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                  <text>.- . -

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Redwomen remain
winless in AMC after loss
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Hospital committee to consider options

SPORTS

8Y BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

• Buckeyes mend. See

PageB1

POMEROY - A steering
committee made up of local
citizens will meet later. this
month to determine what
direction to turn in seeking
funding for a local hospital

and emergency room.
.A second application submitted
through the U.S.
Department of Health and
Human Services for funds
needed to start a community
health center in the former
Veterans Memorial Hospital
building was denied last month.

The proposed facility, to
be located in the former
Veterans Memorial Hospital
building, would provide primary medical care, behavioral health services and
dental care. A critical access
hospital, which would
include emergency room

serv ices, are included in
later plans for the hospital.
Meigs
County
Mick
Commissioner
Davenpon, who chairs the
steering committee, said
Tuesday he will meet with a

Please see Options. AS

FINAL FEW IN CHESHIRE
Hurlow family
leaves behind 15
years of
memories
BY MtWSSIA RUSSELl

mrussell@mydailytribune.com ·

• Family Medicine. See
PageA3
·• Community calendar.
SeePage AS
• For the Record. See
Page AS

WEA1HEit

.eo. '-: ....,., ao.

Plrtly cloudy,.,.,

......, ...,

Lo'rrERIFS
Ohio

Hope Hurtow sits on the front porch of the Cheshire home where she and her husband
Samuel raised their only son, James. James was killed in a traffic accident in 1998 just
outside the Cheshire Village limits, but the Hurlow's said his memory lives on inside their
home, which they will have to leave soon. (Millissia Russell)
·

Pick 3 dey: 2-6-2
~.4 dly: 0-6-6-2

Pick 3 night: ().8.6

Pick 4 night: 9-6-&amp;-2
Buctclye 5: 1-3-17-25-28

Deily 3: 1-8-4 Dally 4: 4-7-4-5
Cuh 25: 1-7-12-15-16-20

J. MILES

LAYTON

jlaytonOmydailysantinE~I.com

INDEX
2 SEC110NS- 12 PAGBS

OUen~/

As

Classifieds

82-4

:.;.,

.t·(

Bs
·Aa

j \

F$tqrials .
..

Movies
Sphrts
Weather

funding for
Carleton School
Bv CHARLENE

HoEFUcH

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - The Meigs
Local Board of Education
took action to supplement
funding for the Carleton
School pre-school handicapped program in the
amount of $5.400 at Tuesday
night's meeting .
Superintendent William
Buckley explained that
Carleton School has funding
for a one-half unit for preschool handicapped children
but will be required to return
that money to the state unless
someone picks up the cost of
the other half.
"It's better to help ·them
accommodate the students up
there." said the superintendent, after the board unani- ·
mously approved the money
for Carleton.
"
Buckley stressed how critical
it is that the Meigs Board of
Mental
Retardation
and
Devel&lt;lJrnental Disabilities· levy .
on the November OOllot passes,
"If that levy fails and
Carleton School shuts down.
all those students become our
direct responsibility,'' he said.
To give this suppon to the
school now is a "better way
to go ," he added.
Approvaj was given . by the

CHESHIRE - Pifteen of
the nearly 150 families that
once populated the quiet river
towJLQ{ Che.shire .are .all that
remain after the buyout by
American Electr\c Power
more than a year ago.
Now, the tall smoke stacks
of the Gen. James M. Gavin
Power Plant cast a sepiatoned hue over vacant lots
and boarded-up homes once
cared for so lovingly by the ·
former residents.
One couple, sa·muel and
Hope Hurlow, are scheduled
to leave their home this
month. They will leave
behind 15 years of memories
and hopes .for the future .
board to create mld:litiooal sec.
"I don•t1think there will
ond
grade teaching position for
ever be another place like
the
Meigs
Primary School. There
this," Hope said. "You would
are
more
than 160 second
always see kids riding their
graders, Buckley &gt;&lt;lid, with a
bikes; you would see your
teacher-pupil ratio of 25 to I. He
neigh~ors. walking.
reported that there is a good pos" lt JUSt won 't be the same."
sibility
of grant funds to take care
While other families left
of the cost of adding the teacher.
months ago, the Hurlows
were given an extension by I ·A $ I 3.000 contract was
with
the
AEP in order to finish their · approved
Community
Act
ion
Agency
to
new home, located off of
reinstate
the
J.O.G.
program
Ohio 141.
at Meigs High School this
"I call this home,'' Hurlow
year. It was also agreed to
said. "The new house will
enter
into a contract with the
just be a house until I live
AthensMeigs Educational
there awhile, but it will never
Service Center to provide serbe like this place."
vices related to special and
The Hurlows raised their
gifted
education at an estimatson James, and many of his
ed
cost
of $540.000.
frie nds, in their two-story

Pluse see Few. A5 •

Please see Fundlnc. A5

BY J. M1w LAYTON
jlayton@ mydallysentinel.com

BY

~ar~by

Meigs Local
supplements

Emergency repairs Students donate ·blood to save lives
stabilize Ohio 338

West Vll'ginia

Comics

,, ,, .J ,,,J, . ., ,,,,,,,II,,, .,,

A4
• A2

81-2,6
A2

c 1003 Oblo .Valley l'aiiiWIJna Co.

ANTIQUITY.
Erosion caused the soil to
slip along Ohio 338 this
past year forcing the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation to make
emergency repairs to the
road along the Ohio River.
"It is a river road and
this is something that we
need to keep on 'top of,..
said ·~ Stephanie Filson,
spokesman for ODOT.
Less than a mile of highway in the Antiquity area
was in danger because of
groundwater
flowing
through the sandstone and
soil the road was built on.

To prevent the problem
from happening again,
highway construction workers drilled holes 50 feet
deep and placed metal
shafts inside. At least 18 feet
of each shaft was embedded
into solid ' bedrock, which
Filson said would prevent
the road from slipping.
The project, which was
contracted to National
Engineering
and
&lt;;o~tracting, cost $ ~ .·3
• hon has been 'Completed.
Filson said this was the first
lliajor soil slip repair sinoe
Ohio 338 was•reconstructed
in 2000. FJison said soil slips
and erosion .along the Ohio
Riy~is_~:r.:L~ exclusive to
SOUmeasl vruo.

mil-

RACINE - Blood supplies have tightened
because of a post-Labor Day surge in surgeries,
but Meigs County high school students are quick
to donate to help the American Red Cross.
Taunia Oechslin, Red Cross senior director
for recruitment and collections, said inventories of all blood types are currently below a two
days' supply. She said the Red Cross is particularly alarmed about low Type 0 inventories.
"In recent days we've received numerous
requests for hospitals throughout our six-state
service area for emergency shipments of Type
0 negative and Type 0 . positive blood, primarily for patients undergoing cardiac and
other surgenes," Oechslin said. "We're operating at less than a day's reserve supply in
these types, which impairs readiness to meet
routine and emergency needs."
.
Southern High School held the first of it's
three annual blood drives Thesday at the gymnasium. Several students, faculty, staff and
community members donated 'at the blood

The American Red Cross carne tci Southern High
School seeking a few donations from students,
faculty, staff and community members.' Southern
High School Student Council President Ashley
Dunn gave a pint of blood while listening to NHS
adviser William Beegle and Red Cross nurse
Laura Napier talk about how low blood supplies ·
are in the tri-state area. (J. Miles Layton)

.......... Biood.A5

Holzer Medical Center ~espiratory Therapy Department's 3rcl Annual

-esplr~tory Fall Sppo•lu•
·· -Friday, OCtober 17 • 7:30 am - 4:00: pm
HMC Education &amp; Conferem:e Center - Gallipolis
A one~ event that gives respiratory care profeuionols
lhe opporlunity·to learn and·review different aspects
one/ concepts in the respiratory field. •
Fq- more information, or to regi$ter, ctJII Sandy Moore at ,

7
-

---

__........,_

t. ........

446·5919 .

)
''

·

.
MEDICAL CENTER .

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org

�..

OHIO
.

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Oct. 2
MICH.

I Mansfield '! 33'150' I ,

'
KV.

0 2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

'

•

Sunny Pt. ClOUdy

CIOOdy

••
~ ~.
~ -~~ * .. • . .. .
\o

\

..

Showers T-storms

A.ain

t

~

~

.•

Flurries

Snow

u-

Ice

\lla Assodated Press

Partly cloudy, cool .today
Friday night...Part!y cloudy.
A 20 percent chance of showers after midnight. Lows in
the upper 405 .
Saturday... Mostly cloudy with
a 30 percent chance of showers.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with a
20 percent chance of showers.
Low around 43. Highs around 61.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low
around 43. High around 62.
Tlfesday...Partly cloudy. Low
around 45. High around 64.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 50s to lower 60s.
Tonight...Partly
cloudy. ·
Lows in the upper 30s.
Northwest winds S io I0 mph.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Thursday
night...Mostly
clear. Widespread frost after
midriight. Lows in the mid 30s.
Friday... Mostly sunny in
the morning then becoming
partly cloudy. Highs in the
lower 60s.

Sept 30, 2003

10,000

IXMJcn35

9.500

nrlBrials

9.000

,~:~w:·~:'

;,;~-"~'

9,275.06
Pet chongt
from provlouo: • t . 12

JUN

High
9,378.10

JUL
Low

AUG

SEP

8.500

Record high: 11 ,722.98
Jan . 14, 2000

9,230.47

Sepl. 30, 2003

2,000

Nasdaq

1,800

O:XIp:site

1,600
JUN

High
1,8t2.8t

Pet=
from""'
o: ·2.06

JUL
Low

1,400

SEP
Record t'tlgh : 5,048.62

AUG

1,783 .46

MarCh 10, 2000

Sept. 30, 2003

1,050

Starrlmi&amp;
R:XlriS 500

1,000

950

995.97

JUN

High
1,006.56

P e t =0: ·1.05
fromprw

JUL

Low

900

SEP
AUG
Record high: 1,527.46

990.36

March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
ACI - 2221
AEP - 30
Akzo-31 .19
Ash"'"" Ire. - 32.85
BBT-35.91

Bll-15.81

Bob Evans - 26.71
Bolg\'Vamer- 67.85
Cily Holding- 3.'3.17
Champion- 4.85
ChanTing Shops - 5.71
Col-26.25
Du~-40.01

00-20
Fedetal Mogul- .22

Gannett - n.50
General E-.ctric- 29.81
GKNLY-4.30
Harley Davidson - 48.20
Kman-24.93
Kroger- 17.87

Ltd.-15.08

NSC-18.50
Oak Hil Financial - 26.99
Bank One- 38.65
CJVB-24
Peoples - 26.76
Pepsico- 45.83
Premier - 6.91
R«&lt;&lt;y Bools- 11 35

AD Shell- 44.20
Rocl&lt;well - 26.25
Sears- 43.73
SBC-22.25
AT&amp;T -21.55
USB- 23.99
Wendy's - 32.30
Wai-Man - 55.85
Wor1hilgton - 12.50
Dai~ stod&lt; reports are 11-..
4 p.m. closing quoles of
lhe previOus daYs transactions, provided by Smilh
Partners at Advesl Inc. of
Gal~x&gt;is

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

WASI:I.INGTON (AP) Emery pleaded guilty
The government served · Tuesday in U.S. District
notice Tuesday it is cracking Court in Dayton to 12 counts
down on illegal shipments of of willfully transporting hazhazardous cargo that officials ardous materials on an airsay could lead to accidents or craft without providing writbe used by terrorists to ten notification to the pilots.
mount attacks.
The violations occurred at
As part of new joint initia- Emery's hub in Dayton from
tive by the departments of 1998 to 1999, according to
Justice and Transponation, court documents. Emery
Attorney General , John ceased doing .business in
Ashcroft announced that 200 I but remains a subDayton, Ohio-based Emery sidiary of CNF Inc .
Worldwide Airlines Inc. "There was no incident.
now part of CNF Inc . - There was no crnsh. There was
pleaded guilty to 12 counts no leaking," CNF spokesman
of violating hazardous mate- Jim Allen said. "It was all clerrial shipping laws and agreed ical and administrative violato pay a $6 million fine.
tions of the act."
More than 1.5 billion tons
The government said
of hazardous cargo are Emery transported corros'ive
shipped nationwide each and tlammable liquids, as
year by air, rail, sea and land. well as . explosive and
These include flammable liq- radioactive materials, withl,lids, pres surized gases, out notifying pilots.
explosives, poisons and
Allen said the radioactive
radioactive material.
materials likely were used in
"With the sheer amount of the medical field and that the
hazardous materials being explosive materials could be
shipped on our nation's such. things as flares.
transportation infrastructure,
"These are commonplace,
we must track down and ordinary industrial shipbring to justice those who ments," he said. "These are
violate our transportation not hand grenades, bombs."
laws," Ashcroft said.
Emery employees some-

Ed~or: Chartene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E•t. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Laylon, EKI. t 3

Advertis,ing
Dave Harris, El&lt;l. 15
Clott./Cin:.: Judy Clark, Ext. 1Q
~SetH :

Circulation
Dlllllcl Mgr.: TBA, El&lt;l. 17

•

General Manager
Chartene Hoeflich, El&lt;l. t2

E-mail:
newsOmydallyaentinel.com

w.b:
www.mydaNv-tinel.com

....

Q

Tuesday's
fund-raiser
brought in approximately
$1.7 million, while another
event in Chicago raised
approximately $3.5 million,
Bush campaign spokesman
Kevin Madden said.
From April I through June·
30, Bush raised at least
$1.61 million in Ohio, an
Associated Press review of
donation figures on the Bush
campaign Web site found.
The 4, 769 donors included
548 who gave the maximum
$28~ campaign officials
said Monday that they
expected to report $48 million to $50 million collected
during the June !-Sept. 30
reporting period. The campaign had raised $30 million
through June 30. Democrat
Howard Dean was expected
to report about $14 million
raised during the same period. Former Cleveland mayor
and U.S. Rep. Denni s
Kucinich was expected to
total less than $4 million.
Bush· raised a record ·of
more than $100 million for
the 2000 primaries, when
the donallon limit was
$l ,000 per person. Under a
new campa1gn finance law,
the limit for federal candidates has dou bl ed to $2'000·
The campaign wifl need
th~money to offset money
spent by outside groups on
the Democratic nominee,
Portman said.
Bush carried Ohio by 3.6 ·
percentage points over
Democrat AI Gore in'2000.
Ohio
was
the
only
Midwestern industrial state

to back Bush. The state's
Republicans say they are
expecting another close
race.
"It's a big state with a lot
of electoral votes. Among
the large states, we won
Florida barely, we won Ohio
and
we
won Texas.
Otherwise, the bigger states
tended to go with Gore. So I
think Ohio will be a critical
state for the president,"
Portman said.
Whi Ie Bush's campaign
was picking . up $2,000
checks,
the
Hamilton
County Democrats planned
to meet in downtown
Cincinnati for their annual
fall
reception,
county
Democratic Party chairman
Tim Burke said.
Tickets to the event at the
Crown Plaza Hotel , which
boasted "lowest guaranteed
rates" on its Web site, cost
$150. "That's negotiable,"
Burke said with a laugh.
"On the local level, we' ve
known for years the big
money in this community
goes to the Republicans,"
Burke said. "I suspect we're
not going to miss too many
people because of the
Republican event."
Democrats haven ' t left
town
empty-handed.
President Clinton and Gore
raised millions of dollars for
their campaign and for the
party at several fund-raisers
at the home of lawyer
Stanley Chesley i n the
Cincinnati
suburb
of
Amberley Village.

times missed ' hazmat markings on cargo, or hazmat
identifiers were accidentally
deleted from the computer
system, the government said
in court documents.
Broad security procedures
have been imposed on air
passengers since the Sept. II ,
200 I, terrorist attacks, but
there have been no such stringent measures for air cargo.
Onir a small percentage of
cargo 1s inspected on passenger
and cargo planes. Cargo planes
have no air marshals or armed
pilots, and airport areas where
cargo is handled are not as
secure as passenger terminals.
Members of Congress have
fGcused new attention on
cargo security, particularly
after it learned of the odyssey
of Charles McKinley, a clerk
who had himself shipped in a
cmte on a cargo plane from
Newark, N.J ~o Dallas.
By the end of October the
Transportation
Security
Administration plans to
come up with a way to plug
holes in the system. Three
groups asked by the TSA to
make recommendations for
the plan are scheduled to
announce them Wednesday.

The government crackdown will target shippers
who hide dangerous materials in otherwise safe cargo,
obtain fraudulent licenses to
carry hazardous materials or
violate a variety of safe
transportation practices.
Shipping these materials
illegally heightens the dan~ers
·posed by an accident, pllrlicularly since firefighters and
other first responders would
be unaware the substances
were there. Officials also
worry that terrorists might use
perceived lax security to ship
hazardous materials or perhags mount an attack.
There are no shortcuts to
safety, and we will give no
quarter to those who violate
hazmat transportation safety
requirements,"
said
Transportation
Secretary
Norman Mineta.
Much of the program
involves educati,pn and training for shipping companies
and more aggressive inspection by transportation officials, Mineta said. But he and
Ashcroft stressed that criminal prosecution will be waiting for those who willfully
and flagrantly violate the law.

rFamily Medicine
I

~Reader's tennis elbow may
~really be 'computer-mouse·elbow'
Question: A couple of weeks
ago, ! was digging a new
!lower bed in very rocky soil
'3IId ended up with what !-think
is tendonitis in my elbow -'
:what I've heard called "tennis
~!bow . " I thought the pain
woufd go away on its own. in a
!few days, but it's now two
weeks later, and some days it's
worse than it originally was .
• rm an office \vorker and
,can't think of anything I do
~h at would continue to aggravate it. What is the normal
course of this type of injury?
ls there something I can do to
hasten the healing process'?
Answer :
Inflam mation
!3£ound the elbow where muscles from the forearm attach is
bften called tenn is elbow, but
as you have found out, it isn't
always due to playing tennis.
In medical lingo this condition is called epicondylitis.
. There are two types of epicondylitis. In the most common type, the pain is on the
outside, or lateral, surface of
.the elbow. Thi s "lateral epicondy litis" is seen in a wide
range of situations where
·people overuse their arms. In
!addition to tennis elbow, you
:may also see it sometimes
referred to as· plasterer's

elbow, carpenter's elbow, long enough period of time.
mechanic's
elbow
and She may recommend a prepainter's elbow. In-your case. scription anti -inflammatory
it might be "computer mouse and some progressive exeroperator's elbOw." Not ' uch a cises as the elbow gets better.
Some people wear a forearm
catchy phrase is it''
Much less often , the person · strap that helps decrease the
with epicondylitis has pain on tug on the tendon attaohment.
the inside, or mediaL surface Also. steroid injections into
of the elbow. This "medial the elbow can be helpful in
epicondylitis" is sometimes cases that are nifractory to
conservative treatment.
known as "golfer's elbow."
It's possible, given your occuThe pain' usually comes on
gradually, and is worse with pation, that the work you do at
activ ities that pull on the the computer everyday on your
affected muscle and tendon. job is either causing or aggraInit ially resting the elbow vating your problem. It might
and using ice for about 20 be a good idea to ask you!
minutes three or four times a employer to do an ergonomic
day can resolve the problem . evaluation of your workstation
if the strain isn't too severe . for needed modifications,
I Familr medicine is a week/1•
Taking an over-the-counter
anti- in flammatory
like column ·-ro submit quesriom.
ibuprofen can also be helpful . write to Manila A. Simpson,
If these simple measures D.O.. M.B.A.. Ohio University
of
osteopathic
don't cause the pain to College
resolve promptly. you should Medici•re. P.O. Bo,t I 10, Athens,
see your primary care physi- Ohio 45701 . Medicul informncian. She may want to take an tiorr in this colwnn is provided
X-ray to be sure nothing as an educational service on/1:
more serious is goi ng on , and · /r does not replace rhe judgmeiu
perform an examination of ofyour personal physician. who
should be relied on to diagnosis
yo ur painful elbow.
Providi ng she agrees with and recommend treatment for
your diagnosis, you should anv medical conditiom. Past
expect a full recovery provid- coiumns are available online at
ing you rest the arm for a IVH'&gt;&gt;jhradio.org/fin.)

Teachers hear health care concerns
POM EROY
Dale
'VanTine, president of the
Ohio
Retired
Teachers
Association, discussed health
care concerns of the member
organizations at a recent
meeting of the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association.
There were six new members and two guests at the
meeting which was held at the
Riverside Golf Course clubhouse . The importance of
membership numbers was
discussed because of influ• ence on policy.
: Carol Ohlinger, treasurer,
reported that Rita Lewis had
made a donation to the schol-

arship fund in memory of
Abbie Stratton . a retired
teacher. It was reported by
Joan Corder that a schola rship
of $300 will be presented Ihis
year to a student pursuing a
career

in

edu cation .

Applications
are
being
accepted through the end of
September.
Cards of appreciation were
read from Teresa Williams. tirst
recipient of the MRTA scholarship, and the family of Grace
Weber for the donation to the
scholarship fund in her memory.
The group voted to endorse
the renewal of the one mill
levy for the Meigs County

MILLERSBURG (AP) ·_ A Benton, is accused of killing
man accused of firing a shot- Steven Keirn, 23, of Apple
gun into a c~fleld, killing .a Creek, a family friend.
tomato-throwmg prankster,
Keirn was hiding in the
pleaded innocent to murder dark field near Mount Hope
and involuntary manslaughter with about I 0 others, ages IS
charges Tuesday.
to 23, who told authorities
Marion Weaver, 58, of . they were throwing tomatoes

at passing cars - an annual
prank in Amish areas of
Holmes County.
The group told sheriff's
deputies that a man whose
car was hit with tomatoes
threatened the group, was hit
again, then returned and start-

Council on Aging.
Next meeting will be held
on Oct. 18 at Trinity Church
in Pomeroy. Attorney John
Le ntcs will be the speaker.
The meeting was preceded
by a luncheon on the porch
overlooking
the
river.
Kathleen Scott read "Where
goes the Boats" ancl Martha
Hoover sang, "Shall We
Gather at the River. ''
'

.

:!y.

Wednesday, October 1, 2003

Fearfu·l child dreads his
summer visit with dad
DEAR ABBY: I am 10
years old and live with my
mom, my sister and brother
in Texas. My grandpi!fents
and my aunt live nearby, and
they come over a lot. They
are always telling me how
important it is to visit my
dad and his family in
Chicago and to have a good
relationship with them.
Abby. I spend six weeks
with my dad every summer- and I don ' t want to go there
any more .- Dad never keeps
his promises to me, and he is
always threatening me with
"the belt." I am afraid of
him. My Chicago grandparents tell me they love me
more than my Texas grandparent s, but they don 't call
me very often, and I hate
that they say bad things
about my mom .
How can' I get out of visiting my dad next summer" -SICK OF VISITING MY
DAD
DEAR SICK OF VISITING: If you haven't already
done so, tell your mother
how you feel and why. Your
mother should speak to your
fa ther and explain that his
form of discipline is not
only not working, but ifs
driving you away and is
emotionally ab usive. She
should also speak to the
lawyer who repre sented her
in the divorce about the visitation arrangement. Perhaps
your .vi sit should be super- '
vised. Please show your
mother this letter.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 22year-old college senior. My
live- in fiance , "Ray," is 3 1
and divorced. We have an

Dear
Abby

infant son logether. Hi s three
children. all under 12. are
with us every other weekend.
When I entered this rel ationship. I had no concept of
the tremendou s responsibil ities I would be taking on.
Besides a full -lim e cla &gt;S
schedule . I take care of our
baby. cook every meal and
clean the hou se . I also look
after Ray's kids when
they're here .
Because of our age difference. I some1 imes feel 1ha1
mx values and goal' conflict
With Ray 's. I want to focu&gt;
on my career. bul Ray feels
my household dutie' should
come first. I do not want 10
be the only one shoulderin g
the burden. I want to have a
professional life after I graduate. Ray does not make me
feel appreciated. and I need
advice about what to do
about it. --OVERLOADED
AND UNDERVALUED IN
PITTSBURGH
DEAR OVER/UNDER :
You and Ray appear to have
different priorities. You
want a career; he wants a
housekeeper and baby sitter
for his child ren . Ideally.
your tiance should be helping you to ac hi eve .your

goals. If you cannot fully
ex pres' your fee ling&gt; to h1m
and arrive at a l·ompromi"' ;
i1 may be time 1o re-e1 aluate
your , fee linp abuu 1 I hi'
entire relationship before i1
goes any fu rther.
DEAR ABB Y: 111\ hu,band and I are discu"i ng
di vorce afler onl y e i ~h(
month s of marriage. Nei ther
of u' i; happy. and I gue»
w~·t a' ready as we
thoug h! we were. I feel lerrible abou1 1he $20.(XJO my
parenl s spent on ou r weddin g, not 10 mentio n all the
beautiful and expen,ive gi fh
we recei ved fro m fam ih and
fr iends.
·
Should we pay m) parent ;
back the money ·.• Whal
should we do abou1 1he
gifts? Please help us do the
right thing. - : :&gt;J OT HAPPILY EV ER AFT ER II\
TEXAS
DEAR NOT HAPPILY: I
commend yo u fo r v. anl ing
In do the righl thing. Any
gifh that ha1 e 1101hcen used
should he offered lo lhc people who ga1e lhern. Cas h
gift, Ihal hav e not bee n
spent shouh.l be returned.
Offer to repay your parents
for the wedding expenses.
but it should 1101 be nece'sary. The wedding was their
'
gift 10 yo u.
I Dear AbbY is •rrittm '"
Abigail v,, j Buren . uls;,
kno ll '// as Jeaw! e Phillip.1.
(JIId 1\'tH /imnded 1&gt;1' he1
111oth er. Pauline Plilil ip 1.
Writ&lt;' Dea r .4 /J!J y ut
H'\nr./ )earAhhr.com o r PO .
Bo.r 694-JO. /m A n gelt'.l. CA
9006'1 )

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News

because they want to make
sure the P.resident's message
gets out.
Much of the ZIP code's
total came from a fund-raiser
June 25 that featured first
lady Laura Bush at the home
of Lindner's neighbor, former
ambassador to Switzerland
Mercer Reynolds.
Reynolds is chairman of
the Bush campaign's finance
committee. Lindner's father,
Cincinnati Reds owner Carl
Lindner Jr., is one of the
campaign's · "Rangers,"
meaning he has helped to
raise at least•$200,000.
After his jet arrived at the
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport, Bush
talked briefly with Jerry
Markley, 63, of Cincinnati, a
volunteer in a citizen patrol
which supports police.
"It's hard to explain or to
put into words. I looked
right into the eyes of the
most powerful guy in the
free world and he looks you
right in the eye and says, 'I
want to thank you for the job
you're doing in your community," ' said Markley, who
works for a machine tools
company. "Then we shook
hands, and I said I appreciate
the job you're doing for our
.country, and he said, 'I'm
giving it my best shot."'
Several dozen activists
protesting Bu sh's VISit
waved signs from an
Interstate 71 overpass in
suburban Cincinnati, several
miles from where Bush visited . The president left
Cincinnati on Tuesday night
to return to Washington.

Justice, DOT use Ohio company as example of cargo crackdown

A DAY ON WALL STREET

.,

COLUMBUS (AP) Among donors to President
Bush 's quest for a second
term, only one area ·has been
more generou s than an
enclave of million-dollar
home s outside Cincinnati 's
eastern edge .
Residents in Ohio's 45243
ZIP code, where on Tuesday
the Bush campaign made its
second stop for cash in three
months, had given $~77 ,500
in the quarterly reporting
period when Bush started
accepting donations, according to the Center for
Responsive Politics in
Washington. The nonparti,
san
campaign-finance
watchdog sa1d only the
I0021
ZIP code, on
Manhattan's upper east side,
had given more: $476,450.
Bush arrived Tuesday
afternoon as the featured
guest at a $2 ,000-per-person
fund-raiser at the home of
Carl Lindner Ill, whose family has donated $25,000 to
the campai gn so far.
Lindner, co-president of the
• American Financial Corp. ,
an insurance holding company, lives in Indian Hill ,
which shares the 45243 ZIP
code with Madeira and other
affluent Cincinnati suburbs.
"A lot of people are stepping up to the plate. A lot of
my friends and neighbors who
have never given a penny to a
presidential candidate and
give little or nothing to the
rest of us feel the need to help
this president,"·said U.S. Rep.
Rob Portman, a Republican
who represents the area.
"They want to help

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday,October1,2003

Bush hits up Cincinnati again

Ohio weather

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0 PINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Octobert,

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-21&amp;6 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

NATIONAL

VIEW

Education
Are American students
falling behind?
The Meridian (Miss .) Star, 011 American students
falling behind:
Just as money can't buy happiness. it appareiitly can't buy a
quality education either. Not in this country.
.
A new report issuecj last week identifies an alarming fact :
The U.S . spends more public and private money on education
than any other industrialized country, but, overall, American
students are barely average in areas ranging from high school
graduation rates to test scores in math, reading and science.
According to an annual review of .25 industrialized nations
produced by the Paris-based Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development, the· U.S. spent $10.240 per
student from elementary school through college in 2000, well
above the average of $6,36 1 among more than 25 nations.
The performance of 15-year-old American students on tests
was a stunning under-achievement. In malh, U.S. students
ra nked 19th, behind even the Czech Republic; in reading,
15th; in science, 14th....
Education in the U.S. today remains in a state of serious
di sconnect between money spent and results achieved. But
money doesn't seem to be I he real problem. Federal education
spending has grown by $ 11 billion since President Bus_h took
office.
: ~Whether some like it or not, th0 No Child Left Behind law
should be only a beginning. Much more creative re-thinking
throughout the entire system is essential if the next generation
of young people is to exceL Otherwise, American students
wiJI have faJlen so far behind they may never catch up.

'

California is a racist state.
That's not my opinion.
That's the implicit view of
those who oppose a California
ballot measure that aims to end
the odious practice in the
Joseph
Golden State of classifying
Perkins
people by their 'race.'
---Proposition 54 would forbid
state and local government .
agencies in California from
~dentifying individuals by their
skin color for purposes of pub- think the resf of California's
lic education, public contract- white population is less coloring, jmblic- ell]ployment and blind than they are.
So they oppose Proposition
other government operations.
54
ostensibly to keep other
Foes of the measure, from
whites
honest. And to affinn
Jesse Jackson to California their solidarity
blacks,
Lieutenant Governor Cruz browns, yellows with
and reds in
Bustamante,
fret
that the continuing struggle
of
California's nonwhite popula- those 'minorities' for race
tion somehow will be equality.
irreparably harmed if it is
The perverse irony is that
approved by the voters. They the whtte and nonwhite foes
insinuate that California's of Proposition 54 find themwhite population cannot be selves supporting public politrusted to treat nonwhites with cy - classifying individuals
fairnes s, without prejudice. according to their skin color They suggest that, unless the that has a long and racist tradiGolden State continues to tion.
keep score on the races of
Indeed, one of the most
those enrolled in its public reviled pillars of South Africa's
schools and colleges, awarded aparthetd system was tts soits public contracts, hired to its called Population Registration
government jobs, whites in Act. The law, which Nelson
charge will reflexively dis- Mandela's African National
criminate.
Congress described as 'inhuWhat astounds is that race man,' required that each and
demagogues like Jackson and every person be classified as
Bustamante are hardly the either white, colored or Bantu
only ones who hold this vievr. (black).
Many whites in California
America's equivalent of the
also share this view, panicu· Population Registration Act
larly those who consider was the Old South's Jim Crow
themselves enlightened 9n laws. They classified individmatters of race. The 'enlight- uals by race for purposes of
ened' whites think themselves preserving divisions between
above race prejudice, beyond whites and nonwhites. It gave
race discrimination. But they us the infamous 'one-drop'

::J
rule - if a person had as little decoding the human 13enome.
one drop of black blood cours- ·· In a recent issue ol Sc.tence,
ing through his or he.r veins, Venter says that collectton of;
he or she wa~ classtfied as race and ethmctty data - tor ;
black.
clinical drug 1nals - co~Jds
The early leaders of the civil lead to 'misleading and bto-"
rights movement in this coun- logically meanmgless conc!u· :
try made a persuasive case sions.' That's because 'race.-~ ~ •
-against the race-conscious a social , rather than .sctenuhc..
public policy that California construct. 'Instead, of applym&amp;.!
now practices; that foes of soc ial categories, he wrote, ..,
Proposition 54 would mam- we should be promotmg.1
tain in perpetuity:
oblaining scienllft c data .
As far backs as 1949, Color of skin does not work as,
Thurgood Marshall argued on a surrogate.' In fact. he noted!·
behalf of the NAACP Legal several scientific studtes have,.
Defense and Educalion Fund shown that there are more dif:that 'classifications and dis- ferences in drug responses
tinctions based on race or within racial and ethni~ ,
color. ha.ve no moral ?r legal groups than over them .. . ;
vahdny m our soctety.
Then there\ the impltcanon ,
Is there an~one . among _ made mQst receml y by the,;
Propostlton 54 s white . and three- judge panel of the 9th,
nonwhtte . opponent; wh,o u.s. Circuit Cmu1 of ~ppeal~ .
would? dtsmtss Marshal.Is that trie\1 unsuccesstull y to
word~; Who would detend J1m stop the recall election- lhat
Crow . Who would condone if California law enforcement::
the? Populatton Regtstrauon agencies slop collecting. race,
Act.
data the state wtll see a nse IllOf course not Yet, they both' hate crimes and racial.,
-.
•
advocate thai Cahfomta con.
I .f .
.d t pro1I 1mg.
tmue to c asst y. tiS rest en s
y: t lh stale novemment's
accordmg to lhetr skt~ color.
e· .e · . e . , 1 .
·t
nonptuttsan
legtslatt ve .tna vst
And th ey emp Ioy the mos .
. 1. p . .· ·
·54 _
1
1
11
dubious arguments to justify dttests '
toposttton . :•
their support for public ·policy allm~s lhc_c~&gt;! l e~tto~land use ot.·.
that has no moral or legal relevant t.t~e-rcl dted d.tta tor ,
validity.
purposes ollaw enlorcemenL ,
Like the claim that, if The foe s ol Ptoposttton54
California
health
care should stop htumg behmd 1
providers stop collecting race excuse' f(&gt;r voting against the '
data, the state's nonwhite pop- measure. They should JUS!'I
ulation will not receive proper come oul am! acknowledge•.
medicallreatmenL
that they thtnk Cahfomta an·;
That docs not jibe with the inheren tl y racist state.
.
scientific findings of J. Craig (Joseph Po*IIIS 1s '' cvlw1m1Sf ~
Venter, who founded Celera .for Tlle San Dwgo U111w-Tnbune ;
Genomics. lhe biote~hnolugy · wul a11 1 "" • •mched "( ,
firm that shares credit for JosephPerkins@Unir»&gt;7iih.com) :
~

WHef\1

WiLL THe'{

_,

Be. CPMiNG
1-/0~?

Community calendar

Broadcast set

in* clear of these areas.
The Athens to Darwin
ATHENS _"Opening the and
Ravenswood
w
.
Th
Oh
·
Connector
projects
are
Door
e
.. 10 major constructton zones
est.
Company of Associates, a that are presently restricted
documenrar:y ~lm produ~ed . to the public," said ODOT
b~ Reedsville s Shelburne , District
10 . Deputy
Ftlms. and ~eatured m t~e Director
George
M.
~unday
Tm~es- ~enlln~l ~ Collins. "When t!lking into
Along the .Rtver secuon account the sizeable equiplast week, w1ll be broadcast ment working in these
by WOUB-TV 20 at 8 p.m. locations it is certainly not
on Oct. 16. .. ,
a favorable area for exploring."
.
Since this area is deemed
off-limits to the public and
I"S
construction crews are not
expecting to find individu~ Ohio als in the work zone, venMARIETTA
Department of Transportation turing there could prove
District 10 is requesting dangerous.
assistance from the public to
"Construction crews are
help maintain safety in major working on these projects
work zones located in Athens at all times of the day and
and Meigs Counties by steer- night D and they are not

COnStrUCtiOn
Zone Off ll'ml"t

expecting to find members
or the public in the work
zone in any capacity~' said
I0
l'Ublic
District
Information
Officer
Stephanie Filson. "To do so
could create a dangerous
environment for boili yourself and those on the JOb."

Benefit sing
planned
MIDDLEPORT-, }. benefit sing for the Middleport
Community Church located
· on Pearl Street in Middleport
will be held at 7 p.m.
Saturday at the church.
Singing will be Mercy,
Earthen Vessels, Salvation,
and Aaron Grate. Pastor Sam
Anderson invites the public
to attend the sing which will
be held at the church.
•

For the Record

DIFFERENT..•

'{ou·RE

"

I'M

I

VERIZ.ON.

.

.,

"

87 8!L.LioN MoRE AME'RICAN$ 01SPATCHED To IRAQ

'

'.

Do men get womenopause?

EDITOR
Leiters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. · Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinion; expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing

--·-----,------....;_
·~

'You've got all the symptoms.' Sue said.
'The symptoms of what?'
'Male Fatigue Syndrome.
MFS.'
'What are you talking
about? I feel fine.'
'Sure, now. But when I
asked you to vacuum the living room, you said you were
too tired. When I asked you
to take out the garbage you
said, 'Later.' You sat at the
kitchen table and watched
me load the dishwasher this
morning as if there was some
huge weight on your shoulders preventing you from
getting up and helping me.
Then Willie calls, says let's
play golf, and you couldn't
JUmp up fast enough.
'It's classic Male Fatigue
Syndrome. You whine and
moan about having to mow
the lawn with your bad back
but it ~ uddenly clears up
when you want to go bowling. You make up excuses to
get , out of little household
chores, yet you've got plenty
of ·energy to work on your
car, and plenty of get up and
go when it's time to ski.
Wlien I'm dead tired, you're
up and ·at 'em. It's classic
MFS. Of course you're ready
to go. I've done all the

Jim
Mullen

'Most women have. It's a
disease that strikes nine out
of 10 husbands and there is
only one known cure.'
'Servants?'
'Only in extreme cases.
Constant and endless nagging has proved most effective.'
··
I pressed on. 'How come
women have heard of it and
men haven't?' 'Because most 'oflen it
occurs in men who also suffer from Male Deafness
Disorder, MOD. It seems
they can hear some things
some of the time, but not all
things all of the time. They
can hear 'Dinner's ready.' but
they can't hear 'Don't throw
your clothes in a big heap on
the bedroom floor.' They can
hear. football games on television but they can't hear 'Put
the toilet seat down.' In
work. '
severe cases of MDD,
'That's odd,' I played women have to stan almost
along, 'I've never heard of every sentence with ihe
Male Fatigue Syndrome.'
words 'How m~ny times do I

_____________
_
..

'
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

Thuraday, Oct. 2
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Auxiliary Post 9053
7:30 p.m. at the hall.
CHESTER
The
Chester-Shade Historical
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the · courthouse.
Plans will be finalized for the
October genealogy lair. Also

Sentenced. .

POMEROY - Foreclosure
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Beneficial
Ohio, Inc., Elmhurst, Ill.,
against Dennis E. Brooks,
Logan, alleging default on a
promissory note in the
amount of $69,729.60, and
by Wells Fargo Bank
Minnesota, Mendota Heights,
Minn., agaiost James A.
Leamond, Racine, and others, alleging default in the
amount of$50,109.77.
A personal injury lawsuit
has been filed by Heather
Barnes, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
against Matthew Putnam,
·
Parkersburg.

POMEROY - Stephan A.
Stearns has been sentenced in
Meigs Cpunty Common
Pleas. Court on a count of
contributing to the delinquenPOMEROY - A divorce
cy of a minor, a first-degree
action
has been filed in
misdemeanor, and attempted
Meigs
County Common
drug . possession, a firstNEW HAVEN
York
Pleas
Court
by Christina Lee,
degree misdemeanor.
•
and
Dee
Shade, agamst Lawrence
Stearns was sentenced to Lee, Jr., Pomeroy.
D e e
two six-month sentences of
(Roush)
local confinement, to be
I ge I s
"'~'_.a,_n.,.n o u n c e
served consecutively, which
were suspended. He was
the birth of
POMEROY -Actions for
ordered to complete two years
a daughter,
dissolution
of
marriage
have
of community control, com·
Peyton
been __filed in Meigs County
plete
the
Community Common
Elizabeth
Pleas Court by
Ingels,
Corrections program, partici- Le~is E. Humphrey, Pomeroy,
Aug. II, at
pate in drug and alcohol and!f Darla K. Humi&gt;hrey,
the Holzer
counseling, and complete 200 Wellston, and · by Kenda K.
IOCels
Medical
hours of community service.
White, Pomeroy, and Stephen ·
Center, Gallipolis.
He was also prohibited A. White, Reedsville.
' The infant weighed 9

from consuming alcohol or
illegal drugs ad was ordered
to see,k employment ani!
observe a curfew.

Ingels birth

Dissolutions ·

with his mother's, His upstairs
bedroom still bears the decorations of an outstanding athlete and loving son. The welfrom PageA1
coming decoration outside
still
"The Hurlow's:
white house located on Third Sam, reads
Hope and Jimmy."
_
Street.
got
good
memories
"I've
James graduated from
River Valley High School in here," she said. "I really hate
1995 and was attending to leave, but my health is bad
enough and I really don't need
Hockin~ College until he was
killed m a traffic accident anything else added to it."
The "anything. else" Hope
Ser,t. I, 1998.
refers
to is pollution • Living here, it's almost like
you can still feel him here," something that concerned her
Hope said. "He loved that and her neighbors for years,
pool. He helped me mow the but was overlooked because
they loved their town.
grass and plant the flowers."
"It was a nice place to raise
His bicycle remains on the
kids,"
she said. "You were
front porch, chained tl)gether
close to the ball fields and

have ·to tell you ... "
'I'm sorry,' I said, 'Did you
say something?'
' A . perfect example of
MSCC, a dreaded but common disease known as Male
Selective
Concentration
Collapse. No known cure.
For some reaso n, it s\fikes
only men, men in their
prime, men who could have
lived happily together with
their wives till the end of
their days but instead
become an"noying
and
tedious within weeks of contracting MSCC. Most men
who get it become unhappy,
divorced, jobless winos who
wander the streets rummag·
ing through garbage and begging for food. I'd have that
checked out if I were you.
Diagnosed early, 1 could live
a longer and happier life.'
'Does practici ng medicine
without a license ever bother
Y0\1? Don't you ever feel like
you're taking a job away
from a real quack ?'
'Hmmpf,' she snorted.
'Where's all that anger coming from? It's the kind. of
delu sional reaction one
exrects from someone suffenng from WWMC What?
Who
Me ?
Convulsions.'
Who? Me! ?! I'd have
loved to hear more about
these fascinating . medical
·non-breakthroughs , but I

~ . II' ..•.,, '"

., ..

... ,

just remembered lhat I had'
promised Dave I'd help him
move. His wife ki cked himout of the hou se last night
for no reaso n at aiL He was
just sitting there watching
television and suddenly she·
went bonkers . He swears he
didn 't do anyt hing, that it
was a bolt out of the blue ..
She just snapped . Walked~
into the living room while;~
he was watching hockey an4:.
put 'Beaches' in the VCR
without saying a word! She"
took the remote and lhrew it
right out the fronl ·door. He
said, 'I'm sure glad men :
don 't
90
thiougll;
menopause, and that's when ;
it hit the fan.
··
Can you believe it? He jusi:
got back from a lwo-week
hunting trip, bro11ght her'
home 300 pounds of elk meat '
and
s h~'s
conrplaining"
because he won't fix the roof'
leak in her sewing room. She
won 't even let him relax for a"
. montti or tWo. She's sick anq
he's paying the price.
•
What can 1 tell you? y0.;
just can't make so!)le warner)
happy.
:
(Jim Mullen is the author oJ
'It Takes A Village Idiot: JC
Memoir of Life After the City :
(Simon and Schuster. 2001):.
He also contribure.&lt; regularlt,
ro Entertainment Weeki&gt;;
where Ire can be reached ac
jim_mullen@ew.com) · · . :

..

••

Funding
from PageA1
A
grant
from
the
Washington
State
Community College for the
Tech Prep program in the
amount of $16,633 was
acknowledged.

Personnel

Hired as substitute teachers
by the board were Billie
Butcher, Kevin Shepard,
Steplj,en Bentley, Brooke
Butchers, Jeremy Chirpas,
James Ewing, Lauren Gripa,
Sarah
Hoffman,
Paul
Kristofco, Jack Malone,
Luke Mcintosh.. Jessica
Roach, Eric Stepihens, and
Donald Thome, Jr.
.
Danny Davis was hired on
a supplemental contract as

head· wrestling coach with
Troy Bauer as the assistant
wrestling coach. Employed
as tutors for health handicapped students at the rate of
$20 an hour not to exceed
five hours a week were·
Jennifer Henson, Hubert
Meyer, and Gloria VanReeth.
Oliver Norris was hired as a
substitute bus driver for the
current school year to be used
on an as-needed basis.

Other business
Tobacco use intervention
programs for teenagers available through local agencies at
no cost to the school district
were discussed at the meeting .
Meeting with the board were
Kyle Ord, assistant tobacco
educator for the Meigs County
Health Department; Todd
Tucker, ·youth coordinator of
Holzer Tobacco 1'revention

1

planned will be a costume
ball and Christmas open
house. Members and others
interested are Invited to
attend the meeting.
Friday, Oct. 3
POMEROY
Meigs
County PERl 174 meets
Friday at ·the Meigs Senior
Center, witl'l luncheon at
noon, followed by meeting
·and program . Sgt. Pat
McDonald of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol to speak
concerning changes in dri·
ving laws.
Sunday, Oct. 5
GALLIPOLIS - Oh·Kan
Coin club will hold a coin
show from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m.
Sundav at the Gallipolis
Holiday Inn.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 ,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30 at
the temple. Work will be in
the fellow craft degree .
Refreshments.

Social Events
Friday, Oct. 3
POMEROY - A merchants appreciation lun-

cheon will be served by the
First Soiuthern Baptist
Church from 11 a.m to 2
p.m. on the Pomeroy parking
lot. The menu for the free
dinner will be beans and
cornbread, and hotdogs with
all the trimmings.
Sunday, Oct. 5 ·.
POMEROY - In observance of World Communion
Sunday a joint service of
Pomeroy churches will be
held at 10 a .m. in the
Pomeroy
amphitheater:
Participating churches are
Trinity Church, Pomeroy
United Methodist Church .
St. Paul Lutheran Church,
and
Grace
Episcopal
Church. Take lawn chairs. In
the event of rain, the event
will by held at Trinity Church .

Support groups
Thuraday, Oct. 2
POMEROY
. Holzer
Hospice Meigs County •din·
ner with friends" will be held
at 6 p.m. at Crow's
Restaurant Call 992-7 463
tor more i~formation .

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

Local folks

Divorce

Few

LETTERS TO THE

Clubs and
Organizations

from Page A1

WE 1RETOO

&amp;;TA~I£R.

Wec:II!Mday, Oct. 1
MIDDLEPORT
.
Middleport BQti'd of Public
Affairs has 7iisCheduled their
regular meeting of Oct. 6, for
5:30 p.m. on Oct. 1., at
council chambers.
Thursday, Oct. 2
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m. at
the office building.
Friday, Oct. 3
ALFRED Orange
Township Trustees will meet
in regular session, 7:30 p.m
at the home of the township
clerk, Osie Follrod.

Civil suits

Moderately Confused

C 20tXl by NEA, Inc.

Public meetings

BI00-d

AT&amp;T.

The Daily Sentinel• Pqe As

www.mydailysendnel.com

Local Briefs

An inherently racist tradition

'

Wednesday, October :1, :zoo3

2003""

~~~~~----~~~~~------~~--~j

The Daily Sentinel /

'

playground, you could hear
the bell -chime at the church
and walk to the pizza place
and · the post office.
Everybody looked out for
everybody else."
Now, Hope said, the town
feels empty and deserted.
"It doesn't seem right," she
said. "It's lonely. I miss the
kids, my friends and neighbors.
The town really looks ruined."
Hurlow said she is looking
forward to moving to her new
home, but there will be a lot
of adjustments to make.
"My wish is just that we
have good friends and neigh- ·
bors there too," she said.
"But, you just don't know
until you live there."
Center, and Lora Rawson,
tobacco prevention specialist
for
the
Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency.
They
discussed
the
Intervening with Teen Tobacco
Users (TEG) along with the
Stay Tobacco-free Athlete
Mentor Program (STAMP)
and explained how the two
programs motivate users to
quit or stay free of tobacco use.
· The three tobacco prevention S.JlCI:ialists will meet with
principals of the district on
Oct. 9 to further discuss the
program and determine how
it can be included in the
school day.
Attending the meeting
were Buckley, Mark E.
Rhonemus, treasurer, Roger
Abbott, John Hood, NoJ'IIlan
Humphreys,
and
Scott
Walton, board members.

drive sponsored by the
National Honor Society .
.William Beegle, NHS lldviser, said 35 pints is the goal the
NHS shoots at each blood
drive. The last blood drive in
the spring tapped 53 pints.
"We hope to help the low
blood supply in the area,"
said Beegle.
When the drive was over,
Beegle reported that the Red
Cross collected 38 people
volunteered to give blood
and 29 pints were donated. .
Southern High School
donated
approximately
between 110 to 120 pints
last year Beegle said. The
Red Cross provided a $500
scholarship to reward the

·Options
from PageA1
hospital consultant next week,
to review the county's application, and to deteJ'IIline the
county's options for funding.
The steering conunittee wjll
probably meet in mid-October
to discuss the county's next
steps, Davenport said
''We're getting mixed signals on the subject of new
starts," Davenport · said.
"When we ftrst received
news that our appliquion had
been rejected, we were told
the next round of funding
would not include an opportunity for new starts, but now
people at the federal level are
telling US SUch fundin~ might
be available after all.'
The specific criteria for
the new funding round will
be released by the federal
government on Wednesday,
with an application deadline of Dec. I.
"We have to consider all
of our alternatives, because
our goal is still to provide
health care from our hospi-'
tal building," Davenport
said. "We can't rule out any

28 MUUOn people in the U.S. baye hearlq lolls.... Are you one of tbem?

499 .Richlmd Awnue. Atbw
7.SM-6333 UOU51·9106

pounds, 5 ounces and was the Roya l Oaks Resort
22 inches long.
Chapel on Sunday mornings
Maternal grandparents are under the direction of the
Harry and Sandi Roush of Rev. Glenn Rowe . The
New Haven. Paternal grand- Chapel is located on the
parents are the late George camp grounds.
H. Ingels and Mary Ingels of
At I0:30 a. m. there is felNew Haven.
lowship and refre!illments
Peyton was welcomed time. The worship service is
home by her brother, from 11 a.m. to noon and
Nicholas Ingels.
there is a class for children
I0 and under. The service is
non-denominational and the
dress is casuaL Pastor Rowe
and the congregation invite
the public to attend. For
POMEROY - A new more i~fonnat io n call 992ministry has been started at 0758 or 992-3 129.

New ministry
started

school for its generosity.
Emily Hill, a senior and
NHS vice president, made
plans to give blood for the
second time in her life. She
gave blood last spring.
"I am out here 'to help the
community,'' she said. "It
makes me feel good about
myself and giving blood can
save lives."
· Ashley Dunn, a senior and
student council president,
was one of the first sn!dents
to sign up for donating
blood early Tuesday moming. The day before, she
urged fellow classmates to
give blood in a speech she
· gave in her drama class.
"I encourage everybody to
give blood," she said.
"Giving blood can save
lives and it is important to
help other peop~e out." ·
Dunn said one of the rea-

sons she gives blood is that
if she is ever·in an accident
or undergoing surgery. hospitals would respect her
blood donor status by reducing the price for the blood
that she might need.
Dunn said !hat giving
blood doesn't hurt and that
the worst part was getting
her finger pricked to determine her blood type.
1\vo student groups - the
Student Council and the
Nursing Assistants group sponsored the blood drive at
Meigs High School last year.
Kathy Reed, a teacher, called
the blood drive at MHS a tra-·
dition and said more than 65
pints were given last spring.
Members of the nursing
assistants group help nurses
with the Red Cross during
each blood drive.

options at this point ."
An administrator and physician have been retained to
oversee the facility's operation
in the event funding is secured.
and estimates place the the cost
of start-up at $300,000.
'We have one of the nicest
buildings poSsible, ready to go,
we have physicians and admin-

istrators ready to join us, all we
need is the money to stan," said
Conunissioner Jim Sheets.
'This is a critical time to
move fotwan:l. because there's
a lot of anention being paid to
runt! health care issues."
Davenpon said "Many areas
like ours are experiencing problems to similar to our own."

Buick

�Page A~

STATE • ·LocAL
National Surgical Technologist Week observed at HMC

The Daily Sentinel

Wt..inesday, October 1,

GALLIPOLIS - National
Surgical Technologist Week
was observed September 21-27
a1 Holzer Medical Cemer.
:&gt;urgical technolo~ists function
undl:r the supervis1on of registered nurses who aro responsible for the care.of patients in Ihe
opcmling room, along with surgeons and anesthesia personnel.
The surgical technologist
works with medical supervision to facilitate the safe and
effective conduct of invasive
surgical procedures. They work
to ensure that the opemting
room or envimnment is safe,
equipment functions properl y,
and the opemtive procedure ts
conducted under conditions
that maximize patient safety.
Certified surgical technologists (CSTs) often function as
the sterile member of the surgical team who pass instruments,
sutures, and sponges durin~
surgery. After "scrubbing,'
they don gown and gloves and
preprue the sterile setup for 11te
appropriate procedure.

Bl
•

Prep Football

Cross Co~ntry

TVC

Ohio Dlvi.lon

m:

111m

o-o
o-o
o-o
o-o
o-o
o-o

Belpnl
Vinton County
Wellston
Alexander

Netsonville-York
Meigs

All
4-1
3-2

2-3
2-3
2-3
14

lloctdng DMelon

m:

111m
Operating room surgical technicians at Holzer included left to right, front, Helen ,
Null , Eve Smeltzer, Crystal Crisp and Elaine Brown , and back, Karen Moore,
Donna Ellis, Darren Clagg, Lori Haynes, Vikki Birchfield and Lori Fisher. Others
,
not pictured are Jody Arnold , Tony Caldwell, Bonnie Handley, Kirby Hill, Tammy Certified surgical technicians at the Holzer Hospital's Maternity and Famlf¥
Nolan. Denise Null, Bonnie Patton. Rebecca Polinsky, Sherry Ritchie, Lesa Sias, Center are. left to right, Linda Slayton , Tammy Rote and Donna Hall. Not Pi!
Christy Vanco, and endoscopy technicians Kathy Edwards and Cathy Hereford. · tured are Ginger Dodrill , Ruth Harper, Debbie Meadows and Christy Rippeth. :

•••

.•

•

All

Trimble
Waterford

o-o
o-o

4-1
3-2

Eastern

tl-0

Federal Hocking

o-o
o-o
o-o

2-3
2-3
0.5.
0.5

Millar
Southern

.. aan..

~

Meigs at Wellston

Eastern atllimble
Southern at Federal HociOOg
Alexander at Belpre
VInton County at Nelsonville-York
Miller at Waterford

Others

ram
Ironton
Wahama

· Symmes valley
SoulhGallla
Hannan

().4

oak H'~l

()-5

Fliday'a Gllrnea
Wahama at Buffalo

Ironton at Paul Blazer (Ky.)

Green at Symes Valey

Slllurdlly'a Gernea

South Gallla at Parkersburg Cath.
Oak Hill at Ports. Notre Dame

Bengals make
roster, practice
squad moves

Dr. Rob Crane visits a local tobacco grower in Gallia County
after program on the smoking at Holzer Medical Center.
tobacco. Following the pre- tour of three local tobacco
sentation, 'he was taken on a growers.

State could begin placing
ads at highway rest areas
CLEVELAND (AP) Billboards could start appearing at Ohio highway rest areas
now that lawmakers ended a
ban on commercial adverti sing at the roadside stops.
Before the Ohio Department
of Transportation starts selling
ads at the state's 148 rest areas,
the agency is trying to tigure out
whether signs would violate the
U.S. Highway Beautification
Act of 1965,,which limited the
number of billboards along
American roads.
"We're looking to see if
there's a federal prohibition
against
that,"
ODOT
spokesman
Brian
Cum1ingham said Tue sday.
The change was put in the
state budget bill this year, giving ODOT authori zation to
sell advertising at rest areas.
The old law banned commercial activity for the safety oftravelers and to be consistent with
national policy. The only exception was vending machines.
Under the budget provi sion,
any protits from ads in rest
areas would be placed in the
newly created Roadside Rest
Area Improvement Fund. The
state has not estimated of how

Prep fooeball l'ltlnga, Plgt B2
'
Cubl top Braves In playoff opener, Plgt B8

Wednesday, October t, 2003

Crane speaks about Nicotine Raising money for prom
GALLIPOLIS
Rob
Crane, MD, ofThe Ohio State
University and President of
Preventing
Tobacco
Addic tion
Fo11ndation,
recently spoke at a continuing
medical education activity at
Holzer Medical Center about
"Nicotine: Taming Our Most
Addictive and Deadly Drug ".
Crane discussed simple
strategies that physicians can
enact in their own practices to
better identify, motivate and
support nicotine addicts. He
also explained effective counseling techniques and prescription combinations that .
maximize the opportunities of
patients who are seeki ng
abstinence from nicotine.
Crane also touched on ways
to prevent youth initiati on and
promote adult cessation from

2003

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

much money it could earn
from ad sales.
Richard Henry, a Federal
Highway Administration official who administers U.S.financed hi ghway programs
in Ohio, said using rest stops
for roadside adverti sing is
probably illegal.
In the mid-1990s, U.S. ofticials s,aid New Jersey's attempt
to place 12 billboards on a
state-owned right-of-way along
Interstate 95 violated several
federal laws and regulations.
But Ron Storey, a Renton.
Wash., businessman. says he
operates a program in
Washington and Oregon that
sells advertising in 35 rest areas
under contmcts with both states.
"It 's a revenue-producing
mechani sm," Storey said. "It
has been all owed by fede ral
law. It 's very legal."
Gov. Bob Tali did not a&gt;k
lawmakers to lin the ban against
conunercializing rest areas.
Dwight Cnm1, a spokesman
for House Speaker · Larry
Householder, said the speaker
added the amendment based on
conversations with constituents.
:State transportation officials also have drafted regula-

tions that would allow nearly
II ,000 billboards on private
property along Ohio's highways to sprout temporary
extensions that could increase
their size up to 2'0 percent.
Billboard operators call such
extensions "cutouts" or"embellishments," and typically charge
extra for them because they
make signs more eye-catching.
Cutouts extend beyond the outside dimensions of a sign, which
now cannot be larger than 1,200
square feet on rural highways.
For example, a hotel might have
a cutout of a city skyline extending beyond the regular billboard.
ODOT's Cunningham said
the agency wants to make sure
it can regulate the extensions
and prevent temporary permits
from becoming permanent.
But Meg Maguire, president of
Scenic America, an organization
that lobbies for tighter billboard
controls, called the proposal to
allow cutouts an "outrdge."
A drive around Ohio "is to be
overwhelmed by litter on a stick
- the junk mail of the American
highway. You don't see the Ohio
Department of Tmnsportation
doing anything to cut down on
billboards," Maguire said.

These Meigs High School sophomores are looking ahead toward paying for their junior
prom in 2005 which lllllY cost $10,000. The sophomore advisory committee is using this
gift bask'&lt;! which contains items from local businesses and is worth at least $800 to rai~
funds. The basket will be given away at the homecoming game Oct. 10. On the committ~
are left to right, front, Travis Butcher, Derek Brickles, Christopher \4in Reeth, Anna
Hartenback, Holly Davis, Taryn Lentes, Whitney Thoene and Autumn McLaug!llin and
back, Brittany Jacks, Kayla McCarthy, Joey Haning and Melia Whan. (J. Miles Layton) ·
.
'

Holiday flower show·· .
discussed by gardeners
POMEROY - Plans for
the annual county-wide holiday flower show were discussed at a recent meeting of
the Winding Trail Garden
Club held at the home of
Alice Thompson.
The show has been set for
Nov. 22 and 23 at the Meigs
Senior Center with the
theme to be "The Sights and
Sounds of Christmas.
Valerie Nottingham, outdoing
president ,
also
announced the regional
meeting to be held Oct. 25 a
the Grace United Methodi st
Church in Gallipolis.
New offices elected were
Alice Thompson, president;
Debbie Mohler, v1ce president; Karen Heater, secretary, and Kay Frederick,
treasurer.
The meeting and program
followed a tour of the

•.

)

'·

'

.,

Thompson rose ganden and a
dinner prepared by Cindy
and Tim Glaze.
Harvesting and curing
gourds was the theme of the
program. It was noted that
because gourds require a long
growing season, they should
be left in the garden as Ion$ as
there is life left on the vme.
Frost may discolor the gourds
but will not hanm them and
leaving them out all winter
improves them for cmft work.
When cutting ~ourds ,
leave at least two mches or
more of the . stems in place.
Wash in a solution of bleach
or lysol and water and dry
well, then let them dry for
three to six months. It was
noted that the most important factor in curing gourds
is time. They should be hung
in a well ventilated dry location. The appearance of

mildew can be a natuml part
of the drying process and
does not harm the gourd. It
can be brushed off and san&lt;l&lt;
ed with steel wool.
·
Once cured, gounds should
be placed in hot water for a
few minutes before having the
outer film and skin scraped
off. Then cut a two inch hole
in the side using a circular saw
and remove all the guts by
scraping with a long me~
spoon. .Drill seven small
drainage holes in the bottom
and a set in the neck for han&amp;,:ing before decorating.
:!
The October meeting will.
be hosted by Peggy Crane. :::;
Those attending beside:$
the above were, Mary
Brown, Gladys Cuming S~
Marge Fetty, Evelyn Holtef,
Addalou Lewis, Kareli
Werry, Sharon Card, aniJ
Donia Cotton.
...•

..,.

\

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Bengals signed
free agent running back
Kenny Watson on Tuesday
alld waived fullback Chris

~FAolorW.s.- ·· """·~...•.

~

....,~ "··

WatSon, a second-year player from Penn State, was cut by
Washin~o during the preseason. .e had 534 yards
rushin , 253 receiving and
scored two touchdowns while
pia yin~ all i 6 games for the
Redskins last season.
Edmonds, in his second
year out of West Virginia,
appeared in Cincinnati's first
four games this season, mostly on special teams.
The Bengals also signed
fullback James Lynch, a rookie from Maryland, to their
pmctice squad and released
running back Ray JackSOn, a
rookie from the University of
Cincinnati.
Lynch · was waived by
Minnesota on Sept. 9. Jackson
had been on the Bengals'
practice squad since Sept. I.

Wahama hires
Toth as boys
hoops coach
MASON, W.Va. (AP)
Wahama High School has
named James Toth as boys
basketball coach.
Toth replaces Lew Hall,
who resigned in August after
23 years.
He has coached both girls
and boys basketball teams in
West Vrrginia and Ohio, and
has a career record of 84-32.

Guskov sent
back to Russian
Elite League

.

ftet·.it

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Columbus Blue Jackets
announced Tuesday they have
loaned
defenseman
Alexander
Guskov
to
Yaroslavl of the Russian Elite

League.

Guskov, the team's sev-

enth~round pick in the 2003
entry draft. appeared in three

preseason g~es and had no
points, four penalty minutes
and two shots on goal.
The 26-year-old signed
with the Blue Jackets this
summer and remains in the
organi,zation's system despite
. ~aying in the Russian Elite
~ague.

The move leaves Columbus
with 27 players in camp: The
team must reduce the active
roster ·to 23 players prior to
the Oct. 7 deadline.

•

l .

·~

Bucke es mend Rio to play

Ohio State

practices

on week off
BY RusTY MtWR
Associated Press

COLUMBUS -Almost
halfway through the 2003
season, the No. 3 Ohio
State Buckeyes take a
week off to heal and take a
deep breath for what lies
ahead.
The Buckeyes get the
weekend off after opening
Big Ten play with a 20-0
win over Northwestern .
They return on Oct. II at
Wisconsin (4- 1, 1-0 Big
Ten) for their first road
game of the season.
"Making sure that we ,
get better and better and
better when we're not
playing a game is ~oing to
be important," Ohto State
coach Jim Tressel said
Tuesday. "Wisconsin gets
to play a game. They get to
get better by playing Penn
State. They get to experience something this weekend that we won't get to
experience. So we've got
to make sure that these
four days that we work ...
that we improve ."
Ohio State (5-0, 1-0) is
right where it wants to be
in the standings. But the
Buckeyes know they have
a fot to work on this week.
''There are some areas
that we think we are making some improvement,
but there are also some
areas where we feel like
our improvement needs to
accelerate if we' re going Ohio State quarterback Craig Kren.zei.J.ooks downfield against North Carolina
to meet the challenge of State In a sept. ·13 file photo. Wlth
games behind them, the No. 3 Ohio
what lies ahead in State Buckeyes are looking forward to taking a week off. Quarterback Craig
Krenzel and tailback Lydell Ross will heal, while the Buckeyes take stock of
Buckeyes. B2 . where they are and what they have ahead of them . (APJ

nve

PI•-...

host.to
area's top
runners

BY MARK WtWAMS

Special to the Tribune
RIO GRANDE- One of the great traditions
of Southeastern Ohio will take place Saturday
at the Stanley Evans Athletic Field Complex at
the University of Rio Grande campus.
The 33rd annual Rio. Grande Cross Country
Invitational sponsored by Bob Evans Farms
will continue with all its· great tradition with
the men ',s college race beginning at 9 a.m.
There will be 10 men 's teams and 12
women's teams that will descend upon the Rio
Grande campus . The men's teams consist of
Rio Grande ; Concord College (W.Va.);
Fairmont State (W.Va.): Kentucky Christian:
Marietta College: Notre Dame College of
Ohio; Otterbein; Pikeville (Ky.) College: and
Shawnee State. The men's race is 8,000-meters
long.
Columbus State and Heidelb&lt;;rg will join the
other sc hools mentioned to make up the
women's field. The women's race will follow
the men's competition at approximately 9:45
a.m. The women 's race is 5.000-meters long.
The high school teams are divided into Red
and White seeded teams. The Red-seeded
teams represent the best compet ition and
white- seeded teams represent good competition.
The Red-seeded varsity girl s will start the
high school portion of the meet at 12 :35 p.m.
Teams represented are Central Crossing ;
Circleville: Cincinnati Hill Christian Academv;
Eastern Brown; Gallia Academy ; Huntington:
Indian Lake: Jack ~on; Lancastec Logan Elm:
McAuley; Scou (W:Va.J; , Spring Valley
(W.Va.); Teays Valley; Warren and Walkins

PleaH ... Rio, 82

,,
'

Prep Volleyball

Eagles fly high in win over Southern
BY BuTcH CooPER
bcooper@mydailytribune.com
RACINE - Eastern continues to look more
and more likely to ca11ture the Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Diviston title this season .
On Tuesday, it was easy to see why.
The Eagles used two dominating games to
defeat at solid Southern team, 15-4, 15-4.
In the opener, Alyssa Holter recorded all of her
service points with eight, as she was 7 -for-9 serving with a pair of aces.
.
Holter was also 17-for-20 setting in the first
game, 37-for-40 overall and finished 8-for-1 0
serving.
At the net for the Eagles (14-3; 13-2 TVC),
Katie Robertson .and Morgan Weber each had five

Robertson was 6-for-8. Lodwick and Robertson
each had four blocks. while Robertson had seven
points and Lodwick six .
Eastern finished 34-for-40 serving.
The Tornadoes ( 11 -4. 9-4) were led by Katie
. Sayre wi th three kills and Emily Hill with two .
· Meanwhile. Deana Pullin s and Kri stiina
Williams led Sou1hern serving with three points
each .
"I thought (Eastern) played very, very well."
said Southern head coach Roma Sayre. "They
really hit the ball well . We were a little off
Lodwick
Holter
~obertson
tonight, but they played well. "
kill s, while Kass Lodwick contributed with three
Eastern plays host to Miller Thursday. while
kills. ·Weber was 10-for-16 hitting, while Southern entertains Waterford.
Lodwick was 6-for- 12.
The Eagles also won the junior varsity match:
Lodwick was also 7-for-8 serving, while 15-7, 15-10.

College Volleyball

Alexander
Redwomen. remain winless downs Meigs
in AMC after loss to Malone in three

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydallytrlbune.com
RIO GRANDE
The
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen volleyball squad
remained winless in American
Mideast .Conference South
Division play after dropping three
straight games to Malone
College, 30-21, 30-27 aqll30-l8,
Tuesday at the~ Oliver
Are
R::· Grande (6-! 2, 0-4 AMC
,
South) was led by semor outside
hitter Becky W1erwille, junior
outside hitter Chelsea DeGarmo
and sophomore outside hitter
Lynnette Kiesling with seven
kills each. Freshman middle hitter Melissa Doss posted six kills.
Junior Kim Posey had 24
assists and a team-high 14 digs.
Freshman Jessica Veach delivered 13 digs. DeGarmo and

)

freshman
Malone (18-2, 4-1) slowly
B r i t t n y pulled away in the first game,
H e n r y building the lead to as high as 25a d d e d 14.
1 seven digs In game two, the Red women had
:1 each.
five~point leads at four different
- ! ' ? 1'1
Serving . times in the game, but could not
·I~
"'
and pass- hold on. In game three, Rio failed
~~Mil ~ •
ing were a to ride the momjlntum of an early
pro b I e m 4-0 advantage.
for the Redwomen, they mislired
Malone was led by Brandi
on seven serves and had II pass- Beebe with II kills and Raquel
ing errors.
0' Hara and Jami Shenemen added
"We phlyed well at times," said nine kills each. Beth Ianniello
Rio Grande Head Coach Patsy· delivered 38 assists, while
Fields. "I felt the serving killed us Shenamen had four aces, Ashley
and that's what I told them after- Yocum posted 11 digs and Lindsay
wands.
Stepp registered three blocks.·
Rio Grande will return to the
"That's what !:)eat us with
Urbana (last Saturday) and we had court on Satunday when they host
them (Malone) the second game NAJA No. 25 Mt. Vernon
(tonight) and we hit the ball into Nazarene and Cedarville in an
the net. I felt we worked h,ard, but AMC tri-match. Rio lost to
Malone's in the top four (in the Cedarville, Sept. 25, in three
AMC,South), we just have to keep straight games. Game times are·set
working."
for II a.m. and 3 p.m.

.

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytrtbune.com
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs duked it out
with Alexander and took the opener
Tuesday, 15-13, but the Spartans recovered
to win the final two games. 16-14, 15-13, in
high school volleyball action.
The Marauders (9-6, 7-6 Tri-Valley
Conference) was impressive at the net with
33 kills, led by Renee Bailey with I 0.
Meanwhile, Samantha Cole and Jaynee
Davis each had eight kills, while Chrissy
·Miller finished with five.
·
Megan Games led Meigs serving.the ball .
with II service points, while Bailey had
nine, Joey Haning eight, Justine Dowler six
and Davis five.
·
Haning also recorded 22 out of Meigs' 27
assists.
·
The Marauders travel to Wellston
Thursday before' returning home Oct. 7
against Belpre.
M!ligs' junior var,~iJy team was victorious
Thuniday with a 1'5¥1, 15- 17, 15-8 win over
the Spartans.

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

�,
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Oct. 1 2003

Wednesday, October lt 2 003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Cincinnati Moeller; Portsmouth Clay;
Fairfield
Union;
Fairland ;
George
Washington: Goshen; Hunting ton; Liberty
Union ; Logan; Miami Trace; Minford;
from Page 81
'
North west ; Ridge wood; Ripley (W.Va.);
South Charleston (W.Va .); South Point; South
Memorial.
Webster; Southeastern Ross; Valley;_ West
The White-seeded girls' teams will run at Union; Wheelersburg and Waverly.
.
I :05 p.m. Teams represented are Alexander;
The high school races are all 5,000-meters
Belpre; Portsmouth Clay; Fairfield Un ion; in length.
George Washington (W.Va.); Glen-vood New. The junior high and high school teams, repBoston; Goshen ; Hillsboro; Ironton; Li berty resent the largest amount in the history of the
Union; Logan ; Miami Trace; Minford; invitational. The junior high girls ' race begins
, Northwest; Piketon: Rid gewood; Rip ley: at II :25 a.m . Schools competing include:
River Valley : Rock 1-lill: South Charleston; Belpre; Circleville; Fairfield Union; Fairland;
South · Point; So utheastern Ross; South Gallia Academy; Hu'ntington Ross; Jackson;
Webster; Trimole; Unioto; Valley; Waverly; Liberty Union; Logan; Logan Elm; McAuley;
West Union ; Wheelersburg and Cabell- Meigs ; Miami Trace; Minford ; Ripley
Midland (W.Va.).
(W.Va.); River Valley; Rock Hill; Madtson
The varsity boys' races are scheduled 10 · (W.Va.); Southeastern Ross; Teays Valley;
begin at I :45 p.m. with the Red-seeded teams Valley; Warren; Washington Court House;
running first. The schools' competing are Waverly and Cabell-Midland (W.Va.).
Cincinnati
Hill Christian Ac ademy :
The j unior high boys are scheduled to run at
Circleville; Eastern Brown: Gallia Academy: 12: 05 p.m. Additional schools competing
Hillsboro; Indian Lake ; Jackson; Lancaster; alo ng with the schools previously mentioned
Logan Elm: Piketon: River Valley; Scott are Glenwood; Piketon; South Point; South
(W.Va.); Teay s Valley: Trimble; Unioto; Webster and West Union. The junior high
.
Warren; Washington Courl House and races are 3,200-meters long.
One of the highlights of the meet is the
Watkins Memorial.
The day will conclude with the White-seed- open race. The open race is scheduled to
ed varsity boys' teams run ning at approxi- begin at l 0:25 a. m. and is open to all runners
mately 2:25 p.m. Those teams include · except high school cross country runners. The
Alexander; Belpre ; Central Crossing ; open race is 5,000- meters.

Rio

Buckeyes
from Page 81
Madison, Wisconsin," Tressel said.
The Buckeyes remain last in the Big Ten in
total offe nse with 298 yards per game.
There is plenty of good news on the injury
front for th~ Buckeyes. Quarterback Craig
Krenzel missed the last two games with a
hype rextended right (throwing) elbow. He
will most likely return to full-contact workouts this week.
Starting center Alex Stepanovich will
return from a sprained ankle and tail back
Lydell Ross is 100 percent after a slight knee
injury. Fullback Branden Joe returned last
week after recovering fro m a torn chest mu scle that sidelined him the first fo ur games.
Tight end Ben Hartsock said it's not a coincidence that the offensr, has been struggling
while those front-line players have been out.
"The guys that are coming back are all guys
that have had ex perience, and a lot of the
problems are coming fro m consiste ncy.
We've had trouble moving the ball," Hartsock
said. "It seems like offensively, once we get a
6- or 7-yard gain and then a couple short
routes down the field, things just reall y start
moving. And when we get guys back that
have that experience, hopefully they can
bring another little bit of a spark to maybe
have a little bit more consistency."
Defensive tackle Darrion Scott is still nursing a sprained ankle.
Scott McMullen fill ed in for Krenzel, while

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e ister

Punt, Pass and Kick

CLASSIFIED

FJVe area youths advanced to sectional
competition in the Pepsi NFL Punt Pass
and Kick contest held at Bob Roberts
Field. The Meigs Marauder Sideliners
Club staged the event for the second
year with winners In each age group
qualifying for sectional competition in
Columbus on Oct. 11th. Winners were,
boys 8-9 Terry Jewell, girls HH1Tara
~J' WCII , boys 10-11 Matt Arnold, ooys
.&amp;..&lt;- J• .:&gt; Seth Perry, ooys 14-15 Jaymes
Haggerty. Meigs head football coach
Mike Chancey presented awards to all
participants.

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 2~01f(rPROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

(

t:..'. ;•

To

'Place
Your

the injuries to Stepanovich, Ross and Scott
opened the door for players such as Nick
Mangold, Ira Guilfo rd and Quinn Pitcock to
pick up some playing time.
Tressel said the bye week comes at a good
time.
" I think this could be good. Thi s will give
us a chance to move forward," he said. "We
know a little bit more about oursel ves."
A week away from game preparations is
particularly valuable to a young tailback such
as Guilford. The freshman saw his fi rst playing time against Northwestern since the season opener. He totaled 29 yards on eight carries, including a 15-yard run .
" I want to get in all the time," Guilford said.
"(Tressel) said it's a·matter of me learning the
otfense. He wanted to put me in a position
where I could have success the first time out."
Tressel said Guilford would get a lot of
chances to show what he could do duri ng
practice.
" He got in the game and now he knows
what it's like. He got excited about it," Tressel
said. " He knows he can do it, and I'm sure he
wants to come out and compete. So this will
be a good week fo r him."
Krenzel has been taking it easy with his arm
since gett ing hur't- agains1 North Carolina
State when his elbow was pinched between
two tacklers. He threw before Saturday's
game and had no swelling or pain on Sunday.
After the bye week, Krenzel will have been
side lined for a month before regaining hi s
starting·spot against Wisconsin.
"He' ll practice li ke crazy," Tressel said. "I
sure hope he's not rusty."

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

r
r ANNouNOMI:r&gt;.~ I

e;dwell

1 year o ld

~ 0 Month American Eskimo.
Hyper. needs place lo run
• nd play. Has all shots.
Please call 304·882-2086

,12 Cats to good home.
Variety to chOse from. Males
&amp; female s. All neu tered.
(304)675·2208

St, Pomeroy,

O~io ,

45789.
9. Publisher: Diane
Hill, 111 Court St.,

Pomeroy,

Ohio,

45769.
Managing
Editor,
Andrew
Carter, 111 Court St,

1993 Fairmont

·Mobile Home
for sale
Bedroom, 2 full baths,
cathedral ceilings,
garden tub, 12 x 1S
covered deck, C/A,
all appliances stay,
gas heat, must be
moved.
$12,500 0.8.0.
7 40-696~ 1227

YARD SALE/BAKE SALE
Oct. 3, 11 :00 a.m.

Victory Youth Center
Given by the Ladies
Missionary Fellowship
992·6550
992·7754
Behind Victory Baptist Church
525 North Sec. Ave.
Middleport

Eat in or take out
YARD SALE · THREE FAMILY
(Weese, O'Brien, Shively)
ONE DAY ONLY .
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2nd
LOCATION: Oak Grove Road
in Racine
TIME : 8 :00 a,m. · 6:00p.m.
LOTS OF CLOTHING
(adult &amp; kids), King size maHress
&amp; box springs, Mary Kay ~rc•uu•o10 ,
Queen size bed, Beanie Bab•ies,
Misc. Items

o.

Moons): 0
F.
Total
Free
Distribution: o.
G.
Total
Distribution: 3,652.
H. Copleo Nol
Distributed: 328.
1. Total: 3,980.
Diana Hill,
Publisher
October t , 2003

Mate golden rerrieverlchOw
tnix, very lriendly dog ,
relriever personality, house
trained. 7 40.441-1308 leave
• message.

If so, you qualify for a

Senior
Discount·
on your home delivered subscription!

p uppies (FREE) Chow mix .
he althy, beautiful, need
home and laving masle r.
740·245-9372 or 740·44615 17

t

r-~----...,

•allipoU• Jailp lrtbune
Joint tllta,ant ltgiQer
The Daily Sentinel
iunbap limn ·itntt~tl

Public Notice
A 2000 Oakwood
manufactured home
bearing Hrlol num·
bar HONC05532131
will be aold at public
auction
on
Wadnaaday, October
8, 2003 1t 10:00 a.m.
At 30825 Rota Vtllty
Road, SyracuH, OH
45ne, ltartlng mini·
mum bid price ol
$15,100 terme coeh,
to the hlghHt blddar.
The
manufactured
home 11 available 10
the public lor tnepactlon It· the above
addreaa during rt~~u­
lar buelnaae hourt.
The
manufactured
home It being aold
under the tarma ol a
Security Agreemani
between
Rebecca
Moore 30825 Rooa
Valley
Road,
SyracuH, OH 457711,
and the undersigned.
Oakwood Acceptance
Corp, 2225 S. Holden
Rd.
(10) 1
·.

r

YARD SALE-

GALLIIULIS
1

Yard Sale-Bake Sale Fri.
Oct. 3. Middleton Estates off
of Mill Creek Road , next to
the Oolf Course.

---.

Po

1M

MEROV

IDOI..E

3
Family
Yard
Sale
St . Oct . Septembe r J O, Oclober
~ ,2&amp;3.
Furniture, 1,2,3 9· 4 s ea Wood Loop
efrigerator, Stove , Washer Aoaa Rutland (740)742·
'
Dryer, Children's Clothes. 274S Watch For Signs
ishes.
' -- -- -- - 4 tamHv g8rage sale. Oct.
~8 Chil lioOthe Road . OCt 3rd, rain or shine , car CD
2,3 &amp;4 . Lots of baby Items player, adult &amp; c hildren
~,.
·
clothet, 341 Rutlan d st. ,
~ Family garage sale. Thurs Middleport.
C hatham

~

_•...:•P:...· - - - - - -

1 Frl.· 1 mile out Rt. 2t6. 4 family yard ule, Oct. 2-3·

• Onct youlll~tolgned up fa&lt; lilt Sonlof Dloooun\ yo~~ -.1 notice wll !iillcl jOiir dlocounL

Furnlture·glassware·ilnens· 4, 10Sm-4pm, Hysell Run
plus alze clothing-lots of
Ad and corner of Twp. Ad.
mi se ~
175, something for every8 family yard sale. Fall chll - one.
~ren's clothing, 18 mos.-12 692 Art Lew is Street.
yrs.Small appliances , lots of
. Oct. 1ol·5th.
iltlac. 4 1 ·Hilda Or. Oct. 3rd &amp; Mlddleporl
knives, porcelain dollt.
4th. Sam-5pm.
Na1c1r items, clothes' &amp;
Sycamore St. Oalltpotls, misc.
- - - -- - -,,- h. Wed, Thurs, Fri. ,0·?
Ba.1ement s_ale· Tup perS
ntlque desk and chalr,,T.V
Plalnl , St. Paul U.M. Church,
oct. 3, 9·7, OCt. 4, 9·2, clolh·
r mobile. Spring Valley
lng, furniture, books, dishes,
o. 120 Maple Orlw .
mise Items.
0/2·10104. 8:30am·
5:00pm.
Big garage sale, October
I!ACK PORCH SAlE
3rd &amp; 4th , Carleton School.
eam-5pm , October 2, 3 &amp; • svracuse, new 1oya, houselsmi St. At. 850, Btdweit hold Items, 8am-5pm , rain or
shine.
r.40-388· 18 t 6.

b4 .

Yl

I

IIIII or drop off 1111• coupon along with I copy of pllolo 10 10
Ohio 'IIIey l'utilllhlng P.O.Box4&amp;1, Gllllpolll, 0114513t
·

I

··· · ········ · ·· ·· ···········~····· · · · ··· · ···· · ···

'

Pub licati on

Bu•l rless D•v• P r ior To
Sunda y Dis pla y : 1 :00 p . m .
Thurs day for Sundays

•

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepa i d

· POUCIES: Ohio Vai'-Y Pu bllthlng rdenl• the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Enora muat be reported on the first day of publicat ioft end
Trlbu ~ntlnai·Reglater will be r e~pon a ible lor no more then the coat of the lpace occupied by the error and only the first inMrtion. We t hai! not be liab le
any loll or expenu that rnutt1 from the publication Of omlttioh of an advertisement. Correction will be made in the flrlltvailtbla editktn. · • Sor: " ",~~~~.::~ ~
are alwaya conthHntlal. • Cun ent rate Clrd app lies. • All real ntatt advert lttmenta are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Aet of 1968. • Th11 n
acc:eptt only help wanted ada rne.tl ng EOE ltllndarda. Wa wil l not knowingly Kcept any advartlaing in viol.tion of the law.

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE® by Larry Wright

YARD SALE-

..,111•0-IIEI
- J&gt;• -Wi\NfED
__,..
~~~~--------r-------~~
twrlyht~lc . net

Overbrook Center is looking
lor a Part-Time LPN, 7am7pm shift. Please come 1n
ahd fill out an application at
333 Page Street Middl eport
Oh 45769
Part-Ti me Tax Pre pare rs
needecl for busy tar: offiCe.
Pomeroy location _ We w1l l
tra1 n
Comp uter
skill s
requirect _ Send resume to
PO 729·13

0

SALES POSITION
Growth Potenti al

0
0

{0 • I

~
EA, Ine.

w·vw.comlcs.com
076

110

I \ 11 ' 1 11\ \II "\ t

YARD SAl.ll-

..,I H\ I• I..,

J&gt;r.I'I.EASANf

1

·--iioiooiiiiiiiiiiiii-,.0 ~':11"------..., ~-------.-J
1110. f1Eu&gt; WANIUl Full time help needed. ApP ly
Es tate Tag Sate Rain or

·-----"'!"_.!

between 10-11 am, Mon..
Thurs .,
Sat
McCiures
Restau ranls. All locations.
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis
Carriers Need Entry Level 740·446· 3837; Middlepo rt
Drivers . Grad's Aec. Top 740·992· 5248; • Po meroy
Pay/B'fitsiJob Placement &amp; 74 0·992-6292.
Be off wk'ends. 1·866-602·
Growing HVAC company
7035.
looking
for
Certilied
Acco untin g instructor for Techn icia n with Installation
Gallipolis Career College . e~e.pe r ie nce . minimum 1 112
Wednesday's 9:00 am to years exp erience in both.
2:00pm. Fax your resume to QN..LI expe rienced need
740·446·4 124 or ca ll for ~- Call 740·441 · 1236 if
tntervtew. 740 -446-4367.
no answer leave a message.

Shine. Sat. Oct. 4, 9:00-5:00.
Sun. Oct 5. 10:00 -4:00.
Cen ter St. Maso n Ci ty, W.V.
18 Day COL Training
90 Year co ll ecti on including: TMC/Swilt &amp; 30 Major

You choose which work you prefer!
Part time and full time work
avililablel .

..

~rir,_~W
:o:ANIUl
._..,.--, Ass tgned Tractors

Huge Garage/Carport Sal e
Browlng tlmberwolf bow. end
tables. table &amp; chair. coats,
·clothes, glassware, much
mise:. Sandhill Ad . at Lelart
Watch fo r signs:

Two Yerd Sal••
Friday, OCt 3, 9 to 1
Hawthorne Lane
{behind Armo ry) Eve rythlnQ
m ust go: no eartyblrds
please.
Rain Canctlt .

,1'\\"\11\1

!NOTICE!
OHI O VALLE Y PU BLISH·

lNG CO recomm ends that
you do business w1th people .

SrnrATIONS

r

We make calls for major non-profit
organizations such as American
Heart Ass ociation , St. Judas, and
Political organizations such as the
NRA.

I

Oct. 1.2.3. 6:00·?

1:4.1

Will pressure wash homes,
tra1Lers. decks. meta l build·
1ngs and gut1ers . Calf (740}
446·0151 ask · lor • Ron or
leave a m ess age

you kno w. and NOT to send .
mor1ey through the ma 11 until
yo u have 1nvest1gated the
otte nng
-A
-B
~S
-0
-L
~U
-TE
_G
_O
_L_O_M
,, 1-N-E '- .

60 vendon g mach ,nes Mth
ex ce lle nt locat1ons all tor
$10,995 {600 )·234-6962

r

CALL:

L.---ro
iiiitoBiiiiiUYoiooo-,..1

Monday-Friday
5:00pm

Absol ule To p Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold • Co!ns.
Praofsets. Diamonds, Gold
A!ngs ,
U.S. Currency.M.T.S . Coin Shop, 151
Second Avenue. Gallipolis.

1-80C)..232.e405
INTERVIEWS:
W&amp;dnesday
Ott.
comtort Inn
From: 9:008m· 1:00pm
605 E. Main St.

7
_4
_o_ 4_4_6_
· 2_
64_2_.- --

Jacl&lt;oon,.OH 45JIIO

~

-

Pawpaw fruit $1 to $2 per
pou na. wal nuts $10 pe r hun-dred pounds, (740}698·
21 24

9 :ooam -

8th

flointersJCaulkersJCieaners..Experienced.
Columbus,
OH. Top wages . 614·491·
0658.
'

Pay based on hours worked, not
res ults!
• Paid training
.
• Paid vacation and holidays
• Excellent benefits
CALL TODAYI
1-sn-4&amp;3-6247
EXT. 2458

1

To Do

ww&gt;N.infocision.com
-~-··--

SDIY~Q:.&lt;;

No Fee Unless We W m 1
1 ·688·582·3345
•

Hoi\U~
!::
FORSALE
.
~--iiiiiiiiii_.l

r10

2 Bedroom House 1n New
Haven $24.000 (304 )882·
2690

2 sto ry 4 Oedroom house.:
ga s heat &amp; i\ic. 132·
Butternut .
Pom eroy.'
(740) 992·3650
4 bedroom 2 ba th m
Ceni:enary.
Detached
garage. above ground poor
Green School 740 -4463150.

4 BEDROOM 4 BATH'
HOU SE 1 Foreclosure Qr11y
$9.900 tor hstmgs 1·800· '
719·3001 Ext F1 44
Aporox. 2400sq h 3·5 bed ·
room , 2 oath. 1 car garage,
fenced bad yard. sto1 age ~
bu1ld 1ng. ha s large den . new
carpet Vmyl &amp; cen tral a1r
Good loca11on. close to ~
school. Also mclud es 2
apartments on back lot. cur· .
rently renred. $1 30.000 tor.
all. (3041675·7833
By OUIIder. new. 3 bed room,
bnck . 2 car garaile _ Good
lOCatiOn $140.000 740·446·
9966 call evenmgs.

HOUSECLEANING
Available day or evening.
Ca ll 740.446-1756. Ask lor
Deanna or leave a message.
MB Handy man ServiCe.
Hauling, pa1 ntir1g, power
wash1ng, driveway rep air,
seal coaling, gut1ers . chin,.
nay. plumbing. Jade of all
trades . 30yrs. exp. Sen1or
Discoun t Free Estimate s.
(304 )662· 2 t96, (304 )377·

6266

All real est.t. ~nrtlsing
In this newspe~r is
subject lo the Federal
F1lr Ho~o~~~lng Act of 1968
which mek" It II~ to
edvert!H "anY
preference, llmltlt~ or
dte-crlmlnltlon beiHd on
race, ccHor, religion , Mx
fllmll~

MB Handyman Servi ce.
Hau ling, painting, power
washing, dr~veway repair,
seal coating , gutters. chimney, plumbing. JaCk of all
trades. 30yrs. exp. Senior
Discount. Free Es timates.
(304 )662·2196 , (304 )377· .
6266

ltMUI or netton111
origin, or any fntentton to
rnP.e•ny auch

pNfaNnce, llmtt.tt on or
dt.crimln•tlon."

TtH1 newspap.r wtll not
knowlntlw ICHPf
tor tM
"tate which le In
Ylolatton Of tM law. Our

Hv.rtiMm.nts

-

Piano TUning 33 year~ i!lxperfenoe In tr l-county area.
Teachers IC:hool, churches,
homes . Reference upon
request cnarles seon 7404
_4_8_·2-:9 32_
G_•1_11po
_ 11'_·_0h
_.

... -by

Informed tta.t 111
ctw.lllngt iCIYertiHCI In
thla new tp~~per .,..
•wMiabte on an M~ ual

.._.

- ~ Meadowbrook

Plcloy Polntwrl

Onve

3b r.

2ba, Hardwood floo" . largo

Free Estimates. Interior and family room. Private. fenced
exterior painting. Give your
home or garage a fresh
n~ look. We pa in! homes.
mobile homes,
buildings, barns and roofs.
Licenced and insured.
(C.II ~ . W)
(304)115-3074
gan~ges .

or stop by
242 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

PROt'EJoSK)i'i.-\1.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SE CURI TY ISS17

76

Call for someth ing you
believe in and make
great money doing it!

Pr.

WANTED: LPN or Medical
Of1ice Assistant for phys1·
ciao of1ice. Full o r Part t1me
Must have current hcen se or
cer tif1cate. reliable tra nsportation and medical otl ice
eKper1ence-compu ter sk1IIS
preferred . No weekend s or
holidays. Fa&gt;; resume to 304·
675-7800 or mail to Box 565
G allipoli s Daily Tribu ne P.O.
Sox 469 GallipoliS OH
4563 1

8USIJio~

anliquo oa k curved glass
china cabln al. beautifu l
break-down
Mahogany
wardrobe . ro sewood dry
sink, ornate red food scale,
4 rush oonom chairs. quilts.
!ons .of glassware incl uding
Fe nton. Fo stor~a . Carn ival.
MiiKglass. Crackle, Fire King ,
China, McCoy, misc. bo tt les ,
and numerou s household
and ga rage items for sate
Large hOuse, garage on nice An awesome jobl, $6-$9 per Help wa nled cari ng for !he
Oci ober 1,2,&amp; 3. Three fam·
lot for sale
hour after training! No expe- elderly, Darst Group Home,
ily: Clothe s, Games , books ,
dishes and mo re . 375 Beech Garage Sale Thurs. Fn &amp; rien ce needed! Fullfparl now paying minimum wage.
lime, flexible scheduling , new shills: 7am -3pm, 7am·
Si reet . Middleport.
Sat. Roach's Henderson .
conveni ent
Pomeroy 5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pmRo ute 143 October 2. 3. Lots Bu nK be ds. Longaberg er, LocaHon, 20+ pos itions 7am. call 740 -992·5023.
of win ter cloth es, too ls. girls cloth es 5-1 0, Boys, 14· available, call 9·9, M·F, 1·
Need 7 ladies to sell A110n .
sewing machin e, mu ch . 18. Large am~unt womens, 888 -974-J obs.
household &amp; junk .
Call 740-446 -3358
much . more
AVO N! All Area s! To Buy or ;___ __ __ __
Shirley Spears. 304· Need lo earn Money? Leis
Tent sale· T im &amp; Cindy Huge Yard Sale Oct. 1·3, Sell
talk the Mf.W Avon. Call
Glaz e residenc e, 34 684 9:00 to ? . 132 Pleasant St. 675·1429.
Marilyn. 304-882-2645 to
FM'ckspring s Rd, Oct. h·2, 3, Pt. Pleasant. Mens, wo mens
&amp; chil dren clothes &amp; misc. 8abysit1er needed tor 7-year learn alllhe ways it can work
~x tra clea n clothes, sizes:
One
weekend for you.
Infants 10 3yrs. file cab ine ts , We athe r perm itt ing. Rain old.
date Oct 6-8
per/month pl us occas ional
cell s phones, misc.
8\lenings. Our hom e or
Two yard sales on Willow Neighbors yard sale.
yo urs if in Point Pleasant
$$$
IT$$$
Fisher Warehouse,
Creek Rd . off Laurel Cliff,
area. (304)675·4500
3314 Mossman Ave .
Oct. 1·2·3
Sat. 8-2:00
CNA's and HHA's needed td".;
provide In-Home Services to
Yard sale Oct. 3rd, 4th,
Maurer residence Pe achfork Oct. 3rd. 8:G0-5:00 at 670 the Elderly/OisaDied in the
Rd., homemade quilts. 9Ker: Sunset La ne oft of Sandhill. Way'ne, Cabell and Mason
c ise equipment and lots Mulli fami ly garage sale. County Areas. Call Toll Free
Rai n or Shine
mo re, Pomeroy, 9·4.
1·666·453-4992
~!!':=-'~~~~-.....,
Three· Family Ga rage Sate
YARD SALE..
Dairy farm needs someone
25 14 MI. Vernon Avenue, pt. to milk. Call (740) 949·2576
Pl..EA.sANT
• Plaasanl. October 2. 3 and or (740 )949·2623.
4.
8 Family Yard Sale OCt . 3·4
EXPERIENCED
&amp;
S
H
A
Yard Safe 2322 Ltnc61n Ave.
414
415 tall ouse d.
TRUCK DRIVERS NEED(Near
Mason
Co . Pt. Pl ea sanl. WV 8:30am ·
EO
Fa i r~;~ro unds )
Actult
&amp; 4:00pm . Fri. &amp; Sat. {Oct. 4 &amp; VERMILLION BROTHERS,
Children cl othin g, Maternity 5)
INC.
&amp; baby clothes, household Yard Sale 3rd house below WE OFFER:
Items, lurnllure, toys
A&amp; L Gall ipolis Ferry. 2·3. Regions! &amp; OTR work avaUotj e
Make up to $8/hr and up to
Big Three FamHy Yard Sale. Wom en's clolhes ,· interio r
Competlth;e Pay
doors,
pa
perbacks,
othe
r
AT 2 Jet. 87 Mill Creek Ad.
$9.25/hr with experience!
Paid weekly, direct . deposit
Oct. 2·3·4. Old feed ~ cks , items
avail.
bed dresser, chin a cabinet,
Yard sale Oct 1. 2 ,, 3. Go to Heanh !nsuranc:e &amp; ~~BCatlon
chalrs, glassware, desk ,
Mason Fire Sta tion. Follow pay
lamps. sweeper, linen s,
Slgns. To Front Slreet
Conventionats
rugs. Lots of' good clolhes.

rg

ln. ,•o-HF.u&gt;
--W•AJ•~
-_.1 ..,r;s___'foi~iloi~
ioi~i-_.1

Create your own hOurs
Lw-.-.;W
iiiiAN
iiriT
iiol~lil-,..1
PfT or FT - - ' '
Call 1·8QCI· 318-QOO I
Ass isted livmg and extra
care tor your loved one m m)·
M-F 10:00 to 2:00pm
home 740- 3BB-0 118
The Town of New Haven IS
now seekmg ap p lica n~s tor, a 140
TR-\~'ING
police
offi cer
position . 1.
Prospective applicants may
be certil iec:l or willing to GaiHpdtis Career College
(Careers Close To Home )
atten d the state police acad·
amy. ReqUifements include Call Todayl 740-44 6·4367 .
1-800·214.-()452
!hat the applicanl be at least
eighteen years of age. ~ ~l!ipohscareen:oaeoe com
Reg 1190-05· 12748.
Benefi t package offered.
Appli cation s
may
be
obtained at the New Havan
M lSCEU.ANH.llS
City Bui lding between th e
hours of 7:00 AM and 3:00
1 load o1 lirewood. clea n.
PM. wee kdays
ready tor picku p 1M the ciry
WANJED : 8 1Uing Clerk tor $10. Phone740-446·0161.
phys fCian office. Full or part
time_ Must have reliab le 25 Seri o us People Wanted
transporlahon and medical WhO wan1 1o LO SE wetght
office expe rience-compuler We Pay You Cash tor !he
and typi ng skills a must pound s you LOSE I
Benefits ava ilable. Fax Sa fe. Natural. No Drug s
resume to 304·675-7600 or BOQ-20 1·0632
mail lo Box 565 Gall ipolis
Da1ly Tribune P. O. Box. 469 Al l Types of loans. 3K to
200K any purpose. QUICk
Gallipolis OH, 45 63 1.
re sults. good or baa cred tl
WANTED: Billing Cle rk for 1-866-425·821 0.
phy sician ott1ce . Full or pa rt
time . Must have reliable Large Superi or brano che st
transportati or"1 and medical Deer cooler. exce llent conch·
office e x per~enc e ·com p ut e.r tjpn. holds 42 cases. S850.
and ty pir1g sk1lls a mus t. call 740·44 6-0798. alter
Ben efits
ava ilable
Fax s:oo p.m
resu me to 304-675-7800 or
mail to Box 565 Gallipo lis Wood stove and backboard
Daily Tr ibune P. O. Box 469 S25. Fold-u p NGHS tenn1 s
Gallipolis OH , 4563 t .
table on ro llers $10 740388-8771 .
WANTED: LPN or Medical
Office Assistanl for physi·
WA~TI1l
ci an office. Fu ll or Pa rt ti me.
Must have current license or
certificate , re liable h ans·
Babystttmg 1n Syracuse
portation afld medical off ice area. coun ty cer11tied. or pnex pe rience -computer skills vate pa y, days, nights &amp;
prefe rred . No weeio.ends or we eken ds. (740)992-6316
holidays. Fax resume to 304·
675-7800 or mail to Box 565
Georges Por!able Sawmill.
Gallipolis Daily Tribu ne P.O.
don't haul your ~s to the
Box ~ 69 Gallipolis OH
mill just call 304-675· 1957.
4563 1.

BELIEVE

I

YARD SALE-

4 columns. Fri &amp; Sat. 9-dark.

1 939

Monday - Frida y for I n sertion
In N ext D a y ' s Paper

baby bedding Pooh, baby eels .
furn ilure, toys &amp; clothes.
Oct 1-3, anliques- dresser.
Oct. 4&amp;5-M ulli-family-yard- wash sland gat e leg table.
sa le, 554 Jay Or. Sprin g C urrier l ves dishe s, red
Valley. Clothin g all'ld larg e Cape Cod d ishes, K1rby
sweeper with a11achment.
va riety of items. 9am-5pm.
wa ter pitchers, 34 folding
Sat. Oct . 3rd , 9·? 2 houses· chairs wilh stand. clothing.
Green Valley Or. off Kerr or lamps, blankets. all ki nds
SA . 160. Wooden swing set misc . items. 31353 Noble
w/ slide. mow er. exercise Summit Ad. off Co. Ad. 5.

Ir4

141 ~admus , girls clothing,

Display Ads
All DI•PI•y: 12 Noon 2

For Sundays Paper

Huge wint er ySrd sa le:
3908 1 Bradbury. Road.
Beside school. October t
Moving sal8'. 136 Taylor Ad. thru 3rd. I OAM - ?? .
3 miles out 775 from t 41,
extended thro ugh the week. Inside sale, 1st, 2nd, 3rd,
new &amp; used. 41h place on left
Oct. 2-3 9:00-4:00. Junction Bee ch Grove. Rutland.
279 &amp; Centerpoint Ad . 1
(740)742·3062
mile from Cente rville. S h ~r ley
Arrowoods 740·682· 71 63
Multi family ya rd sal e, 41830
Pom eroy P1ke , Oct 2. 3.
Oct. 2-3; 9-5 1900 Chestnut gam-Spm, Oct. 4th, 98m_12
St. Clothes. furn i!Ure. cur· noon. small applian ces.
tal ns. dishes plus more.
1 kitc hen ware, tools, Grave ly
nd
1 Oct 3 only 9-3. 1374 trahcto r. som_
e urnllure a
Neighborhood Rd. 4 family, 01 er m1sc. •te rns. ra 1n can-

ftE WARD lost big, older,
Lvhiteltan mate c at. Very Wed, Thurs., &amp; Fri. 9-5. 185
1kim mish , in the Rive rbend Ambleside Or. across from
Vet area cal l 446·2977.
Kerr Post office . Lots of nice
misc., tools and furniture.

r

Word Ads
D a lly J n•Col u mn : 1 :00 p .m .

Gigantic yard sale, first one
Oct . 2·3·4, ott Sl. Rt 7 15
mile s N . ol Pomeroy, 1 mile
S. of Tu ppers Pl a1ns. first
black . top on lett. look for
s1gns or call 7 40-667 ·6577,
roll aw ay bed , ol d pedal
sewin g machine, Seger, 2
electri c gui tars w/Fi oyd
Rose - !limlo, all ktnd of
Ch r istmas deco r , ·- ceram1c
dolls. old gla ss. iron sk1Uets,
new sheets. quilts. atghans.
91 S- 10 4x 4. looks goad.
runs good, 85 Cad dy. nice
ca r. 31 ' Av1on ca mper. all
ki nds Bea nies. Barbie doll s
som e old. lois more, co me
see , rain cance ls

bi ke, kkl s clothes.
...._
Sat. Oci. 4, 8-6 on Dillon EJtt
Central
A/C, waler softener,
Last Male, neutered anQ
11eclawed da rk gray cat with babylt9,2dler clothes, colfee
green eyes. Fa mily pe t table-2 end tables (set) .
named Brutus. Lost in vici ni- Saturday, Oct 4th 4409
ty of 588 an d lower Bulaville Pike. 8:00-? Hull
Chillicothe Rd . Rewa rd. Vase , Ch ristmas Items,
Please call 740·446·8142 Longaberger basket, tools,
~yt;me
lois of misc .

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.

PUBLIC NOTICE
In compliance wllh
Section 5715.09 ol
the Ohio Revised
Code, the Meigs
County Board . ol
Ravlolon will meet on
October 3, 2003, al
10:00 a.m. In lha
Meigs
County
Auditor's
Olllce,
Second Floor, Meigs
County Courthouse.
Nancy
Parker
Grueaar
Board ol . Revision
Secretary
(1 0) 1

classified@ mydailyregister.com

Fall rummage sale, Heath
South
3 rd,
Chur ch .
Middleport. October I -2-3.
9am-3p m

.._---LorriiFi
OUND
iiiAND
iioo_,pp
.l

Public Notice

classified@mydailysentinel.com

Sunday I n - Colum n: 1 :00 p . m .

Church, Carport Sale; October 3-4;
9AM-4PM. 918 South 3rd
Midd leport.
Microwave,
boo ks, tools, gla ssware Low
prices.

liood home. 740·245·9337 .
,,

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:

POMEROY!MIIM&gt;LE

~ell ow lab. To

Male Beagle aprolC . 2 years
old. house trained. needs a
farm to run rabbits. 740·44 1·
:1308 leave a massage .

Street Vendors and
Counter Sales: 3,602.
Total
Paid
C.
Circulation : 3,789.
D. Free Distribution
by Melt.
1. Outside-County
as stated on form
3541 : 0.
2. In county as stal·
ed on form 3541 : 0.
3. Othar classes
mailed through the
USPS: 0.
E. Free Distribution
Outside tha Mall
(Carrier • or Other
Means): 0
F.
Total
Frae
Distribution: 0.
G.
Total
Distribution: 3,789.
H. Copies NoI
Distributed: 315 . .
1. Total: 4,104 ·
Average
No.
Copies ol Single
Issue
Published
Nearest to Filing
Date:
15. Extent and
nature ol Circulation.
A. Total No. Coplaa
Printed : 3,980.
B. Paid and/or.
requaaled
Circulation:
1. Pald/Requeatad
Outtlde.County Mall
Subecrlptlona Slated
on
Form
3541.
(Include advertlaer'•
proof and exchange
coplea.) : 100.
2. Paid In-County
Subacrlptlona alated
on
form
3541 .
(Include odvortiHr'o
proof and oxchanga
coplos): 55.
3. Salaa through
Dealera and Carr&amp;er1,
Btr11t Vendors and
Countar Batao: 3,497.
C. Total Poold and/or
R' . q u • I t • d
Circulation: 3,152.
D. F- DlolrlbuUon
by M•ll.
· 1. Outalde-County
at otatad on form
3541 :
2. In county u alat·
ad an form 3541 : o.
3. Other Claoael
mailed tHrough the
USPS: 0.
'
E. Free Dlatrlbutlon
Outtlde lhe Mall
(Carrier or Other

U.M.

Ul4

Church 51., Bidwell , Ohio.
C-1 Beer Carry OU1 permit Oct. 3·4 (9· 5) havi ng
lor sale, C hester Tow nship, beans/cornbread, hot dogs,
Meigs County, send leners bake -sale, ya rd sale ilems.
pf lnlerest to: The Daily
Sentin el. PO Box 729-20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

broken pretty kit·
~ens, to good home.
! 304)675·6720

Pomroy,
45769.
A. Total No. Coplae
10.
Owner: Printed: 4,104.
Newspaper Holdings
B. Paid and/or
Inc., 3500 Colonnade Requasted
Parkway, Suite 600, Clrculellon :
Birmingham,
AL,
1. Palci/Requasted
35243.
.Outside-County Mall
11 .
Mortgagee: Subscriptions Stated
Retirement Systems on
Form
3541 .
of Alabama,. 135 S. (Include advertiser's
Union
St., proof and exchange
Montgomery,
AL copies.) 122
36119
2. Paid ln·County
Average
No. Subscriptions stated
Copies Each Issue on
Form , 3541 .
During Preceding 12 (Include advertiser's
Months:
proof and exchange
15. Extant and copies): 65.
nature of
3. Salas through
Clrculallon.
Dealers and Carriers,

~~

\\\HI \ t I \ II\!..,

Visit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at: ,, /'

• Start Your Adl With A Kevwor d • I ncl ude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrev iations
• l nc:lud e Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Adl Shoul d Run 7 Dart -

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

2 House

Delivered.
7. Location
ol
Known Olltce ol
Publication :
111
Courl St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, Meigs County,
45769.
8. Location Qf the
Headquarters
or
General
Busines s
Olllces
of
the
Publishers: 111 Court

classified@ mydallytribune.com

Off~e lfoaf4-cf'

R egister

Sentinel

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) .446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:

Ad •••

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel clas-sifieds!

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
1. Title ol publication: The
Dally Sentinel.
2.Publlcatton No.
146-960.
3. Data ol llllng :
September 30, 2003.
4. Frequaney of
i11ue: Dally Monday
through Friday.
5. No. 01 ISSues
publlehed Annually :
255
.
6.
Annual
Subacrlptlon Price. ·
$114.84
Home

m:ribune

20V.,.•IC.~

Mel rwte,.nca.

bactc;

yard.

garage .(304) 67 5-~ 303

and

(304)675· 1252

Newry built ranch. country
setting. 3000 sq. teet 3 br., 2
ba ., lnground pool. 5 min- w
ute s from , t-tOi zer off ·laO,
photos. informatiOn on line
WWW,OAVB.com
cOde
73103 ca ll 740-446-0149

�'

Wednesday, Oct.1, 2003

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com
BRJDOE

WALLEYE
FISH FRY

2 bd. w/w ca rpet, air, porch
PRICE REDUCED
Must sell. 3 bedroom 2 balh Ve ry nice. no pets. In
in a nice lamily ori ented sub- Gallipolis. 740-446 -2003 · or
division in New Haven . 740-446-1 409.
(304 )593-3690
2 bed•oom mobile home to•
Price reduced , newly redec- rent in Ra cine, $325 rent,
Orated 3BR wilh carport 135 $325 depOSit. 1 yr. lease, no
Kirteon
740·446·2776 pets, (740)992-5039 no calls
$59,000
at" 8:30pm

Remodeled 3 · bedroom, 1 2 bedroom trailer, $275
1/2 bath in good neighbor· month , plus deposit. Call·
11ood in Middleport. (740) 740-367-0041 ask for Doug.
992-7743 or view at
·
2 bedroom trailer, near town,
www.orvb.comlt8i 503
$260 per· month &amp; deposit

i

--

MO!IIl£FOR~l_l.o~
~

CIA, clean.

ALL YOU CAN
EAT FOR $6.00
0 I •
FREE
r nr~S are
Rutland Am-erican

11 :00 am unti16:00 pm

Come one come all
everyone ··elcome
..-

lArry Joe
Dugan

.......,

AJ&gt;AKIMFNr.;

Reference and deposit
tUR 'RENT
14x·70· 1985 mobile home. 2 reQuired . $335 a month. Rt. L,,...-~~---.,1
bedroom, 2 . balh as~mg 160 Evergreen . 740·446·
Tara
Townhouse
$6,000. Call 740·245·554 1, 6 169 or 740-446·6865
Ap.artments. Very Spacious.
evenings.
Clean 2 bedroom-electric 2 Bedrooms, 2 FlOOrs, CA , 1
1992 Indies Sulton 14X80 3 mobile h&lt;lme- Spring Valley 1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
bedroom , 2 bath, central air area . 304-675-2900 or 1· Adult Pool &amp; Baby -Pool ,
and BXB deck. $12,000.00 740-441-6954
$250 Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
740-992-0031
Pets, Lease Plus Security
deposit, $300 monthly.
Deposit Required , Days:
2 bedroom trailer. $1 ,500. All Mobil Home tOr rent. 740- ?40·446 ·3481 ; Evenings:
electric 740·367·7935.
446·1279
40-367 0502
7
Cole's Mobile Homes
i\pAKIMFNr.;
.

r

US so Eali\t. Athens. Ohio.
4570 1, 740·592·1972
--

I

FOR RENT

i

. --

FOSR~c;;_['U'.I'jl

Good used 14x70. Only 1 and 2 bedroom aparl$9995 includes delivery, Call ments, furnished and unfur· Mobile Home lots lor rent in
Harold, 740·385·9948.
nished, security deposit Gallipolis Ferry. (304)6758180
New 2003 Doublew1de. 3 BR required , no pels, 740·992·
2218.
\II He 11\ \IJh l
&amp; 2 Bath . (()nly $1695 down
and &amp;295/mo. 1·800·691 ·
1 bedroom upstairs apt. in
6777
Gallipolis. $235 per month,
New 3 br/2 bath. Only $999 dep/ret required Cal! 740down and only $184.04 per · 446-7130
--'-------month, call Nikki 740·385· 2
in
bedroom
apt.
7671
Centenary, appliances furNo Problem Sale- Want a nished, ulilities paid, except
new sectio nal home? No electric,
clean -$350
a
? roblem. Need foundation month-call740-256-1135.
and se ptic ? No Problem.
2 BR Quiet Location. Near
Need tJiilities run or drive Holzer C!A, WID Hookup,
way? No Problem . Want big No Pets, $399. Plus Utilities
_
_
)
savings on a 2003 model.
1740 446 2957
No Problem. Co le's Mobile
Homes. U S. 50 East, 2 br. WID hook up ref. dep,
Athens. Ohio, 740·592-1972 no pets 304-675-5162
Since 1967 , Where You Get
Your Money's worth
Ap B.rtment Available Now.
RiverBend Place,
New
FARMS
Haven , WV now accepting
applications tor HUD-stJbsiFOR SALE
dized , 1 bedroom apartFarm lor sale 36 acres, near ment Utilities included Ca"ll
Ashton Elementary School. (304)882·3121 .Apartment
avai lable !Of qualified sen·
(304)895-322 1
i or/disa ~led person. EHO
304 895·333 1

1330

Lms&amp;

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
ACRFAGI:
PRICES AT JACKSON
2 Semi Private Trailer lots for ESTATES, 52 Westwood
re nt. Located 2 miles 11om Drive from $297 to $383.
Pt. Pleasant on Sandhill Ad Walk to shop &amp; movi es. Ca ll
740·446-2568 .
Equal
Call (304)675·6678
Housin g Opportunity.
4 Year Old Ranch Home and
Furnished 3 rooms and bath
176
acres
in
Leon
upstairs apt. clean, no pets,
(304)458- I 5 I 9
reference , &amp;
deposit
Land for sale. 3 acres, great required . 740-446-151 9
,
building site. At. 588,
Gracious
living.
1
and
2
bed
$35,000, 740-446-9966.
room apartments at Village
Lot lor sa le in Racine, Manor
and
Riverside
{740 )992·5858
Apartments in Middleport.
From $278-$348. Call 740IH\1\1~
992·5064. Equal Housing"
O;::_,pp'-o-•1_u_ni_tie_s_
.---New Haven, 1 b9dJoOm furIO
nished apartment also have
FORRFXf
wa~her &amp; dryer, deposi t &amp;
no
pets,
1-3 Bed FORECLOSED references,
homes. Buy !rom $199 a (740)992-0165

HousES

r•o

HOUSEHOLD
Gooos

L,--~~---,.1
Good Used Appliances ,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers,
Drye rs ,
Ranges ,
and
Refrigerators, Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine St., (740)446-7398
Heavy Cast Iron Wood burning , Fireplace insert, with
built In circulating fan .
Excellent Condition. 740.
446-1304.

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740)446· 7444 1-877-B3D-

Refrigerator $75., Whirlpool
washer $95., Kenmore
dryer $125., G.E. refrigerator,
like
new.
$195.,
Kenmore Washer /dryer set
$300., 3-co uchs· $50. each,
table 4-chalrs, $95., Kingsize
box-spring/mattress
$100., ches t/dresser w/mlrror $140.
Skaggs 740446-7396
-T-ho_m
_p
_s_o_n_
s_A
_ p_p-,li-an
_c_e--:&amp;

Nice 3 be droom. $400 a Now Taking ApplicalionsWest 2
Bedroom
month, $400 deposit. Call 35
Townhouse
Apartments,
740-446-7473
Includes Water
Sewage,
Taking Applications 3 bed - Trash , $350/Mo., 740-446·
room house Parler. Will rent 0008.
with opt ion buy 2004 .
Reference s/deposi t. 740· Pleasant Valley ApcHimenl
Are now taking Appl ications
388-9946
for 2BR. 3BA &amp; 4BR.,
MOBILE HOMF,~
are 1aken
App lications
Monday thru Friday, from
FOR RI.'NT
9 :00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
14x70 Trailer. electric Ileal. 3 Loca ted at 11 !i 1 Evergrl.rt1n
bedroom , HUO approved Drive Point Pleasant , WV
No Pets . Phone (74 0)74 1- Phone No is (304)675-5806.
E.H.O
27 14

Bulaville Pike. Mattresses,
dressers, couches, bunk
beds. bedroom
suites,
recliners, Grave manu·
ments
740-446-4782.
Gallipolis. OH. Hrs. 10·4pm.
Stop by.

16xBO 3 bedroom, 2 bath ,
heat-pump. no inside pets.
$400/a
month . deposit
re_quired. Call 740·379-

who died on
October I, 1996
A million timer
we've needed you,
A million limes
we 'vt cried,
If WVE could have
saved you,
You never would
have died.
In life we loved you
dearly,
death we love you
still.
In our hearts you
hold a place,
That no one else can
flU.
It broke our hearts
to lose you,
But you did not go
alone.
For part of us went
with you
The day God took
you home.
Sadly missed by
Maxine &amp; Family

Repair- 675 . 7388 . For sale,
re-conditioned
automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigerators. gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on maJOr brands in
shop or at your home.
--------Used Furniture Store, 130

r

I

MISC!l

L,--iiiiiiiiilliliililiilo.,l
Firewood , seasoned oak
$20. pick up load. You cut you
hatJI. Not responsible lor
accidents. (304)675·6440
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1Bcxlt537-9528.

""""'-..,;;;;,;,;;;,;._p
Orchard Grass and Clover,
Round Bale Hay. Call 740·
446-7787
If{\ \&lt;., I'UI{I \110\

r

iO

,

Auros
tuRSAI.E

FREE ESTIMATES

CKC Jack Russell terrier
puppies. 4 female
150
·
$
740-256-1652.
Full stock Boston Terrier
pups. Mother full stock,
father AKC. Male -$100,
lemale·$125.
1.-male Rott. pup had shots
and wormed, $100.
740-388-8743

1985 Cllev. C- 10, Looks
good, runs good. (304)675·
4177
-------1995 Ford E-350 Van , 14 h.
high cube box, e&gt;cce llent
cond . 740-446-9416
·

Maplewood Lake

St. Rt. 124
Between Recine &amp;.
Syracuse
Large Spaces $7.50

949·2734
Refreshment
stand open
Special of the day
CHILl

Male Boxer house broke,
good with kids. Very obedi·
ent. (304)593-2374
- -- - - - - Min. Pin. Puppies lor sale
Black and Tan . 5 weeks old.
Male 5200. Female.s $250.
Call (304)576-2002
Old English Sheepdog
Pups
First shots - and
wormed lovabte, beautiful
shaggy dogs $200.00 each
74().985-9823
AeQistered BoKer for sale.
$100. obo. (304)675-2888

t

Flwrrs&amp;

VIOClEil\IJLES

Buing paw paw fruit

$1 .~

after 6:00pm.

r

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4-WDs

olllllllllttr

5 Kind

(2 woe.)

or

38 Whlllo like

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Pass ·
Pass

3 NT
Pass

Opening

24 In-

7 Dllflodll

25 tiny 1.tbbr
or 28 Lobotor
IIIOYIH
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52 Mogazlno
30 Grazing
execa

ch'u1111

starter

38 Funow

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8 Jocquee'

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40

ploee

51 Chlnoy Jr.

(t0911hfr)

omen or

maker
31 St

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watch
6 Bo ..,

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37 - chi

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13 W"'J
45 Spoctly
18 Moor
46 · - Glttl"
19 eomp.nion 47 Ut...y
20 Milke pllln
mloe.t!My
22 O..C:.wl1cly 48 Atl11 - ·
23 Honda rival 50 Swt,_,.,

34 Croom of -

nergy
aource

35 Yorbatlm
40 Dolor Moo'o

10 Wonn

Athens, Ohio

Linda's :Beauty Shoy
'~#/comes

Betty Hosclwr

Our Fall Specials:
Color &amp; Perms 25..
Lqdies Style Cuts 11 ..
Klds&amp;Men5 00
Ltmger Hair Sli,ghtly Higlrer
t-~OW.
TauJ1111g Ar,mfaMe
Wafltim or ApJWI' ~ttm t' IW welromt' a ll)'lfmr.
985-JJ48 TlrnnJufvr J'O II r hlui,J ess.
SuJIIU B&lt;~•m•

C~lebrily Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, pas1 and present. Each tett er tn !he Clpl'ler stands tor another.

Dean Hill

Today's. clue : J equals. W

New&amp;: Used

THE BORN LOSER
II""DOt·\i LE:.T
[ TOT ML'(,
/o.N'&lt;ONE. IE.ll ~1:\~~~m, Cf\tt.F I

475 South Church St.
Ripley. WV 25271

1-800-822-0417

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

"W.V's #I Ch evy , Pontiac, Bui c k , Olds
&amp; C u sto m Van Dealer"

"I lost my shirt

Trucking

TO W"-K~

C.LOSELY 1

OOTOtTI\t.

t&gt;IE.E D TO&amp;:

W()()~'((T

F~l

NY G P U

e

'

BIG NATE
I C,._NT ~ELIEV
!'\'( . !&gt;1'.0 MAPE ME

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Rnancial Services,
Box 189.

I

WE,O.R THIS

STUPIP
FO~ SCHOOL

THINC.
PI&lt;:.TURE DAY.

OH

740-985·3564
Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
AIIJ!I,tCk $5.00
Bring this coupon '
Buy $5.110

HOWARV l.

. WRITESEl
dOIFIIG
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GlnER

NOT TH,O.T 8"1&gt;' DC
YOU SEE AN'&lt;ONE
EL.SE AROUND HERE
WEARING SUCfi ,0.
Rl t&gt;ICULOUS SWEATER?

acting, bul sl'le eventually delivers as
promtsed, ao don't prematur&amp;ly give up
on the goats you set for )'(lursell In the
year ahead . Stay the course and you'll
succeed.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl . 23) -

Let me do it for youl

au those
youtohad
do
but
didn't.things
Expect
be promised
very busytoand
ovo.-.helmed.

L _ _ __t.}._.,lJJ!iliMlJ:I SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)

PAINTING

anyttling unkind about 01hers or did any.

TO 60 lo!OME TO

MAKE MV DOG
A SANDWICIL

WELL, WE'RE
MIDDLE OF
''iiANS llltiNKER'

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing ~
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

;t'i"i;:mm-1
on

SAVtNGS

r

Shop
Classifieds!

TELL MIM WHAT
~

~OU

SAID...

TO SARCASM.,

li~ "!liE

"AC.lOA'S C.UT''

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Years local

ARIES (March 21-April 19)- Be exira
mindful ot your behavior today , because
yoor p001Ic in'&lt;Jgo ~ exOernlly hagle el 1111s
time . Keep your temper In check and don't
respond negatively to any attack! e1n you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - lnsltad of
wasting tlme pointing a finger of blame
today or trylrtg to establish who Is at fault
for 8 blundaf, use your energy to Corr8C1
tht sftuation and get VOUillelf rolling again.
.--------~..-------..,GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20)- Tho WOIId
11 not acting on a footloosa·an~ ·rancy·
frtt IIQif1dl. today as you mtght llkl. 11'1
Ill llrloua buliMII, Wllh no fret rldH. It
you dtclclt to dance anyway, be prt·

IO 7:00 9/15/03
Eastern High

6:00

Cafeteria

M.a.r.e. info. .c..a!!
1 rm.

~======~

SeH-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

GARFIELD

740-992-5232
WINTER STORAGE
Meias County
Fairgrounds
Arrival: Ort. II &amp; Oct. I !it

Y:DO am • 12:00 pm ·
Release : Apri l 26. 2003 .
A fee of $20.00 will be
charged for earl y arri vnl ,
Ime arrival", early removal,
l ate removal, or anytime
access is w ante d to
fairgrounds oth er than
stated dates . Building
space is first r.:ome first
serve .
Inside Storage: S4.001lf
Open Span : $2.00/lf l\41!
Inside Fence: S I.OOIIf wn

.\

NIY PEN
leOUT

OF INK

IMPORTS
Athens
MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(1 O'xl 0' 61O'x20')

STOAA~E
In Mason
1Ox1 0 - $35.00

1Ox20 • $55.00

740-992-3961

TONUTZ

J&amp;L

Electric
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 740·991·093]

C•ll~40-591-l 073

'ROBERT
BISSELL

(740) 992-3194
CIISTRICDON
992-6635
• New Homes
·SELF

out for you previously. There 's money In
profiting from your mistakes.
CAI'RICORN (Dec . 22·Jan . 19) Today's events· will be substanllally lnflu anced by those with whom you choose to
associate. Saddle yourself with losers
and y&lt;lu'll lose; hop ~ ride with wlnners
and you'll go lar.
AQUARIUS (Jen . 20-Feb . 19) - That
weight you're feeling on your back today
Is the heavy hand of neglected responsi·
bilitles. It behOoves you to do everything
within your power to start to all elw'late
those burdans.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) - Pter
pressure could be your worst enemy
todlly If you Ignore your befter Judgment
and succumb to their damaging
demands . Be strong enough to say no,

and mean 11.

SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginner class at

~'R~
ffigh m, Dry

Remember your past e.~~:periencas and
don't Involve y()IJrself today In a financial
situation similar 10 one lhat did nol w011c

BETTY .

Free Estimates

2~

,

• Garages·
• Complete
Remodeling

740-192-1871
Stop &amp; Compare

\

U!INU.

TIIATDAILT

PUIZUI

B C 0 M N

••

,,

dUIJ'O ,&amp;\,.. { -

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ltllra.i' ..y ClA.T 1.,.,LLAN _::__ _ _ __

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Rearrange letten of
0 lour
scrambled words

the
be-

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low

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form four simpl• words.

VAERE W

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lo!E DOESN'T TAKE =~:~ :~ ~:U:tc:!nse~~~~u;r:!~~~~~r- P E T D H
KINDt.'( lo!OWE'IE~ , :';\~~ARIUS (Nov. 23 .Dec. 211 _ ! 1 1 I' 1

CARPENTER
SERVICE

HOME

Autos tor sale- 98 Malibu, 992-6323.
loaded , V-6, $3,200: · 98
Malibu, load~ V-6, $3,200;
96 Regal, white, $2,400; 98
contour SE, 74,000 miles,
$3,400; 97 Escort LX automatic, air, $2,300; 97
Breeze, maroon: $2,600: 98
Skylark,
loaded,
V-6,
$3,400; 96 Mazda 626, auto·
matic, air, ~300; 93 Lincoln
Town car, white v,o/red
leather, $3,0QO; .97 Monte
Carlo, burgundy, nice car,
$3,800; 97 Blazer t..S, 4.~~:4 , 4
dr., red $4,500; 92 F·150,
4K4, red, Ssp, air, V-B ,
$3,800; 740,-742-3802, 740742- 1D81, 740-742-3154.

'I'ES, MA'AM.

RIEiiiT IN Tlo!E

Pomeroy. Ohio

985"'3994

~Today

J ME Y

Bortrand Russoll

may ba e day of reckoning if you had seld

YOUNG'S

;;;:;::=:::::;:===::;

Tho rosulls

Z D N E

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "We are lomorrow 's past• - Mary
Webb
~one mus1 care about a world one will not aee ." -

Mother Nature can sometimes be tardy in

SFREE

'

-&lt;arthdor:

of your procrastlnatlorl"me.y start to gang
up on you today and pressure you to do

ves.MA'AM .. I

KCD

NE U L UANC A

Thuraday, 0.:1. 2, 2003

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Bonanza Get

Advertise
in this
-space for $1 00
per month.

AstroGraph

K C 0

HC T U

G

NCZUCAU

I

My money is with

MW

v De

P C V U P E

"Not

T G A E

PUG R

KCDPNUBW

JGAEUR

I

Estlmllls*
I *fr11949-1405

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, vinyl
siding, carpentry, doors,
windows, baths, mobile
home repair and more. For..
free estimate call Chat, 740-

V K

'

FUi'IDS

'i

market!"

HAULING:
• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

1-\I&gt;..~E

0 C DBR

"K C 0

•

f.COO.Ofl\'&lt; I

,,

in the stock

WE
""OVF:.

'(OU 1'-J( ~f.

wrm T~\:)

R.B.

o;...,.,__..,

r'o

CELEBRITY CIPHERby Luis Campos

74().949-2217

1

r

'

Racine, Ohio
45771

1990 Chevy Conversion
Van. Low miles, fully loaded,
TV/VCR , conver tible bed,
rear air, $3,500 740-379·
2615.

CMlPERS

2.00 lb · buying walnuts
$10.00 100 lbs.
·
Call 740-698-212•
1989 Dodge 314 ton, 360 V8, $1800, (740)985-9857

4 007'1

frtond
41 B-'lol
43

A

29670 Bashan Road

1997 Plymouth
Breeze Tennessee duel axil trailer.
$2,395. 1997 Sunfire Red $6.500. obo. 304 675-7833
2D $3,195. 1990 Astro Van
&amp;
$895. 19 other vehicles.
MoroR Hou~
COOKS MOTORS 740·446- L--~~~-:;:,.~:::;;,.
_
0103 _ _ _ _ __
:c.:;::_
1998 Fleetwood Camper
1998 Toyota Corolla VE, 30ft. sleeps-6. Excellent
44,000 miles, 4-door, excel- Condition. Used very little,
lent condition, power steer· also has Tip Out. (304)675ing,
power
brakes, 1499
amllm.cass.
ale ,
no
&lt;., I 1{\ It I . ._
m_ethanlcal or phys ical
defects. $6,000 call 7 40·
441-9661 m 1-866 -780IMfROVEMENIS
0087.
1.,-~~-~,.J
- - - , - - - - - -1999 ' Pontiac
Firebird
BASEMENT
67,000 miles T-Top, very
WATERPROOFING
clean, view photos on line at Unconditional lifetime guarwww.ORVB .com or call 740- antee. l ocal referenc~s fur446-3620 •
nished. Eslabllshed 1975.

TRuCKS
·--·fURiiiiiliSiiAI..Eiiiiiioo-"

Pal'ls

31 Drop
32 ShorJMn
33 Mlnlmolly

42 -Arbor,

Hill's Self
Storage

o

2002 Neon, 19,500 miles, 5
spd, pw-pdl-pm, cruise , AJC,
spoiler, sunroof. $5,900
OBO 740·256 -6745: 740256-6877; 740-256·6467.

Pass

1 UMd to bo
2 ~

'"'
leod:
----=---=------....J
,
Circumvent

Excellent condition . Asking

s12,900. call 740·446-3138

2000 Plymouth Neon LX, Call 24 H ... (740) ,446•1
0870, Rogers BaseineA1 r
Happy Jack Kennel Spot® automatic, 36,000 miles,
Waterproofing .
the Spot·On with the~ PW, POL, 4-door, air, cruise.
strength to kill ticks and fleas $3,900 OBO. 7 40-441..0370.
before heavy Infestation.
More active, quiCker kill,
longer residual. Athens
Landmark 740..985-3700.

West

tNT

?"
26Atlon

g...Ung
12 ~"&amp;:;,

29 =::ek 3Ori\i;g;:"'

AJ 9
A Q J 9

s...lh

DOWN

27 "H::,rou

750 East Slate Slreel Phone

FLEA MARKET
Oct. 3-4

door·auto-power-A./C, 1993 Marada 2100 Explorer
4
121,000 miles $2750 . day· 21ft. all fiberglas s pontoon
style boat. 115hp. ' Evin
Argonaut 519 Bridge Streel, 740-446-1615, after 7pm Rude. All seats replaced .
7_40_-_
44_6_-1_2_4_
4 _ _ __
Guyandotte/1-iuntington. M/F _
Has bathroom &amp; gas grill.

r

8 6 3

feulble

56 Bondi
lorword

/cHiVRO,~T~

New, scratch &amp; Denl.
Save 70%. 1·800-S2?· 4662

PEls

•

•

LARRY SCHEY

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

s

fOR SALE

7 • 2

6

=~~~

21
23 Joko
:ze Colen@r
obbr.

TRUCKS

40

Stmm

• J • 6 3
• Q5 • 2

t

L

• Repl acement
Windows • Roofing

FOR SALE

r

i

•

K 10 7 4
K 10 8

South
• 10 9 3
• A ~ 2

ISIC!mg • New GaJ-age:&lt; l

Long Mig. Woodburning
pedestal stove with blower.
$600. Call (304}675-2373 1996 Ford Mustang $3,500:
MOJURCVOES
af1er Spm.
1999 Dodge Intrepid $4,200;
- - - - - - -- 1997 ., Plymouth Bre8'Ze
NEW AND USED STEEL $2 ,SOO; 1998 Dodge Neon 02 , Honda Rancher ES, 4x4.
Condition.
Steel .Beams, Pipe Rebar $1 ,90d; 2001 Monte Carlo Excellent
7_
73_-5_:_
For
Concrete,
Angle , $10,500; 1998 Chevy Malibu :13_0_41_
.2_84
_ _ __
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel $2,800;
1998
Chevy 2003 Honda XR100R3 Dirt
Grating
For
Drains, Cavalier $2,500; 1996 BtJii:;k Bike, excellent condition.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Skylark $2,800; 2000 Neon
1 ,600 ca ll 740-441-9865.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
$2,950; 1997 Buick Skylark ~=-=~:.:.....-=:___
ruesday, • Wednesday &amp; $1 ,600; 1994 Pontiac Grand 96 Honda 300EX . Runs
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Am $1,5oo; 1989 Escort' good, Mudd Shark tires on
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; s.w. $975: 1997 DOdge back $2.100 or best offer.
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Intrepid $1 ,7 0 0 7
.4,.0,.-4
..4.'.
-'.;3.'
B&amp;o Aula Sale
~=:
Nice King wood or coat
..
lloA'IliFOR&amp;SMAI..EoroRS
burner, (740)992-2n1
-.u-....~
__
•

!able wf 4 chairs $95. Couch
BUD.J)ING
$50. Rocker recliner $20
Chest of drawers and dress· L---~;:;:;--..,1
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- er wl mirror $140. Full size
ing applications lor waiting mattress box springs $65. Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, linlels, etc. Claude
list for Hud-subsized , 1· br, Queen size sgs.
·W inters, Rio Grande, OH
apartment, call 675-6679 Skaggs Appliance 76 Vine Ca
_ &lt;_
,
11740 24..r5121
St. 740-446-7398.
EHO.

s

K Q J

Pass

Whirlpool washer almond --Off-1-ce-Fu_r_n_llu_r_e_ _ -, -99_6_P:-o'-n-'-lia'-c'-G'-,.-nd-:P:-r-ix-S:-E
color $95. dryer $95. Hot
point
ref rigerator
$75.
Ken more trost free almond
relrigerator $150. Kenmore
washEirldryer $275. Wooden

Ea111t

2o!o

$5001 POLICE IMPOUNDS
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, otcl 1998 Dodge Dakota Ex. cab,
Cars from $500. For listings 4x4 $5,900; 1998 Dodge
Durango $6 ,900 ; 3·1 997
1-800-7i 9-3001 . ext 3901
Chevy S·10 Blazers $4,200
1991 Dodge Spirit $550; ea.: 1999 Ford Conve rsion
1989 Chevy 2500 pickup Van raised roof, etc . $9.950;
$ 1,895; 1994 Saturn $2,195; 1993 Chevy S- 1 Blazer
18 others to $5, 995;
$1 ,800; 1993 Ford Explorer
COOK MOTORS
$2,300
74D-446o0103
B&amp;:D Auto Salea
_ __:.__:.c__:.__:.c__:__,-Hwy 160 N.
1991 Mazda Miata special
740-446-8865
edition , !i speed, tots ol
options, rtJns great. Dark 4x4 Dodge Dak&lt;lta 2000,
Green w/ Tan leather lntarl· malching fiberglas s topper.
or. Only $4,500!1!" 740·446· $10,000 or best offer. Still
7484.
under warranty. (304)675·
6278
1994 Pontiac Sunbird LE,
automatic· AC·AM/FM cas- 88 Ford F·150, 4x4 ~ XLT
sette . Fully loaded-alu· Larial , loaded, grea1 condi·
minum wheels. 61K·$2,450, lion, (740)992·1385 $2500
caii740-379-2748.

7~} ~!'6·5

7 6 3

Vulnerable: Both

oo

GRAIN

•

Dealer; South

1995 FORD E350 CUBE
BOX
TRUC K.
CALL
(740)446-9416 , M-F 9-5,
New Idea 3 23 One Row Located
1391
Safford
Corn
j)icker. Many new ~Sc;_h_oo--'
I, _G_a_llip:_o_li_s_.- - parts. Excellent Condition. 20
Ford Ranger ext. cab
740 922-7603
loaded
50,000
miles.

l:riO:I.:::;:;.:.:;:HA:~:v·&amp;~-...,

A 8 74'2

... K 10 S

992-5479

FARM

ANnQUF.S

•

Jeff Warner Ins.

EQUIPMENT

1!11111_ _ _ _ _ _...,

Hftrmland
53 Monu
choice
16 "-1911
17 Conlor
54 Force
knlghlhood
1hrough
18Hindball
55-

• Q.

Cellular

740-992-7599

'--------J
p30

~LLt&amp;L

Auction.
All sales final &amp; sold "as is"
Terms: Cash, charge card and check
with S.S. number l.D., 10% buyers
premium will be charged. Tax will be
charged unless you have vendors
number. All doors must be removed 2
brs. afienbe
completion_of auction ..

Couch and Love Seat.
flower design, very good
condition . Call 740-2561155.
I \It\ I&lt;.,! 1'1'1 II"'
,'\. I I\ I &lt;., I! H l'l.

oeoro

14 Patsy

door hardware. 8x7, 9x7, 16x7, 10x8,.
10x10, t2x12, 14', 16', 18', wide commercial and other size doors available. For a different size or style door
to be added to this auction 01111
(614) 837-4710.
Door Installation Available
Bring a truck or Trailer
Open for Preview 2 brs. Before

. ,r_...~li Rioi~i isi i ALEi i io_.~l r

44 Potftc1

Ellt!WNiy

15 Sllrint 11

with sunburst glass tops, track,
springs, trim, 300' hanging metal and

· -------"
9162. Free Estimates, Easy LL,.;,
financing, 90 days same as
cash . Vi sal Master Card. Antique Show: October 4-5,
Drive- a- little save slot.
State
Farm
Museum·
Fairgrounds
Road
PI
Pleasant Free appraisals,
MOVING
stoneware, marbles, bottles,
Must sell complete formal
advertising items, glassware
dining room set 60x40 oval
and pottery. Dealer and Flea
table w/pad &amp; 12 inch leal,
Market space ava ilable.
6 cushioned chairs
(7 40) 992-5088.
w/cained high backs, 2pc.
China Cabin et, w/lots of
Buy or se ll.
Riverine
drawers also 2 cushioned
Antiques, 1124 East Main
winged back side chairs
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740samon color, .4 matching
992·2526. Auss Moore ,
throw pillows over $4,000.
owner.
New will sell for $975,
FIRM. (304)882-2072
J ANEOUS
------,.-:-MFROIANDl~

month! 4% down, 30yrs at Nice 1 Bedroom Apartment ,
8 5% APR. For listing Call
Second Floor on Viand
1-800-719-3001 E:d. F144
Street. $325 · month 1 per·
3br 2 full baths. $375. a son, All utilities included.
Security Deposit.
mon th. $300. Deposit, in $100
He'nderson. (304)576·3235
(304)675-3654
House For Renl
1BA , Nice one BR unfurnished
unfurn. NC, wasl1er/dryer- apartment. Range &amp; refridg .
hook-up. $350/mo, no pets , provided. Water &amp; garbage
depositlre terences required , paid. Deposit required. Call
740-446-3667
7 40-446 -4345 aIter 6 p.m.

2821 .

In Memory of

_,.

cold
4t9tm08n
13 L.uau attire 41 Rich,

Sunday October 5, 1:00 P.M.
Held at Athens Co. (West of 682) to
Union Rd., go nortl} to fairgrounds.
Able C.H.l., Clopay, Haas and Shoff
garage door
sections. 1/2 b.p. Genie'iend commercial garage door opene9.. Approx.
100 garage doors will be offered in
this auction, one sided, steel and insulated doors, several insulated doors .

Legion

Mlchigln
43 Cl1ble

1 Dwindi-.1
6 Fluotor
11

October 5, 2003

r.

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

I ~c=al~l7~4=0-_4:::46:::-9:::204:__~- ..,:-~--• 2 br, all ele&lt;:triC,

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

.

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....

I I' u I IN I' I
5

N 0

1

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.

.

The guy was two hours late for
his date. He knocked on her door
and found her in a nightshirt. ''I'm
two hours late," he exclaimed,
l"and you 're Sfii··-- ---- -!"

A Co.mplete th e ~;huckle Quo: ed
. '-II' by f1lling in the mis.sing words
you develop from step No . 3 below.
2

SCRAM.LEl\A,N~RS

Menial- Noqse ·

&lt;•

Bpi&amp; · Ninety - INSOMNIA

'Why do you lhink you re qualified lobe a night watch·
man? " the employment agent asked the fellow. "Easy,"
the guy laughed, "I have INSOMNIA "
pared lo pay the piper.
CANCER (June 21-JuJy 22) - The kind
of responses you can exp&amp;Ct lrom others
today-will be determined by YQUr own atti·
tude and behavior . If you ' re sharptongued or highly criHcal, anticipate simi·
Jar treatment in retum ,
LEO (July 23-.Aug . 22) - Mlstl'lterpreling
the actions of olhers today stems from .
exoectlng the worst from life ana having a
chip on your Shoulder. You may think oth·
ars are dictating to you when ttley're only
1&gt;ying IO help.
VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sopt. 22) - Tha1 ~rttlcol
eye of yours that you depend on so
ily might nol be operattve 10d1y, so you'd
b"l Wise to steer dear of expensive pur·
chasu or Involvements. You could be
dupod,

hta_..

Classlfleds

Get ..
"'

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'

.

'""

�..
Page 86 •

:

Wednesday, October 1, :zoo~

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

•

Wood uses bat, Cubs win playoff opener~
tory over the
Florida Marlins
in
Game
1
Tuesday.
AlLANTA - They came by the thouSchmidt outdusands, imem on helping their beloved
eled
Jos~ Beckett
Cubbies break a 58-year losing streak m
while
Bariy
postseason road games by transforming
Bonds
and
the
Turner Field into Wrigley Field South.
Giants
took
It worked.t
advantage of a
Kerry Wood allowed only_ two hits and
costly error by
drove in the ~a-ahead runs wtth a double m
fill-in
Florida
the sixth inmng off Russ Oniz, leading the 1 ;_~~........
third
baseman
Chicago Cubs to a 4-2 victory over the
Atlanta Braves in Game I of their NL diviMiguel Cab~
to score the g sion series.
ahead run .
Wood's two-run double, which broke a
At 68, Fe!' e
1-all tie, made him the first pitcher to drive lllll~~!~
Alou
wound up a
in the ~arne-winning run in a postseason
winner
while
game smce Orval Overall for the Cubs in
his
managing
Game 4 of the 1907 World Series.
first postseason
But it was Wood's work on the mound
game and 72that stood out. 1-fe completely thronled the
year-old
Jack
high-scoring ~raves, a team that p~uced
McKeon
lost
in
six players wtth 20 110mers and four wtth
his playoff debut.
100 RBis during the regular season.
Bonds barely
Wood struck out II in 7 I -3 innings. The
had two feet in
only major slip-up came in tbe third, when
the batter's box
Marcus Giles homered.
when
catcher
Trailing 4-1, Atlanta scored a run and
I van Rodriguez's
knocked out Wood without gelling a hit. A
glove shot out . to
questionable call at ftrst on a potential
signal an inteninning-ending double play allowed the run
tional walk.
to score.
Bonds wound
, But Kyle Farnsworth retired Javy Lopez
up 0-for-1 with
on a bases-loaded grounder to short, and
Joe Borowski allowed a hit but struck out
three
walks.
Chad
Fox
intenthe side in the ninth for the save -comtionally walked
pleting the three-hitter.
·
Lost in the hoopla over Chicago's 95Bonds
with
year drought without a World Series title
nobody on base
was this little nugget: The Cubs had lost
in the eighth, and
he · came around
eight straight postseason road games since
Claude Passeau pitched a one-hiller to beat
to score on
Detroit in Game 3 of 1945 World Senes.
Edgardo
Of course, the Cubs went on to lose that
Alfonzo's douWorld Series, falling to the Til;lers in seven
ble.
games. They have lost I0 stratght pos,tseaOn a day the
son series since winning their last World
teams combined
Series title in 1908.
fqr only six hils, the Giants scored a run on
Maybe this time will be different. On the a misplay.
first day of spring training, first-year manCabrera. starting in place of injured Allager Dusty Baker told his players to forget Star Mike Lowell, charged in on Alfonzo's
the past and create some new Cubs' histo- fourth-inning bunt and made a wild throw
ry.
to first. By the time the ball had stopped it
was in the bullpen dirt and Rich Aurilia
•
was headed for home.
·
Alou had said the key for Schmidt was to
keep
his pitch.::ount-down - and that hapSAN FRANCISCO- Jason Schmidt
pened. The lanky right-hander witli the
Chicago Cubs pitcher Kerry Wood watches his two RBI double aced another test.
as he runs to first in the sixth inning against the Atlanta Braves
Schmidt pitched the San Francisco league's lowest ERA worked ahead in the
in game one of the National League Division Series at Turner Giants to their first playoff shutout in 16 count and was at 79 pitches through six.
After Alex Gonzalez reached on an error
Field in Atlanta Tuesday. lAP)
years, throwing a three-hitter for a 2-0 vicAssOCIATED

PRESS

Giants 2, Marlins 0

Eagles ready to
stop·blee&lt;Ung, Bt

in the fifth, Schmidt retired the fmal 13 bat~
ters. Schmidt walked none and struck out
five .
Schmidt pitched tht'. flfSt postseason
shutout for the Giants since Davl!'
Dravecky beat St. Louis in Game 2 of the
1987 NL championship series.
.~
Beckett gave up two hits in seveq
innings, striking out nine and walking five;:
•
••

American League
Twins 3, Yankees 1

Tomadoes.meet Miller
in battle of winless
1VC teams, Bt

•

•
•••
•

•
NEW YORK Those pesky
Minnesota Twins quickly put the big, ba4
Yankees in another postseason funk.
.~
Torii Hunter circled the bases when hi$
line drive resulted in a pair of mispla)'1
and the Twins finally beat New Yor!&lt;;
defeating the stumbling Yankees 3, I 11}
Tuesday's AL playoff opener. .
. . t
The Yankees threatened a nmth-mnm&amp;
comeback. But a spectacular catch by
Shannon Stewart helped Eddie Guardadd
escape allowing only one run.
:
Twins starter Johan Santana left aftet
four innings because of a leg cramp, bill;
Rick Reed, J.C. Romero, LaTroy Hawkins
and Guardado cobbled together a nine-hit~
ter th4t gave the AL Central champions a
1-0 lead in the best..of-five series.
-~
Hawkins got the win and Guardad!i
hung on for the save.
:·
In the ftrst early afternoon postsea~
game at Yankee Stadium since 1981, ~
Twins showed no fear. Stewart made ·~
leaping catchat the left-field wal~ t? ~
Hideki Matsut on an extra-base htt m tlit:i
ninth - with many fans leaning over ~
try for a Jeffrey Maier-like grab.
·.- :
B_emie Williams, who made the day')
key misplay, had, singled leading off
inning, and Aaron Boone followeQ;
Matsui 's drive with a one-out double. B\tt
Ruben Sierra flied out and, after Alfonso_
Soriano beat out a run-scoring infield single, Nick Johnson grounded out.
•
In a sign of just how different playoff
baseball is, New York played the infield it)
with a runner at third base in the firSt
inning, escaping the jam when Mike
Mussina induced a pair of groundouts. .
Mussina fell behmd in the third inning
when speedy Cristian Guzman reached on
a slow roller past the mound, slid into third
just under Boone's tag on Stewart's single
to left arrd scored· on Luis Rivas' sacrifice
fly.
Santana allowed runners in each of the
first four innings but didn' tlet any get past
second.

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Bids·to be taken for Meigs LocaJ schools' demolitions

SPORTS
• Lewis and Spikes were
never meant to be. See
Page 81

.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Richard Rupe
• Gv.erdllyn PO.eti-RcBti

BY CHARLENE HDEFUCH

hoeflich@mydailysentlnel.com
POMEROY - When the
Salem Center and Rutland
Elementary sd\tools are
demolished this fiiJ1;.-.it will
complete the Meigs Local
School District's disposition
of eight schools vacated
when students moved into
new buildings this fall. ·
Currently the district is
advertising for demolition
bids on the two schools.
Those bids will be opened at
I p.m. 'on Oct . 20. Earlier it
was announced that the bids
would be opened Monday
bu~ a decision to delay the
opening
was
made
Wednesday at a pre-bid
meeting.
Meigs
Local
Superinrendent
William

Buckley said it was decitled deed carried a provision that
to separate the bids into two the land would revert back
parts , one for asbestos to the original owner should
removal and the other for it no longer be used for
demolition. The estimated school purposes.
cost of razing the two buildThat original owner is
now deceased and the Meigs
ings is $372 ,688.
Once
the
two-story Local superintendent says
Rutland school is down, the disposal of the property is
basement tilled in, and the - coniingent on a legal opindebris hauled away, the lots ion defining ownership. If it
will be transferred to the is owned by the school disRutland Volunteer Fire trict, then it will be sold. he
Department for construction said .
of a new fire station.
The Bradbury building
As yet a decision has not was transferred to the
been reached on the disposi- Athens/Meigs Educational
tion of the four acres on Service Center. Some renowhich the Salem Center vation took place over the
school is located. When the summer and it is currently
land was originally trans- being used for Head Start
ferred to Salem Township and other preschool proand later to the Meigs Local grams, along with Adult
School District at the time Basic Literacy Education
consolidation occurred, the
Ple•se see Schools, A5

'

HOMECOMING C:OURT' Pomeroy raises water bill

INSIDE

J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
BY

• Law You Can Use. See
Page A2
• Closing your home to
pests. See Page A3

''

..

WEATHER.

Ohio Prep Football Notebook

Mostly aunny, HI: SO., Low: 30

.

..

Bv

MtUER
Associated Press
RUSTY

Nobody's laughing at Toledo
Woodward anymore.
The Polar Bears didn 't win more
than three games in a season from
1992 to 2002. Over that span, the
Bears . were 17-90 and were
outscored by an average of 33-11 :
Located in one of Toledo's most
economically depressed neighborhoods, Woodward has been hit hard
in recent years by academic ineligibility and a lack of interest in most
sports.
As recently as last season. when
they finished 2-8, the Bears began
two-a-day practices with just 23
players.
But this year, Woodward is 5-l
and has 52 players - some recruited from the hall s and school grounds
by the team's top player, running

back/defensive tackle Khalfani Rice.
Now third-year coach Henry Delffs'
team shares first place in the Toledo
City League.
• HOT TEAMS: Cincinnati
Anderson pushed its regular season
win streak to 26 with a 42-28 win
over Glen Este; Coldwater coach
John Reed earned his 200th career
victory with a 34-0 weather-shortened win over hi s former employer,
Rockford Parkway ; Middletown
Fenwick won for the first time at its
new home, Krusling Brothers Field,
beating Lemon-Monroe 49-0: and
Cadiz Harrison Central improved to
3-3 with a 26-25 win over Sharon
(Pa.) Kennedy Catholic, after entering the season 1-39 in its previous
four years of existence.
• NEVER TOO LATE: St.
Marys Memorial '(6-0) has had a season of close calls. The latest came
when the Roughriders pulled even
with
fellow
computer-ratings
'

regional leader Lima Shawnee 2626 on Corey Vossler's 3-yard run
with I :03 left - but missed the
extra-point kick.
Shawnee took over deep in its own
territory and had to punt with 2.5
seconds left. The snap was bobbled,
Nick Yahl blocking the kick into the
end zone where teammate Andy
Maze recovered for a 32-26 win.
• TOUGH TO TACKLE: After
rushing 40 times for 308 yards and
five touchdowns against Millersburg
West Holmes, Ashland's Nate
Summerfield now has 1,217 rushing
yards and 22 rushing TDs on 155
attempts; Minster single-wing tailback Ty Parks, son of head coach
Whit Parks, broke his own school
record with 302 yards rushing in a
six-touchdown performance in a 4813 win over rival New Bremen;
Mount Vernon's Dan Melton
rushed for 265 yards on 24 carries
and had TD runs of 53, 27 ~nd 42

yards against Delaware Hayes which had Paul Stelzer throw for
458 yards and Ryan Kennedy grab
seven passes for 265 yards and two
TDs; Ottawa-Glandorf's Derek
Patrick rushed for 244 yards and
three TDs (70, 61, 6 yards) in a 2719 win over V:m Wert; Williamsport
Westfall got 233 yards rushing from
Brice 'Redman in a 27-0 win over
Chillicothe Unioto; and Justin Isaacs
ran 14 times for 222 yards and three
TDs in Finneytown's49-22 win over
Cincinnati Deer Park.
• ARMY OF ONE: Cincinnati.
Winton Woods sophomore Jason
Davis scored on punt returns of 54
and 93 yards in a 48-0 wiri over
Amelia; Kyle Rhoad of Bloomdale
Elmwood ran for three T.Ds and
passed for three more in a 5 t-10 win
over Genoa; Scott Moyer threw for
three touchdowns, ran for a fourth,
and also intercepted three passes in
Zanesville Rosecrans' 34- I 9 win

."'

.

'

o.tallo•on

Pac• A2

LO'I"I'ERIFS
'
Ohio
Pick 3 dly: 2·1·2
Pick 4 dly: 8-7-4-7

Plck'3J11ght 2·7-6
Pick f"'nlght 0-7-3-9
Qiickeye 5: 1-4-15-18-26
$Uperl.otto: 3-14-17-23-41-49

Bonus Qall: 48' .
Kicker: 1-9-2·2~9
Dally 3: 3-4-5
Dally 4: 3-3-1-9

•

·"'~

INDEX
2 SBCI'IONS -

Calendars

·Ke£1ping_-·.
.·; M~igs ....

county ,: ·

informed:

12 PAGES

., A3

Classifieds

B2-4

. Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Bs
A3
A4

~

B6

As
B1

A2

© 0003 Ohio Valley Publlahlna CO.

Jon P. Karschnik, Senior Lender

't' '

i

l

',

When you visit or call us,
nothing else is important.
Our focus is on you, your needs,
and your satisfaction.
Be reco~nized. Feel important. Come see us.
We' re your hometown bank •.

!71aoiRe

cfgmca.te

740-9~9-2210

740-992-6333

til
LllftDI!O

~--------------------------------------------------.
..

lia Pratt. Alyssa Holter, Stacy Smith and Katie Robertson. pictured left to right with their
escorts, are candidates for homecoming queen at Eastern High School. The queen will be
crowned Friday night. Pratt, the daughter of Michael and Debbie Pratt of Pomeroy, will be
escorted by Kevin Marcinko, son of Kevin and Belinda Marcinko of Tuppers Plains. Holter,
daughter of Ed and Jan Holter of Pomeroy, will be escorted by Nathan Grubb, son of Ron
and Felecia Grubb of Tuppers Plains. Smith, daughter of Tim and Karen Smith of Chester,
will be esc~ted by Alex Simpson, son of Tim and Cathy Smith of Lottridge. Robertson,
daughter ~reg and Anna Parker of Tuppers Plains and Jimbo Robertson of Belpre. will be
escorted by Brendan lind, son of Bettie Bow and John Taylor of Lottridge. !Brian J. Reed)

Lawsuit accuses AEP of
manipulating natural gas prices

West VJrginia

POMEROY- Effective in
January, water bill s will
increase by a flat fee of $3.50
for Pomeroy water customers
to provide additional funding
for construction of a new
water treatment plant.
By emergency action#t
Wednesday night's mee$«&lt;&lt;~ .
Pomeroy Village Counctl
adopted an ordinance adding
$3.50 surcharge to water
bills. The action by Coum:il
also included another surcharge
to be added in January 2006
that could be a~ much as $3.50
bringing the total increase to $7
for Pomeroy water customers.
Since the total amount for
the construction of the $J .5
million water treatment plimt
has yet to be determined, the
village may charge less than
the $3.50 fee increases
planned for 2006.
Mayor Victor Young IJI -and
Kathy Hysell, clerk treasurer.
said the
Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) is to
blame for the cost increase
estimated to be at least
$100.000. Hysell said the
EPA slowed down the permit
process required before con-

··•· -uJe

It doesn't take long for some Stars to shine.

-.
over We st Jefferson; Cincinnat1
Elder's Bradley Glatthaar rushed for, •
117 yards and five touchdowns ~
all in the first half - of a 49-21 wit}
over Covington (Ky.) Catholic; arid
Columbus Grove's Blaine Maag se~
school records with six touchdowns
and 44 in a career in a 42-0 win ove~
Troy Christian.
.:
• THROWING IT: Bluffton'~
Jesse Partmore caught a s·chool~
record II passes for I 05 yards and ~
TD and freshman Ricky Matter brother of Ohio State basketball stai:
Caity Matter- completed 24 of 3g
passes for 281 yards and three TDi
in a 43-6 win over Spencerville~
Bellefontaine's"Chris Walden passQiol
for 369 yards and three TDs in a 41 ;
21 win over Springfield Shawnel!:
and Dover's Todd Lisowski se:t
school l)'larks for passing yardage itl
a game (313), most completions in l1
season (109) and in a career (194). 1

The Bradbury school vacated by the Meigs Local School
District is now the permanent home of Head Start. The front
lawn has been converted into a fenced-in playground with
brand new . equipment. Here Lori Hatfield, center director.
watches over some children at play. (Charlene Hoeflich)

COLUMBUS (AP) Federal investigators say
traders for American Electric
Power Co. tried to manipulate prices in the natural gas
market from 2000-2002 by
sending thousands of false or
misleading reports to industrY publications.
AEP fired the five traders
last October for giving false
information to Platts, an
energy-industry trade publication whose price index is
sometimes used as a benchmark to set prices in natural
gas_contracts.
The company was surprised by the lawsuit filed
TUesday because it reported
the traders' activities and
continues to negotiate with
the federal government to

reach a settlement in the case,
AEP spokeswoman Melissa
McHenry said Wednesday.
The complaint filed ·by the
Q.S. Commodity Futures
Commission
Trading
alleges that AEP reaped
$63.5 million in profits from
November 2000 through
October 2002 because of
false trading reports. The
lawsuit, filed in U.S.
District Court, seeks up to
$355 million in penalties.
The traders bid on contracts
based on information aboutthe market price of natural
gas. The commission said
traders used a computer
spreadsheet they called
"bogus" to manipulate prices.
Traders refer to the price
index supplied by Platts publi-

cations to assess risk. If a
price index shows an increase,
tt could indicate strong
demand or weak supplies.
The lawsuit comes one
year after an internal review
by AEP uncovered false
reporting to a price-compiling industry publication and
ftred the five traders .
At the time, AEP said it
did not know how many
false reports had been made
or when and that the company had completed its review.
The commission continued to investigate. •
The commission would
not confirm that negotiations toward a settlement
were ongoing, but
.
. it said the

Pluse see AlP, A5

stPJCtion could begin on the
water treatment plant and thi s
increased the costs associated
with the rroject.
" Counci rejected three bids tilr
the construction of the water
treatment plant in September
because the bid~ were too high.
Young said village administrator
John Ander&gt;ou told him that If
the vi IIage didn ·t immediate!)·
approve the $7 surcharge. there
would be no reasoo to re-bid ttM:
project because there wouldn't
be enough money to complete it .
After approving tttc surchalge.
cowtciJ approved reopening the
bidding process for the proposed
water treatment plant.
Council member Ruth Spaun
voted against the surcharge .
She said she did not have
enough inlorrnation to make an
informed decision on the matter. Spaun and Council member
Jim Sisson: who vored to
approve the surcharge. discussed the effect the higher
water bills might have on peo .
pie living on fixed incomes.
Young said if Counci I
refused to ~ pprove the proposed surcharge. it would risk
losing the Sl .3 million in federal and state grants needed 1r1
pay for the water treatment

Plene see Bill. A5

Dirt removal

Dirt is finally moving at the site of the new Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. After months of site preparation work . primarily on the
West Virginia side of the Ohio River, the work has now moved
to Pomeroy, in the area beneath the existing bridge :
Meanwhile, the sound of pile qrivers working at coffer dams
mid-river can be heard all over town. C.J. Mahan Construction
Co., Grove City, is the primqry contractor on the project. (Brian
J. Reed)

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          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="21855">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="21854">
              <text>October 1, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
