the homeless.
The most recent rejection

Janet McDaniel, who is the
&lt;L~sistant to the Zone 8 chairman from Nelsonville, said
there is a misconception that the
Lions Club is only for the elite.
"We're hard-wO!king, ordinary
J»lPle who want to serve:· said
McDJniel who is one of I.4 miUion
Lions Oub rrembers nationwide.
"We serve" is the motto of
the Lions Club and if you
would like to serve with
them. you may call Kenny
Utt at 992-7559 or attend
their regular meetings.

was announced last month .
Meanwhile, the county's
"health ,care model" has been
used by other communities
across the country which
have ultimately been awarded funding.
The committee also has
secured $240.000 in funds
for equipment, in the event
that Fairly-Qualified Health
Care funds are ultimately
awarded by the DHHS .
Davenport said the committee may consider bypassing
the community health clinic
process. and apply directly
for fund&gt; for the critical
access facility. now that the
federal funds for renovations
have been approved.

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today •992-2 155

""1

waiving his · rights to contest
extradition to the 36th ·
District Court in Wayne
from Page A1
County. Mich.
"Yeah, I just return ,"
Oliver, who was charged Shealey said.
Boyer told Evan s that the
Monday in Meigs County
Court with obstructing jus- Detroit Police Department
tice. was released on a said they would be here
$25,000 recognizance bond within I 0 days to pick him
by Judge Steven L. Story. On up. Until then. the city will
Wednesday, she wa' permit~ have to pay · to keep him
ted to sit next to Shealey and housed in the Gallia County
hold his hand before his hear- Jail. where he has been
lodged since his arrest on the
ing began.
During Wednesday's hear- morning of Nov. 17.
ing, Judge Margaret Evans
The Gallipolis
Police
asked Shealey, his attorney Department received a tip
Ron Calhoun, Assistant from the Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Jeff Sheriff's Department the night
Adkins
and
Gallipolis of Nov. 16 that Shealey might
Detective Jeff Buyer to be staying at a Gallipolis
motel. He was arrested at the
approach the bench.
Evans then explained Super 8 on Upper Riyer Road
Shealey's rights to him. and without incident.
While Oliver had protected
exactly what he was doing by

Shealey for a year, it was her
call to police 'that ultimately
led to his capture.
On the night of Nov. 16.
Oliver and Shealey apparently had a domestic dispu te.
according to Deputy Ri ck
Smith of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department. Oliver
called the sheriff's depart ment. but by tne time deputies
arrived, Shealey had left.
Oliver told deputies that ,
Shealey did not know his
way around the area, and
likely would have driven
north or south on Ohio 7
and stayed at the first hotel
he found. She said they had
fights before. and Shealey
always returned within a
week.
Smith said he and fellow
Meigs
County · officers
planned to keep Oliver's
Pomeroy residence under

"'l"ve been a ..,ingle mom

for too long." Silverthorn's
wife. Anna, said at Detroit
Metropol itan Airport. ··1 didn't care about th e turkey. I
just wanted to cume here."

AND MEDICAl. EQliPIIBT

Christmas

goodies from local merchants
will be given away during the
season. Shoppers may sign up
from Page A1
at any participating store with
the winner to be announced
shortly
before Christmas.
Model A club from Gallipolis
Though the parade kicks
will have I 2 Model A Fords
of the Christmas season, holin the parade.
Those planning to partici- iday events sponsored by the
Merchants
pate in the parade are urged Pomeroy
As sociation . will continue
to call 992-2054.
This year, residents are throughout the month of
encouraged to dress their pets December.
City Nati\)nal B&lt;mk will
in holiday outt1ts and walk
them in the parade through sponsor a cookie contest
beginning at 9 a.m. on Dec. 4
downtown .
"
"
with
judging to follow after
After the parade, the pets
and their owners can visit the bank closes that day.
Farmer's Bank will sponPeople ·s Bank in Pomeroy
sor
a homemade wooden toy
for a competition where costumed pets will be judged in contest where toys may be
three
categories:
most displayed ;ts early as Dec . 2
Christmasy. most original. , in the bank lobby. Judging
will take place af!er the bank
and funniest.
Pets also can ge t their pho- doses on Dec. I I.
People' s Bank of Pomeroy
tographs taken with Santa in
will
sponsor a candy contest
the lobby of People' s Bank
along with children who wish beginnin g at 9 a.m. on Dec.
18 with judging to take place
to give Santa their wish list.
Speaking of wish li sts. a after the bank cllhes that day.
First place prileS fnr the
holiday basket filled with

Pomeroy
Merchants
A&gt;Sociatiuns events include a
S50 savings bond from the
bank hosting the contest: second place wil I receive $25 in
Meigs County Chamber
checks; third place will
receive $I 5 in Meigs County
Chamber checks.
Also, tree ornaments featuring the Pomeroy -Mason
bridge currently under construction are now on sale for
58 each at area bu&gt;inesses that
include Hartwell Hou se.
Weaving Stitches. Anderson's
Furniture. Meig s County
Chamber of Commerce.
Fanner's Bank. People's
Bank of Pomeroy. Ohio
Valley Bank (Save-A-Lot
Location). Ctty National Bank
of Pomeroy. Clark· s Jewelry
Store, K&amp;C Jcwlry Store.
Middlepon Department Store.
Ohio River Bear Co .. People's
Bank of Middleport. Mone y
rai sed by th~ .'&gt;1crchants
Association i' J~signated for
beautification of Jn" ntu-.. n
Pomeroy.

SALES/RENTALS
SERVICE
~etving

. Meigg
County
fol' OVI!t

20 Yeatd
Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Free Back Up Oxygen
Portables Delivered when
you want them
7 days a week 24 hrs. seiVice
Complete line of resp iratory
products
Nebulizers, C-pap, Ventilators
and much more.

-7¥easan/ Vaf/e.Y Jlosp.ilal aJefcomes... . ·

TIMOTHY p. METZGER, DO
Fa1nily Me(licine
OffiC'e lloi1rs:
'l'o llt• l..cK•ntt'll h1 Tht•

't'lll'

ll1c .\liddkpon Clime
-HH :\orrh S&lt;:cuml Street
\tiddleport, ( )J 145' W

I

l·'utnrt•:

• Monda\':
e Tucsda;·:
• Wednc~dar:
e Thursday:
• Friday:

&lt;)

.un. ro.

J"

p.m.

I I a. m. to" 7_p;j.m.I·

a. m. tn) p.m.
9 .1.111 : to 7 p.m.

t)

II a.m. ru 5 p.m. ·

304-77:-J-51 95 .
.\(&gt;eepting m·n patients.
('all for an appointnu.•nt.

�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Friday, Nov. 26
SYRACUSE
-Sutton
TownshipTrustees will meet
in special session at 6 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall.
Monday, Nov. 29
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commiss·ion. 9 a.m.. 117
Memorial Dr.. Pomeroy.
Wednesday, Dec. I
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30p.m. at Pageville
Town Hall.
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Tr4stees. 6:30p.m..
Olive Township Garage.

Clubs and
organizations
Mondav, Nov. 29
POMEROY - OH- KAN

Coin Club meets at 7 p.m .. Becky Edwards, Marianna
McDonald.
Pomeroy Library.
Sunday, Nov. 28
POMEROY
-Christ
Academy Bell Choir performing Christmas concert at 3 p.m.,
Sunday, Nov. 28
CARPENTER -Jim Eden Trinity Church. following
of Charleston. W.Va. in concert Pomeroy Christmas Parade.
Thesday, Nov. 30
at Mt. Union Baptist Chur~ h .
Refreshments follow service.
POMEROY -C hildhood
Information from
David immunization clinic. 9 to II
Wiseman. pastor. 7-12-2568.
a.m.. I to 3 p.m .. Meigs
County Health Department.
Bring shot records, medical
cards. if applicable. Children
Saturday, Nov. 27
must be accompanied by a
MIDDLEPORT
- Art parent or legal guardian. $5
ex hibit at Riverbend Arts donation accepted but not
Council. I to 5 p.m .. required for administration.
Satun.iay and Sunday. Local
artists and photograpl1ers .
A~rylics. oils, pastels. watercolors. scu lpture. Student
Thesday, Nov. 30
secti on from re~en t art classCOOLV ILLE - Dora M.
es taught hy Rhojean Calaway celebrates her 89th
McClure . Exhibitors are birthday. Cards rmty be sent to
McClure. Julie Proctor. her home. 42320 Ohio 7.
Delores Long, Scott Needs, Coolville, Ohio 45723.

Church services

Birthdays

Birth
announced

older,

singi ng groups

in

Mason Coun ty, or any nearby neighboring area churches. including Ohio. are welco me to participate. All
me mbers participate on a
voluntary basis and on their
own sc hedu les. Rehearsals
begin at 7 p.m. and end at
abo ut 9 to 9: 15 p.m.
· Rehearsals and Gospel
Sings are held at the Church
of Christ In Chri stian Un ion,
at 206 Main St. in Point
Pleasant. All rehearsals and

sings begin at 7 p.m. The
choir rehearses once monthly
and is featured monthl y at the
gospel sings. along with one
or two guest groups.
The choir's musicians Larry
Smith . guitari st; Brenda
Weaver. pianist : and Dennie
Weaver. bass gui tarist. Pastor
Dennis Weaver is the director.
From time to ti me. indi vidual s, and/or gro ups from
within the choir are featured
at the gospel sings. which are
hosted by the Christian
Union Church, and sponsored by the Mason County
Area Gospel Choi r.
Anyone interested in more
informal ion about the Area
Gospe l Choir. may co ntact
Pastor Dennis Weaver at
(304) 675-5525 or Mr,. Carol
Browning at (304) 773-5689.

Then she asks why I took
my shower so long before
bedtime. She also constantly criticizes the way I wear
my hair.
Aunt Marge gets upset
because , when Keith is
home, we screen our calls.
I've explained that it' s to
avoid telemarketers, but if
we don't pick up. she says in
a rude tone. "I don 't want to
leave a message. Pick up the
phone NOW!"
Abby, she's a good person
in other ways, but she has
always had a habit of criticizi ng and being too quick to
judge. Do Keith and I have
reason to be offe nded . . or
should we just accept that
she is who she is, ignore her.
and not say anyth ing? GETTING FED UP IN
CALIFORN IA
DEAR FED UP: If no one
has pointed out to Aunt Marge
that it's rude to ask people
what the y do with their
money, to drop by unannoun ced. to give unsolicited
adv ice about personal grooming, and to demand instant
gratifi cation when she call s.
now is the time. It wo n' t
change her. but perhaps it will
cause her to stop for a
moment and think .
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
kllOWil as }ea/l/le Phillips,
a11d was jou11ded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11geles,
CA 90069.

·You '11 find old fashioned hospitality, friendly sales people,
affordable prices and a great selection of gift items
--· .,

--·--·-

'

Sunday, November 28th, 2004
:
12:00 noon to 5:00p.m. ·
Parade at 2:00p.m.
1

I'

'

lti,;..........

Santa will be in the Peoples Bank lobby on
Court Street immediately after the parade.
• Sign Up Now For Quilt Gasses
·Long Arm Quilting Service
• Tuxedo Rental

•••lA"t'l

Drawing to be held Sunday at 3:30
Ohio State Cheer Leader Doll, 2 Po1111d Rtts.~el Slover Asst. Cho(·olotes

110 West Main Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

The following good
through Tuesday.
Russell
Women's

992-2284

Stover

Assorted

Chocolates

Colognes,

Perfumes,

Gift Sets

t Pound

"Stop by and en joy some
light refreshments with us!"

for tfze J-lofidays

25%

Reg. $7.99

Only

OFF

Berkline &amp;.. Aexsteel
from smaU ladles recllners to
. massive "Big Mans" Recliners.
Large Selection.
Sale Prices Start At Only

saaa•

Ing dock
company.

Dining Sets
For Your Holiday Dining

Oak or Cherry Aoor Oock

$479 Ped. Table/4 Chairs....Sale $389

Large Assortment
~f styles, fabrics
.and wood finishes!
Sale Priced From

$289

80

Assorted Styles
Christmas Sale
PricesI

Cold
Pop
.

::
"

20 oz. Bottle

~: (oo utility pa~ments) ::
::
•~

::
::..

Jewelry

::•~

Complete s_tock

::

only 77¢

1/2 pnce ::·~

::

Christmas
:: ~=======~
~l wrapping paper
Christmas

1/2 pnce
Amity Billfolds

:1

Gift Baris
6
::.. Assortment
of
::
::

Reg: 39¢

::

Mens &amp; Womens

Only

::u

1/2 Price ::••

10

::

I

. ::
1I 2 Prrce

::

IF

ZIPPO :1•• limit per customer ..::••
cards"
••
LIGHTERS · ::"•• Chnstmas
in boxes
::

100 E. Main

Please help us celebrate

Pomeroy. OH

the start of our 1Oth year!

30%0FF

CE

1 2
~::
.. ==P=R=I=~:¢::!
"

Times Watches::

•

::••

1/2 Price ::
7Day-2B lots of Prll ••
&gt;&lt;

•~

•

:1•~

Box es Reg. ~8.95

::

Only $1.99
"
·~················
···
···················· ~

HiVal

Cigarettes

SJ718
Carton
Everyday

•.

~~.~

Bring this ad for 20% off anyohe
regular priced item. Sunday Only!

......

•

THANK YOU f 0~ Y(!UH BU SINE SS '

740-992-7696

$1319 Rnd. Table/4 Chalrs ..Sale $1059
$1769 Table/6 Chalrs.......... .Sale $1399

••roown

Curio Sale

•

1 Oam-4pm

OPEN HOUSE
Sunday. Nov. 28th.

Bolillay
nnancing
Glider Rockers

•~

27¢
u
~=======*
:l
~
·~

Hartwell House

$299 Table/2 Chairs.............5ale $249

stzar

Open Sunday ::

~:

Russell Stover
~ecln\at Butter
::
Ma~le Cream ::
antas
::·~

WE WISH YOU A MERRY CHRISTMAS

Reg. $1619.00

Now Only

~:

2

Quality by
Howard Miller
· the world's lead-

~&lt;-•======-====~

~.~iij!fff:\'i)]~Hfij
~
••

·~

aocks
Recliner Sale

Featuring Eloise's
exclusive 2004
Snowman line

16 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 1.15769
Telephone (71.10) 992-1

Holiday Ho urs
Monday 9-8
Tuesctay - Saturday 9-6
Sunday t-5

'WIIH Ill• ••

Register to Win a $25.00 Gift Certificate

The Fabric Shop

EDECORATE

Uly Dugan

Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2156
Mason • 675- 1-333

I

Register for our
"Open House"
door prize

Grandfather

Sunday
Times-Sentinel ·

"&lt;!Cbri~tma~ ~long ~be ~iber"

$5.47

SALE

Keeping
Gallia, Meigs
&amp;Mason
informed

Invites you to celebrate ...

Subscribe today ¥ 740-992-2155

Anderson's

I

The Dail) Scntirwl • !'age \7

The Pomeroy Merchant's Association

Sunday Times-Sentinel

with !furniture !from

RACINE -Amber and
Arn ie Dugan of Raci ne
ann ou nce the birth of their
first ch ild. a daughter. Lily
Angelina. at 5:52 p.m. on
Sept. II . 2004. She weighed
six pounds. si\ ounces and
was 20 inches long.
She is the granddaughter of
Dick and Barhara Dugan of
Racine. Debbie Maynard of
Pomeroy. and Cecil Maynard
of Racine. Great grandpare nts
are David an\1 Ann Zirkle of
Racine . and Walt Hayes of
Pomeroy. Great grandmother
is Roberta Swisher of New
Haven . W.Va.

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Friday, November 26,2004

DEAR ABBY: I' m a single
mother, raising a 14-year-old
daughter,
"Cheryl."
Recently, Cheryl has started
going through my things
Dear
whi le I am not at home. A
Abby
couple of times she has
found things of a sexual
nature - pictures and mari tal aids - that I had thought
were well hidden.
How do I address these she gets correct answers.
matters without discussing
DEAR ABBY: I' m having
the content in depth'l We have trouble dealing with my
discussions about a lot of Aunt "Marge." She disapthings, but I must admit r m proves of the fact that my
embarrassed
about this . hu sband . "Keith," is 40 and
However. I want to discuss I' m 33 . Aunt Marge says I
thi s with Cheryl before she shou ld ha ve married sometells someone about what she one my age - or no more
found and gets misinforma- than a year or two older tion. BLUSHING IN because SHE likes men her
CHI CAGO
own age . Also. SHE prefers
DEAR BLUSHING: Your dark-haired men. so she
dau ghter is old enou gh to keeps aski ng me why I marunderstand the concept of · ried a blonde.
privacy - and that includes
Keith earns enough so
not go in g tl:trough your that I can stay at horne with
thi ngs without permission, or our two chi ld ren. Aunt
discussing your private life Marge says I'm selfi sh to
with her co ntempora ries. make him carry the financial
Since yo u now know what burden alone. (Neither Keith
she doe.s in you r absence. nor I feel there's anything
keep you r personal items selfish about it.) What 's
under lock and key.
peculiar is. Aunt Marge has
If Cheryl 4uestions you always been a homemaker.
ahout the items she found . She hasn' t worked a day
explain to her that they are since she married Uncle
sometimes used by ad ults. If Steve . Also. she constantl y
she wan ts to know more. asks my husband if he's savanswer her 4uestions honest- ing the money he earns, and
ly. And while yo u' re at it. be what we do with it.
sure yo ur daughter know s
Aunt Marge stops by
that if she has further ques- une xpected ly a lot. usu;tlly
lions in the future, she 's wei- at ni ght. If I' m wearing my
come to come to you with rotle and nightgown , she
them. and you wi ll be sure . demands to know why.

Other events

There are no auditions or
dues. Members are not
required to know music prior
to participation. Anyone interested in membership. should
ke l free to atte nd the first
spring rehearsal.
Any church. pastor. indi viduaL 16 years of age or

Friday, November 26, 2004

Mom is embarrassed by what
her snooping daughter found

Area Choir rehearsals off until spring
. PO INT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- The Mason Coupty Area
Gospel Choir will not be
holding any rehearsals or
sings until spring. due to holidays, illnesses. weather. etc.
After a ni ce break, the
group will begin their
rehearsa ls in March .
Members are being notified
early that new song bonks are
now arrivi ng and in the
spring, all members and
poterllial members should
make every effort to attend
the spring rehearsals. at which
time the new books will be
distributed. and rehearsals
wi ll hegin.
Indi viduals of all church
affilia tions thro ughout the
area including · Ohio , are
welcome to participate with
the Area Choir. Parts most
needed are te nor and bass.
however. all voices are
always' we lcome.

PageA6

'Ia- Per

- Woolrich ·
. - Carhartt
- Levi's
- Landau

- Belts
- Boots
- Knives
Scrubs

lr/aAPR

~bop

JLocallp tbts

~~~~ohbap ~eason

"~

~~~

COME CELEBRATE THE SEASON AT CLARK'S. WE WOULD BE HONORED
TO HELP YOU SELECT THE PERFECT HOLIDAY GIFT WITH GREAT SAVINGS
AND I'RIENDLY HOMETOWN SERVICE.
ADJACENT TO THE COURTHOUSE IN HISTORIC DOWNTOWN POMEROY

-~

740-992-2054

~- ,.. ......... ~- .. ~ ~- ,. .... ,. ... ,. . . ,. .... ,. ...... ,.._ ,. ...,. I' .. 1- -·

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�Page AS

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26, 2004

Tbe Dally Sentinel• Paae A9

~~'VItfi-lttil: ~~til: l.ft?~ ·"P-C:

Portland Community Center to serve lunch and dinner to deer hunters.
5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Each meal
will cost hunters a $5 donation
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
that goes directly to roof repair at
PORTLAND - This year. deer the center.
The meals will be home-cooked
hunter' in the Portland area will
and
include menu items such as
have a place to each lunch and
dinner at tlie Portland Community turkey and noodles, soup beans
a1id cnrnbread. spaghetti and salad
Center.
and
sloppy joes. Refreshments will
Starting Nov. 29 thrnugh Dec.
3. lunch will be served from II :30 include coffee. tea and pies for
a.m. to I p.m .. ami dinner from desert.
BY BETH SERGENT

Volunteers Mildred Krider,
Carrie Shaw, Mila Raymond and
Ruby Congo will prepare the lunches and dinners that will hopefully
attract hunters to Portland and
Meigs County.
Congo, who is also a board member for the Portland Community
Center. is in charge of the menu.
Al~10ugh she describes it as a lot of
work. she says all the cooking is

worth it if it helps repair the roof to
the community center which is a
non-profit organization.
"There ·s no use trying to get
anything else at the center if you
don't have a roof," she added.
The "anything else" Congo is
speaking about is the Civil War
Museum, not to mention the weekly
community dinners the center hosts,_
"I want to see the center grow

and grow," said Congo who said
the community dinners are a big
part of that plan.
As for the deer hunter lunches·
and dinners next week. Congo
added the only public place for
them to eat a hot meal in Portland is
at the community center.
There are tentative plans for a
Christmas dinner at the Portland
Community Center next month.

"The ehristmas Village"

~

2004 Holiday Schedule

g

Explosion destroys house, damages others

Brian J. Reed/ photo

ason Ingels, Tom Dooley and Julie Proctor of the White Lilac
Inn, a Middleport bed and breakfast. are pictured with some
Jf the grand prizes to be awarded to Middleport Christmas
;hoppers this Christmas. A DVD player and computer system
from Ingels · RadiO Shack and an overnight stay at the new
ll&amp;B are among the prizes to be awarded by the Middleport
Community Association.
·

Middleport holiday
promotions begin Sunday
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

8 REEOOMYDAILYSEN TI NEL. COM

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport merchants will begin their
Christmas shopping season with an open hou&gt;e on Sunday.
Other holiday promotion&gt; inc lude a Christmas parade on Dec.
L i1nd $5.000 in prite&gt; to be awarded to local shoppers
lhro ughout the month nf December.
The Middlepnrt Communi ty Association will coordinate
~ vents designed to encourage local residents to do thei r
Christmas shopping in l\1idLIIepoi1, using the traditional theme.
The Christmas Village."
The merchants plan an open house celebration from I to 4
p.m. on Sunday. and registration for the in-store and grand prize
drawings will begi n then. Clonch·, Carriage will offer free
horse-drawn carriage rides during the open house. and Mrs.
Santa Claus will pass out treats throughout the shopping district.
Participating merchants wi ll conduct in-store drawings for
prizes. beginning Dec. I. and the association will offer $5.000 in
~ra nd prize giveaways, including a computer. DVD player. three
bicycle&gt;, ga&gt; and grocery certitkates, Longaberber h'uliLiay basket, a $200 gift certilicate to Middleport merchant&gt;. a limited
dition Ohio River Bear Co. bear. three TV video games and free
lodging at the Downing Hou,e and White Lilac Inn bed and
hreahfa&gt;t inn,. The drawing lor those grand prizes will be conducted on-air through WYVK-FM on Dec. 23. Entries for the
"big-ticket" drawing will be taken from in -str~ weekly entries.
The annual Christmas Parade will be held at 6 p.m . on Dec.
+.preceded at 5:30p.m. by the Christmas tree and candle lighting service. conducted by Middleport Minsterial Association.
Santa will be at Peoples Bank for free photographs fo llowing
the parade. and the Crossroads/WorkNet program m the
Unive rsity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College
wi ll hold an open house with refreshmenb .
Middleport's annual Frantic Santa late-night shopping spree
will he held on Dec. 23. and horse-drawn carriage rides will
again be offered for free from 8 to I0 p.m.

,.

·Y·

Tnursday. December 23
• Frantic Santa Shopping Spree-shop until midnight at participating merchants
• FREE - horse drawn carriage rides 8pm-10pm

·•......
,
~

...

By Hearth &amp; Candlelight

* Americana * Collectibles

Holida1
CJiveawaSt!!

* Retired Longaberger Baskets

* Crafted &amp; Seasonal I-tems
* Dip Mixes &amp; Sauces

* Gift Baskets

"On the T"

t 07 Mill Street • Middleport

Inside i

Sut's SELEeTA.BLES
"On the T"
Collectibles, Antiques &amp; Morel

BRING.....,ItfTHISAD FOR- - .,

1

10% OFF PURCHASES

I

-----------Stop in if you're looking for that Unique Gift!

t.

(ttp lrH 1'1/3 1/04)

107 Mill Street•

740~992-3148

• Middleport

Beginning
Nov. 28th, during
Open House, sign
up at participating
merchants for
$~,000 in
merchandise!

Antiques &amp; Collectibles
' Bring this clipping in and receive

10% OFF

one 1 ~ item in the store!
Adjacent to The Dawnin g House

220 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport OH

740-992·9115
Hours - t 0-5

&amp; t -5

Holiday Open House
Sunday 1·4 pm
Stop In and sign up for prizes
during our Christmas Kick-off!

Middleport, "The Christmas VIllage•

INE)EWELRY

5Q0fo

Off Storewide*

~~ .... ' \

1 ct.

I

' .....~,..,...

Friday
_-Tuesday

Huge selection of
Past. Present &amp; Future
Jewelry
1/4 ct. $199 (Reg. $398)

I

~

Only!

~A'~

$980 (Reg. $1960)

1/2 ct. $385 (Reg. $770)

Centerpieces
• Christmas
Eternal Light Crosses
•• Wreaths
• Throws
Funeral Arrangements
* Cemetery
Pieces
•
~

We also offer
a line of purses
'
wallets &amp; totes!

Middleport

~nvites

you to the'ir

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE.

MiddleP-ort Flower Shop
83 Mill Street

992·5627

You are invited to come in and enjoy crossroads hDspiwlity

The University of Rio Grande I
Crossroads Program I Meigs Center

Saturday, December 4th,

im mediately following Ihe Middlepon Chrisunas Parade.
There will be refreshments of sam.lwicht:~. chips.
cookies.

~oft

drinks. coffee and Hot Chocolate.

FREE TO THE PUBLIC!!

Middleport, OH

Christmas

EJewefr~

Safe

740-992-3533

60% OFF
Original Price

ON ALL JEWELRY

Certified diamonds available!

14k Sandal
Charms
Starting at

Stop in and see
our new arrivals·* Blue diamond jewelry
* Pink sapphire collecti~n
* Titanium wedding bands

$19

(reg. $38)

Several styles to
choose from!

- Pat !l{icftter :Jfofitfay Cards
- OSU fjift Itfeas
- :Jfofitfay 1fags
Stop In during

OPEN HOUSE

*Fossil watches are 20%

--,-----------~

FINE JEWELRY
151 Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446·1841•

a•- :::&amp;:

Holiday Hours
9-8 Friday
9-6 Saturday

6 Months
No Interest
Financing
(with approved credit)

fl...

• 5:30p.m.-Tree &amp; Candle Lighting Ceremony on the "T"
, • 6:00p.m. -Holiday Parade
• Visit with SANTA at Peoples Bank, Free pictures!

weapons at his classmates,
the police chief said .
"Students began to llee from
the classroom, and he !led
from the classroom and was
tackled to the lloor by school
facu lty members." he said.
St udents described a
chaotic stru gg le in a hallway
and said they saw blood on
the floor.

......

-t.

Saturday. December 4

1 ct. round s 1625 (reg. $3250)

; ng. Temperatures wi II rise 46 early this afternoon to 49 by
from 29 to 44 by. late thi&lt;o 2:00pm then drop down to 4 1
morning. Wind&gt; will be 5 to I() late afternoon. Winds will be 5
I'!J 15 \1PH from the 'out h.
MPH from the south.

A

• Basket/Snow Bear Bingo-Middleport American Legion 6p.m. Call 740-992-4055 for info.

New shipment of diamonds
All shapes and sizes
t/2 ct. round s599 (reg. $1398)

Aftemfln/1 (/ -6 p.m.)
Friday, Novemher 26 ·
· It shou ld remain cloudy.
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
It looks like a cloudy morn- Temperaltires will ri ;e from

0

Thursday. December 2·

·iwl Arriued!

•

;*'

•1-4p.m. Merchant's Holiday OPEN HOUSE
.
• Register to win Merchants Holiday Giveaway prizes at participating businesses.
· • FREE-horse drawn carriage ride for all

Student sneaks in knives at Indiana high school, slashes five classmates .·
the hospital, including the any infonnation about a possiBY TOM COYNE
accused attacker, a IS-year- ble motive lor the attack, which
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
old freshman , Police Chief happeneq as classes were startVALPARAISO. Ind . - A Michael Brickner said. All ing at the school some 20 miles
student carrying a machete but one of those injured were southeast of Gary.
Brickner said that before
and another kni fe slashed five released by Wednesday aftercarrying
out the attack , the
classmates Wednesday morn- noon, he said. Five suffered
ing as they W&lt;ltched a Spanish cuts and the others com- st udent asked his teacher for
plained of pain from other permission to close the classclass video, authorities said.
room door. He shut the door
Eig ht Valparaiso High injuries, authorities said.
Authorities did not release and then started swinging the
School students were taken to

~

Sunday. November 28

WARREN, Ohio (AP) - . A house
exploded, damaging at least five other
homes, just a few seconds after the
owner hurried out because he was worried about a possible natural gas leak.
Randy Mansfield escaped injury
Tue&gt;day in Howland Township, 50
miles southeast of Cleveland. •He was
trying to use the telephone in his neighbor\ home about 5:30 p.m. when the
blast turned his home into rubble, sending debris fl ying 200 yards in all directions. fire officials said .
" Not even 30 seconds after he came
over here, it blew up," neighbor Phillip
Cyb said. "We were in shock."
Mansfield told Cyb that a worker from
Dominion East Ohio had been at the
home earlier Tuesday because of the odor
AP Photo
of a natural gas leak. Cyb said Manslield
Only debris remains from a Howland. Ohio, home that exploded Tuesday evening. The
ran from the residence atier he returned
explosion damaged at least five other homes. just a few seconds after the owner hurhome and still noticed the smelL
ried out because he was worried about a possible natural gas leak.
" It was horrific. He just lost everything:· Cyb said.
Howland Fire Department Chie f East Ohio spokesman.
Fire ofticials said no one was injured.
He confirmed an employee of the gas
but three neighboring families were not George Brown said Wednesday a gas
permitted to retum to their homes because leak is a possible cause. The investiga- company was at the home Tuesday and
ti ghtened a connection to a gas stove.
tion is continuing Wednesday.
of the extensive damage.
"That apparently resolved the odor."
"We're trying to figure out what hapA pit was left in the ground at the
·
pened," said Neil Durbin, Dominion Durbin said.
home site.

,

for refreshments
and door prizes!

in stock
While Supplies Last!

Free
Layaway!
Free Holiday
Gift
Wrapping! ·

•on The T'

Middleport Department.Store
107 Mill Street • 740-992-3148 • Middleport

30% OFF
All Pictures in Stock
~ 37 M jJ.~'tr"SteCV

INGELS JEWELRY
&amp; PICTURE GALLERY
106 N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH

7 40·992·2635

�The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Butchmelater, Page 82
SemlnoiM acalp ssu, Page 82
Garcia uneure of Sunday ltltus, Page B4
Mk:Uieon wlneln Hawaii, Page 810

Bl
Friday, November 26, 2004

'Prep Schedule
Todlr'epme

&amp;ys Baskttball
Ohio Valley Christian at
Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Saturday'• ,..,...

Girls Basketboll ·
#Eastern vs Northwest,
3:30p.m.

Boys Btisbtboll
#Southern
vs North
Adams, 12:30 p.m.
#_Eastern vs Waverly, 5
p.m,
Trimble at Ohio Valley
Christian, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Gallia Academy,
6:30p.m.
#-

Pepsi 2004 River City

Shootour at Shawnee State

University.

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usee

Rio Grande to
sponsor holiday
food drive
RIO GRANDE- The athletic department at the
University of Rio Grande
will be conducting a holiday
food drive during the week
on Nov. 29 through Dec. 3.
The event will be sponsored by the "Champions of
Character." The Champions
of Character initiative holds
the five core values of
respect, integrity, servant
leadership, sportsmanship
and responsibility.
Anyone
interested
in
donating non-perishable food
items may give the items to
any student-athlete in their
classes.
There will also be drop
boxes placed around campus
for any food items to be
placed in as well.
The following items are
needed: soup. peanut butter.
.-ketchup, apple sauce, tuna,
macaroni and cheese, juice,
lunch meat, dish soap, hand
soap and plastic bags.
For more information contact : Rio Grande Athletic
Director Jeff Lanham at
(740) 245-7485 or e-mail at
jlanham@ rio.edu or Rio
Champions
of
Grande
Character liaison Ken French
at (740) 245-7294 or e-mail
at kfrench@rio.edu.

national football league

Flustered Davis ·hanging
by thread with Browns
Bv TOM

WITHERS

Associated Press
----~-----

BEREA - Butch Davis'
confidence, swagger and
optimism seem to have left
town already.
He's probably next.
An agitated Davis refused
to discuss his uncertain
future as the Cleveland
Browns
coach
on
Wedne sday, deferring all
question s to owner Randy
Lerner. That's atypical of
Davis, who has willingly
talked about any topic in the
past.
Times have changed,
though.
Davis could be in his final
days with the Browns (3-7),
who are in last place in the
AFC North and mired in a
four-game losing streak during a season spiraling downward. The only question

Davis fielded was whether
· he planned to finish out the
season.
"I think that 's a question
that you've got to ask
Randy," Davis said. "I have
every intentions of being
here."
With some media outlets
running wild on Tuesday
with reports that Davis was
about to be tired by Lerner,
Browns president John
Collins insisted Cleveland
will not make any coaching
changes during the season
- unless Davis resigns .
Collins reiterated the
team's
stance
on
Wednesday. He said the club
was not in negotiations with
Davi s'
agent.
Marvin
Demoff, on a financial settlement with Davi s, who has
three years remaining on a
contract worth approximateJy $12 million.
Collins said Lerner and

Davis had a conversation on
Tuesday in which the team
reaffirmed its support for
thr embattled o:oa&lt;.:h. who is
21-35 overall in three-plus
seasons but just 8- 18 since
the end of 2002.
Asked if Davis could be
back next season, Collins
said, " Yes. He's our coach."
But judgin g by Davi s '
· salty attitude as he prepares
hi s team to play the
Cincinnati Ben gals this
Sunday, there appears to be
an irreparable rift between
the coach and Cleveland's
front office.
There has been speculation that if Davi s gets fired
or resigns that he will pursue a high-profile college
job. One newspaper report
said there is mutual interest
between Davis and the
University of Florida. Davis
Please see Davis, Bl

College football
Three former OSU players back Clarett's allegations

Meigs seventh
graders fall to
Gallia Academy
ROCKSPRINGS - The
Gallia Academy seventh
grade boys basketball team
opened the regular season
with a win at Meigs, 52-34.
Leading the way for the
Blue Devils was Kyle
Dinguss with 14 points (four
three point shots), Corey
Eberhard netted II points,
both Chuck Calvert and John
Troester finished with eight,
Zeke Maher tallied six and
Dometrious Garnes added
four.
Leading the way for Meigs
was Jacob Wells :.vith 14,
Taylor Deem eight and Caleb
Davis finished with seven
points .
The Blue Devils will play
host to Logan 5:30 p.m.,
Monday at the Washington
Elementary Gymnasium.

Supervised deer
hunting in 0. 0.
Mcintyre Park
GALLIPOLIS-, The 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District will
allow parent-child hunting
only during gun deer season.
Children must have a valid
hunting license and b~
accompanied by an adult
with hunting license as well.
Permits are limited to 20
per day and must be picked
up at the office at Raccoon
Creek County Park. There
will be no charge for permits ,
which are 'bn a first-come,
first-serve basis. License
must be shown at the time of
registration. ·
For more information, contact Mark Dan·ner at 4464612, ext. 255, or . the
Raccoon Creek office at 379271 1'.

AP Photo

Cleveland Browns Butc h Davis prowls the sidelines in a 1().7
loss to the New York Jets Sunday in Cleveland. Browns offi·
cials said Tuesday that Davis isn't going anywhere -for now.•

Ohio State coach Jim Tresse l celebrates his 37-21 victory over Mich igan with the marching
band at Ohio· Stadium in Colur;nbus Saturday.

COLUMBUS (AP J - · loaner cars.
Three former Ohio State playThe school labeled the
ers, including an NFL player charges as lies and some forand the son of a former assis- mer players told ESPN they
tam coach. backed up fonner never saw any wrongdoing in
tailback Maurice Clarett's aile- the Ohio State program.
gations that players received
Claret!, who led Ohio State
trnproper benefits while play- to the national championship
ing for the Buckeyes. in 2002. was suspended after
ESPN.com reported.
his fm tfman season for lying
Carolina Panthers wide to investigators during an
receiver Drew Carter. fomter NCAA probe of allegations
linebacker Fred Pagac Jr. and that he received improper benformer fullback Jack Tucker etits from a family friend. He
said in a story posted on the then lost a court challenge of
Web site Wednesday that they the NFL's rule preventing
kne w of tutors who completed players out of high school less
homework for players. Carter than three years from being
said he was overpaid for work- drafted.
in~ udd ~obs:
An NCAA investigator was
l'agac 1 lather, Fred Sr.. on cm11pus last week to look
served as an assistant coach at into Clarett's accusations.
Ohio State for 19 years. Tucker
Carter. Pagac and Tucker
was an Academic All-Big Ten told ESPN.com they didn 't
pick
believe Tresse l set up Claret!
''There are alway; people with vehicles.
who will help you and cross
Me ssages were left . late
the line:· Pagac was quoted as Wednesday for Buckeyes athsayin~ in the report . "I've per- letic director Andy Getger and
sonaltv seen it happen. You sports information director
had tutors who if you asked Steve Snapp.
them for help writing a paper
Snapp told ESPN.com he
they'd end up writing it.
thought the story was "another
"You 'd go in and ask hdp example of selective journalabout speciiics. and then tt ism on ( ESPN's) part and an
would end up getting written." attemr.t to run an unbalanced
Carter told ESPN.com that it story.
was called a "hook-up." a tutor
Carter said he was offended
who did players' homework or by Geiger describing Claret!
a boo; ter . who provided an and other players who backed
.
the running back's claims as
easy. high-paying job. .
Carter sa1d he ~SOt patd qutte "colo"al failures."
a btt ol mpney tor sweepmg.
"If guys like Freddie and
cleaning up stuff. doing like Jack and me went through it
very. very light work . What and didn' t ~et in trouble and
you would call nonstrenuous did everythtng right. but still;
work."
you know. got some perks
ESPN The Magazi ne report- because of it, are you gonna
ed earlier this month that call us colossal failures. too'
Clarett accused coach .lim
"That\ why Ohi o State is
Tre"el and his staff and .; chool being afraid - because if
boosters of arrangii1g for him other people. legit people. like
to get passing g'rades. money Fredd1e and Jack and myse lf,
for bogus summer jobs. thou- say stuff. then they' II be like.
sands of dollars in cash and · Oh no.' ..

College Basketball
Bluejays knock off Bucks in OT
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (APJ
- Creighton continues to
play David slaying Goliath
m the Guardians Classic.
Creighton, which is considered a mid-major in the
Missouri Valley Conference,
finds it difficult to get a team
from niajor conferences to
come to Omaha, Neb.
The Guardian s Classic ,
however,
provides
the
Bluejays a chance to play big
name schools, and they've
made the most of it, knocking off Ohio State , Missouri
and Notre Dame.
Tyler McKinney hit a
game-w inning field goal
with 4.2 seconds left in over. time' as Creighton defeated
Ohio State 65-63 in the
Guardians Classic championship game Wednesday

night.
"We get up for these games
with
power-conference
teams," said Bluejays guard
Nate Funk . "We don 't get a
chance to play them very
often. That's why we come
here."
Creighton (5-0) became
the first school to win two
Guardians Classic titles. The
Bluejays defe~ted Notre
Dame in the 2002 title game .
McKinney. who also sank
a free throw with 28 seconds
left in overtime, fini shed
with II· points and was
named Most Valuable Player
of the tourn ament. He also
sci a tournament record \\·ith
30 assists in four games.
"He had 17 assists and two
turnovers in the two games
here," said Datia Altman ,

who picked up his 200th victory as the Creighton head .
coach. "He doesn't score a
lot of points, so people don 't
understand the signit1c ance
he has for us."
Anthony Tolli ver led the
Bluejays with 13 points and
I0 rebounds before fouling
out with 43 seconds left in
regulation .
.
Creighton scored the first
five points of the overtime
with Jeffre y Day and Johnn y
Mathies hitting field goals
and freshman Dane Watt&gt;.
who had nine point, , making
a free throw. Ohio State 14- 1l
came back to tie it at 63 \\ ith
a 3-poi ntcr h:
Ton:
Stockman with 15 ;econd' Creighton's Nate Funk (10) looks to pass as ~e is fouled by
left.
· Ohio State's Matt Sylvester (40 ) during the second half of the
.champions hip game of the Guardians -ClaSS IC on Wednesday
Please see OSU, lil
111 Kansas City: Mo. Creighton won 65-63 in overt ime.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November

www.mydailysentinel.com

26, 2004

Friday, November 26, 2004 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Dai ly Sentinel • Page B3

Ohio coaching job and
Marshall's bowl chances
Butch
Cooper
THE BUTCHMEISTER
Going into the 2004 season. two things
were almost cenain.
Brian Kn01T was on the hot seat, and likely
on his way out as the Ohio football head
coach, and his replacement was already in
Athens.
Well , Knorr is gone and the search, or what
may seem like a search, has begun.
But. it 's only a formality.
The next head coach of the Bobcats is
already with the program.
Offensive coordinator and quarterbacks
coach Phil Earley was brought in during the
offseason not on ly to make big changes to the
Bobcat offense. but to prepare himself to take
over the program.
There 's no conspiracy here.
If Knorr could have pulled out a good season, he would still be the head coach this day.
And , bringing in Earley. last January was a
coup.
, This is a man who has led dynamic offenses at Idaho and Nevada. And the offense at
Ohio, especially at quanerback, has been a
problem for the Bobcats in recent years. Since
Jim Grobe left for Wake Forest, anyway.
· It was perhaps the best hiring that Director
cif Athletics Thomas Boeh has had since taking over the department.
But, Earley has been an offensive coordinator as various schools since 1996, so perhaps
it 's time for him to take that next step.
Besides. the Bobcats chances of latching on
to a high-profile head coach or even an assistant are very slim. Those coaches would either
want too much money or wouldn't be interested in relocating to southeastern Ohio.
So, th~t leaves Earley as a possible front
runner.
And it wouldn't be a bad choice.
Earley has been a coach since I986, when
he was an assistant at Western Washington.
Since then. he has traveled through out the
westem United States seeing and coaching
many styles of football from the Pacific 10 to
the Western Athletic Conference and the and
Mountain West. It wasn't until Ohio hired him
that he took his first coaching job on this end
of the Mississippi.
·Still, the Bobcats cou ld do a whole lot
worse.
The search committee will likely make their
decision by :-lew Year's Day.
MARSHALL'S

BOWL HOPES

Davis
from Page 81
coac hed at the University of
Miami before joining the
Browns in 2001 .
.Collins said there has been
no discussion with Davis
about other coaching opportunities. He also disputed
that Davis will be a lame
duck coach fo r the final six
weeks and said there has
been no discussion about the
coac h's status for 2005.
"Why would there be''' he
sa id . "The ultimate judgment is how well the plan is
going. How well do all the
constituents - the fans. the
media. the commu nity. the
business partners - ho\il
well does everyone buy into
that pl&lt;m'! Is it going well ''
Do people see progress? Are
they buy ing into it? Are they
excited about n'!
"If we're not showing
progreS&gt; and people aren ' t
bu ying into the plan there is
.a problem."
Collins was asked if the
team\ business partners

osu

from Page 81
J.J. Sullinger had 16 points

for Ohio State, including a
follow sho.t with eight seconds left that tied the game
and sent it into overtime.
Ivan Harris added l I paiNs,
but only two after halftime. .
· Creighton rallied from a
nine-point deficit with less
than ei~ht minutes to play in
~egulauon to take the lead
before Sullinger hit the final
Shot.
.· "I think our full-court press
got us going." McKinney
~aid. "We got some steals off
of it. We got ~orne energy
trom the press and it helped
pick us up. "
. The Buckeyes were up 4637 with "1 : I 8 left when John
Mathie.l made a 3-pc;Jinter.
Then freshman Dane Watts
l

Despite having one of the worst seasons in the
Bobby Pruett era, and a conference that wants
to boot out Marshall as soon as possible, the
Thundering Herd could still be playing that
extra game come December.
Right now, the Mid-American ConfereQce
has three guaranteed bowl games, the most in
the history of the league. But, don 't expect to
find the Herd playing in either the Motor City
Bowl, GMAC Bowl or the Silicon Valley
Classic.
Those will be reserved for Toledo, the MAC
West champs, MAC East champions Miami
and Bowling Green, which was a Top 25 team
before losing to Toledo Tuesday.
There are still plenty of possibilities for
Marshall due in part to a little scuffle at
Clemson.
Following a nasty tight that broke out
between Clemson and South Carolina last
Saturday, both schools have declined any
bowl bids that were likely to come their way.
That means that the Southeastern Athletic
Conference and the Atlantic Coast
Conference will each have one Jess bowl eligible team. Even prior to the rumble in "Death
Valley," these were two conferences that
struggled to fill their allotment of bowl
games.
That opens the door to the other bowl eligible teams out there.
At 6-5, Marshall is one of them.
Sure, they 're not an attractive team on the
field, but Herd fans travel well; better than
anyone else in the MAC. Bowls tend to like
that ..
So, that's good news.
The bad news for Marshall is the MAC.
With the Herd leaving, the league isn 't
going to promote Marshall to the respective
bowl committees. That means that the MAC
will likely push Northern Illinois and Akron
ahead of the Herd. And the conference does
have a big say in this since the bowl committees don't talk that often with individual
schools anymore.
The bowls that could come calling are the
MPC Computers Bowl (formally the
Humanitarian Bowl in Boise, Idaho), the
Independence Bowl and/or the Fort Wonh
Bowl. The latter could show how Marshall
may already benefit from going to Conference
USA.
.
C-USA has an affiliation with the Fan
Worth Bowl, but may not have enough bowl
eligible teams. That means that C-USA may
push for Marshall, a future member, to take
their place.
Not a bad way to begin in a new league,
huh'' ·
There's always the possibility of the Music
City Bowl as well. With an at-large spot and
Nashville's short distance from Huntington,
this seems like a good possibility.
The next week should prove to be interesting.

have expressed concern.
said Garcia, who will not
"Everyone has expressed start this week because df a
concern." he said.
shoulder injury. "Who
Davi s addressed his shaky knows what's going to hapstatus with Cleveland's play- pen in the offseason."
ers during a morning meetGarcia described Davi s
ing that must have been as as being upbeat.
awkward as any in his
Kicker Phil Dawson said
career.
Davis spent little time dealInstead of what would ing with hi s persona I
have normally been a discus- plight.
sion of Xs and Os,
"He was focused on the
defensive team zeroing in on this
Cincinnati's
sc hemes and putting pres- week 's
game,"
said
sure on Bengals quarterback Dawson, one of only two
Carson Palmer, Davis began Browns starters left from
by explaining his job was the 1999 expansion team.
safe - for the moment.
However. there were con- "He acknowledged all the
flicting reports in the locker stuff going on but said,
room about what exactly 'You've got to be able to
Davi s said. A few of the focus in the midst of all this
Browns got the impression stuff. We have six games to
Davis would be around for go, we're going to focu s on
· the remainder of the season . winning all six.'''
Others weren ' t so sure.
"I don't know," said safety
Earl Little. "I can't tell you .
I don't know what's going to
happen."
Quarterback Jeff Garcia
said Davis gave assurances
that he would be Cleveland 's
coach for anot her six weeks.
''He is here for the year."

.. If you have a question

or a

comment, write: NASCAR This

Week,

1893.

Gastonia,

NC 28053

Does Jr. get special treatment?
Awat'dJ. C81em011)',
' l ]),f!i., Del:. 3

.,. ){urt .Bus.cn

won th!!

Nextet

' ¢up ehamplonsh lp !l&amp;eause he
·· .w~s'.consistent and Junky, He
) f(j)lsned i~ \he toP 10 nine

tlmes in th&amp; "CMs.e races; but
ne .also .spun out

in three of
: them and had a tire fly off his
· ford in the final race. In each
of those lour races, Busch
managed to fight b~ck and fin·
.·. Ish In the top 10.
' ,. Had the old system been in
place, Jeff Gordon would have
won a fifth championship. Busch
woulo have been fourth, 247
points behind. Of course, the
old system wasn't in place,
meaning that au. the ·woulda,
coulda, shouldas • were irreleAP Photo

Florida State's Alexander Johnson (32) tries to grab a rebound in front of Shawnee State's
Richard Montague, top center, during the first half Wednesday in Tallahassee, t:fa. Florida
State won 88.£5.

Seminoles scalp Shawnee State
TALLAHASSEE,
Fla. loss to Texas A&amp;M-Corpus
(AP) - Adam Waleskowski Christi.
hit two free t.hrows and a
Shawnee State (2-3) Jed
jumper to ignite a 20-4 scar- 20-19 with 7:42 to play in
ing run to close the first half the first half but couldn't
as Florida State pulled away keep pace. The Bears turned
from Shawnee State for an the ball over 20 times and
88-65 victory on Wednesday were outscored 42-22 in the
night.
paint.
Alexander Johnson scored
Adam Davenpon led
I4 points and grabbed nine Shawnee State with 16
rebounds,
while points and nine rebounds.
Waleskowsk! and Von Wafer . Florida State pushed its
added 10 potnts each for the lead to 20 points six minutes
Seminoles (2- I), who were into the second half and the
coming off a Monday' night Bears never got closer than

I2. Nine Seminoles scored at
least six points, led by the
freshmen guard trio of Isaiah
Swann, Ralph Mims and
Jason Rich, who combined
for I0 assim and 2 I points
on 7-of-13 shooting.
The two teams were paired
in the second-round of the
six-team Corpus Christi
Challenge, which continues
thi s weekend in Texa s.
Florida State will meet Kent
State on Saturday and close
the
round-robin
event
Sunday against TCU.

2005 year Food Service Operation (FSO) and. Retail Food Establi shment (RFE) fees
Effecive t2/l/2004 the State ponion ofFSO &amp; RFE license fees raises from $25.00 to $28.00 each
for lice~se and from $5.00 to $6.00 for each vending location.
·
Effective 1/1/05 the FSO &amp; RFE license fees in Meigs County wii'l be us follows:
LEVEL AREA
Local Fee
State Fee
+
=
Risk Level I, Jess than
25.000 '4· ft.
$29.90
+
$28.00
=
Level 2, less than
25,000 sq.ft
$99.57
+
$28.00
=
Level 3. less than
25,000 sq.ft
$202.67
$28.00
+
=
Level 4, Jess than
25.000 sq.ft
$260.57
+
$28.00
=
Level I,
25,000 sq.ft and over
$131.57
$28.00
+
=
Level 2
25,000 sq Jt and over
$139.18
+
$28.00
=
Level 3
25,000 sq .ft and over
$527.73
28.00
+
=
Lcvel4
25,000 sq.ft and over
$560.23
+
$28.00
=
Mobile Operations
$125.00
$28 ()()
+
=
Temporary • by the event
$30.00
+
$0.00 '
=
Vending Machines $15.82
+ Cost of living increase
$6.00
+
=

Total
$57.00
$127.14
$2.10.67
$2~8.5 7

$159.97
$167. 18

$588.23
$153.00
$30.00
,. Who's hot? Nextet Cup champi·
on Kurt Busch closed the sea·
son with nine top-10 fin1shes 1n
the last 10 races . .. . Jimm 1e
Johnson lost the totte by only
eight points and won four of the
final six "chase races.~ ... Ever·
conSistent Mark Marlin finished
in the top 15 in 14 of the final
15 races.

$6+COLA

Meigs County Health Department
Mullberrry Heighs

Pomeroy

•

992-6626

HOMESTEAD, Fla . NASCAR 's daring strategist
said all along it would go
down to the end, and. boy, did
it. The sport's first season of
roller derby went down to a
rip-roaring conclus ion, with
the fina l race and the champi·onshiJ) hanging on every lap.
The Ford 400 - and , by
extension , the Ne&lt; te l Cup
season- had an e&lt;citing fin·
ish on Sunday, one that. un·
fortunate ly, seemed almost
insignificant.

most eyes were focused a few
car lengths back. where -the
race that tasted for 10 tong
weeks was being dec1ded.
Th ere. Kurt Busch was
nailing down hi s cham pi·
onship, and all the riches and
status that come 'w1th it. with
faultless precision. Busch finished fifth , which made Jimmie Joh nson's second-place
finish and Jeff Gordon's third
irrelevant. For all those math·
emati ca lty in "the Chase:

-the race, 1n effect. went
into overt1me - B1ffle was
the winner, but Busch, his
teammate. was the champi -

· this ra ce was never about

won four championships in

his retat1vety brief but already
legendary career.
Maybe next year.

While Greg Biffle - one of

winning. It was about the big

the best racers ever to w1n
two races in a single season
and do 'Ve ry little else -was

pi cture, and Busch took the
b1g pict ure with a Nikon camera disgui sed as a race car.

dueling with Tony Stewart,

At the end of 406.5 mites

2004

Kevin Ha rvick won the

Ford 300, his second victory
of the season, and Martin

Truex Jr. wrapped up the
he
had
championship
clinched the week before.
Truex, driving the No . 8
Chevrolet co·owned by Date

on. B1ffte wound up .342 of a
second ahead of Johnson.
Busch wound up eight pomts
ahead of Johnson and 16
ahead of Gordon. Johnson

Earnhardt Jr. and Teresa

was second 1n the race and
second in the points stand-

Earnhardt , wound up 230
points ahead of Kyle Busch.

~ngs for the second stra1ght
year. Gorilon fell shy in his
"drive for fove.' having already

- Monte Dullon

Ka sey Kahne ha s ne'Ve'r
lost in the trucks. He followed up a 'VICtory in Darlington w1th another at Home -

stead 1n the Ford 400. Those
are h1s only career starts m
the ser1es.

,. Who's not? Jeremy Mayfield
wound up 506 points behind
Busch after making "the
Chase: ... Likewise for Elliott
Sadler, whO finished ninth, 482
points off the pace.... Tough
year for Kyle Petty, who failed to
post a single top-10 finish this

HOLZER
CLINIC

1pm·6:30pm
12pm-6:30pm

Friday, November 26
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson and Athens Facilities

1pm-9pm
12pm-9pm
9am-9pm

Saturday, November 27
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson .and Athens Facilities
S1.1nday, November 28
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson and Athens Facilities

v

NEXTEL CUP CHAMPION

E
R

Ryan
Newman
.,

No. 97 holds on for dear life, wins first points championship
By Monte Dutton
NASCA8 This Week

I

s
u
s

Newman . who ted the Ford 400
unttl ttre failure sen t h1s Dodge slidIng into the wall , intimated that a failure to keep the track clean co ntributed to his problems . "It was

ters it. Kurt, once he makes a mistake,
dedicates himself to rectifying it, and
that's a remarkable attribute in a
young man."
When Busch became a rookie, arriving in Cup years before most expected
it, there were many things for him to
learn . He wanted to be great for at
least a year before he was capable of
pulling it off. But Busch always wanted to win. He was never interested in
paying hi s dues and plying liis trade.
He's from Las Vegas, and people from
Vegas know all about being stars.
"I thought I was supposed to win ,"
Busch said, "and if you had to run
over people, so be it."
Then Roush paired him with
Jimmy Fennig, a mechanic
who had worked with
great veteran drivers like Mark Martin and Bobby AI·
lison. Fennig had
never worked
with a driver
who was raw
and unpolished.
Somehow, it
worked. Almost
immediately, in
2002, Busch's
career took off.
"Now," Busch
said, "l under·
stand 'the big ger eth ic.' It
rook me th e
first couple of
years to learn
that though.
''Fi nally, I have
pieced together
what it takes to be a
champion ."
Obviously.

HOMESTEAD, Fla.
When the
first Nextel Cup season began , a new
means of deciding the championship
came along with the corporate sponsor. The new format wasn't Nextel's
invention. NASCAR's leaders hip just
decided it was time for a change.
By separating the season into 26 introductory races followed by a 10·
race "Chase," a championship for mat resulted that inevitably produced a close r championship
race.
Kurt Busch took advantage of
a surpri se system to become a surprise champion. The 26-year-old
driver, NASCAR's third-·
youngest champion ever,
won only three times all
year, but the key ingredient wa s consis tency down the
Busch,
stretch .
from Las Vegas,
finished in the top
10 nine times in
the final 10 races.
A fifth-place finish in the Ford 400
at Home stead-Mi·
ami Speedway enabled Busch to
hold off Jimmie
Johnson , who won
eight rqces during the season. including four during "the Chase,"
by eight points.
Jeff Gordon finished 16 points behind Busch.
"Once he understands how something works," said Jack
Roush, the team owner, of
Busch, "he goes out and mas-

pretty embarrassmg that NASCAR
d1dn"t clean up the track when it was
in that condi tion." he said. "The

track had a lot of debris on it all day.
Before the race even started, it
looked like they couldn't even blow
the deb riS off 1t ... It's very disappointing. but 1t's pretty convenient

and on par for NASCAR."
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dullon gives his lake : ·Many picked
Newman to w1n the championship
th1s year. He barely made 'the
Chase' and wound up seventh in the
standmgs Perha ps it's just a case of
all tt1e frustrat1ons pi!1ng up."

W

ith Darlington apparently goIng by the ways1de (soon). my
suggest1on wou ld be to use it
for the NASCAR all-star race the week
before the (Coca·Colal 600. Sort of
loke the Ha ll of Fame baseball game
at Cooperstown (N.Y.). Nexte l has
been runn 1ng ads m1x1ng the old w1th

the new. so they could bnng the old
cars from the museum out for a parade around the track 1n addit iOn to
hononng the ret1red dnvers. It's St ill
near Ct1arlotte so the dnvers shou ld·
n't 1111nd rac1ng there. It would be a
barnbu rner.
AI Torney

Annapo li s, Md.
Great idea. Wed like ro see it.

I

n my OPIO &gt;On. NASC AR ~en t too far
when they sold the advertising
r~ghts to voctory lane. NASCAR has

many chances to push the ~r sponsors. as we are rem1nded all the time

hOw "th iS NASCAR event has been
brought to you by ·wh oever.'· If they

1ns1st on sel lrng VICto ry lane, I don 't
thmk 1tshould overpower the wmning
car ana dnver I th1nk victory lane
shoulo be reserved for the winn1ng
car ana dnver to strut the1r stuff, including the1r sponsors.

Conta ct Mont e Dutton at
hmd4858@peoplepc .com

leonard A. Wllllame
Beckley, W.Va.

-

Valley

&amp; Supply
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611

1pm-9pm
12pm-9pm
9am-9pm

')

Ryan Newman
vs. NASCAR officials

season.

Thanksgiving Day
Main Facility
Jackson, Athens, Meigs Facilities

Rumors woll always pers1st tha! Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1s NASCAR's
·chosen one." and tllat certa1n events occur for hiS benefit.
It's pertonent to note though, that ot was Earnhardt Jr whoreceived the "curs1ng on 1\1' fine from NASCAR that greatly hindered
him 1n his brd for a champ 1onsh rp. Two BusCh Series drivers were
punished for simrlar behavioral issues earlier in the season .
But. when Earnhardt was a guest on the Speed Channel show
~ w ind Tunner a week or so ago. host Dave Despa in broached
the subject head-on. and that's the way Earnhardt reacted.
"That (hrs gettrng preferential t reatment) was a legitimate argument maybe two years ago." he said. ··vou hear that more and
more and more from a lot of peop le. and it seems to change
NASCAR's position towards me. where the clam ps are a little
tighter. Every little thing I do rs scrutinized and manipulated.
"I fee l lrke personally, I thrnk rt's fa1r to say, that I'm watched
pretty cto~e t y by NASCAR, maybe not more so than other guys.
There rs a bunch of us rn the series that maybe needs a little extra
attention. I think NASCAR has been faor on all of their judgments,
both pro and con with me. good and bad. I th onk 1t's evened out.
NASCAR couldn't ru n a legrtrmate business rf there was a teacher's
pet. I don't think anyone can truly agree w1th that."

vant..
,. Chevrolets have dominated the
past two seasons, and yet Ford
drivers . both representing Jack
Roush's team, have won the two
most recent championships.
Chevrolet drivers won 22 of the
36 races, matching a standard
Chevrolet previously achieved 1n
1980.
,. For the first time since 1993.
there were no first-time winners .
For the first time since 1999 . .
there were no rookie winners .
,. Homestead winner Greg Biffle
won twice this year but finished
only 17th in the points stand Ings . He only finished in the top
f1ve two times in races he did·
n1t win.
,. The Hendrick Motors ports drivers finished second (Jimmie
Johnson). th ird (Jeff Gordon).
25th (Brian Vickers) and 26th
(Terry Labonte). Not exactly consistent. huh?
• Johnson won fi ve more races
than Busch . fin ished in the top
f1ve 10 more times. had two
more top-10 finishes and won
$1,572,292 more money. The
money, of course. witl change
once Busch collects the $5 mit·
lion·ptus that goes with being
champ.
• Thirteen dri\le rs won more money than Busch based on earn·
ings derived from race fin ishes.
,. Only two of the top 10 posit ions in the points standings
changed hands in the final race.
Mark Martin and Date Earnhardt
Jr. switched places, with Mart1n
moving up to fourth.
,. Only David Pearson won more
than one championship whi le
driving a Ford. Pearson won 1n
1968 and 1969 white driving
Torinos fielded by the famed
Holman·Mood)' team.

$555.73

Urg.ent Care Hours
Thanksgiving Weekend

made a backcoun steal and
fed McKinney, who was
fouled making a lay-up.
McKinney also made his free
throw, cutting the Ohio State
lead to three points in a 12second span.
"We're up by nine and they
get six stratght points without
us getting the ball back,"
Ohio State coach Thad Matta
said. "That was a killer right
there." .
Funk said it turned around
the game to favor he and his
fellow Bll!ejays.
Altman agreed.
"Those were two big plays
that really changed the
momentum of the game,"
Altman said. "That changed
the comeiexion of the game
real fast. '
.
.
The two · schools were
meeting for the· fir.1t time
since Dec. 30, 1972, when
Eddie · Sutton
coached
Creighton w a 79-71 victory
in Omaha.' ·

C/O The Gaston Gazette , P.O. Box

Thanks for letting us know how you
feel. A lot of people agree witn you.

CHECK .
OUT THESE
WINNERS!

'fou'wQatQ&amp;-ttiCIII~o, wntlltAI'-na.

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'

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 26,

The Daily Sentinel • Page Bs

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

I

Cleveland
Browns quarterback
Jeff
Garcia stands
on the sidelines
in the second
quarter of the
Browns
10-7
loss to the New
York
Jets
Sunday
in
Cleveland.
Garcia sprained
the rotator cuff
in his right
shoulder in the
first half of the
game and has
been unable to
throw a football
this week , but
won't rule out
starting Sunday
against
the
Bengals.

national footba ll league
WR Johnson more low-key for this Sunday
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press
CINCINNATI Chad
Johnson isn't sending anythino
to Cleveland this week.
"
No handwritten note&gt;. No
bottles of Pepto-Bismol. No
promises about touchdown
dances. Nothing that would
fue up the Browns and upset
his own head coach ·s stomac:h.
Even his comments were
tame. a 'ign that the Cincinnati
Bengals have taken coach
Marvin Lewis· outburst to
heart - for at least one week.
anyway.
Asked on Wednesday if he
was doing anythinli.. special
this week. the chatt\' I-'m Bowl.
receiver etrec:tivelv dammed
up.
"Yeah. playing football." he
said.
That was it.
Johnson isn't about to add
any spice to a game that really
could use some. TI1e Browns
(3-7) have staggered out or
playoff content ion with four
consecutive losses. fu eling
speculation that coach !Jutcli
Davis will be fired.
The Bengals t.f-6) aren't a
whole lot better. playing so
poorly that Lewis reached his
breaking point and &gt;Creamed
at his team following a 19- 14
loss to Pittsburgh on Sunday.
Both teams have a lot bigger
concems than a few small bottles of antacid .
"They're down. They ' re
reeling." quarterback Carson
Palmer said. "But we' re reeling. too."
y~
It was nothin ~ like this when
they met on~ Oc:t. 17 in
Cleveland with a grudge to be
settled. Johnson had angered
some of the Browns with his
latest prank: He se nt bottles of
Pepto-Bismol to fou r defensive backs with handwritten
notes warning thev·d get sick
trying to cover hini . ~
It got quite a reaction.
"I threw it in the trash, .. safety Robert Gri!Tith said in a
conference call Wednesday. " I
told him after the game I
thought it was disre, pectfu l to

AP Photo

Garcia not sure if
he'll face Bengals

~

Bv JoE ·MtuctA
Associated Press
Ck1c land
Bruwn' quarterback Jeff
Uarcia · ha' hL'l'll tmab lc to
throw a foo lhall thi s week.
hut won't rull' out ~tart im.!
HEREA

AP Photo

Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chad Johnson , top. catches .a 36-yard touchdown pass against
Pittsburgh Steelers defender Deshea Townsend. bottom, during the first half Sunday in Cincinnati.
senLI th em. I g: ue . . ~ I'm just u against Pittsburgh. He also eyes off the ba ll as he l·aught
little olu &gt;ehoul. You just don 't urged lcms to bring bottle, of it . and lixed the problem in
do tha t."
·
Pepto-Bi smnl to tl1e Bmwns practice th e next week.
The 1okeJ backtired. The game.
John~on i ~ nn p:tcl' to lla\'e
The locker room tone is ~~ catches fi1r l.:!n\1 yarcb.
tired-up Browns rolled to a 3417 "in. and Johnson ll&lt;td hi' more serious this week. appar- Last season. he made his lirst
wnr-·.t game - I hree catches ently the re;ult of Lewis dia- Pro Bowl with 90 catches fi&gt;r a
for 37 yards anu three dropped tribe. Johnson also has ;omc- club-recond I J55 yards. th e
thing else on his mind - hav- must in the Americ;i1ovpas-..e ....
Some nf the Browns defen - ing a much better showin u Conference.
sive hacks took Johnsu n\ against Cleveland than tile laSi
The game a~ainst Clcl'elanu
tongue-in-cheek antacid ~i fl time.
"I had the worst game of my was bv r,;r his worst.
the ._way it was meant .
. .__
Cornerh:tck Alllhony Henry
"I h:tven·t used it at al l.'' career. a very un foc used game. diU a gnnU joh guanl ing him .
sakty Earl
Litt le said one that r 11 prnbabl y never.
Wednesuay. chuckling ... 1 still ever have again.'· Johnson and Johnson dropped the ball
have it. Its still in my medi- said. ''I'm looking forward to most of the times l1c got open.
" I helped them out."
heing consistent like I've been
cine cabinet:·
Johnstm said. a hint of bragFor one week. the self-pro- since that point."
gadocio
returnin g to hi~ ton'e .
Johnson
was
haunted
hy
his
motion i~ gone from John~on·s
one
stopped
me : I stopped
"No
bag of trids. And that \ a bad game. losi ng sleep whi le
nnlahl e ~ham.!e.
~
!lying to fig ure out how he myself. Coming into thi s one
He had Le\vis playing dam- could drop so many passes Sunday. I've got to he comage control last week when he atier rai.sing the stakes so high pletely focused, which I wi ll
promised a new touchdown with his Pcpto prank. He con- be. It 's going . lo be a goou
celebration for the game cluded tha t he was taking his une."

Sundav a~uin'-l 1hc Ci 1icHH1ai"i

. Be n g al &gt;.~
·
Garcia sprai ned the rotatur
cull in his richt sl10uldc r in
Sunday's los~ to the :'\cw
York Jets. He said i1 '"''
improving Wcune .,day. but l1c
st iII couldn ·t pract icc.
''I'll · continue to prepare
mentally. coiuinu c to prepare
as if I'm going to play the
game:· Gar"t!ia .said. "Whether
I can play on Sunda! is real ly
a question mark right nn\v:·
The inj ury is unlike any
he's had. Garcia said. and not
something the gutty quarte rback can just play through.
"The strengt h i~ nul c,·cn
near I00 percent and not in a
position to whe re I can make
a throw... he said.
If Garcia can practice by
Friday. he .said he'd probab ly
tell ,·uach Butch Davi ., he can

play. If not, Davi s wou ld likely give Ke ll y Holcomb his
first start or the season.
"You'd li ke any opportuni ty to go out on the field and
show what you can do,''
Holcomb 'aid. " I don't take
that for ~runted."
Holcolnb failed to lead the
Browns to any points last
week when he filled in for
Garcia in .the second half,
completin g ju't 4 of 10 passes for .'2 yards.
If Holcomb struggles again.
the em battled Davis co uld
turn to rookie Luke McCown,
his fm1rth-ro und draft pick.
McCown said he's getting
better and more confident
eacl1 week. He is the younge r
brother of Arizona quarterhack Josh McCown. who was
rec ently benched.
" I feel like if they put me in,
I could play and I fee l like I
could put the team in a good
.si tuation:· Luke McCown
said. " If thev call me. I' ll he
ready. John Elway had to start
&gt;&lt;Hncwherc. Peyton Mam1ing
had to start from somewhere ...

national football league
With Burress out, Steelers need
WR Ward to pick up his game
By· ALAN ROBINSON
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH - Losing
receiver
Plaxi co
wide
Burress for at least o ne
game will be diffic ul t
enoug h for the Pittsburgh
Steeler&gt; . Getting Hines
Ward back would partly
make up for Burre ss·
absence.
Ward hasn't missed a
game in his seven-season
career. bu t he 's been noti ceably abse nt of late from th e
Steelers offense. With
Burress out for Sunday's
home

game

aga inq

the

Redskin s (3 -7 ). the Stec lers
(9- 1) badly need Ward to
again . be the productive
receiver he has been most or
hi s career.
The three-time Pro Bowl
receiver know s it. too. after
bein g limited to three catches fo r 15 y&lt;irds in Sunday's
19- 14 victory at Cincinnati.
Ward ha s only eight catche s
for 89 yards in his last three
games - well off hi s seven
catches ·per ga me pace during his first seven ga mes .
" I ·have to ra ise · my
game:·
Ward
sa id
Wedne sday. " Hopefully. he
(offen sive coord inator Ken
Whisenhunt ) will put me in
some great opportunitie., . to
make some plays."
Ward , who has averaged
I 00 catches per seaso n since
200 I, ha sn' t had such an
un produc ti ve three-game
stretch since ear ly in the
2000 season. hi ' first as a
starter.
Now. with the 5-foot-1 0
Antwaan Randle El starting
rather than the 6-5 Burress.
Ward is likely to see ·even
more doubl e coverage than
usual from Washington's

":_,
.....
.....
'

No. ~-ranked defense.
E1·en if he's not sure that
is po ssib le.
' TI'C heen see in g tt.
Ward said. "Some games
the y're pi..:king and choosing wh ich guy to take out of
that particu lar play: · Jt's
second dol\n. so we're
going to play Cc)\er 2 to
Hinc &gt;' ; ide. lt '.s first down.
we·r~ go ing lo play Cover 2
to Plax·s ''de.·
··We're both ge ttin g our
fair sha r~ of doub le coverage to our side . 8t1t when it

-l

Associated Press

Bv JoE KAY
Associated Press
Jihad
CINCINNATI
Muhammad never hesitates to
shoot - not when the misses
are piling up, not when the
game's on the line .·
The point guard's four-point
play completed an 18-point
comeback in regulation , and
Jason Maxiell had a breakaway dunk in the second overtime Wednesday night that
clinched Cincin nati's 76-70
victory over Northern Iowa in
the Las Vegas Holiday Classic.
Northern Iowa (1-1 ). returning the core of a team that won
its first Missouri Valley
Conference tournament titl e
last season, pulled ahead by 18
points in the second half
against a poor-shooting team
but couldn't hold on.
Cincinnati (2-0) tied it at 56
in regulation on Muhammad \
four-point play with I :23 to
go. The Bearcats shot only
28.6 percet]t from the field, but
made up for it by dominatin g
the boards down the stretch
and forcin g 22 turnovers .
Cincinnati's
Armein
Kirkland missed a 3-pointer in
the closing seconds of the first
overtime. leaving it tied at 64.
Eric Hi ck,· putback and
Maxiell's dunk gave the
Bearcats a seven-point lead in
the second overtime.
Muhammad led Cincinnati
with 23 points , hut wa.s only 6of-22 from the field . including
4-of-15 from behind the arc.
" He's not afraid tn take big
shots," coach Bob Hugg ins
sai d of the junior college transfer. "His re putation coming in
was he 's not afraid to take big
shots and make big shots. He
did that.
"I think he took a few more

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than I wanted him to take, to
be honest with you. It's a fine
line. I certainly don't want to
screw up his
confidence, but
I'd
like
to
enhance his deci.s i on- m a k i n g
skills a little bit."
Asked if he
ever hesitates to
s h oot,
Muhammad had
a
one-word
reply.
"Never," he said, with a
smile.
Maxiell added 21 points and
15 rebounds for Cincinnati.
Erik Crawford had 16 for
Northern Iowa and Brook s
McKowen scored 13.
The ex,mpt tournament features six teams playing a
round-robin format on local
campuses. then meeting in Las
Vegas for the final games in
late December. No. 5 Illinoi s,
Longwood ,
Northwestern
State and Valparaiso fill out
the field .
The tournainent uses ex perimental rules - the lane is 3
feet wider, the 3-point arc is
moved back 9 inches to 20
feet. 6 inches. There's also a
"no-charge" zo ne under the
baskct simil ar to the one used
in the NBA.
Both . teams struggled to
&gt;core at the outset - it was 9all with just over 10 minu tes
left in th e first half. Northern
Iow a missed its first six shots,
and Ci ncinnati opened in a 2for-14 fu nk against a packedin defense.
Nort hern Iowa emerged
from it.' slump with a crowd hushing run. McKowe n made
a three-po in t play and a drivi ng layt1p in a 12-2 spurt that
pushed it to 24- 13.
The Panth ers· three-guard

offense repeatedly made open
shots on the perimeter as they'
led by as many as 14 in the
first half.
Huggins kept his cold-shooting team in the locker room for
the. entire halftime break .
Kirkland took their only two
warmup shots when they
returned to the floor - and
missed them both. Maxiell
then missed a dunk off a
rebound to open the second
half.
The Bearcats were stunned.
"We were all thinking ,
'Wow,"' Maxiell said. "All
week long we heard Huggs
say ing _ Northern Iowa can't
come in here and beat us. We
·did slack off a bit."
McKowen hit bookend 3pointers in a 10-point spurt
that gave Northern Iowa its
biggest lead, 44-26. wit h 14:46
left. Cincinnati was shootin g
only 22.9 percent at that point.'
That's when the Panthers
went into a funk.
"When your team gets an
18-point lead . yo ur coach
needs to bring ·em home and I
didn' t do that .'' coach Greg
McDermott said. "This one's
on me.
"I backed them off a little
bit. We had guys in foul trouble, got the 18-poi nt lead and
decided to run a little bit of
clock before we initiated ou r
offense. We had foul trouble s
that forced us to play a small
lineup that we really didn't
want to play, an.d we were out
of sy nc."
Freshman Roy Bright hit a
pair of short jumpers. starting a
26-8 spurt that sen t it to overtime. Muhammad hit a pair of
3\ in the run. then tied the
game with his four-point play.
He mi ssed two shots th at could
have put Ci ncinnati ahead at
the end of regulation.

NEW YORK - One of the byproducts of
last weekend's NBA brawl could be 'a poisoned atmosphere in collective bargaining
talks.
At a time when they should be negotiating a
new labor agreeme nt, lawyers for the NBA and
the players· union are about to fight a side battle - an appoal of the lengthy suspensions
give n to Ron Artcst. Stephen Jackson and
Jermaine 0' Neal - that could exacerbate an
already contentious relationship.
Just six years ago, the league and union went
through a lengthy lockout that forced cancellation of nearly half of the 1998-99 season.
That was a low point, and nearly all the principle players from that battle - starting with
NBA commissioner David Stern and union
director Billy Hunter and including most of the
staff attorneys- still hold the same jobs.
"This is a relationship that's dysfunctional at
best. The well is already so poisoned, it would
be difficult to . poison it even more." said
Robert Lanza. labor attorney who was the
lead in-house counsel for the Players
Association during the 1998-99 1ockout. ''A lot
of issues that should be dealt with as a team are
not dealt with that way.''
The union's attomeys asked Tuesday that an
arbitrator review the suspensions Stem handed
out tu Artest (the rest of the se&lt;t,on), Jackson
(30 games) and O'Neal (25 games) for brawling with fans at Friday ni ght's Pacers-Pistons
game. .
. _
. .
.
Sole diScretiOn m dec1dmg pum.shment for
on-court behavior rests with the commissioner,
who also is the only avenue of appeal.
The union wants to maneuver around that
.. rule, which is in the col lective bargaining
agreement. by t1ying to send the case to an
arbitrator. Roger Kaplan. who wa;, relieved of
his duties two month;, ago when the owners
declined to renew hi.s tenn.
The league and the union have not agreed on
a replacement for Kaplan. the emergency
gri eva nce arbitrator until hi s succe%or is
nan1ed.
"I don't know what involvement. if any, I'll
have with his case." Kaplan said Wednesday,
declining further comment.
If recent hi story provides a guide, Kaplan
could be the emergency arbitrator for quite
some' time. The post or systems arbitrator. to
resolve salary cap-related disputes. has been
vacant since Kenneth Dam left in 200 I.
because the sides haven't agreed on a replacement.
Prelim inary collective bargaining negotia-

a

National
Basketball
Association
Commissioner David Stern pauses as he
answers reporters' questions after he
announced a handful of suspens 1ons resulting from a brawl that erupted dunng a Nov.
19 game between the Indiana Pacers and
the Detroit P1stons. dunng a hastily called
news conference Sunday.

•

tions have been desc1ibcd as cordial. Each side
has already defin ed its major area' of concern.
but wide gaps rem ain 011 many or the major
core Issues.
Neither side wants a repeat of the battle
waged six years ago. hut there is a growing
concern among players that another lockout
could be comi ng.
.,, feel it's inc~vitabl e:· Toronto·, Jalen Rose
said earlier d1i1 season.
Absent some sort or conciliatory gc,ture
from Stern. the relati onship between the league
and union in the weeks and month' ahead ligure;, to remain advcrsarial at best.
People close to Stern and Hunter say there is
some uneasiness between the two men. and the
union's decision to fight the suspen;ion, does n't tig ure to strengthen the relationship. Each
side doesn 't entirely trust the other. and no gestures of compromise were made as the
unprecedented events of the past week unfolded,
"We can still do both . We can lit i~ate the suspensions and negotiate the CBA: One iss ue
should not impact the oth er... Hu.nter said.
Stem. through a spokesman . declined comment.

tn. I.I

improve if they are to truly be
worthy of their lofty rankin,g.
The coach rattled them off
like a kid reciting a holiday
gift list.
"We have a world of things
to work on and correct." he
said . "] think our proclivity to
turn the ball over. our lack of
exec ution offensive ly, our
· b. I.
1
h' h
Ina t ll y to s 1001 a tg perce ntage of free throws. All of
those things we really need to
get better at in order to play as
well as we'd like 10 play."
Against Providence, Wake
Forest missed 10 of 23 free
throws. had 16 turnovers and
h d tl t 1
f t 1 If d
a
la ong IrS - la
ry
spe ll. The bottom line.
though, is the Deacons posted
another double-digit victory.
"!liked that we battled toeto-toe with them." Providence
coach Tim Welsh said. "I
thought we guarded them
pretty stro ng. We're close .
We're close where we can
compete wi th a Top 25-type ·
team. But close doesn't get'

Forest coac h Skip Prosser
another week or so. and he' ll
. have a better handle on just
how good th e No. I Demon
Deacons are and just how
good the y can be.
Like most teams at thi s
stage of the season, Wake is
seekin g its identity. learning
its strengths and weaknesses .
Prosse r is ju st as interested as
anybody to find out how it all
will play out.
So far, so good.
"I think. when all is said
and done next Sunday, we
will have played seven games
against maybe five or six
teams that will be in postseaso n pl ay," Pros ser said .
"Comin g out of the ga te.
we ' re playing a challengi ng
schedule .··
Wake
beat
George
Wa shin gton and Virginia
Commonwealth in the fir st
two rounds of the Preseason you much.''
Now Wake gets Arizona, a
NIT, added a non-tournament team that nourishes in thi s
win over Yale, then followed month and in this tournament.
that with a 79-fl7 se mifinal Under coach Lute Olson . the
victory over Providence in Wildcats
are 49-9
in
the semifinals at Madison November and have won
three Preseasqn NIT litles.
Square Gmden.
The tough early stretch con- They beat Michigan 61-60 in
tinues Friday, when the overtime Wednesday, domiDemon Deacons play No. 18 . nating the backboards 54-4 1
Arizona in the ch ampion~hip 10 make up for some erratic
game of the Preseason NIT. shooting from the field .
after
Michigan
meets Arizona shot just 3 1.4 percent
Providence in the consolation and made just one of eight
game.
shots in overti me.
Next week, Wake plays at
"We need to shoot the hall
Illinois and hosts Ri chmond. better if we're going tu be a
By then, Prosser said, he good team," Olson said.
will know a lot more about
Michigan coac h Tommy
his t~am.
.
.
. Amaker was pleased with his
W&lt;1ke
. •s e f-1·or1 ". ga 1
·11st
Ar1·7.on ·a.
. Forest.
. h No.h I tor.
r the . 1e,ml
.
fitrst tlf!le m, l e. sc 00 ;s ,99. "I saw a lot of toughness in
year hlstor). was somcw iMt our kid s." he sa id ... , thought
tnconSisten t 111 th~ VICtory · it was the. type of game you
over
P1ov1dence
on would ordinarily see later in
Wednesday
mghL The the year in co nference play. I
Deacons put on a clllliC early, was ve-r y pleaseu."
racm g · to an 18-pmnt lead.
Olson took a peek at Wake
then _we nt stone cold. score-_ and was suitably imjJresscd .
"Just in term s of watching
less _tor the l &lt;ISt 6 m111utes ol
the first halt. lettmg the Fnars the amount of the ga me thm I
•
did with Wake Fore.st. I mean.
back in the game.
"] ·thought the first 15 min - th ey definitely deserve to be
ut es, we played ahout as well in that No. I spot." Ol;on
as we could play ... Pro"er &gt;a id . "The y arc physical.
said.
The; IJ&lt;l\'e ~rea l alhletrs: and
And then ·•
the\ h'a\l' n cc Iknt de pi h ...
Well , then, they didn't.
And in a . week or so.
The reversal left Pru s., er Pmsscr wi ll ha\·e a better
with a list of thin gs he nee&lt;b scn,e of just llllw much they
the Demon Deacons Ill can acco111pl"h .

AP Photo

•

No. 1 Wake Forest is
a work in progress
NEW YORK _ Give Wake

covcrugc.

··E-mail your ·sports news to:
sports@mydailysentinetcom

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

BY HAL BocK
Associated Press

aged nearly 12 yards on
seven pt)nt returns.
Randl e El is confident
th at he can get open, eve n
though Redskin s cornerbacks Fred Smoot and
Shawn Spr ings prefer to
lock up receivers at the line
of scrimmage whi le frequent ly playing man -to-man

''I'm not too worried
about that. " Randle El sa id.
"That's not . my worry.
Actua ll y. I'm not sure if I' m
worried about anythi ng too
much , j ust getting the plays
down. Now that he's nut
r ve go t to pic k it up and go
in there and be able to make
the plays."
Randle El. th e former
Indiana quarterback , normally is the slot receiver
when the Steelers go to a
three-rece iv er &gt;et. Thi'
come" t1me fur U\ to make week, he sl ides over to split
play,. we·,·c: both don~ end iri two-re ceiver se ts but
th;,t. '' he sa il! .
returns to the slot when Lee
To aut! some '· depth at M&lt;Jys comes in as a third
recci\cr. the Stee lers re- rece1 ver.
signed wide receiver Ch ri s
--rm excited for Randle
Doering
w ho
wu~
becau~e he· ~ going to go om
released a week into the and do fine ... said Burress ,
seaso n - and released run who is confident that he wil l
nin g bacK Dante Brown on
mi'\s only one game with 41
Wednesday.
Randl e El is a much sprained hamstring.
Burress IS looki ng forsma ller targe t than Burress
for unbeaten mokie qumtcr- ward to the Steelers play 111g
back Ben Roethlisberger. nine more games - six in
whu is coming oll lhe worst the regular season and three
of his e ight career 'tarts. in th e playoffs - so he
Roeth l i'h~rg e r wa\ "ackcU doesn ' t think missing one
'even times hy the !Jcngals game ,hould di.,rupt his -..ea ·
and hegan vacating the ~on.
Nine more game~. of
pocket frequently when he
could n' t fino Ward ,,. co urse, wou ld ge t the
Steclcrs to the Super !Jowl.
Randle El open.
" I'm not afraid to ~ay it,"
Ward had onl~ one c&lt;~tch
itfter Burress left early in Burre&gt;s 'aid. "Maybe the y
the second quarter. R&lt;1ndlc don't want me to. hut. he y.
El had onlv two catches for that's the way yo u've got to
17 yard,. -th ough he (1\Cr· think in thi s bu siness."

College Basketball
Fight over brawl suspensions
Bearcats survive double-overtime could affect labor negotiations
scare from Northern Iowa, 76-70

I

Farmers Bank
Special
.Holiday Loan Rates!
'

Everyone wants a little extra cash at the holidays, so they can express their love and gratitude
to their friends and family with extra-special presents. Here's our gift to you- Farmers Bank's
traditional "Holiday Loan " special with exceptional rates and terms that makes borrowing
anywhere from _$500 to $1,500 easy! For example:

Borrow $1,000
for
only
$86.97
a
month!
··
12 Month Term

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
', ···r, ,.

. .•" ' .
, .. ·

"

•,

'

..

.................
WUFUN&amp;V ,
~

"'

•
•
•
•

Pomeroy 992.2136
Mason 773.6400
'
Tuppers Plaw&gt; t&gt;6 ' 31 61
Gallipolis 446.2265 · -~

• www.fbsc.com

Mem ber FDIC

�Friday, November 26, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 26, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

\I I IH 11\'-llhl

Real Estate

Real Estate

~ribune-

Sentinel- ~eglster
CLASSIFIED

G&lt;Mll&gt;;

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
RepBir-675·7388. For sale.
re-cond1110ned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refngera·
tors , gas and electric
ranges , air conditioners. and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on maJor brands in
shop or at your home.

laeglster

Sentinel

Your Ail, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
can Today•••
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157
675·5234

Offtee llotif'~
Monday thru ·Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ .W RITE AN
AD
-Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\'\\Ol '\(I \II '\I'-

I \II'I0'\\11'\1
Sl H\ H Is

Ul.'&gt;TAMJ

Found: White Husky doQ
Male. blue eyes. 1n Kyger
Grave bla nkets. $5-$25: live Creek Middle School VIcinity.
wreaths. $10. liVe roping: Call !740)367-0185.
Sue's Greenhouse. County
Mjssjng-Bewardl
30,
Rac1ne.
Oh,
Rd.
Two adult male German
(740)949·211S
Shepherds with orange coljO'IO
Iars Black &amp; tan . Contact
GIVEA\\A\
!740)367-7763.

~

A uc noN •~n

FLEA MARKEl

RIVERSIDE
AUCT ION
Free
to
good
home: BARN At. 7 South. 5 mtles
Ronwe11er mix pupp1es 7 below th e Dam EV~BY
weeks old. (740)367-0624.
SATURDAY
@
6 pm.
(740
2S6·6969
Half Black Lab puppy 7 wk.
3 kittens . laying hens. bunWANIHJ
nies. Free to good home
ro BuY
(740 )2SH433.

Electrica !/Refrigeration ... ............ ..... ........... 840

Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating .......... ......................... ................ 830
Farm Equipment ............................ .............. 610
Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ....................................................... .585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ......................... ............ 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Hauling ................................. -... ····--850
Giveaway ............................... .......................040
Happy Ad&amp;-.. .......................... .....................-.050
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................ ,.................... -........... 110
Home lmprovements ...................................810
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................... ................ 510
Houses for Renl .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ................................... , ............ 020
lnsurance .......... ....................................... :... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment. ....................... 660
Livestock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ... _....... -.. ............ ........ ......... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ................... _........................350
Miscellaneous .................. _....................... :... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repair ......... -.......................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rert ............................... 420
Mobile H9mes lor Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan-............................................ 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ......... -................ 740
Musical Instruments ·--...................... .......... 570
Personals ........................................ ; ............ OOS
Pets_ lor Sale ................................ ,............... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ...,......-........ -.... ............ 820
Professional Services ....................... .......... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...................... ......... 160
Real Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schools Instruction ..... ......................... ....... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer. ............................. 650
Situations Wanted ... -......................... -......... 120
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods ......................... :- ................ 520
SUV's for Sale .- ...................................... ......720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery .... _... ... _............................. .......... 870
Vans For Sale ........ ., ................................. ,... 730
WanJed to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farl!l Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do ................................... :.......... 180
Wanted to Renl ....................... _,,,_ .... .......... 470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis .. --.................-.... -......... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .... _......... ,...... .... 07 4
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant.. .-....................... ..... 076

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday- Friday far Insertion

Business Days Prior To

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

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.

Friday For Sundays Paper

Thursday for Sundays Paper

• AU .ads must be

prepaid'

POLICIES. Ohio Valley Publishing reserves the right to edit, rejec:t, or cancel any ad at any time, Errors must be reported on the first day of
Tribune-Se ntinel-Register will be responsible for no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the !!rat insertion. We
not be I
any loaa or expense lhalreeulla from the publication or omiaaion of an advertiHment. Correction will be made In the flrat available edition. • Box
are always confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All real estate advartlaementa era subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act ol1968.. • This
accepts onty help wanted ada meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advertising In violation of the law.

""'"P•pe•l

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lwright@ic.net

HOMES

Monn .E HoMf;&lt;;

IUR SALE

FOR SAI.I:

GET YOUR LOAN TO
BUY OR REFINANCE
YOUR HOMEI
"FREE" APPROVED
HOME LOANS!

550.000-$60,00
PER YEAR!!
HOME WEEKLY

NEW PURCHASES/
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$0 DOWN/ $0 DOWN
CASH OUT/ HOME
IMPROVEMENTS.

'99% No Touch

·70"1o Drop &amp; Hook
"Great Miles

tlol&gt;l'T r£&gt;1-1.- HINj
WHAT 41BI-l;IS

·company Starl· .3B~~~:Imile
'0 1Ops Start-51.00/mile

UNITED SECURITY
MORTGAGE
1·800·370-496S
CALL TODAY
STAFFED BY U.SVETERANS

A f?.£; .

Class A CDL + t yr. OTR
Required

1·800·358·3204

SAVE-SAVE·SAVE
Stock models at old prices,
2005 models arriving Now,
Cole's
Mobile
Homes,
15266 US 50 East, Athens.
OhiO 45701 . (740)592-1972.
"Where You Get Your
Money's Worth"

t

J.cm &amp;

Domino's now hiring safe
drivers
all
positions ,
Gallipolis. Pomeroy, Pt.
Pleasant. &amp; Eleanor call
sto re (304)675-5858 tor
applications
Dr1Ver wanted : COL Class B.
Tanker
Endorsement.
$10.50/hr. plus benefits.
(740)245-5514 Bam-4pm
Drivers
"Home Weekends
' 99°~ No Touch Freight
'No NYC!
'$1.000 S1gn on Bonus
1 yr OTA reqd
1·800·927-()431 or
www.arcticexpress.com

WE 'RE GROWING
AGAIN
We need to fill the positions of installers. If you
are an individual looking
to Improve yourselt , &amp; you
work well with others with
a clean driving record. We
offer theses following ben·
ems to our employees.
*Medical Insurance
•Retirement Fund
"Paid Vacations &amp;
Holidays
•Annual Bonus
"Trucks &amp; Tools
Furnished.
Applications
can
be
picked up at our office at
Bennett's
Healing
&amp;
Cooling, 1391 Safford
School Rd. Gallipolis. OH.

(740)446-9416.

MB S263
(Ohio Loans Only)

II· '-iP

b~r
© 2004 by NEA, Inc.
110

110

Hn.rW.wrm
Ga1l1 a-Me1gs CAA IS acceptIng applicaltons for temporary field supervision staH
tor Flood Cleanup Project in
Galtia County and Meigs
Cou nty. Posit1ons will 1nvolve
SICtensive travel in area and
outdoor wort&lt;. during winter/spring, pnmanly 1n/along
creeks
and
streams.
Appl icants should have
knowledge of proper use of
hand too ls, chatn saws and
other equipment.

Now h1ring Full and Part
t1me pO Sitions McCiures
Restaura nts 1n McArthur.
Gallipolis and Middleport
App ly between 10 and
10 15am.' Monday
thru
Saturd ay

PRon~IONAt

HF.t .I' WA~IH)

Prominent,
h1gh profil e
garage seeking com petent
technician . Must be fam11iar
with OTC. Snapon , or other
scan tools. scopes. Must
have own tools. Prefer cert1·
lication. but not necessary
Senl'i resume . complete with
3 references. to Help
Wanted , P O . Box 315 .
V1nton, OhiO 4 5686.
- - - - - - - --

J&gt;SY&lt;:II()l.O{.iiST

All real estate adv•rtising
in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Houaln!iJ Acl or 1968
which makea It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion , sex
familial status or national
origin , or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."

SERI'ICFS

t:J ~IRECTV
Up to
12 Months Free
Programmtng. 130
Channels plus Free
Equ1pmen1. Free
Professional InstallatiOn, up
to 4 Rooms Free Call 1·
800-523-7556 to r details

Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
informed thai all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal

We are a well respected Jewelry Repair Buy, Sell
F•eld Coordinator Will super· natiOnal prachce dealing Gold .
Diamonds.
v1se l1eld opera!ions involv- with geriatrics. We are in Gemstones,
Appraisals.
ing approximately 40 work ·
ers deployed 1n crews.
Coordinator will be responstble tor attendance. proJeCt
guidel1nestsafety
compli-,
ance
production lev131s.
reports , developing work
plans. field cooperation with
other organizations and
other duties.

need at a 11censecr psycholo·
g1st who IS interes ted in
working part t1me We otter a
good start1ng salary and the
ability to participate tn ou r
401 K Call Psychologist
Trans 1tions at 677-734-203 1
or fax resume to 877 ·734 2030.

==------Salesperson.
lifestyle

Furniture, lull hme position
AsSIStant F1eld Coordinator
Apply in person 10-5 No
will assist Coordinator and
phone calls please. 856
will
substitute
when
Th1rd Avenue. GallipOliS.
Coordinator is unavailable.
TE LE MARKETERS NEED·
GMCAA Stall Applications ED- No Expenence OK. S7·
may be obtained at the fol- 9 Per Hour, Easy Work , t lowmg 1oca t1ons ·
888-974-JOBS

Galta
I. County One Stop·
GCOJFS, 848 Th1rd Avenue,
Gallipolis
Me1gs County One StopMCDJFS. 175 Race Street.
Middleport
GMCAA. 8010 North State
Route 7, Cheshire
GMCAA . 859 Third Avenue.
GallipOliS
GMCAA.
t369
Street , Middleport

Powell

Retu rn
applications
to
GMCAA E&amp; T. 8010 North
SR7 . Chesh1re, OH 456200272. Resumes and oTher
documents may also be
subm1tted.
however
a
GMCAA staff app11ca t1 on
mu st
be
subm11ted.
Appl1cat1ons
must
be
received
by
12PM,
Wednesday December 1,
2004

IMMEDIATE OPEN INGS 20
to 30 HOURS A. WEEK IN
ME IGS COUNTY Prov1de
self-directed. 1ntens1ve support •·coaching· !Od!vlduals
and the1r fam1l1es to worl&lt;
through dtf11cult1es We g1ve
you spec1fic pa1d trau1iny
and earned pa1d 11me ott.
May be ass1gned even1ngs
and/o r week-end schedule Equal Oppor tuniTy Employer
wor king pnmanly w1thm
family home or preferred
meEiling place For applica!JOn call (937)653·1320 or
wnte
to
HA
Dept .
Champaign
Aes 1dent 1al
Serv1ces Inc .. 1150 Sc 1oto
Strecl. Urbana , Oh 43078.
Champaign
Res 1den11al
Serv 1es 15 celebratmg 28
years of serv,ces to ad ult s
w1th challenges and disabili ·
ttes EOE

www.comlcs.com

Gem Testing , Graduate
Gemolo gist
Jeweler
(740)645-6365 or (740)446·
3080.
- - - - - - ' - -- TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Winl
1-888 -582-3345
I( I· \I I "i I \II

P10

Ho~m;

FOR SALE

(2) 3 bedroom houses tor
sale. 2 baths, fireplaces. on
acreage
Call (740)7 09 11 66

0% Down Payment and
f1nancing available with
1.--•'•NSTR-iilli;C~~I~~lO~~N~_.J approved credit Average
cred1t qualifies you If down
Gallipolis Career College payment has kept you from
(Careers Close To Home)
buying, this· IS your chance
Call Today! 740-446-4367 , to own your own home. If
1-800-214-04S2
you have a down payment
WNW gnlhpoloscnreercnBege com
but would like to conserve it.
Accred11ed Member Awedot•ng we ofie r low down payment
Cou11t1l for lndependtml Collsgss
programs also Great Interi\'"i!i':i'":;'""
.::.;":.,':"o~'0:6 ·---...., est . rates l Local compa ny
170
ML~.ELIANEOI JS
M.ortgage
Locators
....,_ _ _ _ _ __..~ (740)992·7321 .
----~---H1gh
School
Jun 1ors , 2 story. 4 bedroom. t bath.
Seniors and Pnor Service CIA, detached 2 car garage
you can fil l vacant positions 314 acre.
rural water
1n the West Virginia Army Located m Salem Center.
National Guard If you are Me1g s
County
Phone
between the ages of 17. 35 (740)384 -3955
Serious
or have prior mtlitary serv- m
__q:_
u_iri_es_on_IY:_·_ _ __
1ce. you won·t wan1 tO pass
3BR 2BA located 1n Green
th1s up. For Opportunities 1n
your area . calf· 304·675- Township, close to schools
5. t29 acres. Owner wants
5837
offer (740)446-7377.

150

180

~. -HUUI.S
-

~

IH

~I

\I "i

\Vt\N'IH&gt;

519
Chandler
Dr.
4
~---•Ti.lil)oil)!iiioi)--,.J Bedrooms. 1 1/2 bath call
(304)675·4456 or (304)675Wood's Extra Care lo r your
3381
love~ one. Pnvate roombath,. 3 hot meals Phone
(740)388-0116

--,---,-----MACH INIST,
10
yrs .
e;o:;pere1ence min Abi lity to
read bluepnnts and m1c
Expertence wJiathes. m11is.
etc 40 hrs. per week . patd
hOlidays. vacation. and 401 K
II\\ 'oC I II.
plan .
Send resume to
Machinis t.
C/0
Po.mt 1'1':::""-~----....,
Pleasant Reg1ster. Box
10
Bl ·sJNE\."'
House 3 Bedroom 1 112
TSC18 . 200 Matn St Pt
Ot'I'Oifll 'NITY
Bath Hea t Pump, new
Pleasant WV 25550
Car pet. Wmdows •&amp; Roof.
RJver View 12 Sm1th st. No
Make 50% selli ng Avon
Money D o ~n to qual1fy1ng
• "' . "V-"vC "'
Limned
11mc
· ONLY joHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
Buyer $425 /month why Rent
(740)446·3358 F1rst 5 to call lNG CO recommends tha
(304)675-2 749
rece1ves a g1ft
ou do bus1ncss w11h peo
Syraausc· 3 bedroom, 1 112
fe you know and NOT t
Param ediCS
&amp;
EMT's
end money throwgh lh€ ba th on 1.- acres CH8A .
needed App1y at 1354. ma11 unlil you have mvesh basemen t garage. $70.000
Jackson P1ke. Gall1pQI1s
negoMble (740)992·0.16 7
hated the offer111Q

10

HOUSf;&lt;;
fUR JbJI.T

0% Down Payment and
1inancing avai lable w1lh
approve.d credi t . Average
cred1t qualifies you . If down
payment has kept you from
buying, this is your chance
to ow n your own home. If
yo u have a down payment
but would hke to conserve 11,
we offer low down payment
programs also Great mterest rates! Local company.
Mortg age
Locators
!740}992-7321 .
1 bedroom house. Gart1eld
Ave . $350 month Call
(740)441-0194 or (740)441·
1184.

View photos/into online.

PBedroom . 3 Bath,
Located 1n Gallipolis overcoking the Oh10 RNer
Pver 3000 sq ft on 3.94
lacres Code 825 or call
740) 44 1-0323.
Redwood Cape Cod
Home, 9.5 ac res, 4
~~droom, ? Bath, 2 Car
~arage , Above ground
~ool. Bidwell . Oh.Stocked
Pond, Code 914 or cail
740)388-041 0 .

~;======~

r'

J\!IOBILE HO.\U:S

L. . . .~IY·l~R~S·A~I.~E. ..,.J
1987 Schu lt z, 2 bedroom, 2
bath. 14x70. $8.000. must
be move. (740)696·0757
For sale or rent- 2 bedroom
mobile homes start1ng at
$270 per month, Call 740992·2 167

For RenVSale 3 bedroom,
11/2 bath. mobile home. All
elec tn c w1th air. $425 00
monthlY. References and
deposit
requ 1red
Ravenswood
area
(740)24].0402

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furn1shed and unfur·
nished . secunty deposit
reqUired . no pets. 740·992·
22 18
1 bedroom In-level Spr1ng
Valley area. Deposit &amp; references reqwred (740)446·
2957
1br Apartment. very clean,
Reference
ReqUired
$225/month. plus Depos1t.
leave message (304)6754975
2 bedroom apartment. $275
plus depos1t &amp; utr lities ar:d
references, 3rd
Street.
Racine . (740)247-4292
2BR. CIA. refngerator/stove
1ncluded .
washer/dryer
hook-up.
1 0 mtn lrom
Holzer
(740)441-0194 or
(740)44 1-11 84

2 Story- Home lor rent 4BR
APARTpossiQJe 5. in Mason . WV, BEAUTIFUL
AT
BUDGET
No
Pels.
$300/deposl! MENTS
$425/month (304)882-3652 PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
m Dnve from $344 to $442 .
3
bedroom
house
Pomeroy, depos1t &amp; refer- Walk to shop &amp; movies Call
ences requt red. no animals. 740·446-2568.
Equal
(740}949-700 4
Hous1ng Opportunity.

3
bedroom
house .
Middlepor t $425 00 plus
depoSit No 1ns1de pets
For sale
Com./ resicll 4 lots &amp; 1 (740)992-3194
house, below appratsed
3 bedroom house . Tuppers
va lue. at 141 0 Lewis St. Pt
Plains. $450 per month plus
Plea.304-548·68 18 after 5
depos1t. utihl1es. and refer pm
e nces. (740)667-3487
House for sale 262 High St .
Harttord . WV 1-acre lot. 4· 3 bedroom, 1 bath. located
bedrooms. 2-full size bath· in country. $550 depoS11.
5550 per month, (7 40 )594·
rooms, large living room,
3031
kitchen and dining room
com bined, sewing or com· 3-4 b9rm . house in Pomeroy.
puler room, completely $350 mo., $350 deposit,
remodeled call (304)675- (740 )992-2979 no answer
1296·evenings . (304)675- leave message
504 1-day
3Br Home •n New Haven.
WV Total- Electr iC &amp; Heat

(740)446-3620

Clean 3 bedroom. in the
country. Ca ll (740)256-6574.

00~3-~----­
Gienwood. $14.000. one _2:'l
half a. lot Tycoon Lake, lddn
$7 .SOO. (740)247-1100 "' 1. APAKIMEN'I~
1UKJb:N1·
cell 304-532-6271 .

~~o~p~po~rt~"~"~'tr~ba~•:•:··~~

Home Listings.
Ltst your home by calling

mRRENT

Nice 2 bedroom mobile
t 8.5 a. Hanna Trace Road horne . No pets. (740)446-

~

www.orvb.com

MOBII.E HOMf:~

ACRIA(;f:

www.landair.com

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

no

Now you can have borders and graphics
.1LJ
added to your classified ads
(. ~Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
l;!.iilll
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00forlarge

Displav Ads

A'ITENTION!

t

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent .. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market. ........................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........ .................. 760
Auto Repair ..................................................
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sal&lt;-. ........................... 750
Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business 0pportunity ................................. 210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .................... -.............. 780
Cards of Thanks ....... .. --...................... --....... 010
Child/Elderly Care __..................... .. .............. 190

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

110

An Excellent way to earn
Part Australian Shepard part Absolute Top Dollar. U.S. money The New Avon.
pupp1es .
Very Sliver and Gold Coms, Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
Brittany
tnendl y Call (740)446-8318 Proofsets. Gold Rings. U.S. AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
or (740}446-1865.
Currency.-M.T.S _Coin Shop, Sell. Shirley Spears, 304151
Second
Avenue, 675 _1429 _
Title for 2002 Honda-450ES.
Gallipolis, 740-446-2842.
:::..:::....=~----­
sold 1-year/ago. Movmg CUST SVC REP
soon.
II
wanted
call- Buying junk cars. Paying up
NEEDED!
(740}367-7893 ask for T1m to $50. (740)388-0011.
Work
From Home.
or leav e-message
Standing timber and togs, 2
800-210·4689
acres or more . (740)596losT Al~IJ
S500-S1.500!Month
S933 . Call 1-666·202-41S6
Part-time
FOUND
$2,000-$8.000/Month
ssoo Reward offered for
Full -time
information lead1ng to recov·
Del1very/Warehouse person
ery of stolen items fr om
needed, full t1me. imrned1ate
Arnold Sears residence 1n
opening. must have excelHamsonv111e. call (740)992·
lent
dnving record , apply at
4 129.
Lltestyle Fur1111ure. 856 3rd
Ave. Gallipolis. g.'s no phone
calls please.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Word Ads

• Start vour Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete
· DeKription • Include A Prh:e • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

FOUND

Big black dog. good with
kidS . (740)992· 1510 leave
message

Oeatllfirlhf'

Clean furnished S1udioApartment.
$325/mon th
1ncludes
water/trash.
Secur1ty
Deposit
and
References reqUired call
alter 5pm 1304)675-3042
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments .
and/or small houses FOR
BENT. Call !740)441-1 t1t
!or applica tion &amp; information
For rent: 2 bedroom garage
apt . Call (7 40)4-16· 1652.
Gracious !ivmg. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riversida

Apartments 1n Middleport ~ ·
From S295-S444 . Call 740 -:
Pump.
$300/deposlt .
$ 400/ month
No
Pets 992 ·5064. Equal HousmgOpportunilles.
(304)882-3652
Nice 2 BR apt. Centenary:
3br ln,Syracuse $475/month Rd . water/trash pa~ d . fur Hud Approved no Pets nished
~lichen .
(304)675·5332 weekends washer/dryer hookup. no.
only call (740)591·0265
pets,
deposit/referenceS'
4BR , 2 bath house 1n reqwed,
S375
month ~
Gallipo li s.
S650/montll . l:_7_
4.::
0):_
4.::
46.::·.::94.::4::2:_
.---deposil reqUired . (740)441- · One bedroom garage apart-· ,
0194 or (740}441-1184
ment , kitchen furniShed :
Condo 3 bdrm 2 baths _ w/ $400, (740)992-3823
basement. View of nver.
Cntrl
A/C
$700
mo.
Gallipolis Ferry {740)446348t .

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking App_l1cattons
for 2B A, 3BB &amp; 4BR . .Applications
are · taken·
Monday
th
ru
Friday.
trorr\
House tor rent 3 bedroom
Avcii lable now. Patriot vil- 9:00 A.M -4 P. ~ . Office IS"
located at 1151 ~vergreen':
lage. (740)379·2540
Drive Point- Pleasant , WV
Huge Duplex, clean . 3 bed- Phone No is (304)675-5806 .
room. 1 bath. din1ng, star. /' H.O
age No petsfsmok1ng. $595.
Call Kelly (740)446-9961
Tara
Townht. 1s .~
Apartments. Very Spac;c ·.. -,
Rac1ne. $600 depos1t, $600 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA . 1
ro nt plus gas &amp; electr iC 11.2 Bath , Newly Carpeted.
(water, !(ash, sewer included Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool."
m relit). 4 bedroom &amp; 2 full Patio , Start $385/Mo Nobath. calheat . must have ref· Pets Lease Plus Se
1'
·
cunY.
erences,
17401949-22 17 Depos1t Requtred, Days :
740 446 3 481
E
7 am. 1opm ,
l:!l::""~--""!":~-. ·
·
:
venings :
211 MoRILE HoMf:~
.740-367-oso2.

- - - - - - -- - .,._ _.;f,;,lliiRiiiRliii~
iii.r_ _.
Make 2 payments. move 1n 4
years on note (304)736- 2 8A traile r, stove/ref. fur~
3409.
n1shed on St. At. 588. $300
mon th .· $ 150
deposil
New Oakwood rnega store Washer/dryer hOok -up, no
Homes
by pets (7 40 )44 6-9061
'featur1ng
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp;
G1les One stop shopp1ng
o nly at OakwoOd Homes of
Barhoursv1ll e WV 1304)736·
3409

Tw1n R1vers Tower is accepting applicatKlns for waitinglist for Hud-subs1zed. 1- br;
apartment. call . 675·6679EHO

Used Furniture Store. 130
Bulaville Pike. Appliances,
dressers, twin , full, queen,
king mattresses, dressers.
couches . d1nettes . recliners.
grave mon uments. much
(110[fl
(740)4 46·4782
Gallipolis OH Hrs. 11-3 (M~)

1520

'8"'column Inch weekdays

15"' column inch Sal. or Sunday

0

•
Prime opportunity for someone
wanting to establish their own business.
t

mR SALE:

Three

~ tory

t

structure
or

a basement containing
6.930 tolal square feel .

10

Sundays thru Christmas
12 noon-4:00p.m.

CONTACT:

arrange an on-sit e 'isit

contact Bil l Barker,
Pleasant Valley Hospi!UI

plca~e

(l_omted in N(rw Rave,, WV)

Henderson, WV

Siders Jewelers

675-2497

Pt. Plea/Gallipolis/Mason

Ceil Phone 674-331 1 Fax 304-675-2 457

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

Corporate De\el opment.
t

BON US FEATURE:
Tht s

FOUR residential rental units.

r

Bear &amp; Basket B ingo Dec. 2.
M iddleport Am . Legion
$20
Double baskets, double bears ,
doub le winners!
Advance ticket drawing

(304) 675-4340, b1. 1381.

building contains
Sniou.1 illtjllil"ies o11ly. plea\e.

!:!'!:::""-~----...., •~-------.., ~~""'!'~-----~
SPOR11N(;
j540 ML&lt;;O].L ·\ NWUS
ML&lt;;LH .LANHII'S
._

M.ERC'IIANIJL'&gt;F.

MERt."llt\NUL~E

GOOili

Winchester 1300 12 gauge
with 2 barrels. $325: NEF 20
s1ngleshot, $75 ; 2 Chinese
SKS nffles, $175 each.
Mossberg 12gauge sluggun
$175 (740)446·1305.

Buy or
sell
Riverine
Ant1ques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomaroy, 740Beretta BL4 12 gauge 0 /U 992·2526 . Russ Moore ,
30" full $800; Remington owner.
1187 t2 gauge sluggun.
$400:
Remington
870 ~ MJsu.J.iANEOUS
MERCIIANIJISE
Express t 2 gauge slug gun,
· $225: Marlin 17 caliber bolt
S.ct1on r1Hie heavy barrel F1rewood 4 sale. Seasoned
$225. (740)446-2905
delivered. (740)446-6637.

GKJilN

Pole Barn 30x50K10FT
$6795 1nclud es Painted
Metal. Plans, lnstructron
Book. Slider. Free Delivery
(937)SS9-6365

50 Gal Nat. Hot Water Tanknew $175. 5' Shower Stall
base $75 , Ruger Carb1ne 44
Magnum, $100. 2 Gun
Cases 1. Maple w/sliding
glass. 6 guns, t P1ne
w/glass door, 8 guns. 3
Piece living Room Suite,
Sage, Off White &amp; Mauve
$950. 93 Ford Taurus GL.
$995, call (304)675- 1458

Hot

lub &gt;acfmy Uu!IBI
Holic:lay Salel
op qual1ty, warrant1es,
Milton, WV. Floa Marke
fSecliOn C. Sa1Urdays an
undavs. (608)61S·0776

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;l
Sctap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am-4 30pm Closed
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (7401446-7300
Nord1cTrack, like new, $100,
new computer desk, $40·
1925 sol1d oak desk, $25:
Modern oa~ and upholstery
side chair , $15. Phone:
(740)446-93S6

Rare cast Iron skillet #i3
Wagner $225 Also Case
"tested XX" scout pocket
JET
knife, genwne brown bone
AERAT ION MQTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In handles. has 2 p1ece can
Stock. Can ROn Evans. 1- opener blade, very unique,
excellent $250. (7 40)533·
800-537-9528.
3670 .

992-4055 fo r info

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

l~---f(·):;.~.·,~-·I.•E_.I

• Sum mer

\l ade • Camp&gt;itcl

J.Batlp m:rtbune
~otnt ~leasant Register
The Daily Sentinel
~unbap 'C!J:fmes -~entinel
~alhpolis

r------------------------------Subscriber 's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
· - -- - - -- ' - - - - - -

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

Reg . German Ro ttweller
pupp1e s
tor
sale .
Mother/father on prem1ses.
Call (740)268-IS92.

70

Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Bo;.:: 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

BUSINESS
O':J this page for as low.,f!S
$25~Q.ri p,ee mo(Jth/;.,
I

.

'

'

\'c\\ ll n1111.'" • \111\ l

and general office momagemcnt.
degree in uccount i n,g rrl'fcrred.

!

Sentinel
. 992-2155
.
.

45771
740·949·221 7

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

Pleasant Vulle)' Hospital
% Human Resources

2520 Valley Brhc
Point Pleasant, \VV 25550
AA/EOE \~ w~.p.,alky.nr~J

740-843-5264
Licensed m Oh1o and

r

r

~~~ I

FoK SALE

1998 Dodne Caravan New
transm1SSJOI'I 53 600 080
1740)379·9035.
--------2003 Chevy E ~~;press Cargo
Van 3/4 ton. 2500 sertes
woth s1de coors 373 Vorte&gt;~
engme. a1r . crUise . !Jlt
44 .000
mile&amp;
S16 500
(740}446·9585 or 1740\446l9B8 Chevy Nova body &amp;
7724
1nterior m fair cond1!1on . runs
great, good engine &amp; trans - 2004 Chevy Express Ca rgo
mts~on . needs ball JO int . Van 31 4 ton 2500 senes w1th
$175 080
side doors Air crwse . t1il .
1995 Pontiac GrandPr1x fully 9,200
miles
S21 .50U
loaded , 4dr, rebuilt , V-6 (740 )446 -9585 or (7401446·
engine . body &amp; interi o r 7724 .
eKcellent cond1t10n . $1 ,500

40

86 Fo rd Mustang. run $400
OBO, 5hp Sup-pump, heavy
duty gas eng1ne $250. M1g
Welder Hoban works good
S200 (304)682-2196

1:\II'KOH:\IENTS

i.,.""oiii;;,;,iiii,;;;,iiiioiii_.J

0401985-4180

Rl\lll'tn ~

R ESIDENTIAL

7:00AM • 8;00 PM

7 40·992·7599

Clown!:

li'~~~~i·~
.~~~~~ ·
I
Birthday parties - Family
nsFestivals - Bu siness promotions etc.
Comedy Magic- Skits - Gospel illusions
Balloons &amp; Fa ce paintmg

740·992-1 747
ema il- ronandtrix(t:l1msn .c om

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

See
Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or 992·6635
" Middleport•s only
Self-Storage"

'JtM.t 'R~

93

Columbus

33795 Hiland Rd.

Pomeroy. Oh1o

740-992·5232
r~======~
OI·Ier's

Rd .

IMPORTS
AI hen s

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.6S I D"r" i11. OH
7 --J.().lJll~ -70 1.~ II/' ~-l(!- 1 )ll ~ -~)).~

McnnKl'YC 'I.E-J

=,0~=H~c;;;1\;;;1l·": "

LINDA'S PAINTING

COMMER CIAL and

Hours

High &amp;Dry
~,_4,;,;\,;,ViiHiiJ-:iit;iil.tiiJii~sio·--,..1 Self-Storage

oBO

let me do it for youl

• RL' pl aLL'I!ll'l11

FREE ESTIMATES

Fo~~:IE

VA~S

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

S1d1ng • \'c \\ c ; .1r:1~1.~

\\'inJn"" •

W~'

Ta~e

BUILDERS InC.

!;;:::::;:;::::;;:::::::;:-;;;::::;:::;::::~

Ucsloc/.irtCJ
""''

'" lc lhkl Sa liii,&lt;J&lt;'
ltlt•r .1/u r/.d HH'I-~

S1.'L' Hl t'lll "' Hn .u 1 \\ · h.d~.·\

.\1 - l ·n

~: \l) . .'

1111

S ;\1. S:.~O - \ Ililll

Sun . Cli·..,~·d

l&gt;rer Shop
••· ) .,
·r·o '\' ·II ' '111
f -r"'.. "\' r-/1 " (( ", 1,,...I

137 S. 5th h l'llU&lt;'
\1idflh·pil rt. OH

.'I h.t:' .~I~ .l~:O
Lan g~ \ilh.· . OI-l
.t~ 7 .tl

17-IUl YlJ2-75.13

A'••itlr &amp;. (;Ioria Oi/a

. 740-742-2076
.\ki11. ( 'ur. HmJil(
1.-rt•t"::.•·· \!! rhil (ill' rmlr
';o-15.00
.
L.,_ __,;;:;;;;.:::..,_ _...J

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncon01110nat hlet1me guar MitsubiShl Lance r. rebul)t , antee Local references tur·
40.000 m1les. auto. $5.200 nlshed. Established t 975
OBO (740)256-1618 o r Call
24 Hrs (7 40) 44 6·
(740)256·6200
OftrO . Rogers Base ment
Water proofing

www.orvb .com
Car L is tings.
L1st your car by calling
(7401446-3620
View photos/1 nfo online.
1997 3500 Chevy Carg
ruCk. t 6tt bed w1tll 4tt ca
ver . 23.000 regular miles.
all (740)446-3620.

1S

· TRucK~
n&gt;RSAI.E

t 989 Ford Dully D1ese1
$S .SOO .
1740)446-7 60 0
1991 Eagle Prem1er mce
St .OOO .
(740)446-7600
\997 8utck leSabre $4.500
(740)446-7600
1997
Bonne..,11fe-sha1 p $4 500
1740)446· 7600

r

~x4

FoR SALt.

1989 Foro F·tSO 4•4 runs
good . 302 eng1ne S 1 500
(7401388-8 152

------ -- - -··--·-'

A-.~ocia t c~

Send resumes to:

1960 Willys Jeep Truck.
8,000 1eg u1ar m11es
ood Cond1t1o n, Run
ood. Call 740)446-3620.

.;J?aHy"·

·H ome • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medjcare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

29670 Bashan Road
Ra ctne . Oh10

requi red. inclu ding accounts pL~yahlc. puyroll

t980 van new eng 1ne &amp;
t ransmissio n. V-8 loaded
cruise/ACICD playe r nice 1999
Harley
Her1tage
Baldwm
Synthasound body &amp; 1nter1or S1.300 080 Spnnger FLSTS . 11 ,200
miles red excellent condl·
-o rgan
8 loot pedals. (304)S93-21 17
tapedeck , books. tapes &amp; 1989 Oldsmobile Cutlass t1on w1th e)(tras S16 000
bench
make an offer, C1erra New 11res. exhaust 1740 )4, H253 .
(740)992-3426
etc $1 ,295 OBO (740)446· 1999
Polar 1s
I \R\ISI PPIII'1369.
Sportsman 4x4 One owner
500
,\.1 1\ l-SIO&lt; 1..
i 993 Bonneville. grea1 car very good conditiOn Lots of
extras. W•nch· etc Neve r
52.500 00
been abused Calf ,.,,,,...
i983
Honcla
XL
185
and
I ,tH.l!1llCK
1974 YamahA 250 $200 00 740-446 -9777 ask for Chuc ~
m 7•0·245·5096 atw 6pm
for both (7401949·9008
S3.SOO.
Angus
Bulls·
Top
1999 Mazda Mlata. 41 .000
Performance Lmes 40 Years
H arl e)'
Dav1dso n
miles f1ve speed. ps. pb. 88
Ar!lf1C1al Insemination. Slate
(740)992-6991
Sportster $3.600 00 080
Run Farm 1,740)286·5395
(740}992-6363
Aft er
www.slaterunfarm .com
2003 TrR. cker . 4x4 3.000 5:00PM
m1les All electnc. alum
"ii-1-C\ I( I "i
OBO
wheel $ 14 .500
(740)368-6432
=;;;;

'

45760

BISSELL

M liSILAL
INS'Ill.ll\11-NI'S

ADVERTISE YOUR

~~

Hill's Self
Storage

r

Phone, _____________________

Middleport

Vallt:"y Hospi1 ul j.., currently
.'&gt;cckmg a phy~ic:ian pr;.u.:ticc ol ftn: managl?r.
rcsp on~ ihl c f or ull phy~idan offil·t.:s. Priur
physi cian office managC"r L'Xpt:nl'nCt'
#Plc ns ant

57 .995: 2002 Toyota Tacoma
PU 4)(4 , 4 cyl, 5-sp. factory
warr/37 .000 -niles (New) .
$12.900 . 2000 Ford F- 150
XL 4 door. 2 WO, PU . V6 ,
automatic. m•les-077.4 t I .
$10.000 (N1ce)
Full-blooded Lab puppres 6
Southern Aula Sales
weeks. black. chocolate, yel70 1 2nd Ave
low Phone (740)446-2460
(7 40)446·8554
Pure bred Border Coll1e
pups . Imported bloodl ines,
workmg parents . 1 shots &amp;
wor med
Call · (740)3 7 99 110 .

_

7~0-949-27.'~

AKC Registered German 0 I Ponti ac Montana Van . 7673
Shepherd Pups, Excellent 58 .000 , cash special : 01
Jl
Blood Line (304)675-5724
Dodge Caravan Sport van .
AK C
Registered
St .
old
Bernard
4-month
female , tull mask . sweet per·
sona\ity. up to date .shot
record $250 Call (7401645·
2824 anyt1me

Box 189

Arailahlc

.;•.;,u-RSIIAiilii-Fii:-.,.J

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

and Financial Services

PHYSICIAN PRACTICE
OFFICE 1\&gt;IANAGEK

(FiQtHii""+

on your home delivered
subscription!

.

Sau~agl'

#003506

Contra ctors Lie .

Rocky Hupp Insurance

fake

p1es. 10 weeks old. see at Bound bale hay last yr. $5 1994 S-10 Blazer 4·WD. 4
1473 Hannan Trace Road or 2nd cut this yr. $16. Phone door. lciJthe r.,lo aded. Vorle~~;
V-6, auto. 138.000 m11es.
call (7 40)379-9063 . No . 0) 44 6-7787
$3,000 080. Call (740)441 Sunday Sales
0131 Of (740)446-7807
AKC Golden Retnever pup - ~16
Aun~
pies
Re ad y
12/04/ 04
2004 Chevy Silverado 4x4
$250 00 each Will hold for .__ _
Z71 Off Road 1500. V-8.
Chnstmas. (740)992-7557
automatic, less than 3.000
$5001 Honda's, Chevy's, m1les. (740)378-6349
AKC Pekmgese 2 male First Jeep's,
Ect
Police - - - -- - - -shots &amp; wormed . $400 l1rm Impounds! Cars trom ssoo 79 F-150. 4K4. 390 4 speed.
(7 40 )446 -1000 or leave for listings 800-391-5227 6" SkyJACker lilt . 35· BFG
message.
EXT 3901
AT's. 53 ,000 . Call (740)367-

Senior Discount*

'

maplei4HHHL

• Wra1Jpcd

2 lemal e AKC Beagle pup- .__ _ _ _ _ _ __.

If so, you qualify for a

.........-........

Hccr Proccssin~

• Skinned_• Cut

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�Friday, November 26, 2004 ,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel
ALLEY OOP

ACROSS

East
.. l 54 2

'II'QJ 108
• Q4
• Q 10 5
South
•

K J

•

AK2

t

A K 9 8

"'AJ98
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

2.

South

West

North

2NT

Pass
Pass

2
3 NT

+

East
Pass
All pass

Ope~ing lead: • 10

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

One chance is
better than none

~ TI'41NI' ~'M S~ING

FOLt.OWEl&gt;.

P~~C.IN(T
I~

BARNEY
CLOTHES
'DRYER IS
SPOILIN' ME,
EL-

THAT

VINEY
II

THE BORN LOSER
.\

~\l&gt;.f\1\)
COOKING

Tf\£ Li&gt;-.::i[ Tl 1'\[,:iJI£
~ED !\ FROZE~&gt;\

Tf\N'IK:'&gt;-

""wELL, r-IOT E~ERYONE COOKS (;I P"NO ~I MEAl'\ Tf\E TURKEY WI\':&gt;""'l
:'&gt;I ILL FROZEN Nf-\EN :}r\(
FRESfl. \URKE:Y OM Tf\1\~KSGI~Ii'lG,
YOU Kt-101-,j I
SERI/ED IT 1

ESS A

BU fTON

DO&gt;f T LEOT

ME

BOtHER

YOU '
PLENTY TO
CHOOSE FRCM

PRESS A
i&gt;UTTON '

PEANUTS

IN HO~OR OF TJ.IE
OCCASION, I USED M'&lt;
FINGER TO DRAW A TVRKE'I'
IN '(OUR D06 FOOD..

TIIANK56IVIN6,

OL' PAL!

SUNSHINE CLUB
SO. .ARE. YOO
MARRIEVOR
r

I

SI NGlE, FRAN'&gt;
\

1\lE.llHER

1'M BE'TWE.£1\J MY
£X AND Mi IJEXT

G-ARFI 101...17 1
PINNER!

Q-10-5 or 0-10-3, you must play low to
your nine (or eighl). II East has K-Q-5. K0-3 or K-Q-5-3, you must play low to your
jack. By a tour -fa-three margin , you
should take trick one with dummy's spade
queen, then play a club to your mne. Th1S
loses to West's king , but you win the next
spade on the board and play another
club. covering East's 10 with yotJr jack.
Your partner now kisses you•

G

BIG NATE

HAPPI'

55
56
57
58

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

.. 9 6 4

•

DOWN

Llvy's year •
He loved •
Lucy
:
Make bread .
Galena and •
bauxlle
'
Make do
wllh
Dash oil
Come down.
wllh
·
Senoe
,
'

'A

organ:

1

AstroGraph
qo,. 'lllrthWif:

Friday, Nov. 26, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead make an efforl to ally
yourself with those who you belie\le can
help advance yo ur goals. If you're prepared to do something back in return, you
should Oe able to do so with little trouble.
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23- 0ec. 21) Although you might have your excuses,
without reallztng it you may be a bit domineering today. If you run into a rests!lng
person who can be more forceful than
you, fireworks could go off.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ) Regardl ess of how you feel , do not let
down those who are cou nting on you
today. Make ce rtain you measure up to
your commitments.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. I 9} - In order
to get others 10 do things yOur way today
you may lry to coerce th em into co mpl iance. Unfortunately, this would be a mis take because it would Oreed resentment
and grudge-holding
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - An important goal can be realiz"ed today, but •l's
going to take a great deal ol effort on ynu r
part. ll you believe it to be worth while. be
prepared to pay the piper. It'll be worth il
in th e long run .
AR IES (March 21-April 19)- Experience
has taught you th at ce rtain topics thai
agitate a close friend are off limits, so
whatever you do, make sure that 1f one is
brought up today, get the discusston onto
something else last.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - There's a
strong possibility that someone who
knows how to play on your emotions and
generosity may gat you to part with
something you love that this person has
been coveting.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Should you
have to deal wilh someone today of
whom you're not overly fond. keep your
wits about you. By playing it smart, your
tactf ulness will make sure no waves are
churned up.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Sadly thiS
co uld be a day of reckoning for cleaning
up neglectet;l tasks. Roll up your sleeves
and get lo work
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - ll you're worn
out or just trying to play catch up on
something important today. don't allow
you r peers to pressure you into doing
something that goes agatnst your best
judgment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Unpleasant
Issues may be dropped on your doorstep
today that nobody else wants to deal with.
It'll be important that you keep your cool
and not let them disrupt the harmony of
your home.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)- Usually you
count to 10 while you consider all sides of
an Issue. bu t you could ha'&gt;~e a shan fuse
today due to being !Ired. Don't blow up
O\ler something you·ve always t1andled
we ll .
SCORPIO (Ool. 24-Nov. 22) - Be extra
cautious today ' if you decide to hit the
stores to start your holiday shOpping
There wi ll be plenty of bargains out th ere,
but, unfortunately, a lot oi hidden bad
buys also.

?

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnry C10her c!)'plOgrams are D"ealed !Tom Quotations bv tamous people. past and preseol
Each letter 1n the ophet stands lo· anolhtlt

Today 's clue: D equals G

CXKSW
ISUY

a

KTY

P.ff\E'( 11\US\ BE.Mf&gt;.Kit-I.G 11\EJI..Iti P"'TI\"-1~ 00( WI\'( OF Loo&lt;.lt-.1&lt;.

KCMUYA

""=q

A-.1 lT !

~~~ :)I'ML.LE,K H\E:.'£ (»..'{:) 1.

KTNXUJOSGSXO ."
OSXXBWWA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "All that non -l1ction can do is an swer questions. li's ·
fiction 's busi"ess to ask, them.'- R1chard Hughes

(C) 2004 by NEA. Inc.

West

North

East

1NT

Pass

3 NT

All pass

Hesketh Pearson . a British biographer,
wrote. "A widely read man never quotes
accurately, for the rather obvious reason
that he has read too widely."
In bridge, the "obvious" play will normally
be correct, but one should always pause
to consider the "unobvious"- it might be
a lifesaver. In th1s deal, how should East
defend against three no-trump? West
leads the spade five, his fourth -highest
South wins with the king and runs the club
nine to your queen . Whai would you do
now?
Note that South is correct to take the first
trick with his spade ki ng. II he wins with
the ace. he would be advertising his
strength there.
We all know about the obvious ~return
partner's suit.'' Here, though, South would
take the trick and drive out West's club
ace. Even if West ihen shifts to the diamond eight. declarer plays low from the
dummy and loses only two diamonds and
two clubs. Instead, Easi should pause to
count the points. He can see 20 (10 in his
hand and 1 on the board), and South has
announced 15-17. So, West started with
3-5, But West surely has the club ace. It
South had that card, he would have
cashed illirst belore taking a club finesse.
Th•s means that return1ng a spade would
be ineffective. Instead , East should switch
to the diamond three. Then. when West is
in with his ace. he can lead his remaining
diamond, allowing the detenders to collect
l1ve tricks: th ree diamonds and two cl ubs.
Pearson also claimed that misquotations
are the only Quotatio ns that are never
misquoted. Obviously, you may quote him

11 -25

on that!

'::~:~~~' S©\\g{}}\ -/!, £tf~·

.- - - - - - loltoo

~y

0 lour

lett en of

the

tcrombled words

be·

•eorronge

WOlD
GAMI

AstroGraph

CLAY I . POLLAN------

I

-r

r1'{ O WN
E'&lt;ES,
TEDDY.

I I I 1~ I
I

r

St..'v-J
IT WITH

AYV LEL

I'

I

I

·'

--;-W;-;:R-;::-P-;O:;-;-L-_:."1,~-:.

l. I

T HE'(VE GOT SNICKERS !
THEYVE &lt;'&gt;OT MILKY
WAYS! THEY'VE &lt;;.OT
MILK DUDS' T HEY 'VE
(,{)T SU&amp;AR SABIES 1

Salurday, Nov. 21: 2004
By Bernie• Bade Oaol
Your chances for advancing your career
are quite promising in the year ahead.
However, timing could turn out to be a
crucial factor, so you must be ca retul not
to push before conditions are ready.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov_23-0ec. 21) - You
and your mate might not be operating on
the same wavelength as you thi nk today.
so before making any commitmen ts th at
involve your partner. cons!Mt with him or
her first .
• CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If you
teal you"re being pressured today to do

I

NAXEN

One

I 1I .
3

~ot so smart coloeoe

cut1e to another "Mamagc becomes two me's searchmg for

--,;:~-L'Ir,s_u'lE--r:l,---11 0- c~~;,,,.
. L _ 1_ _ _ _

~

L..L-L..L-L...l.--'

~&gt;.BOVE

more than that to whtch you're com mit·
ted. take the appropriate action to allevi-

PEANUTS

~:~lot~:,.~t~:;·P~~~~~~

TI4AT'S PRETT'( STRON6
LAN6UA6E, ISN'T IT?

th, chvckle ovored

by l.ll•ng on th~ rntatn;:: wordl
yOl CP.velop trom 51e~ r--.c ~ b_. •ow

--~
•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1 1 '" 4 ' 0 4
Apogee • Musty - Rouse · Muscle - COMPUTERS
I believe that the real danger IS not that a computer
will th1nk like a person. but people will think like COM-

SUNSHINE CLUB

PUTERS1

ARLO &amp; JANIS

LEIS sie NOW .. .

10MA10E.S&gt; 1

L£!1UCE. BRE.AD,lUI\lA ASH.
MILK AND. .. UH-011 ..

1DMATC£S!

11-{ATS IT-

O~GE.S,

0

•'

GARFIELD
t I...OVE
I...ASAC.NA!

WHA1 A WOIJDt~~UL­
P~Op;Lt,M 10 HAV~.

SOUPTO NUTZ

GR.I ZZWELLS

'YUM/ 1

~LD

~~A
.. OR, liKe , Ndl"Ea1iNG
STUff Ya. FrND DI'Cf'Pro
ON l14E: Gl«&gt;ut-lD?

e

ll~

actress

DOWN

23 My, myl
24 Frlghlln
27 Thronga

~~~

A!lcUT
tJp'tJ

RU\.LY

8UT AI...AS, IT WAS

ONl.Y A Fl.INGf

ucularly se lective about Accepting a
soc1a1 mvita tio n today. !t you believe
someone you dislike could be 1n allendance, you'd be wise to avoid the gathering al this time.
PISC ES (Feb. 20-March 20) - If the outside world treats you in an unfriendly
manner today, do not bring · your frustration home and inllict 11on the en tire family. Find a way to release your ire 1n an
acceptable manner.
ARIES (March 21-April J.9)- Don't tr y to
commit to memory today that which is
Important to yo u and may need to be
reviewed from lime to time. Crucial parts
could be gone forever and cause you a
major loss.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 - Shopping
and buying can be fun , but subdue temptations ,,today to overextend yourself
fi nancially on frivolous items. Remember
that there will come a tlme when the bills
w111 have to be paid.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Do not
make your ability to !unction iree of
restrictions so important that you behave
in ways which could alienate your companions, especially if you're so inclined to
change your mind a lot.
CANCER !June 21-July 22) - Al 1hough
today·s frustrations might not be enti rely
of your own doing. don 'I take it out on
others or allow the person who made the
mess blame you for it. Keep everything 1n
perspective.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) - Don't think
you're smarter !han everyllody else and
start playing poli tics with friends today.
Instead of getting their vote, they'll reSet
just the opposite and leeve you to be the
lone dissenter.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 2:2)- Do strtve to
be en achiever today, but not at the
expense of others. You may need to be
careful that when satisfying your own
purposes. you don't pu sh others around
in the process.
LIBRA {Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) - When dis·
cussing sensitive lsauea with others
today, even 11 you don't agree with evarylhlng they say, k..p your coot at all coltl .
Argumantl that go O\llr the line have no
Value.
SCOFif&gt;IO (Oct. 2"-Nov, 22} - Listen to
your Inner voice and keep you r gut~rd up
today If you find your111f In an environ·
man! where you don't 1..1 eomfortal:)la.
Thlnge may bt am111 and you don't went
to be tha pat1y.

SOUP TO NUTZ

anlatanto
41 "Mogormbo•

24 "-Ooba
Honeymoon"
25 Pelty or

1 Food llah
2 E•plorer

30-Tasman
31 Dwell on
3 Rllzy rental
32 " Uialume"'
4 Zoopoe!
5 Kuwaiti's

actor
42 Bloached-

Loughlin
26 Choir
member
27 Bundle
of hay
28 Colossal
29 Drench
31 Got In the
way
33 Loop tralna
35 Staff
member
36 Putting out

34 Museum
conlenta
35 Has a lever
36 Watch'a
lace
37 Antlhptlc
39 Sways
40 7 and 11
41 Veldt grazer
42 Food-

neighbor
6 Devotee
7 Episodes
8 Japaneoe
theater
9 - - a
good thing
10 Shade
11 Conclualon
19 Graceful tree
a candle
processor 21 Party·
36 Fishing
boats
oattlng
throwar'a
39 MD
44 Proopector's
plea

oul

43 Luau

lnllrumenta
45 Operatic
solo
46 Masculine
principle
47 Spade of
whodunlto
49 Bravo!
51 Emerrncy
algna

CELEBRITY CIPHER by Luis Campos
CeteOOty Cll)hef,cryolograms are creal&amp;d iro.mQUOtations by tamou• people, past arw:l pr•Hnt
Etc111entr if1 trw apher slafiCis lor ai\Otl'let

Todsy 's clue: Gequals N

" TZ
F

ZYYG
AGIJ

BN

TZ

F

F

JTZ

FG-KTJZ

SYL
FG

BTCDFIC

LDYXRKI .

ZIGL

LYTGA-NYX

Bl

T

GYLI."

OYCGIN

CTGSIDEFIKC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Coex;stence - what the farmer does wilh the
lurkey - unlil ThanksgiVIng.' - Mike Connolly
(c) 2004 by NEA, Inc. 11·26
TMAT DAILY

UMI
',;©~~lA-l&amp;t.~s·
CLAY I . POLLAN-----WOII

PUZILII
- - - - - - E41,.o

~y

Q four
R.arrol'lge leflers. cl
tcrombled word•

ti-le ~-....,.w-~..._,.
be-

I

low 'O fo rm lour words

B [ y DQ M

r-r-r,·, -,--,-;-1

r

I

11
I_
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.

I
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12
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-,

1

'--'--L.....L-..L........J

It--r-,.-...,.-;-.,--1·
D0 I T I I
;:.
~

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so in the most

AQUARIUS (Jao . 2o-Fet. t 9J- Be pac-

lE1HP.S

\

along

20 Dried lruft 57 One-liners
22 Muhammed

qo,. &lt;JIIrthdll,y:

low to form four words

I

tao1
41 Munro's
1 Ring up
pen name
5 lncfto a dog 48 Stick up
8 High Iller
50 Some COs
12 Oscar't
52 Htlm
coualn
poaltlon
13 Fire mid.,. 53 Houh
14 Shortly
addlllon
15 Showroom 54 Elmodol
(weather
16 Ma. Hagen
culprll)
17 Cement
55 Jumble
18 Bounded
56 "Gidget"

o

.J

KTY

South

The obvious can be
wrong, obviously

1 FJGGER 1 CAN KEEP THIS
PACE UP RIGHT TO TH' END !!

RETIREMENT
P&amp;.ANNIN',
SNUFFY

FSKT

9 7 6

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

YOU DONE ENNY

ZBYJ

•

Opening lead: • 5

BARNEY

" OSYHSJKYXOY

•

QJ
10 9 6 5

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

TI'4~NIGS.

FTNK

7 2

"-KJ 10&amp;5
j,;ast
• J 3
, 1 08652
• A QJ 3
• Q2
South
.. A K Q

A1'4, GAL£.0US·

ENMIYM

K 3

+K

1 Family
rooms
2 Breakfast
conclusion
to Saturn
43
fare
23 Patshop
21 Shade
44
3 Fishing
sound
ol meaning
lures
26 Fu!ura !Ish
22 Penicillin, 47
27 Big Dipper 4 Bronze
e.g.
48
component
bear
23
Fuaa
word
·
5
Boggy
30~24 Dice toss 49
lowland
32 Trucked
25 senora
34 Antelope
6 Feedbag
from Bonn 51
morsel
habllat
35 Longhalred 7 Grad.school 28 Spill over 52
29 Flying
8 Pollio
cat
prefix
54
36 Comic-strip 9 End-of31 Largo lizard
semester
moppet
event
32 p~
37 Eyebrow
10 DC figure
111F11f1!1M10nl
shape
olthlnga
38 OlGa morsel 11 WrasUing
33 Male parent
holds
39 Red-laced
12 Movie pig
37 Sigh of reiJel
42 lnllate
40 Main rds .
45 Reporter's 17 Unseal,
1
41 Feathery
to a poet
questlon
20 Planet next 42 Chirp
46 Wind

sometimes supposed, the Managing
Director's chance to kiss the tea-girl. It is
the tea-girl's chance to kiss the Managing
Director (however b1zarre an ambition this
may seem to anyone who has seen the
Managing Director lace on)."
Bridge involves chance. Sometimes , your
odds are good- you will kis s the tea-person. AI other times. your odds are pooryou might have to kiss th e managing
director. Occasionally. you have two
choices and must pick carefully to ensure:
that you k1ss the right person.
You are South, in three no-1rump. West
leads the spade 10. What is your plan?
After South shows a balanced 23 or 24
points, North thinks game will be easy. but
the painful duplication in spades - 10
points but only two tricks - leaves nine
tricks far from automatic.
You have seven top tricks: .two spades.
two hear ts. two diamonds and one club. lf
you play on diamonds, you generate only
one more trick- kiss your contract goodbye. lns!ead, you must hope lor two extra

club tricks. II East holds K-10-5, K-10-3.
"'I

53

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

IIEJ.I/ HtH/ JI!.Hl

Instrument
Physicist's
study
Garden
Stole city
FoiloWI
upon
Union man
Aim
Blended
whiskeys

In 1962, before political correctness,
Katharine Whitehorn, a Brit ish writer,
penned : "An oH1ce party is not. as is

\

.

50

1 Money
owed
5 Source
10 Toke back
12 -S.blea
13Hnd
ole train
14 Mischief
15 Library
sound
16 To11
18 Old soldier
19 -lrom
a dollnite

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page 89

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Phillip
Alder

Friday, November 26, 2004

j

·

/S

Mv husband says there are
ali kirlds of credit cards but they
all have one th ing in common ,
they~ r J n ___ into .... -.

I

~-_..__..
__.~,__.~,____.

I-,.---r,-T:I":""T-1I
EGEy R0

•·
I

I
.

•

I'
_

1'.?
_-

I () :
_

.

&amp;l " '"'' "'~'"5,Rf0 l!TTERS
l.;1 IN 'TI-lE S ~ r;.:&gt;Ut..P.~ S
.:\ UNSCRAMBLE
V

AN)W~~

~~p le1e th~ chuckle Qu oted

~\ ldi1fl9 in t~e rrhUI"'~ words
)'Ol c•v ~lop from step No 3 below.

I'

1
'

1· I' ' I' i'

FORI
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Valley -Annex - Prowl- Tous le- ONE WE

One nol so smart college culie to another
becomes two me's searchrng for ONE WE ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
GIRDI~C.

YOUR LOI/J!&gt; 2

d~?

! ~A'ID, GI~D i "£&lt;
YOU~ LOI"~~

"Marnage

�Friday, November 26,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B1o • The Daily Sentinel

ALoNG THE RivER

PGH Golf

·Mickelson shoots 59 to win Grand Slam
BY JAYMES SoNG

Associated Press
POIPU BEACH, Hawaii
- Phil Mickelson ended his
magical year with golf's
magic number.
The Masters champion
shot a 13-under 59 on
Wednesday to win the PGA
Grand Slam of Golf. a twoday competition for the
year 's four major winners.
" lt was certainly unexpected," said Mickelson. who
hadn't touched a club for two
weeks before the tournament. .. 1 didn ' t hit it great
today and somehow I shot
59. So go figure. It J·ust all
kind of came together."
A! Geiberger, Chip Beck
and David Duval are the only
players to shoot 59 on the
PGA Tour, and Annika
Sorenstam shot a 59 on the
LPGA Tour. Mickelson 's
score will not count in the
record books because the
PGA Grand Slam is not an
official event.
Shigeki Maruyama carded
a 58 at Woodmont Country
Club in Rockville. Md., during qualifytng for the 2000
.
U.S. 0 pen.
Mickelson barely missed a
9-foot eagle putt to the left
on the last hole that would
have given him a 58. He
tapped in for birdie and
smiled as the gallery cheered
wildly.
"I just went out and just
kind of played and today. the
ball went in the hole," he
said. "! don't really have an
explanation for it."
Mickelson's 59 moved him
from third place to first, with
a 17-under 127 total, which
tied the course record and
beat PGA champion Vijay
Singh by five strokes.
Lefty had II birdies, an
eagle and no bogey s to win
$400,000. He putted just 24
times, including 11 times on
the front nine. It was a spectacular way to end a season

Mickelson won't forget: His
victory at Augusta National
allowed him to shed the label
of "best player never to win
a major," and he went on to
finish a close second in the
U.S. Open. third in the
· d f
British Open and tte or
sixth in the PGA.
"I made everything," he
said. ''It was a great feeling
to see the ball go in the hole .
Awesome."
Mickel son's previous competitive career low was 61 at
the 200 I Greater Hartford
Open. His season low was a
63 at the Bob Hope Chrysler
· Classic.
.
Singh. the No. I player m
the world, shot a 66 and
earned $250,000, while firstround leader Retief Goosen
_ the U.S. Open champ closed with a 68 10 finish at
11-under. British Open
champion Todd Hamilton
finished last at l-over 145
after a 75 _
"Phil outplayed everybody
- or outscored everybody,"
Singh said. "It was incredible. After about the 12th or
15th hole, we were just
watching him.''
In balmy and calm condih
'd p .
tions at t e oceanst e .. otpu
Bay Golf Course, Mickelson
struggled off the tee at times
- finding the rough, sand
and gallery - but compensated with impressive short
play.
He became just the third
player to win the event since
1998. Last year, Jim Furyk
snapped Tiger Woods ' record
string of five straight Grand
Slam victories.
With his face caked in sunscreen, Mickelson was
relaxed and loose throughout
the round, chatting with his
opponents and caddie Jim
"Bones" McKay.
"C' mon Bones. let' s see if
we can make at least one putt
today." Mickelson said with
a smile while walking up to
his short birdie attempt on

No. 12. It was hi s seventh
birdie of the cjay.
Mickelson, who won two
tour events this year and finished third on money list
with more than $5.7 million.
birdied Nos. 13-15 to open a
commanding
four-stroke
edge and closed with birdies
on Nos. 16 and 18.
But it was on the front nine
when Mickelson surged to
the top of th~ leaderboard.
His tournament-record 28 on
the front side included six
birdies and an eagle. He
broke Woods · mark of 30 set
in 2000.
Mickelson. who had two
eagles Tuesday, carded four
straight birdies, followed by
an eagle on the 573-yard No.
6 to tie Goosen for the lead
at 10 under.
His 15- foot eagle putt was
set up by a 324-yard drive
and a 247-yard second shot
with
a utility wood .
Mickelson sank a 3 1/2-foot
birdie putt on the next hole
to take his first outright lead
of the tournament.
The birdie-birdie-birdiebirdie-eagle streak was the
best in tournament history.
That run ended after
Mickelson
found
two
bunkers on the 374-yard No.
8, but he still managed to
save par there.
Goosen, who was fighting
a cold, opened with a 65 and
had a stroke lead over Singh
and three-stroke edge over
Mickelson to start the second
round.
"Didn't feel all that great
today,"
Goosen
said.
"Really, in the middle of the
round,(!) lost a bit of energy
and really started getting a
bit dizzy."
Goosen will now return to
his home in London to spend
time with his new daughter
Ella Ann , born Friday.
Trying to make up some
ground, Mickelson, Singh
and Hamilton each made
birdie on the par-5 second ,

but Goosen eagled with a
spectacular second shot from
209 yards to 12 feet to take a
two-stroke advantage over
Singh. Goosen expanded the
lead to three strokes with a
birdie on the next hole.
Singh, coming off a ninewin,
tour-record
$10,905,166 season, captured second place by sinking an 11-foot birdie putt on
the final hole.
"You play your own game
out there," he said. "It doesn't matter if a guy is shooting 59 or 79. You just go out
there and hit off the tee."
The Grand Slam featured
three of the top five players
in the world. The elite foursome won a combined 15
events and more than $23
million this year on the PGA
Tour.
Hamilton, who won two
events and finished llth on
money list with $3,063,778,
never contended for the lead.
Th~ former longtime Japan
tour pro's round included
two birdies, two bogey~ and
a double bogey, which came
..
on the par-3 No. 11.
But all was not lost for
Hamilton.
~
"I had a great view · to
watch two pretty good
rounds of golf and one
golf," he
superb round
said. "I actually felt like I
was in everyone's way
today."
Divots: Singh had fun with
a reporter who asked about
his abilities .when he worked
as a bouncer in Scotland.
"Why don't you try me?"
Singh said. "Keep asking
these questions, I'll probably
have to bounce you out of
here." ... Singh was presented the Vardon Trophy for
having the PGA Tour's lowest scoring average (68.84),
beating out Ernie Els (68.98).
... An agreement was reached
to bring the Grand Slam to
Kauai for the 12th straight
year in 2005.

or

27

'I'll Be Home for Christmas'
How military families are coping
with separation over the holidays, Cl

04

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
( )Inn \ .lilt• \ Pu hl1 ~ lnug ( o.

SPORTS
• Wagner deals with
injuries, hard Urnes.
See Page 81

I 'onHTI"

\I icldh· pt u·l • t .a II ipul i., • \

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ern her :!H.

S 1. :.!.) • \ 'o I. :~X.

:!00-l

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H-

UiJunded son returns from Iraq, evokes true meaning ofThanksgiving
BY NICOLE FIELDS
NFIELDS®MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - If he
could, U.S. Marine Sgt. John Hill
said he would go back to Iraq in a
heartbeat.
For now, he'll just have to
hang on to the bullet that sent
him home - which he does. In
fact, 23-year-old Hill carries the
bullet with him everywhere
he goes.
Hill, who serves with the 3rd
Battalion I st Marines Regiment
out of California, was shot Nov.
13 while working on ·a house in

Phil Mickel :;on holds the PGA Grand Slam of Golf trophy
ning the tournament at Poipu Bay Golf Course in Poipu
Hawaii. Mickelson shot a 59 on Wednesday to win the PGA
Slam of Golf, matching the low score in competitive golf.

•

Fallujah . He said although he
does not remember every detail
about the shooting, he does
remember . that he shot and
killed the Iraqi soldier who had
shot him.
·
When asked if he is proud that
he killed the enemy soldier, Hill
nodded.
"That son of a ... tried to kill me,"
Hill pointed out. "! thought I was ,
gonna die."
Hill, who is the son of Nancy
and Pat Hill of Pomeroy, Ohio,
spent five months in Iraq before l"""'loi

U.S. Marine Sgt.
John Hill, right, stood
proudly in front of his
brand new 2005 Ford
Mustang with his
father Pat, on Friday.
Hill purchased the
red mustang at
Turnpike Ford in
Gallipolis after mceiving his re~ nlistment
bonus from the
United States Marine
Corps. He said he
pi ans to drive his
new car to California
when he goes back
in January.

Please see Son, AS

United Way opens gift-wrapping stand at Wai-Mart
Bv TtM

MALONEY

TMALONEY®MYDAILYl'RIBUNE.COM

THE THREE STONE

fbiamM/1~~
0BITUARIFS
Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis

(740) 446-3484

Page AS
• Barbara L. McCarty
• Larry Edward Harmon

•
INSIDE
• Local FSA election ends
this week. See Page A2
• Choir to perform. See
Pa~AS

• Church offers lunch . .
SeePage AS
• Consortium set.
SeePage AS

The year's towesl prices on ALL re1nalnlnQ ·
2004's and au 2005's In stock!

WEATIIER

GALLIPOLIS - For 20
years, Cheryl Salisbury
has watched the gift-wrapping stands in various
stones, always with a hint
of envy.
It was a job she wanted.
"I don't know why," she
said. "I've always enjoyed
gift wrapping·."
On Friday, Salisbury ful filled her long-held wish.
She became the head giftwrapper at the United Way
stand at Wai-Mart. ·
"If you want good gift
wrapping, you've got to be
neat," she said.
But at about 11:30 a.m.
Friday; minutes after WalMart's 6 to II a.m. sale
had expired, business was
starting to slow. The lines
at the checkout counters
weren 't as long as one ·
might have expected on
the so-called busiest shopping day of the year.
Then, just as Salisbury
began to wonder when
· she'd get another customer,
along came Sue Doss of
Tim Maloney/ photo
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Cheryl Salisbury smiles as another customer approaches the United Way gift-wrapping stand at the Gallipolis Wai-Mart. In the
background are the Rev. Marvin Sallee. honorary campaign chairman, and United Way board members Elizabeth Rumley, left,
Please see Wrapping. AS and Alice Niday.

Cheshire history book comes out next year Deer-gun season begins Monday
Detallo on Pace A&amp;

lllllwlhatoll Stoh, -

C•trtl, 1•1 Stlo1 Paduogct

lUND IIEW 2004 BUICK
LESURE SEDAN

1 hl••l" 5tollot. TV Witlo DW Sf•'- loly PIW• 1.....

INDEX

lUND NEW 2004 FULl SIZE
CUSTOM VANS

4 SECTIONS- 24 PAGES

·c~eck 111 ne LOW PAYMENTS an Quality GM Certified Used Vehlalesl 2.9°/li APR u, To 11 Mollt~sl

~~.;:4
CHEVY S·ILAZER
LS 4 DOOR414
Sill Prka $13,650
GIIAC 2.9% lato .
60 ..... 111111

StitPrka$10,590 .
GIIAC 2,.,. late
60 ..... 111111

TnH 114 fu1 ut '-cW.I
t~..ot,,.,.. lt

2004 liCK
RENDEZVOUS Cl

Stlt Pike $16,620
GilA( 2.9% ....
60 ..... 111111

We Pike $16,710
GIIAC2 •.,. 1111
60 ..... , ....

._..,_

Ttltln.ftttlll..,_.

· • TGxes, Togs, Tide Fees extra. GMAC ftnan&lt;e allowo.ll&lt;e and rebate induded in sole r:ice of new vehide listed wltere applicable. "GMAC Rrtall&lt;e
allowance on owoved credit. On selertsd models. Nat responsible for typographlca errors. Prices good November 25th through November 28th.

....

R:'"\WITD4

© 2004 Ohto·Valley Publl.ohinl! Co.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - More than
400.000 hunters are expected
to take tlie field acros&gt; the state
next week for the deer-gun
sea,on, whicli begins Monday
and continues through Dec. 5.
The season wi II be open
each day from a half hour
before sunrise to sun set. With
a pre-hunting season population estimate of 700.000
white-tailed deer. the Division
of Wildlife anticipates a kill of
140,000 to 145,000 deer during the week -long hunt.
Many non-resident hunters
choose Ohio - and Meig s
County. in particular - as a
deer hunting destination.' for
both quality of deer and hunt ·
ing accessibility. Deer hunt·

ing is one of the county's premiere tourist attractions, and
restaurants and other businesses traditionally report a ··
significant increase in trade
during the deer-gun season.
Last year. hunters in Meigs
County harvested 2,789 deer
during the week-long season,
Wildlife Officer Keith Wood
said. Ohio is divided into three
deer hunting zones. Meigs
County is located in the state's ·
"Zone C." which allows a
three-deer limit for the season.
Wood said he is working
with the Meigs County
·Cooperative Pari sh thi s year
in an effon to collect donated
venison from · hunters who
enjoy the 'pon but do not use
the meat. Wood said he will

.

Please see Deer, AS

Gallipolis Jr. Women's Club

'"' .;;,; .;i!.

~-

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C Section
D Section
Classifieds
insert
Comics
• Down on the Farm
A2
. Editorials
A4
Obituapes
As
B Section
Sports
A6
·weather

time boasted several businesses, around 90
homes and a population of more than 200.
Those statistics changed after AEP. which
CHESHIRE American Electric operates the neighboring Gen . James M.
Power's acquisition of , most properties in Gavin Power Plant. and the village
Cheshire has left the village looking a lot announced in April 2002 that the utility
different today than it did in the past.
would buy out for $20 million a number of
For those who want to remember Cheshire homes and properties affected by the coalas it was, a family descendant of Cheshire fired plant's emissions.
residents has compiled a community history,
A ballot initiative to di ssolve the village
to which many current and former residents failed in February 2003.
have contributed memories and photographs.
For Little-Creech, who visited Cheshire
"Ohio River Mile 257.7, Cheshire, Ohio: often in her youth, the disappearance of
Memories of a Small Appalachian Village" the community in the. wake of the sale is
is being produced ' next year by MT heart-rendi.ng . But the book and research
Publishing Co., Evansville, Ind. It is she's done in the past will serve as a
authored by Shari Little-Creech of memorial to a time and place not often
Wilmington, a genealogist and historian found anymore.
whose father, Robert Little. and grandfather,
"It's funny. but the attendance at the
Charles M. Little, both lived in Cheshire.
Cheshire Baptist Church has increased rather
The 9-by-12 hardcover volume is avail- than decreased," she said. "There's so much
able on a pre-sale basis for $34.95, plus tax, spirit to that village, it's unbelievable.
until Jan. 31, 2005.
· Please see Cheshire, A5
Little-Creech traces h·ow Cheshire at one
BY KEVIN KEUY

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Silent Tree and Wreath Auction~~~

'

-I

'l

.&lt;

To make a bid, stop in to the French Art Colony in Gallipolis during business hours
Monday - Fri(lay and during the Holiday Home Tour on

'

Wtsl Vh]illl's II Gny, Pnllar,. llkl, AMI Custom Vn Dnler.

Monday • Saturday 9 am • 8 p1n • Sunday I p1n • 7 p•

Friday, December 3 from 6 pm until 10 pm and
Take 1-77 to

Ripley FAtRPLAtN Interchange
(exft 132) Turn North on At. 21,
Dealership It 3 mlln on left ·

Saturday, D~cember 4 from 1 pm until 4 pm.
.

&lt;Btddlngtorthe•vem.,;d••••Pf'n.)
.

A large selection and variety of trees and wreaths. donated by cotnmun1ty bu sinesses and
individuals, will be showcased . Show your support for Holzer Hosp1ce thi s Holiday season .

For more information about
the services Holzer Hospice
provides, plea~e call locally
at

(740) 446·5074
or toll -free at

1·800·500-4850.

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