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Couch's big night
saves Browns, Bt

Bengals comingjust
short of wins, B6

Volunte·ers assemble disaster kits

SPORTS

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

• BoSox advance to

hoeflich@mydallysentlnel.ccm

ALCS. See Page B1

POMEROY- About.200
homebound senior citizens
will be better prepared to
leave their homes in the
event of a fire, flood or other
disaster because of a "Make
a Difference Day" project
being carried out by Meigs
County's
· Homeland
Security RSVP volunteers.
The dozen or so members
of the group are putting
together disaster kits so that
should elderly residents
have to leave their homes in
a hurry, they can put their Working on disaster kits, a Make a Difference Day project of
medicine into the .hack-pack the Homeland Security RSVP volunteers, are from the left,
Glenna Riebel, Betty Sayre, Diana Coates, RSVP director,
. Pl.... IH Kits, A5
Maxine Little and lil.lian Harrison. (Charlene Hoeflich)

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Roy Greene
• Rhonda Stover
• Ullie Ann Robinson
• Emmett Douglas
• Richard E. Lusher

Birth and death of two homes
change Pomeroy skyline
_.... --

INSIDE
• Time Out for Tips. See

Page A3
• Local business briefs.

See

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Page 16

Senior ~arterly

Page A3

WEATHER
MHtlr ounnr, HI: 70., Low: 50

Pay the fine or
face the time
J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel .com
BY

POMEROY - Failure to
pay fines to
Pomeroy
could result
in
either
arrest
or
increased
fees to peowho
ple
think they
can
shortProffitt
change
1he
law.
Pomeroy Mayor Victor
Young lli said thousands of
dollars are uncollected from
defendants convicted in
magistrate's court. Youn g
said guilty parties promise
to pay court costs and the
fines associated wilh the
offenses they are charged
with but never do.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
Proffitt and his staff have been
systematically
searching
through court records to find
. guilty parties who have not
paid the price for justice.
Failure to pay fines and
court costs after 60 days can
result in an arrest warrant.
Proffitt said people can be
incarcerated and charged
$65 for each day in jail until
arrangements are made to

·~~.J;~'tlj;~~ l(liii con,;
~ue.,
:..r.:
tempt of court charge and
warrant added to the bill.
"Those individuals who
have not paid their fine s will

Area churches to
host fall festival

Detail• on Pace A2

l.OTIERIES

BY J, MILES lAYTON
jlaytonO mydailysentlnel.com

Ohio
Pick 3 day: D-9-4
Pick 4 day: 7-8-7-8
Pick 3 night: 1-9-5
Pick 4 night: 5-5-2-3

Buckeye 5: 2Q-21-24-28-32

.'

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 9-D-0
Dally 4: 4-2-5-5
cash 25: 2-3-7-9-19-23

INDEX
2 SI!CI10NS - 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby

At Pleasant Valley Hospital we treat you .like
family ... because that's what you are.
~

,,

.

.

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

be arre sted and put in jail
until the judge is able to see
them ," said Proffitt . "Nonpayment of fines will not be
tolerated in Pomeroy."
Proffitt said that at the
very minimum, his department will place a hold with
the Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehicles to restrict anyone
from bein g allowed to
renew their drivers license
unti.l the fine is paid .
Unpaid parking tickets is
still a hot iss1,1e with Young
and Proffitt who are intent
on collecting fines on more
than 300 unpaid parking
tickets. The viJlage is
extending parking ticket
10
Pomeroy
offenders
immunity from the additional late penalty until Oct. 31 .
Ordinarily when the lwo
hour time limit on a parking
meter expires. a person ille gally parked gets a $2 park ing Iicker. If this tickel is not
paid within 48 hours. the
fine doubles to $4 . Village
Council voted to drop the
additional fine which doubles the penalty until Oct. 31
for anyone who pays their
back parking tickets.
On Nov. I, the police
department will contact the
BMV office to repon anyone with any unpaid parking
tickets Vehicle ownqrs will
have lo pay these tickets
before they are allowed to
renew their vehicle's regi stration stickers.

As
B2-4

Bs

A3
A4
As
As
B1-2,6

A2

© S003 Ohio Volley Publlobl,nl Co.

POMEROY - · Out with
the old and in with the new as
one home is demolished,
another one is being built.
The once proud and stately
home located at the corner of
Sycamore and Second Street
in downtown Pomeroy is
being
demolished
and
replaced with. a parking lqt
for the St. Paul ·Lutheran
Church located across the
street.
The Federalist-style .house
dates back to the early 1800's
and·for many years was hOme
to the local Order of the
Knights of Pythias.
Dating back to 1864, the
Order of the Knights of
Pythills was a national fraternl!,l org.tiqn that originally sought'WI heal the !livisive
wQilllds created by .tile Civil
W~Wi Itwas the fix$tAmerican
Ojdet ever ~h~~rte~d by , an
Act otthe U.S. Congress lind
of ·. qoublew~tral~' it still exists today in several
· Street. Todd and cities nationwide. During
· . ~room. two bath- World War U the house was
pr®erty ne~ to their old
. l'lllillli!MHD•llwAS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeflich@ mydailysenti nel.com
POMEROY- "Bring the
whole family for a full night
of fun" is the message from
I0 area churches who are
hosting a family fall festival
from 4 to 8 p.m. Saturday on
Lynn Street in Pomeroy. In
the event of rain it will be
held at Trinity Church.
A highlight of the festival
will be a carved pumpkin contest. Pumpkins are to be
carved ahead of time and dis. played for judging. The public
will judge the contest paying a
penny a vote. and the pumpkin
with the must money wins.
First place prizes will be
awarded in three categories
- elementary, a 20 inch bike;
junior/senior high, a 24 inch
bike; and adult, a $50 sayings
bond and a gift certificate to
the Wild Horse Cafe.
.
There will be games with
prizes ~ore including a guessthe-wetght-of-the pumpkin
contest with the grahd prize
being a 25-inch teleVision.
The church clowns. Trix.
MeMe, Pudgey and The
Pocket Lady will be there
face painting, making ani mal balloons. and passing
out prizes. There wtll also

be games of all kinds for all
ages with prizes galore .
Hotdogs. tacos in a bag,
po~orn , cotton candy and
dnnks will be served. While
there be no charge to participate in any of the activities,
the host churches will be
accepting donations for the
Mulberry
Community
Center being developed in
the old Pomeroy Elementary
School by the Meigs
Cooperative Parish.
The festival is sponsored by
Trinity church, United
Methodist
Church
of
Pomeroy. Health United
Method1st
Church
of
Middlepo11, Grace Episcopal,
Pomeroy Church of Christ. St.
John's Lutheran, Laurel Cliff
Free Will Methodist Church,
First Baptist of Pomeroy, First
Southern Baptist of Pomeroy,
and Sacred Heart Catholic
Church.

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·www.holzer.org

�Page.A2

OHIO
Only Coas~ Guardsman who was
Vietnam MIA buried in Arlington

"fhe Dai y Sentinel
Ohio weather
Wednesday, Oct. 8
MICH.

I Manollold !soomoj

,

0

IND.

0

0

.' I

0 ·- · 0
, ./

.....

I

" I

/" L.l

W. VA_

.... .. ... .
0 ---- ~-.,.\

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Showers

Cloudy

...

~

* •

T-stoiTTls

Ram

,.

Rurries

Snow

v

'

Ice

Mostly sunny, warm
percent.
Thursday night. .. A slight
chance of showers in the
evening ... Otherwise partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A
sli ght chance of showers · in
the afternoon and evening.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows near 50 and highs in the
lower 70s.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers until midnight.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Mostly
sun ny.
Highs in the mid 70s. Light
and variable winds.
Tonight...Clear. Lows near
50. Calm winds.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s. Calm
winds.
'
Wednesday night. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s.
. Thursday... Partly cloudy. A
slight chance of showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
lower 70s. Chahce of rain 20

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Oct 6, 2003

10,000

Dow
Jones

9,500
9,000

JUL

9,594.98

High

Pel clll!'ll'

9,624.91

fnlm P•••toui' +0.24

Low

8,500

OCT

SEP

AUG

Record high: 11 ,722.98

9,562 .53

Jan. 14,2000

1,600
, ,600

-=-=

JUL

'"'"'

High
1,894.22

. +0.69

1 ,400

AUG
Low
1,876.00

SEP
OCT
Rooc:o•d htah: 5,048.82
March 10. 2000

Oct 6, 2003

1,050

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

1,()()()

950

::.=..,

AUG
Low

JUL '

1,034.35

High

+0.44

1,036.48

900

OCT

SEP

Record high: 1,527.46

1.029.15

March 24 , 2000

N'

Local Stocks
AEP -3).48
Ard1 Coal- 23.49

Federal Mogul- .22

Rod&lt;wetl- 27.75

USB-24.88

Al&lt;zo- 31.00
AmTecMlBC- 22.77
Ashland Inc.- 35.74~
BBT -3;.93
BLI--16.28
Bob Eva'lS- Z7.95

Gannett- 79.90

Rod&lt;y Boots -11 .50
RD Shell- 45.50

Borgwamor-74.50

Ud.-16.17
NSC-19.12
Dak Hill Finanoat- 29.40
ONE-40.11

Gene!aJ Etectric-30.79
GKNLY-4.50

Haney DavidsOn - 49.36
KMRT-25.25
Kroger- 18.90

~-4.64

Charming Shops- 6.01
City Hotcing- 35.55
Cot-25.76

CNB-24.50

00-21.18

Peoples - 28.10
Pepsico - 47 50

DuPont- 40.67

S-48.25
T -20.15

USB-24.88
Wai-Mart- 57.99
Werdfs- 34.87
WOt1h1ngtOO - 13.35

Daily stock reports ara the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the pr611ious day's transac·
lions, provided by Smith
f'artr&lt;&gt;ls at Advest Inc. ct
Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPs 213-9601
Ohio Valley Pubttshlng Co.

Correction Polley

Published

Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
sto!)l, call tho newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

every

afternoon ,

Monday through Friday, 111 Coyn
St1eet, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper

Association.

Our main number Is

Poatmaater: Send address correc·
tions lo The Daily Sentinel, 111
Cou!t Streei, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

(740) 992-2156.

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EdHor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Roporter: Brian Reed. Ext 14
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Matt

General Manager

S~becrlptlon

tnolde Metg1 County
13 Weeks ............. '30.15
26 Weeks ... .. . ....... '60.00
52 Weeks .... .. . .. ...'118.80

Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
E-mail:
newsOmydaltyaentinel.com

Rstes o.Mtde Melge County
13 Weeks . .. ...... .... '50.05
26Weeks . ........ .. .'t 00.10 .
52 Weeks . .
. .'200.20

-=

www.rnydaltysen~nol.com

.,

should

advance direct to The Daily

'I

friends and family as a man
who could do everything.
"I know just what he
would have said if he were
here today : 'I'm no hero. It's
my job,"' said younger
brother David Rittichier, 69,
of Erwin. Tenn .
Before Vietnam; Rittichier
won honors for rescue work
during Hurricane Betsy in
I965 . He also earned an Air
Medal in I967 for copiloting
a helicopter that rescued eight
seamen from a West German
vessel in Lake Huron.
Rittichier was discharged
from the Air Force as a captain in 1963. He then joined
the Coast Guard and volunteered for a pilot exchange
program in Vietnam.
Two .weeks after being
deployed. he earned his first
Distinguished Flying Cross
for flying through enemy fire
to save four Army soldiers.
He would earn two more
Flying Crosses and three Air
Medals before his last fli ght.
"If we define the character
of a man by his actions.
Lieutenant Jack C. Rittichier
is the embodiment of
courage," Collins said.
Homeland
Security
Secretary Tom Ridge also

attended the funeral, which
was followed by a procession
behind Rittichier's flag-covered casket. It was pulled by
six white horses on a black
caisson to his grdve site at
Arlington
National
Cemetery's Coast Guard Hill,
a part of the cemetery usually
reserved for senior officers.
Mourners recited The
Lord's Prayer, then a sevenmember rifle party fired
three volleys . .As a lone
bugler played taps, four red
and whtte helicopters circled
the hill , representing every
type of chopper in the Coast
Guard inventory.
"When those guns went
off and those helicopte rs
went over ... I was flooded
with a Jot of the old feelings," David Rittichier said
of his older brother, who
played football in high
school and was captain of
the 1955 Kent State
University Golden Flashes.
"We've missed him terribly."
A Coast Guard bagpipe
band played "Amazing
Grace" as Collins presented
a flag to David Rittichier.
Brother Henry Rittichier, 60,
of Houston, and Rittichier's
widow, Carol Wypick of

Fountain Valley, Calif.. said
they had waited a ion~ time.
"I never thought thiS day
would come." said Wypick,
who later married another
Coast Gururl search and rescue
pilot. "You have no idea, in my
heart, how wonderful this is."
Joint
U.S.-Vietnamese
teams had searched unsuccessfully for the crash site in
Vietnam. In May 2002, officials received information
about a crash near Ban
Kaboui , Laos, about nine
miles from where they 'd
been searching. The U.S.
Army Central Identification
Laboratory in Hawaii identi- ·
fied the remains recovered at
the wreckage as those of the
pilots and crew.
Also killed in the mission
were: Rittichier 's co-pilot,
Air Force Capt. Richard C.
Yeend Jr. of Mobile, Ala. ;
and two crew members, Air
Force Sgt. James D. Locker
of Sidney, Ohio, and Air
Force Staff Sgt. Elmer L
Holden of Oklahoma City.
At a reception following
the funeral. three people
gave the family their MIA
bracelets engraved with
Rittichier's name.

Man sentenced for dealing in child pom involving relatives
CLEVELAND (AP) -A
man was sentenced to I9
years in prison for sexually
abusing two relatives as part
of an internatiohal ring that
involved parents posting
nude photographs of their
children on the Internet.
Edwin Bartholomew, 43,
of Galion, said in court
Monday that his obsession
with children was similar to
a drug addiction.
U.S. District Judge Donald
Nugent criticized that comment, saying people who
smoke or use drugs only hurt
themselves,
whereas

Conviction
reversed-in
death of pizza
delivery driver

2,000

1,893.46

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)
- Thirty-five years after Lt.
Jack C. Rittichier 's last rescue attempt, the only U.S.
Coast Guardsman missing in
action from the Vietnam War
was remembered as a hero.
Rittichier, then 34, was the
pilot of an HH-3E helicopter
that had left Da Nang Air Base
in South Viemam June 9,
1968, on a rescue mission for
a downed U.S. pilot. His helicopter was struck by enemy
fire and exploded in a firebalL
The pilot Rittichier was
trying to rescue, Marine Ist
Lt . Walter R. Schmidt, of
Nassau, N.Y., had been shot
down and was stranded in
enemy territory with a broken leg. Schmidt didn't survive and was listed as MIA.
On Monday, about 600
mourners walked a half-mile
up a hill overlooking the
Pentagon to bury Rittichier,
the seventh ru1d last Coast
Guardsman killed in Vietnam.
"All hands are now
accounted for," said Adm.
Thomas Collins, the Coa~t
Guard commandant.
That last mission was just
one of many rescue attempts
made by Rittichier of
Barberton, Ohio, known to his

WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE (AP) - A man
whose earlier guilty pleas
and prison senten~ were
overturned now faces the
death penalty after being
convicted a second time in
the kidnapping and slaying
of a pizza delivery driver.
A
jury
convicted
Matthew McCullough on
Monday in Fayette County
Common Pleas Court on
three counts of aggravated
murder - each -with death
penalty specifications murder,
kidnapping.
attempted rape and aggra...._
vated robbery.
.
The sentencing phase
begins Wednesday in trial
that began Sept. 16, Judge
Vtctor Ponttous Jr. said.
The body of Precious
Canter, 31, was found in
June 2000 in an alley
behmd a school in this city
40 miles southwest of
Columbus. The pizza parlor
where she worked reported
her missing when she failed
to return from a delivery.
McCullough, 23, of
Washington Court House
had pleaded guilty t~
aggravated murder, kidnapping and aggravated
robbery in September
200 I and was sentenced to
life in prison with 'the possibility of parole after 40
years. He was 19 when
Canter was killed'.
The 12th Ohio District
Court of Appeals overturned that conviction in
November,
saying
Pontious did not adequ&amp;te1~ inform McCullough of
his nghts before accepting
the
pleas.
Pontious
declined to comment on
the appeals ruling Monday.
Monday, the jury acquitted McCullough of a
fourth agwavated . murder
charge, ftnding that the
killing was not done with
prior calculation, and
found him guilty of a lesser count of
Pontious said.
·· Three juveniles arrested ·
along with McCullough
were sentenced to lesser
charges, two as juveniles
and one as an adult. •

Bartholomew was "con- Court in Bucyrus.
If Bartholomew is convictdemning ~ hildren to a lifeed there, Assistant Crawford
time of suffering.".
Bartholomew
pleaded County Prosecutor Cliff
guilty in May to sexually Murphy said he will push to
exploiting children for use in have the sentence run consecthe Internet porn ring. Some utively with the federal term.
Federal agents uncovered
of the photos were of fathers
abusing their daughters. the case in January 2002,
Bartholomew posted pic- when Danish police accused
tures of two relatives. One a Denmark couple of raping
child had been photographed their 9-year-old daughter,
from age I until about age 5. according ·to court records.
Authorities learned of a
Bartholomew has also
· been charged with 13 sex- San Diego man who created
pornography.
related charges in Crawford child
County Common Pleas Bartholomew's name and e-

mail address was in the man's
electronic address book.
Officials
said
U.S.
Customs agents raided
Bartholomew 's house last
year and found more than
2,000 images of child
pornography.
NLJgent
ordered
Bartholomew to avoid all
swimming pools, toy stores
and pl aygrounds when he
gets out of prison. Nugent
also told him that he could
not talk with any child unless
another adult is with him.

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
AGRICULTURE

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

·www.jimsfarmequipment.com

!

have plain hamburgers and
roast beef sandwiches. Omit
sauces, mayonnai se, cheese
and bacon. Stay away from
fried foods - french fries,
fried chicken, onion rings,
fried !ish, etc. Pick broiled or
poached foods instead . Drink
water, tea, coffee and Jowfat
milk, rather than milkshakes.
Choose tacos and taco salads that are in a soft tortilla the crisp ones have been
fried. Eat taw vegetables or
salads without dre ssing, or
ask for light dressing on the
stde. You will save quite a
few fat calories by dipping
the vegetable s into the dressing, instead of having the
dressing poured over the
salad. Refrain from desserts,
coffee creamers, croi ssants
and biscuits that have lots of
fat in them. Go with smaller
portions - junior and children' s sizes can help.
Stay away from unneeded
sugar, use less ketchup, relish, jelly, honey and barbecue
sauces. Resist gelatin salads,
desserts, regu lar pop, milkshakes and sweetened fruits
at the salad bar.
Limit unnecessary sodium
by avoiding pickles, chicken

nuggets. sausage. ham and
bacon. Go easy .on the salad
dress ings - try a lemon wedge
instead. Some types of pop
are full of sodium so read
labels or ·ask your server if
there is sodium present. To
further control your use of
sodium, restrict yo ur use of
cheese and ask for unsalted
french fries .
Make fas t food s even
healthier by increasin g your
dietary fiber. Select fresh
fruits and vegetables at the
salad bar. Ask for tomatoes
and lettuce on your sandwiches. Choose whole grain and
multi-grain bread s and buns
for added roughage. Order
baked potatoes, but use top·
pings sparingly. Increa se
your con sumption of foods
that contain beans, such as
burritos and chili , because
they are great sources of fiber.
You c;m eat healthy while eating fast toods. Simply pay anenllon to these nutrition guidelines
while placing your order.
(Becky Baer is the Meig.r
County Extension Agent.
Family
and
C01woner
S c i e ;, c e sIC o mm u 11 i t I'
Development)
·
/

Local business briefs
Craft Marketing
Seminar Aims to
Boost Sales
NELSONVILLE -The
holiday season is less than
three months away, and as the
usual routine of seasonal
preparations begins, craft
makers and artists are gearing
up for peak-season sales.
Bruce Baker, a nationally
known expert on crafts marketing, will host a seminar at
Hocking College in Nelsonville
Oct 25-26. This will be the first
time the event has been offered
in the Southeastern Ohio
region, said Donna Sue Groves,
Appalachian Field Office
Coordinator for the Ohio Arts
CounciL

The Ohio Arts Council will comers alike." said Le sli e
Foundation
for
sponsor the event in collabo- Lilly,
ration with Ohio Designer Appalachian Ohio president
Craftsman, the Foundation and CEO.
for Appalachian Ohio, the
Lodging for the seminar
Foothills School of American participants is available for a
Craft, the Dairy Barn Arts discounted rate, if reserved
Center, and others.
before Oct. 10 at the Ramada
"The two-day schedule is Inn Hocking Hills and
filled with useful information Conference Center adjacent to
for regional anists and craft the Hocking College carnpus.
makers," said Groves. "The Registration and fees for the
agenda highlights best prac- event can be made directly to
tices and lessons others have Ohio Designer Craftsmen. For
learned to attract new cus- full detail s call 6 I4-4&amp;6-4402
tomers and increase sales."
for full details.
Topics 'include how · craft
"We hope that anyone
sellers can use . booth space · interested in the seminar ·i~
most effectively and how to able to attend. We truly feel
capture a customer's attention this in.formation will help
with c!ynamic sales techniques. regional artists and crafts
"This program i ~ a great people to boost their sales in
business resource for veter- the upcoming holiday seaans of craft sales and new- son," Lilly said.

GALLIPOLIS ·
"We
make a difference, starting
with you" is the theme of this .
week's observance of Holzer
Medical Center 's celebration
of Emergency Nurses Week.
The theme reflects the mission of emergency .nurses in the
United States and around the ·
world . The special observation
is celebrated each year during
the second week in October. 1
"We honor emergency nurses
during Emergency Nurses Week
for the difference they make in
the lives of their patients and
communities each and every
day", said Kathy Robinson,
President of the Emergency
Among those being recognized during Emergen~y Nurses Week
Nurses Association (ENA).
The traditional Emergency are these nurses who work in the Holzer Medical Center
Nurses Day celebration was Emergency Department in Gallipolis. They include left to right ,
first expanded to a full week front , Lori Saunders. RN, MSN, FNP, department manager;
in 200 I, according to Crystal Wagoner, RN and Kim Brumfield, RN , and back, Margie
Robinson, because "one day Kemper, RN; Juanita Curnutte, RN and Pat Huffman, RN.
is. just not enough" to recogmze all that emergency nurses exposure to body fluids because Center in Gallipolis, total patient
of diseases such as hepatitis C volume for the year 2002 was
do for their patients.
Working in emergency and AIDS. Those fears have riot 20,916. September 2003 statisdepartments , urgent care cen- gone away and' new life-threat- tics show that 16,336 patients
ters, on emergency rescue ening infections resistant to cur- have been cared for in the
units, as flight nurses, and in rent anitbacterial, antifungul, Emergency Department since
many other roles, the nearly and al)tiviml medication are January 2003, approximately
I 00.000 emergency nurses emerging. Suicide bombings, 500 more compared with the
across this country combine biological and chemical attacks, same time in 2002.
"Our increase in total valstate-of-the art skills with and exposure to unknown toxins
heartfelt compassion for the increases the danger to emer- ume is a retlection of the
people they serve. Each year gency nurses and family mem- changing times in healthsince 1989, the second hers, worldwide. It gives you a care" , Saunders said. "Our
Wednesday in October has greater appreciation for the risks nurses have responded by
obtaining additional educabeen
designated
as emergency nurses face."
The
Emergen~y
Departmepr
tion to provide the quality of
Emergency Nurses Day , a
at
Holzer
Medical
Center
tn.
pattent care our community
day set aside to recognize
9allipolis
·
.
has
witnessed
an
eX:pects.
Emergency nurses
nurses for their service and
commitment to excellence itt mcrease tn the number of are a vital component of the
pauents tlrat come through the healthcare system, and in
emergency patient care.
"Now more than ever, emer- Emergency Department for care: many instances, are the first
gency nursing is at the forefront According to Lori ·Saunders, healthcare professional a
of e~erging J?Ublic health RN, MSN, FNP, Department patient has contact with .
cnses , satd Robtn5on. "In the Mahager of the Emergency They truly deserve recogni '80s and '90s, the focus was on Department. at Holzer Medical tion for their expertise ." .

www.turnpikeflm.com
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com

Lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

The Daily Sentinel

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.mydailysentinel.com
Point Pleasant Register

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ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

•

I

Do you eat a lot of fast
foods? Do you choose fast
foods because you're too·
bu sy too cook1 Or is it
because you can't cook or
you hate to cook'l
. ,Do you feel that cooking
tsn t worth the effort when
you I ive by yourself? Do you
hate the clean-up? No matter
what your reason for frequently dining out, you can
still have a healthy diet when
eating at fast food restaurants.
Fast foods can be healthy if
you make sure that you consume the daily minimum
number of servings from
each of the food groups: 6-11
servings from the breads,
cereals and grains group; 3-5
servmgs from the vegetable
group; 2-4 servi'ngs from the
fruit group; 2-3 servings from
the dairy gro up; and 2-3 servings from the meat group.
Remember to keep sugars.
fats (especially saturated and
trans fats), salt and calorie s to
a minimum. Choose foods '
with fewer calories, but more
nutriei\IS.
How can you eat fast foods
and pick those that are nutritious '' To reduce fats, saturated fats, and cholesterol,

Pleasant Valley Hospital

NEWSPAPERS

CHURCHES

Eating healthy still possible
when eating fast food

HMC observes emergency nurses week

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Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Time Out for Tips

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·

WEB SITE .., ......,.a:.'"'
for only a $1 a day.

Tuesday, October'7,

'

Holzer Medical Center

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge

BYTHE .BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2003

PageA3

..

Planned escape route endures·
family safety in case of fire · ·
DEAR ABBY: Can you
imagine waking to the 'ound
of your smoke alarm in the
middle of the night'' Would
you know what to do'N;Lalf
of all home fire' occur
between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00
a.m. - when most people
are sound asleep.
Thi s year the National Fire
Protection
. Association
CNFPA). the official 'pon&gt;ar
of Fire Protection Week for
more than 80 years. has
teamed with Pella Windows
and Doors and the Home
Safety Council to promote
fire safety education and preparedness
during
Fire
Prevention Week . Oct. 5- I I
2003 . Our theme: "When Fir~
Strikes. GET out! STAY out !"
Our campaign drives home
the message that when the
smoke alarm goes off, you
should leave ri ght awa y usi ng
one of your two preplanned
escape routes - AND NOT
GO BACK INSIDE FOR
ANY REASON :
Abby. please let parent s
know that as part uf their
escape plan , they must make
sure that smoke alarms wake
everyone in the home. especially children. If fam ily
members do not wake to the
sound of the alarm. consider
installing interconnected
smoke alarms in all the bed- ·
rooms. When one alarm
sounds. they all sound. Or
assign an adult to take the
sound sleepers and ass ist
them in escaping .
. Th;mk you for .sharing this
lll1JlOt1ant mfonnat"m with your
readers. - JA MES M. SHAN-

Dear
Abby

NON . PRES IDENT '&lt;FP.o\
DEAR READERS Smce
thi' i' Fi re Prevention Week.
I can thinl-- of no licttcr time
for all of u' to en,ure that
there are working baltcrie,
tn our ' moke alarms . If ) ou
ha ven't already done so.
now i' aho the time to craft
a fi re _esca pe plan '" that if
your lt re alarm do~' "'und.
you and your lmcJ ones wi ll
all get out without he t n ~
inJUred. Plan not one . ht~

the ~ should both fess up and
come clean for the c·hi ld ',
sake It ne (er happened. But
since he terminated his relattotlshtp wtth Trish . I rcall~
cou ldn 't complam .
Tmh has contmued to e·
mail and call Ph il atte mpting
to arrange a dinner for the
two of them &gt;O they can
c·atch up. and he could be
kept informed of the child'&lt;
d&lt;}\elopment. (He is now
11.1 1 told Phi l I would emertain the idea tf Tr"h's husband ami I were included .

He 'aid that wa"

•

fj'

impo~.o, ihl e .

Last night. Phtl received
an e- mail from Tnsl1 stating
that he had pmmi seu he
would "alwavs be there" for
her - and ni1w he 1\ ll . l. Phil
Jidn't respond .
I Jon ·t want to cause aJdt tional hardship for the ch ild .
Am I heing im mature. un retwo avenu e:-. of c-.nl r)L: 111
alisti
c ~Jr unfair' Your input.
case one is lilockcd . Al so. an
plea,e.
- PHIL'S WIFE IN
escape plan i' no gooJ
NEW
JERSEY
'
unless cvervone is familiar
DEA R WIFE :. You · are
with it -. s·o p~ · i ~'' pracnone
of the above . You arc "
tice. practice.
;
DEAR ABBY: Y~a r s ,hr~ wd lad\ who" tf\ in~ to
before we met. mv hus band prolct:t h cr.marri&lt;-~c~ . · If any Jinncr' are plann~d
"Phil :· had . a rclationshtp
so
Phil ~an "be there" for
wtth a marncd woman I' II
call Tri&gt;h . It bega n before Tri sh. vou shou ld also he
we met and cnued when our the re. It wil l 'emf a st rong
relationship began . Ph il ami m e~~ CJ gt'.
Dl'llr Ahhr i1· 1rri11m /l\
Tri sh beli eve that he r fi N
Ahiguil Va/1 Bnrt-' 11. af,;,
~ hild is hi,.
For the first seven years of k11tnrn as i!'owu~ Pltil!tj J\,
this child 's life. Phi l watched and ll'as jinouit'd '" he r
the child from afar and contin- morller. Ptw !iru.' Pl;dltp\ .
ued havin g relation' with Trish. Writ &lt;'
/) mr
Ahln
'"
11 ·lnl'. Dn 1rA.hh r. com or P 0.
Her husbw1d has no clue .
I told Phil I want ed nothin ~ l&gt;o r (,CJ-1-10. 1-tll A11 ~1'fe, CA
to do with thi s charade. I " 'i J L)(j()f,CJ

MMS citrus fruit sale underway
POMEROY - The Meigs
Middle School band is selling a variety of citru s fruit to
raise funds for the purchase
of new instrument s for the
band. The sale will continue
to Nov. I I.
According to Rebecca
Stump, director. so many students are enrolled in the band
program that there are not
enough instruments for them.
"There are 14 percussionists

in one class ond onl v seven
instruments." she s; id "s o
half of the student s are actu ally play ing on mu sic
stands ."
The hope of the band is to
raise enough money to purchase two riew marimbas.
some tom-toms. bongos and
as many percussion accressory isntruments as possible .
She said money is also needed for new concert mu sic and

tran;porta!Qin to local mu,i c
fe stt\'al s.
The fruit will be shipped
the first
weekend
111
December and delivered well
before Christmas. Order&gt; are
being taken at the school.
992-3058 or may be placed
wi th any middle sc hool band
student. Small boxe s are $15.
large ones are $25.

Lane

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FOR

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•

2003

••

�.,

The Daily Sentinel
Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(74UJ 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

GUEST

PageA4_

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

~ 11

•

VIEW

Secu
Responding to changes
Now is an exciting time in the history of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol. Homeland Security remains in the forefront
of America's attention. These new responsi bilities have resulted in many changes in the Patrol. One of Colonel McClellan's
favorite quotes is from Charles Darwin. He sa id, 'It is not the
strongest of the species that survive. nor the most intelligent,
but the one most responsive to change.'
The look of the Patrol on the road has changed in the interest of safety with the Patrol fleet color changing from gray to
white and the addition of a new light bar. Though the color
change a~light bar are the most visible changes in th.e Patrol,
these are ust a few of the many changes that are tmprovmg
safety, bo for the public and our officers.
Operatio ally, the Patrol has recently changed a great deal.
Technology is being placed inside patrol cars with computer
terminals and enhanced digital radio systems. This allows
troopers and dispatchers to react quicker than ever to the
needs of motorists on Ohio's roadways.
· One such change is the inter-operability of communications
provided by MARCS ; the new 800-mega hertz digital network that is vastly improving oftlcer safety and efficiency in
Ohio. In addition, shared intelligence capabilities have· been
improved by the new State of Ohio Intelligence Report. This
new system provides all Law Enforcement Automated Data
System (LEADS) users with the ability to submit incident
information that may be useful to other law enforcement
agencies in the state.
Additionally. LEADS has undergone a tremendous amount
of change, with a new format that allows for graphics such as
photos ana fingerprints which can be viewed during inquiries.
Another change is the critical need for local and state law
enforcement to aid in national security. Ohioans rely on the
Patrol - not just for the detection and apprehension of criminals - but also as an information source to keep Ohio safe
from terrorism. Knowledge , and the sharing of information
with the public, is a valuable tool for crime prevention, public safety, and Homeland Security.
These are just a few of the many changes the Patrol is facing. We aim to not simply adjust to these changes, but to
l~verage these changes by exploring the new opportunities
they allow to improve our safety efforts for the residents of
Ohio.
It's about safety.
(U. Dick Grau is comma11der of the Gal/in-Meigs Post of
the Ohio Stale Highway Patrol.)

Tuesday, October 7,

2003.,

Is it as bad as it looks?
The Bu,h administmtion is
experiencing one week of woe
after another, dimming the
president's
re-election
prospects. As Democrats
pounce, Republicans have to
seek solace in the fact that
other presidents have had it
worse and ·in the belief that
things are bettet than they look.
GOP pollster Ed Geoas, for
instance, notes in his latest
Battleground survey that
President Bush's standing is
better than his father's was· in
1991 and at lea~t as good as Bill
Clinton's in 1995. Currently, 54
percent of voters approve of
Bush's pertormance and 48 percent say they·are inclined toreelect him, Battlegmund found.
In 1991, George H.W.
Bush had a 48 percent
approval rating and only a 3)
percent re-elect number. He
went on to lose the I 992
election , of course. Clinton
· had a 52 percent approval
and only a 41 percent re-elect
and won in 1996.
Bush's prospects, of course.
depend on events, his continuing perfonnance and the effectiveness of Democratic attacks.
On that basis, if the outcome
were a straight-line projection
of recent developments which it isn't - Bush would
be cooked. In Iraq, the rate at
whi'h Americans are being
killed is three to six per week,
and the general in charge says
that 'the enemy has evolved
-a little bit more lethal, a little more sophisticated and, in
some cases, a little more
tenacious.'
Worse, chief U.S. weapons
inspector David Kay has

Morton

Kondracke

been able to turn up no evidence whatsoever that Iraq
had weapons of mass
destruction, undercutting
Bush's primary justification
for taking the country to war.
The Fox News/Opinion
Dynamics poll showed that the
percentage of Americans who
believe the war was 'wotth it'
has fallen fTOm 64 percent in
April to 46 percent last month.
And now Democrats,
assisted by a scandal-hungry
media, have se ized upon an
apparent White House leak of
the name of a CIA undercover agent to challenge Bush on
what's been his strongest suit
- a reputation for integrity
and trustworthiness.
Retired diplomat Joseph
Wilson merely speculated that
the culprit in leaking his
wife's name was the presi dent's closest political adviser,
Karl Rove, and now the press
has seized upon the prospect,
even though Wilson himself
has admitted he has no proof.
The bipartisan Battleground
survey found that 67 percent
of Americans approve of Bush
personally. A Pew Research
Center poll found that Bush is
regarded as 'trustworthy' by
62 percent and 'able to get
things done' by 68 percent.

Those are the towers the
Democrats are attacking and hoping; somehow: to
drive out Rove, the archttect
of Bush's re-election strategy.
Previously, Democrats have
been trying to attach an ethtcal
scandal to Bush's other 'brain,'
Vice President Cheney, over
the fact that his old company.
Halliburton, ha~ won fat contracts to rebuild Iraq.
They've failed to prove. however, that Cheney ha' anything
to do with awarding contmcts.
Bu sh's
re-election
prospects .. will marked! y
tmprove tf tt appears that Iray
is becoming more stable and
secure. There's considerable
evidence, contrary to news
media reports. that things :tre
improving. but the adm.mt stration is having a dtfttcult
time getting the message out.
In an interview last week
with Roll Call reporters and
editors, Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld expre"ed
considerable frustration that
the puhlic and Members of
Conoress don't understand
that lt1e l).S.-Ied coalition has
recruited and trained 56,000
Iraqis for security duty in less
than five months and has
another 14,000 in training.
It hasn't gotten throLtgh, either,
that lrJC]iS are taking over m.utagement of their government
much faster than has occurred in
previous occupauon situations
and that progress is being made
toward a constitution and free
elections.
Part of the problem is that
the administration has found
no systematic way of communicating progress. Officials

•.

write op-ed pieces. Members·
of (:ongre" take tnps and
report that things are bener. Yet
the press plays the had news. ·
Rumsfeld smu that. at the.
suggestion of Sen. Lamar
Alexander. R-Tenn ., the
Pentagon would produce a regular progress chart 111 vanous
military and soctal categones. It
ought not to he sent JUSl to
Congress. but be made puhhc. .
On the uomestic front. in the.
meantime, the Battleground
survey showed that 61. percent
of voters wtll &lt;:&lt;mstder the
economy to be imrroving if.
the jobs picture improves. So ·
f&lt;u·. it is not improving.
Last week. there was luwl ·
ly a net increase in jllhs. but
the
unemployment rate ·
remained stuck at 6.1 percent.
The auministration is rel ying on hopes - which are..
hi stori cally so und - that.
employmenll" tt l.1ggi ng e~:o ­
nomJc IIH.ltc.ttot anJ lila!
other ·fundamenta ls' are
good. includin g curporate·
profits, the stock market. productivit y and factory oruers.
The Battleground survey
fount! that Busl1 and the
Democrats &lt;U-e t:tmred about
equally as able to 'keep America
prosperous' and that Democrats
are favored. 48 percent to 3R
percent. on ·ct-eating jobs.·
In a matchup against an
unnamed Democratic opponent , Bmh wins by only 47
percent to 43 percent. If the
news stays bad , one of these :
days Bush will he runnitlg
for his political life.
(Morton Kondracke is exec-,
wive editor of Roll Call. rhe
•~ewspaper of' Capitol Hill.)

1\'\eWELC.OM\t\\G
COMM\TIE\;,,,n.

Moderately Confused

•
•

Gl'FIH$R ·

•

~

,,

2003 by NEA , lr&gt;e.

...

2003

Obituaries
Richard E.
Lusher

infant twin brothers, Edward
and Edwin Douglas, and a
brother-in-law, Vinton D.
Hodge.
At Mr. Douglas's request, a
VINTON - Richard E.
Lusher, 59, Vinton. died private funeral services will
Monday, Oct. 6, 2003, at th~ be held at the convenience of
Holzer M~dical Center, the family with Rev. Billy
Gallipolis. Arrangments are O'Brien officiating, and burbeing handled by Fisher ial will be in Wells Cemetery.
Funeral Home and will be The family will receive
friends Wednesday 6 to 8
announced when competed.
p.m. at the Bigony-Jordan
Funeral Home.

Emmett Douglas

ALBANY
Emmett
Douglas, 83, Albany, passed
away at the Ohio State
University
Hospital
tn
Columbus early Monday,
Oct. 6, 2003.
·
Born on Nov. 25, 1919 in
Scipio Township, Meigs
County, Ohio, he was the son
of the late George F. and
Sylvia Mae Douglas. He was
a retired farmer and sheep
shearer. He was a former
Republican
Central
Committeeman for Scipio
Township, former ScipioHarrisonville School Board
member and a former Scipio
Township Trustee.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Helene
Marie and Ronnie Dale Scott
of Albany; granddaughters,
Debbie (Jeff) Arnold of
Albany, Dalelene (David)
Stafford of Breman, and
Denise (Steven) McCauley of
Bedford; great-grandchildren, Rebecca Arnold of
Bedford, Christina Arnold of
Albany; Timothy Sedlock,
Trisha Sedlock, and Lexi
Staffqrd of Breman; and a
sis~(, Martha M. Hodge of
Thurston.
Also surviving are two
nieces, Judy Long and Jan
Hodge, four nephews, David
(Marilyn) Hodge, George,
Darrell and John Douglas, a
great-nephew and niece, John
and Jenny Long, and a
cousin. Flora Mae Osborne.
He was preceded in death
by a brother, Frances, and

Shut down of water
service scheduled

'&lt;OU . AktN~

\N

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Water District will have a
scheduled shut down of water
service on Wednesday from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. The shutdown
will affect Meigs County,
Letart and Sutton Townships,
on the following roads: Jenny
Watt Run (County Road 28),
Apple Grove Dorcas Road,
Manuel Road, Rowe Road,
and Mile Hill Road.
After the service is restored
there will be a boil advisory

-·

Kits

.

from Page A1

Put Arafat on trial
Israel should not remove
or kill Yasser Arafat.
Assassinating him will make
this. lifelong revolutionary a
martyr for the ages, and not
only among Palestinians.
Nat
But he should be put on trial,
in Jerusalem, for direct
Hentoff
involvement in serial acts of .
terrorism against civilians.
This trial should be entirely public - )lnlike state trials in Cuba and China.
Arafat would be provided
Facilities should be provided with the most qualified
for the world press, includ- defense attorneys, from any
ing neutral , professional country, willing to take the
translators that are neither case and whom he approved .·
from Israel, nor \he Though I suspect Arafal can
Palestinian Authority ·nor afford legal fees, if contribuArab countries.
tions were necessary for the·
Intense worldwide atten- defense fund, I believe that
tion will certainly be paid to there would be more than
these proceedings , consider- ample financial resources for
ing the identity of the defen- the lawyers and . legal
dant and the issues to be experts, as well as for the
raised in the trial - histori- travel expenses of witnesses.
cal and contemporary - that
An international panel of
will concern a number of legal authorities (jurists, law
nations, as well as Israel and professors and defense
the Palestinian Authority.
lawyers) should review the
· Arafat's defense will sureles of evidence before the
b: include extensive charges trial to ensure that the defenag~
· st ~heIs .of _lsrae dant gets his full due process
inclu ing t t state's ill ed (fundamental fairness itt all
acts o
onsm agatnst the legal procedures before, durPalestinian people.
. ing and after th5 trial),
Both sides, then, before a including access to{forensic
world audience will finally, · experts.
in direct confrontation in an
Fpr one example, Israel
open 'courtroom, be able to . ~!aims to have evidence of
present their quintessential. written payments,. signed by
arguments for self-preserva- Arafat, directly to terrorist
tion - as · nations and as groups for the specific purpeoples.
•
poses of terrorist acts. Can

- -----;---- ---- ••· ......, - -- -rr. -- - •·

-··-------·-~ -.,~

those be proved to be his signatures?
,
The legal definitions of
terrorism .will have to · be
clearly spelled out in the
charges- based on internationa! law and the precedents
of previous trials and proceedings against defendants
charged with crimes of terrorism. These definitions
wili be set forth not only by
the prosecution .- the govermnent of Israel - but will
also be reviewed and critiqued by the assembled
international panel of legal
authorities.
All these documents including the reply briefs
and other motions and objeclions by Arafat's defense
team - must be publicly
and continually avai !able to
all media. It is vit&lt;~l that all
news formats- print, radio,
television and Internet - be
accommodated for the trial.
Whatever the verdict,
there will be many around
the world who will fervently '
maintain the views they held
before the trial. But there are
many others who may well
find facts - in a fair, open
trial -_,causing them to at
least doubt their preconceplions. And the .evidence on
both side~. tested through the
strictest of scrutiny not only
by the participants, bqt by
observers in many lands,
could become part of the
basis for actual, concrete

negotiations for an end to the·
killings and tormented memories for both partie &gt;.
I cannot pretend to be neutral about Arafat. For years, I
wrotC-S.~,r. o ngl ~ in favor of an ·
tnOepcf(dent
Palestinian
state. arid eve n received ,
recognition from an Arab- •
American organization for :
fairness in my reporting. But :
the horror of su icide bomb-:
ings- vigorously approved :
by Arafat in speeches in :
Arabtc to Palestinians - has :
deeply changed the moral ;
equatmn of this conflict
'
Avraham Burg fo~mer :
speaker of Israel's' Knesset •'
(its unicameral parliament) :
and a persistent critic or:
Ariel Sharon's policies. said:
tn a recent _' Letter to my :
Pales ttntan tnends' about :
sutctde bombings:
'
'It is a weapon of mon -:
sters. not freedom fighters. :
And until you spit it and its;
tactlttators trom your midst, ;
you Wtll have no partner on •
my side.'
•
If Arafat does go ·to trial r:
hope with all my heart that •
SUICide . bombings every-:
where wtll be, at last defini-,
lively condemned a; indeed :
a monstrous violation of:
human rrghts -. . and &lt;will:
then ~.glaringly defined as:
such tn mternational law ,. •
(Nar Hemoff is a nario;tal- :
ly.renowned aurl10rit" 011 rite :
F1rst Amendment and rite'
Bill of Rights)
:

..

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com

Rhonda Stover
POMEROY Rhonda
Lizer Meredith Stover, 36,
Pomeroy, died Sunday, Oct.
5, 2003, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
She
was
born . 111
Parkersburg, W.Va., daughter
. of Lois June Crider Smith of
Little Hocking and the late
Robert Meredith . She was a
member of the Veto Church
of Christ.
Besides her mother, she is
survived by her husband,
Roy A. Stover of Pomeroy; a
daughter, Samantha June
Stover of Little Hocking; a
sister, Roberta June Meredith
of Pomeroy; two half brothers, Robert Jason and
Thomas Joseph Meredith,
both of Parkersburg; _her
grandmother, Lizel Crider of
Little Hocking; and several
aunts, uncles, nieces and
nephews.
Besides her father, she was
preceded in death by her
maternal
grandfather,
Herschel Crider; and her
paternal grandparents, Philip
E. and Flossie Louise
Meredith.
Services will be held at II
a.m. on Friday, Oct. I0, 2003
at the Leavitt Funeral Home
in Belpre with Steve Fuchs
officiating. Burial will follow
at Rockland Cemetery. .
Friends may call from 6 to
8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home.

Roy Greene
,HARTFORD, W.Va.
Roy "Gene" Greene, 68,
Hartford,
W.Va.,
died
Tuesllay, Oct. 7, 2003, at his
residence. Arrangements are
under the direction of
Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral
Home and will be announced
upon completion.

Lillie Ann
Robinson
RUTLAND -Lillie Ann
Robinson, 85, of Rutland, died
Oct. 4, 2003, at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born Oct. 17, 1917 at
Pigeons Roost, Ky., she was
the daughter of the late
Abraham Lincoln Johnson
and Freelove (Johnson)
.Johnson. She ·Was a homemaker, retired clerk at the
Rutland Department Store.
and member of the Rutland
Church of Christ.
She is survived by sons,
Jackie (Diane) Robinson of
Marietta, and Samuel "Red"
Robinson of Rutland; a stepson,
James
(Marge)
Robinson of Kettering, and
grandchildren, Kristy, Sam,
Sandy, Bob, Jerry, Renee.
David, Jeff, James, Jennifer,
and Cappie.
Besides her parents she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Sam Robinson, a
stepdaughter, Virginia Mae
Cantebury; brothers, John
Belcher,
Lish,
James
Sherman, Lafayette, Roy, and
Morgan Jack Johnson; and
two sisters, trade Hall and
Zelia Caudill.
Services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
Rutland Church of Christ in
Rutland. Pastor Bob Werry
will officiate and hurial will
be m Miles Cemetery at
Rutland. Friends may call
from 2 to 4 and 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Tuesday at l)le Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland.

kit and be on their way.
Each kit will contain a variety of small personal items
like toothpaste, shampoo,
deodorant, soap, and lotion,
along with a washcloth,
towel, toothbrush, comb, bottled water, flashlight and batteries, disposable razor, bandaids and antiseptic towelettes.

\

4-H members with winning woodworking projects were recogn1zed by Carpenters Local 650
at the Local's annual picnic held at Forked Run State Park where they and thier families
were guests. The winners were presented tool boxes, hammers. shirts. hats and other
prizes. The honored youth pictured with Pat Boston, local president , left back, and Jeff
Circle. recording secretary, right back. were front, Eric Pierce. Jeffrey Bau!lhman, ahd Lacee
Arms, and back, Morgan Werry, Whitney Thoene . and Robbie Weddle.

Birth announcements
Hubbard birth
PbMEROY Jeremy
and Brandy Hubbard of
39604 State Route 143.
Pomeroy, announce the birth
of a son Kady Dylan, on Oct.
2 at the O' Bieness Memorial

and all water for human consumption is to be boiled for a
mirumum of three minutes.
After a sample is taken and the
results are known to be safe,
the boil advisory will be lifted.
The reason for the shut
down is to connect to the
existing waterline with a
newly laid line, said Donald
C. Poole, general manager.

Lawrence Bush is the .Pastor.
There will be special stnging.
Everyone is welcome. - ~

Revival announced

RUTLAND -The Rutland
Nazarene Church, Main
Street, Rutland will hold
revival services Oct. 7-12.
Evening services will begin at
7 p.m. while the Sunday worService planned
ship will begin at I 0;30 a.m.
and the evening worship that
LONG BOTTOM - Rev. day at 6:30 p.m. Rev. Leon
John Elswick will be giving a and Linda Annstrong will be
sennon at 7 p.m. Wednesday, the speaker and song evanjleat
the Mount
Olive lists. For more information
Community Church where call 742-2221
The kits will be delivered youth and church groups
to every senior citizen who is might like to donate items
currently receiving home- emphasizing that "what we
delivered meals.
need are small bars and botDiana Coates, RSVP direc- tles, not the 16-ounce size,
tor and chair of the homeland just something to get the
security group, said that Eddie seniors through a few days,
Bauer back-packs have been something that could see
donated for the project which them through if they were in
will be carried out on Oct. 25 an emergency shelter."
Make a Difference Day.
The seniors receiving the
"Now what we need," said disaster kits will be encourCoates "is for individuals and aged to add whatever personal
organizations to help us fill it~;ms they feel are vital to their
those 200 backpacks."
day-to-day living, ·including
She suggested that perhaps · some medications they take.

Homes
from PageA1
the · home of the Charles
Murray family.
The village acquired ownership of the property a few
years ago. Demolition work
began Monday.
Village Council approved
a lease agreement in
September with St. Paul
Lutheran Church for $1 a
year during the next three
years: After the demolition is
completed the property will
become a parking lot. The
church will be responsible
for property taxes and insurance on the land.
Council chose to lease the
land instead of selling it to
the church because of the
potential.. that the property
might be attractive someday
as a site for·a new business ..
. If that happened, Council
would reimburse the church
fer 'construction .expenses
related 10 the construction of
the parking lot.

As the old home came
tumbling down, a new home
was being built on a hirge
hill overlooking Pomeroy.
Todd and Anne Norton purchased a double wide mobile
home which will be placed
on Anne Street at a scenic
location with a view of the
Ohio River.
The trailer carrying only
half of the home was so large
that Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark Proffin had to direct
traffic as the trailer turned
from Mulberry Street and
began.moving high up Anne
Street.
"It goes to show you that
everything is possible," said
Proffin.
Dale Robinson, the owner
of Horizon Mobile · Homes,
said this was one of the
hardest jobs his company
had ever undertaken. David
Banks, of Horizon Mobile
Homes, drove the 28,000
pound or the 14 ton first half
of the Norton's new double
wide up a · very steep and
narrow
Anne
Street
Monday.

Hospital in Athens.

Landen Eugene. born Oct. I
at o· Bleness Memorial
Hospital
m
Athens .
Grandparents are Peg and
ALBANY - Danielle and Art Trout. Bonnie and
Eugene Althouse of Albany Marvin Althouse, and Joe
announce the birth of a son. and Diann Bush.

Althouse birth

Community calendar
Public meetings

-Local Briefs

TODAY lN HISTORY
'
Today is Tuesday,
Oct'. 7, 2003 the 280th day of 2003 and
the 14th day of autumn.
Today's history: On this day in 1816, the first doubledecked steamboat arrived in New Orleans.
. On this day in 1982, 'Cats,' a musical by Andrew Lloyd
Webber, opened on Broadway.
On this day in 200 I, American war planes began dropping
bombs on the people of Afghanistan following the Taliban's
refusal to hand over Osama Bin Laden.
. Today's birthday: Amiri Baraka ( 1934-). poet and dramatist,
is 69; John Mellencamp ( 1951-), singer and songwriter, is 52;
Yo-Yo Ma (1955-), cellist, is 48; Simon Cowell (1959") TV
personality, is 44.
Today's sports : On this day in 1952, the New York Yankees
won the World Series for the fourth time in a row. They
defeated the Brooklyn Dodgers 4-2 in game seven.
· Today's quote: ' If your lifeguard duties were as good as
y'our singing, a lot of people would be drowning.'- Simon
Cowell, on ·American Idol'
Today's moon: Between first quarter (Oct. 2) and full moon
(Oct. I0)

Tuesday, October 7,

Wednesday, Oct. 8
- POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Health will
meet al 5 p.m. in the confer~ ence room of 1he Meigs County
Hea~h Department, 112 E.
Memorial Drive, Pamer~¥

Friday, Oct. 1o
POMEROY
The
Widows Fellowship will meet
at noon at Gino's in Mason ,
W.Va. for a luncheon .

Homecomings/

Reunions

RACINE- The Southern
Sunday, Oct. 12
Local School Board will
RUTLAND Rutland
have a special meeting at 7
Church
of
Christ
will
celep.m. In the media center at
brate
its
17
4th
anniversary
Southern High SchooL The
purpose of the meeting is to at a homecoming. Worship
conduct personal evalua- and communion service will
tions of the superintendent begin at 10:30 a.m. There
and treasurer, discuss nego- will be carry-in dinner at
tiations and conduct other noon, an afternoon service
at 1:30 p.m. with special
business.
REEDSVILLE - Olive music by Mercy River, a
quartet · from
Township · Trustees, 7:30 gospel
p.m. at the township garage Gainesville. Fla. Bob Werry
is the church's minister.
on Joppa Road.

Clubs and
Organizations

Other events

inability to pay.
Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER - A genealo·
gy fair will be held at the old
restored courthouse in
Chester from 9to 5 p.m. The
fair is co-sponsored by the
Chester-Shade Restoration
Association, Bedford-Lodi
Historical Group, and the
Chester Daughters of
America.
SYRACUSE
-Open
House
at
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries, 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Tours, other
events. Information from
Steve Beha, 992-6681 .

Support groups
Tuesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
Fibromyalgia support group
by
Holzer
sponsored
Medical Center will meet
from 2 to 4:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Senior Center conference room. Group facilitator
will be Missi Rose. For more
information
call
Beth
Shaver, activities director at
the Center, 992-2161 .

Tuesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
Tuesday, Oct. 7
CHESTER
-Chester will conduct a childhood
Council 323, Daughters of immunization clinic from 1 to
7 p.m. at the office on East
America, 7 p.m. at the hall.
Memorial Drive. Take child's
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community shot records. Children must
Association , 8:30 a.m., be accompanied by parent
or legal guardian. A $5
Thelma Hayes of 48328
Peoples Bank.
donation is appreciated State Route 248, Long
Thursday, Oct. 9
CHESTER- Shade River although no one will be Bottom, 457 43 will observe
Lodge 453, 8 p.m . at the haiL denied services because of . her 91 st birthday on Oct. 13.

Birthdays

"David Banks earned his
money
today,"
said
Robinson about ·the driver
who trekked at least a tenth
of a mile up Anne Street at a
60 degree angle. "This is a
very hard site and very tough
to get a home into."
Norton, who is also president of Pomeroy Village
Council, said this is the first
new home that he and his
wife have ever bought.
When it is completed, the
house will have three bedrooms and two baths. One of

the bathrooms has a skylight.
The Norton's will be next
door to their old house which
they still live in. which
makes moving into the new
home that much easier.
Neither Todd nor Anne are
certain what they will do
with· the old house once the
new one is completed. they
chose the location near the
top of the hill because of the
incredible view of the valley

and the river below.
"Once the leaves ate off
the trees, we will be able 'to
see 'the bridge," said Todd.
"When winter comes, we
will be able to see the new
bridge being worked on."

.fro~ to,~iiDrt.~
·. yt~ur,lift. · ·
Sl:'btcribe !Odit, •992·,1155

~

CORRECTION. ..

WINTER STORAGE
Melp ·county F•lraaouncls

Antv•l .. October n. iOOJ
9 lt.m... 12:00 •.m.
Reluse • April 17, 1004
1

For more lnfonnatlon e~~ll: 115-4372
We apologize .tor any inconvenience
this may have caused.

'

�.

PageA6

NATION • WORLD
White tigers were Roy Horn's life,
California voters s~t to
choose change or!familiarity one nearly caused ~is death

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2003

decades, Schwarzenegger on ed GOP pressure to drop out of
LOS ANGELES (AP) The scramble to determine Monday marshaled the sup- the race, said he was skeptical
who will lead California went port of hi s wife, Maria of the 11th hour complaints.
down to the wire as actor- Shriver, and mother-in-law, But he also indicated \he alleturned-politician
Arnold Eunice Kennedy Shriver, and gations were boosting his
Schwarzenegger denied last- surrounded himself with standing among voters.
"People are sayi!lg 'Thlmk
minute sexual harassment women-friendly messages.
God
ypu stayed in the race,"'
Scores
of
female
supportallegations and Gov. Gray
Davi s pleaded with citizens ers stood behind him at McClintock told MSNBC-TV.
events, holding signs proSchwarzenegger continued
to give him another chance.
"Remarkable to hammer away at Davis,
Voters were asked Tuesday claiming
to choose the ending of a Women Join Arnold." As he telling supporters in San Jose
saga that has captivated the took the stage at one event, that he falls among a class of
nation for months: whether the actor smiled broadly and politicians who only know
Davis becomes the nation's said, "To all the incredible how to "spend, spend, spend"
second governor to be women, thank you."
and "tax, tax tax."
Davis reached ou.t to his
recalled, and if so, who
The latest woman to come
among a field of 135 candi- core of labor support, march- forward, Rhonda Miller of
ing in San Francisco with Los
dates should replace him.
Angeles,
said
Recent polls suggested that a hundreds of frrefighters, most- Schwarzenegger lifted her
majority of voters . favored ly clad in blue "No Recall" T- shirt to photograph her
dumping the governor - who shirts. Many in the crowd breasts and groped her twice,
was elected to office less than a were out-of-state residents when she worked as a stunt
year
ago
while attending a safety conference. double
on
the
film
"If you give me the chance "Terminator 2: Judgment
Schwarzenegger emerged as the
to fim sh my term, I will do it Day" in 1991 and in 1994 on
·leading replacement candidate.
The chaotic gubernatorial with all the passion, all the the set of "True Lies."
campaign, which survived a humanity I can muster
Schwarzenegger did not
handful of legal challenges because my goal is to make mention the allegations at
after a Republican-led effort your life better," Davis told campaign stops, but in a statebrought it to the ballot, was the crowd chanting "No ment, he denied Miller's
without parallel in the recall! No Recall!"
claims while admitting makHarold Schaitberger, presi- ing crude comments about
Golden State. The unpopular
governor was blamed for dent of the International photographs of staff members
my_riad problems and an Association of Firefighters, posted in a trailer during the
acuon hero grabbed much of roused the crowd with a filming of "Terminator 2."
the spotlight from candidates throaty plea to keep
"If my crude comments
that included a porn mar- California from electing "a offended anyone, I apologize.
keter, a sumo wrestler, a musclebound knucklehead And as I have stated a numstrippe_r and two experienced who doesn't know a thing ber of times in this campaign,
about running a state."
pohtlctans.
occasionally engaged
At a campaign appearance Iinhave
Lt. Gov Cruz Bustamante,
rowdy
behavior. With
the only prominent Democrat in East Los Angeles, regards to all of the other
on the ballot, and Republican Bustamante, who once led comments that were made by
Sen.
Tom
McClintock among replacement candi- Ms. Miller, they did not
remained the only other can- dates in independent polls,
the statement said.
didates polling in double dig- said his internal polls showed occur,"
Davis'
popularity plunged
closing
on
its. But their campaigns were · him
the downturn in the
following
eclipsed in recent weeks by Schwarzenegger. "Frankly,
economy
and
the burst of the
the target of the recall and the there's a lot of people who
feel he's not fit to be the gov- high-tech bubble in particuformer Mr. Universe.
lar. Californians face an $8
Schwarzenegger's
poll ernor," Bustamante said.
Looming over the day's billion state budget deficit,
numbers got a bounce after a
lively Sept. 24 debate that . events were the allegations, persistent unemployment and
brought together all the top including more from a woman struggling schools.
In addition to the recall,
candidates for the first and who came forward Monday,
two
ballot measures also
only time. Although the ques- that Schwarzenegger groped
to be decided:
tions had been made avail- the women and sometimes were
53 would steer 1
Proposition
able to the candidates before made crude comments during
percent
of
the state annual
the forum, analysts said encounters dating from 1970
budget to fix California's
accom- . to 2000.
Schwarzenegger
Schwarzeneg~er released a roads, bridges and sewage
plished what he needed to by
appearing confident and in statement denymg the latest plants, and Proposition •'M,
accusation,
while . which wo11ld ban the .....~...
command of issues.
With allegations dogging McClintock and Bustamante from using race, ethnicity or
him· that he had groped and said the allegations were national origin to classify
people in public · education,
sexually harassed as many as helping their campaigns.
contracting
and employment
who
bas
reject·
McClintock,
16 women over the last three

Conservatives rally as Episcopal
Church faces a possible split
over homosexuality
DALLAS (AP) - In one
of \he biggest independent
meetings of Episcopalians in
years, 2,600 clergy and lay
members are gathered to
protest the denomination's
liberal steps on homosexuali.,ty, with the possibility of a
church split in the air.
The meeiing, set to begin
Tuesday, was originally
planned as a strategy session
for a . few hundred leaders.
But it mushroomed in scope
as conservatives reacted
against ·two actions by the
Episcopal Church's midsummer. convention: confirmation
of a gay bishop living with his
partner, and a vote to recognize - though not endorse or
condemn - that bishops are
allowing blessing ceremonies
for same-sex couples:
The presence in Dallas of
45 of the church's 300 bishops underscores the gravity
of the situation.
"We have two lo three
weeks to see the future of the
Episcopal
Church
in
America," says the Rev. David
Roseberry, whose 4,000-member Christ Church in suburban
Plano organized the event.
He refers not only to the
Dallas meeting but, more
importantly, an Oct. 15-16
emergency summit in London
for leaders of the international Anglican Communion, of
which the Episcopal Church
is the U.S. branch.
That session involves the
Anglicans' . spiritual leac:J,er,
Archbishop .of Canterbury
Rowan Williams, and .the 37
other heads of world

Anglican branches. Presiding
Bishop Frank Griswold of the
Episcopal Church also is a
member of that group and
defends the decisions reached
this summer in Minneapolis.
The American Anglican
Council, sponsor of the Dallas
meeting, says that U.S. conservatives are loyal to Anglican
beliefs and the Christian tradition, so it's the Episcopal
Church majority that has broken away into schism. ·
Founded in 1996, the AAC
has emerged as the most
important
conservative
Eptscopal caucus. It reports a
mailing list of 50,000 and
support from about 500 congregations and 50 bishops.
Spokesman Bruce Mason
says "we probably represent a
minority within the Episcopal
Church but are part of the vast
majority worldwide." .
Jim Naughton, spokesman
for
the
Diocese
of
Washington, D.C., and part
of that liberal majority, estimates that, at most, 14 percent of the 2.3 million
Episcopalians favor traditionalist protests. Naughton is
part of a team in Dallas
observing .the meeting, which
concludes Thursday.
Any Episcopal split would
presuma~Iy be the biggest in
the United States since 1976,
wben I00,000 members quft
the Lutheran Church }\1issouri Synod. The Episcopal
Church also suffered 1970s
walkouts, over women priests
and revisions in liturgy, but they
were minor by comparison.
The meeting's major action

will be a pettlton to the .
London summit that's likely to
ask the world leaders to provide special bishops to minister to conservatives within liberal U.S. dioceses, instead of
their regular bishops.
The petition could also
repeat an idea approved by
recent conventions of the Fort
Worth
and
Pittsburgh
Dioceses, asking the London
summit to declare the traditionalists to be the authentic
U.S. branch of Anglicanism, in
effect suspending or expelling
the Episcopal Church.
Whatever emerges, "we need
a safe place to be, safe from
theological and spiritual
harassment, harassment to
careers, and danger to our property," says Canon David C.
Anderson of Stone Mountain,
Ga., AAC president.
He says AAC leaders will
be holding a follow-up meeting sometime after the
London summit.
A split is implied in such
program topics here as
"Talking Points for Answering
Difficult Questions" and the
legalistic
"Constitutions,
Canons, Pensions, Properties
and Jurisdictions."
Who gets church property
in a split could be among the
toughest problems discusse&lt;j
in Dallas. The most radical
position came from the
Pittsburgh diocesan convention: a declaration that buildings now belong to each congregation, denying the
national
denolnination's
claim to control all property
under 1979 legislation.

LAS VEGAS (AP) Exquisite white tigers h,ave
'been Roy Hom's passion for
almost 40 years. Then last
week, one of the beasts brought
him to the brink of death.
,
A modern day
Dr.
Doolittle who called the cats
his children, Horn spent vast
amounts of time, energy and
money on animals that have
left millions of show-goers
here in awe since 1966.
The menagerie developed
by Horn and longtime stage
partner
Siegfried
Fischbacher includes 63 rare
white tigers and white lions.
Horn has been on hand for
many of their births.
·
"The first voice they hear is
mine, the first touch they feel
is mine, the first human face
they see is mine," Horn said
in an interview in late 2000.
''They just think I' m a strange
tiger .who walks on two legs."
But on Friday night, just
20 hours after Horn had eel·
ebrated hi s 59th birthday
with hundreds of friends,
one of the beasts inexplicably turned on its owner at the
Mirage hotel-casino. As he had done thousand·s
Of · times, Horn sauntered
onto the stage with 7 -yearold Montecore, a white tiger
who has appeared in the
show since he was 6 months
old - telling the capacity
crowd of 1.503 it was· the
eat's stage debut - a little
white tiger lie.
Montecore was told to lie
down, but . balked and
grabbed Horn's arm in his
mouth.
Horn
struck
Montecore with his microphone, trying to get him to
loosen his grip. Montecore
then grabbed Horn by his
throat, dragging him backstag,e where handlers subdued the tiger by spraying
him with a fire extinguisher.

Ho~ remained in crltical attempted to bite me again.''
The bonds with special
but stable condition Monday.
Horn prided himself in animals begin at an early
knowing his animals and his age . When a white lion or
animals knowing him. In white tiger is pregnant she JS
more than 40 years of close cared for at special birthing
encounters with some of the facilities at Siegfried &amp;
world's most exotic animals, Roy's Secret Garden, an aniHorn was never injured by mal habitat at the Mirage.
''1 think this is incredible
any of the creatures, Hom
when
you eonsider ·an anisaid in a 2000 interview for
mal
like
this can kill their
the book "Siegfried &amp; Roy's
own mate over young ones,
Gift for the Ages."
"Siegfried and I have' spe nt and to think that she accepts
every waking moment with Roy to be a part of the ex peour animals," Horn sa id. rience is a miracle,"
"We watch and observe. We Fischbacher said.
Horn 's love of animais
talk to !hem, take walks with
dates
back to post-war
them, swim with them, meditate with them. Day by day,· Germany, when hi s father
we learn about each other. retu rned home from the
But you must have patience German military with an
and re spect for Mother animal that was half dog,
Nature. Becau~e when an half wolf. Horn and the dog,
animal gives you its trust. Hexe, became inseparable,
you feel like you have been spending their days wandergiven the most beautiful gift ing in the nearby woods.
"If it wasn't for Hexe, I
in the world."
be sitting here
wouldn't
Hom said whatever situation
he's put in with his animals, "I today," Hom said in the interalways try to think as they view. One day Horn was
think. We can always solve out sucked into a swamp area and
arguments in an understanding began sinking. Hexe raced to
way because I respect them a nearby farmhouse and
brought help, Horn recalled.
and they respect me."
Horn left home at an early
Only once was that philosophy tested, he said in the age to become a bellboy on
the cruise ship, where he met
2000 interview.
He was playing hide and Fischbacher, a young magiseek, as he often did, with a cian who was one of the
Siberian tiger named Sabra. ship 's entertainers.
The two first played Las
"After rolling around in
the grass together, she sud- Vegas in 1966, then returned
denly laid on top of me and as a featured act in 1974.
pinned me down," Horn . They signed an unprecedentrecalled. "Our eyes met and ed $57.5 million contract to
I realized she was n'o longer play the Mirage in a theater
playing she was about to bite bearing their name beginme. Trusting my instincts, 1 ning in 1990. In 200 I , after
raised my head and bit her performing some 5,000
shows before more than 7
nose as hard as 1 could.
"Totally perplexed, she million people at the Mirage,
jumped up and pretended it they signed a lifetime connever happened. I immediate- tract with the resort.
The day after the attack, the
ly made our friendship sound
show
was closed indefinitely.
- ff-fuff, ff-fuff. She never

INSIDE
Mllrllna VI. Cubs In NLCS, Page 82
Bengels close to wins, Page 88

~avs' Wagner to

get another
opinion on knee
CLEVELAND (AP) Guard Dajuan Wagner will
miss
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers' exhibition opener
and possibly the start of the
regular season, too.
Wagner, sidelined since the
first day of training camp
with a swollen right .knee,
will visit famed sports orthopedist Dr. James Andrews in
Birmingham,
Ala.,
on
Tuesday for a second opinion
on his injured knee.
Cavaliers general manager
Jim Paxson said team physician Dr. Richard Parker will
accompany Wagner to see the
Andrews.
"After having the weekend
to think about it, we wanted
to have another set of eyes to
take a look at the film (X·
rays and MRI results) on
Dajuan 's knee," Paxson said.
Paxson declined to comment when asked if more
surgery had been recoinmended for Wagner, who
missed the final 20 games
last season after having tom
cartilage removed from his
knee .
Paxson said it's too early to
put a timetable on when
Wagner might retum.
Wagner, a first -round selection in the 2002 draft, had an
injury-riddled rookie season
for Cleveland. He missed the
entire preseason and the first
14 regu)flr-season games
afte~...bemg hospitalized with
a bladder tnfecuon.

Bl

The Daily Sent~el

.

Alvarez _tries to treat OSU like another game
BY JR Ross
· Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. - Ohio State is the defending
national . champion, undefeated and riding the
nation's longest winning streak.
Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez said the worst
thing he can do is treat Saturday's game like
something special.
'
Alvarez said Monday the No. 23 Badgers will
bed. acked up enough for third-ranked Ohio State
an won't need any extra motivation, not with the
rare home night game for Wisconsin to be broadcast on national television.
"Probably the worst thing a coach could do is
make a big deal out of it,"·Alvarez said Monday at
his weekly news conference. "It's a big enough
deal."
While Alvarez won't have to worry about
Wisconsin 's emotions Saturday, he's got plenty of
questions about his players' health.
While Ohio State (5-0, 1-0 Big Ten) is coming

off its bye week, Wisconsin (5-1, 2-0) could use a
little break.
Tailbacks Anthony Davis and Dwayne Smith
are nicked up, as is linebacker Jeff Mack. Alvarez
said all three wore protective boots Sunday, with
Davis still tryingf(o shake off a sprained ankle he
suffered three weeks ago. He played in just the
first half against Penn State before reinjuring the
ankle.
Alvarez said he "couldn't answer that if I wanted to" when asked Monday who might be ready to
go in the backfield against Ohio State, with the
best run ·defense in the country. The Buckeyes
have given up just 217 yards in five games, an

average of 43.4 yards a contest.
"We've been nicked up. We ' ve been a team
down to your third tailback in a couple of games,"
Alvarez said.
Still. that third tailback hasn ' t been all that shabby. Booker Stanley ru s he~ for I 19 yards and a
touchdown against Penn State, playing mostly in
the second half.
Alvarez also expects another close game wi(h
Ohio State. The Badgers lost 19- 14 last year after
blowing several opportunities late in the game to
win.
That game fit a pattern Ohio State has built over
the past two &gt;easons of pulling out close games
late to keep ih 19-gam.e winning streak alive . Ten
of those wins have been by a touchdow,n or less.
But Alvarez doesn't think the Buckeyes have
.
just been lucky.
"A luck y team that wins and a team that's very
well-coached that wins at the end are the same
team, because somebody coached them to be
lucky," Alvarez said.

Red Sox set
upALCS
with Yankees

OAKLAND, Calif (AP) - Pedro Martinez,
Johnny Damon, Manny Ramirez and even that
maligned Boston bullpen - they all were tougher
than any curse.
Martinez pitched seven gritty . innings, and
Ramirez broke his slump with a decisive three-run
homer as the Boston Red Sox completed a threegame playoff · comeback. beating the Oakland
Athletics 4-3 Monday night in Game 5 of their AL
division series.
. Boston got its fourth playoff series victory since
its last World Series title in 1918, while Oakland's
frustration continued. The A's have lost nine straight
games in which they could have clinched postseason
advancement, extending a major league record.
Boston meets the Yankees, its traditional rival, in
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) the AL championship series starting Wednesday
A judge on Monday sided
night in New York. The Red Sox had to withstand a
with Indiana University in
rally attempt in the ninth to get there.
Bob ~each-of-oon-- ..._
Reliever Scott William son, making his fifth
tract lawsuit over his firing
· straight appeamnce for Boston. led off the inning by
as the school's basketball
walking Scott Hatteberg and Jose Guillen. Red Sox
coach three years ago.
manager Grady Little went to Derek Lowe, the
Monroe· Circuit Court
Game 3 starter and Game 'l loser out of the bullpen.
Judge Kenneth Todd granted
This time, Boston's No. 2 starter came through.
the university 's motion fnr
After Ramon Hernandez bunted pinch-runner Eric
summary judgment, effecByrnes and Guillen into scoring position, Lowe
tively dismissing Knight's
threw a called third strike pa~t pinch-hitter Adam
lawsuit without a·trial.
Melhuse -the A's backup catcher who had three
"The university from the
hits in Game 4 Sunday.
start has said that it followed
Moments later. Chris Singleton topped a weak
the provisions of the contract
grounder down the first-base line - but Kevin
Millar didn't charge it in time to prevent it . from
and fulfilled its obligations,
going foul. Lowe then walked Singleton, loading the
and the court has agreed,"
school spokeswoman ·Jane
bases.
Jankowski said.
The A's countered with pinch-hitter Terrence
Long, who was just 2-for-7 in the series. Long took
Messages . seeking comBoston Red Sox closing pitcher Derek Lowe. top, is picked up by catcher Jason Varitek after the Red an inside fastball for another called third strike ment from Knight's attorney, ·
Sox
defeated the Oakland Athletics 4-3 in game 5 of the American League Division Series playoff game, and the Boston bench and bullpen emptied onto the
Russell Yates, were left at
Monday in Oakland, Calif. (AP)
field in celebration.
·
his office and home in
· Denver.
Knight was fired in 2000
~or violating a "zero tolerance" behavior policy by
grabbing the arm of a student who he said · greeted
him by his last name.
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP)- NFL career first 13 seasons with and led to three
Team orthopedist Russell Chick
Smith was .unavailable Monday,
Knight sued two years
I
rushing
leader
Emmitt
Smith
has
a
Super
Bowl
victories.
found
the
break
to
the
scapula
in
the
leaving
without speaking to reporters.
later, claiming the university
broken
left
shoulder
blade
and
will
be
Coach
Dave
McGinnis
said
X-rays
back
of
Smith's
shoulder
after
a
more
McGinnis
acknowledged Smith
yiolated his employment
sidelined
indefinitely.
the
injury
taken
Monday
revealed
thorough
examination.
would
be
out
for
at least a few weeks,
contract. Knight, who was at
was
more
serious
than
originally
the
"If
it
was
just
a
bruised
shoulder,
The
injury
occurred
early
in
his
season
was over.
but
doubted
Indiana for 29 years and won
second quarter of Arizona's 24-7 loss thou~ht. A~ter the game, the believe me, Emmitt Smith would
"I'm not going to put a time frame
three .national champion
Sunday
in
Smith's
first
Cardmals
satd
Smith
had
only
a
to
Dallas
have
come
back
out
of
that
locker
on
it because I've not been given a
onshfps, is the basketball
game
against
sprained
the
team
he
spent
his
s'lloulder.
room,"
McGinnis
said.
time
frame on it," McGinnis said.
coach at Texas Tech.

Judge sides
with Indiana in
Knight lawsuit

Emmitt·Smith's left shoulder blade broken

.,

Great~hospitaiS Start
1 ,

•

,great.phys· ·
•

2520 Valley Drive ePointt'IE~(J»(,
·- --··-··--·-

•·

- - - - - · - -- -

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, October 7, 2003

Www .mydailysentinel.com

Baseball

m::.ribune - Sentinel - ~egister

College Soccer

~LASSIFIED

Surprise! It's Marlins-Cubs in the NLCS No..1. Redmen
wipes out Walsh
:

~

IJy BEN WAUIER
Associated Press

CHICAGO - Count Jack McKeo n
among all those people who co unted
out the Chicago Cubs when it came to
~e postseason.
· Then agam, the Flonda manager
flardly expected hts team to make it.
either.
No matter. Barry Bonds is gone and
so is Chipper Jones . Albert Pujols. Jim
Thome and Jeff Bagwell never even
got a chance to play.
· October is here , and so are the
Marlins and Cubs 10 the NL champt .ilnship series starting Tuesday night at
Wrigley Fteld.
"I think it 's good for baseball. I think
it's good for the country," Cubs manager Dusty Baker smd Monday.
. ''The Marlins, I don ' t think they
were picked over there and l know we
were picked third or fourth over here, ..
ne said.
But back to McKeon .
A few days after the All-Star break,
when the Marlins and Cubs were both
struggli ng along. Kerry Wood 8itched
~ two - hitter and beat Florida 1- at Pro
Player Stadium.
· "That's the reason he's an All-Star,"
McKeon said at the time. "Thank God
we don 't have to see htm anymore "
The 72-year-old manager was then

asked about the ·poss tbil ity - albeit a
remote one at th e time - that Florida
mi ght meet Sammy Sosa and the Cubs
in the postseason
" I don ' t think the Cubs will be in the
playoffs," he said, brushing as tde the
notton.
So Trader Jack, any seco nd thou ght s
on tl now ?
"! don ' t re member sa ying it ,"
McKeon said Monday " If I dtd, it was
a mistake ."
Too late for the Cubs' taste.
"Oh yeah . That's well-documented
here ." Cubs battin g coach Gary
Matthews satd dunn g an afternoon
workout. "Surpri se, surprise."
Truth ts, few reall y expected the sign
outside Wri gley to be lit up with "Cubs
Win! " at thi s time of year.
In fact , the Cubs were below .500
until Wood' s gem at Florida on Ju ly
19. The Marlins, meanwhtle. stumbled
to a 19-29 start that put them far back
of the pack.
··w e thought m spring tramm g we
had a chance to be here," pitcher Josh
Beckett said. "Our team is not surprised by how we've done.
"We underachieved the fi rst few
months , that 's how we became a surprise team," he said.
Beckett will start the opener agamst
the excitable Carlos Za mbrano.
Beckett is aware the Cubs have
tremendous national appeal, wi th base-

ball ro manti cs ac ro ss the country
watc hing to see whether the team can
win its fir st World Senes champi onship since 1908 .
The wild-card Ma rlms started playing in the malors in 1993 and already
have won one title . Still, Beckett
thinks hi s club makes for an equally
feel -good story.
"Well. we changed managers in the
middle of the year. We' ve overcome
some injuries and stuff li ke that," he
said.
. Plus, the Marlins shocked most
ev~one by bouncing Bonds and the
San rancisco Giants in the first round.
N t quite what McKeon mtght have
expected in late May when he took
over after Jeff Torborg was fired . Back
then, he would' ve brushed off such
-predi ction s.
"I would have probably told them
they are crazy," he said. "You figured a
lot of us wouldn't be here . I think a lot
of clubs didn ' t thmk the Cubs would
be here, a lot of people didn't think we
would be here.
"Mayb,..we didn ' t think we would be
here , who know s? Things happen.
Things turn around You get lucky."
The Cub s surged to win the NL
Central, then used the dommant pitchmg of Wood and Mark Prior to beat
Atlanta tn the fir st round.
Chicago did it without a lot of production from Sosa. who hll only .188

College Volleyball

.
Redwomen continue with growing pal ns

STAFF REPORT
sports@ myda1lytribune.com
RIO GRANDE- The Umversity of
Rio Grande Redwom e n vo lleyball
squad faced another tough tri-match at
the Newt Oliver Arena on Saturday
when they hooked up with NAJA No.
25 Mount Vernon Na zarene and
Ameri can Mideast Conference South
Di vtsion Co-leader Cedarville.
The young Rio Grande tea m
dropped the first match to MVNU in
three straight garces, 30-23 , 30-23 and
30-19.
Freshman Melissa Doss continued to
establish herself as the team leader,
crushing 13 k1lls . Junior outside hitter
Che lsea DeGarmo registered eight
kills, while senior Rebe cca Wierwille
added seven, Lynnette Ki esling had

six and freshman Lindsay Urton nailed
fi ve.
Freshman setter Jessica Veach delivered 35 assists and eight digs.
DeGarmo led the way defensively
with 18 dig s. junior Kim Posey tallied
I 0 digs while freshman Brittny Henry
had seven and Danielle Thomas numbered six .
MVNU (20-5, 3-3 AMCS) los t to
Cedarvtlle in the middle match tn four
games, 25-30, 25-30, 30-15 and 32-34.
Rio (6-14, 0-6 AMCS) played hard
defensive ly against the Lady Yellow
Jackets, but could generate very little
offense. Cedarville won in three
straight games, 30-18, 30-22 and 3018. Wi erwill e lead the attack with
seven kills , followed by Doss wtth six
and Urton with ftve .
Veach posted II di gs to lead the

STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytnbune.com
CANTON - NAJA No .
I Rio Grande contmued on
its' collision course with a
perfect season after shutting
out Walsh on
Saturday, 4-0 in American
Conference
Midea st
Soccer South Diviston
action.
Rio Grande ( 11-0, 2,0
AMC South) penetrated
Walsh's defensive formation with the first goal of
the game in the 25th
jumor
minute
when
defender Mark Fahey rung
the bell off an assist from
Jason Harvey.
The Redmen would add
another marker before
halftime on a goal from
senior mid-fielder Nils

Hocke.
The
former
Lucasvtlle
Valley
exchange student scored in
the 38th minute with the
assist gomg to Conar
Dawson.
Rio would score twice
more before the match
came to. a clo se. Ben
Hunter notched his 12th
goal of the season, in tlw
68th minute, with John
Carroll rackmg up the
assist. Ben Calion fintshed
off the scoring after
recetvmg a feed from
Simon Carey in the 82nd
minute.
Oliver Sanders recorded
his 1Oth shutout of the seaso n and stopped the only
shot by Wal sh in the game.
Wals h ts now 5-6-1
overall and 0-3 in the
AMC South •

Sports radio hosts
suspended for
gorilla comment

BOSTON (AP)- The hosts of a popular spons radm talk
show received two-week suspensions for comparing an escaped
defense . Po sey and DeGarmo added zoo gorilla to minority students who participate m a voluntary
I 0 each. Veach also distributed 2 1 busing program.
The suspension of John Dennis and Gerry Callahan takes
assists.
immediately, station WEEI-AM announced Monday.
effect
Cedarville (21-5, 9-0 AMCS) kept
The
station susJ?f:nded Denni,~ last week for two days, but
it's hold on the top spot in the
American Mideast Conference South increased the pumshment after offictals from the busmg proDivision . Julia Bradley had a good all gram, Metco, and community leaders said 11 was too leni_ent.
around game for th e Yellow Jackets The station decided to suspend Callahan after a transcnpt of the
show revealed both hosts took part in the conversation.
with 15 ktlls and two blocks.
Also, health msurer Blue Cross Blue Shteld of Massachusetts
Rio Grande Head Coach Patsy
announced
it was pulling a six-week advenising campatgn from
Fields likes the effort of her team.
the
station,
and would donate the $27,000 to Metco.
"We play our hearts out, but we just
"We've
done
it because of the comments made by them and
can't win," she said. "But, we've soonwhat
we
v1ewed
as the statmn's teptd response," satd Blue
er or later we've got to win.
executive vtce president Peter Meade.
.
" If we keep pl ay ing thts hard , good Cross
Station spokesman Jeremy Crockford said the msurer's
things have got to happen."
announcement did not prompt the two-week suspensions. The
Rio lost both matches to Cedarville hosts had no immediate comment, he said
thi s season .
The remarks were made Sept 29, a day after a gon lla, Ltttle
Shawnee State is o n th e horizon for Joe, escaped from the Boston zoo and injured two girl s. After
the Redwomen as the Lady Bears will Callahan observed the gorilla was captured near a bus stop,
host Rio 7 p.m. today.
Dennis said "Yeah, yeah. He was a Metco gorilla."

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

......... c:::
... c:»-r. c::: IE!
IN THE

COMMON
COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
:IHIO
~OME
NATIONAL
EIANK
PLAINTIFF
liS
3ARY J. WOLFE,
ETAL.
:ASE NO. 02 CV 79
·~OTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an
:lrdar of Sate luued
&gt;ut of the Common
Pllao Court ol Meigs
:ounty, Ohio, In the
&gt;818 of the Home
National
Bank,
Plaintiff, vo. Gary J.
Nolle,
at
at.,
Oolendanto, upon a
Judgment therein
..ndered, being Case
No. 02-CV-79 In said
:ourt, the Shariff of
\taiga County, Ohio,
~rltt offer for aate at
the front door of the

~LEAS

::ourthouae

!&gt;omeroy,

In

Malga

::ounty, Ohio, an the

"'h

day
of
2003, at
10:30 a.m., the follow·
•ng Iande and tananento, located at
J7801 TR. 73t ,
Fllelne, OH 45n1. A
&gt;omplete
legal
:loocrtptlon ol the
..., oolite to 11 lol·
~avamber,

1owa:

PARCEL

1:
~ttuated
In Letart
rownahlp,
Malgo

:::ounty,

Ohio,

In

!loctlan No. 14, Town
Z, Range U begin·
1lng at the oouthwllt
&gt;arner ol John H.
-dime property and
&gt;n the north and
south tine which Ia
thl boundary line
:~~~Ween thla property
and
Artie
Y.
•'"&gt; Brldgemtlno 135 acre
II'ICI, thlo point begin
tnclallld by the point
&gt;f o plow hotf burled
· tn the ground; thanco
1orth 11 rode to a
1takl: thence th 1
-terty direction to
!hi lOuth Nil corner
&gt;f Semllll B. She"'''
ltnd: thence oauth 42
t/2 dagNao weal 45

rods •nd 15 links to
the forks of a ravine;

tHence down the middle of satd ravine
south 71 degrees
west 10 rods to on
Elm

tree;

thence

along and with the
cllll to the north and
south line which Is
the
boundary
between this property
and
Artie
Y.
Bridgeman's 135 acre
tract; thence north on

the above described
line to the place ol
beginning containing

Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, In the
case of the Home
National
Bank,
Plaintiff, vs. George
Brlcklaa, Jr. aka
George Brlckles aka
warranties
or Garage Brlcklas, et
covenants.
al., Da!andants, upon
Property Address: a Judgment therein
47801 TR. 731 , rendered, being Case
Racine, OH 45771
No. 03-CV-63 In said
Real
Estate Court, the Sheriff of
Appraised
at: Meigs County, Ohio,
$58,000.00. The real will ollar for sale at
estate cannot be sold the front door or the

easements and rights

of way ol record.
Auditor's Parcel
No.: 08·00729.000
The
above
described real estate
Is sold "as Is" without

for less than two-

thirds the appraised
value.
laaa.
Terms ol Sale: 10%
RESERVING the down day of sale, ba~
coal and other miner- ance on delivery of
als beneath the s~r­ deed. Sold subJect to
lace of oald land. A accrued 2003 real
right ol way Ia hereby estate taxes. Sold
granted the, grantee subject to the Untied
through Artie Y. States or America's
Bridgeman's 135 acre right ol red em ptlon
under 28USC Section
tract.
• ·
PARCEL 2: A 32 24tO(C).
loot right of way for All sheriff's sales
purposes of Ingress operate under the
and egran and utility Doctrine of Caveat
service to tho above ·Emptor. Prospective
deacrlbed t3 112 acre purchasers are urged
parcel. Commencing to check for llano In
at the south line of the public recorda ol
Parcel No. 1 as Meigs County, Ohio.
described In deed The Meigs County
recorded In Vol. 295, Shertlf makes no
Page 249; Meigs guarantee aa to the
County
Dead otatua of IHII prior to
Recordo,
where , oale.
Townahlp Road T63t Linda R. Warner,
lnteraactt uld oouth Attorney lor Plaintiff
tine: Sold sccaoo and (9) 30, (tO) 7, 14
utility right of way
ohall follow tho extol·
lng roadWoy 11 much
Public Notice
ao proctlcoble.
Reference Deade: IN THE COMMON
VOlume 300, Page 881 PLEAS COURT OF
and VOlume 215, Pogo MEIGS
COUNTY,
241, Melgo County OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
Deed Racordt.
Excepting 4.t379 BANK
acr11 and euoment PLAINTIFF
lor lngroao, egr111 VS
and utility llrVIce .GEORGE BRICKLES,
· conveyed to Donnla JR. AKA GEORGE
Lee Rtchordo, Jr. and BRICKLES
AKA
Motlaoa L. Rlcharda, GEROGE BRICKLES,
by deed recorded In ETAL.
volume 113, Page DEFENDANTS
747, Metgo County NOTICE OF SALE
Olllcllt Ro~ordo .
CaN No. 03 ~v 63
· The real · eotate
By virtue ol an
a"ove dllcrlbed lo Order of Seta laauad
aubjact to all lloaeo, out or the Common
13 112 aces, more or

•

'Yo-...r

courthouse

Pomeroy,

in

Meigs

County, Ohio, on the

13th
day
of
November, 2003, at
10:00 a.m., the followIng Ianda and tenements, located at
28457 Bashan Rd,
Racine, OH 45n1 . A
complete
legal
description of the
real estate Is as lot·
Iowa:
Situated In the
State of Ohio, County
of Meigs, Townatilp of
Sutton, Township Two
(2) North, Range
Twal,ve (12) West and
a part ol the
Northeast Quarter
and
Southeast
Quarter ol Section
Sixteen (16), '!'Ora
particularly
deacrtbed ao,lollows:
Beginning at a
point at the North•••
corner ol the southeast

quarter

of

Sactlon t6, eeld point
lo atoo the eouth•et
corner of ·the north·
weet quarter of
Section 16 and local·
ed tn County Road
No. 28 , (Basham
Roadt: aatd potntaleo
being the NorlhWHI
corner of a 68.32 acre
trect of land now or
formerly owned by 0.
and H. Booth at
deocrtbed In Volume
187, Page 147 of the
Deed Rocordo of
Metgo County, Ohio;
thence South 1
degree 21 mlnuteo
eeot along the eatt
tine of Section 16
County No." 28 and

~laht

Booth's Wast Una, a
distance of 153.88
leal to an Iron pin;
thence teavtng the
east line of Section
16 and County Road
No. 28 , south 83
degrees 42 minutes
wast, passing an Iron
pin set at 46.1 0 feat, a
total distance of
206.35 Ieaiia a found
concrete monument o
at the northeast corner of a 0.53 acre
tract of land now or
formerly owned by
Ronald L. and Janice
K.
Salser
as .
described tn dead
Volume 277, Page 117
or the Dead Records
of Meigs County,
Ohio; thence along
the northerly line ol
said 0.53 acr&amp; tract,
south 86 degrees 04
minutes wast, paaslng an Iron ptn sat at
85.00 feat a total dislance of 90.40 feat to
the canter of a bush;
said bush Is the
northwest corner ol a
0.53 acre tract and
the northeast corner
of a 1.43 acre tract by
daed of correction to
Ronald L. and Janice
K. Sataer, also
described In Deed
Volume 277, Page
117; thonca along the
northerly tine of oatd
1.43 acre trect. oouth
75 degraea 52 min·
utao well, a dlatanca
of 106.751eet to a oat
Iron pin; thence leavtng the north line of
oald t .43 acre tract
on a tine parallel to
the eall line of
Section 16, north 1
degraa 21 mfnuteo
weal, paoolng the
quarter oectton tina
between tho south·
eaat and northeoot
quarter or Section 16
at e dlatance at
199.33 feat, a total '
dlatanca al 245.45
1111 to an Iron pin;
thence north 88
degrees 39 mtnutae
eaot, pautng a oot
Iron pin at 375.00 feet,
a total dlatance ol

.=-a..ah •• oe :N..:..C:Ic~s 1.-. ]"''to,le'YV S IJfttJ ~ •-B­
t«&gt; ..C..-..c:»""• I&gt;eii"V"ered. :R.Ight tao "'"c:»a..ar ~oor.

400.00 leal to an Iron
ptn on the east line of
Section 16 and
County Road No. 28;
thence South 1
degree 21 minutes
aBBI, along the eaat
line of Section 16 and
County Road 28, a
distance of 46.t2 teet
to the place of beglnnlng, containing two
(2.00) acres, mora or
tass.
Saving and except·
lng the following
described right ol
way for relocated
State Route 124 and
described as follows:
Commencing at
the northeast corner
of the aoutheast
quarter of Section 16,
sold · point also
located In County
Road No. 28 (Basham
Road); thence South
1 degreeo 21 mlnuteo
eaot along the aut
line ot oactton 16 and
County Road No. 28,
a dtotonca of 58.73
feat to the plato ol
beginning for right of
way; thence conttnu·
lng oouth 1 degree 21
mlnutea oaot, along
the aall tina ol
Section 16 and
County Road' No. 28,
a distance of 96.15
teet; thence leaving
tho ••t line ol
Section 16, South 83
degraea 42 mlnuteo
wast, • distance of
40.15 feet to a point:
thence north 1
degree 21 mlnutao
weal porallol to tho
eaot tine of Section
16, a distance of
98.81 fHt to a point;
thence north 88
degroea 39 mlnutao
aaot, a dtetance ·ol
40.00 IHtto the place
of beginning, con·
tolnlng eighty eight
thoueandtha (0.088)
of an acre, more or
1111.

.,_tao aubjact to the
eaoamant of County
Road No. 28 and all
utllttt11.
The. above deocrlp--

tlon was written by
Wttttam C. Jewett,
Registered Surveyor
No. 5758, on June 22,
1982.
Excepting there·
from ott mtnorata
heretofore excepted
and raaarvad to the
State of Ohio.
Reference

Deed:

Volume 52, Page 217,
Malga County Ofllctat
Recorda.
Auditor's · Parcel
No.: 18~1131.000
The above deecrlbed
real estate Ia oold "as
Ia" without warranttea
or covanant1.

Property ·Addre11:
28457 Beahan Rd.,
Racine, Ohio 45n1
Root
Estate
Appralaad
at:
$65,000.00. The real
altata cannot be sold
lor leaa than twothirds the apprstl8d
value.
Terma of Sate: 10%
down day of aile, balance on delivery of
- · Sold IUbjtct to
accrued 2003 real

...........

All aharlfl'a aat•
operata undlr the
Doctrine ol Cavoot
Emptor. Proapectlve
purchlaore are urged
to check lor llano tn
tha public recorda of
Metga County, Ohio.
The Melga County
Sheriff makea no
guarantee aa to tha
IIIIUI ol IIIII prtor to

.....

Dauglat w. Little,
Attorney far Plalntlll.
(1)'30, (JO) 7,14
Public Notice

Township

of

Ohio,
Rutland,
passed on the tat day
Ohio, pa81ad on the ol August, 2003, there
24th day of July, 2003, wilt be submitted to a
there wilt be submit- vote of the people of
ted to a vote of the said aubdtvtaton at a
people ol uld eubdl· General Election to
vision at a General be held In the
Election to be held In Township of Rutland,
the Townahlp of Ohio, at the regular
Salisbury, Ohio, at the places of voting
regular places of vot- therein, on the 4th
Ing therein, on the 4th day of November,
day of November, 2003, the question of
2003, the question of levying a tax, In
levying a tax, In excess or the ten milt
exceas of the tan milt limitation , for the
limitation, lor the benefit of Rutland
benefit
of Township lor the Fire
Unincorporated oraeo protection
al
Sattabury Said tax being: 2 A
Township, excluding renewal of an existing
Middleport
· and tax ol 1 milt at a rate
Pomeroy VIllage lor not exceeding 1 mllta
the purpose ol lor each one dollar of
Maintaining and oper- valuation,
which
ating cametertao
amounts to ten cent•
Said tax being: 2 An ($0.10) lor esch one
additional tax of 0.5 hundred doltoro ol
milt at a rate not valuation, lor live (5)
exceeding 0.5 mlllo ye1ra. The Polio lor
lor each one dollar of aatd Election witt
vtluetlon,
which open at 6:30 o'clock
amounto to live cante am and remain open
($0.05) for each one unlit 7:30 o'clock pm
hundred dolltrt of of 11td dey.
votuatlon, far five (5) By order of the Board
yaara. Tho Pollt for of.Eklellono, of Metga
uld Election wilt County, Ohio.
open at 8:30 o'clock John
N.
thla,
am and rametn open Chalrperean
until 7:30 o'clock pm Rtto
D.
Smith,
Oflltddey.
Director
Br order oflho Board (10) 7, 14, 2t, 28
o Ellcttana, of Melge
County, Ohio.
John
N.
lhte,
Chatrperaon
on
Rita
D.
Smith,
Director
SAYtNGS
(10) 7, 14, 21,28

S.llsbury, Pomeroy,

Public NotiCe

NOTICE OF ILIC·
NOTICE OF ELI!C· TION ON TAX L!VY IN
TION ON TAX LI!VY IN EXCESS OF THE TEN
EXCESS OF THI! TEN MILL LIMITATION
MILL LIMITATION
Ravt11d
Coda,
Rovlold
Code, ' Section• 3101.11 (0),
S.ctlone 3501.11 (G), 5705.1I, 8708.25 .
5705.11, 5705.25
NOT1CI! It hereby
NOTICE to hereby glvan thlt In pur·
given 1hat In pur· IUinCI
Of
I
IUanCI
of
I
Resolution of tho
Roaolutlon ol the Board of Townahlp
Board ol Townehtp Truot••
of tho
Truotaao • of the Townohtp al Rutland,

Shop
Classifleds!

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Sentinel
~rtbune

·'

TO

Place
Your
Ad •••

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

• Stlrt

r

ANNouNCEMENfS

r
I

4

l'oMEROY/MtoDLE

L&amp;L Scrap Metals w1ll be
closed Oct 3 thru Oct 13,
for 1n11entory red uCtion
Say good bye to h1gh ph one
bills' New local phone serv·
1ce w1th FREE un l1m1ted
na t1on w1de long D1stance
1-800·635-2908
or
www Freee1 omMov1e comfl tp
aysyou Local Agents wanted

GIVEAWAY

1 femal e lab/ shepard m1K
fem ale black tong haired
Dach shund To good home
Call 740·446·0420

pet. call 740·446·3521
Free kittens to good home. 3
black/white, 2 dark calico, 6
weeks old , and htter tra1ned
ca11 740·44 1 ..()501
Very cut e k1t1ens, 8 weeks
old 2 mates, 1 female Call
740-441 ·0 t 45
between
8am-5pm
Wh1te fne ndly male house
cat L1t1er tramed. call 740446·3897

~¥~0

Monday ~ Friday

Lost Large wh1te lnsh Wolfe
Hound Answers to the
name Sugar. She has a
name tag with I he add ress
740 388·0416
Yellow
LHASA ,
Lost
Garl 1etd Ave Old, s1ck , her
name IS Lhucl 740·446-

r

'

YARn SALE

IIIIo

A Keyword • Include COmplete

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p .m .
Thursday for Sunday•

POLICIES· Oh io Valley Publlahlng reserves thl right to edtt. reaeet. or cancel any ad It any 11m1 Errors must 1M reporttd on the f1r1t dsy of publle.t•oo •nd
Trlbunt-Sentlnti-Fieg ltter will bt responsible tor no more thin the cost of the 1pace occupied by the &amp;rror and only the f1t1t tnaertton We shill 001be
any Iota or uptonse th•t reaulta from the publioetloo or oml ..lon olan advertl ..ment Conectlon will be made 111 the f1r11 available edition • Bo11 ,;.,.,.,,..
are always confidential. • Current rate card applln • All real 111a11 advertisements are subtect to the Fede rel F•" Hous1ng l et of 1968
acceptl on lv help wanted 1d1 meet1ng EO£ st1nd~rds . We will not knowmgly &amp;ccept snv 1dvsrtlamg 1n v1a11tlon of !he l1w

,I

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ® by Larry Wright

10

lfEt_,•p•W.•(o.•N'mD
-W

Chrl!ltlan metal rock band
needs drU mmer Our Influences lncluOe Fugazy. Black
Sabbath :a.hce Cooper, Pmk
Floyd , Oto, Metathca, Black
Label
Society,
Staple
Otsctple. Tourn1que t Pillar
an d a whole bunch of other
rock bands We e.re too kmg
for someone wh o can
Monday
Tuesday, groove , 1f Interested you can
Wednesday. 8-7 behmd call Joseph (7401441-1236
MasoniC Lodge 1n RBCJne
Da~ry farm needs someone
Infant to adult clothmg,
10 mtlk Call (740) 949-2578
playpen, stroller, swmg,
m (740)949·282 3
walker, new h1gh cha1r, furniture, newer Home tntenor
EXPERIENCED
piCtures, 30+ atu mmum win- TRUCK DRIVERS NEED·
dows, commode ch81r, lots
ED
Of m1sc
VERMILLION BROTHERS.
INC.
Multi ya rd sale· Oct 1 11h,
412 S 4th Middleport. WE OFFER
R~1o n al &amp; OTA wa r"' ava1l·
cloth1ng . toys. lots of mise
able
Wed OCt 8 9-5 Ant iques. Competlh\19 Pay
luggage earner clo th es, Pa1d weekly, d1rect depoSit
large vanety One m1le from 8'18Jt
Pme H1lls Golf Coa rse. Health 1nsurance &amp; vaca110n
loca ted on Wi ll's H11t
pay
Co rwenhO ilals
Ass1gned Tracto rs
. ..,.l CALL
9 ooam·
Monday·Fnday
Huge Large Sale Duncans 500pm
New Haven 4th &amp; Rollins 1-80()..232-6405
Oct 7·8·9 Storage Sh ed , INTERVIEWS
furniture , bedd1ng &amp; lots Wednesday
Oc t
ath
more
Comfort Inn
From 9 OOam-1 OOpm
Yard Sale Wed. Thur . Fn 605 E Mam St
500 Rob1nson St Rugs ,
Jackson 1 OH 45640
large and XL work clothes ,
mens reans, kmck !lacks
Fullt1me help needed Apply
galore
between 10· 11 am. Man .
~r;,;:;;__'""'
Thurs .
Sat
McCiures
WANTFJJ
Aestaura!liS All tocatJO!lS
~
ro BUY
Jackson P1ke , Gall1poiJs
740·446·3837, Middleport
Absolute Top Dollar, U S 740·992·5248 ,
Pomeroy
S1lver,
Gold
Co10s, 740·992-6292
Proofsets Diamond s, Gold
R1 ngs,
U S Curren cy,· Grow1ng Heat1ng &amp; Coolmg
M T S Co1n Shop, 15 1 compa lly took1ng fo r exper1·
Second Avenue. Gallipolis e11 ced Installers with some
tech e)(perlence lnstatla!Jon
740·446-2842
- - - - -- - -- &amp;ICpenence a must Good
Outs1de Wood Burner, Water pay (740)44t - 1236 1f no
type
(304)675· 4004 or answer, leave message
(304)674·1315
Help wanted canng for the
Pawpaw frwt $1 to $2 pe'
elderly, Darst Group Home
pound walnuts $10 per hunnow pay1ng mm1mum wage
dred po und s, (740)698- new shlt1s 7am-3pm, 7am·
12::4_ _ _ _ _ __
:2.:.:
5pm , 3pm- 11pm , llpmTable saw. call 740-441- 7am , call 740-992-5023

a

r
..._

3 lamlly yard tale, St Rl. A leadi ng provider of aup·
141 Centenary, 10·5, Oct 8, port aervlcat to Individuals
7, 8

5!4 Chaahtre, Frl &amp; Sat Oct
10·11, 9·? Rain canceled.

224
10 8 3
• • Pm .
Turn be1tde

Speedway on Jaokaon Pl~e.
Chil dren'a clothlnglahoea
,
and toys, men 'a/women 8
clothing houaahold llama.

with Mi=VOD 11 looking tor a
Full-time RN Suptrvltor to
work In Chesapeake and
Gtlllpotle.SuperviiOI)'tXpt·
rltnce required Benetltt
Included. Contact Oorcthy
Harpe' al7ol0-448·7 148. An
Equal
Opportun"y
Employer. F/MIDN
::....:..::.:;...__________
An awaaome jobl, S6·S8 pe r

Garage Sale· ThursdayFriday 9am-5pm, Saturday
Sam-noon
Winter
ctothallcoats. Ieana, baby

hou r after lrainlngl No t&gt;&lt;PI·
rl• nce needed! Full/part
time, fleKiblt tchtdullng ,
convenient
Pomeroy
Locat ion, 20+ poalllons
lteme, pool table, a~eerctse
available, call 9·9, M·F, 1·
bikes, electronic stair step- 888·974-Joba
per, atr h0Ck4Y table , soma
furniture, uaed oven, 2 truck AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Shirley Spears, 304·
tlrts &amp; many mlac llama Fer Sell
additional Info phone 740· 675-1429
441 ·1489 after 8 pm South
on At 7 to Clipper Mills turn AWESOME CAREER
right follow eigne
$14 80.$38 00+/hr,
Postal Poaltlona, Hlrln9 tor
Having 3 lamlly ya'd sale, 89 200312004 Full Bonoflto, No
Cedar
St
Tuesday, l)l;p req, Call Now 1-1008 .::
E::
"':·:2::0:.:7.:.
2·'-~Wadnesday, and Thursday :• 7:.:H0:..:::.:7.:.
10om· Spm .
Busy salon ha s great oppor·
Moving sale 138 Taylor Rd tu nlty for &amp;ICperlenced atyllat,
3 m1les out 175 !rom 141, with manager's license to '
extended lhrough the week. take over excess clientel e
740·441-t880 0' 740·2!16·
Pearl &amp; Ultlan Salet 6 miles 6336.
SOuth on SR 7 10/9-1011 t .
CNA's and HHA's needett to
'Giusware , mise Items
provide In-Home Services to
Yard sale 1611 Shoestring • the Elderly!Otaabled In the
Ridge, 9·4 , Thurlday-Frtda~ Wayne, Cabell and Mason
Little girt clothll, Iota of County Areas. Call Toll Free
mloc
1-858·453·~992

HO\If:S
FORSAU:

10

Hom:&lt;
S,\1.1-.

I-"OR

Pnce reduceo newly redec - 14.:70 Tralfe1 elect roc heat 3
ora ted 388 w1th carpor t 135 bedroom HUD approved
'Kmeon
740-446-2776 No Pets Pholle (740)742·
271 4
$59 000

Approx 24D0sq ft 3·5 bedroom 2 bath 1 car gar age
fenced back yard storage
bUJid1ng has large den new
carpel Vmyl &amp; centra l a1r
Good locatiOn close to
school Also mctu des 2
apartme!lt S on oack lot cur·
rently rented $130 000 for
all 1304 f675-7833

Aemodele'd 3 bed room 1
1,2 bath 1n good ne1ghoor
nood 1n M1adlepon /740)
992 77 43
or v1ew
at
www orvb com#8 1503

f120

MOHIU Ho\U:&gt;;
1-URSAU.

Cotes Mob1te Homes
US 50 East Athens OhiO
4570 1 7 40-59'2 · ~9 7 2

acres
m
Gall1pOI1s
pholos/mfor mai!On on line No Problem Sale· Want a
www orvb com code 90303 new sec t1onal home? No
Problem Need foundat1on
or call 740-446-0531
an d sept1c? N o Proble m
By Owner 3 Bedroom Ranch Need utilltl€6 run or drill€
2 bath s 2 car garag e way? No Proorem Wanr b iQ
GallipOli S photos/Information sav1'1QS on a 2003 model
on hne www orvb com code No Pro01e rr1 Coles Mob1 ie
US
50 East
8 1803 or call i740)367 -7039 Homes
Athens Oh10 740-592-1972
Completely refini Shed home S1nce 1967 Whe re You Get
Great 1oc at1on m Galilp OIIS Y· ;:;
ou;;.•,;;M;;:o;;
ce~v,;;s,;;W
.;,o;;',.
'"-­
Oh lo, 3 bed rooms 2 lull 1'!1
bath s Pnced to sale now
llt 'SINfS'i
' ' " Bt ll.l&gt;l ~.s
Phone 740-446 -9539

/0· 7

~&lt;111t

C&gt; 2003 by NEA, Inc.

fm

1110

HEU WANlm

AN/PI LPN/PI
PT AN &amp; LPN De s ~red .
Enjoy FleiCJble Schedul1n g &amp;
A Rewa rd1ng Career Ill A
Homelike
At mosphere.
Many Benef1ts, Competitive
Pay Proless1onal Appl1ca nts
May Apply Daily Moll ·SUn
9-4pm , Ra11enswood Care
Center 11 13 Wa shington
St
Ravenswood
WV.
(304}273 94B2.
(Acro ss
Ritchie Bndge, At 2 N . Last
~Bu smess On A1ght) Come
JOJn Our Team I You 11 Be
Glad You [Mt
SALES POSITION
Grow1h Potential
Create your own hours
Pff or FT
Call 1-800-318 -0001
.... M-F 10.00 to 2 00 pm

secuntas Secunty Is now
hmng In your area for EMT-8
cert Jhed Officers lor our
site We are also h1rNeed to earn Mo ney? Lets Buffalo
Jng lor officers to Coller pos·
talk the N.E.W Avon Call
Sible tabor dlsp i:Jte In your
Ma,llyn
304·88
to area, above average wages
learn all ,the
ways 2·2645
It can work
paid with uniforms provided
tor you
Applications acceptect at
Now Hiring· A leading 1032
12th. Sl
Wo ot
provider to lndlvldutli with Huntington WV, Mon-Fr l
mentel rttt rdatl on and between the hours of 8am·
and
1pm-3pm
dtvtlopmenttl dlaabltitlel Ia 11 am
lOOking tor direct care staff In E~rlence helpful but not
Galllpolla No experience required For more datalta
nacatllf'Y. $8.35 pe r hour 0811" 1-800·241-7454
Paid l'alnlng II you would
like to loin OU&lt; t11m to help EOEIM/F/0/F
lndlv tdualt achieve their - - - -- - - - - ' fu1t11t potential , ctll 740 • The Town of New Haven Is
e. , e, or apply In person
44 8 4
now seeking applicants lor a
at Middleton Eatatea. 82Q4t
poll ee
ofllcer
position
Carla Drive , Gallipolis, Oh Ftroapectlve appll canta may
An
Equll
Opportunity be certified or willing to
Employer F/MIDN
attend the state pollee scad·
~.:...:.:.:..__ _ _ __
Overbrook Rehab Center It emy Requirements Include
1 1
lOoking tor a part-lime rele that the applicant be at tea at
cook, pltaae come In and fill 81ghteen years of age
out and application at 333 Benefit package olfered.
may
be
Page Street. Middleport Oh Applications
eo
obtained
at
the
New
Haven
457
City Building between the
Pari· Time TaK Praparers hours ol 7•00 AM and 3 00
needed tor busy tax office, PM, weekdays.
Pomeroy location We wilt
train
Computer
skills Wanted Babysitter w/ referrequired Send resume to . ence, lor 4 yelr old Hours
Tho tl!!ily Sentinel, PO 729· 3·11pm 5·6 days 8 week
13, Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Vinton area 746·38S·0875

Need 7 ladles to sell Avon
Call 740·44 6·3358

------

Polnters/Caulkera!Ciaaners
WANTEO. Billing Cieri&lt; lo'
EKperlenced
Columbus,
physician offk:e Full or part
OH Top wages 614-491 ·
time Must have rel1abte
0658
transportation and medical
Sales -National Co needing office experlen ce~ omp u ter
auto related satesldehwery and typing skills a must
persons to SEHIIICe local Benefits available
Fa~e
market Truck , salary bene- resume to 304-675-7800 or
fits
Included
Keystone mall to Box 565 Gallipolis
Automotive
1-800·820· Daily Tribune ~0 Box 469
Gallipolis OH , 45831.
3962

- - -- - -

www.comlca.com
HELP WANfEIJ

To Do

WANTED LPN or MediCal
Office ASS IStant lor phySICian otttc e Full or Pa rt tJm e
Must have current license or
certJ!Jcate re liable tran sporta tiOn and med1cat offiCe
eKper1ence-comp uter sk ill S
preferred No weekends or
holidays FaiC resume to 304 675 7800 or'ma11 to Boll 565
Gallipolis Dally Tnbune PO
BoiC 469 Gatt 1pohs OH
4563t

120

WANTI-Jl

SnuAOON.~

WANI"F:.V
ASSISted

Georges Po rtabl e Sawmill
don't haul your logs to the
mtll Ju st can 304·675- 1957
- -- - - - - - HOUSECLEANING
Availabl e day or even mg
Call 740-4 46- t 756 Ask for
Deanlla or leave a messa ge,
MB Handyman S erv~ c e
Hau ling painting, power
wa shing , drl11eway rep a 1r~
seat coahng gutters chimney plu mbmg Jack of all
trades 30y rs eKp Sen1or
Dtscount Free E s t 1 mat ~s
(304)882-2 1 96 . (30 4)377·
8266
W1ll pressure wash home s,
traile rs, deck$, metal bUI Idmgs and gutters Call (7 40)
446-0151 ask for Ron or
leave a massage

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740.446·4367,
1-Boo- 214•0452
www usllipoli&amp;carearcollege com

11111
1176

~R:::e:ici.:•:.;;:R0:.·;:;:05::;·,:,1 2~7;;;4;:;:B--,
MNRLA
_
NEOUS

•

I

r16

L,._______.
BtJSINE'S'i
OPPOtnlJNffY

All real estete advertising
in this newspaper Ia
subj ect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whic-h makes 11 lllegelto
advertise · any
preference, llmltat10n or
discrimination based on
rtce, color, religion sex
familial status or national
origin, or any lntant1on to
make any such
preference, limitation or
dJscnminatJ on "
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertleementl tor re1 1
estate whtch Is In
vlolaUon Of the law. Our
re1ct.rs are hereby
Informed that 111
dw.lllngs •dvertlsed In
this newap1per •ra
avalhtble on 1n equal
opportunity b«oaaa

Co untry l1ke settmg Leon ,
!NOTICE I
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH· WV area Ph one, 304·458·
•
tN O CO recommends that 1878

2001 comp lete Hewlett
Packard computer Like new,.
hal
windows
)(~

you
buatneas
wtth topeople
you do
know,
and NOT
'send Farm house· 3 bedroom 2
money through the mall until baths 2 story newly reno you have ln\ltstlgated !he vated . unfinished basement

CO/OVO/CD· AW all manu· offering
als. Paid SS99. aski ng $299
Coli 740·367·0502.
A8SOLUTI GOLDMINEI

2e Btrlouo Pooplo Wanttd
Who want to LOSE weight

_
A_Il _JY_pe
_ s_o_l _lo-a-na'""
· .--K--2-00
- K
3
any purpose, quick results,
good or bad credit. 1.ees-

425 _ 82 ~ 0 .

For Sate Located 1n building
-3 {Chapel) Mausoleum ol
Hope m the Ohio Valle y
Memory Gardena, Gallipolis,
Ohio 3 crypts In tier u
would like to sen togethe r,
but would consider sellin g
on or two for more Into call
740·441 ·0233 0' 740·446·
. 3488

~creened

po rch
22K20
garage.
dou'!_e carpo rt,
p ubl~ watt,, Mllga County,
eountry eel1inQ 5+ aeres . no
60 vending machines with land contra ct $79 500 can
excellent locations all tor (7 • 0)742 _9937
$10,1195 (800)·234-6982

rir-"!'!"-----.,

We Pa1 You Cash lo' tho . ..
pounde you LOSE I
Sate, Natural, No Drugs
600·201 ·0832

PRoFI!ssioNAL

SERVICES

TURNED QOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnt
, ·858·582·3345
I&lt;I \ I I ' I \II

r

io

HoME'i
IURSAl.E

\IOIIIU. 1-JOM~S
fll" RI-N I

4 BEDROOM 4 BATH
HOUSEl Forec losure on ly
$9 900 lor IJs~tngs 1 aoo719-3001 EM1 F144

By builder new 3 bedr oom
bnck 2 car garage Good
locahon $140,000 740·44 6·
New 2003 Doublew1de 3 BR
9966 call evemngs
&amp; 2 Bath Onty S t 695 down
aM &amp;295/mo 1 800-69 1
By owner 3 bedroom 2 Oath
nvert ront Wllh boat doCk t 5 6777

___""''

0182 after 5 30 or le ave
message

classified@ mydailyregister.com

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid.

L , ._ _

--oiYiiiARDiiiiSiiAU:-iiiiioa-'ll.lo
_______
G~
HoJt WANTED

F'lday Oct.
Oak Drive

for Insertion

Sundays Paper

I

Found· a c1rcular saw at the
Jntersect1on of Aockspnngs
Ad &amp; Flatw oods
call
(740 )992·3653

2125 or 740·446·2782

All Dl•play: 12 N oon 2
Bu•lness Days Prior To

In Next Dav•• Paper
&gt;unod••v In-Column: 1:00 p.m .

~7::: :~:~:: :::·~::. ~r.6_,;1'r;,yi ~.~.l.Si "Ai iLEi Nfil
1

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Display Ads

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

3 Famtly Ya'd sale Oct 10
965 Ash Street, Middleport
9·30 • ? Lots of kids clothes
. lad1es linens. baby items ,
m1 sc
.:._:::__ _ _ __ __
Carport sale· Oct 10th Lee
res1dence
Tyree Blvd ,
Racme, n~ce Winter clothing ,
match1ng comforter drapes

C- 1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
lor sale. Chester Township,
Me1g s Cou11ty, send letters
ol mteres; to Th e Da1ty
Sent1nel, PO BoiC 729·20,
Pomeroy Oh10 45769

r

YARDSALE-

vour Ada With

Word Ads

Description • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbreviation•
e lndude Phone Number And AddrHI When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 01y1

Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\\\01\1 I \I I \I...,

V1sit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at. (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Cou.rt Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call us at: (740) 446-2342 '
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008.
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@
mydallysentlnel.com
classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

0//iee lforq-~
~ ~·

l\egi~ter

For sale by owner Why buy
one place whe n yoU' can
ha\le 2 for the aama price cj,
one. Here Is the dream you
have bee n wa iting for
Beautiful 08 acre of ll!o nd
w/2 mobile homes, &amp;
4-bulld lngs Cfose to huntlnQI11Shlf1Q. Very n1C8, quiet &amp;
prtvate (304)674·0 155
House lor sal e 704 4th
Street. New Haven
3
Bedroo m fm1shed baae·
ment w1th wood bur ner 2·
ca r ga rage !'eauty shOp
bUild on, could be used as
s , op or Iam1y
1 room ",.. h
(304
" )882 _2770 (J04) SB 2 ·
2439

2 Bedroom House 1n New
Haven $24,000 (304 )882·
· 2890
-------2 story, 4 bedroom house,
ga s he at &amp; ale. 132
Buttern ut,
Pomeroy, Meadowbrook Drive 3br
(740)992·3850
2ba , Hardwood floors .large
Licensed Oayca'e/ Baby oil· - - - - -- - -- tam1ly room Pnve.te , "-tnced
yard
an d
" "d
II Shi'"u&amp; 3 tam , FA, Lg LA Cath back
tl ng - watc h "tsa
take private pay/state paid ceilings WOOd t&gt;e ams flre- garage (304)675- 1303
place. hardwood floors. 1304 )675· , 252
(740) 843- 1094
mo 'elnlo (7~0)~4H724
PRICE REDUCED .
- -,-- - - - - , - Wood stove and backboard 3 bed rooms. 2 bath Ra nch Must sell 3 bedroom 2 bath
$25 Fold-up ' NGHS tenn1s Remodeled kitchen t /2 a~ re m a nice family oriented sublot. Reduced to divisiOn 1n New Haven
table on rollers $10 74(). level
(304)593-3890
$78,000 740-446-4737
388-6n1

-- - -- ·-·--

Lm~&amp;

A CRM!;E

2 bel w w carpet a•r porch
Very n1ce no pet s In
Galhpo! s 74 0·446 2003 01
74 0·446 1409

2 bedroom mo tule home

~or

rent 1n Aa cme S325 rent
$32 5 depo$11 t yr lea se no
pets (740 )992-5039 no can s
afar 8 30prn

2 bed rOOm 11 a,te r $275
montr plus dep os 11 Call
740·367·D04 t ask tor Doug
3 bedroom no pets Rent &amp;
depOSit
Sou thwester n
School 740-3792 540
.-\PAKl'\tt;~, 'S

mR RJ-J•n
1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments turn 1shed and unfur ·
nr shed secuflty oeposrt
requ ~reo no pet s 740 992
22 18
- - - - - - - -1 bedroom upstarrs apt 1n
Gall1pohs $235 per mon tt\
oeplret req u1red Ca ll 74().
446 ·7 130
:

1 BR w1th stove and re t r~ ger;
ator star.t1ng at $2901mo ..
depos11 740-44t t 322

2 or W/D hoo ~ up ret dep
no pet s 304-675-5.162

Apartlnent A... arlabl e Now
R1verBend Place
New
Ad 51 2 000 Call 740-446 Ha ven WV now accept1 nQ
2296
appt1ca110ns tor HUD·su bs,.
d1zed t bedroom apar f.6 acre s MI L wat er and el ec- ment Ut1I1M S 1nctuded Call
tnc ms talled I 500 It road (304)882 ·3 t 21 Apa rtme nt
frontage
a\latlable to1 Quallf1ed sell.Wn te To J&amp;M Farms
JOrldlsabled person EHO •
960 McCully Ad
BEAUTIFUL
APART ·
Gallipolis OH 45631
MENTS
AT
BUDGEt
Lot lor sale 1n Rac1n e PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westw oo ~
(740)992·5858
Dnve from $297 to $38i "
Lot Spnng Valley Large tot Walk to shop &amp; movtes Call
Eq wfl
aprox 10 1 x J 71 City wa te r 740-446 -2 568
Hous1ng
Opportunity
sewer Nat gas e1ec1r1c all
1 acre of land on Centenary

are available
44 6 9539

Phone 740- Furn1shed 3 rooms ana 081!'1
upsta1rs apt clean no pett
refe rence
&amp;
deposU
Lots • 9 &amp; t O Heatley S req utred 740·44 6· 15t 9 •
Addl t1on 1M Bld'Well Two
larQe level lots PriCe to sell Gracious liv1ng i and 2 bed·
roo m apertmellt8 a t Vlllagi
now Phone 740-446·9539
Ma nor
and
Rtverslde
Apartments 1n Middleport.
:~;=~===:, From $278·$348 Call 740·
992-5064 ECIUII Houamg
H~
Opponunltlea
FUR

r'o

L,.--------"
RENr

Honeysuckle Hilla Aptt
Located on Colon ial Or
1·3 Bod FORECLOSED
behind HIQhway Petrol Po• t
homes Buy from $199 e
on Jackson P11ce 1 &amp; 2 Or
month! 4 % down SOyre at
rant starting S255 tow &amp;
8 5% APR For LiltlnQ Call
moderate mcome EQual
t -800·719-3001 EICt F144
Housing Oppor tu mty 740•
446 ·3344 TOO 1-600· 750·
3 bedroom 2 bath Brick
home Reference s and 2 0750·-----~
mon th&amp; deposit requ1red New Haven t bedroom fur·
$650 a month, no pets 740- nlsh&amp;d apa rtment al so hav~
washe1 &amp; dryer deposit &amp;
388·9851
references
no
pets
3 bedroom 11ew ca rpet. no (740)992·0165
pet&amp; Oep Bidwell 740· 379· N1ct 1 Bedroom Apa rtme nt.
2540
Second Floor on V1and
Street $325 month 1 per:
LArge hOuse lor rent 10 ,aon. All ut llit1es mcl uded
Pomeroy
refe rence
&amp; $100 Secur1ty Deposit
depps1t reQUired no pets. [304)675-3654
(740)949· 7004
N1ce one BR unfurntshad
- - -- - - - -Reasona ble rent 4-room apartment Range &amp; reflidQ
house. wate r paid Rent plus p rov1ded Water &amp; garbage
utJI!!Ies and' depos1t 740- pa1d Depos1t r&amp;QUJred Call
7 40-4 46~45 aher 6 p m ;
446-0974
Takmg Apohcat•on&amp; 3 bed·
room house Porte1 W11t rent
w1th opt1on b\.IY 2004
Aelerences/deposll 7 40·

386·99•6

'

UnfurniShed 2 Dr, hOuse with
full besemen1 close to town
asktng $400 a mon +Utili·
t1es.dep required call 304·
675-8902 0 ' 304-593·01 52

Now Ta ~ ~n g Apph cat,ons.35 We st 2
Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartment&amp;.
Includes Water
Sewage,
Trash, $350/Mo 740-446-

0008
Twin Rivers Tower Is aocept
100 applications 1or wa111ng
ltst tor Hud-suba1zed , 1· br.
apartment. can 675·6611
EHO

�•

..

HBI)PY

'

Pleasant Va118y Apartment
Are now taking Applications
tor 2BR , 3BA &amp; 4BA .,
Applications are taken
Monday thru Friday, !rom
~ AM .-4 P.M. Office is
~ted at 115 1 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WY
Phon e No is (304 )675-5806.
fH.O
- - - - - - -]ira
Townhouse
..(partments, Vary Spa cious.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Aelutt Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio Start $385/Mo. No
P,ets, l ease Plus Security
Deposit Requ ired , Days :
740·4 46-3481 : Evening s:
740-367-0502 .

r

Solid oak Clresser, m1rror. NEW AND USED STEEL
bunk beds. Winelsor style. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
• For
740-245·5220.
Concrete,
Angle.
Ch annel, Flat Bar, Steel
Th ompsons Appliance &amp; Grating
For
Drains,
Aepalr-675-7388. For sa le, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
re-conditioned au tomatic Scrap Metals Open Monday,
washers &amp; drye rs. refrigera- Tu eselay. Wednesday &amp;
tors, gas and ele ctric Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
ranges. air conditiGners, and Thursday,
Saturelay
&amp;
wnnger washers. Will do Sunelay. (740)446-7300

i

re!Jairs on major brands m
shop or at yo ur h ome.

~~~~

7 61
"-11 Size

bedroom su ite,
'of/serla mattress &amp; box
spring. Upright freezer. ref.
1"9 cubic feet, hutch, desk.
(304)875-16B7

COrm!"'&gt;ent

~!!!!~~~~
5 '

Longaberger Basket Bingo
Thursday,
October 9'th, 6:30 pm

.Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
ro
MUSIOU.
JET
Quaranteed .
Was.hers.
AERATION MOTORS
INsTRUMENTS
Gryers,
Ranges,
and
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu ill In Lw-oiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiii_.i
Rehlgerators, Some start al
s9s. SKaggs Appliances. 76 Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- Bundy Trumpet w/case &amp;
800-537-9528.
accessor ies $50. Yamaha
Vine St.. (740)446·7398
PSA-160 Key board $50:
Mollohan Carpet, 202 ClarK
(304)675-7777
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Long Mfg. Woodburning
(740)446·7444 1·877·830· pedestal stove with blower. """,...-~---.....,
FRUITS &amp;
9'162. Free Estimates, Easy $600. Call (304 )675-2373
V•'' 'n• •• ~
financing, 90 days same as a~er 5pm
· --------- ~
~ ~~
cash. Visa/ Master Card. ~~-Metro Tech 9BOO XT Utility
Drive- a· little save alot.
line locator, like new. ·
Suing paw paw fruit $1.00·
Roper Ref. Good Shape. 200 B Craftsman transit &amp; 2.00 lb buying walnuts
Runs &amp; lOoKs good. $175 Tripod . new. call after 5pm. $10.00 100 lbs.
(304)675-5067
(304)675-69B6
Call 740-698-2 124

r

American Legion, Middleport.

H appy Birthday!

r

COOK MOTORS
740-448-0103

1991 M ~da Miala special
edition , British Racing
·Green. Hard and Soft Tops.
5 speed, every optiOn available, runs great. Dark G((ten
wl Tan Leath er interior. Only
4 4_8_
_
$3_.9_00
_
111_7_
40_·_
·7~4~
84_._

OH

Jeff Warner Ins.

1993 Marada 2~00 Explorer
21ft. all fiberglass pontoon
style boat. 115hp, Evin
Rude. All seats replaced .
Has bathroom &amp; QBS grill ,
Tennessee duel axil trailer.
4x4 Dodge Dakota 2000, $6.500. abo. (304)675-7833
matching fiberglass topper.
$10,000 or best of1er. Still
under warranty. (304)675·
6278

xlf

BB Ford F-150, 4x4
Lariat. loaded, graal condi·
lion, (740)992-1385 $2500

['10

Model 4104 Bus conversion
recreation vehicle, complete
self contained ready for
camping. 740-256·6926
"'11{\1(1 ...

m,,..._____....,
riO

HOME

L\IPROVD1Ef\'fS

I

MoroRCYCLES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
2003 Honda XA 100R3 Dirt Unconelltional lifetime guar·
Bike, excelle nt condition. anlee. Local refe rences fu r$1,600 call740-441-9865.
nlshed. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4481992 Gao
runs
good
&amp; Morono
$1,000.
CallStorm,
.
_
...,.
.l\,3
0870,
Rogers Basement
740 379 2805
_____ ___ ~'--·-oiFOiiiiiRioSii.lii"LEiiiir_,.,. Waterproofing .
1996 Mystique, 6 cyl, auto,
air, 'moon roof, leather seats, ~977 Norris Bass Boat with C&amp;C
General
Home
106,000 miles, $1800, 85 HP Evanrude has a Mainte nance- Painting, vinyl
depth finder, fish fi nder,
(740)985-4418
siding, carpen1ry, doors,
trolling motor, lull length
windows, baths, mobile
1996 Pontiac Grand Prix SE cover. Nice Trailer. AU in home repair and more. 'For
4
door·auto-power-A/C, good condition. (304)675· free estimate call Chef, 740121,000
miles $2,750 day- 3354
Potatoes for sale 50# $10,
992·6323.
740·
446·
1615. after 7pm
Mon· Sat., 65002 State
Route 124, Reedsville. Oh, 740-446-1244
(740)378-629 1
-------2000 Grand Prix GTP.
22,000 miles, Silver. Call
FoR SALE
740-388-9804
OR TRADE

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

i

-,

r

•

I

Bo··rs

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For sate: lnvoca re Pronto
M6 Power Chair. Less than a
year old. Asking $3,100, wi ll
nego_liate. Call 740·2450t6 3 before noon on week·
d
I
'
I \In I St 1'1 1 1 II S
,\II\ I SIO&lt; h

°

1

2000 Plymouth Neon LX,
automatic, 36,000 miles,
PW, PDL, 4-door, air, cruise
$3,900 080. 740-44 1-0370
2002 Neon, 19,500 miles, 5
spd. pw-pdl·pm, CIUiSe, A/C,
spoiler, sunrooi $5,900
080 740·256·6745; -740·
256·6877; 740-256-6467.

FARM

~--F.Q"'"ulin~-~E~N;,;1'-.J For sale or trade, 1980 Ford
'
14- 10 Case Diesel Tractor
wi front end loader. 6 ft.
brush hog. Can crusher separates steef cans. Gas well
swabber, 1900 ft. cable ran
by tractor power lake elf.
740-245·5535

F-350, flat be d, good run·
ning condition, will sell without bed cheap, 3 1985
Monte Carlo, one in running
condiUon , (740)742-1903

1720

TRUCKS

mRSALE

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised ·
Code,
Secllons 3501 .11 (GI,
5705 .19,5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that in pur-

Resolution

of

a

of

the

Board
of
County
Commissioners
of
the Cpunty of Meigs,

Pomeroy,

Ohio,

passed on the 10th
day of July, 2003,
New Idea 323 One Row 1988 4x4. Jeep Pickup. 9~ there will be submit·
low
mileage. ted 1o a vo1e o1 ·the
Corn Picker. Many new engine ,
people of said subdiparts. Excellent Condition. (304)675-3476
vision at a General
(740)992-7603
1995 Ford E-350 Van. 14 ft . Election to be held In
high
cube box , excellen t the County of Meigs,
LIVESTOCK
Ohio, at the regular
cond. 740-446·94 16
places
Of
vonng
Angus Bulls, Heifers plus 1995 FORD E350 CUBE therein , on the 41h day
Maine-Angus Steers and BOX
TRUCK.
CALL of November, 2003,
Heifers, Top blood lines. (740)446-9416. M-F 9·5. the question of levy"
Slate run farm, Jackson . Locateel
1391 Safford lng a tax, In -excess of
740·286-5395.
School, Gallipolis .
the len mill limitation,
lor · tho benefit of
Horse Boarding Indoor/out· 1996 8·10 Chevy trucK, LS Meigs County lor the
Cloor pens. Box stalls. 740- package. 6 tt. bed, 4 cylin· purpose of
448-4 710 barn; 740·645· der, standard. Asking $3,750 providing and main·
2475 cell
call 740-446·4525.
talnlng senior citizens
services or facilities
(Meigs
County
Council on Aging,
Inc.,
Multipurpose
Senior
Citizens
Center
Said tax b&lt;llng: 2 A
renewal of a tax of 1
1
••
mille lor each one dol·
1ar of valuation, which

r

~;~ ~ in: rre&lt;~~~:

amounts to ten cents

START DATING
TONIGHT!
1·80Q.ROMANCE
EXT 1847

'11AQRA-LOWE$T PRICE
Remis. Guaranteed. $3.60 PMI OOmg.
Why paY men? Wa have t\e answer!
Vk&gt;xx, Ctltbrtx, Lipitor, more!
Praacription Suyera Gro~.
1·86e.887-1283

MailinQ Our Sales BrOChures!
•ree S\~Wiea. Postagel
Start lmmeellal&amp;lyl
Gtnul"" Opwtu~tyl
FQf Free Information.
Call Tou Free·
1-1100-351•1t 70

(S0.1 01 lor each one
hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (51
years. The Polls lor
said
Election will
open at 6:30 o'clock
am and ramaln open
until 7: 30 o'clock pm
of said day.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio.
John
N.
lhlo,
Chairperson
Rita D. Smllh, Director
(1op , t4, 21 , 28

In WaaiUa . .A.Iaska
Es&amp;~y Contell Oetaila
'INM.waslllaconteal.com
0&lt; SASE' Wasil~ Web World
713 W. Pfl'ka Hwy. C. 130
Waolla, At&lt; 99$54 $11X\'per enrry

Coda,

Sections 3501.11 (GI,
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pur.-

suance

of

· a

of tho
County
Commissioners . of
the County of Meigs,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
passed on the 31st
day · of July, 2003,
!hero will be •submit·
ted to a vote of the
people of sold subdl·
vision at a General
Election to be hold In
the County of Meigs,
Ohio, at the regular
places
of
voting
!herein, on the ~th day
l!osolutlon
Board
of

a

construction ,

operation of Car1e1on
School and Meigs
Industries Workshop

for
persons
witti
Mental Retardation
and Developmental
Disabilities
Said tax being : 2 An
additional tax of 2
mills at a rate not
exceeding 2 mills lor
each one dollar of valuation,
which
amounts to twenty
cents ($0.201 lor each
one hundred dollars

of valuation, for five
(51 years. Tho Polls lor
said
Election
will
open at 6:30 o'clock
am and remain open
until 7:30 o'clock pm
of sold dey.
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio.
John
N.
lhlo,
Chairperson
Rita D. Smhh, Director
(10P, 14, 21,28

Public Notice
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS ·
Releranca:
5715.17 Ohio Revised
Code
Tho Meigs County
Board of Revision has
completed Its work of
equalization. The tax

returns for tax year
2003
have
been
!'&lt;!Vised and the value·
lions completed and

are open far public
Inspection
In
the
office of the Meigs
County
Auditor,
Soc.o nd
Floor,
Courthouse, Second
Stroot, Pomeroy, OH.
Complaints against

the

valuations,

as

with Section 5715.18
of lhe Ohio Revised
Code. Those complolnta must be filed
on forms which will
turnlahod by the
county Auditor and
must be filed In the
County
Auditor's
Office on or before
tho 31st dey of March .
2004. All complaints
·rued with the. Couniy
Auditor will 11&lt;1 hoard
by the Board, of
Revision In the manner
provided · by
Section 5715~ 19 ollhe
Ohio Revised Code.
Nancy Parker Gruoaer
Meigs County Auditor
(101 6, 1,
9, 10, .13,
14,15,16, 17

oo

a,

+

25
26
27

J 9 3 2
K6 2

We"t
PMs

North
3 NT

New Ho mes • Vinyl
Siding' • New Garages
. • Replacenienl
Windows • Roofing

..,__
F:ast
All pass

A Berrer

ftl&gt;t&gt;L~

A.._,l&gt;
,..

.A 'Oyl
0Vf~ Tf'tf
.

Linda's 13eauty Sfioy

JIJMPI/'16

U1!/comes Betty Hosclw r

0
"====--~M~~O~fol:!;_·
...:=:__:_____::.~~:::'!!!.J~~ZJ

Our Fall Specials:

;;.

Color &amp; Perms 25"
Ladles Style CUts 11"
Klds&amp;MenS"

''DEAR ELVINEY,
WHAR ARE
MY SOCKS?"

Longtr Hair Slightly Hrgllfr
"1'ann1NOAW
,,g vm·rtl bl "

!

.

H1Jllcius or Appoillllnr uts 11'4'friJIII4' a uylim r.
9SJ-JJ48 Tl11m lu fi~r J'OIIr busi nrH.

i

••••
•

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

45771

New&amp; Used

475 South'Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

P'16 IfTf\E ~PN&gt;\ t

II

1-800-822-0417

Hours

"W.V's # I C hevy. Po n t iac. IJ u ir k . Old s

GEX IN. ((\'1' ""'
&lt;:.·fi'.AIL 1-.1~\ ~ rn::lU&lt;*\,
~ow t'l(\ GETIII'IG :&lt;:&gt;PN'II lt-ll'\'&lt;
FOR.IONf COOK.I€.:'5&gt; I

Va r

R.B.

"I lost my shirt"
' '""'",.. 11nthestock
market!"
/

Trucking

more exp erienced player will derive

!ar more benelit.
Each chapter begins wilh a quota·
ti o n from " Pract ical A ridge" by W.
Dalton, which was published in 1908,
and end s with a quiz
In thi s deal. vou are South in three
no-tru mp HoW would you p!a n t he
play afler West leads the spade six and
East puts up the king? What would you
do if your diamonds were switched
with dummy's?
You have seven top tricks: one spade,
thre e hear ts, one diamond and two
cl ubs. You will get the extr as from dia·
monds.
Suppose you win the firs t trick and
take the diamond finesse . lr it wins, no
by Luis Campos
worries; but when it loses. East "pushes
Celebrity
Cipher
ci)'Pfograms
are crea1ee1 from quotatiOns oy famous
through the spa de nine (the higher of
people, past and present. Each lener 1n the cipher stands tor another.
two remaining ca rdsl . and West takes
Today's clue: P equals K
four tricks in the suit for one down.
Instead. hold up your spade ace until
t he third round . Then. when you take ., J y T
LYDEMN
0
BDMFIRBF
the losing diamond finesse. East has no
spades left. {Qr, if he does, presumably
SF1UFGB
LBIRWKFI
R B
the suit is splitting 4·4 and you will lose R
only t hree spades and one diarnond.J
When the diamonds are switched. B Y F
ZFNLONF
0 u
X T
the diamond finesse will be taken into
the West hand. Now it is correct to win
lhe rirst tri ck, because with West' on XOWN? "
l ead. your r cmaihing jack · fou r of
spades stop s the suit.
CMRNOXOI
WRZDPOC
The book is 518.95 po!itpaid from
Baron Barclay Bridge Suppl ies. Ca ll
SLTGYORBIOL.eL
(8001274-222 1 to order.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Dean Hill

740·949·2217

L__..:::::::?.::=:~C~~~l_j

ow

ftAstro:

HAULING:
• Limestone
• Sand

My money is w 1th

Rocky Hupp Insurance

and financial Services.

•Ag Lime

Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone, 843-5264 ."

746-985-3564

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds sta

;

•HOME
MAINTENANCE
.SEAf11LESS
GUTHR

6:30

Let me do 1t for youl

11M GOING TO TAKE Tl-115 LEAF

'(OU COULD TALK ABOUT
I-lOW WE ALL FEEL SORT
OF SAD Wl-iEN TI-lE LEAVES
6E61N TO FALL. ...

SC~OOL FOR ''SHOW AND TELL~:
WI-IAT DO '1'00 Ti-UNK I
S~OOLD SAY ABOUT IT ?

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

~1---'IR.I

l SI-IOULD FEEL SAD
BECAUSE A LEAF FELL?

Buy $5.1JII
Bonanza Gel
SFREE

YOUNG'S

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BETTY

• Room Adclltlona &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters ·
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pal"ntlng
• Patio and Porch Decks

~UT ii1E GAAI~

HASN'T EVEN

'

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1/

'

/

I

'

~AAT'EO

I

'lET...

992 -6215

'

'Pome1oy, OhiO
22 Years Loc I

SHOTOKAN KARATE
Beginner class a1
6 :00 to 7:00 9/15103
Eastern High
Cafeteria
into. Qa1J
985-3894 ·~

740-992-5232

CAN'T... ReACH .••
IT•••

WHY PON'T

YOU N'CNE?

I A~5U'ME
'o'OU'RE
1'AI..KING

0
0
0

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(lO'xlO' 610'x2D')

0

0

'11 TT I
~1\MEA

I' I' I I
A RN0 G
I 17 I___.L.J
II......J.-.l._.J.

i _=o
',

6

r---------.

My exper iencas

with buying :
.
th at expe ne n ce e.1 ables you to ·
recognize a mistake when you - •

cars was upset1rng. I've concluded

,;.;
~~~:~:N th• chuck!• ouo•od
~er-T'"JM~Oi-I.:.:.K,. : DJ:. . ;. I .9N.,..J-II-~t

L.- ' - ·- ' - ·-'---L--L.-l.

@

by filling in tht tniSIIng words
you develop from .SltP No. :l below.

I' I'

I, I' I' I' I' I' I' I~
I I I I I I I I I I 1·

Pi! N T NUMiE &lt;ED
LE TTE RS

it

SC!IAM-lETS ANSWIU
Crafty · Onion· Tempo - Wildly- PARTY Lliv£
. A fter l1ste nm g to 1he news concern 1ng illegal wire tapIng gran ny 1nbrmed m e that in her day 1t was called a
PARTY LINE .

who is progressive In his Of her thinking. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Stop war·
ryi ng about what the other guys have and
cal activity. It may.be fun whil&amp; 1t lasts. but
start enjoying what you possess .
your sore muscles will belie tMt fac1 1ater
Adopting unreasonable desires cou ld
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - - Success
cause you to be discontent with your preIn your c~ reer endeavors is in the oHing
sent lot in life.
today. prov1Cieo you don't put pressure on
ARIES (March 21 · Apr il 19) yourself to accomplish more than is real·
Maintaining harmony between you anel
istic You coulel choke and strangle your
your mate could be a bit more problemat·
deal the moment you do .
ic than usual. if either of you gets ott on
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Just remember
the wrong foot Ieday, a Clelicate but surethat a discussion with your friends isn't a ·
tOoted balancinQ act may be requ ired.
forum for the United Nations. In order to
TAUAUS (April 20-May 201- Don't. try to
maintain pe acefu l relationships, avoid
sweep your duties under the rug today.
unresolvable topics , such as politics or
Once you get all of your respohsib!Uties
religion.
properly laken care of, you'll feel relaxed
VIRGO (Aug. 23-St pt. 22) - It's natural
enough to give freely to your more mun·
for All of us to protect that which we feel
dane activities.
Is ours. HOwever. today be careful no! to
GEMINI (May 2~ -June 20)- Be careful
carry this to the point !hal you become
not to go overboard todsy If you lnvotve
overly possessive or selfish when cleaH"Q
yourself In some form ol strenuous physi·
with others .
TeLL '(o u WH&lt;l]':. L'L PL•Y
ibu ore-on -ore 'lb12 1T
W~EveR

WI N&lt;; GeTS
To I&lt;"~P -me l&gt;oLL

Licensed &amp; Bonded
Ph 74Q-gg1·093J
Ceii74D·591-1073

ROBERT
BISSELL

• New Homes
• Garages

1'0 THE
CRUM!' ...

Fast
Results

SOUP TO NUTZ

J&amp;L t
Electric l

Advertise (740) 992 .. 3194
CONSTRICTION
992-6635
in this
space
SELF
STORAGE
for $50
n~~ ,.:;;,00
,u,.,.=•-r--?o:20 : $55.oo 740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare
;

n

L E :&lt; ..~ I T

Get

1toJ;;~~
High 81. Dry
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Syn cMronize yourse lf with the tide of
events in the year ahead lnsteael of trying
to swim against them and let the rhy1hm
ol life write a symphony for you. Tha t
success you desire is bome of perfect
har~ny .
'
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23 ) - You 'll get
what you give tOday and there is no sign
that knows that better than yours . If you
fail to be cooperative with others. don·t
ell.pect them to bend over backwards to
yield to you.
SCOAF'IO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - A tem·
pe ramental co-worker coulel be even
more difficult to get along with today. It
won't matter that you may be righl - if
you ignifa /lis or her fuse , you'll regret it.
SAGITTARIU S !Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- A
surefire for mula fo r stirrin g up trouble
today is to mix friends together who you
know ha ve a· hard lime being cordial to
each other. Don't equate you r easygoing
temperament with thei rs.
CA P.RICORN (DeC . 22 -Jan . 19' Should the hard, cold outside world not
tre at you as kindly toelay a!J you desente,
Clon· t go home and take it out on innocent
fam ily members . Find another way to
ve nt your steAm
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 -Feb . 19) Di'scussing your lalesl plans with the
wrong person today invites responses
lhat could be more destructive than help·
lui. Take ca re that the individual is one

Classifieds

Mru

Sefi·Storage

WAUl

Wednesday, Oct. B. 2003

PEANUTS

liNDA'S PAINTING

WQID

&lt;bJr &lt;Birthday ;

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Last Thursday of

*Free tsbmates*
949-1405

lrCTO A BAR,
WITH A
DUCK oN
HIS HEAP...

PR EVIOUS SOLUT ION - "It seems to me easieo 10 give ser·
mnn~ thAn to ~it throuah them ." - Rabbi lionel Blue

~Graph

!OUY WALKS

EVENT~

OM&lt;&gt; •~~

. HOWARDl.
WRITfSfl
I •ROOFING

A'INOUI&gt;ICE1'\ENTS. PKETT'I' l&gt;U L.L
EH . (,AN(,&gt; 1101i:.NIN(;, '
ANN0UNCE11ENTS · "'R.E
ONE l!.t&amp; SMOOlE·F!.ST
tN~TEIIt&gt; OF BEIN!O
THEY COULl&gt; BE : AN

NNotme!

• Di1t

l.r.-f-4---

somethmg rrom the book. I think a

SUS41H BIIU III

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

!""""!l!...,.,.-oound

. .With the holidays approaching, it is
t_
1me to start our look at recently pub· r
hshed books. t"irsl , "25 Ways to Make
More Tricks as Declarer" by Barbara
Seagram and David Bird !Master
Point Press, 2003).
·
It is marked Newcomerllntermediate ,
but alt hough a beginner would gel

750 East Sl ate Street Phone (740)593 -6671
Athens, Ohio
~

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

part
43 SouHProml11
Mllrio, Mich.
Car oplion 45 Glazier's
Puohpln
unH
Eortt.en46 Battery
waro pot
-'
24 Mob scene 47 Hopping
25 Caught
mod
a glimpse
50 Poleno
29 Lllck ot
color
competanco 52 Tatamio
30 - Mahol
53 Solem~~
32 Hert.l
oong
lnluolon
56 Murmur
35 Hordeno
lloftly
38 Author
58 Stoin flllor
- Dlne11n 59 Gentle b&lt;lw.
37 Caah
60 Bl..,.
diopon-.
42 Pnluro

19
21
22
23

•,..--+-+----!--_;

RE SID ENT IAL

740-992-7599

yowter

night
63 Ht
Glueo down 64 Sullivan
WolghHifl·
ond Murrow
er'a pride
65 Poetic
AI cede
odvarb
Vane dir.
66 Deacortoo'
Muhammed
nomt

By Phillip Alder

COMMERCIAL and

FREE ESTIMATES

oooked
coke
61 Prepare
ER otaflero
lor prtnr
Runway
62 Bock.fence
Ph~liquea

28 MOlt
DOWN
11gaclous
31 Sour,
1 Center
at cream
2 Lennon's
33 PBS
wile
3 Unmatched
reletlve
34 Korea·o
4 Prescribed
locetlon
ornounto
38 Capohow or 5 Emply
Moll
8 Ruohed
39 Ventilate
7 Tort lruH
40 Say In fun
8 Jolla
41 Monaoterletr 9 Take the
44 Woolen cop
podh.m
45 Cron~
10 Mldeoll
48 Facllllate
nation
49
14 Cothedrol

Opening lead ' i!&gt; 6

and

made ·in accordance

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

Win 1 HOule lftd Bu11M..

the question of levyIng tax, in excess of
the ten mill limitation,
lor tho benefit of
Meigs Coun1y lor 1ho
purpose of
Malnenanco, capital

ostabllohed lor tax
year 2003 must be

Public Notice

Revised

of November, 2003,

20
22

Dealer: South
Vulnerab le: Both
South
l NT

.,

suance

•

992-5479

1998 Mercede s ML320 SUV
4-wheel drive, 59,000 miles.
740·44 1·1377 leave amessaga.

F.asl
A K 9 7

Q I 0 862
J 9 7
¥ 10 862
7 5
• K 8 I
JSJ
\1 10 7
Soulh
A AJ 4
• A K3

+

IrlloA~:s~aroR51

r~

1986 Plymouth Voyager low
mileage engme, great
mecha]lical condition, body
&amp; paint good. $1,800. firm . - - - - - - - 740_256_6890
86 Chevy Conversion Va n.
Loaded, TVNCR, very nice,
1991 Dodge Spirit $550; new tires, low miles, $2 ,000
1989 Chevy 2500 pickup 080. 740-256·6476.
$1 ,895: 1994 Saturn $2 ,195;

~Bothers to $5,995:

Cellular

20 Games $20
367-7530

We Love You

i!&gt;
•
•
,fo

Shot width
Dlatrlet

18 Festive

A Q 10 6'
A 9 I! 4

Gallia County Democrat

CKC Jack Russell terrier ~ 985.5 Porsche Coupe, 20,
pup~ i es . 4 female $150. ~ 50,000 miles, real sharp.
740-256-1652.
$3,000 304-773-511 1.

Seeking new owners of
recently bought · Owaker
Parrot from Pets &amp; Plus.
Previous owners have valu·
ab)e Info. on his needs &amp;
accidents. (304)6 75 _6440
habits. Ple.ase call 740·4467_36_2_· - - - - - _
, G~age d~or, 7' hei(lht xd 16' Year
old
Shaltie,
w e woo en garage ocr.
(4) panels including (1) brown/white, hOuse broken,
~;~lass panel. complete wta ll great with kids, AKC regishardware for installation, tared $250 call 740·379$250. (740)992-6192
2179

12
13
15
16
17

;:;

Q5 I

iirift.:.;:;:;:;;:;:;;;~---..,
PETs
mRSALE

Iter

55 FrooJing
11 DIHntengle 57 Rum,.., ..,

I

Amish oak !able, 2 chairs,
2000 Model/Load Star/Dow
~nd-made , finished $350.
dolly, heavy duty/3500
lb new, save $150. 446GVW A, 205 75114 t ~ras,
:!506
$!!oOO, (740 1992 -6192
qtue Ridge Mountain - -- - - - - Rreplace insert wl lh cr·rcula- Firewood. seasoned oak
tll-.n fan. $500 call 740•445. $20. pickup load. You cui you
~ _
haul. Not respo nsible for

toeth
51 Bent
1 Porkl extro 53 DrHo edge
5 Shlveoy
54 Exploding

a Happineeo

5@!

L ~R~ I

MERCHANDISE

ACROSS

ALDER

ftaJ 1:,,,.eJ

Washer,
Dryer.
Air
Sons, M om . Dad,
FOR RENT
Conditioner for sale. $75 .00 4 full blooded Saint Bernard
all 3. (304)593-0852
puppies, $150.
Offices ,
(Downtown
2 CKC Jack Russell Terrier
Gallipolis) for rent. All alec·
I H. \ "\ ... 1'1 )I{ I \Ill 1\
pupp1es $125. 740·256·
tric, 3 roomS and a 4 rooms,
1652.
both on first floor, 400 Block
16
In Gallipolis. Both are clean Buy or sell
Riverine Atrican Grey Pa"rrot $400 00
&amp; nice. Phone 740-446- Antiques, 1124 East Ma in Call (740) 992·1987
9539.
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS.
\111(1 11\\lliSI
992·2526. Russ Moore, AKC Lab Pups . ~ Yellow
male $150 .. 1 black female Hondas. Chevys , Jeeps, etcl
rP,liji:O
;;;O;;;LD;;;;;;::;
S ~ 00. Shots &amp; wormed . Cars from $500. For listings
~ -B00-719· 3001 ext 3901
(304)773-51 03
M &amp;:EU.ANEOUS

;;;;;;H~OU;;;Gixn;;;;
'SEII;;;
"

------ - -NEA Cronword Puzzle

PHILLIP

BUUJ)JNG

r

The Dally Sentinel • Pase BS

Ad

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winte rs, Rio Grande, OH
Call740-245-5121.

SPAO:

----

www.mydallysenllneLcom
----·-"-.------.
-.
BRJDGE

SuPPI..IIs
""'--liiiiiiOiliiliioo_.l

Used Furniture Store. 130
Bulaville Pike. Mattresses,
dressers, couc hes. bunk
beds, bedroo m suites,
recliners , Grave monuments.
740-44 6- 4782.
Gallipolis. oH . Hrs. to-4pm.
Stop by.

Tuesday, October 7, 2003

Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2003

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

8u1 ik Oi ".s nol- Fa ll?. .

Yoo re

a Bt G 1&lt;: 'D.. \to.k,
Me .. vf' _ ___,

CREAM

THE GRIZZWELLS

'

..

• Complete

Remodeling

•

740·992-3961

,.
'•

.,

�Tuesday, October 7,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

..

2003

Arnold wins Ca1ifomia
recall election, A6

Marlins win
Game 1, Bt

Couch's ·big night saves Browns
.

'

(

Davis
said week before in home loss to Cincinnati.
BY TOM WITHERS
Couch proba- Not with their patchwork offensive line.
Associated Press
bly will start at ·· Not without a running game. Not withhome
this out Holcomb, who riddled the Steelers
BI;:REA - On the road, under the
Sunday against for 429 yards in January.
lights and before a skeptical national ·
0 a k 1a n d ·
And especially not in Pittsburgh,
television audience, lim Couch was
Holcomb,. who. where they had lost II of 12, most
reborn as an NR. starter.
has a hmrhne recently i,n the AFC playoffs in January.
Just in time. Couch might have saved
fracture m h1s
B
.th C h
.
ut WI . ouc 1eadmg the way,
the Browns' season, and maybe his right fibula, was Cleveland's No. 3
quarterback for the second straight Cleveland pulled off a 180-degree tumembattled career, too.
around.
•
Oozing confidence from the start, week Sunday.
From the outset, Couch was locked
"It's going to be my assumption that
Couch played his best all-around game
as a pro Sunday night, leading the lim Couch is probably going to be the in.
On his ftrst pass, Couch dropped
Browns to a stunning 33-13 win over quarterback again th1s week," Davis
said. "Until Kelly is 100 percent, there's back, spotted his target and hit wide
the Pittsburgh Steelers.
receiver Andre" Davis for a 23-yard
"Tim just wanted to prove to every- no real reason to make a change."
And
there
won't
be
if
Couch
plays
gain.
At that moment, Couch sensed it
one he could play," said wide receiver
like he did against the Steelers, rescuing was going to be a special night.
Kevin Johnsgn.
the
Browns (2-3) from the brink of hav"It just felt right," he said. "We got it
He did that, and then some.
rolling. That felt nice."
Couch, demoted to being Kelly ing their sea~on dissolve into disaster.
Go figure. Nobody could have seen
He was nearly flawless in the ftrSt
Holcomb's backup only to get his job
this
coming
from
Couch
or
Cleveland,
half,
going 16-of-17 for 169 yards and
back temporarily when Holcomb broke
his right leg, finished 20-of-25 for 208 which snapped a six-~ame losing streak two TDs. Couch's lone misfire was
yards and two touchdowns. He also ran to Pittsburgh and Davts' 0-5 start against when he smartly threw the ball away out
the Steelers.
of the end zone.
9 yards for a TO.
It was the Browns' most dominant
Criticized and booed by Browns fans
"Tim stepped up," running back
William Green said. "I can't say enough performance since returning to the for his indecisiveness the past four
about the way he played. He was a gen- league in 1999: It wasn't supposed to years, Couch made anotfr1Jeady P!ay
happen.
late in the first half to giv the Browns a
eral out there."
Not after the way they played the 23-10 lead.
On Monday, Browns coach Butch

Rolling right, Couch couldn't find an
open receiver. But instead of forcing a
throw, he tucked the ball and scampered
in untouched for Cleveland's first rushing score this sea~ori.
Once in the end zone, Couch punctuated the TO with a ferocious spike that
dug deep into Heinz Field and seemed
to release months of pent up frustration
for the former No. I overall draft pick.
"He showed great poise," Davis said.
"He was in total command. He made the
right checks, the right audibles. He
made very, very nice throws."
Couch needed the big game. If
Holcomb doesn ' t return soon, the
Browns need him more than ever. And
in ca~e the Browns decide not to keep
both quarterbacks next season, Couch
showed the rest of the NFL that he can
still win.
He al~ady had an idea of what TV
viewers thought of him.
"People probably think I'm a backup,
I'm a bust, the No. I pick, he 's sitting on
the bench," Couch said. "I knew it was
a national stage, a big audience, and I
wanted to come out and play well."
Couch did, and earned something as
good as a win. The chance to do it again.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)Mike Vanderjagt's 29yard field goal with 3:47
remaining in overtime
capped one of the greatest comebacks in NFL
hi story and gave the
Indianapolis Colts a 3835 victory over the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
on Monday night.
Peyton Manning rallied the Colts from a 3514 deficit with four minutes left in regulation ,
sending the game into
overtime on Ricky
Williams' 1-yard touchdown run with 35 seconds to play. Marvin
Harrison, who had two
touchdown catches. set
up the tying score with a
52-yard reception to the
Tampa Bay 5.
Harrison scored on
second-half receptions
of 37 and 28 yards, the
latter trimming Tampa
Bay 's lead to 35-28 with
2:29 remaining in regulation .
Indianapoli s
(5-0)
became the tirst team in
NFL history to win after
trailing by 21 or more
points with less than four
minutes to play in regulation.

Fax your
sports
news to:
446-3008

Histori.c marker celebrates Ponieroy's past·

SPORTS
• LeBron passes test. See
Page B1

0BITUARIFS
Page A5
• Card June Varian Lee, 54
• Gael Dudding, 79
• Donald Lee Alkire, 67
• James L. McHaffie
• Richard Lusher, Sr., 59
• Carriene Price, 66
• David R. Cline, 68
• Roy E. Greene, 68

WEATHER

National Hockey League

blame will fall on MacLean. After all, he put the
team together. He fired Dave King midway
through last season and took on the mantle of
COLUMBUS . _ The novelty of the coach, and now is also responsible for not only
Columbus Blue Jackets is wearing off.
the personnel but how it plays.
Heading into its fourth year, the franchise has
Nash carries much of the Blue Jackets' hopes.
proven to be viable in its market and has built a He put together a solid rookie year, totaling 17
solid fan base. About all that's left to ensure a goals and 22 assists in 74 games a year ago.
bright future is the most important item on any Almost everr mght he made a play or two that
team's checklist_ wins.
dazz!ed ,not J~St fans but oppon~nts. But often
The Blue Jackets set a team record with 29 '· he d1dn t fimsh off the play w1th a goal, frevictories a year ago while easing rookie sensa- quently drawmg enough attentiOn to get
tion Rick Nash into the lineup. Now Nash is knocked off the puck and taken out of the
bigger, smarter and stronger - and the Blue action.
Jackets had better be as well when they open the
"I feel a lot stronger out there and I feel my
new season Thursday-night in Atlanta.
strength will help me a lot," the 19-year-old said.
"We're a lot tougher team this year," Na~h
The franchise has moved forward in fits and
said. ".It's going to be a battle every night." · starts, opening up with 71 points before lapsing
After totaling 69 points_ a distant 23 behind to 54 and then last year approaching the success
Edmonton, the eighth and final playoff qualifier of their first season. Others have noticed the
in the Western Conference- the Blue Jackets upgrades in the roster for 2003-2004.
added speed and experience to a core of young
"They have some young kids that are going to
players to offset the loss of leading scorer Ray get better and better and that's part of the
Whitf)ey.
·
process," St. Louis coach Joel Quenneville said.
President, general manager and now full-time "They've added some speed and a little bit of
head coach Doug MacLean dipped into the skill to their lineup. You'll gradually see them
free"agent ranks to sign center Todd Marchant, get better."
·
winger Trevor Letowski and backup goaltender
MacLean hopes that the blend of youth and
Fred Brathwatte. Perhaps most Importantly, he veterans can override the failures on the road
picked up defenseman Darryl Sydor from and supply a solid work ethic throughout the
D~llas in exchange for Mike Sillil)ger and a season.
third-round draft pick.
"We changed the makeup of the team." he
"I feel good. I think we improved our team" said. "Klesla should be better. Nash will take a
MacLean said. "Of course; the proof is in the step. That's what it's all about."
pudding. I like our group; I think we're a Andrew Cassels (68 points), Espen Knutsen
tougher teQill to play against. Still, you've got to (w~o suffered through an injury-plagued year),
take it on the ice."
Wnght (19 goals), Geoff Sanderson (a club
Sydor gives Columbus someone it has sorely record 34 goals), David Vybomy (46 points)
lacked: a leader for the power play and a and defensemen Luke Richardson and Scott
defenseman whp can handle the puck.
Lachance are all proven commodities.
Marchant is among the quickest players in the
Rostislav Klesla, the team's ftrSt draft pick in
NHL, Letowski adds grit and attitude similar to 2000, showed signs of in the final month of last
teammate TYler Wright, and Brathwaite gives season of developing into a contributor on the
the Blue Jackets someone who can relieve blue line. The Blue Jackets' most recent frrst"
front-linerMarc Denis, wh6 set a leagu'e record round pick, right wing Nikolai Zherdev might
for minutes played.
add another young talent to the mix - if
The Blue Jackets were a respectable 20-14-5- MacLean can pry him away from his Russian
·
•
2 in the friendly confines of Nationwide Arena, Elite League team.
but a dismal 9-28-3-1 elsewhere.
Another one of those young guns, Denis, said ·
· "With the home record we had, we would he is optimistic.
. .
ruive been in the hunt," Letowski said. "We've
'There are a lot of good things we can look
just ~ot to, ~e! better on the road. You do that by forWard to," he said. "We'll definitely carry the
staymg withm the system and playing hard confidence and the swagger that comes with
e,very night."
winning a few games and performing well in
If the Blue Jackets get off to a rough start, the the preseason."

Oetallo on Page A2

BY RusTY MiLLER

Associated Press

LO'I'I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-8-7
f'lck 4 day: 1-7-1-1
Pick 3 night: 8-5-5
Pick 4 night: 8-Q-3-7
Buckeye 5: 5-17 -W:22-36

West VIrginia.
Dally 3: 4-9-3
Dally 4: Q-5-7-6
Cash 25: 1-9·13-14-18·22

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Ciassifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituaries
Sports .

B1-2, 6

Weather

A2

~

J.

MILES LAYTON

POMEROY Ohio's
Bicentennial Commission
recognized Pomeroy as one
of the Ohio River heritage
sites Tuesday at the Pomeroy
levee. The historic marker
was dedicated by a village
remembering its gloriou s
past, recognizing the present
and its belief in a future
filled with potential.
The cast-metal 4x4 · feet
marker wa
brought to
Pomeroy on the Chartanooga
Star which is visiting · J2 sites
on its 14-day journey. The
marker recognizes the spirit of
entrepreneurship and discovery that made Pomeroy one of
the most populated places in
Ohio in the 1800s. Margaret
Parker, Meigs County historian, said preservation echoes
an eternity for the future.
"It was a resilient people
that settled Pomeroy and the
same resilience is seen yet

Loan to
guarantee
Middleport
payroll
BY BRIAN

Mootly ounny, HI: 701, Ltw: 40s

Blue Jackets add to talent
base for fourth season

BY

jlayton@mydailysentinel.ocm

© 1003 Ohio Volley Publlshlng Co.

today, as the people of
Pomeroy strive to bring the
hustle and bustle of business
and visitors back to this beautiful town along the Ohio
River," she said. "We congratulate them for the preservation of the historic buildings and for keeping alive for
future generations the historic
founding of the town ."
Paul Reed, president of
Farmer's Bank, emceed the
event which brought politicians,
historians and the Meigs High
School band to the levee. He
quoted a line about Pomeroy
written by Clara Lochary which
captures the spirit of the people
·of Meigs County.
'"We l()()k to the future,"'
quoted Reed from a book
about Meigs County History
before he said, "How prolific
those five words were. It was
as if she was encouraging us to
be mindful that there are many
more chapters of Pomeroy history still to be written."
The inscription on the

marker highlighted the history of the village' s founder,
Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy, an
early landholder. and his
son-in -law, ·Valentine B.
Horton, both of whom were
influential in developing the
coal, salt and iron industries
of the region. It also includes
information on Horton who
pioneered the transportation
of coal by river. built the
world's first coal barges, and
in .1835, the first coal-fueled
towboat, "The Condor-"
"We would like to congratulate the people of Pomeroy
on this marker," said Mick
Davenport , Meigs Countv
Commissioner. ·
·
Pomeroy Mayor Victor
Young Ill who has lived in
Pomeroy all his life , 51
years, said he has seen the
village change, and remains
optimistic about its future
because of the people.
"The people are the
lifeblood of the village," he
said.

QU.EEN

Ohio:s Bicentennial Commission dedicated a historical mark·
er which recognizes ' Pomeroy as one of the Ohio River
Heritage sites. The marker which stands at the levee tells of
past industrialists who influenced the region with iron , coal
and salt. Pictured , left to right, are Mick Davenport, Meigs
Commissioner, John Musser. who coordinated the visit of the
Chatanooga Star and the dedication ceremony, Laura Galvi n.
Southeast Regional Coqrdinator for the Ohio Bicentennial
Commission. Chattanooga Star co-captains Mike Hoseman
and Pete Hoseman. Pomeroy Mayor Victor Young Ill , Margaret
Parker. president of the Meigs County Historical Society. and
Meigs County Commissioner J1m Sheets. (J. Miles Layton)

C~ ANDIDATES

J. REED

breedO "'Ydailysentinel.ocm
MIDDLEPORT - The
Village of Middleport will
rely on a bank loan to
make payroll in three village departments through
the end of the year.
Meeting in special session on Tuesday, council
passed an emergency resolution
authorizing
a
$70,000 line of credit
through Peoples Bank to
meet operatmg expenses
for the police department,
street department and
mayof's office. The loan
will require no collateral,
according to Village Fiscal
Officer Susie French.
Appropriations made for
those three general fund
departments have been
exhausted, according to
French, and without the
loan, the village will be
unable to meet payroll
expenses beginning with
that issued Oct 17.
Meanwhile, qne street
department employee has
been laid off, and anotheF
has transferred to the
sewer department, French
said. The village also
expects to issue a temporary layoff of the village
buiidmg inspector, who,
along with a custodian and
a secretary, are paid
through the mayor.'s
office.
The village has experienced increasing financial
difficulties this year, with
the loss of income tax payments from employees of
the Pomeroy Elementary
Middle
and • Meigs
Schools, and due to a
freeze in local government

Please see LOin, 15

Middleport
sets
'moonlight
madness'
promotion .
BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydaitysenti nel.ocm

Buckley said the farm
was very busy picking
green peppers before the
frost could harm them.
"We picked pep~rs like
crazy," Buckley smd.
The
next
morning.
Buckley said the frost
ignored the green peppers
and struck in other places.
Despite six weeks of rain
and an uncertain demand
. t!Jreatening any product a
Iarmer grows. Buckley said
it was a really good year.
Kneen said the pumpkin
crop was "hit or miss'' for
several farmers in Meigs
County. Buckley said their
. farm didn't produce many
pumpkins this year because
tt. is too risky. She said they
dtd sell the few pumpkins
they did have, but customer
demand is never certain

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport merchants wi II be
open late on Oi:t. 27 for their
annual "Moonlight Madness"
promotion . and plan' for that
e\ cnt and a holiday basket
bingo fundraiser were finalized
when
Middleport
Community Association met
on Tuesday morning.
President Tom Dooley
asked all merchants to
observe extended hours. from
6 to 9 p.m.. for the promotional event on Oct. 27. The
association will coordinate
gro up
advertising. and
Dooley said Pomeroy's merchants wi II be encouraged to
·join in the promotional event.
Advertising will also be
directed to the Point Pleasant.
W.Va. and Gallipolis markets, Dooley said.
Susan Baker of Ohio River
Bear Co. displayed a special
'' Bingo Santa'' bear to be
included in Longaberger baskets awarded in an upcoming
Bear Basket Bingo fundraiser
at
the
Feeney-Bennett
American Legion Hall on Nov.
13. Proceeds from the bingo
gan1e will help fund group
advertising during the holiday
season, as well as "big-ticket''
prizes to be awarded as part of
the annual "Shop Middleport''
promotion during the holiday
shopping season.
Last year, the association
awarded a big-screen television, DVD players. bicycles
and other large prizes
through weekly in-store
drawin~ .
designed
to
encourage local shopping.
The special bear will be

Please see Huvest. AS

Please see Madness. AS

Southern High School will have its homecoming match against Waterford High School Friday.
The homecoming queen candidates are left to right. back. Deana Pullins. Emily Hill, Stephanie
Bradford. Bethany Amberger and Amy Norman. Homecoming attendants are Jordan Neigler, a
JUnior, Chelsea Sm1th, a sophomore, and Jessica Lyons, a freshman. (J. Miles Layton)

Average harvest despite the odds
BY

J.

~ILES LAYTON

jlayton@mydailysentinel.ocm
POMEROY - · The harvest did not suffer too much
from a wet summer or an
early frost in Meigs County.
Hal
Kneen,
Meigs
County
Agricultural
Extension Agent, said the
early crops were affected
by tlie wet weather, but not
the late ones. When it rains,
puddles develop even with
proper drainage . This
chokes off the oXJ(gen suppI y to plants and '1:an have
an impact on their growth.
The rain also delayed early
planting.
"The wet weather affected the early settings," said
Kneen. "The planting started later than usuaL"
Kneen said prices have
been up because · yields

have been down. Last week
there. ,was an early frost
warmng that Kneen said
caused farmers to hurriedly
puli their crops in before
the near freezmg temperalure's at night and frost
could damage or destroy
theiJl. Kneen said it was an
average year for the famous
Ohfo River tomatoes and a
good year for green peppers.
. .
Chester and
Dottle
Buckle~ own a farm in
Reedsville. They grow
tomatoes, green peppers.
pumpkins, potatoes !ind
other ptoduce. Dottle srud It
was an excellent year for
tomatoes.
"We ~.ad a re~lly Rood
harvest, she sa1d. The
tomatoes that we had were
tops. We couldn't ask for
better. The rain must have
been good for them."

Emergency Nurses Week
is October 5 ., ·1.1
· En~ergency Nurses
is October 8 ·
'

Holz~r Medical Center salutes our "Amazing"
· Emergency Department nurses during
this
on.
~

--~------

-

Day

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