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,._

...

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•

Reynolds snspended
for injuring Sorgi, B6

Corey Dillon returns

to practice, B6

SPORTS

Trussell: Transfers would allow deputies to return.

• BoSox, Yankees even in
ALCS. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY Meigs
County
Sheriff
Ralph
Trussell has requested the
transfer of nearly $ 112,000
within his budget's line items
in hopes of returning deputies
to the road and office for the
remainder of the year.

Trussell sent a written
request to the Meigs County
Commissioners on Friday,
asking for the transfer of
$62,000 set aside for housing
of prisoners, $29,883.35
appropriated for food for
prisoners, and $20,000 for
medical expenses for prisoners into his salaries line.
Commissioners have previously denied Trussell's request

for
the
transfer of
money set
aside for
.
'
pnsoners
food, citing
the pending
civil lawsuit Trussell
filed in the
Fourth
District

Court of Appeals. asking for a
writ of mandamus ordering
additional general fund appropriations.
However,
the
board
approved a request Trussell
made last week for the transfer of $7,000 inro his salaries
line, allowing Trussell to pay
his son, Scott, who returned
to work as the force 's senior
officer earlier this month.

Trussell

According to Trussell, tht&lt;
$ 111 .883.35 transfer, if
approved, would allow him
to return all 13 deputies, laid
off this summer. to work,
and would also leave the
necessary fund s in the three
line items to fini sh out thci
year. The legal responsibilit)'
for housing, food and med,

Pluse ... Retum.AS

Union workers at Kroger:
stores vote to strike
·
made that money for them. It
was the average employee
that made it."
Twenty stores normally
close at midnight. A Kroger
spokesman said the company
planned to close all 44 stores
at midnight Monday.
" Kroger will not operate
those 44 stores for the duration of the work stoppage.
although store pharmac1es
will remain open so the customers can have their prescriptions filled," said Archie
Fralin, a spokesman for
Kroger's mid-Atlantic region
in Roanoke. Va.
In small towns such as
Gauley Bridge. Kroger is the
only grocer in town. Some
res1dents planned to rely upon
convenience stores for the
basics and make infrequent
trips to grocery stores in other
towns.
"We'll just pack up the
coolers and head to Beckley,"
said Betty Kincaid, who Jives
near Gauley Bridge. about 35
miles nonh of Beckley.
Kroger i~ West Vi · · 's fourth
largest employer. wi~5.100
employees statewide.
Stores in West Virginia's
Northern Panhandle are represented by a different local and
are. not affected by the strike,
said Leonard Terranova, a
spokesman with Kroger's
Great Lakes division.
Clerks at Kroger Co.'s
Ralphs and Pavilions walked
out late Saurday in Los
Angeles, along with two other
maJOr supermarket chains.
Replacement workers were
hired there .
In Missouri , about 10,000
United Food &amp; Commercial

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Rex O'Brien·

INSIDE
• Time Out for Tips. See
PageA2
• Precious Memories
now offering doughnuts.
See Page ·A3
• Community calendar.
See Page AS

WEATllER

~·!JIIoliijr..liit ' . Latili'.....
.'

Details on Pace A2

LoTIERIFS
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-0-7
Pick 4 day: 2-6-0-0
Pick 3 night: 7-4-4
Pick 4 night: 6-4-9-1
Buckeye 5: 5-1 0-14-17-30

Please see Union. A5
•

Middleport mobile home
regulations approved ·

West VIrginia
Dally 3: 3-7-4
Dally 4: 0-5-5-2
Cash 25:8-9-10-12-13-24

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

INDEX
2 SI!CilONS- 12 PAGES

calendars

As

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

82-4

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

8s

A3..

A4
As
As
81-2, 6

M.

® aoos Ohio Valley Publlahln&amp; Co.

MIDDLEPORT - "This
is something everyone can
live with."
Middleport Councilman
Stephen Houchins said
compromise between village council, the planning
commission and a special
committee appointed · to
consider mobile home
restrictions helped secure
the passage of the new regulations
on
Monday
evening.
The ordinance, which
strengthens a 1965 ordinance regulating the placement of manufactured
homes, passed by a 3-2 vote

last night, before a room
filled with village residents.
Councilman
Roger
Manley, who was excused
from the meeting just prior
to the vote on the measure,
proposed two compromise
amendments to the pro-.
posed ordinance, reducing
the minimum front and back
yard dimensions from 20
feet to 15 feet, and increasing the m~~Ximum age of
homes which can be moved
into the village from five
years to eight.
Manley, who owns rental
mobile homes in the village,
has abstained from voting
.on the measure, and left the
,........ Approved. A5

........

Birthday reunites old classmates
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - A 9lst
birthday is a landmark
wonh sharing with friends.
Thelma. Biddle Hayes of
Chester did just that on
Monday, celebrating her
special day with some 20 of
her best girlfriends including two friends who
were former classmates
'back in the day.'
Joining together at Crow's
Family Restaurant for cake,
ice cream and coffee, the
ladies shared memories of
!heir ·common experiences,
enjoyed old photo~raph s of
the 'birthday g1rl and
caught up on one an'other's
lives today.

.....,_
Thelma Hayes , center, celebrated her 91st birthday with a
host of friends Monday, but none were more important than
the two seated beside her, Erma Cleland aod Mae Vineyard,
who attended school with Hayes at New Hope School at
PIMH ... Blrthclllf. A5 Chester. (Brian J. Reed)

Are you cQrlng for
your ·aging parents?
Call Holzer Extra Care to receive a FREE copy
of our brochure, "Caring for Aging.Parents".
Discover the Holzer Differen·ce
-EXTRA CARE-

www.holzer.org

(740) 446·9560 • 1·800·920·8860
.,

�Page.A2

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy PD cracks down on domestic violence-

Wednesday, Oct. 15
AccuWeather.com forecast tor davtime condHions lowfhioh temoaratures

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

~

-!..

MICH

····. . . , .---··-:· •

I Toledo ••2"/58'

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-~ ' I Ctovetand i44'153:J
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and Shane.
At approximately 6:27
p.m. Friday, Shane contacted
the Pomeroy Police to report
POMEROY Ronald that Keyes was in her home
Keyes. 39, is scheduled to be on Wetzgall AvellUe. Police
arraigned in Meigs . County corporal Ronnie Spa'un
• Court today on a charge of arrived at the scene. and soon
violating a temporary pro· found Keyes walkmg down
tection order issued on
behalf of a woman earlier Butternut Avenue. Police said
Keyes fled wh~n officers
convicted of stabbing him.
attempted
to contact htm.
In September, Patty Shane,
Officers
Keyes,
43. was convicted by the Meigs captured himpursued
and
transponed
County Court for domestic vio- him to the Middleport Jail
lence against Keyes who she
where he was incarcerated.
stabbed in her home.
While sentencing ·Shane, He was charged with disor. the Co!lrt issued a temporary derly conduct by intoxicaprotection order to · prevent tion . Keyes also had two warany contact between Keyes rants outstanding from Meigs
BY

. I P'-

''"';j""

I, _ 1....-J •

~ ~.

'il

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/ ·

(

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1!!D

: '·/ ·~ Poriim~h ]·'·~· ~

- W
.VA.

...!~~;.. · - ·
[CJ~•;tr~.J.~~-~~

/a

.... ~

·(~

C 2003 AccuWeath«. Inc.

0 .....

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

( \i

Showers

T·storm!

Rein

Flurries

Snow

Friday... Partly. cloudy with
a 30 percent chance of light
rain. High around 56.
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of light rain . Low
around 37.
Saturday .. .Partly cloudy.
High around 54.
Saturday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Low around 37.
Sur~day ... Partly
cloudy.
High around 56.
Sunday
night ...Partly
cloudy. Low around 38.
Monday ... Partly doudy.
Highs around 61.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A DAY ON WALL STREET
10,000
9,500
9,000

9.764.38
Pct.c=.
trom
: +0.93

JUL
High
9,783.49

8,500

SEP
OCT
AUG
Low
Racorrl high: 11,722.98
9,675.57
Jan. 14,2000

Oct. 13, 2003

a,ooo

Nasdaq

1,800

wtfCSlte

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

JUL
High
1,940.97

collision

Pct.o=.,.
from
: +0.95

1,400

L&lt;&gt;w
1,921.96

Oct 13,2003

1 .~0

start:lml&amp;

1,000

R:xms500

............:

del~ys

SEP
OCT
Rtoord high: M48.62
Mareh 10. 2000

AUG

traffic
BY

950
JUL
HI_.
1,048.90

1,045.35

Pct.c;:?:...: .+0.70
tram

AUG
Low
1,038.06

~ 24.74

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

AD Shell - 48.56
Rockwell- 28.45
Sears - 50.68

Gannetl - 79.94

Akzo-32.65
Ashland Inc. - 35.73
BBT-37.53
BLI - 15.15
Bob EIIBI'lS - 28.64
89&lt;11Wamer- 77.35
City HoiOOg- 35.91
Champion- 4.35
Charmng S!10PS- 6.64
Col-26.48
Duf'&lt;lnt-40.50
DG-21 .47
Federal MogU - 21

General Elec1ric - 28.93
GKNLY-4.65
Hark&gt;! Davidson - 51 .55
KmM-30.50
'

SBC - 21.70
AT&amp;T-20.15

USB-25.33
Wen&amp;/s - 35.81
WaJ.Man- 56.95
Worthington - 14

Kroger- 19.26
Ltd. - 1728
NSC-18.62

Oak Hill Financial- 30.10

Dei~ stock reports ""' the

BankOoo -41.15
CNB-25.75
Peoples - 28.11
Pepsico - 48.33

4

p.m. dosi'lg quotes ot

the pr!!Vilus day's transactions, provided by Smntl
Par1ners at Advest Inc. ot

Premier- a.n

Gallipoli&amp;

Rod&lt;y Boots - 11 97

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPS 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

afternoon,
Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday. 111 Court
accurate. H you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The .Associated Press

Our main number Is
{740) 992-2156.

Department extensions are:

Published . e'Jery

and

the

Ohio

Newspaper

Association.

Pollmaater: Send address correc·
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. EKI. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, E.:t. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, EKt. 13

Subscrlptlon,Rates
By carrl4\lr or motor roule

One month ............'9.95
One year ......... . .•.'1 19.40
Dally ..... . .. ....... ...50'

Advertising
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CIIHJCirc.: Judy

Clark. Eld. 10

Circulation
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General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
E·moll:
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Senior Citizen rates
One month ........ . ...'8.95
One year . ............'96.70
Subscribers

should

remit

A Share Draft Account is
similar to a NOW account,
but is through a credit union.
The National Credit Union
Share Insurance Fund, or
NCUSlF, is the insurer.
Money Market Deposit
Accounts usually have a predetermined minimum balance and only permit a limited number of checks be written within a month. Money
Market
Mutual
Fund
Accounts are comparable,
but are administered by
investment
companies.
Checks written on these
accounts may only be for
large amounts and are not
~uaranteed with federal
msurance.
Debit cards can also
access the money in your

,.
I

I

AGRICULTURE

GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer Medi cal
Center
Respi ratory
Therapy
Depanment announces its
third annual res piratory sy m-·
posium.
The one-day presentation
Will give respiratory care profess ional s the opporlunity to
learn and review different
as pects and concepts in the
respiratory field . Scheduled
for Friday. Oct. 17. the event

POMEROY - A twocar crash resulted in minor
injuries and extensive
vehicle damage about 7:50 ·
p.m. Friday at the intersection of Ohio 124 and Nye
Avenue.
Cheryl L. Fetty, 21, of
Point Pleasant, was driving
a 2004 Dodge east on Ohio
124 when she attempted to
left tum onto Nye Avenue.
Her vehicle was struck
head-on by a 1996 Chevy
driven by Jarrod M.
Woodall, 34, of Middleport
who was traveling west on
Qhio 124.
Fetty was charged with
failure to yield . . She and
her three-year-old daughter Brya and Woodall were
transported to Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis,
where they were treated
and later released.
The other passengers in
Fetty's vehicle included
Caleb Provost, 6, Alex
Fetty, I, and David H.
Fetty II. Both vehicles
were described as a total
loss hy the Pomeroy
Police Department.
Corporal Ronnie Spaun
conducted the accident
investigation with traffic
control and other assistance from Police Chief
Mark Proffitt and patrolman DaCI'id Woolard.

Memorize your · Personal
lderttification Number (PIN
number) and shield each
transaction from the view of
others. Never have the PIN
number written down with
your ATM card. A thief could
use the card with your PIN
number to steal your money.
Financial institutions may not
assess a fee if you use their
Automated Teller Machines.
However, if you go outside
their network, you may have
to pay a dollar or two to use
their ATMs, even if it is to
deposit money into your
account. This can become
quite costly.
Before choosing the right
checking account for you,
-·research your needs and situation. Carefully consider all
options, convenience features and costs before making your decision.

.'

,

Becky Baer is· the Meigs
County Extension Agent,
,Family
and Consumer
Sciences/Community
Development

M EDI CAl.

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequlpment.com

www.holzer.org
www.pvalley.org

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
NEWSPAPERS

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

www.mydailytribune.com
The Daily Sentinel

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Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com
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Wlivw.charter.com
·Take your business into the homes of over
40,000 consumers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs
Counties EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

·WEB SITE DIRECTORY

in areas where home

carrier service Is available.

Mall Subscription
tnolde Molga County

Oulolde Molga County
ta.weeks ............ .'50.05
R8tel

~

~

,The Daily Se~/ ' '
· Subsctibe

these upon completion of the
Symposium .
To attend, a .regiStration
form mu st be completed .
Forms may be obtained by
calling Moore at the
Res piratory
Therapy
Department at HMC at (740)
446-5919. Registrations are
limited and will be on a first
come , first served basis.
Registration deadline will be
Oct. 13, 2003. Registrations
received after the deadline
will be charged an additional
$1 0 late fee.
For regi stnition or general
information about this year 's
Respiratory Symposium, call
Moore at (740) 446-5919 .

t/Jddy •1191-2155

www.mydailyset~~mel.co!ft

26 Weeks ..•.. . .. .... .' 100.10
· 52 Weeks . . . ... ......'200.20

'

'

influenza vaccine i' newly ·
licensed in the U.S. thi' year.
For more informat ion about
it, you r reader' 'hould con·
suit their health-care profe , sionals. DEBORAH
WEXLER , M D . EXECU TIVE DIRECTOR. IMM UNIZATION
ACTION
COALITION
DEAR DR . WEXLER :
Thank you for your timely
remmder. From per,onal
exr.:rience, I can say that
ne!lher I nor my husband ha'
contracted the fl u 'ince we
began getting flu shot &gt;.
Other excellent candidate;
who should consider being
immunized include poli ce
and fire personnel. teachers.
bus drivers. and people who
come in contact with' the
public.
Readers. if you have
questions about influenza
vaccine, or any othe r vaccine, .you can find reliable
information by calling the
National
Immun izatio n
Information Hot line: (g()())
232-2522. or visit the Web
site : www . \~ accineinforrna ­
tion .org.
Dear AbbY is writtm by
Abigail Van Buren, ols;, ·
known as Jeanm• Phillips. ·
and wa s Jou11ded br her
mothe r. Pauli11 e Phillips. :
Write
Dea r Abb\'
ot
www. DearAbbv.com or PO.
Box 69440, LOJ Angeles. CA
90069.
.

Local folks
Russell first
birthday

Jim and Debbie Boyer are pictured with the mobile donut fryer
which produces mini-{)onuts from their Precious Memories
shop in Middleport. The donuts are now available Monday
through Saturday from 8 a.m.•to 5 p.m.
.
.
the Boyers' fryer enables . Questions
about the donut
'
them to go on location as a operation can be directed to
fundraising tool for organiza: Boyer at Precious Memories,
tions, Boyer said.
992-4292.
.

costs: Jason L. Bassett, seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Pickerington, speeding, $30 and Samuel H. Bullock, Detroit,
costs, seatbelt. $30 and costs;
Mi., speedi ng. $30 and costs;
James N. Biggs, Pomeroy, Jeffre y
D.
Burnside,
seatbelt, $30 and costs; Lakeworth, Fla., speeding,
Millie D. Bills, Union, speed- $30 and costs; Jeremy M.
ing, $25 and costs; Jeffrey A. Bury, Raleigh , N.C .. speed·
Bissell, Reedsville, $30 and ing, $30 and costs;
costs ; Michelle A. Bi ssell,
Kathleen Buschak, Little
Rutland, speeding, $30 and River, S.C., speeding, $30
costs; Ainber D. Blackwell, and costs; Bradlee R. Butler.
Pomeroy·, tinted gla ~ s, $20 Jackson, speeding, $30 and
and costs; Jesse A. Blythe. costs; Robert J. Calaway,
Columbus, seatbelt passen- Little Hocking, seatbelt, $30
ger, $20 and costs; Robert E. and costs; Warren H.
Boring , Pomeroy, seatbe lt , . Calaway, Reedsville. speed$30 and costs; James P. . in g. $30 and costs; RiCkey L.
Brady, Pomeroy, speeding, Campbell , Malta, seatbelt,
$30 and costs;
$45 and costs; Michael C.
Sallie
K.
Breakey, Carey, Middleport, speeding,
Pickerington, speeding, $30 $30 and costs; Seth E.
and · costs; Timothy D. Carleton, Reedsville, speed,
Brinager, Racine, seatbelt, ing, $30 and costs; Christina
$30 and costs, left of center, L. Carroll, Reedsville, seat$20 and costs; Joseph J. belt, $30 and costs.
Brown,
Albany,
traffic
cont/dev/signs, $35 and costs;
Debra K. Buck, Athens,
speeding, $30 and costs;
Hansen B. Buckley, Pomeroy,
seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Betty L. Bufkin, Gallipolis,

In compliance with provisions of Section 5721.03
of the Revised Code of the State of Ohio, there will
be published on November 17th and November 24,
2003, . in this newsp_aper, a delinquent land list
containing the description of the property as it
appears on the tax list, the name of the person in
whose name the property is listed, the amount of
taxes and penalties due and unpaid.
Each person charged with real property taxes
and penalties may pay t~e full amount of taxes at
the Meigs County Treasurer 1s Office by 4:00 p.m.
on November 10, 2003, to avoid publication.
To avoid additional interest charged on ..
December lst, a taxpayer may enter Into a written
agreement 'with the county Treasu·rer to PM' onefifth (1/5) of the delinquent taxes.
Nancy Parker Grueser
Meigs County Auditor

for only a $1 a day.

in

13 Weeks . . ...... . . .,. '30.15
26 Weeks . " .' ... .. . . . .'60.00
52 Weeks . . ...... ....' 1t8.BO

DEA R ABBY: Each year
in the United States. influen·
za kills 36,000 people and
hospitalizes 110,000 more .
Influenza's impact could be
greatly reduced if your readDear
ers would put "schedule flu
Abby
vaccination" on their to-do
lists today.
The vaccine is extremely
effective. Despite thi s. many
people for whom flu &gt;Vaccine
1s recommended fail to get months and younger are hosimmunized. Some presump- pitalized with tlu complications that keep people from tions at the same rate as people 65 and older.
being vaccinated:
The folluwing are some
MYTH I: The flu shot
of
the people for whom
can give you the flu .
FACT: The influenza shot influenza vaccine is recom·
cannot give you the flu . The mended in .the United States:
( I) People 50 and older.
injectable vaccine is· made
(2)
Anyone 6 months and
from "killed" influenza
older
who
has medical probvirus.
MYTH 2: If you don ' t get lems . such as heart or lung
the ·vaccine in October or disease (including asthma),
diabetes, kidney disease or a
November, it's too late.
FACT: Although it's best weak immune system.
(3) Women who will be
to be vaccinated in October
14
or more weeks pregnant
or November for maximum
between
December and
protection throughout the flu
season, people who are March. which is flu season.
(4) Health-care workers .
immunized tn December,
(5) Caregivers who work
January and February are
with
or live with people with
protected.
MYTH 3: Only people 65 t\le problems listed above .
(6) Anyone who wants to
and older need the influenza
a
void
the risk of spreading
vaccme.
the
flu
(and its possible comFACT: Flu vacci ne is recommended for everyone age pli'cations) to a loved one or
50 and older. But ANYONE friend . Flu vaccine protects
6 months or older can bene- not only you, but also the
fit from it. It 's hard to peop!e you care about.
A nasal spray form of
believe, but children 24

POMEROY - Alexa Ann
Russell, celebrnted her fmt birthday Sept 6 at the home of ll2' par·
ents, Michael and Julie Russell.
Attending were her grandparents, Tommy and Sally
Hill , Ted
a
n
d
Marsha
Russell ,
her greatgrandpare n t s ,
Eileen
Roush ,
Herbert
and Mary
Pugh and
Alexa Ann
Bi II
and
Russell
M a r y
Russell; and Todd, Renee
and Emma Powell, Tammy
and Jeff Hill, Roger and Jane
Ann Hill, Scott and Mary
Hill, Wayne and Linda
Russell, Don and Mary Hill,
Carissa,
Breanna
and
Hannah Bailey, Heath and
Kyle Hill, Roger and Shirley
Johnson, Gary and Joanne
Wilford, Cody Campbell ,

•·

Kim Swisher, Dave. Holly donated for the fund raiser by
and Justin Bennett.
Carol Smith of Jackson .

Wills to observe Murphy birth
66th annifiersary announced
RUTLAND - Al.legra and
Norman Will of 33655 Will
Nick Road, Rutland, 45775
will observe their 66th wedding anniversary Saturday.
They were married on Oct .
18, 1937 at McArthur in the
Church of Christ P.arsonage.
Mr. and Mrs. W1ll are the
parents of four chi ldren ,
Donna Higgins of Orient,
Duane Will of Point Pleasant,
and Danny Will of Pomeroy.
and a deceased son . Dean.
A family celebration will be
held to observe the occasion.

Winners
announced
POMEROY -· Among the
winners of prizes at the
Sternwheel Riverfest were
Carol Laudermilt, the boat;
Paul Chadwell , a set of
knives; and Rita Morrison, a
doll. The knives and doll were

Shannon and Leanna Davis
Murphy of Athens announce
the binh of a son. Dylan Eli.
born Sept. ~---~
16 at Holzer
Medical •
Center.
T

h

e

infanl
weighed 8
pounds. 10
ounces.
Mr. · and
M

r

s ,

Murphy
Dylan Ell
have anothMurphy
er
son,
Connor Wesley. and a daughter, Bethany Ann .
Maternal grandparents are
Dawana Davis of Middlepon
and Don and Mary Bush of
Racine. Paternal grandparents
are John and Debbie Murphy
of Athens. Maternal greatgrandparents are Delmar and
Deanna pavis of Langsville
and Suzanne Bush of Racine. :

Gospel concert to be held
POMEROY - A gospel
concert will be held at 7 p.m .
Saturday at the First
Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike near
Meigs High School.
Featured will be Mark
.Lanier, Garry Sheppard, and·
Randy Miller, artists who
have long been recognized
as outstanding in their fields.

Sheppard
and Miller
sang with
t

h

e

Kingsmen
and Lanier
w i t h
Perfect
Heart and
others.
There

Mark Lanier

will be a
love offer·
ing . The
pubic is
invited to
JOID
the
congregation in a
night of
go s pel
music.
Garry Sheppard

Nearly nine

DELinQUEnT
. REfll ESTHH PROPERTY nOTICE

advance direct tp The Daily
Sentinel. ·No subscription by mall
perm~ed

MIDDLEPORT - Minidonuts sold by the baker 's
dozen arc now available at
Pre cious Memories, · 145
Norlh
Second
Ave ..
Middleport.
Jim and Debbie Boyer use a
mobile donut fryer to make
their products, cinammon
sugar, powdered sugar, and
plain mini-donuts. A chocolate sauce for "Dippin '
Donuts" is also available. and
the Boy ers sell coffee to
accompany the sweets.
The donuts sell for $2 per
bag of 13, and the Boyers
offer a uelivery serv ice to
business accounts. The donuts
are available from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m.,
Monday
through
Saturday.
"The best time to come in is
· b~lween 8 and I 0 a.m.,
because the donuts are hot
right out of the fryer," Boyer
said. "Our mini-donuts have a
taste between that of a funnel
cake and an elephant ear."
The complete mobility of

POMEROY .
Cases
resolved in the Meigs Cou nty
Court of Judge Steve Story
between Aug . 25 and Oct. 10
are as follows :
Roy L. Bailey, Racine, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Thomas
M. Bailey, Syracuse, $20 and
costs; Michael A. Baker,
Long Bottom, seatbelt-passenger, $20 and costs ; Laurie
H. Barber, Reedsville, speeding, $30 and costs; Hollie C.
Bare, South Point, tinted
glass, $20 and costs; Harold ·
D. Barnes, Bidwell, speeding,
. $45 and costs; Constance A.
Barnett, Coolville, tinted
glass, $25 and costs;
Donna R. Barnhart, Racine,
failure to control, $20 and costs;
Steven V. Barnhart, Belpre, tinted glass, $20 and costs; Thomas
Barnhart, Syracuse, seat-belt,
$30 and costs; Terra R. Barton,
Middleport, speeding, $38 and

www.turnpikeflm.com

lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

Healthcare professional s
who should atte.nd this seminar include all 'respiratory
therapists, including those
from hospitals, long-term
care, doctor's offices, and
HMEIDM E: homecare/DME
business ow ners; registered
nurses: licensed practical
nurses; respiratory students;
and others who provipe respiratory services. SiK continu·
ing edu,ation units (CEU)
have been approved by the
American Association for
Res piratory Care (AARC) .
and attendees will rece ive

Prelolffi Memories now offering.doughnuts

·Cases heard
in Meigs
County Court

Pleasant Valley Hospital

CHURCHES

will take place in Conference
Rooms A aqd B of the
Hospital's Education and
Conference Center.
A variety of topics wi ll be
covered over the duration of
the Symposium . by several
health care . professional s
tncludtng, Wllliam Malley,
MS . RRT. Director of
Respiratory Services at West
Penn
Hospttal; Joseph
Lewarskt , BS , RRT, of
Hytech Home Care; Sall y
Betz, RN , MS, Program
Director of Trauma Services
at Ohio State University ;
Bruce Clay. MA , Licensed
In sight
Psychologi st at
Psychologi cal
Services ;
Christopher Clark. MD, of
Holzer Clinic; and Scott M.
Pettinichi , MEd, RRT, RCP,
of Cincinnati Childrens
Hospital · Medical Center.
The se minar will di sc u ~s
such subjects as arterial
blood gases, home care, trauma , pediatri c assessment ,
allergies and asthma. and
dealing with difficult people.
A special feature of the
Symposium is .a vendor dis- ··
play wi \h representation from
a number of local businesses
and organizations, which will
have the newest products on
hand to view.

Court news

Holzer Medical Center

AUTOMOTIVE

Turnpike· Ford of Gallipolis

CHESHIRE - Jennifer L.
Blackwell of Athens has been ·
promoted from associate human
resources assistant to human
resources assisw nt at Ohio
Valley Electric Corporation's
Kyger Creek plant.
ShejoinedOVEC in 2002.She
is a graduate of Ohio University
with a bachelor of business
administration in human resource .
management degree.

HMC to Host
Third Annual
Respiratory Fall
Symposium

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
Norris Northup .Dodge

Local Stocks
ACI

MILES LAYTON

Becky
Baer

checking account. A debit
card is sill'lilar to a credit
card, except the money is
immediately
withdrawn
from your checking account.
It's like an electronic check.
Record each transaction in
your check register to keep
your balance current.
Electronic Fund Transfer
(EFf) also uses a computerized system to conduct
financial business. Direct
deposits and automaticallydeducted payments provide
worry-free banking. You do
not have to physically write
checks nor make personal
transactions during banking
hours with this option.
Automated
Teller
Machines, or ATMs, provide
access to your account when
out of town or after business
hours. To use an ATM,
insert your ATM card and
type in your Personal
Identification Number or
PIN number. Follow the
automated prompts that will
allow you to make the transaction you want. Always
remember to record these
transactions in your check
register.

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

AP

AEP-29.61

J.

900

OCT

SEP

A checking account can
help you keep track of your
expenses, as well as a means
in which to pay them. With
a checking account, you
deposit money inro your
account, then you can write
checks for routine bills, payments sent by mail and anything that requires proof that
you· have paid for a product
or service.
Checking
accounts provide an easy
way to pay for items without
carryihg cash.
There are several different
types of checkin.g accounts
available. Banks may offer
regular accounts that have a
minimum balance requirement or service fee s. A
NOW
account,
or
Negotiable
Order
of
Withdrawal , will earn interest similar to a savings
account. There may be minimum balances and fees
associated with it. Make
sure your bank is insured
with the FDIC · the Federal
Depositor's
Insurance
Corporation. If so, your
account will be insured up to
$100,000 a11;ainst theft; fire
and bank failure. .

Head~on

1,800

1,933.53

Blackwell
promoted

reports, ..the vehicle sm~lled
of m;;rtJUana and alcohol.
Thomas DeWeese , 37, of
Middleport was arrested and
charged with operating a
motor vehicle under the
influence of drugs and alcohoi and driving wit~ a suspended license. S h a n n o n
Shoulderer, the passenger, ·
was ·charged with possessing
drug paraphernalia and with
talner Police
an open . con
·
reports satd DeWeese has
two war:ants outstandmg
from Metgs County Court
for contnbutmg_to the delmquency of a mmor and for
falsilication of information.

ALL ABOUT CHECKING ACCOUNTS

Ice

Showers &amp; thunderstorms
Today... Showers ... With a
chance of thunderstorms
mainly from afternoon on.
High around 66. Chance .of
rain I00 percent.
Tonight...Cloudy with a 40
percent chance of showers
then partly cloudy after midnight. Lows in the mid 40s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s.
·
We£1nesday night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Thursday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows around 41 .

County Coun for assault and
disorderly conduct. . .
ln. an unrelated mctdent,
Assistant Pomeroy Pohce
Chief Floyd
Hic k~an
responded to a call reportmg
an incident of domestic violence at 12:50 a.m. Saturday
morn mg. Stanley Watson, .
2~. of Pomeroy ~as charged
wtth domestic ~10lenc~ ·and
he was 1mmedtate~y mcarcerated m the Mtddleport
jail. He was scheduled to be
arraigned in Meigs County
Court today.
While on patrol , police
corporal Ronnie Spaun
pulled over a '1994 Chevy on
Liberty Lane. According to

Tuesday, October 14, 2003·

·Flu shots are·good protectiot:l
and won't give you the·flu

Local business briefs

·Time Out for Tips

~-·-·

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 14,2003

Ohio weather

PageA3

women suffer
heart disease.
Talk with your doctor about heart disease.
Learn more about heart health under
O'Bleness' Health Resources at
www.obleness.org, or call (740) 592-9300.

Find out if you are
one of them.
.IIJit

~~
·1~11-

.

OhioHealth
.

....
This worh.ens heart health initiative isprovided by O'Bieliess Memorial Hospital
In collaboration with OhioHealth.

�•

\

·
0 PINIQ N

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Tuesday, October 14. 2003

Tuesday, October 14, 2003-·

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

Bad press grows for .Bush·administration

- The Daily ·Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
· (740) 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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 14, the 287th day of2003. There are
78 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Oci. 14, 1947, Air f'orce
test pilot Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier as he tlew the
experimental Bell X-1 rocket plane over Edwards Air Force
Base in California.
On this date: In ·1066, Normans under William the
Conqueror defeated the English at the Batile of Hastings.
In 1890, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th president of the
United States, was born in Denison, Texas.
In 191 2, Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for the presidency, was shot in the chest in Milwaukee. Despite the
wound, he went ahead with a scheduled speech.
In 1933, Nazi Germany announced it was withdrawing from
the League of Nations.
·
In 1943, the Radio Corporation of America completed sale
of the NBC Blue radio network to bu si nessman Edward J.
Noble for $8 million; the network was renamed the American
Broadcasting Company.
.
.
In 1944, German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed
suicide rather than face execution for allegedly conspiring
against Adolf Hitler.
In I~60, the idea of a Peace Corps was first suggested by
Democratic presidential candidate John F Kennedy to an
audience of students at the University of Michigan.
In 1964, civil rights· leader Martin Luther King Jr. was
. ·named winner of the Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1968, the first live telecast from a manned U.S. spacecraft was transmitted from Apollo 7. .
In 1990, composer-conductor Leonard Bernstein died in
New York at age 72.
Ten years ago: U.S. helicopter pilot Michael Durant and a
Nigerian peacekeeper were freed by Somali fi ghters loyal to
Mohamed Farrah Aidid. In Haiti, gunmen assassinated Justice
Minister Guy Malary, a supporter of ousted President JeanBertrand Aristide.
Five years ago: Amartya Sen won the Nqbel .Prize in eco..
nomic s. 'Polka king' Frankie Yankovic died in Tampa, Fla. , at
age 83. Animal rights advocate and author Cleveland Amory
died in New York at age 81. The San Diego Padres won the
National League pennant, defeating the Atlanta Braves, 5-0,
in game six of their championship series.
One year ago: Another shooting linked to the Washington- •
area sniper: an FBI analyst was killed in a mall parking lot in
Falls Church, Va. , by a single bullet to the head. President
Bush called recent attacks in Kuwait, Indonesia and Yemen
part of a grim pattern of terror, and said , 'We've got a long
. way to go' to defeat Osama bin Laden 's global network . The
San Francisco Giants beat the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 to win
the National League championship series in five games.
Today's Birthdays: Golf Hall-of-Farner Beth Daniel is 47.
Singer-musician Thomas Dolby is 45. Singer Karyn White is
38. Actor Jon Seda is 33. Country musician Doug Virden ·
(Sons of the Desert) is 33. Country singer Natalie Maines
(Dixie Chicks) is 29. Actress-singer Shaznay Lewis (All
Saints) is 28. Singer Usher is 25. Actor Jordan Brower is 22.
Thought for Today: 'It is amazing how complete is the delusion that beauty is goodness.'-· Leo Tolstoy, Russian author
(1828-1910).
.

The recent weapons report
from Ira~, the leak of a CIA
operatives name and continuing reports of chaotic conditions in post ~war Iraq have
driven down President Bush's
Morton
polling numbers, even in such
Kondracke
previous areas of strength as
integrity and foreign policy
leadership. Bush must act
decisively if he hopes to
counter the decline.
for not reading Kay's interim
Chief U.S. weapons inspec- report and fairly representing
tor David Kay says he was it. The New York Times head' amazed' at U.S . press cover- line was 'No Illicit Arms.'
age of his findings in Iraq , but The Washington Post. 'No
he shouldn't have been. And Banned Weapons.' USA
that media reaction was partly Today, 'No Illegal Weapons.'
the fault of the Bush adminisReporting on the report
. tration.
opened the way for another
There were iwo stories to dtstortion, repeated both in
tell about the Kay report: (I) the media and by Democrats
that Kay's inspectors have yet - that Kay's findings demolto find actual weapons of ished Prestdent Bush's claim
mass destruction, and (2) that that Iraq presented an 'immithey found qbundant evidence nent' danger justifying war.
of weapons activity and ·In fac t. Bush said no such
effons to conceal them.
thing. In hi s State of the
Whoever concocted the Union message this year, he
press strategy for unveiling . said, 'So me have said we
the Kay tindings last week must not act until the threat is
should have known that the imminent. Since when have
media, if permitted to do so, · terrorists announced their
would fasten on the first and intentions, politely puttina us
ig no~e the second if given any on notice before they strtke ?
chance to do so.
·
If th is threat is permitted to
Some media bias against fu'lly and suddenly emerge, all
Bush may be involved in that words, all recrimination s
stance. The media's fascina- would come too late. Trusting
tion with bad news certainly in the sanity and restraint of
was. And so was the adminis- Saddam Hussein is not a strattration's ·constant response, egy, and it is not an option.'
when asked about WMD,
The entire, legitimately
that, 'We'll wait to see what controversial Bush doctrine
David Kay finds.'
of preemption is not that the
So, President Bush's public United ·States will strike only
relation s people should have when an attack is imminent,
figured out a way - whether but before a rogue state with
by leaks or public statements WMD can pass weapons off
- to get a combined story to a terrorist group.
out, preferably in one senIf Saddam Hussein in fact
tence: no WMD yet, but over- possessed no actual WMD,
whelming evidence of Iraqi but merely had multiple
experimentation , preparation weapons-research programs,
and massive deception.
that would undercut Bush's
The media deserves .blame argument for war:

...

$463, F&amp;AM, Harri sonville
Order of Eastern Star,
POMEROY
- . Rex Pomeroy Chapter #80, RAM,
O'Brien, 86, of 107 Holly Bosworth Council #46, and
Lane, Pomeroy, died on Ohio Valley Commandery
Sunday, Oct. 12, 2003, at #024.
Holzer Medical Center in · Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, June
Gallipolis.
and
Paul Eichinger of
He was born on Dec. I0,
Pomeroy
and Nancy and
1916, in Flora, son of the late
John
Rawlings
of Stewart; a
John and · Faye Miller
O'Brien. He was a former son and daughter-in-law.
Larry and Phyllis O'Brien of
emplo~ee of Columbia Gas.
of OhiO, and was a member Racine; seven grandchildren
of the Shade River Lodge and II great grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was

s;

Local briefs
Gospel sing set
BIDWELL - A gos pel
si ng will be held at 7 p.m.
Friday at the Poplar ndge
Free Will Bapti st Church.
Proceeds will go to toward
construction of a clinic in
Kenya. Singing will be
Mercr,, Proclaim, Delores
Cundtff, Earthen Vessells and
Sharon Faye. John Elswick,
pastor, invttes the public.

Correction
RACINE
Alli son
Gibeaut was the flower girl at
Southern Homecoming last
weekend. Her name was
reported
incorrectly
in
Monday's edition.

Play presented
ATHENS - "Welcome
Home," a play by W.R.
Smiddie of Pomeroy, will be
presented at the Unitarian
Fellowship of Athens at 8
p.m. on Oct. 31, 2J.m. and 8
p.m. on Nov. I, an 2 p.m. on
Nov. 2.
The play addresses . the

Approved
from PageA1

NOW
~HAT?

council meeting after the
amendments were approved.
Council members Bob
Pooler and Kathy Scott voted
against the ordinance, while
members Houchins, Linda
Haley and Bob Robinson
voted in favor of it.
The new regulations also
address minimum lot specifi·
cations, appraised value ·of
homes to locate in the vil·
lage, and porch. raiiing and
underpinning requirements,

.,

....
"

Union

Moderately Confused

·Rebirth offree speech·at colleges

HOMEWORK

&lt;!:&gt;

2003 by NEA, In&lt;:.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR ·
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters
should be in good taste,
.,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column · below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. editorial board,' unless otherwise noted.

.

s

Workers members have been
on strike at the St. Louis
area's three largest chain grocers since last Tuesday. The
96 stores affected by the dispute have hired temporary
workers and cut back hours
as a result of the strike. The
biggest sticking points are
medical costs and pay raises.
Jim Logan, a Baptist pastor
who works at the Kroger in
Beaver, said the company

~~~~~====~~==~
. ====~~··

eor

For years, as political correq'llire or prescribe speech, spectrum. FIRE's board , ol ·
rectness spread like a fungus
conduct or harassment codes which I am a member. also
over the nation's college
that impair the e·xercise of cuts across all such cate·.
cambp ushes, admini strators
rights protected under the ganes.
.
esta 1ts ed speech codes or
First Amendment.'
· . Reacting toReynolds:S ringinsened them into codes of
Thi s .does not mean , mg of the Ftrst Amendment
conduct. These codes punNat
Reynolds emphasized, that liberty bell , FIRE co-founder
ished students whose verbal
Hentoff
the OCR will weaken its pro- HarveY. Silverglate, a Boston
.or written remarks rttay have
hibitions of 'racial, disability ciVIl ltberttes and civil rights
offended other students on
and sexual harassment of stu- lawyer, said:
the basis of race, gender, di sdents.'
. 'Thi s_ letter .to college offi ability, sexual preference,
However, charges of dis- ctals w~ll certatnly put to rest
religion or national or ethnic conservative student new spa- · criminatory speech or other any clatms by future academ : •
origin.
pers a few years ago, an actions 'must include some- ic administrators that OCR o(
College
presidents, admini strator at -"Cornell thing beyond the mere federal law required them 16:
provosts and deans act as if University told me that those expression of views·, word•,
' pass ·spe
. ec h coctes or punish -·
h
t ey have di scovered a con- protests we~e simply acts of symbols or thought s that offenstve, hurtful or rude
stitutional right for students free expressiOn .
some person finds offensive. speech. as is now the routine.·
not to be offended. I have
At last, a landmark affir- ... The conduct must also be .. : Thts makes it clear that the '
heard
11 d from
r students at so· mation of First AmendrAent considered sufficiently· sert·- vt e wpotnt expressed in 3 •
ca e e tte uni~ersities as freedoms on college campus- ous to deny or limit a stu- remark, no matter how offen'-'
. well as r.ommumty colleges es has come from the U.S. dent's ability to participate in stve or chall engin g, can :
about how they censor them- Department of Education's or benefit from the educa- · never, by tlself, constitute '
selves on campus for fear of . Office 'for Civil Rights . tiona! program.'
harassment. • .
·
bemg targeted as racist, sex- (OCR). This department proBy
contrast,
among
Reynolds put it plainly· ·
tst, homo]Jhobtc or otherwise vtdes colleges and universi- Reynold's predecessors in the 'All action s• ta_ken by (th~ ·
found
g a ttes that receive federal funds OCR, there were commissars De part ment . o1 E.du catio n· ~~·:
1 · of fostenn
·
h ·1 gUilty
ostt e ea.rnm ~ ~nvtronment. (and that includes some pri- of political correctness who Office of CIVIl Rtghts must
~n.der susptcton are such vate um versities) ~ith ree;u- stunted free speech on col, comport
wtth
First-.
]lOltttcally tncorrect ~u es- lattons agamst dtscrimmatwn lege campuses. This suppres- Amendment prin ~iplcl . ·
lions as whether Chnsttan on the basis of race, ·gender sian of the very spirit of free
In my 1 t
d
h
ld
be
II
d
.
as Court
cun vc"ati
on
stu ents s ou
a owe to or other categories.
inquiry and di ssent - the with Supreme
Justice
have a campus club, or why
On Au g. 8, Gerald A. core of learning how to learn Wtlham Brennan, he ~aid of
the progeny of upper-class Reynolds, the OCR's assis- - has been continuing at all the rampant ~:oil~ &gt;peech
black parents s hould be enti- · lant secretary, sent a letter to too many colleges and uni- code_s. They uu 1 10 just
tied to affirmative action college and university offi- versities.
·
·
abolish all of 1 em.' And
when whites from poverty- · cials nationwide that the
In consta~t combat against now, Gerald A. Rcynold &amp;:i
level f~mili~s are not. In this De~artment . of Educatiqn's tht s tnfecttous educational as.si~tan! secretary, Office oi;
censonng climate, large ptles .anti-dtscnmmation regula- malpractice · is FIRE (the Ctvtl Rights, Depanment of·
of dtssentmg student · news- lion s 'are not intended to Foundation for Individual Education, has done just that
papers have been ; stolen restri ct the ellercise of any Rights in Education). Based
Congratulations!
:
before they're read, and even expre·ssive aCtivities protect- in Philadelphia, it defends
(Nat Hentoff is a national-·
burned, at many tollege ed
under
the
U.S. the free-speech rights of stu- ly_reiiOWII ed authqrity on the:
campuses.
,
·..
Constitution' ... OCR's regu- dents and professors across FrrstAmendmenrand the Bill
After two such bonftres of latiOns and policies ~o not the political and ideological of Rights.)
,.:
---,. ,....

. .. ..

'

issue of homeless children
through a story in which two
homeless teenagers convince
a middle-class professional to
taken them in for one night .
The cast of the play is made
up of local community actors
and School of Theater students.
Tickets are $10 at the door.
Unitarian Fellowship of
Athens ts located at 184
Longview Heights. Parental
di scretion is advised, due to
strong language.
Information is available
from Karen Chan at 594-8604.

Advisory issued

'•

'

.'

'

among other restrictions.
Ohio River on Front Street.
It is estimated that approxiThe Board of Public
mately 40 mobile homes in Affairs project will be
the village are now located in financed through a $68,000
areas where they are prohibit- state grant and local funds;
ed by zoning regulations, and although the source of the
council hopes the new regu- local funds has not yet been
lations, if enforced, will help determined.
Council also:
increase property values and
• Apfroved transfers total·
tax collections.
ing $! •724 in the parks and
recreation, tax refunds and
mayor's line items;
• Approved payment of
Council approved a con- bills m the amount of
tract with Crown Excavating $25.951.73;
of Gallipolis, in the amount
• Approved the mayor's
of $112,500, for repairs to the report of fines and fees colcombined sanitary and storm lected, in the amount of
sewer overflows along the $3,41 1.47.

Other business

and in 2005, along with lumpsum payments of $300-$500
in 2004 and 2006, as well as
an increase in the number of
full-time employees.
Pete Williams, president of
Kroger's
Mid-Atlantic
region, wrote a letter to
employees over the weekend
saying the company offers
generous benefits compared
to nonunion grocers like WalMart.
"Wal-Mart doesn 't have
anything to do with this,"
Atkins said.
After. a strike, some stores
may not reOpen, Williams said.

had become "too corporate."
For worlrers represented by
Local 400, Kroger proposed an
8 percent, or $9 million,
increase in what it pays into a
health and welfare fund administered by a third party on behalf
of the company and union.
An independent actuary
determined the fund needs an
additional $29 million,
Lowthers said.
Union members would
have to pay_ more for health
care, or suffer cuts in benefits
under Kroger's ·proposal.
The company's offer also
incl.uded hourly pay raises of
20-25 cents ·per hour this year

from PageA1
ly $10 million a year into a health and welfare
fund to cover its employees' medical bills.
Kroger is proposing to .mcrease that amount by
36%, to $ 13.6 million, over the next four years.
"Our offer is very fair, particularly in light
of soaring health care costs and the competiti"e threat posed by lower-cost, .non-union
retailers in West Virginia," said Pete
Williams, gresident of Kroger's Mid-Atlantic
division. ' Our health care costs have soared
by more than 50% over the past four years.
We are offering to increase what we pay so
that our employees can continue to receive
some of the most generous benefits in the
region. At the same time, we' re competing
against other retailers that pay far less in

Clubs and
·Organizations

Homecommgsl
R ·
eUniOnS

Concerts,
Shows
0

Residents urged to get flu shots

POMEROY Meeting
Thursday afternoon, Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved
appropriations
adjustments for the community
corrections program, prosecuting attorney, probate court, apiary inspections and coroner.

COOLVILLE - Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dtstrict
has issued a boil advisory for
the weekend for Calaway
Road in Orange Township in
Meigs County, and Bnster
Road in Carthage Township

wec~nellday, oct. 1s

· RUTLAND Rutland
Village Council will meet in
regular session at 6:30 p.m.
in council chambers.

Transfers
approved

Advisory lifted

RACINE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge 164
will hold a regular meeting at
7:30 p.m. on Thursday. All
members are urged to attend.

· Tuesday, Oct. 14
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
the town hall.

legal issues concerning served at noon. Take a fXY'Iolder adults . Reservations ered dish . The 1:30 p.m.
lor lunch are to be made by afternoon program will lea·
calling 992·3214 or 247- ture music by Black Water
2723. Guests are welcome. Run, a blue grass group,
Russell Spencer and the
,
Coe Family, Joe. Bob.
Christy and Mary. Pastor
Linda Damewood invites the
.
public.
Sunday, Oct. 19
RACINE - Morning Star
United Methodist Church will
observe its 75th anniversary
and homecoming with morning worship at 10 a .m., a
Sa1urday, Oct. 18
basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
POMEROY - A "triple
and the afternoon service at blessing" concert will be held
1:30 p.m . John Gilmore, pas- at · 7 p.m. at the First
Soiuthern Bapiist Church ,
tor, invites the public.
CARPENTER
.
41872
Pomeroy
Pike .
Homecoming
will
be Featured will be Mark Lanier,
observed at the Carpenter Gary Shepherd. and Randy
Baptist Church , State Route Miller, artists who have long ·
143. Sunday school will be been recognized ' as outheld at 9:30 a .m., and standing in · their fields .
preaching at 10:30 a.m. by Shepherd and Miller sang
Robert
Thompson lollowed with the Kingsmen and ·
.
by a carry-in dinner at noon . Lanier with Perfect Heart .
Afternoon service will begin and others. There will be a
· at 1:30 p.m. with singers to freewill offering. The pubic is
include the Builders Quartet, invited to join the church in a
Claudelle
Harbin , and night of gospiel music .
Sharon Fayer. John Elswick,
Sunday, Oct. 19
pastor, invites the public.
POMEROY
Gary
POMEROY
Shepherd will be in concert
Homecoming will be held at at the First Southern Baptist.
South Bethel Community 41872 Pomeroy Pike, at
Church, located on Silver 10:45 a .m. Shepherd has
Ridge, County Road 293 traveled with the Kingsmen
across from Eastern High and Perfect Heart for several
School.
Dinner will be years.

LETART FALLS - Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water Dtstrict
has lifted a boil advisory issued
Monday for Jenny Watt Run,
Apple Grove-Dorcas Rd.,
Manuel Rd., Rowe Rd., and
Mile Hill Rd. in Letart and
Sutton Townships. Results of a
sample are constdered safe.

in Athens County.
Consumers are asked to boil
cooking and drinking water
for three minutes before consuming it. Samples will be
taken and test results publicized when service is restored.
The advisory is due to the
repair of a matn line leak.

Lodge to meet

Public meetings

Tuesday, OC1. 14
HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville Chapter 255,
OES, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Current dues payable.
lr]stallation practice to follow
meeting .
Wednesday, Oct.15
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Literary Club will
meet at 2 p.m. at the home
of Phyllis Hackett. Leah Ord
will review "Memoirs of a
Geisha" by Robert Golden.
Thursday, Oct. 16
RACINE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge 164
will hold a regular meeting at
7:30 p.m. All members are
urged to attend.
Saturday, Oct. 18
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet for a noon luncheon at
Trinity Church . Judge Scott
Powell will speak on current

•

Kroger·

wages and benefits, and many don't provide
affordable health care benefits to their
employees."
Thirty-seven of the stores to be closed are
in West Virginia, five are in Ohio and two are
located in Kentucky. Williams said that when
the strike ends and an agreement is reached,
Kroger will re-open "as many as stores as we
believe at that time we can economically
operate."
Writesel said the strike might impact the
future of her store in Pomeroy.
"The store may be at risk for closing, but
we have to take that chance," she ·said. "We
have families to consider.
Kroger currently plans to keep the stores
closed for the duration of the strike, although
store pharmacies will remain open so that
customers can have their prescriptions filled.

·School in Tuppers- Plains. Walking miles to
and from school, the girls enjoyed the relative
luxury of a . school bus just one year during
their School career.
from PageA1
"Enma and I are the only people left from
the
Class of !930," Hayes said. "We had 24 in
Included in the .Jarty were ,several of
our
class, but the rest. ~f the class is gone
Hayes's c.ousins, .an two other friends who
now."
·
began school with Hayes at New Hope Grade
.Their muiuai' friendship has seen a lot of
School near Chester.
Erina Reed Cleland of Chester and Mae water flow beneath the bridge: loved ones
.. Osborne Vineyard of Tuppers Plains sat on · lost, times changed. B.ut life is what one
eitl!er side ?f the 11uest of honor, symbolizing makes of it, and the support of friends has
therr lang-ume fnendshtp whtch has spanned made ail of the difference, not only to Hayes,
nearly a century. Cleland and Hayes graduat- .but to her two close friends, liS well.
ed from Chester High School in 1930, while
"We stick together," Vineyard said. "We .
Vineyard graduated from Olive-Orange High always have."

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

hoeftich@mydailysentinet .com
POMEROY With flu
season just around the corner, the Meigs County
Health
Department
is
encouraging residents, particularly those who are
elderly or disabled, to get the
influenza vaccine .
The Health Department's
annual shot clinic where residents 65 or older with a
Medicare or Medicaid card
can get immunized at no
charge has been scheduled for
Oct. 3! at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
Railroad Medicare will also
be accepted this year. As in
previous years the cards must
be p~sented at the time the
shots are administered.
The immunization clinic
will again this ~ear be held in
conjunction wtth the Senior
Center 's health fair whe~
numerous a~encies and or~a­
nizations wJII be distributmg
educational information.
At the Oct. 31 clinic, shots

Return
from PageA1
ical costs for prisoners lies
with the commissioners. ·
The [rans fers wou ld leave
$15,000 in Trussell 's housing line and $5,000 in his
medical expenses line,. but
would leave no f un ds 10 the
fr-~ lt'ne The Met·gs County
uuu
·
Jail was closed last year, and
with prisoners being housed
in other jails in the region, a
fOod appropriation is unnecessary, Trussell has said in
the past.
"Historic expenses for this
budget year support that the

will
be
· given from
9 to II a. m.
and I to 3
p.m., but
only to the
elderly
(over65 ) or
those with
high risk
conditions.
. Sherry
"There is
Weeh, R.N. no indication of vaccine shortage. so
there is no need to arrive early
to avoid long lines," said
Sherry Weese. R. N. director
of nursing. Last year there
was a shortage and lines of
people wantin$ to be su~
they got thetr flu shots
extended around the building.
Weese said the influenza
vaccine for the elderly and atrisk has been provided by the
Ohio Department of Health.
She noted that additional flu
shot clinics will be held on
Monday. Nov. 3 from 9 to II
a.m. and I to 3 p.m., and on
Tuesday, Nov. 4 from 9 a.m. to
II a.m. at the health depart·
rnent. These, she said, will be

given to all residents as lotig as
~upplies last. There is a $10
charge for those who are
younger than 65 -years and
without a medical card.
Insurance cards are not accepted, said Weese, although she
noted client~ might be able to
submit their receipts for possible reimbu=ment.
"Influenza is a serious disease. caused by a virus that
spreads from infected persons
to the nose or throat of Olhers.
The season begins in
November and runs through
April. It causes fever, coogh.
chills. sore throat. headache
and muscle aches," said Weese.
"Rates of infection are
highest among children, but ·
rates of serious illness and
death are highest among persons aged 6S years or older
and persons of any age who
have medical conditions that
place them at high risk for
complications frommfluen·
za," she adPed.
Protection develops about
two weeks after the shot arid
may last up to a year.

funds as held (in line items
oilier than salaries) will not be
needed," Trussell wrote in his
letter
the
board.
10
"Inadequate staffing of the
sheriff's office is compromising the saJety and security of
the citizens of Meigs County,
as well as many judicial and
civil processes."
Trussell, whose budget
was subject to a $60,000 cut
in January as the resul( of
across-the-board cuts in
· ·
d b

the commissioners, said the
funds lying unused in the

three line items in question
will certainly be returned to
the county general fund at
Year's end if not used.
''This would only represent additional budget cuts
above an d beyon d I huse
experienced by other county
offices this year." Trussell
said.
l•a•p•p•ro•p•~•a!lltt•on•s-a.pp•r•o•vlll!e-•y-.--•------. .

Do You Just
Your sentinel
Nominate them for

"Carrier-of-the-Month"
If they are selected, your ~
carrier will wi~ dinner P/f;A%
.~
· for two at
p

'·

,,

•

' ·-

Pizza Hut
compliments of
Pizza Hut

Birthday

! ·
~

preceded in death by his wife,
Mary Swartz O'Brien; three
brothers: Frank. Vern and
· Charlie 0' Brien; and three
sisters: Linnie Leifheit, Etta
Cullums and Ada McClary.
Services will be held at I
p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 16.
2003 at Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Rev. Pete
Shaffer officiating. Burial
will follow at Burlingham
Cemetery.
Friends may call from 7 to
9 p.m. Wednesday at the
funeral home.

'

from PageA1

YOU'VE

Communtiy calendar

Rex O'Brien

.
Bush, the CIA and for the trouble it's in because•
Secretary of State Colin someone disclosed the name
Powell all said without reser- of CIA agent Valerie Plame in
vation that Iraq did possess apparent retaliation for h~t:
chemical and biological hu sband Joserh Wtlson
weapons.
; challen~e to clatms that Ir;iq
The failure to find them was trymg to buy uramum Ill'
does not represent a lie on Africa.
.
'
Bush's part, but it does repreIn the Plame leak,_tt would
sent a massive failure of U.S . be helpful if three thmgs hapintelligence but also pened: first, Attorney Gen.·
French, Italian and British John Ashcroft should recuse:
intelligence. all of which con- himself from any . personaL
curred that Iraq had WMD.
mvolvement m the mvesltga- ·
Parts of U.S. intelligence tion of the case whil~ not giv-"
specifically, special opera- ing in to Democratic demands
tions commandos - have for- an outside investigator.
done a spectacular job behind Career FBI and Ju sticC:
enemy lines in Afghanistan Department personnel can·
and Iraq.
handle it.
But those responsible for . Second, 1 any journalists
knowing what's going on in (besides columnist Bob Nova!\),
Iraq have done a miserable who were told about Pl ame·~
job and deserve a rough going identity should write st o~t es ·
over from their overseers in about tl1e fact - not revealmg
Congress - as has started to confidential sources, but verilY: ,
. happen with a preliminary ing that there was a systematiC,
report from the House effort to umnask her.
~
Intelligence Committee.
And, third, Bush should be.'
That said, what Kay's prepared to fire whoever dtd"
in spectors have found so fa r the leaking, regardless oJ· ht&gt;,
- including vials of active or her identity or value tohtm . ,
botulinum toxin and evidence Bush has made such a feti sh
that Saddam Hussein con- about secrecy, especially ,
tracted· to buy ballistic mi s- about intelligence matters.
siles from Nonh Korea that his credibi li ty will be in l
should incline objective doubt if he doesn't act force-·
observers to give Kay more fully in this matter.
time to get to the bottom of
In fact, he's already losl
the WMD issue .
.
credibility. - and not just
Kay said on Fox News among Democrats. The latesl
Sunday that Iraqi generals CBS/New York Times poll
have told him ihat their mili- indk;ates that only 35 percent,
tary possessed chemical of voters think that Bush has ·
weapons, but don't know brought more hone sty an¢;
where they are now.
integri ty to government than·
Kay said his people have previous administrations.
searched only 10 of 130
Only 18 percent regard him
weapons depots containing as less honest than others, but ~
600,000 tons of munitions - 45 percent judge him as no'
a third of the U.S. supply. He different from hi s predeces-:
also said that weapons may sors. That's a big loss.
_:
have been moved to Syria,
(Morton Kondracke is '
Iran or Jordan.
executh•e editor of Ru/1 Call,
Meantime , tbe administra, th e newspaper of Capitol
tion also has itself to bl ame Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

~

'

'
.
1.1
1111 yq..r
and ohone miriibl!r.
2.,) · · )'OIIr cAn1e.r's narne, )'O!D' routt I1UII1bet
. or !lllbiia lbeqJUmbet.
·
3.), II\~ WOI'Ihor tess. tdl us wtiY we ahould choolle.

)'OIIr CIJTier,

Mill )'OUr el'llrlea to:

•

Plliul lllmer
pal{lpolls Dally Tl'lbune
~1blrdAvenue

Oillllpolls, QH 4.5631

,·

~ll

IH .!'-

/ILL

Tt'-'1' ' ' ' "

'

.

•
•

,•

�•

..

'

The OOy Sentinel

.

.

PageA6·

NATioN·· WORLD

Tuesday, Octobert4,2003

White officers' trial for slaying
Selecting an unbiased jury a ·· ·
.·
challenge in first snip·er shootin~ trial black sergeant to bare
Muham~
Providence, R.I., polic~. past
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va .
(AP) - A year after a series
of deadl y sniper shootings
terrified Washington-area
residents, defense lawyers
;ay they face trying circu mstances in the death-penalty
trial of 42-year-old suspect
John Allen Muhammad.
The case, which opens
Tuesday and is expected to
last up to six· weeks, was
moved some 200 miles out of
111klropolitan Washington to
thiS southeastern Virginia city
after defense lawyers argued
that every northern Virginia
resident could be considered
a victim because the shootings made them afraid.
Even so, some legal experts
have said it will be difficult to
select impartial jurors from a
community where people
may still have felt vulnerable
as the altacks mounted.
Intense media coverage of
the case will also ·make it difficult to find unbiased jurors.
About 120 potential jurors
will be brought to the courtroom in groups of 40 to fill
out a lengthy questionnaire.
Circuit Judge LeRoy F.
Millelle Jr. ordered that jurors
he questioned individually
about such sensitive issues as
their views on the death penalty, their knowledge of the case
and whether they or their family felt terrorized the spree.
Individual questioning is
intended to ensure that potential jurors are not influenced
by each other's answers.
Muhammad's
defense
lawyers, Peter Greenspun

and 'Jonat)lan Shapiro, have
faces two
also expressed serious con- counts of capital murder for
cerns that law-enforcement the shooting of Dean Harold
leaks already have hurt their Meyers, 53, of Gaithersburg.
client's chances of getting a Md., while he pumped gas at
fair trial.
a Sunoco station near
Police violated a court 1 Manassas on Oct 9, 2002.
order prohibiting them from
One charge is' under an
discussing evidence with anti-terrorism law passed by
reporters "because they feel the state legislature after the
like nobody is going to com- Sept. II, 200 I, attacks. It has
ria in that Mr. Muhammad ·.~ never been prosecuted. The
nghts
were
vtolated, state will have to show not
Greenspun said.
only that Muhammad particiShapuu also says the ~fen~ .pated in a murder, but that the
has suffered under Vtrgmta intent was to influence the
rules that severely limit what government or to intimidate
prosecutors are requtred to dts- the civilian population.
cl~,se ~fore tnal.
The other capital charge
We re .as rrepared as .the alleges multiple murders over
law m Vtrgmm has allowed three years. Prosecutors will
us .. There IS a. wall , ~hmd have to prove Muhammad's
wht~h there. ts a ton, of'-infor,; involvement in the Meyers
mall&lt;?n we. JUSt don t know,
killing and at least one other
Shaptro satd.
. fatal shooting to obtain a conPaul Ebert, a . prosecutor viction under that count.
from Pnnce Wtlham County
Df
u
where the case originated
e ense 1awyers arg e ..
dismissed the idea that leak~ Muhammad can get the death
have rendered · the defense penalty on thts count only_ tf
unprepared. In fact, he said, a he was the tnggerman, whtle
recently published book with prosecutors say recent case
inside information from law law shows they need only
enforcement
actually r.rove Muhammad _was t~e
revealed more information msllgator and movmg sptrthan defense attorneys would it" of the murders. .
Malvo goes on tnal Nov.
otherwise have been entitled
to recei~e .
I0
in
neighboring
Muhammad and Lee Chesapeake for a fatal shootBoyd Mal vo, \8 , are ing last October outside a
charged with 13 shootings, Home Depot in Fairfax
including 10 deaths, over a County. His lawyers intend to
three weeks last October pursue an insanity defense,
that left many Washington · saying Muhammad had so
are"a residents ducking for indoctrinated his young comcover as they filled gas panion that Malvo could no
tanks and ran errands.
longer tell right from wrong.

Environmentalists, Navy strike deal
on controversial sonar system
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
lAP)- The Navy has agreed
to limit its peacetime use of a
new sonar system designed to
detect enemy submarines, but
which may also harm marine
mammals and fish, an environmentalist group said.
The Natural Resources
Defense Council, which sued
the military on the issue, and the
Navy reached a senlement last
week in which the Navy agreed
to use the new system only in
specific areas along the eastern
seaboard of Asia, according to
documents provided by the
enviromnental group.
The agreement must be
approved by a federal magistrate to become permanent,
but if implemented the deal
would greatly restrict the
Navy's original plan for the .
sonar system, which once
was slated to be tested in
most of the world's oceans.
The Navy has not received
final word of the agreement,
but would comply, said Lt.
Cmdr. Cappy Surette.
"Whatever the final decision is, the Navy will uphold
the law," Surette said from
the Pentagon.
Environmentalists say sonar
systems endanger marine
mammals and tish, especially
whales. T)ley point to a different system the Navy used in
2000, when at least 16 whales

and two dolphins beached
themselves on islands in the
Bahamas. Eight whales died
and sci~ntists found hemorrhaging around their brains
and ear bones, which could
have been caused by exposure
to loud noise.
"Oceans are an acoustic environment, and the species that
live there have an acute acoustic
sense," Frederick O'Regan,
president of the International
Fund for Animal Welfare, said
in a conference call Monday. "lf
we interfere with these critical
behaviors, we may be affecting
not just individual animals, but
entire populations." .
Last year the Natural
Resources Defense Council
and other environmental
groups sued the Navy over
the new system, seeking to
restrict its use.
U.S. Magistrate Elizabeth
Laporte later issued a preliminary injunction restricting use
of the system, and in a separate ruling ordered the environmentalists and the Navy to
negotiate a final settlement.
The new deal, which is the
result of those negotiations,
largely mirrors the restrictions imposed by Laporte's
injunction.
Since the injunction, the
Navy has used the sonar system in restricted areas without harm to marine· life,

Surette said. It is designed to
detect enemy diesel submarines at great distances.
Joel Reynolds, director of the
Marine Mammal Protection
Project at the Natural
Resources Defense Council,
wei~:&lt;Jmed the settlement.
·
"This agreement safeguafds both .marine life and
national security," Reynolds
said in a statement. "It will
prevent the needless injury,
harassment, and death of
countless whales, porpoises
and fish, and yet allow the
Navy to do what is necessary
to defend our country." .
ln addition to restricting
the system to the eastern
seaboard of Asia, the Navy
also agreed to seasonal
restrictions designed to protect whale migrations, and to
avoid using the system near
the coast.
None of the restrictions
applies during time of war.
Meanwhile , the Natural
Resources Defense Council,
Fund
for
International
Animal Welfare and other
environmental
groups 1
announced a new global campaign Monday to stop the
spread of high-intensity sonar
systems in oceans. Such systems are used by the defense
forces of Canada, Britain,
France, Germany, Italy and
other nations.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP)
- Ten months ago, officials
proclai med a new dawn for
the Providence Police
Department.
A new mayor bent on
ousting corruption from city
government took offi ce and
hired a squeaky clean police
c h i ~;f.
Police . official s
promi sed changes, and
assured the public the
department's
misdeeds
would be forgo ll~ n.
Yet the trial into the shooting death of Sgt. Cornel
Young Jr. is expected to lay
bare much of the department's past sins - in some
instances in greater,detail
than eve r.
Young, who was black,
was off-duty and in plain
clothes when he was shot by
two white patrolmen after he
emerged from a diner with •
his gun drawn to break up a
fight on Jan. 28, 2000. A
year and a half later.
Young's mother, Lei sa, sued
the city, police department,
two former chiefs and a pair
of ranking officers for $20
million: Her chief charge.
made in an opening statement last week by her
lawyer, is that haphazard
training by the department
caused her son's death.
James Fyfe, deputy commissioner of training at the
New York City Police
Department . and a national
police practices expert who
Young hired as a consultant,
is expected to supply much
of the criticism. He may testify this week.
Fyfe, who says he has
reviewed at least I 0,000
police shootings, analyzed
the circu.mstances behind
Young's death. His report
lays t)!e 1 blame for the •
sergeant's death squarely on
the depariment...
,, ,.,.
"At bottom, this is a case

in which two poorly ~rain ed
officers and supervised office rs shot and ki lled another
poorly trained ofticer ... ··
Fyfe wrote.
.
Lawyers for both sides say
they've been barred from
discussing the case. Police
Chief Dean Essenmm would
not comment on any issues
involving his department.
In his report, Fyfe criticized the department for
having an unclear policy for
off-duty ofticers. For more
than a year and a half after
Young's death. off-duty ofti cers are required to carry
weapon s, and to respond .to
any incidents. The policy
was admini stered by Urbano
Prignano Jr., who was police
chief when Young was shot
and is a defendant in the
lawsuit.
''Chief Prignano stubbornly held onto a long-discredited policy of requiring oftl cers to intervene in police
actions while off-duty, and
to do so on the basis of their
'common sense' rather than
upon any systematically
developed training," Fyfe's
.
report stated.
"This was a recipe for disaster," he wrote.
Prignano's attorney said
Monday neither he nor his
client would comment on
the report .
A state grand jury cleared
oflicers Carlos Saraiva and
Michael Solitro of criminal
wrongdoing. The U.S. attorney's offtce decided not to
prosecute after a preliminary
federal civil rights inquiry.
The police department never
conducted its own investigation, nor did it ask Solitro, in
his eighth day on the job at
the time of the shooting, to
surrender his weapon, even
though the patrolman" has
said he had two...nervou s
breakdowns after Young 's

death, according to Fyfe 's
report.
"The ·(department's) failure to invest igate the matter,
and its failure to disarm
Solitro .. . are clear evidence
of its administrators' recklessness regarding the lives
of its own officers and of the
public," Fyfe wrote .
·
One longtime observer of
city po litics says the trial
could
reopen tensions
between police officers and
citizens as th&lt;! d.epartment's
image is sull ied anew:
"The trial could be demoralizing for the department
just because it's going to
highlight so many problems
from the past," said Darrel
West, a political scientist at
Brown University. " It 's
going to dredge up issues
that the public didn't know
about, and that will add to
the need to reform that
department ."
Clifford Montiero, director of the Providence chapter of the
National
Association
for
the
Ad vance ment of Colored
People, said minorities have
long known of the police
department' s iroubles. He
sees the trial as vindicating
those beliefs.
"It has taken a long time
(for people) to believe that
we 're not being crybabies,"
Montiero said.
West said public trust in
the department could erode,
until Mayor David Cicilline
and Esserman convince residents the department 's policies have changed. Minority
leaders say that will happen
only if leaders punish those
involved.
"For Leisa, she's got to
feel that somebody's paid,
for her son's death," said the
Reverend
Marlowe
Washington, former pastqr
of the Allen AME Church.

DALLAS (AP) - Twoyear-old Egyptian twins
whose fused heads were surgically separated over the
weekend were doing remarkably well Monday but were
still not out of the danger
zone, a doe!or said.
Doctors warned that the
risks include stroke and infeGtion. and said there are also
concerns about how the
· wounds heal and long-term
questions about brain damage.
. The 34-hour operation to
separate
Ahmed
and
Mohamed Ibrahim began .
Saturday morning and ended
afternoon, after which

they spent their ftrst-ever night
apart. They had been born
joined at the top of their heads.
"After coming back from
the operating room last night,
the twins have had a remarkably stable course," said Dr.
James Thomas, chief of-critical care at Children 's
Medical Center Dallas.
"They have really thrown us
no surprises in the process."
As for the possibility of
brain damage, brain scans
Monday found no· bleeding
and little brain swelling. "The
neurosurgery team is quite
pleased with what they see,"
Thomas said.

Scoreboard, Page 82
Prep Volleybllll Roundup, Page B6
Rams thump Falcons, Page B6
GMFL resulta, Page 86

Tuesday, October 1.4, 2003
'
I

.

Marshall coach
suspendsWR
Bates for year
I

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - Marshall receiver Brad
Bates has been suspended for·
the rest of the season.
Coach Bob Pruett made the
announcement Monday during
the weekly Mid-American
Conference coaches' teleconference.
Bates started the Thundering
Herd's 49-33 win over Kent
• State on Saturday. But midway
through the game, he removed
his jen;ey and shoulder pads
and went into the locker room,
reportedly chatting with fans .
along the way.
After the game, Pruen said
Bates was unhappy with
decreased playing time. ·
A junior from Chillicothe,
Ohio, Bates missed much of
last season after injuring his
knee. He entered this season as
one of the Herd's top three
receivers, along with Darius
Watts and Josh Davis.
He had 12 catches for 77
yards this season, catching at
lea~t one pass in every game
but the win over Kent State.

MARIETTA
Gallia
Academy traveled to Marietta
Saturday for their last regular
season game. The Blue Devils
were looking for the upset after
SEOAL leaders Marietta handled the Blue Devils in their
ftrst meeting. The Blue Devils
carne out strong and. continue
their effort throughout the ftrst
half. Marietta's Ben How len
managed to sneak one by Jesse
Patrick to give.his team the lead.
with 31 minutes gone in the
half. The lead was short lived
when TqiVis Massie powered a
penalty kick past Marietta's
keeper to tie the ganne. The
penalty kick came when the
Marietta keeper left the goal
and fouled Joe Esmaeili, who
had taken the ball through the
Tigers back four.
In the second half, the score
remained tied until the 63
minute mark when Howlett
once again gave Marietta the
lead. Several counters by the
Blue Devils failed to fmd the
net and the Blue Devils upset
hopes fell short. Marietta managed a third goal with six minutes left as the Blue Devils
defenders were .caught sneaking too far from the Gallia
Academy goal. The goal by
Ashton Preston put the Tigers
up by three, and Preston struck
again on a penalty kick in the
last minute to seal the win.
'This is by far the best team
effort so far this year, said
coach Raymond. "We played
well at Warren but this effort
tops it." "We are looking forward to going to South Point in
District Playoff action TUesday
rught."

COLUMBUS (AP)
Trevor Letowski was placed on
injured reserve Monday by the
Columbus Blue Jackets, who
said the left win~ will miss
about six weeks wtth a broken
piilky fmger. ·
Letowski was slashed by the
Rangers' Boris Mironov during
. Columbus' 5-0 win over New
York on Saturday night.
Letowski scored the game's
ftrst goal, his ftrst with
Columbus sinee signing with
the team as a free agent during
the summer.

The boys, who had shared
an intricate web of blood vessels but had separate brains,
were in adjacent rooms and
remained in critical but stab!'e
condition Monday. They
were in drug-induced comas
· to minimize the risk of.~rain
swelling. Both were on
mechanical ventilators.
"The longer that you go
without the appearance of
complications, that's always
taken as a positive sign,"
Thomas said .
The boys' father, Ibrahim
Mohammed Ibrahim, . fainted
l!l'hen told his sons had been
separated.

Big East schools authorize lawsuit against BC, ACC
BY MATr APUZZO
Associated Press

CONFERENCES IN CRISIS

HARTFORD, Conn. ~ Officials
from four Big East football schools
approved a lawsuit Monday against
Bostnn College, its athletic director and
fo, !I' Atlantic Coast Conference officials, Attorney General Richard
Bluinenthal said.
The suit, to be filed Tuesday in
Vernon Superior Court, alleges that the
ACC and Boston College conspired to
weaken the Big East. Boston College
announced Sunday that it would follow
the University of Miami and VIrginia
Tech, which are leaving the Big East to
join the ACC.
.
"We just got off a conference call,"
Blumenthal $aid earl)l Monday evenin~ .
"All the presidents have authorized thts
lawsuit."
The suit names Boston College

Big East v. ACC

Athletic Director Eugene DeFilippo.
'ACC Commissioner John Swofford,
ACC President Carolyn Callahan, ACC
Vice President Donn Ward and ACC
Treasurer Cecil Huey, Blumenthal said.
Connecticut, Rutgers, Pillsburgh and
West Vtrginia alreildy are suing Miami.
A judge last week threw out a case

against the ACC on jurisdictional
grounds.
"I suspect the same will happen to
those of us who, by virtue of our rotation, happen to be officers," Ward said.
"And I suspect the people of
·Connecticut wlmt their attorney general
to chase far more important issues."

Tile case against the ACC was thrown
out because attorneys could not prove
the conference did enough business in
Connecticut tn warrant a state suit By
suing the conference directors as mdtviduals, Big East schools hope they can
get around the jurisdiction issue.
"We are not'required to show they are
tr.msacting business." Blumenthal said.
:·If they have violated the law and hJve
damaged Connecticut or its ·citizens,
they can be sued."
Messages seeking comment were left
at the homes and offtces of the other
school and conference officials. Hu~
Keefe. an attorney who represented the ,
ACC. did not return a page.
Miami and Vrrginia Tech will join the
ACC next year. Boston College may
not change conferences until 2006. ·
The suit makes several tort claims.

Please see Blc

Ea-. H

Red Sox'even in ALCS with win over Yankees
Williamson, who
had
relieved Mike Tunlin to start
the inning. struck out Dave
BOSTON_ No beanballs or · Dellucci and Alfonso Soriano
to earned the save.
brawls. just a dynamite knuck- The series continues at
leball by Tim Wakefteld that
gave the New York Yankees ftts Fenway Park on Tuesday. origand allowed the Boston Red inally a tr'dvel day. David Wells
Sox to knot the AL charnpi- pitches for New York against
. senes.
·
Game 2 loser Derek Lowe in
onshtp
Wakefteld struck out eight Game 5.
over seven-plus innings, and
After Sunday's rainout fans
Todd Walker and Trot Nixon had a festive time on the warm
provided the ofl'ense with solo autumn night. booing Yankees
homers, leading Boston over catcher Jorge Posada. who
New York 3-2 Monday night to screamed Saturday at Pedro
tie the best-of-seven AL cham- Maninez after the Boston pitchpionship series at two games er hit Karim Garcia with a
apiece.
pitch. Posada went 0-for-4 with
There wa~ none of the ftght- two strikeouts, leaving seven
ing that marred Game 3 runners on base.
Saturday. and Wakefteld beat
They also chanted "We want
Mike Mussina for the second Nelson." a reference to New
time in the series, which now York reliever Jeff Nelson,
II'IUill mtum 1o Yankee Stadium involved in Saturday's ninthlater this week.
inning bullpen scuffle. Nelson
Pinch-hitter Jason Varitek entered to boos in the eighth
added important breathing inning just after Felix Heredia
room for Boston with an RBI hit Walker in the shoulder.
grounder in the seventh. just There was no hint of trouble on
beating the throw to fU'St as the this one - Walker went directYankees tried to complete an ly to fU'St base.
inning-ending double play.
Still, there wa~ at lea.~t one
It turned out to be important. dispute.
Derek Jeter drove in New
After Nelson's lirst pitch,
York's first run with a fifth- Boston manager Grddy LinJe
inning double that hit' third base came out to talk to the umpires.
and pinch-hitter Ruben Sierra who then checked the pitcher's
homered off Scott Williamson belt and glove. But they apparwith one out in the ninth, end- ently didn' t ftnd anything
ing a streak of 19 1-3 shutout against the rules, and Nelson
innings for Boston's much- got out of the inning with a doumaligned bullpen.
ble-play grounder.
BY RoNAlD BLUM
Associated Press

Biue Devils fall
to Tigers 4-0

Blue Jackets
Letowski on
injured reserve

Surgical separated twins doing
remarka ly well in Dallas hospital

Bl

.INSIDE

Boston Red Sox's Todd Walker releases his bat as he watches his solo home run in the
fourth inning against the New York Yankees in Game 4 of the American League
Championship Series, Monday, at Fenway Park in Boston. Yankees catcher Jorge Posada
looks on. (AP)

World Series or not, Cubs shed lovable loser image
81' BEN

WALKER

Associated Press

CHICAGO - Whatever
happens at Wrigley Field this
week, whether his team
reaches the World Series or
not, Dusty Baker already has
posted a huge victory for the
Chicago Cubs.
He 's managed to get them
to shed their longtime image
as baseball's lovable losers.
Cute cubby bear on their
sleeves? Friendly Confines?
Warm and fuzzy feel?
Forget it.
Watch Mark Prior and
Kerry Wood buzz a batter,
even if·it's Barry Bonds. See
Kenny Lofton knock down
Florida pitcher Mark Redman
with a loose elbow. Listen to
Baker shout out Totiy La
Russa.
More like grizzlies than
baby bruins, these Cubs.
"What we've been fighting
here all year long," Baker

said Monday, a day before
the Cubs flayed Florida in
Game 6 o. the NL ·championship series. "Everytime
you lose a game, somebody
conjures up something negative in history that happened
before."
Ahead 3-2, the Cubs can
wrap up their first World
Series trip in 58 years with a
win TUesday night. Prior will
start against Carl Pavano,
with Wood set to pitch Game
7 if necessary.
A win would ~ive the Cubs
a chance to cla1m their first
Series championship in 95
years. Jack McKeon had no
good reas9n for the Cubs'
long drought.
"I don't know. I'm not that
old. I haven't been following
them that long to see what
goes on," the 72-year-old
Marlins
manager
said
Monday.
"There's a lot of luck
involved and I don't know
whether the hex or the curse

in Boston ... I guess if you
want to believe that, that's
what will happen. So, I hope
you aU keep believing the
hex is still on." ·
Baker wants to keep the
focus on the tleld, thou~h he
knows a lot of fans wtll be
thinking about the Cubs' past.
"Most of these guys in
1984 - Kerry Wood in 1984
- what was he, like 8?"
Baker said. "Half of this stuff
doesn't apply to them. Th~y
can't help the fact that they
are playmg for the Cubs,
Dodgers or A's or whoever
they are playing for, and they
can't help what happened in
the past.
,"f was watching a game the
other night and ·in between
innings this goat kept running
across the street. I thought
that was the craziest thing I
ever saw in my life. Or 1-800
who's curse is .the su:ongest,
the goat or the curse of Babe?
Man, that's crazy," he said.
"You either ·don't pay atten-

tion to it or you laugh at it.
Those are the two choices
you got."
Sammy So sa sure wasn't
laughing after a 97 mph from
Josh Beckett whizzed past his
head Sunday in a 4-0 loss in
Game 5. Sosa sprang up.
pointing his bat at the young
Florida pitcher, and several
Cubs rushed to the top of the
dugout steps, ready to rumble.
Ernie Banks was Mr. Cub
and the ultimate gentleman,
entertaining crowds with his
call of "Let's play two!" But
he never made it to the World
Series during his Hall of
Farner career. ·
Baker
guided
San
Francisco to the Series last
year, losing in Game 7 .to
Anaheim, and then took over
a Cubs team that had gone
67-95. This season , Chicago
went 88-74 and won the NL
Central.
After the Cubs beat Atlanta
in the tlrst round of the play~

offs. Baker admitted he did
not think the turnaround
would be · so swift. He said
new players and a new staff
helped bring success, along
with an extremely positive
outlook .
''I remember back in my
day s with the Dodgers, I
mean, with Tommy Lasorda,
he genuinely believed and he
would always tell us, 'You' ve
got to believe it,'" Baker said
right before the NLCS. "I
remember when I was going
for my 30th home run on the
last day of the season, and I
had come back to the dugout,
and I said. 'I don't think I'm
going to do it,' and I must've
said it too loud because he
heard it.
"He went into this long dissertation about the children
of Israel standing by the Red
Sea, and they dtdn 't believe
and those that didn't believe
and fled perished, and those

Please see Cubs, H

YOUR TIME IS NOW!

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The Pleasant Valley Wellness Center.is recruiting "sol,diers" to participate in
Boot.Camp beginning Monday, Nove111ber 3, 2003.
·•
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Every Monday &amp; Wednesday
5:30a.m. to 6:30a.m. daily
For More Information:
$30/month or $5/session
Instructor: Keith Cundiff, Certified Personal Trainer

(304) 675-7222

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.

�•

Pro Football
National Footba ll League
AMERICAN
East
W LT Pet PF PA
4 1 0 BOO 105 58
Mam'
New England 4 2 0 887 126 113
3 3 0 500 114 103
Buffalo
1 4 0 200 75 80
NY Jets
South
WLT Pel PF PA
5 1 0 B33 178 105
Indianapolis
Tennessee
4 2 0 667 157 133
Hous1on
2 3 0 400 B6 15 1
JacKsonville
1 5 0 167 110 154
North
WLT Pel PF PA
Bait more
3 2 0 600 108 92
C!EI\Ieland
3 3 0 500 92 95
2 4 0 333 111 146
Pnsburgll
C1r,clnnat•
1 4 0 200 17 106
We1t
W L T Pet PF PA
6 0 0 1 000191 115
Kansas C1ty
Denver
5 1 0 833 158 87
2 4 0 333 11 5 144
Oakland
0 5 0 000 89 149
San Otego
NATIONAL
Eaal
WLT Pct PF PA
4 1 0 BOO 112 93
Dallas
Washington
3 3 0 500 128 147
NY Giants
2 3 0 400 95 109
Philadelphia
2 3 0 400 81 109
South
WLT Pet PF PA
5 0 0 1 000 101 6B
Carolina
Tampa Bay
3 2 0 eoo 121 73
New Orleans 2 4 0 333 107 151
1 5 0 167 97 175
Atlanta
North
WLT Pe1 PF PA
Minnesota
5 0 0 1 000 151 84
Green Bay
3 3 0 500 116 132
1 4 0 200 80 152
Chicago
Detroit
1 4 0 200 94 122
Weat
WLTPetPFPA
4 1 0 BOO 122 87
Seattle
$t Louis
3 2 0 600 136 84
San FranCisco 2 4 0 333 135 11 9
1 5 0 167 82 180
Arizona
Sunday 1 Games
Tennessee 38 Houston 17
Dallas 23 Philadelphia 21
Carolina 23 Indianapolis 20 OT
Mlami 24 Jacksonvi lle 10
Kansas City 40 Green Bay 34 OT
New Orle ans 20 Ch1cago 13
Tampa Bay 35 Washmgton 13
Cleveland 13 Oakland 7
New En gland 17 N Y G1ants 6
N Y Jets 30 Buffalo 3
Balt•more 26 Arizona 18
Den'Jer 17 Pittsburgh 14
Se attle 20 San Franc,sco 19
Open Cincinnati San 0 ego Detro•t
Minnesota
Monday 1 Game
St Louis 36 Atlanta 0
Sunday Oct 19
Dallas at DetrOit 1 p m
New Orleans at A11 an1a 1 p m
Green Bay at St Lou• s 1 p m
Tennessee at Carolina 1 p m
New En gland at Mtam1 1 p m
Philadelphi a a1 N Y G1ants 1 p m
Baltimore at C1nc1nnat1 1 p m
Denver at M nnesota 1 p m
San 01ego at Cleveland 1 p m
N Y Jets at Houston 4 OS p m
Ch•cago at Seattle 4 15 p m
Wash1ngton at Buffalo 4 15 p m
Tampa Bay at San Franc1sco 4 15 p m
Open Indianapolis P•ttsburgh A.r1zona
Jacksonv lie
Monday Oct 20
Kansas City at Oakland 9 p m

College Football
TheAPTop 25
The Top 25 tea ms In The Associated Press
college football poll with f1rst place votes •n
parentheses records through Oct 11 total
pomts bas ed on 25 pomts for a hrsl pl ace

Boise St 27 Tulsa 20

Major College Football Scoree
EAST
Albany N Y 44 St Fra nc1s Pa 21
Boston College 38 Temple 13
Colgato 30 Princeton 3
De awa re 22 New Hampshire 21
Duquesne 42 lana 29
Fordham 24 Brown 21
Georgetown D C 49 Stony Brook 21
Harva rd 27 Corn ell 0
Hofstra 24 Northeaste rn 14
La Salle 33 Mansi 31
Lafayene 41 Columbia 27
Leh1gh 35 St Marys Cal 7
Monmouth N J 24 Wagner 0
Notre Dame 20 P1ttsbu gh 14
Penn 14 Bucknell1 3
Robert Morns 27 Cent ConnectiCUt St
17
Sacred Heart 4 t S1ena 14
Towson 30 Holy Cross 13
Villanova 21 Rhode Island 17
West Virg1ma 34 Rutgers 19
Yale 40 Dartmouth t 7
SOUTH
Alabama 17 Southern M1ss 3
Alabama St 27 Jackson St 20
Alcorn St 66 Pral ne V1ew 0
Others receiving votes Te~eas Tech 219
Appalach an St 13 Furman 10
Bowling Green 120 U1ah 92 Pittsburgh
Bethune Cookman 27 Delaware St 13
74 Mary and 32 M1am1 (Oh10) 27 South
Clemson 30 V1rg lrna 27 OT
Carolina 12 Flonda 11 Air Force 7
Coastal Carolma 47 Charleston W Va 0
MISSISSIPPI 4 Boston College 3 So1se St
Dav1dson 37 Jacksonville 29
2 UCLA 1 V1 rg1n a 1
Florida 19 LSU 7
Flor1da Atl ant1c 3t Nicholls 51 23
Top 25 Fared
Gardner Webb 27 Uberty 17
How the top 25 teams m The Assoc•ated
Georg1a 41 Tennessee 14
Press college football poll tared th is week
Georg1a Southern 31 W Carolma 25
Georg•a Tech 24 Wake Forest 7
No 1 Oklahoma (6 D) bea1 No 11 Texa s
Grambling St 45 MVSU 6
65 13 Next vs M ssour Satu rday
Houston 45 Tulane 42
No 2 M1am1 (6 0) beal No 5 Fonda State
Howard 16 Florida A&amp;M 14
22 14 Next vs Temple Saturday
Jacksonville St 34 Tenn Marl n 24
No 3 Oh1o Slate (S..t) lost to No 23
James Madison 34 Richmond 14
W1sconsln 17 10 Next vs No t4 Iowa
Lou1s ana Monroe
45
LOUISiana
Saturday
No 4 VIrginia Tech (6..0) beat Syracuse Lafayene 42
LOUI SVIlle 34 Army 10
51 7 Next at West V1 rg1n•a Oc t 22
Marshall 49 Kent St 33
No 5 Flortda State (5 1} lost to No 2
Maryland 33 Duke 20
M1am1 22 14 Next at No 25 Vl rg1ma
Massachusetts 24 W1l 1am &amp; Mary 14
Saturday
•
M1am1 22 Flonda St 14
No 6 LSU (5 1) lost to Fl onda 19 7 Next
M ddle Tennessee 35 New Mex•co St 18
at South Carolina Saturday
M SSlSSippi 55 Arkansas St 0
No 7 Arkansas (4 1) lost lo Auburn 1D-3
M SSISSIPPI St 35 MemphiS 27
Next vs Flonda Saturday
Morehead St 49 Austin Peay 0
No 8 Georgta (5 1} beat No 13
N Carolina A&amp;:r 28 Morgan St 21
Tennessee 41 14 Next a1 Va nderbilt
N C State 31 Connect cut 24
Satu rday
Navy 37 Vanderb h 27
No 9 Southern Cal (5 1) beat Stan1ord
Nor1h Carolina 28 East Carolina 17
44 21 Ne ~e 1 at Notre Dame Satu rday
Northweste rn St 87 SE Louisiana 27
No 10 Nebraska (5 1) los t to Mlssour 41
S carolina St 34 Norfolk St 15
24 Next vs Te,.;as A&amp;M Saturday
Samford 35 Murray St 6
No 11 Texas (4 2) lost to No 1 Oklahoma
Southam U 55 Alabama A&amp;M 25
65 13 Ne~e t al Iowa State Satu rday
Tennessee St 27 Tennesse e Tech 23
No 12 Washington State (5-1) did not
UAB 31 Cincinnati 14
pl ay Next at Stanford SaJurday
VMI 50 Charleston Southern 7
No 13 Tennessee (4 2) lost to No B
Vlrg1nia Tech 51 Syracuse 7
Georgia 41 14 Next at Alabama Oct 25
W KentucKy 9 SW Missouri St 6
No 14 Iowa (5 1) d•d not play NeKI at No
Wofford 45 Elon 7
3 Ohio State Saturday
MIDWEST
No 15 Pittsburgh (3 2) lost lo Notre
Akron 45 Cal Poly SLO 14
Dame 20 14 Nekl at Rutgers Saturday
Bowl ng Green 32 W M1ch1gan 21
No 16 Northern IllinOIS (6 0) beat Central
E Kent!Jd(y 41 E llhn01s 0
M1ch1gan 40 24 Next Western Michigan
M am1(Ohio) 59 Buffalo 3
Satu rday
M1ch gan St 49 II tno•s 14
No 17 M.n nesota (6 t ) lost lo No 20
M1ssour 41 Nebraska 24
M1ch1gan 38 35 Fnday Ne"t vs No 21
N I lino16 40 Cenl Mlch1gan 24
MIChigan State Saturday
N Iowa 22 Indiana St 14
No 18 Purdue (5 1) beat Penn Stale 28
Northwestern 37 lnd1ana 31 OT
14 Next at No 23 WISCOnSin Saturday
OhiO2B UCF 0
No 18 TCU (6 0) beat South Flonda 13
Purdue 28 Penn St 14
10 Friday Next vs UAB Satu rday
S IllinOIS 45 llllno s Sl 17
No 20 M ch•gan (5 2) be at No 17
St Francis lnd 47 Butler 16
M nneaota 38 35 Fnday Next vs lllinots
Toledo 49 E M1clllgan 14
Satu rday
ValparaiSO 33 Dayton 28
No 21 MIChigan Slate (6 1} beat llhnots
W IllinoiS 54 Youngstown St 20
49 14 Next at No 17 Mtn nesota Saturday
Wisconsin 17 Oh10 St 10
No 22 Kansas State (4 3) lost to
SOUTHWEST
OKlahoma State 38 34 Next vs Colorado
Auburn 10 Arkansas 3
Satu rday
Louisiana Tech 38 UTEP 35
No 23 W•sconstn (6 1) beat No 3 Ohio
Oklahoma 65 Te~ea s 13
State 17 tO Next vs No 18 Purdue
~ma. St 38 Kanaa1 St 34
Saturday
T9)(as A&amp;M 73 Baylor 10
No 24 Oregon State (5 1} did not play
Texas Southern 7 Ark Pme BluH 6
Next vs Washington Saturday
No 25 V~rg 1n a (4 2) ost to Clemson 30
Tekas Tech 52 Iowa St 2 1
FAR WEST
27 OT Next vs No 5 Flonda State
A r Force 24 UNLV 7
Saturday

a

Colora do 50 Kansas 47 OT
E Wa shmgton 42 Portland St 16
Hawan 55 Fresno St 28
Idaho St 23 Montana St 17

The tax returns for
tax year 2003 have
been revised and the
valuations completed
and are open lor pub
lie Inspection tn the
office of the Meigs
County
Auditor

Second
Floor,
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
Complaints against
the va luations, as
establlohed lor tax
year 2003 must be

made In accordance
with Section 5715 19
of the Ohio Revised
Code These com
plalnta muat be flied
on forms which will
be furnished by the
county Auditor and
must be l)led In the
County
Auditor'•
Office on or before
the 31at dey or March
2004 All complaints
Iliad with the County
Auditor will be heard
by the Board of
Revlelon In the man
ner
provldod
by
Section 5716 19 ol
the Ohio Revised

be
held
In
the
Township of Rutland,
Ohio, at the regular
placea
of
voting
therein, on the 4th
day of November
2003, the queatlon of
levying a tax, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation, lor tho
benefit of Rutland
Township lor the Fire
protection
Said lax being 2 A

pose of
providing and main·
talnlng senior clll·
zens services or facllltles (Meigs County
Council on Aging,
Inc ,
Multipurpose
Senior
Citizens

School and Meigs
Industries Workshop
lor
persons with
Mental
Retardation
and Developmental
Disabilities
Ssld tax being 2 An
addltlonal tax of 2

Center

mills at a rate not

renewal of an existing

dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten
cents (SO 10) lor e~ch
one hundred dollara
ol valuation lor live
(5) years The Polls
lor said Election will
open at 6 30 o clock
am and remain open
until 7 30 o clock pm
or said day
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John
N
lhle
Chairperson
Rita
D
Smith,
Director
(10) 7 14 21, 28

tax of 1 mill at a rate
not exceeding 1 mills
lor each one dollar of
valuation,
which
amounts to ten cents
(SO 10) lor each one
hundred dollars of
valuation, lor live (5)
years The Polls lor
said Election will
open at 6 30 o clock
am sod remain open
until 7 30 o clock pm
of said day
By order of the Board
of Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohlo
John
N
lhle,
Chairperson
Rlla
D
Smith ,
Director
(10) 7, 14, 21 , 28

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
Coda
Noncy
Porker ' MILL LIMITATION
Cilrueur
Revllld
Code
Malgo County Auditor
Sections 3501 11 (Cil)
(10)
7,
9 , 10, 13,
5705 18, 5705 25
14, 15, 18,17
NOTICE II hertby
given that In pur·
IUinCI
of
I
Public Notice
R•oolutlon of the
lo'ilrd
of
Countr
NOTICE OF ELI!C·
Commllllont1'8
of
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
tht County of Melgo,
!XCIII OF THI TIN
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
MILL LIMITATION
PIINd on the 10th
Atvleod
Code,
dly ol Julr, 2003,
leollona 3101 .11 (0),
lhe1'8 will be •ubmll·
S708.t8, 8708.28
lad to • vole of the
N011CI Is hereby
peoplt of uld oubell·
given thlll In pur·
vlelon II 1 Oonorol
ouonce
of
1
lltollon to be held In
the County of Melga,
1111olullon of the
lotnl of Townahlp
Ohio, 11 the reguler
TrueiHt
of the
plec11
of
voting
Townehlp of Rutllnd,
therein, on tho 4th
Aulllnd,
OhiO,
doy of November
2003, the quattlon of
Jllllld on the 111 day
levying 1 t ax , In
of.Augull, 2003, there
will be aubmlltad to 1 eXCIII of the loin mill
vote ol tho _ . . of limitation, lor tho
Hid aubcllvloloil II • benefit of Melg1
Cilenoral Election to
County lor the pur·

e, a,

•

Seld tex being

2 A

renewal of a tax of 1
mill at a rate not
uceedlng

1

(one)

mills for each one

Public Notice
NOTICE CF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Code,
Section• 3501 11 (G),
5705 18, 5705 25
NOTICE Is htrtby
given that In pur·
1uanco
of
1
Reoolutlon of the
Board
of
County
Commllllonero
of
the County of Molgo,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
PII&amp;Md on the 3111
dsy or July, 2003,
thtre will be eubmll·
lad to 1 vote of the
peoplt of Hid lUbell·
vlalon at a Cileneral
IIICIIon to be held In
the County of Melgo,
Ohio, Ill the rtgular
pl1c11
of
voting
lheroln, on the 411\
doy or November,
2003, the qllllllon of
levying e tax, In
excets of the ten mill
limitation, lor the
benefit
of
Melge
County lor the pur·
poNOI
Malnenanca , capitol
construction,
and
OPIIratlon of Carleton

290

3 Delphos 51 Johno (1) 71
4 N Lima S Range (,) 8-0

Montana 12 Weber St 7
N Ar•zona 24 Sacramento St 21
Nevada 28 Washmgton 17
North Texas 24 IdahO 14
S Utah 31 Texas State 28
San Diego 41 Drake 35
San Jose St 31 SMU 14
Southern Cal 44 Stanford 21
UCLA 24 Ar~zo na 21
Utah 27 San D•ego St 6
Wyoming 48 U1ah 51 21

325"
316
241
194
65

86

9 Sycamore Mohawk 7 1
10 Balnbndge Paint Valley

80
56

DIVISION VI
1 Columbus Grove (24) 8 0
2 NoiWalk St Paul (4) IUJ
3 Mogadoro(3i7 1 245
4 Cov1ngton B 0
210
5 Cory Rawson (2i 8-0
6 Newark Cath ( 1)7 1
7 N LewiSburg Tnad (2) 8 0
8 Cle Cuyalloga Hts 7 1
9 Cola Hardm Northern 7 1
10 Shadys1de 7 1
42

323
27 1
240
206
191
118
103
71
31

Others rece vmg 12 or more po nts 11
Cols Walnut Ridge 23 12 Youngs Chaney
18 13 Jackson 13
DIVISION Ill
1 Cla Ben edictine (28) B 0
344
2 Stoubenvlllo (1) 8 0239
3 Germantown Valley View (2) 8-0
230
4 Dover(2)B O
211
5 Newark Licking Valley (1 ) 8 0 209
6 Llsbon8eaver (1)8 0
tBO
7 Day Chamlnade Julienne (1 ) 7 1
148
8 Canal Fu lton NW 8 0
97
9 Sunbury B1g Walnut 8-0
88
10 Chesterland W Geauga 8 0 40
Others rece v1ng 12 or more po1nts 11
Mentor Lake Catll 37 12 Cots Watterson
22 13 (tie) Bellevue Rayland Buckeye St
Marys Memonal14 ~6 Keltenng Alter 13
17 Gallipolis Gallla 12

D~NIV

1 Voroaollo• (22) 8-D 346
2 Ironton (11) B 0
320
3 Coldwalor (1) 7 1 250
4 Clarksvtlle Clinton Mass1e (1) 8-0
219
181
5 Upper Sandusky (1) 8 0
6 Ap ple Cre ak Waynedale 8 0 175
7 Youngs Mooney 6·2
11 9
8 Coshocton 7 1
11 4
9 Bellaire 7 1
82
10 Lima Bath 7 1
37
Others recewlng 12 or more points 11
Delta 35 12 Huron 20 13 (t• e) Sulliva n
Bl ack
R• ver
Hanoverton
United
Williamsport Westfall1 6 16 Urbana 12

o

ooo a,

'

Sunday 1 G1m11
Toronto 86 Detro1t B1
San Antonio 85 New York 78
New Orleans 89 Houston 71
Monday s Games
Milwaukee 87 Cleveland 81
Atlanta 98 M1nneso1a 86
Tue1d1~ 1 Gamel
New Orleans at Orlando 7 p m
San Anton1o at Miami 7 30 p m
Philadelphia at New Jersey 7 30 p m
Wash ngton at Memphis 8 p m
Indiana at Chlelgo B 30 p m
New Vorl!; vs Utah at 8obae ldaho 9 p m
Houston at Sacramento 10 p m
Seattle vs Portland at Redmond Ore 10
pm
Dallas at L A C 1ppers 1o 30 p m
Ph oenlk vs L A Lakers at San Diego

10 00 am , the follow·
lng lands and tenements, located at
48457 Bashan Rd,
Racine, OH 45771 A
complete
legal
descrlptlon of the
real estate Is as follows
Situated
In the
Stale of Ohio County
of Meigs, Township of

south 86 degrees 04
mlnutaa west, pass·
lng an Iron pin set at
85
teet a total distance of 90 40 feet to
the center ol a bush,
said bush Ia the

oo

line of oectlon 18 and
County Road No 28,
a dletanco of 58 73
feet to the place o f
beginning lor rtghl of

way,

thence contJnu·

Ronald L and Janice

feat, thence leaving

K

the
eaat line of
Section 16 South 83
degrees 42 m lnutea

Chairperson
Rita
D
Smith ,
Director
(10) 7, 14, 21,28

is also the southeast
corner of the northwest
quarter
of

IN THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF

vs

GEORGE BRICKLES,
JR AKA CilEORGE
BRICKLES
AKA
GEROGE BRICKLES,
ET AL
DEFENDANTS
N,OTICE OF BALE
Coae No 03 CV 83
Br vlrtuo of on
Order of l•le l11ued
out of the Common
Pleoa Court of Malge
County, Ohio, In the
cue of 1ht Home
Nl11onal
Bonk,
Plllntlll, va Cilaorga
lrlcklea,
Jr
akll
Cileorga lrlckl11 okll
Geroge Brlckleo, at
11 , Dal8ndlnlll, upon
1 Judgment lhoreln
rendered, being C111
No. 03-CV43 In Hid
Court, the She~ll of
Meigs County, Ohio,
will olflr lor 1111 at
the front door of the
courthouso
In
Pomeroy,
Melgo
County, Ohio, on the
13th
day
of
November, 2003 at

10 30 p m

Wedneldl y 1 G1m11
Boston at Detroit 7 30 p m
Denver at lncllana 8 p m
Toronto at Minnesota 8 p m
Seattle vs Golden State at Reno Nev 10
pm

Hockey
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlalon
W L T OL PI&amp; GFGA
New Jersey
1010354
Ph•ladelphla
1 0 1 0 3 5 3
N Y islandars 1 1 0 0 2 7 6
Pittsburgh
0 1 1 0 1 3 6
NY Rangers
0 2 0 0 0 3 10
Northeast Division
W L T OLPta GF GA
10 0 1 3 7 5
Ottawa
11 0 0 2 6 5
Montreal
1 2 0 0 2 4 11
Buffalo
0 12 0 2 5 9
Boston
0 1 10 1 26
Toronto
SOutheasl Dlvlalon
W L T OLPI&amp; GFGA
Atlanta
2 0 00464
Florida
1 0 20464
W~s hlngton
1 1 1 0 3 11 7
TampaBay
1 0002 5 1
Carolina
021 0 1 47
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L T OLPI&amp;GFGA
2000464
Detro t
2 1 00 4 94
Columbus
1 001 3 3 3
St Louis
1 1 002 4 4
Nashvi ie
1200239
Ch1cago
Nol'lhweat Division
W L T OLPta GF GA
2 1 00 4 94
Vancouver
1 1 00246
Calgary
1 10 0 2 6 2
Colorado
1 10 0 2 5 5
Edmonton
12 0 0 2 7 7
Minnesota
Pacific Division
W L T OLPioGFGA
2 0 004 41
Plloenlx
2 1 0 0 4 10 6
Dallas
2 1 00495
Los Angeles
1 2 0 0 2 1 10
San Jose
030 0 029
Anaheim

Section 16 and local
ed •n County Road
No
28
(Basham
Road) said point also
being the Northwest
corner of a 86 32 acre

tract of land now or
formerly owned by 0
and H
Booth as
described In Volume
187, Pogo 147 of the
O..d
Records
of
Melg1 County, Ohio,
thence
South
1
degrH 21 minute•
1111 along lht 1111
lint of Section 1 6
County No 28 and
Booth'• Walt line, a
dlotonct of 153 88
feet to on Iron pin;
thence leovlng lht
1111 line of Section
11 tnd County R011d
No 21, eouth 83
lltgrHI 42 mlnut. .
wtlt, Pilling an Iron
pin HI 1148.10 !HI, •
lOIII
dllllnCI
of
201 38 ' " ' to 1 found

cancrele manument

11 the north1111 cor·
ner of 1 0 83 ocre
lrlct of lond
or
lormerly owned by
Ronold L. and Janice
K
811111
il
deecrlbtd In daed
Volume 2n, PIIJ• 117
of the Dead Racordo
of Mtlgt County,
Ohio, thence along
the northerly line of
uld 0 53 a c re troct,

now

northwest corner of a
0 53 acre tract and

the northeast corner
of a 1 43 acre tract by

Salser,

also

described In Deed
Volume 277, Page
117, thence along the
northerly line of said
I 43 acre tract, south
75 degrees 52 min·
utes west a distance
oft 06 75 feel to a set
Iron pin, thence leavIng the north line of
said 1 43 acre tract
on a line parallel to
the east line of
Section 16, north 1

degree 21 minutes
west, passing the
quarter section line
between the aoulh·
eaat and northeast
quarter of Section 18
at a distance ol
199 33 feet, a total
dlatance of 245.45
feel to an Iron pin,
thence
north
88
degraea 39 minute•
eoal, paning a aet
Iron pin at 375 00 feet,
o total dletance of
400 00 feet to on Iron
pin on thto eoet line of
Section
I6
and
County Rood No. 28,
thence
South
I
degree 21 mlnut11
eaet, along the Hit
lint ofllectlon 18 end
Countv Roed 28, 1
dlet.nce of 48 12 feet
to the place of begin·
nlng, cont.lnlng two
(2.00) ecree, more or
ltll.
living Md except·
lng tht following
deecrlbad right of
way lor relocated
8111tt Route 124 end
detarlbed aa lollowt
Commonalng
11
the northHot comer
of
the
oouthe11t
qu1rter of Section 11,
11ld
point also
IOCIIId In County
Rood No 28 (BIIhom
Rood), thence South
1 lltgreet 21 mlnut11
1111 llong the eaet

or

oo

of an acre, mora or
lass.
Alao aubject to the
eonment of County
Rood No. 28 and oil
utilities
The above deecrlptlon wao wrlnen by
William C
Jewett,
Regloterod Surveyor
No. 5758, on Junt 22,
t982
Excepting there·
from
111 mlnaralo
horatolorl excepted
ond roMrvod to the
Stm1 of Ohio
Aelaronce DHd:
Volume 82, Plge 2t7,
Malga County Olllclol
RICOrdl.
Audltor'a
Percel
No 1H1131 000
The lbow dltarlbed
rMI Illite Ia told "II
lo" without Wl,.ntltl
orc-.nta.

PiOI*IY Add-.
41417' laohln Ad ,
Racine, Ohio .cent
Alii
lahlt.
Appralllcl
at·
. .5,000.00. The reol
•tate cannot be eold
lor l t l l than two·
1hlnll the lpprlieed
VI lUI.
Tormo of llle· 10%
down diiY of 181t, boll·
ance on delivery of
deed Sold IUbllcltO
occruod 2003 reel
eohlle hlxes

Wedneedey

\\\Ol '\(I \II '\I"'

i

....

until 7 •30 o'clock pm
ofuldday
Br order of the Board
o Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John
N
lhle,
Chairperson
Rita
D
Smith,
Director
(10)7 14, 21,28

Public Notice

Oouglao W
Little,
Attorney lor Plaintiff
(9130, (10) 7 , 14

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELEC·
TION ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
Revised
Coda,
Sections 3501 11 (G),
5705 19, 5705 25
NOTICE Is hereby
given that In pur

of

a

Reeolutlon of the
Board of Township
Trusteea
of the
Township
of
Salisbury, Pomeroy,
Ohio, peaaed on the
24th diiY of July, 2003,
thoro will be eubmlt·
tad to a vote of the
people of uld subell·
vlalon at o General
Elactlon to be held In
the
Townohlp
of
llllabury, Ohio, 111 the
I'IIJUitr placn of votlnglheraln, on the 4th
dey of Novtmbolr,
2003, the qUMtlon of
levying a 11x, In
ex . . . . of the tan mill
limitation, lor the
ben•llt
Of
Unlncarporlllod 11'1111
of
Sallabury
Township, excluding
Middleport
ond
Pomeroy VIII... lor
the
purpo11
of
Mtlnlllnlnglnd oper111110 - t a r l t l
lllcf 1111 baing: 2 An
additional 1111 of D.S
mill Ill 1 rate not
••CHdlng
mill•
lor HOh OM dOllar ctf
valuotlon,
which
amountoto nve conta
(10.01) lo• Nell one
hundrod dollora of
valuation, lor live (8)

o.s

yalll'l. The """" (o;

Eltctlon will
Ill 1.30 o ' clacll
om ond remoln open

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MAnER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO·
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchere of the lol·
lowing namod fiduciary has been filed In
the Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio
lor approval and nt·
tlement
ESTATE NO 24905- '
18th
Account
of
JennHer L Sheet.,
Ciluardlon of the Pill·
eon and 81lota of
Oliver E. Boiler, on
Incompetent
Unltse txceptlono
lrt filed thal'lllo , llld
ICCOUnt Will be eel
lor heerlng bollore
llld Court on the
14th
dly
of
November, 2003, at
which
time
11kl
occounl will be conoldered ond contln·
uod from dly to dty
until llnolly dlopoHCI

of.
Any PII1'80n lntor·
Htacl may lilt wrltlln
IXctpllon to Hid
eocount or to m....,.
P111111nlng to the Clition of tha truot,
not lila thin llvt

diYI prior ro 11M elite
Hi lor helrlng.
I Powell
Judge

Common
P1e11
Court,
Probata
Dlvlolon
MeiiJ• County, Ohio
~10) 14

ANNouNl'EMENn;

__

HF..LP W ANTW

I ~---_.1

. Dom1no s Now Hmng al l
ocafiOns
Pt
P easant
C 1 Beer Carry Out perm11 Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy Safe
for sale Chester Township dr vers must be 18 Apply 1n
Me1gs County send leiters person at loca tions
ol Interes t 1o Th e Da•I Y
Sen11ne PO Boll 729 20 Earn money for Christmas
Pomeroy OhiO 45769
by sell•ng Avon call Joyce
304 675 69 19
Say good bye to h1gt1 phone
b•ll sl New local phone serv - - - -- -- ; - E.mp.JQyment OpoarluOily
•ce w1th FR EE unhm ted .QQmbtoed Me1gs Coy oly
natiOn w1de long Distance
Heal!bCommss•one[J
0
1 BOO 635 2908
Healtbpepartmeot
wVM FreedomMov•e com/ tp
Adm ntslrator
aysyou Local Agents want Expenenced
Health
ed
Comm ss10ner/Adm mstrator
needed to d reel the Me1gs
G IVFAWA\
County Hea th Depar tment
_
(w th 20+ stall members)
Must be able to write com
Pupp• es Cocke r Spa n1 el
m111 6 weeks old Call 740 pet tlve grant proposals and
mu1t1 task Possess expert
367 0624
se 1n bu dgeting and f1scal

r

-,

WMe tnendiy male house management comp uter p ro
cat L Her tramed call 74G- hcusncy excellent wntten
and vert:lat (publ!cllntel'per
446 3897
sonal) communication skills
expertise '" rese arcll•ng &amp;
Loi;T AND
solving problems tam•har 1y
FOUND
With emergency procedures
assessment and State regu
Found Female Choco la te
latiOns orgamzatiOnal skills
tab 1n Thurman area house
e)lpert se In policy develop
broken well taken ca re of
ment and program plann ng
Call 740 682 3163
knowledge of publiC health
e)(penence 1n human rela
Y AIUI SAI E
IIOnsfconfh cl management
Must be an achve part•c•

l r
l

r
r

.l ~m

P ~ bllc•tlon

Sunday Dl•play• 1:00 p m
Thureday for Sunday•

oUrldiiY In- Column : 1 00 p m

sunday• Paper

POUCIES Ohio V•l'-v Publlehing ,.....-vH tnt right to ldJt. rtjlct. or canc.i eny tel It my tfrM Errors mu.t be' ~ltd on thl first clay of putMUtion end
Trlbunt-SentiMI-RegiiiH will M ruponl lbtl tor no more thin the cwt of tht 11p1e1 occupMd by the lfTOI' Md only tM flrll lneertion. Wt WI! rt0t b411'-bt.
eny 1011 or expenM thltrHUitl from ttt. public.uon Of omiMiorl of In ldwrtiMmlnt Comction will be mecM kl 1hl ftrlt n eillbh ..:lttion • Box numW
ere 1tw1y1 confkttnll•l • Current rill urd eppllel • All r•l es..Widvtrtttem.me.,. •ub!«:t to the F~ F•lf Houllng Act of 1111. • This
sccepts only help wented Ide mNIIng (QE 1t1ndlrdl We will not knowt"iiY .coepl 1ny ldvertialnrg In wlolltlon of the llw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lb:LP WMmll

lwrightC!IIc net

r"--•,tms•CRf••&amp;•""cE.__..~I t

2 br WI D hOok up ret dep
no pets 304 675-5 162
663 Th rd Ave Gallipolts 2
Br upsta •rs/bathl no pet s
$300 plus ut1h1tes plus
dopo"1 740-245 9595

liol.9:s

0
0

1 3 Bed FORECLOSED
hOmes Buy from $199 a
month• 4% down 30yrs at
8 5% A~ R For L•sllng Call
1 800-7 19 300 1 Ex1 F 1709

(}

3 bd 2 t:&gt;ath Aanch home
Addav1lle school diSifiCI
$750 per month f1rst and
last month re nt depos1t &amp;
reference required 740 367
7039

The
Athens Me gs
Educational Serv1ce llas a
1
position openmg or a
Teacher of th~ Alhens
Altern at•ve
Education

lo - 14

~Mh
«:&gt; 2003 by

Inc

Hor.m;

FOR SAIL

r

2

==--------

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

em

r:~

•io_______~I S2535
16

r

place

r

hardwood floon ba&amp;emen1 2 car garage On __

111s tn cl uded
Keys tone 1 SOD-875 2673 aak lor --'-- - - - - - more 1nfo (740}441 1724
Automotive
1 800 820 'TOmmy Mllstaad between Sam Some rvil le MfSGT
3962
12 2pm onty
USA ongmal army camou • BEDROOM • BATH
Delivery Natiof'lal Co neeo.: _P:o._,-n-e-rsi
- C-au-l-ko-rsi
- C-Ie_a_n_or-e flaga smce
1964
by HOUSE• FOJetiosure onty
1
59 900 lor tisM~ 1-oooColumbus Sandyvme Pott OffiCe wide
1ng auto related sates/dellv EKper~enced
to serv1ce k&gt;Cal
ranne ot clothlnn SIZBS JA 7193001 Exl F144
• '~7 pe-'no
'"""'
OH Top wages 614-491
•
•
market Truck salary bene
3XL m mens 304 273 5665 By 6wnor 3 bedroom 2 tialh
0658
hts •ncluded
Keystone
riverfront Wltll boat dock 1 5
Automot1ve
1 80Q-820 Recaption work available Two while day bedS (w/out acres
1n
Galhpolts
3962
on hne
photo
sllnforma110n
mattress)
with
ladybug
qu•lt
Mon Fn Full or Part time •n
www
orvb
com
code
90303
and
bed
~1
rt
E
xc
condttion
MediCal
Office
Contact
Need 7 ladies to sell Avon
or call 7AQ-448-0531
7.Q-4-46-0805
Dalona (304)773-5000
Caii7AO-A46-3358

~

Grac10us hvlng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
A vers1de
Apartments tn Mu:Xffeport
From $278 $348 Cali 74().
992 5064 Equal Hous1ng
Oppor tumt1es

r

•

N'«t 5 room house new
bath utility room encloSed
pard\ 2 lOis (back lenced)
mid 30 1 call Somerville Lot for sale 1n Racme
Reatny 30.t 675 3030 or
(740)992 58S8
3CM-G7S.JA31

'

Jus1 beyond Centenary
large newly remodeled
kitchen w1th all appliances
dmmg and I v og room two
bedrooms bath large Iron!
and back decks $4B5

Pleasan t Valley Apartment
Are now takmg Applica11ons
for 2BR 3BR &amp; 49R
Apphcauons are ta ken
Monday thru Fnday tram
900 AM 4 PM Off~ s
month $400 depos1t NO Located at 1151 Evergreen
740 446 4254 or Dnve Po.nt Pleasant WV
PETS
740-446-0 205
Phone No 1s (304)675 5806
EHO
New 3 br t bath garage
$500 per mo + deposit No Tara
Townhou se
pets Call 740 245 51t4
Apanments Very SpaciOu s
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA 1
Tak1ng Apphcahons 3 bed 112 Bath Newly Carpeted
room house Porter Will rent Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
w1th opt on buy 2004 Pat1o Star t $385/Mo No
Refe rences/depoSit
740 Pets lease Plus Secunty
388 9946
Depos•t Reqwed Days

i

~

~FOR"""
nl!.~' m;

:::_:_:_:_:_.:..:._:~----

Sola &amp; love sea! Mauntul
Ivory brocade Made by
Rowe co 1n excellen1 cond1
110 n 740 245 sa45
:.::_~__:_::._:...::..:__:__ _ _
Thompsons Apphance &amp;
Aepa1r 675 7388 For sale
re cond ttOned
automattc
washers &amp; dryers retrtQe ra
tors
gas and etectnc
ranges a•r cond•tK&gt;ners ana
wnnge r washers W111 do
repa1rs on ma1or brands n
shOp or at your home

F rewood seasoned oak
$20 p1ckup load You .... ut you
haul Nol respons1ble tor
accidents (304)675-6440
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1 red New &amp; Rebu1lt In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
BOQ-537 9528

- - - - - - - -NEW AND USED STEEL
Steal Beams P pe Rebar
For
Concrete
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grating
For
0 ams
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
Tuesd ay Wednesday &amp;
_E
_•_•_n_m_g_• Fnday Bam 4 30pm Closed
74Q-36 7.()502
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
TWin Rtvers Tower 1s accept
Sunday (740)446-7300
ng apphcattons for wa ting
1st for Hud subSIZed 1 br
orttce Fumtture
apartment call 675 6679 New scratch &amp; Dent
EHO
Save 70% t-800-527 4662
Argonau1 51 9 Br dge Street
Guyandotte/H unllngton MIF

I _7_4_0_44_6_34_8~1
•

1 mobl.. home With 3br
Located 1n Glenwood All
appliances
w1th
WID(304)576-999 1

"r:,.P.--FOR-~-k0:---.

14x70 Tra1ler electriC heat 3
bedroom HUO app,oved
Wood 910\18 to r s.ale 304
No Pets Phone (740)7•2
67
5- 1506
2714
Mobile home lOt Will take 14
or 16 wiOe up to 80 lOng
2 bd wlw carpet a1r porcl'l
$125 month 7~ 175
Very n1ce no pets In
Gallipolis 740-446 2003 or
7.a-446 1409
jjr;jiOr;;~HoiN:IniJ~=;:;;;==;; Bllflel&lt; sewer i&gt;'peo
w.ndowa Hntels, etc Claude
2 bedroom mobile home for
Gooa;
W•nlet'l Rto Grande OH
rent In Rac1ne $325 rent
Call 740-2~5121
$325 &lt;lopOII1 1 yr leaN no
2 rooms mauve carpet with IIIII--""!~----,
petS (7.a)992 50311 no caus
poda- 15&gt;13 and 13x15
I'm;
ator 8 30pm
$125 esclt E&gt;r&lt;olk!n1 cond'
t"'R SAIL
.
tiOn c.ll 740-2~
Trol1ora &amp; Apa r - lor
Saln1 Bernord
ronl Colt 740-3e7.o611 Better In Ben 1 Wood burn • lull popple&amp; $150
.....,..11'9 and ;;UICI I'Idl.
mg ltOYe lnaert wl1h bkMer 2 CI&lt;C Jacl&lt; Ruuoll Terr1or
very nloe 1.tx70 2 Br Wd Exc.llent condltkm 740- pupploo $125 740-258
CIA CM 10 min from town 448&lt;l13e
1652

t
j

t

Lg lfonl and blck Oep. ulllroqw od 1350 Gold Moy Tog wallhar
l&lt;onmoro &amp; Hoi polnl wu1&gt;
mo 7~7
~ KC Lab Pupa 1 Yellow
or Whirlpool dryer All whlta
molo $151l 1 block lomolo.
$65 MCh After
00 pm
$100 Shot• &amp; worm4d
7-90811
(30ol)n3o5103
Good Uaod Appllancea
t and 2 bedroom ap srt Reconditioned
and Jock A . - Torrlor pupt
rnonts lumlarted end unfur Guaranteed
Wuhtn1 hunllr1g oypo $150 oa. can
nished aecurity depOsit Dryara
Rangn
and 74().361 7110
1eqU1red no petS 7&lt;o-992
Relrigeratora
Some
ltort
at _.-"='--:~"""'(
2218
$9S Sl&lt;ogga Applla""" 76
Films &amp;
Vine s• (740)448-1388
VilGEfAIIU:S ~
Bedroom Apartmen1
K~han Furnished
All Heat N-G1o Propane InSert
Electnc
S300 Month Maximum output 24 000 Bulng fruit $1 ooOepos)t Required Near High BTU Excalk!n1 Condl11on 2 00 tb ~ng walnul &amp;
School (304)675-3100 Or $1 000 080 (304)895- $1000 1001bL
3789
Coll7-2124
(304 )675-5509

a!lr-_.:-'..,0......,....,
IrL---F'*iiiiiiRENriiii;;._.l
~

112 acre plus Completely
palnlod new carpet Aoklng otllce bul1d1ng lor ron1 800
108 ~ by appointment SF eleCt heat ale cetllng
740-245-57 1 ~ or 41&amp;-797· len R - i&gt;ark Mtnera~lle
2390
$300'rro+ S200 dep 161 • )
876'1661

a.

Close to Kyger Creek and
Gav1n Plant
Back ot
Add1son Call740 367...0102

Roper Ref Good Shape
Runs &amp; looks good St 75
(304)675 6986

FOR

Gl

i,O

BEAUTIFUL
AP4RT
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Weslwoo d
Onve hom $297 to $383
Walk to shop &amp; mov•es Can
740 446 2568
Equal
Hous1ng OpportuOily

MollOhan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Aoao Porter Oh•o
(740)446 7444 1 en 830
9162 Free Est mates Easy
hnancmg 90 days same as
cash V sa Master Card
Dr1ve a IItie save alot

Used Furn iture Sto1e 130
Bulav lie P ke Manresses
dressers couches bunk
beds
bedroom
swtes
reclmers
Grave manu
ments
www comics com
740 44 6 4782
Gallipolis
OH
Hrs 10 4pm
New Haven 1 bedroom lur
3 br ranch house lor rent nlahed apa rtment also have Stop by
Remodeled 3 bedroom 1 $375 00 a mon 10 New
washer &amp; dryer deposll &amp;
112 bath 1n good n9IQhbor Haven no pets 120 Howard
references
ro
pets
hoOd m Midd aport (7.40) Sl 304-675 3458
(740)992.()165
992 7743 or v1ew at - - - -- - - - www orvb comt 8 1503
4 bedroom 2 bath 568 N1ce one BA unlurn•shed Buy or sell
A1ve rtne
While
Ad
Reference apart ment Range &amp; refrtdg A.nt•ques 1124 East Mam
reqwr9d 1 yr lease 740 prov•ded Water &amp; ~arbage on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740MooD..E HOMe&gt; 446
2158
pa1d Depos1t reQUired Call 992 252 6 Russ Moore
SAIL
740 446-4345 aher 6 p m
owner
for
Rent
on
House
1979 24x48 Sect10nal 3 BA Rockcastle Road Bros1a Now Takmg A.ppllcatlons2 Bath Den French C1ty 'WV $350 Damage Deposit 35 West 2 Bedroom
Homes Gall pols 0hlo 740. Referen ces from Former TownhOuse
Apartments
446 9340
Landlords No ns de pets Includes Water Sewage 3 Piece Full S•ze Sedroom
1994 Clayton 16 x80 Elec 3 Call (304)675 t 277 after Trash S3501M o 740 446 Su 1e w/matt ress &amp; bo:.
6;.
P_
m_ _ _.,.._ _ __ 0008
spnngs (304 )675-8861
bedrooms 2 baths round _
3 Br hOUae tor rent LOcated
on Sanders Onve $550 per
month Deposit and refer
ences
reqw ed
Call
W1seman Real Estate 740.
446 3644

cation and expellen ce
Subm 1 a letter ot mterest

'

Gooo;

!OR RE:Nr

Georges Portable Sawm111 A pp ro~e 2400sq tt 3 5 bed
don 1 haul you r logs to 1he room 2 bath 1 car garage
0
fenced back yard storage
pan1 1n County s total hea 1h ~~shunme and releb~ns~:~ ~ m II JUS! call 304 67,5.1957
bwld.ng has large den new
ca e delivery system plan
Athens 1 have one ope nIng tor a carpet Vtnyl &amp; central a r
be mvolved 1n nfrastructure Supenntendent
Call Good locat1on close to
development alld b1o terror ~=~~:r Edu~~~onal A~~~~~ Elderly man left
(304)675-6 183
school Also 1ncludes 2
tns1de Garage sale 1467 1sm preparedness collabo
apanments on back lot cur
Jackson P1ke Thursday &amp; rate With State/local social Avenue SUite 111108 Athens
Oh 457m Appl•cahon dead J m s Carpentry and small
Oct 16&amp;1795
serviCe agenc es bus1ness 1ne Until PoSition ts F lied landscapmg 20 yrs expen rently rented $130 000. lor
once
Free
es1 1mate all (304 )675 7833
commu n1t y org amzat1 ons
WM1l0
The AME SC IS an equa
healthcare
provtd er s o p p o r t u n 1 I y (740i446
2506
•:._:::..:_.:..:.::.:.:.:..:._ _ __
m ULl
Conttdentlallty requ1red
By Owner 3 Bedroom Ranch
M•n mal educatiOnal req u1re employarlprov•der
Licensed Daycare/ Baby s t 2 baths 2 car garage tub skylight AIC 3 fans
Abso u1e Top Dollar U S ment Masters Degree 10 - -- - -- -- 11ng watch kidS all shtfts Gal tpol1 s photos/information some new carpet $15 500
S lver
Gold
Co1ns Public Health or related Wanted Licensed Oh1o take pnvate pay/slate pa1d on hne www orvb com code
Kanauga Mobl~ Home
Proofsets Diamonds Gold l1eld Salary commensurate Soc al Worker to prov1de ~1:._4::0
7 ::_)_:84_:3:_:
1 0::9:.:4:.___ __
81803 or call (740)3877039
Slln
U S Currency
Rmgs
Galllpolll Ohio
w1th expenence w1th a base counseling servtces lor MB Handyman Affordable •----~--.....,
M TS Com ShOp 151
pay ol $35 000 plus benet Is youth 1n a group home set Servtce Hauling pa•ntmg
740-441~310
Second Alf9 nue Galllpo 1s
Current or forme r Me•gs tmg tn the Jackson Oh10 power washl l'lg dnveway
COles
MoMe
Homes
74D-446 2842
County res•den t pret~ rred
Area Th1s ts a full t1 me pos• repair sea coaling gutters
-US 50 East Athens Qh 1o
Pawpaw fru1t $1 to $2 per Subm•t resume and five pro liOn w1th compe1111ve sa ary Chimney plumbmg Jack of
45701 74Q-592 1972
pound walnuts $10 per hun fess•onal references lo and excellent benef•ts Must all trades 30yrs exp Semor
Me1
gs
Counly
Board
of
be
mot1
va1
ed
and
have
a
Discount
Free
Estimates
Good used 14X70 2 bed
dred pounds (740)698
All rut estate ldver1i-'ng
Health 112 E Memo r1al w II ngness to work w1th kidS ( 304 )882 2196 (3041377
room
2 bath
Only
2124
this newsp~~per Is
In
Onve Pomeroy OhiO 45769 Send resumes to The 8266
$8995
00
Includes
dehyery
subject to the Federal
I \11'1 Cl\ \ II '\ I
by 11 05 03
Counseling
Center
Call Harold (740) 385 9948
Feir Houalng Act ot 1968
..,1 1{\ I( I -..
At1entl on AI S1ebel 608 Park W1ll pressure wasll homes
which makes It Illegal to
Now 14X70 3Bri2Bth ooly
Full t1me help needed Apply Ave Ironton OH 45638 tra1lers decks metal bUild
advertlae sny
$995 00 down and only
110
between 10 11 am Man EOE
ngs and gutters CaH (740)
preference, llmitltlon ~!
$1 96 43 per month Call
Thurs
Sat
McCiures ;;;,;;;...~-----., 446015 1 ask for Ron or
.1
HELP WAroiTED
dlsc:rlmln.llon baed on
120
Restaurants Ali locat•ons 1
SrruATIONS
leave a message
rece. color religion H X I : Karona (740) 385 767 1
l1m1111l etlfus Of netlonsl
An awesome JOb $6 $ 9 po r Jackson P1ke Ga!ltpol s L.---·WiiAijtTDiiiiiio-_.1
New 2003 Ooublewide 3 BR
or'gln or •ny intention to
hOur after tra•nmgt No ekpe 740 446 3837 Middleport
&amp; 2 Balh Only $1 695 down
mHe•ny euch
rlen ce needed Fu l l par t 740 992 524B
Pomeroy Ass1sted llvmg an d exira
B~
and &amp;295/mo 1 800 691
preference limitation or
care for your loved one 1n my
OPPorntJNnY
!Jme fl exible schedul ng 740 992 6292
dlecrimlnllion "
convenient
Pomeroy .,.-----:--:-::-::- oh;,;
om,.:
e '"7;_:4~0~388
:::::,;::0::_11~8~-., L---iolliiiioiiiiiil;..-'
No Problem Sale- Want a
Location 20+ pos1t1ons Growing Heal~ng &amp; Coolmg 11-«1
11us1Nrn;
This new~JF*P8f wll not
INOTICE1
new sectional home? No
availabl e call 9 9 M F: 1 company lOOking lor expert
TRAINING
knowingly occtpt
OHI O VALLEY PUBLI SH
Problem Need foundation
..Jobs
anced
Installers
with
some
888 974
.cv.rtiMrMnt• for rut
tNG co recommends that
and septic? No Problem
tecll experience InstallatiOn
..atewhlchlsln . ·
you
do
bustness
wftl'1
P8QPie
Ga111pollo
Co'"'
CoiiNeed utiht1es run or dnveAVO Nt All Areas• To Buy or axpenence a must Good
vloltlllon of the lllw Our
way? No Probktm Want btg
Sell
Shirley Spears 304 pay (740)441 12.3!) 1t no (Careers Close To Home) you know and NOT to send
rlll1ders •rt~ hermy
Call Todayl 740-446-4367
money through the ma•l until
s&amp;'JtnQI on a 2003 model
675 1429
answer leave message
Informed thM 1111
1 800-214.()452
you have mvestlgated the
No Prot; em Coles Mobik!
dwetlinp lldwrtiMd In
Busy salon has great oppor Help wanted car ng for the www galltpohscaree roo!lege com oHenng
Homes U S 50 East
thl•~ ....
tunify for expeflenced styhst elderly Darst Group Home
Reg *90-05 1274B
IVIIIIble on 1n Miual
Athens Oh tO 740-592 1972
ABSOLUTE GOLOUINEI
with manager s hcense to now paymg m1n.mum wage
oppor1unl1ySu1ca 1967 Where Vou Gel
60 vend•ng m&amp;ttunes w1th
take over excess clientele new shi ftS 7am 3pm 7am
Your Money's Worth
excellent location s all tor
740'44 1 1880 or 740 256 Spm Spm 11pm 11pm
Farm house 3 bedroom 2 Older 2 bedroom 12x65 1n
$10 995 (BOO) 234-6982
8336
7am call 74()-992·5023
baths 2 story newly reno great cood1t1on
Needs
1 sun setter retractable
Chnsllan metal rock band
vated unfiniShed basement r&lt;llhlng but moved ready 10
awmng &amp;IZB 1Ox20 has 5
needs drummer o ur lnflu I have one opening for a
sc,eened pofch 22x20 live tn $4800 located in
ram way arches used 3
entes 1nclude Fugazy Bl aCk Elderly man left
Call
garage
double carport Bidwell VInton
area
summers 11 Interested csll
183
- -, - - - - 304 675-3664
Sabbalh AI~ Cooper Plnk l·304--)6_7_5-6_
publiC water Melga County (740)388-9818
Aoyd Dlo Metal llca Black country setting 5+ acres no Very good condl11o1Vclean
TURNED DOWN ON
Label
Society
Slaple Now hiring Sales Aepa to - - - - - - - - SOC1AL SECURITY 1881? land contract $79 500 call 1993 mol&gt;lle homo (14XBO)
Disciple Tourniquet Pillar call
Government 25 Serious People W.nttd
(740)742 9937
No Fee Un~u We Win!
sitting on 2 loti on Second
and a whole bunch of oth er Departments
C ty Who want to LOSE welgllt
1 888 582 3345
r$Ck bands We are looking Departments Government We Pay You Cash for the
Houst tor sail In Harttort $1rnt
SyracuH
Oh
I ~ I \ I I "' I \ I I
tor someone who can Entitles We call Business pounds you LOSE!
WV on Moore Street S1orage D..nldlng wMnyl 11021 1
groove ! Interested you can only no residential calls Sate Natural No Drugs
000 00 OBO (740) 7•2 lng 1o mal&lt;:h1 homo
X2
call Joseph (740)441 1236 $8 00 minimum up to $12 00 BOQ.20Hl632
HOMe&gt;
carport on
24X70 paved
(depending oo experience)
FOR SAIL
drlvo Asking ~ 000 00
Delivery National Co need guaranteed plus bonus our - - - - - - - - •
N~
3
llOdroom
Ranch
at
~OBOiiil'...;.l7_40::l-992
....,.a:~~~30--,
lng auto related sales/del v top Sales Reps average A 24 bulb commerctal tan
ery persons to service local between SBOO to S12 000 a ning ~d reasonably prK:ed 3 bdrm FA Lg LA Calh Spring Valley on JackSon
AND llvo..DINGs
market Truck salary l)ene week. Call 304-675--2700 or 74()..388.Q436 after 8 30 prn ceilings wood beams lire- Pike 1 112 balh fireplace

'

H OUSI'l iOW

2 BR Ou et Locahon Nea r
Holzer CIA. WID HOOkup
No Pets $399 P us Ut1llf1eS
(740)446 2957

2br 1ba home 482 Hornton
Sl Mason 41 acre lot adta
cent Umon Cemetery Broad
Run Map parcel 1660003
agents protected {304)4B7
672 3

Nurse Pract•oner
Ped1atnc Olf1ce 1n Ripley WV
that sees pat ants age birth
21 years old IS seekmg
FT/PT cert1f1 ed pnmary care
Nurse Pract oner w•th ped1
atnc e)(penence Pos1t1on
does not reqwre any on call
beeper or llOSpl!at cover
age
Compe1111Ve salary and ben
ef1t pacKage Pl ease ca
(304}372 82 50 fo r more
ntormat on You may fa11
resume to (304)372 8297 or
ma11resume to
Olf1ce Manag er
AT 1 Sox 62 AA
A1pley WV 2527t

Program tor the 2003-2004
School Year ThiS POSition IS
a 9 month posit•on witll fu ll
board approved bene fits
Appl cants must hold a val d
teachm g ca rt l1cate/l ce nse
n special education or be
w111 ng to get a temporary
license and pursue the spa
c1a1 educa tion valldat on
Salary Will b'e based on edu

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

All Dleplay 1 :z Noon 2
auelneu Daye Prior To

In Next Day•• Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrlplion • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Add reu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

110

1.

Display Ads

Word Ads
D a lly In- Column: 1 00 p m
Monday- friday for In•ertlon

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. .

V1s1t us at 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at· (304) 675· 1333
Fax us at (304) 675-5234
E-ma1/ us at
classified 0 mydallyreglster.com

V1s1t us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at (740) 992·2157
E-ma1/ us at·
classified@ mydallyaentlnel.com

•

Monday thru Friday

a Game•

National Basketball AIIOCIIIIon
SACRAMENTO KIN GS- Released F
Ashante Johnson
SEATILE SUPERSONICS- Waived F
Matt Barn es and F Sam Hoskln
Na11onal Foo tball League
DETROIT LIONs-Cl aimed WR KR
Regg e Swinton off wa vera fro m Green
Bay
Netlonll Hockey League
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETs-Placed LW
Trevor Letowakl on the Injured llat
ST LOUIS BLUEs-Reassigned F Stove
Martins to Worcester of the AHL
COLLEGE
W DENER- Named Al sa D1Bonaventura
women s ba sketball coach

V1s1t us at. 825 1 hlrd Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at (740) 446-2342
Fax us at. (740) 446·3008
E-matl us at
classlfled@mydallytrlbune.com

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ

~egtster

Sentinel

m:rtbune

Offtee llo~~

Transactions

Emptor Prospective
purchasero are urged
to check lor llano In
the public I'ICOI'do of
Meigs County, Ohio
The Melga Countv
Sheriff maktl no
g...,.ntee •• to the
status of t111e prior to

open

Ad.-..

Phoemk at Florida 7 30 p m
Boston at Dallas 8 30 p m
Ottawa at Los Ange es 10 30 p m

Doctrine of Caveat

llld

To
Place
Your

Buffalo 4 Dallas 3
Florida 2 Carolina 2 tie
Columbus 3 Vancouver 2
WashlnQton 2 Toronto 2 t•e
Tuesday 1 Games
Washmgton at Montreal 7 30 p m
N Y Islande rs at Atlan ta 7 30 p m
Edmonton at Calgary 10 p m

All sheriff's oalea
operate under the

1uance

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Monday a Gamel

west, a distance of
40 I 5 feet to a point,
thence
north
1
degree 21 mlnutea
west parallel to the
east line of Section
16, a distance of
98 61 feet to a point
thence
north
88
degrees 39 minutes
eaat, o dlatonce of
40
feel to the place
of beginning, containing eighty eight
thousandths (O 088)

In One Week With Us

Two po1nta for a win one point lor a t1e
and overt1me loss
Sunday • Games
Los Angeles 4 Ch1cago 2
San Jose 3 M1nnesota 2
Phoen1x 2 Anahe m 0
St Louis 2 Colorado 1

P-..:ablic N"otlces In N e ~sp.apers .
R..lght t o I&lt;..._o""', I&gt;ell:vere d Right. t o "'"V"ou..- I&gt;oo.-...

(2)
North ,
Range
Twelve (12) West and
a
part
of
the
Northeast
Quarter
and
Southeast
Quarter of Section
Sixteen (16), more
particularly
described as follows
Beginning at a
point at the Northeast
corner of the southeast
quarter
of
Section 16, said point

Public Notice

83

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
WLPeiGB
3
0
1 000
M1am1
2
0
1 000 1
New Jersey
1
2333 2
Ph1ladelph1a
1
Washington
23332
0
3
000 3
Boston
Orlando
0
3
000 3
0
4
000 3 1
New York
Central Division
WLPeiGB
lnd1ana
2
0
1 000
Toronto
2
0
1 000
Cleve an d
2
1
667
11
New Orleans
2
t
667
1.
M !waukee
2
2
500 1
Atlanta
1
2
333 1 ,
Chicago
1
2
333 1 1
Detroit
1
2
333 1 'It
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldweet Division
WLPeiGB
San Antonio
3
0
1 000
Denver
2
0
1000 •
2
0
1000 ~
Ulah
2
1
8671
Dallas
Minnesota
21
667
1
Memphis
1
1
500 111
4
Houston
Pacific Division
WLPetGB
Golden State
2
1
667
2
1
667
Portland
2
1
Sacramento
667
Seanle
2
1
667
1
1
500
LA Laker&amp;
LA Clippers
0
2
000 1!.
Phoenix
0
3
000 2

deed of correction to

cents (SO 20) lor each
one hundred dollars
of valuation, lor live
(5) years The Polls
lor satd Election will
open at 6 .30 o clock
am and remain open
until 7 30 o clock pm
of said day
By order of the Board
or Elections, of Meigs
County, Ohio
John
N
lhle,

200
176
t 68
129

Basketball

Sutton , Township Two

valuation,
which
amounts to twenty

333
276

Others recelvmg 12 o r more po1nts 11
Lan caster Fisher Cath 21 12 Spnng
Cath Cent 20 13 Marla Stein Manon
Local 13

lng south 1 degree 21
minutes east, along
the
east line
Section
16
and
County Road No 28,
a distance of 9515

excaedlng 2 mills lor
each one dollar of

1

Preseason Glance

62

- Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

157

National Basketball Association

Others receiVIng t2 or more po1nts 11
Manon Harding 30 12 Brunswick 18
DIVISION II
1 Macedon~ a Nordonla ( 18) 8 0
2 Avon Lake (9) B o 309
3 Cols Brookhaven (1) 8 0
4 P1ckenngton Central (3) a 0
5 Syvan1 a Southv1ew (1) 8 0
6 Trenton Edgewood (3) 8 0
7 Warren Howland 7 1
B Kings M1lls Kmgs 7 1
9 Whitehall Yearling 7 t
10 T1ffm Columbian 7 1

n

5 Gates M1HS Gilmour (2) 8 0
6 Amanda Clearcreek 8-0
7 S m1thv~ l e 7 1
107
8 Woodslleld Monroe Cent 7 1

Dalton 33 14 Hamler Patrick Henry 32 15
Warren JFK 24 16 Mineral R1dge 20

AP Ohio High School Footb all Poll list
COLUMBUS Oh10 (AP) - How a state
panel of sports w 1ters and b oadcasters
ra tes Oh1o h1gh school football teams mthe
s1xth weekly Associated Press poll of 2003
by OHSAA diVISIOns With won lost record
and lotal po nts (l1rst place voles 1n paren
these s}
DIVISION I
1 Cia St lgnat1us (21) 8 0
2 Warren Harding (8) 8 0
3 Mentor (4) B 0
284
4 e m Colerain (2} B o
5 Westerville S ~ t ) 8 0
6 N Can Hoover B 0 179
7 Cm Elder 7 1
152
B Lakewood St Edward 6 2
9 Tal Wh itm er 8 0 63
10 Dublin Coffman 7 1

231
204

Others receiving 12 or more points 11
Morral Ridgedale 35 12 (lie) Columbiana

Prep Football

~rthune

Tuesday, October 14, 2003
OIVISION V
1 Marion Pleasant (25) 8 0
344
2 Sarahsvll!e Shenandoah (6) 8..0

Arizona St 59 Oregon 14

vote through one potnt tor a 25th place
vote and prev1ous rank1ng
Record Pta
Pva
1 Oklahoma (61) 6-D
1 597 1
1 534 2
2 M1Bm1 (3)
6-Q
r 475 4
3 V rgmla Tech
6-Q
1 385 8
4 Georgta
51
5 Southern Cal 5 1
1 339 9
1 161 12
6 Wash ngton St 5 f
1 155 5
7 F orida St
5-1
1 091 3
80h1oSt
51
9 towa
51
1 035 14
6
10 LSU
51
986
7
839
11 Arkansas
41
16
802
12 N llhno1s
6-0
18
751
13 Purdue
51
23
743
14 Wisconsin
61
21
711
15 M1ch ~g a n St
61
647
18
60
16 TCU
611
20
17 Michigan
52
10
51
500
1 Nebras ka
19 Auburn
42
363
20 Texas
42
31 1
11
13
236
21 Tennessee
42
24
235
22 Oregon St
51
234
23 Oklahoma St 5 1
230
24 MISSOUri
51
17
224
25 M1nnesota
61

Vo ... r

NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Reference
571517 Ohio Revised
Code
Tha Meigs County
Board of Revision
has completod Its
wortc or equallzatlon

f age B2

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2003

e

i1

•

~

�Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2003

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesda~Oct.

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

ALLEYOOP

Are you 65 ·or older?

f~~~~~

ACROSS

Phillip

North
. Remodeling
Used Kichen Cabinets
Formica counter, stainless sink &amp;
appliances, 2' double steel Stanley
doors Call after 7 pm

on your home delivered subscription!
•

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

Cellular

304-675-3383

I

rLo__.~_R_U.SALECKS
__... r BoA~:~aro~

1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft.
high cube boll., e)(collent
cond. 740 _446 _94 16
-------1995 FORD EJ 50 CUBE
BOX
TRUCK
CALL
_ _
( 740 ) 446 _941 6 _ M-F
9 5
Located
1391
Safford
School, Gallipolis ·.

r

&amp;unbap ottme• -i&gt;entinel

Y\~

. MoroR HOME'S
1992 Chevy Ast ra ex tender:!
van, runs good , $ 1,000 , 2001 Hornet Ute 24' loaded
(740)949-2909
Must be sold. French City
Homes Gallipolis, Ohio 7401994 Chevy 1 ton, 4 wei, 446-9340
Silverado, flat bed, tool - - - - - - - bO)(BS, tow pkg. 102k miles 2002 Sportsman Front ier.
sleeps !line. new
cond..
$8500. 619-770-0493
used five ti mes. factory war1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee ranty, unique floor plan.
Laredo 4x4, $9,995. 1996 e~tras included. call fo r
Dodge Da kota Supe rcab detail s or questions, list ·
4x4, and many more 4x4's·to $17,2 00 sacrilice $12,200.
441-"9593 be rare
1Op m
Choose from .
Motors. please.
Riverv iew

I

:Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

'·Phone'------~------------of your PhOIO 10 to

1740)992-3490

Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Sf R\ H I S

1

·-·--·· ····················-·······-···············

1998 Dodge Grand Caravan

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

mission,
e11.cellentnew
condition.
Sport , loaded,
trans-

--FRiiriullrrsill::&amp;:oiil_.ll
VEGETABLE'S

r

UVESIOCK

I

Potatoes for sale 50# $10, Angus Bulls, Heifers plus
Mon-Sat. , 65002 State Maine-Angus Steers and
Route 124, Reedsville. Oh, Heifers, Top bloocl lines.
(740)378-629 1
Slate run farm, Jackson .
740-286-5395.
I \1{\1 . _, 1 I'PIII . _,
Horse Boarding lndoorfout,\ I I\ I ..., Ill( 1,
door pans. Box stalls, 740·
FARM
1446-47 10 barn ; 740 -6452475 cell.

_

EQuiPMENr

r

~

·v &amp;

1m

I

New Idea 323 One Row
GRAIN
Corn
Picker. Many new ..._
pa rts. Excellent Condition.. Cover Crop wheal $ 4 .50 per
(740)992·7603
bushel , and 1,000 lb round
bail hay $ 15 each. Call 74
245 _5047 _

o-

LIVE'S'lOCK

IR \ \ ...,I'OIU \I H 1'\

[_16__FOR
A_1JTOS
_
_ _,..I
SALE

r10

AlffOS
FOR
SALE

$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS. 1990 Ford Probe 120k, good
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc I co nd. $1400. 304-675-5205
Cars from $500. For listings or 304-675-4595
1 - 8 00 ~719·300 1 ext 3901
1995 Grandam 20 99K
$2,495; 2000 Buick Ce ntury
1984 Fo rd Cougar V-6. 57K $4,395; 19 othe rs
auto/power windows, locks,, $1 .195to $5, 795.
honor
lumbar seat, AM/FM!Cass. PAC program cars.
good tra nsmi ssio n , tire s.
COOK MOTORS
740-446-4070 5-9 pm.
740-446-0103

W9

19 ~9

1985 Cutlass Supreme. 1
owner, sharp 37819, very
clean. $2000. new tires
1990 Jeep Cherokee 4 liter
98700, sharp truck 2 wh .

drive

Pontiac Bonneville
loaded $7,295. 2000 Saturn
4dr. Blu e, 41 ,000 miles
$5,99 5. And many more
cars to choose from.
Riverview · ,
Motors

$2000. (740)446· (740)992·3490

1266.

gentle, walking horse mare,
withl without
PBIWH,
6
month lilly, imprinted han died daily 388-0436 after
5:30pm.

71,000
miles,or 740·992·
$7500.
(740)949-4037
5082.

(740)664-3206

BLIC
NOTICES
tN THE COMMON
stake; thence In a
Excepting 4.1379
PLEAS COURT OF wes1erty direction to
acres and easement
MEIGS
COUNTY, lhe south east corner
for Ingress, egress
OHIO ·
of samuel B,. Shar\e's
and utlllly service
HOME
NATIONAL land; thence south 42
conveyed to Dennis
BANK
112 degrees west 45 " Lee Richards, Jr. and
PLAINTIFF
rods and 15 tinks to
Melisse L. Richards,
VS·
the forks of a ravine;
by deed recorded in
GARY J. WOLFE,
thence down the mid·
volume 113, Page 747,
ET AL.
dte of satd ravine
Meigs Counly Official
CASE NO. 02 CV 79
south 71 degrees Recorda.
.
NOTICE OF SALE
weal 10 rod a to an
The real estille
By vlrlue of an
Elm
tree; lhence
above described is
Order of Sale Issued along and wllh lhe
subject to all leases,
out ot lhe Common ctift lo lhe north and
easements and rights
Pleas Court of Meigs south tine which Is of way of record.
County, Ohio, In lhe 1he
boundary
Auditor's
Parcel
case ot tha Home between thla property
No.: 08.00729.000
National
Bank, and
Artie
Y.
The ·
above
Plalntlft, vs. Gary J. Bridgeman's 135 acre
described real estate
Wolfe,
et
al.,
tract; thence north on
Is sold "aa Is" without
Defendants, upon a lhe above described
warranties
or
Judgment
therein
tine to .t he place of covenants.
rendered, being Caae beginning containing
Property
Addreas:
No. 02-CV-79 In said 13 112 aces, more or 47801
TR.
731,
Court, the Sheriff of teso.
Raclna, OH 45771
Melgo County, Ohto,
RESERVING
the
Real
Estate
witt ofter for sale at coal and other miner- Appraised
at:
the front door of the ata beneath the ,,._ $58,000.00. The real
Courthouse·
In face of said land. A · eatate cannollle sotd
Pomeroy,
Meigs right of way Ia hereby for less lhan lwoCounty, Ohio, on lhe granled the grantee thlrda the 'appraised .
'13111
day
of through
Artie
Y. value.
November, 2003, at Bridgeman's 135 acre T.,ma of ' Sale: 10%
10:30 a.m., the follow- tract.
down day of sale, ballng tanda and tonePARCEL 2: A 32
ance on delivery of
menta, located at toot right of way for · Sold aub)ecl to
47801
TR.
731, purposes of Ingress accruecl 2003 real
ReCine, OH 45771 . A and egreae and utility
eolate laxea; Sold
complete
legal service lo lhe above
subject to the Unlled
cteacrtpllon of the real cteacrlbed 13 112 acre
Stales of America 's
. . - Ia •• followa:
parcel. Commencing
right of red!mpllon
PARCEL 1: Situated al the aouth line of
under 28USC Section
In ·Le1art Township, Parcel No. 1 as
2410(C).
Meigs County, Ohio, described .. In deed All aherlff'a sales
In Secllon _!lo. 14, reconled In Vol. 295, operate und~r the
Town 2, Range 12 Page
249;
Meigs
Doclrlne of Caveat
beginning al the . County
Deed
Emplor. Proopectl~e
eoulftWett comer of .Records,
where
purchaaara are urged
John H. Adams prop- Townahlp Road T631
10 checi&lt; for Ilona In
q
lind on lhe north llllersecb aald aoulh
the public recorda ot
.net 11011111 line which · line: Said acceu and Metga County, Ohio.
Ia U. bou'ndary line· · ·utility · rtght of way The· Meigs Counly
boatwun lhlo property ohall follow lhe exlot·
Sheriff makes no ·
and
Artie
Y. lng I'OO!dwlly aa much guarantee as lo lhe
Bridgeman• 135 acra •• practicable. ·
stalua of lllle prior lo
1r11c1, 'IIIIa point begin _
ReferonC. Deeds:
sale .
lrldlcaled by lhe point Volume 300, Paga 681
~lnda
R. Warner,
·of a plow half burled . and Volume 295, Page Attorney for Plaintiff
In lhe grGUnd; !hence 249, Melga County (9) 30, (10) 7, 14
north 11 rods to a Deed Records.

Ho~m

IMPROVEMEJIITS

r

~~...;;,;;;;;;;;;;::,;;;,._

40

__,

MOTORCY~

I

0436.

~

~- l

TttE-

A 6 2
K Q 9 1

740-992·7599

:::=====~:::
Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

A

Linda's 'Beauty Sfioy
Welcomes Betty Hbschar

Our Fall Specials:
Ladles Style Cuts J r..
Kids&amp;Men5 ..

BARNEY

L&lt;Hrger Hair Slightly Higher
· ·
NOW
Tanrrr rrg Available

YOU KNOW HOW
VOICES CARRY
ACROSS THESE
. HILLS !!

Uftfki11s or Appoiuunrnu wrlcomc aN}'Iillll'.
985-JJ4811wt~.lu for you r b~Jiur..u.

Hill 's Self
Storage

2111
'l7
2111
30

~!own-home
~

-

TonnHie

Alt.

Powctery

Nil aurfet
Plow Into

31 calendar

8 Sctentllt't
lolr
llombKk
7 &amp;pedltlon
36 ton aourco 8 Flo.a olong
37 eon-t pl. I Poflah
38 Hat feature 10 - - ·

aquaro
32 Uti entry

35 Mo.

a...

48 Far-flung
11-wh•ter 4llllruloncr

Once

. 24

.~ l'teur-cte- -

you should aim to win three hearts and
twO black-suit aces. But how should you
attack hearts? ·
Best Is to lead tne ace, to get a look at the
dummy. If you see king-doubleton on ·the
board, continue with a low heart; a good

.Dean Hill
New&amp; Ustd
475 South Church St.

WATERPROOFING

1·800·822·0417

,J

P'5fli \~ \fi.E. WOR-~1
\~P..,ffi€.11.

~

''W .V 's # 1 C h evy. Pontiac. Buick . Old :=;
&amp; Custom Van D ea ler'"

R.B.

t

P'~ts MKtt-~e:.

U~ S\Ut&gt;Y!

IT'!li\OAA!I!U. ...

33 Celt a

01 1

~bo1. tot~
35 ..

50 "I, - . (roclc

auiObiOt

51 Pledgt

5210Upart
53 .........

55=k1J

Strangely, in the bOOk, Roth gave dummy
only_king-doubleton of hearts, so that a
low·heart lead was good enough .
The book is $17.95 postpaid lrom Baron

"I lost my shirt
a"""
in the stock
1
market!" /

Trucking

Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call 1800) 27 42221 to order.

HAULING:
• Limestone

.'Not me!
My money is wilh

• Dirt
• AgLime

LOOK. l'AAN&lt;:I~. 6iNA '5

Insurance
Services.

I'.FTEI&lt; ELE&lt;:TION DIW,
SHE'LL HAVE TO COPE
WITH !'AI LURE FOR
"' CAANG.E I f&gt;Y BEATING HER , I"LL BE
TE"CtHNG HER A VALU~~·;,:;c, "LIFE LESSON 1•

GOOD AT" EVElt.YTHING I
SHE'!&gt; I'!EVER. CoME IN
SEC:OMt&gt; HER WHOLE
Lt FE 1 THAT'S NOT

OH

740·985·3564

1-\ EALTH.,_,Y_,\ __.
Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds starl

6:3(1
Lasl Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Honanza Get

I

II

H"T~ JU ST

T"HE SORT
DF WAAPEt&gt;
l-OGIC YOU

LOOK FOR

rN A Cl-ASS
TREI'.SURER .

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

'

11401 985-4180 '
After 6pm '"'. ,...,.,;'(!,.
.. ·
),:::...·•' ~·
'' '

.--..~

'I

Wldne~.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER ·
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

Any

NFHVKIII

ZL

Fll

WALZIIILL

GASTBS

Wt

RC8

GKHBL

ZR

VBBVL ."

CAJWBDR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Foe purposes of"action nothino is moce uselul than
narrowness ot thought combined with energy ot will." - ffenri F. Amiel
·.
lcl2003 bv NEI&lt;. Inc 10-14
WQ ..
G&amp;MI

· After summer I was moaning
about my ciothe s not fitting. My
son poked fuJI at me and said ,
,..--,,..,.,-:--:----.·Being overweight usually is just

Q-~:.:.;~~

1--,. . .

5
s..,H,-R.,.,,_A-T17.:. ;A.,.,
' ,-lj··

quo~

me ehudlo
_ •
_ _ _ .
by Hlling In 1ht milling ...,..,
'-...L.-1"-.1...-L-.I......J ·yov dl'loloo 1,.... ~.. No. 3 balow.

f9

PR INT NUMB£iEO
l£11£15 IN 50U&lt;R£&amp;

e ~~:c;~~~A£1

t£TTERII

I I I I I -I I I

looks will have a strong positive effect on

A middle aged women complarned about ~er husband
being lazy and inept around the house. She srghed, "The
older my husband gets. the better at everything he USED
to BE. '

(Feb.

20-March

20)

-

lnstinc11vely, you'll have an acute awareness of what resources are at your disposal today and how you can make the
most of them . By loHowing your Instincts,
you can go lar.
. ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) - This Is a
good day to shore up a personal relationship that needs a little tending. Make an
E!ffort to spend some quality time doing
something together that warms the heart

'.

VDILZSBIIR

SCRAM.uts ANSWERS to - 1 3 • Ol
Meadow· Budge -Issue- Oblain - USED lo BE

PISCES

,M.!JSIC!
11£~
COMTf

992-62 15

ZKNFNNK ,

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Porsons
who have optimist ic and e)Cpansive outattract all things good. making for a very
.pleasant day.

1\1\S IS MY

Pomeroy. Oh•o
22 Year
al

EFIIB ."

Instead of

your attitude today. This frame of mind will

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'K

NFHWKR

In the year al'lead, many obstacles or pitfa lls that had pnwlously stymied you can
now be overcome with relative ease. Once
past them. you will have many opportunities to put some ot your bigger concepts
Into action.

activity or endeavor you engage in today
where you fully utilize your talents, skills or
abilities will not go unnoticed or unrewarded. Aim high and strive to do your best.

'

JIB

K

.

OCt. 15, 2003

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -

Free Estimates

"ZR ' L

n IH!P

By Bernice Bede 0.01

so it behooves you to plan something fun
with friends. Take the time to relax and
enjoy yourself.

• New .Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting :
• Patio and Porch Decka •

Todly'seivecEfQ1111$l

-~:

SAGITIARIUS !Nov: 23-Doc. 21) Social arrangements you make today
could offer you some special advantag&amp;s,

.. ..._hi!;.

5 FREE

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

by Lula Campos
c.bilyC4;fllf ar'*'¥••• n crellld lrom ~II\' flmcus P'IClPII •
EICti!Df .. h ~ ltlldl !or ..,.,.....

Graph

thinking, only about the moment at hand,
look ahead a bit today and give some·
thought to your future interests.
Constructive plans can be developed tha t
will prove to be very fruitful.
SCORPIO (OCt 24-Nov. 22) Associates and friends vlew you very
favora~y at this time and are likely to do
what they can to assist you when and
where you need them. Don't be afraid to
request favors today.

llllrS PIINiiNG
(a&amp;lore6pm
•

G

Astro-

LIBRA (Sept 23-Qcl. 23) -

Let me do i: for youl

Leovo M&amp;liOQ!L~J.::~ · ft-1

partner will have four or live cards In the
suit. However, when dummy has king.
thi rd, yOu should continue with the heart
queen, hoping to pin the jack In declarer's

CELEBRITY CIPHER

hand.

-a r--,..--" ~--

r'=======~ 'tL=~;~====~;;;;;:;:=~

949-1405

puncher

23 HI or AK,

5 Grouncted

lin; he probably has al most a jack. So.

Ripley, WV 25271

*fl'll hiiiiiiiU

mlldkiine
46Sgt.
Praoton'a

salvo?
You know that partner Is playing third vio-

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

*ROOFING
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
HEIMlESS
GUnER

31 Aria
...,,_

Ealt
All pus

4li

I'

the worst of al l. The latest book to tall into
this last category is ~Pattl ways to Better
Bridge Defense· by Dann"Y Roth (Master
Point Press, 2003) .
There are lots of interesting defensive
teasers, but some of the bidding is hom
the twilight zone. The .bOOk is marked
Intermediate, and for defense, wtlk::h is
always dlfficu~. this claim Is correct.
Here Is a '100d open ing-lead problem.
look onty at the West hand. YoUr right·
· hand opponent opens one no-trump,
promisii'\Q 15·, 7 po1nts. After you pass,
the responder jumps straight to three notrump. What would be your opening

·I

HOWARD£.
WRITES!£

North
3 NT

alringera
(hypl\,)

ICied
o13 Tocb on

When you read a bridge book containing
probtems, the author will tall into one or
three camps. There will. be no bidding the coward's way out. There will be sensi·
ble auctions all the time - excellentl Or,
some auctions wilt be absurd - pertlaps

5LIPPf/l$.

Color &amp; Perms 25..

Weal
Pus

4

.1

20 ltcile

.,-

to Byron

Drinual

J:lrSI-

18

By Phlltlp A -

'IIIC~fl&gt;

r
~::;:::::::;s;";
'":":a:"":":'::::::::::::: i

• Sand

21 E-,

Key card-play,
bad bidding

WITCtt
oF Ttte wesT
Tlllf5 A NfW
TACTIC TO 6eT
Ttte fl.vrY

FREE ESTIMATES

BASEMENT

Unconditional li fetim e guarantee. Local references fu r1998 Mercedes ML320 SUV
4-wheel drive. 59.000 miles. nished . Established 1975.
740-441 ~ 1377 leave a mas Call
24
H rs. (740)
4460870,
Rogers
Base ment
sage.
Waterproofing.
-------91 Dodge Carava n LE, - : - : - - : - - - - - - loaded , one owner, BBK . C&amp;C
General
Home
$2 .000, 74 0·9 4 9·2 48 1 or Mai1 11enence- Painting, vinyl
7 4 0· 9.9 2 -6 145 leave mes- siding, carpentry, doors.
sage .
windows. baths. mobile
home repair and more. For
9l Fofd E11.plorer 4x4. Lots free estimate call Chat, 74Qof newer parts. Runs great,
_
_
992 6323
bodY damage to driver si cle r--:--:--,--:----,
No lr~.me damage. $ 1,ooo
Jump
OBO call 740 _446 _4910
on
leave a message.
SAVINGS

2000 Mercury SaDie fully
equipped, leather int. . powe r ...,
,
Amil;
1986 Pontiac Bon neville. V6, moon roof. 41 .000 miles will
'"··-..,;FORriiiirriiSiiiALiiiEirr..-J
Honda 300, 2WD, new
4 door, great wo rk car $4 75 · consider trade 304-675 - ti1996
-~
res. looks and runs like
3354
455 cubic in. motor &amp; trans. :=:..:__ _ _ _ __
1985.5 Porsche Coupe, 20,
$350. 1984 Chevy Citation, 9 1 Old's Cut. Cierra. Run s ~~79.$2,200, neg., 740·446·
150.000 miles, real sharp.
runs good $350. 740-446- great. $800 '0BO. Call 740- - - - - - - - $3,000 304-773-5 11 1.
2829 or 740-379-2386. John J88-0318.
~==----- 1998 Yamaha IOOcc 499 Dodge Intrepid, every wheeler, e~cellent condition.
power option c~uise, CID, lilt, new engi ne. new ti res.
rear air, price $8,000 0 80. $1,000 OBO. Call 740-367-

Apurebred 5 yr old. smooth rlO

&amp;

t

Opening lead: .,

COMMERCI AL and
RESIDENTIAL

1987 Fore! F150 Conve rsion looking for engin es or transVan w/wheel chair . lift. In missions give me a caU at
740-446-05 19.
good Condition . $2,000 . =~:;,;;;;.;.;;;-~~_,

·········---------------------------------------:Subscriber's
Name _______________

South
1 NT

Windows • Roofing

I

K Q B6

c.....,.
about

11 Auntlra
Em'all.
DOWN
21 DroopIIOMd ftltn 1 Corporote
22 -ta1
VIP
fi!Ctlll'"
2 llori1J8QN
25 Good look 3 aarn.rt

Vulnerable: Neither

• Repl~cement

:utomo:::::you;

• Once you have signed up tor the Senior Discount, your renewal no1lce will reflect your discount.

r.

AliiO P..IUS &amp;

group

17

6 I 2

J 9

5I Long time
eo 11o1a • ,..
81 Wlfa
•
of Genllnl
82 J)auble.hab

o-·

9 5 31

•

a - jab se s-:t hill

1t "Denclng

• 10 8 4 2
• 10 5

•

tun

57 calchon

ohrfef&lt;

1s

J 10 5
East

Dealer: South

New Homes • Viny l
Siding • New Garage~

1993 Marada 2100 E11.plorer
21 ft . all fiberglass pontoon
style boat. 115hp. Evin
Rude. All seats replaced.
Has bathroom &amp; gas. grill.
Tennessee duel a11.i! trailer
$6.SOO. obo. {304 )675 "7833

CAMPERS

1. Oarloon

•

BUILDERS IOC.

------

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Tuesday, October 14. 2003

www.my«fallysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Rams thump Falcorls 36~0 on Monday night football
,.
B_y BARRY WILNER

Associated Press

,.
ST. LOUIS - Look out
NFL, the St. Louis Rams
have a stingy defense to go
with their precise offense.
Veteran Aeneas Williams
forced two early turnovers
as the Rams outclassed the
36-0
Atlanta
Falcons
Monday night Atlanta managed only 209 yards in St.
Louis' first shutout in two
, years.
It was the Rams' first
home shutout since 1993,
when they played in
Anaheim.
"Give credit to the
defense," star receiver Torry
Holt said. "A goose egg!"
Williams, playing free
safety this year for the first
time after a stellar career as

a cornerback, has 52 career
interceptions, . second to
Oakland's Rod Woods_oo
among active players. He
P.icked off Doug Johnson 's
111-advised first-quarter pass
in the end zone, then
knocked the ball free from
Atlanta tight end Alge
Crumpler and recovered the
fumb le in the second period .
Both turnovers set up long
drives for points as St. Louis
took a I0-0 halftime lead.
"A shutout is so difficult
to do in the NFL, and the
progress of this defense is
truly amazing," coach Mike
Martz said. "The young corners continue· to make plays,
we're getting pressure up
front and excellent linebacker play. I'm very proud
of our defense."
Marc Bulger thre w for 352
yards and two touchdowns

to Holt.
"I really dido 't feel like I
played an NFL game
tomght," Bul re r said . "I
hardly got hit. '
Lamar-Gordon, in hi s third
start this season ·replacing
injured Marshall Faulk,
rushed for a career-high 92
yards and Holt had II receptions for 161 yards to spark
the offense. Veteran receiver
Isaac Bruce displayed his
versatility with the second
pass completion of hi s
career.
St. Louis (3-2) won its
ninth straight home game
and handed the Falcons ( IS) their first shutout defeat
since 1993. In a span of fo ur
plays in the third quarter,
the Rams had three sacks.
They never all owed Atlanta,
ranked 27th in total offense,
to threaten to gei coach Dan

Reeves his 200th career victory.
The Falcons have lost five
in a row and are in desperate
need of a healthy Mtchael
Vick. Johnson, his replacement, made several critical
mistakes and the St. Louis
defense even recorded a
safety when Leonard Little
nailed T.J . Duckett trying to
run out of the end zone in
the third quarter. ·
It was the fourth sr•"ety the
Falcons have y'ielded this
season.
Travi s Fisher went 74
yards with an interception of
Kurt Kittner 's pa, s with
I :33 left to close out the
rout .
Williams attempted to run
hi s early interception out of
the end zone. but got onl y to
the I. It looked like an
unwise move until Bruce

went to work.
· Bul ger hit Bruce for 16
yards on third down, and
after Gordon 's 20-yard run,
Bruce,- on a reverse, threw
perfectly to Halt for 25
yards to the Atlanta 29.
That led to Jeff Wilkins'
28-yard fie ld goal for a 3-0
lead - and also establis hed
the Rams' willingness to be
daring.
The next St. Loui s series
was punctuated by a 33-yard
completion to Bruce. Onfourth-and-! at the 7, Martz
went for it , but a pitchout to
'Gordon was snuffed by linebacker Keith Newman.
No bi g deal. Williams
made his second big play
and St. Louis took over at its
42. Bulger capped a 58-yard
drive with a 3-yard run up
the middle through a gap
seemingly as wide as the

Mississippi.
The Fall:ons never were Ill
it after that. Holt caught a
21-yard TO pass early in the
third quarter and had a 1_4yarder with I0:44 rematntng.
Atlanta got some strong
running from T.J . Duckett
earl y, only to go away from
him at cnttcal umes and
flop. Duckett rushed for 38
yards in !he first quarter and
barely made a dent the rest
of the way.
Jay Fedy attempted a 60yard field goal at the end of
the first half, but Rtchard
Angulo of the Rams blocked
it. Otherwise. the Falcons
were stym ied by the Rams'
suddenl y stro ng defense.
"That 's probab Iy the worst
game as a te am I' ve ever
seen . in my life ." Johnson
said .

-UK's Inrenzen may
miss Ohio game, Bt

. ~

1t •ti \ J -... • \tal

\ ,•

•

~

Dillon returns to practice
CINCINNATI (AP)
Running hack Corey Dillon,
who mi ssed the Cincinnati
Bengals' last game because of a
strained groin, returned to pmctice Monday.
Dillon has been limited to one
complete game this season. He
hyperextended a knee in a pileup in Oakland in the second
week of the season and strained
his groin a week later.
He started against·Cieveland
on Sept. 28, but had to leave the
game because he couldn't cut.
Coach Marvin Lewis then rested him during a loss at Buffalo,
and Dillon didn't work out last
week as the team had its bye.
Lewis said it was too early to
tell whether . Dillon will be
available to play Sunday
against Baltimore.
"Everything looked fine,"
Lewis said. "Everybody
worked today. It was good to
have Corey out there."
Dillon's streak of 52 consecutive starts was snapped when he

Big East
from Page B1
page.
Miami and Virginia Tech
will join the ACC next year.
Boston College may not
change conferences until
2006.
The suit makes several tort
claims, including unfair trade
practices, civil conspiracy

sat out the 22-16 overtime loss
at Buffalo. Backup Rudi
Johnson started in his place and
scored a touchdown.
Dillon took handoffs, caught
passes and ran some agility
drills during the brief time that
practice was open to the media.
"He did some things,"
Johnson said. "He didn't do
everything, but what he did
looked good."
Dillon declined to talk to
reporters .after practice.
The two injuries have limited
Dillon to 164 yard~ and one
touchdown. He is one of only

and breach of contract,
Blumenthal said. As in the
suit against Miami, the Big
East schools seek unspecified
damages.
The suit singles out
DeFilippo for allegedly using
his role as a Big East conference director · to manipulate
discus sions between BC,
Miami and the ACC,
Blumenthal said.
"One of the key reasons
that BC and DeFilippo were
able to engage in tht s secret

four players in NFL history to
rush for 1,000 yards in each of
his first six seasons.
Receiver
T.J.
Houshmanzadeh, who has
missed the entire season with a
pull~;:d hamstring, and linebacker Riall Johnson, who has
missed the last three games
with a strained calf, also panicipated in the 90-minute workout
Monday.
Houshmanzadeh, who led
'Cincinnati with 24 punt returns
and was third on the team with
492 yards receiving last season,
suffered his injury in the
Bengals' last presea.~on game.
"It went all right," he said
about practice. "I was more nervous than anything, but I was so
happy to get out there. I was a
little bit like a kid in a candy
store."
Lewis wa~n't sure how he
will be used.
.,,
"We've still got to find a spot
to get him on the field," Lewis
said.

scheme with Miami and the
ACC is that they had access
to sensitive and confidential
information from the Big
East and its member
schools," Blumenthal said.
He said Boston College's
defection strengthened the
case.
"The more·· we learn, the
more appalled and astonished
we are by the depth and
breadth of the illegality,"
Blumenthal said.

Saturday when the No. 14 Badgers
host No. 13 Purdue.
' "I know how thi ngs get during
the game, and l know how thing s
can happen," Sorgi said . "He made
a mistake. It's a sign of a man
when yo u can make a mi stake like .
that and ca ll and apologize for it."
After Sorgi was knocked out
against the Buckeye s, backup
quarterback Matt Schabert came
in to th row a 79-yard touchdown
pass to Lee Evans that ended the
defending nati onal champion's l 9game wi nning streak.
'

Syracuse appbints new police chief

• Reynolds wishes he
could take back assault on
Sorgi. ~ Page 81

Bv J. MtL£5 LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
SYRACUSE - A former Meigs
Deputy Sheriff is the new chief
of pohce for the village of Syracuse.
Vill age Council approved Kevin
Dugan's appointment at a recent meeting to replace Brian Pearce who
resigned. He is now employed as a
police officer in Mason, W.Va.
"My goal is to make sure the village

BY ANDREA SZULSZTEYN "

Associated Press
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. New York Jets coach
Her man Edwards sa id
Monday there is a "50-50"
chance quarterback Chad
Pennington
will
start
against the Philadelphia
Eagles on Oct. 26.
Pennington , out since the
preseason with a broken
and di slocated left wrist,
will begin doing team drills
thi s week at practice wearing a red, noncontac t jersey. Edwards sa id there is
no chance Pennington will
start
Sunday
against
Houston, but · he could be
New York's No. 3 emerge ncy quarterback.
Edwards said he will
make that decision later
this week , and also is trying
to decide whether to make
Pennington the backup
before he start s a game. As

Cubs
from Page B1
loud because he heard it.
" He went into this lo ng
dissertation about the children of Israel standing by
the Red Sea, and they didn' t believe and those that
didn't believe and fled perished, and tho se who
stayed there and waited for

of Monday, Pennington has
not yet been cleared to play.
"It's different with prac tici ng and having to play in
game ."
the
foot ba II
Edwards said. "For me , I
don't know if it' s his hand,
but it's more of his condi tioning. Where is he at?
Playing a game is different
than seven-on-seven. As he
goes on during the week.
we' ll see \vhere he's at."
Pennington does not want
to talk about hi s progress
until hi s status changes.
When
the
for mer
Marshall quart erback, got
hurt Aug. 23, the Jets said
he would be side Iined 12
weeks, putting his return
Nov.
23
again st
Jacksonvill e. If he sta rts
against the Eagles, he
would ha ve missed nine
weeks. The Jets are 1-4
without their starter.
Pennington began throwing last week for the first

time si nce the injury and
prac ticed seve n-on-se ven
drill s with the scout team
on Thursday. He also
worked on his foo twork
and condit ioning for 45
minutes before the Jets' 303 win over Buffalo o n
Sunday.
In other injuries, starting
safety Jon McGraw and
backup cornerback Jamie
Henderso n are doubtfu I.
McGraw inj~red hi s right
shou lder against the Bills
and had an lv!Rl on
Monday, while Henderson
sprained his right knee.
If McGraw cannot go,
rookie Derek Pagel and
Tyrone Carter wou ld play
in his place.
Lin ebacker
Victor
Hobson (ribs), co rn erback
Leonard Myers (right
shottld er) and recetver
Wa yne C hrebet (migraine)
should be _able to play
against the Texans.

the Lord to deliver them the Cubs to the World
and the sea part ed, and I Series in 1984.
.}Vas like before he fi n"I've heard all the thin gs
ished , 'OK, Tommy, l about bein g part of a losbelieve.· That next at-bat, I ing orga ni zation, that the
went up again st J.R. team can't win at Wri gley
Richard , my nemesi s, and I Field, that they can't win
h-it it over the center- fi e ld because of all the day
fence ."
ga mes," he said. "I've
So what would a cham- heard all those things. This
pion ship represen)'?
would pretty much erase
"Oh man , it would mean all those things and say the
everythin g," said for mer Cubs are a winning organistar second baseman Ryne zat ion."
Sandberg, who nearly led

is safe and secure
and to try and assist
the citizens in any
way I can," he said.
Dugan graduated
ftom Hocking College
in I
where he studied police science. He
is currently a full-time
· corrections officer at
the Women's CorrectKevin Dugan ional Facility in Lakin.

m

Prior to this, he was a deputy sheriff for
more than five years.
"I love being a cop," Dugan said.
While the position is only part-time,
Dugan said he will do his best to serve
the community and will respond to as
many calls for assistance as he can. If
he or the other \WO part time officers,
Rick and Randy Smith, are una vailable and it is an emergency, he advises people to call the Meigs County

_BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH
hoefilch 0 mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY- A holiday tow
of historic downtown Pomeroy
has been planned by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association
for Dec. 6 from 6 to 8 p.m.
The tour led by guides in
Victorian
costume
will
include
businesses
and
churches in the downtown
walkin~ area. Groups will
leave trom the basement ot
Trinity Church.
Business
owners
are
encouraged to decorate thcit
stores. be attired in period 01
old-fashioned costume. and
give commentaries on the histories of the bui ldi nj! they
occupy and the businesses
they operate.
A progrdlll of music will be
presented by a choir directed by
June VanVranken and conclude
wi th a sing-along at 8 p.m. fm
· those on the tour as well as
business owners. In addition to
the downtown stores and
churches, arrangements are
being made for the courthouse
to be open for visitors.
Tickets for the event chaired
by Susan Clark will be $5.
Refreshments will be served
at Trinity" Church. Businesses
interested in participating are
asked to attend a planning ses·
sian set for 8:30 a. m. on Oct.
28 at Peoples Bank.
Also discussed at Tuesday's
meeting of the Association
was the annual Christmas
parade and open house to be
held on Nov. 30. it was noted
that Toney Dingess will again
this year be chairman of the
parade with lineup to take
pace at I p.m. and the parade
to move at 2 p.m.
George Wri~ht, David
1-Jarris and Bobbte Karr were ·
named to the Christmas decorating committee.
It was reported that the new

PleeH see Chief, AS

BY BRIAN J, REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com

OBITUARIES
• Charles Fields, 52
• Ida Spradlin, 64
• Donald Roush, 68
• Sister Fidelis Bell, 81
• Mary Martin, 83
• Rex O'Brien, 86

WEATHER
...,.Y-.., HI: u;·1-. , _ 40

Detallo an P... A2

LO'ffERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 dey: 8::!-5
Pick 4 dey: 4-5-5-Q
Pick 3 night: 2-2-6
Pick 4 night: 7-7-6-7
Buckeye 5: 6-10-11-14-24

Bv J. Mtw

have provided money for
rides for children during the
Pomeroy Ri verfest. This
past summer, Overbrook
MIDDLEPORT ·:::_ Mike helped sponsor Kiddie Day
Crites, director of family and in Middleport which offered
community
services at free swimming and games.
Overbrook, spoke to the
"One of Overbrook's core
Meigs County Chamber of values is to promote the comCommerce Thesday and munity as a whole;" he said.
reminded them that Overbook
Crites said that although the
will be celebfating its I5th services at Overbrook are
anniversary on Oct. 19.
geared toWard the senior 1'01'""We at Overbrook, ·as we littion. it is part of its llllSSton
approach our 15th . anniver- ''to supPOI1 all phases of life
sary, are proud of past accom- thro~"", ~mmunity involveplishments, but also look to ment.' He said Overbrook's
the future as we continue to motto "A Celebrntion of Life"
be a leader in community is a recuning theme throughout
involvement," he said ..
evervthing the OverbrOOk does.
During the past few years.
"We at Overbrook feel that
Crites said Oyerbrook has our residents are still a part of
worked with other civic the community and we honor
minded ~ups to make the their past commitments and
commumty a better place to accomplishments as we conlive. There have been two tinue to grow in our communisuccessful fundraisers that ty involvement," he said
BY J, MtL£5 LAYTON
jlaylon@ mydailysentinel.com

Calh 25: 2-9-11-12-15-24

SEC11oNs -1a PAGES
.Calendars
A3
a

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials ,_
Movies
Obituaries

A6

Weather

PleaH He Tour, AS

LAYTON

jlayton@mydailysentinel.com

Dally 3: 8-3-5
Dally 4: 8-4-1 -8

Sports

tlf Rutland and Brenda Jinks of Pomeroy, pictured with Darla Hawley or the Meigs
Senior Center, look overT-shirts promoting the Meigs County Council on Aging's one-mill levy
renewal. They·were among the levy supporters attending a kick-off rally at the senior center
on Tuesday evening. (Brian J. Reed)
·
ernment programs.
Board of Trustees and the state and federal level
"We can't sit back and serves on a regional Council are tight, but the center has
assume this levy is going to on Aging board. said the done well in providing serpass," Sutton said. '1t is impor- board chose a renewal , vices on a limited budget,
tant to register voters, help with rather than a replacement, and will continue to do so."
absentee ballot applications, because it would not change
"A community is defined
and encourage supponers to the amount collected from by how we treat our senior
get out on Election Day to individual property owners. cttizens," Davenport said.
ensure success."
"Times are tough every- "and here in Meigs County,
.. Meigs County Commiss- where, and especially in we've proven that we care
ioner Mick Davenport, who Meigs County," Davenport deeply about them. That's
serves as the president of said. "That's wh~ we went why o·ur chances of passing
the Council on Aging' s · for a renewal. Ftnances on this levy are good."

Overbrook approaches Crane removes trees, deb-ris
15th anniversary

West Vll'ginia

Classifieds

POMEROY - A strong
"get out the vote"· effort will
be an important part of
passing the Meigs County
Council on Aging's onemill renewal levy next
month, according to the
agency's director.
Mark Sutton spoke to
levy su pporters and members of the agency's levy
committee Thesday as the
group kicked off its campaign to seek passage of the
levy, which provides partial
or complete funding for a
range of services to the
county 's older population.
Sutton said 20 percent of
the age ncy's total budget
comes from levy proceeds.
"These funds also allow
us to access $t&amp;~ iuld federal doll'ars we would not'nor-mally have access to,"
Sutton said. "As a result, the
levy_ allows us to provide
serv_tces that c?uld .~ot otherwtse be pro_vtded.
Sutton satd the levy,
which has rrovided for the
delivery o 243,00 homedelivered meal s in the past
five years, 185,000 miles of
transportation services, and
3,000 congregate meals at
the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior· Center in the past
year, al so allows the council
to provide services to a
wider population, including
those over 60 who do not
qualify for subsidized gov-

A4 .
As
As
B1-2, 6
A2

ec&gt;aooa Ohio V.Uey l'ulllloiiiJIII eo.

MINERSVILLE A
large crane is removing trees
and debris along Ohio 124
beside the Ohio River bank.
The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, i·n conjunction
~ith ODOT is working on a
sfabilization project to protect the roadway from river
encroachments and erosion.
Madison Coal has been Clllltm:ted by Ilk: Ohio !Xpmtm:nt
of Tiansjxlltatioo to oo SOITI! of
Ilk: wen related to this IJ'C!ied.
Fred Boggs, a surveyor with
Madison lli!I. said 2,300 feet of
riverbank is being cleared.
Ordinarily, trees prevent soil erosion. Boggs said that years of
high water and flooding have
emled much of Ilk: soil between
Ilk: tree ro«s (~long the river bank.
Boggs said ihat after the
river bank has been cleared,
-engineers will use an existing wall to anc hor the pro-

A crane removes trees along the riverbank in Mlnersyille, the
first phase in work to stabilize the highway. Layers or rock
and C(lncrete will be laid along the riverbank once the clearing is completed. (J.Miles Layton)

jecf. The sione wall used to
support an old railroad line
that is now no longer in use.
Layers of rock and concrete
will be added to the river

oank. Project co'mpletion is
expected by May. 2004.
Traffic should be minimally impacted by this project,
tl was reported.
.

7th Annual Lewis A. Schml•, MD
M•••••lal ea..Cer Symposium
Saturday, November 1, 2003
9:00 am - 12 Noon

MEDICAL CENTER
Disc~ver the Holzer Difference

(Pre:registration and breakfast at 8:30am}

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

"

www.holzer.org

Continuing Medical Education will be given.
'

For more inFormation, call (740) 446-5057 .

-----------··----- --------1

·

Holiday tour
planned by
Merchants
Association

Senior Center kicks off levy campaign

Page AS

Pennington to start drills this week

,,,,1, . , •. ,1 •• 1. . ,,,,,.,•

SPORTS

Reynolds suspended one game for injuring Sorgi
apology by itse lf is not enough."
he couldn' t bark out the signals
Tressel
said. "Robert's conduct
loud enough to be heard by the
was
totally
unacceptable and ha·s
other players, keeping him from
no
place
in
intercollegiate ath letgoi ng back into the game .
ics."
Reynolds issued a stateme nt
Tressel sa id he had informed
Sunday night through Ohio State,
of hi s decision to suspend
Alvarez
saying that he had apologized to
Reynolds
and again apologi zed to
Sorgi and Wisconsin coach Barry
Sorgi.
· . .
.
Alvarez .
Btg Ten co mmt ss toner . Jun
Tressel said that Reynolds was
Delany said Reyno ld s' actions
"sincerely sorry" for hi s actions
"have
no place in our game."
and that hi s conduct was comSorgi
said
he
accepted
pletely O\Jt of character for the
Rey
nolds'
apology
and
he's not
second-year starter.
"However, after getting a first- what took place, I feel that the holding any grudges. He expects
to practice this week and play
. hand look •at the tape and seeing

'

\\JI)'\J"'I1\, . tHit)BII{J 1 •tltl : ;

Count~

COLUM BUS (AP) ~ Ohio
State se nior linebacker Robert
Rey nolds was suspended one
game Monday for Jamming &gt;llis
fingers into the throat of
Wisconsin quarterback Jim Sorgi
and choki ng him.
Reynolds will miss the eighthranked Buckeyes' homecom in g
game Saturday against No. 9 Iowa
at Ohio Stadium, coac h Jim
Tressel said.
Sorgi said he had difficulty talking and breathing after the injury
in the third quarter of Wisconsin's
17-10 win Saturday night. He said

Buckeyes searching for
answers after first loss
- .
in 20 games, Bt

..

it"•. ···----"""

.-

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