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Melas -County's
Hometown
Newspaper
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ODOT: Keep ·political signs·Off right-of-way·
· MARIETTA- It's election year,
and political signs are popping up
everywhere. However, there is one
place travelers shouldn't see them
- in the right-of-way along Ohio
state routes.
As required by law, signs · found
along the state right-of-way will be
removecl, according to officials
with. the Ohio Department of

Transportation.
Tile signs will be taken to the
locaL ODOT county garage and
kept for about two weeks.
During this time; sign owners
may retrieve their property from
this storage site.
..
. "Any obstruction in the state
right-of-way is a safety hazard for
the traveling public because of its

distraction to drivers and its crash
potential," said ODOT District I 0
Deputy Director George · M.
Collins.
."Political signs are often most
prominent at intersections where
drivers should be most attentive to
traffic situations. With safety in
mind, we cannot condone this practice," Collins added.

carleton School
projects win
state·~~nd~ng

I

r

'

Ravens beat Broncos, A&amp;

A good· indication of state rightof-way is either the fence line or
mowing line, ODOT officials say.
If the right-Of-way cannot be determined, a visit or phone call should
be made to the local ODOT county ·
garage for clarification.
According to ODOT, only those
signs located on the state right-ofway will be removed.

Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH

.

'.

Sentinel news editor

Olga Daniels, 90
.
Dolores K. Hoffman, 73
Debllls, AJ

--

SYRACUSE - Funds totaling $358,660
have been released by the Ohio Department of
Mental Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities for two capital construction I?rojects at Carleton School and Meigs Industries.
State Rep. Jolu;l, Carey said that $58,660 is
· desi~nated for making safety and structural
repa1rs in the adult services workshop, and
$300,000 is to be used to build additional.
rooms where early childhood development
classes. will be offered.
.
'
Th(! money for the adult' services workshop
'will be used to replace its 20-year-old roof,
upgrade its loading dock and add automatic
doors to the center, according to Carey, a
Republican from Wellston:
Steve Beha, executive director of the programs, said that "while the limited funding will
not permit the program to meet all of the projected facility needs, I am very pleased with
the opportunities which will be provided within the scope of the available funds to expand
and renovate the existing facility to better meet
the needs of eligible children and iidults wi~h
mental retardation and other developmental
disabilities and their families." .
Beha said that the total cost of the capital
consttuction projects wfll be $383,800, which
includes the required $25,140 match by the
Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation
. and Devel~pmental Disabilities.
Beha said that the $300,000 for the early
childhood program has been held "in abeyance
for over three years" because of the repeated
defeat of a levy which would have provided
the rest of funding for a $1.2 million capital
,
construction project.
· "That would have included the addition of
4,200 square. feet-to the Carleton School program, and 4,200 square feet to the Adult
Services Program," he explained.
·
"The original projects included the addition
of two classroom learning centers, a .facility
cafeteria, kitchen renovations, expanded habitation and production areas, facility roof
replacement, therapy and sensory room addi- ·
tions, and accessibility renovations to include
automatic door openers and bathroom renovation.
·
"With only 32 percent of thefunds available
due to the non-passage of the levy and the need
to utili ze the state funds or lose them, the board

.

Jackie Coonen (right) and FranCis Cisco, both of The·R'iverby Mini-Grafters, put the finishing touches on "The
Honey Bear House" at the French Art Colony for the current "It's a Small World" miniatures ·exhibit.
·
"·
(Contributed)

·Weather.
•

•

,.;c;

.

. H1gh. 80S,.~w: sos
: (' .,...... A2

~ Hunter education

·course announced
· fl6MEtro

·-'An Ofiio
Hunter Education Class
will be held Oct. 21, 22, 28 ·
and 29, 6-9 p.m. at the
. Pomeroy Gun Club on
Pomeroy Pike.
This course meets
requirements for first-time
hunting license holders and
- current hunj~rs see · ng
· out-of-state hcense . The
class is free and all materials will be provide . Preregistration IS require and
class size is limited. To register,, call the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation ·
District at 992-4282.

OHIO
Pick :S: 7-3-1
Pick 4: 3-0-4-0
Buckeye 5: 5-17-18-21-27
Pick :s nlafrt: 5-1-9
.
· · Pick
4
nljht:
7·8-6-9
.
.
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.,

\V.VA.

Dai!J :S: 5-2-9
DallY 4: o-1-7-0
Casli 25: 2-11-12-13-2Q-25
'

index
'
:

I Section - II .....

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

Sports

Weather

A3
A7-9
AlO

A3
A3

A3
A3

A6-7
A2

C lOOl Ohio Valley Publishi'lS
_, Co.

FrenCh Art Colony ·brings
culture . . .· res·dents.
...........

BY KRIS DOTSON
OVP staff writer
GALLIPOUS - "There's no
reason to be bored in Gallia
County," Mary· Bea McCalla,
director of the French Art Colony,
says.
"We offer classes for kids .and
adults alike and in several really
fun categories."
.The French Art Colony has
been bringing culture and classes
to Gallia C~untians si~c~ 19~. ·
. Whether 1t's art exhibits, p1ano
lessons, after-school programs or
bridge classes, there's sure to be
something-for anyone to enjoy.
"Our classes ar~ very successful
this fall ancl going . like gang
busters," McCalla says. "Both our
youth 11l;awing and Spanish coursc;s {II'~
d to capacity."
·, . ~ve · to..,Z-year-olds can still

enroll for the Oct. 26 "Spooky
Math" cla~s where they will learn
counting basics with, what else?
Candy.
For the adt,Ilt crowd, Bonnie
Pennix offers folks her talent and
time to teach ~lass painting, and
for those who hke to dabble-in .the
culinary arts, the FAC offers a·
class in Mediterranean cooking.
"We also are givin~ people the
chance to learn how to play bridge
and do quilting," McCalla adds.
"The last week in October we
"'tart an intermediate brldge
class."
· FAC's current art exhibit is in
it's ninth year and is called "It's a
Small World."
· Tri-state artists from the
Riverby Mini-Crafters club are
displaying their miniature collections.
·
The gallery is open to the public
lO a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through

will

Friday, and I to 5 p.m. Sunday•.
Club inembers will be there to
greet fans Saturdays and Sundays
from I to 5 p.m.
.
"It's a real plus because if visitors are curious or have specific
questions, often times the creator
of the piece is on hand to help,"
McCalla says.
The exhibit runs through Oct.
27.
On Oct. 19, the club will be
teaching how to make a mini fly
swatter at 2 p.m. and from I to 5
p.m. that same day, they will be
cleaning their dollhouses alld
room boxes, and will hold a "yard
sale."
The exhibit is free .
T~e French Art Colony, a nonprofit organization, is located at
530 First Avenue and can be
reached by phone at (740) 4463834.

Please see Funding, A:S

,Judge throws out cell phone-brain t111Dor suit
BALTIMORE (AP)- The Catherine
Blake 'ruled
federal ruling that tossed out Monday that none of the evian $800 million lawsuit · dence submitted by Newman
against cell phone manufac- was substantial enough to
turer Motorola could hinder warrant a trial.
other lawsuits filed by wireNewman, a neurologist
less users who claim their from Jarrettsville, claimed an
phones gave them brain can- analog cell phone he used
cer, an attorney said.
from 1992 to 1998 gave him
"Clearly from the outset, a cancerous tumor behind his
it's not going to bode well for right ear.
· those cases," said attorney
Newman's tumor was
John Angelos, who filed the removed, but he was permasuit against Motorola and nently disabled, his lawyers
several major cell phone car- said. Newman is blind in his
riers on behalf of Dr. left eye, suffers memory loss
Chrfstopher Newman.
• and slowed speech and ):an
A'ngelos said his firm may no longer work, they said:
appeal.
The telecommunications
U.S .
District
Judge Iindustry watched the case

closely. · If it had been
By rejecting Newman 's
allowed to continue to tria~. it testimony, the judge cleared
·could have opened the door the way for Motorola to
to.other suits against the $45 move to dismiss the case.
billion industry. Similar
At least II other personal
claims against mobile-phone injury cases are pending
carriers also have failed.
against cell phone makers,
Newman 's case garnered some also before Blake, said
more attention because it was Motorola
spokesman
one of the first to ·be filed . It Norman Sandler.
also.was the first to reach the
"We hope this · has an
stage or'Yvidence hearings. ' impact on other pending litiNewman's attorneys pre- gation and serves as a detersented .scientific evidence ~T61:l!. to future litigants makshowing that an lag phones ing unsurported claims of
may cause tumor , but Blake this kind,' Sandler said.
ruled it was overwhelmed by · Five cases seek more than
evidence showing 'no rela- $6 billion in damages and
tionship b~tween cell phone were filed in Washington,
D.C., courts in February.
radiation and cancer.

Cell phones are used by
137 million Americans.
Digital phones emit radiation
in pulses; older analog varieties emit continuous waves.
By the time cell phpnes
exploded in popularity in the
late 1990s, most of those sold
used digital technology.
Three major studies published since Decembllr 2000,
including one by the National
Cancer Institute, found no
harmful h~alth effects from
cell,phones.
"-•••
On the Net:
. · http://www.mdd.uscourts.g
ov/D.pinions 152/0pinions/ne
wman0902 .pdf

Immediate Job Openings

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All/isle&lt;/ positions require an Ohio License, or Ohio License eligibiliiy.

Excellent salary/benefit package
If interestecl, please contcct:,
Human Resources DepOrtmenl, Holzer Medical C~ler, 100 Jockson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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www .hQlzer.org

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�Ohio

· ·The Daily _Sentinel

Tuesday. October 1. 2002

.

Trial opens in death penalty case

-- Ohio weather
Wednesday, Oct. 2

I ,McARTHUR (AP)- Relying on tes-

llllnallokl lee•/12' I•

·I Columbu• le7'185' I

-

..

•

.Clouds and sunshine today·

.
.
·
.

Weather Forecast
Today ... Warm with a mix Qf
clouds and sunshine. Highs in
the lower 80s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday ... Continued
warm with a mix of clouds
and sunshine. Highs in the
milt 80s. Southwest winds 5
to 10mph.
Wednesday night .•.Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s.
Thursday... Partly
sunny
,·th isolated showers and
Highs in the
lower SOs. Chance of rain 20

percent.
. . 'til.
Thursday night...Cioudy
with isolated showers. Lows
in the mid 60s. Chance of rain .
20 percent.
Friday... Cioudy and breezy.
Scattered showers and thunderstonns. Highs in the lower
80s.
Saturday... A1 chance of
showers and thunderstorms
during the day... Otberwise
clearing. Lows in the mid 60s
and highs near 80.
Sunday... Mostly
clear.
CQO[er. Lows in the lower 50s
and highs in the lower 70s.
Monday... Partly 1 cloudy
with a chance of rain; Lows in
the lo~er 50s and highs in the
lower 70s.
.
'

· A roundup of the dally markets
Sept. 30, 2002

12.000

Dow Jones
Industrials

•
11,000

10,000
7,591.93

9.000

Pel change fran p!O\'IDull
High

-1.42

~

8,000

7,898.81
7,480.78
Record high: 11,722.98
Ja.n. 14, 2000

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

7,000

timony and time sheets', prosecutors
have started to.present evidence against
a man accused m two slayings in ;t case
that generated debate over death penalty lljal costs.
Prosecutors told jurors Monday in
Vinton County ~ommoh Pleas ~ Court
' that no single piece of evidenc~ would
point to Gregory McKnight, but that
they would have to look at all the evidence. Defense lawyers said the evidence doesn't stack up.
McKnight, 25, could face a death sentence if he is convicted of killing a
Kenyon College junior who ·disappeared nearly two years ago after leavmg a restaurant where both worked. He
is charged with aggravated murder and
kidnapping in the shooting of Emily ·
Murray, 20, who graduated from high
school in suburban Cleveland.
The time sheets sltcrW'ed McKnight
leaving at 2:59 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 3,
2000, and that Murray left at 3:07 a.m.
Defense lawyets tried to challenge the
accuracy of the time sheets, noting that
the machine workers used .to punch
their time sheets sometimes would
show inaccurate dates.

Prosecutors also iis~ testimony from . costs could run $150,000 to $300,000.
Murray's father and t o of her former 'Fhe state is expected to pay some of the
roo1J!mates to argile th t Murray would costs.
not leave campus unexpectedly without
McKnight also is charged with murtelling someone. ·
der in the case of Gregory Julious, 20,
Tom Murray testified Monday that his of Chillicothe. Investigators say Julious
daughter had once attempted suicide but was last seen in May 2000 with
said she had received treatment and was McKnight.
·
doinjl much better before her disappearThe remains of Murray and Julious ,
ance.
.
were found · in December 2000 on
Common Pleas Judge Jeffrey McKnight's property at 80 miles .from
Simmons drew attt:ntion to the case the restaurant near the southern Ohio
with an unprecedented ruling in August village of Ray.
that prosecutors could not seek the
Murray's body was found m
death penalty. because Vinton County McKnight's trailer after a sheriff's
might not be able to afford a proper deputy went to the property to serve a
prosecution and pay for McKnight's summons in an unrelated case and saw
defense. Simmons later changed ·his Murray's cai outside. She had bee~ shot
mind.
. in the head, and her body was wrapped
Simmons had said he was concerned in a carpet in a bedroom of a trailer on
the case would deplete the $2.7 miUion the site. The carpet had been covered
general fund. budget in Ohio's sparSest with trash bags.
county, with 12,800 people, ab9ut 60
Authorities found Julious' bones and
miles south of Columbus. ·
·
, teeth four days later.
The state attorney general's office
McKnight is serving an eight-year
argued that the judge lacked,authority to sentence for an unrelated burglary. He
drop the death penalty as a possible sen- spent five years in juvenile detention for
t~nce. The state als? sai~ that money· robbing and killin~ a. Columbus man
should not be a cortsJderauon.
before he was released m 1997, when he
Defeqse attorneys have said Jheir turned 21.

ODOt doesn't.use
fraud detection program
COLUMBUS (AP) .- The
Ohio
Department
of
T~ansnortation has· never
used software at its disposal
to complete a statewide
check of potential fraud by
highway contractors, The
Colu1Jibus Dispatch reported
Monday.
.
.
Instead, ODOT reviews
each project individually,
looking for bid-rigging and
other forms of fraud, the
newspaper found in an eightmonth investigation of the
state
Transportation
Department.
·
The state has had the computer system since 1985, but
has only recently started a
statewide analysis of bids.
Preliminary results are not
expected for several months.
A statewide review can
uncover trends . that have
pointed to collusion in sonfe
cases, such as evidence of

bid rotation -in which contractors take turns submitting the low bid on projects,
the newspaper reported.
. The department said it
could not calculate how
much it paid to lease the collusion-detectimi component.
The American Association
of State Highway and
Transportation
Officials,
which licenses the program
to Ohio and 38 other states,
said it cost $60,000 this yw ..
alone.
. ..
ODOT spokesman Brian
Cunningham said the system
the state uses works.
Cunningham said the system, which breaks up bids
for projects by quarters
instead of taking bids for the
entire year, has resulted in
ODOT's
11
in

...

•

N•

2FREEDiiii8
SPRII8 VIII EV
Cll-l
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AN'D WINI

1,800
1,800
1

1,400

Pol ohango fran ,.....,....

H,_. ·2.28
.

.

1,200

~

1,t80.74
t,t80.07
R-rd hiGh: 5,048.82
MlltCht0,2000

OCT

1,000

Sept. 30, 2002

t,200

Standard&amp;
Poor's500

1,100

•

815.28

900

Pt1. change hom pmlooJs

. -1.46

High

800

"-

827.37
800.20
Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

oor

·Local Stocks

122 E. Main Street
~T~ Pomeroy, mi ·99,2 -3985
or
1005 B. State St., Suite G
Athens, OH 594-0660
OWner

Manager .

Athens Office

AEP -28.5 t
Arch Coal-16.55
'A kzo- 32.30
AmTech/SBC- 20.10
Ashland Inc:- 26.79
AT&amp;T- 12.01
;sank One - 37.40
SLI-15.83
1iob Evans - 23.70
:eorgwarner- 49.64
Champion - 2.31
Gharming Shops- 6.75
Gity Holding- 25.61
:Col-2t.94
DG -13.42
;tiuPon1 - 36.07

Federal Mogul - .53
Rockwell - 16.27
USB-t8.58
Rocky Bools - 4.55
Gannon ~ 72.18
RDShell-40.17
Ge"l'ral Elec1rlc - 24.65 Sears- 39
GKNLY.,...4.30
Harley Davidson- 46.45 Wai·Man - 49.24
Kmart- .49
. Wendy's - 33J.1
Kroger- 14.10
Worthington- 18.70
Ud. "7 14.34
Dally stock reports are
NSC-;- 20.1~
lhe 4 p.m . .closing
OakHiiiF'I'Ia1Cial- 21 ·70 quotes of !he previous
OVB-21.50
d , t
.
BBT _ 35.04
aya ransacloons, proPeoples- 25.70
vlded by Smllh Partners
Pepsico.,... 36.95
al Advesl Inc. of
Premier- 6.50
,Gallipolis.

·:families choosing to stay off welfare
·

/'""
•
COLUM'i3US (AP)- State Ohio welfare policy adminis- .
officials~·ct that very few trator.
~ the
families whose
He said the availability of
ca$h be Its ended two years jobs, hildler pay, more-strinago und r welfare reform will
weffare criteria and conbe taking advantage ohtheir-ilnul:d:-eli~:ibility--foi·~mtuctt~l-'-l~I_!_n~Sllarl~ey:~---:--=--9-----'
,enewed eligibility. ·
needed
such as ~th
Taft regularly sends staff
· Under the welfare n;form care, child care and food
members notes - wbich
are . exempt from ·open
iaw enacted five years ago stamps ·may keep many appliTuesday, Ohioans lost cash cants off the rolls.
.
records law of calls
benefits after 36 months of
"While they're not making~. them, Sharkey said. ' ·
help. But the Jaw allows them' lots of money, the&gt;-: have more
Tiin
Hagan,
the ·
to reapply for assistance after a than they would If they were
Democratic candidate for
two-year break if they demon- on welfare," Potts said.
governor, did not use· e-mail
Strate economic hardship.
A family of three can receive
professionally in . his 16
Some officials feared there about $373 a month in cash
years ~ Cuyahoga County
would be a flood of applicants. assistance, while a full-time
commissioner. He uses it at
But apparently most families worker earning $6 an hour
home, occasionally getting
are choosing to continue to go brings home about · $780 a
messages from his 82-yearit on their own, said Joel Potts, month.
ole;! mother
·
'
...
•
.

..

North Dakotans
~strike food ·deals
on last day of expo

ToW
· O dead

d.0· Ze·ns lnkure
·· d
•
after bUS dfiVer attac ed
I c rt . f
.
a OrJg a I 0rn1a . reeway ..

BUSINESS • LIFE·
IRA'S ·HEALTH
A.n lnclepenclenl
Agency representing
ERIE Insurance

'

. YOUR
CHOICE

$499
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$599

11omPa.-A1

.The Daily SentineJ .

his seat, walked briskly up to
the driver and atlacked him
• before 9 p.m., said Lt.
Reader Services
(UsPs 21a-9~o)
Margaret Mims of the Fresno
Correction Polley .
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
County Sheriff's Department.
Our main concern In all stories is to be Pliblished
every
afternoon ,
accumle. H ycu know of an e'!Pr in a Monday' lhrough Friday, 11t Court
"The driver was actually
slory, call tho newsroom a1 (740) 992· S!reel, Pomeroy, Ohio. Secondcut in the neck," Mims said.
2156.
class postage paid al Pomeroy.
·•' He struggled, tried to defend
Member: The Associated Press
himself and lost control of the
and !he Ohio Newspaper
Our main number Is
1\ssoclalion.
bus."
.. .
{740) 992-2156.
Poslmaster: Send address correcAuthQnttes caught the susDepartment ext11nslons are:
tions 10 The Daily · Sentinel, · 111 · p~t as he tried to run away.
.
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
His name was not immediateNews
45769.
Editor: Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
ly released, an~ he was arrest~
Reporter: Brian 'Reed, EICI. 1a.
ed on suspiCIOn of ass~ult
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By carrier or motor route
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One year ·... , ........"119.40
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Dlotrlct Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext. 17.
blessed."
•
•
lnolde Melga Countt
Twenty-seve_n peo_ple were
13Weeks ............ .'30.t5
Gen ral Manager
taken to hosp1tals, mcludmg
26
Weeks
............
.'60.00
Cha ' HoefHch, EICI. 12
52 Weeks ....... .. .. .'t18.80
thre~ in ~erious condition,
offic18ls
said. The others wen;
I
E-mail:
Ra~o oulslde Meigs County
still being evaluated, but most
n\rnyd::,enlinel oom • • 13 Weeks ......... ... .'50.05 .
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dition.
nursing
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satd.

on !Ill

HCDNDONI

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the ~ase," Mims said.
.
Jall)ille Bradfield, a spokeswoman for Greyhound Lines,
said a hot line had been set up .
for friends and family members of passengers lo call for
infonnation.
"Our top priority right now
is taking care of all of the passengers as well as ,the driver
and their families," Brad~ie ld
said. ·
Almost exactly · year ago,
on Oct. 3, 200 1, a passenger
on . a Greyhound bus in
Tennessee cut the driver 's
throat, causing a crash that
killed seven.
Congress ha s included
$3.85 billion in an anti-terrorism bin passed this year to
augment aviation security. It
has al?proved $15 . million for
secunty improvemen ts on
intercity buses.
.
. Dallas- based Greyhound,
the nation 's largest bus service with 20,000 daily departures, has hired a private
company to screen some passengers with e lectric wands
but has inspectors .at only a
portion of its terininals.

f

~cmg soy yogur • to u an

oth~r foodb f~r huran. .~o~sumpuon , a rympe sa t 10
a telephone mter~lew ~rom
Havana. In the Untted States,
soybeans are !nore com mon ly grown for ltvestock feed.

BOX OFFICE OPENS
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Pleasant Valley Hospital knows the importance of familiar faces and ·
surroundings when faced with at?- illness or chronic medical condition.
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His Third Frontier Project
would spend $1.6 billion
over 10 years to create a
new high-tech industry and
high-paying jobs. The proposal includes construction
of more research centers
and more .p artnerships
between colleges and businesses to convert uni.versity
research into commercial
ventures.
Taft said. he occasionally
sends e-mails to family un,."--.1,
private account at home.
·
His
director said she doesn't
encourage him to use .e-niail
at work because of concerns\,
the. messages would · be
made public under .
open records law. "The
ernor should be a&amp;le to
communicate with his aides
confidentially," .said Mary

Answer calls

.

AUTO-HOME·

Judy WIINomo J - Ann WIIIIOml

. 1

tion."

·
Robert McDaniel, treated;
11:42 a.m., Happy Hollow
Rd. , Sam Williams, Pleasant
· RUTLAND - Olga Alice
Valley Hospital;
Daniels, 90, of Ohio Route
12:06' p.m., Blak Hill Rd.,
... POMEROY- Dolores K. ·124, Rutl'and, passed away
ORLANDO, Fla. (A,P) to recovery is a rocky one ,"
RACINE
Racine
.Hoffman, 73, ·of Pomeroy, Thursday, Sept. 26, 2002 · at. In a case closely watched by Bush ·said. "If counselors are American Leg ion 602 will be . Lesley Eblin, Holzer;
12:13 p.m., Elm St., Opal
·;ohio.died Monday, Sept. 30, Holzer Medical Center in drug counselors nationwide, a required to report every viola- having. a public steak and
Cummins,
Pleasant Valley:
noodle
dinner, Sunday.
judge , has ruled that staff tion , then it makes treatment
: 2002 at·St. Joseph's Hospital Gallipolis.
1:02
p.m.,
Ohio 681, James
·serving will begin aU I a.m.
·.'in Parkersburg.
·
She was born Jan. 20, 1912 members at the drug rehab very difficult to work."
Haggy, refused treatment;
f. She was born March 31,
in. Johnson County, Ky., center where Gov. Jeb Bush's
The state attorney'$ office Cost is $6.
2:34 p.m., New Liina Rd.,
.,1929 in Salem, Ohio, a daughter of the late Albert daughter is receiving treat- issued subpoenas for four
Francis
·Imboden, Holzer;
'daughter of the late .Lewis Stapleton and Eliza Cox men! don't have to answer staffers at .the Center for
4:0
I
.p.m., Suc~.ess Rd.,
: ' Neihei~l
and
Evelyn Stapleton. .
.
. police questions in the inves- Drug,free L.ivinj: in Orlando
wit
h
Tuppers
Plains unit
.'Wittenauer·
' Neiheisel
She was a housewife. She ligation.
after police rece1ved a report
POMEROY
Meigs
· Summerfield . She was a attended the Kingdom Hall of
Investigators had sought a froljl another patient on Sept. Emergency Services units. assisting, motor vehicle acci,, homemaker.
· Jehovah Witnesses.
court order to compel' four 9 that Bush had been found · answered ·the following calls dent, Ashley Boyles, treated;
5:26 p.m., North Second
Survivors include her husSurvivingareadaughterand staff members to provide with cocaine . Investigators for assistance:
.
Ave.,
Jacob Landis, Holzer;
;, band, Glennis Hoffman; two son-in-law, Nina and Aaron information on whether 25- also· tried to take a sworn
CENTRAL DISPATCH
5:41
p.m.. Ohio 338,
, ,daughters, Paige and Richard Williams of Orlando, Fla.; a · year"old Noelle Bush was statement fro iii\ one of the
Sunday, 12:04 a.m., Brick
Donald
Jacob, Jackson
. .Garfield
and
Connie son and daughter. in-law, Lane found with a piece of crack staffers.
.
. St. , Sharon Boggs, Holzer
General Hospital;
; .Hoffman, all of Pomeroy; and Donna Daniels of cocaine in her shoe.
Workers at the Center for Medical Center;
4:43 p.m.," Overbrook
.. two sons, Larry and Lavema Rutland; and three wandchilBut Circuir Judge Bcilvin Drug-Free Living refused to
4 :43a.m., Sheriff's Office,
Center,
. Cecil
Teaford,
•.Hoffman of Pomeroy, and dren: Jeremy Williams and Perry ruled Monday that a cooperate, citing privacy con- )\evin Dull, treated;
·
Pleasant
Valley;
Ronald
Hoffman
of Erek Daniels of Orlando, Fla. patient's privacy outweighs cerns. One staff member
12:40 a.m., Dye Rd., Patty
7:13 p.m., Cole St.,
&gt;Charleston; w. Va.; . four and Leah ~iels of Athens.
the interest of .a criminal wrote a statement for officers Harmon, treated;
but ripped it up after a super8:05 p.m., Holzer Meigs Middleport, Joe Conley,
grandchildren, one great- . In additio to her parents, investigation.
'ld,
·
d
she was preceded in death by · Perry ruled that if the visor intervened: Violators of Clinic, Carol Smith , Pleasant Holzer;
d
h
1
· · 7:26 p.m., Valley Bell Rd.,
·.•gran c
one aunt, an one her husband, E.L. "Eck" · staffers . were forced to give the federal regulations qn Valley HoSpital: ·
from
with
assistance
·., un~~~ides her parents, she ~U~e'Is; a grandson, Joel Lee testimony, then "all patients drug treatment privacy can be 8:49 p.m ., Second St., Syracuse
unit,
.
Mar.k
Russell,
.- was preceded in death by her . 1 1ams; two sisters, Delphi who suffer relapses could be fined up to $5,000 per viola- Shawn Gilmore, Holzer;
.step"father;
.Brooks Staplebton hand I vel Music; and . hauled out of treatment pro- tion. ·
Monday, 6:24 a.m., Ohio Jackson General.
.SYRACUSE
Summerfield.
two rot ers, Ben C. and grams and into criminal
No charges were brought 681.
. Alicia
Elitrit z,
4:30p.m., Main .st., Shirley
......
I
.
Hudson Stapleton.
courts on the whim of. a state again st the governor' s da· ugh - O'Bleness
Memorial
Boring,
·
-9mden-Clark
runera services will be
Memorial services will be prosecutor or police officers. "
Hospital:
•
Memorial
Hospital.
11
,held at
a.m. Wednesday, heldat3p.m. Wednesday, Del.
Drug counselors sa1'd a ru
· 1- terN. 11 B h
·
·
6 ·25 a 111
D
. orst Rd
·Oct. 2, 2002 at White Funeral 2 2002 1th Ki d
Hall .
oe e us was put 1n a
·
' · ·•
..
•
a e ng om
m ing against the center would cou'rt-ordered rehabilitation
:Home in Coolville. Burial
:wili be in the Chester . \Yheelersburg. !'fivate grave- · have had a chilling effect on program in February after she
•
Side semces wttl be condu~t- people seeking treatment.
was arrested at a pharmacy
; Cemetery,
ed at Sunset · Memonal
But Prosecutor ·Jeff Ashton d nve-through
·
· d Chester, Ohio.
11 ·
h
window fo r
F
: f n~ s may ca at t e Gardens in Wheelersburg.
said the ruling would tie alleged! y trying to buy 'an
. ~geme~ts are under the investigators' hands in look- anti-anxiety drug with a
: uner home, TUesday, 6 to 8
;p.m.
·
direcllt?n ofBII'Chtield Funeral ing into futui drug cases. He fraudulent presc ription.
o
I
........ Paid Notice Home m Rutland. . . .
said he woul appeal.
Florida's drug courts allow
. -Paid Notice
"If sayi'n essentially to addicts to seek treatment
drug patients, 'Go ahead. You under the supervision of a
can ' I be pros~cuted for using judge rather than being tried
drugs at the center,' I wonder in criminal court.
if that's valuable for their
Drug treatment counselors
treatment?" Ashton said. "The · elsewhere said that only under
court's decision says we can't rare circumstances would law
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) North Da'-ota 's state Mill
even inquire about how a per- · enforcement be called in if a
•
A
Cuban
food
trade
show
and
Elevator is selling a
son got drugs .." ·
patient were · found with
Bush said he was pleased drugs , and that · il did not · ended profitably for a group quantity of flour, and the
: CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. pipes, is suppose to deliver
appear that the president 's of North Dakota participants, Northarvest Bean Growers •
~AP) - NASA's first space another girder to tli intema. with ·the ruling., .
"Our drug court system is niece was gelling special who struck last-minute deal s Association struck a deal to
-shuttle . i&lt;~unch in months tiona! space station.
to sell dry beans, edible soy- sell black and dark red dry
·
.ocould · be
delayed
by
"It's a little discoura ing to based on the fact that the road treatment. .
beans, pasta and flour, Lt. m8&gt;l ble beans, Dalrymple said.
iHurricane Lili.
get yourself this far and get
Gov.
Jack Dalrymple said.
Dalrymple described the
: Shuttle program manager
ready for launch and have
Shortly after the agree- deals as small, introductory
;Ron Dittemore said he will
good weather, basically, in
me nts . were sig ned late transactions, which are likely
'llOt launch Atlantis on
Florid;~
and
then
find
out
you
11
. I .·
Monday, the gro up hurriedly to be followed by larger .
:Wednesday if the hurricane
left Havana to stay ahead of sales.
:aims for Houston, .home to have this threat in the Gulf
"What's really important is,
Hurricane Lili , which was
Mission Control. The shuttle, Coast," said Dittemore, a .
this
shipment will give us all
bearing
down
on
the
western
resident.
"But
;already six ' weeks late Houston
an opportunity to ship more
halfofCuba.
-because of repairs to cracked there's no rush."
in the future," he said.
'
.
, _The trade s~ow represented
ty, ho;ne and co.mmunity ~ · . ·
'' ,. '··
·
Pasta Co., : s'aid Dakota 'l~e J_irst s1gmficant opportuFRESNO, Calif. (AP)- A
Other passe ngers received Growers and a group of seed mty m 40 years for American
b as_. ed services for el.igible passenger slashed the throa t mmor
·
··
scrapes an d bru1ses.
businesses signed agreements businesses to sell food to
_I
children. and adults .and their
f
G
h
d
b
d"
A
.
o a rey oun . us nver as
uthorities originally slat- with Cuban government offi- Cuba. The communist nation
f amilies will. ' be greatly· the b us t rave1e d · d own a e d t hat t he d nver
·
• enhanced.
was one of cials to sell wha.t he described has been under a U.S. trade
California freeway,' causih~ it the two who died, but the as relativ ely small amounts embargo since the early
•
"Our
mission
is
to
ensure
to careen . out of control, Fresno County Sheriff's 0 f
od
: will be working with an ·
1960s. Congress agreed to
the
availability
of
programs,
a~thori!ies
said.
Two
.
P.eople
Department
later
said
tha.t
he
B~kOt~
Growers,
based
.
in
relax the. restrictions two
: architectural ftrrn to priorisold
about years ago, to allow sales of
: tize which projects to include services and supports that . died and dozens _were mJured. surv1v~d . He was m senous Carrington,
The bus, headmg from. Los conditiOn.
45,000 pounds of vegetable- food.JRd medical supplies.
' as part of .the capital con- es.sist eligible indi~idu~!s
There_was np word on what bl e nd ed pasta, including
Last week, North Dakota
. struction projects," Beha with developmental disabiii- A_n geles to. San. Francisco,
ties
in
choosing
and
achievfl1pped
on
us
s~de
Monday
the
mo~1ve
mt!lhl
have
been,
spaghetti
and
fettucine,
for
pea producers · signed the
'd
.' sa1.
· .
· .
ing a life of increasing capa- evemng and shd mto a cotton but M1ms smd 11 did not Havana I
restaurants trade show's first agreement
, He said thlft;w.iUl the com- bility so that they can live, field about 500 feet off appear to be anything that Dalr m~le sa·d
' with a .North Dakota compa: pletion _(If t~lity expan- work and-play in the commu- l~tersta~e 5 ,near Fresno, offi- ~ould
req uire . federal
U~ty S~ed Co. of ny.
.
sion and rentwa:tion, Carleton nity and support their fami- ~I.als said. The bus was carry- I~volvement m the mvest1 ga- Casselton, Peterson Farms
. Schqol and Meigs Industries' lies iri achieving this objec- mg 49 passengers.
t1on.
S d I
f H
od
d
OffiICia
. Is sa1.d th e attac k
"If. . some b?.d y IS
. . t h.m k.mg Earth
ee wise
nc. Processors
o
arwo LLCanof.
ability to offer lifelong facili- tive," he concluded.
was not related to terronsm.
terronst or hljackmg or any- M
h d M'
d
According
to
witness · thing like that, we don't have s oor ea : nm, :wee 10
accounts, the man rose from any reason to believe that 's deH soybeans 10 ~se 1 ~rod

;space shuttle launch in

WILLIAMS
INSURANCE

No e-mail
for·Taft
COLUMBUS (AP) ·Gov. Bob Taft is pushing hi.s
$1.6 billion plan to improve
Ohio's high-tech economy
with handwritten notes,
meetings and phone calls.
Taft, 60, has never sent a
. work-related e-mail as governor, doesn' i have a computer on his desk and .asks
his staff to 'research information he needs on the
Internet.
"I just don't have the time
· to sit down and go through a
lot of e-mails," Taft told The
Associated Press. "For me
it's more efficient to .use
other forms of communica-

;-rue__s_da~V~·~O~c~to~be~r~1~,~2Q0~2~----~.~------------------~)~~ww~.~m~v~d~a!ilv~s~e~n~ti~n~e~l.c~o~m~----------------------~-~T~h~e~D~a~l~lv~S~e~n~t~ln~e~i:•~Pa~g~e~A~3
1)1111 rehab center d_Res not LOCftl .Brjefs
··Obituaries
Dolores K.
Olga Daniels hav~ to cooperate"iiPcase
·Dinner to be
aga1nst Jeb Bush'~ daughter
Hoffman
served . ·

Hurricane could e ·first

2,000

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PLEASANT·
-V ALLEY
HOSPITAL

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.

•

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Tueada~October1,2002

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f~c·ru•rs

w 1he 1Jdimr are u·e/rnme. Thev should be l.ess than
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1101

se11.•·11.•

..1
Tuna Noodle·
Casserole
Oven Fried Potatoes
Broccoli Salad floll
Carrot Cake

NATION.(\.L VIEW

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Vi~

lVIexican braceros' contributions
deserve compensation
•

• Dallas Morning News, on Mexican braceros: Legal
et"fnn&lt; ttl force repayment" of a 60-year-oid debt to former
Mc xica n hraceros suffered a setback-recently when a federal
j udg~ in California •dismissed a· lawsuit seeking hundreds of
millions of dollar:, in back wages aod interest from the gov~ rnm cnb of Mex ico and the United States. Ten percent of
workers" salaries was set aside in accounts administered by
Well s Far ~ o and transferred lOa bank in Mexico where it was
to he.g i w~1 to the taborers in old age. The funds disappeared,
and the c\tiprit may be the Mexican bank or the Mexican government 1tself.
.
Not that the Un ited States is totally in "the clear. .. , It was the
United States that recruited the workers and.drafted the agreement. Alone point. when the Mexican government wanted to
pull ou t of the deal , the United States insisted on sticking to it.
There is no need for more lawsuits. Instead, governments of
hoth ~V~exico and the United States should voluntarily contrihu t~ to a fund that could provide some small ·amount of
compensation for an aging cohort that contributed to the welfare of both countries.
The U.S. govern metlt could more easily honor the braceros'
two other requests: humanitar{an visas so they could visit the
l:ln ited States once more before they depart, and a simple
"th ank yo u"" for a job well done.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

.

Today is Tuesday, Oct. I , the 274th day of 2002. There ·are
9 I days left in the year.
Today's High light in History :
·
·
Forty years ago, on Oct. I, 1962, Johnny Carson succeeded
Jack Paar as regular ho~ of NBC's 'Tonight" show: Carson
recei ved an on'air introduction from Groucho Marx: the
ouests on his debut program were Joan Crawford, Rudy
Vallee. Tony Bennett, Mel Brooks and The Phoenix Singers.
On this c.Me:/
.
.
in 1800, S~n ceded Louisiana to France in a secret.treaty.
In i.R85 . spec ial delivery mail service began in the United
States.
in 1896, the U.S .· Post Office established Rural Free
Delivery.
,
_
In 1908, Henry Ford i!itroduced the Model-T automobile to
the 1ilarket.
In I943 , Allied fo rce&lt; captured Naples during WWII.
In IlJ49. Cnmmunist Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung raised
the first flag of the People ' s Republic of China during a ceremony in Beijing.
In I'!61. Roger Mari s of the N.Y. Yankees hit his 61 st home
- run durin g a 162-game season. compared with Babe Ruth 's 60
home runs during a I54-game season. ·
In 1964, the free Speech Movement was lau.nched at the
University of Cal ifoYnia at Berkeley.
in I 971, Walt Disney World opened in Orlando, Fla.
in 1986. former President Jimmy Carter's presidential
· library and mu&lt;eLII11 were dedicated in Atlanta with help from
Pre sident Reagan .
Ten years ago: The U.S . Senate voted 93-6 to approve the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. Texas billionaire Rqss Perot
JUmped back into the presidential race.
Fi ve years ago: In Pearl, Miss., 16-year-old Luke Woodham
sta bbed hi s mother to death , then .went to school with a rifle
and opened fire. killing hi s former girlfriend and another studen t and w~ding six · others. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Net~ aliu freed Hamas spiritual leader Sheik
Ahmed Yassin . ( tssin was freed to Sl!c~re the release of two
Mos"1d agen ts arrested 111 Jordan tollowmg a botched assasst. nat(on attempt aga in st Hamas political leader Khalid
Mashaa l.)
One y_e ar ago: New York City Mayor Rudolph diuliani, in
an impassioned speech to the United Nations, said there was
no room for "neutrality"' in the global fight against terrorism
and no .need for more studies or vague directive's. T.he
Supreme Court suspended · former President Clinton· from
pract icing before the high court. A Pakistan-based militant
group att acked the state legislature in Indian-ruled Kashmir,
kill ing..JJ\._I)&lt;;(lj)J ~
Today\ Birthdays: Former Librarian of Congress Daniel J.
Boorstin is gg_ Actor James Whitm~re is 81 . Former President
l i)nm y Carter is 78. William Rehl1quist, chi~f justice of the
United Swtes. is 78. Pianist Roger Williams is 78. Actor .Tom
Bos ley is 75 . Actor Ricbard. Harris is 72. Actress-singer Julie
Andrew' is fi7. Actress Stella ·stevens is . 66. Rock musician
Jerry Martini (Sly and the ~amily Stone) is 59.Ba~ebail Hallof-Famer Rod Carew is •n'7. Actor Stephen Coiltns ·IS 55. Actor
Randy Quuid -1:.t s.2. 1Singer J-!oward Hewett is .45 : Singer
Youssou N"Do uf 1s 43. Actor Esai Morales is 40. Actor
Ch ristopher-Titus is 38. Adress~111oilel Cindy Margolis i~ 37.
Rock sinecr-inu&gt;ician Kevin'6titfiri (Better Than Ezra) is 34.
C'ounlry -, ingc r Kelly Willis is 34. , Singer Keith 'Duffy
(B el\ tone ) i' 1X. Actres~ .lurnee Smollett is 16. Actress 6rie
La;·~on i., 13.

.'.

Congress should help President Bush
Jres1dent AI Gore in his speech
In an interview, Galston charged that
end the dire threat posed by Iraq, but .it Monday in San Francisco.
Bush's Sept. 12 challenge to the .United
also needs to give careful scrutiny to his
Gore accused Bush of practicing a "go- Nations to prove its relevance by con:.
new doctrine of pre-emptive war. It could it-alone, cowboy-type approach to inter- fronting Iraq was "a purely-tactical !ffid
be dangerous to world order.
national. affairs," though he basically rhetorical tack toward multllateralisfll .
Just as Bush's anti-terror doctrine - endorsed Bush's current policy of chal- which was abandoned at the first whiff of
"whoever harbors a terrorist is one" lenging the United Nations to enforce its grapeshot."
has been used by Israel, Russia and India past resolutions against Iraq.
. That's yet to be proved- the United
to justify ,their .own operations. other
On the Bush doctrine; Gore said, "The States is still working on a new U.N. re~
countries also might pick up on the pre- president is proclaiming a uniquely olution- but Biden's s~er pointed ou,t
emption idea t_o ~ttac"k: adversarie~ they American right to pre-:ettlplively attack · that Bush's U.N. speech IS nowhere mensuspect of hostile mtent, .
· \,
whomsoever he may deem represents a tioned in the draft liaq resolution sent to
In fact, Russian. President Vladimir . potential future threat."
Congress by the White House. .
.
Putin already has claimed the right to
Gore said the doctrine is "open-ended"
On pre-emptiv~ war, Galston s.a1d,
invade areas of neighboring Georgia to and might be applied not only to Iraq, but "The administratiOn seems to believe
root out Chechen rebels seeking sanctu- "against a succession of states" including somehow that ·we can contain this ·~lx&lt;ary there.
Syria, lrnn and North Korea.
trine to our own case and that our uruque
"If other nations assert the same right, virtue, wisdom and porer w1!l enabl~ us
Nuclear-armed India or Pakistan .could
easily attack the other, claiming that it then the rule of law will quickly be to use it .while restraining other nations
was convinced its adversary was plan- .replaced by the reign of fear," Gore from using it !II all. I don't belie~e it." •
ning to attack. And while it would be a charged. .
By the logtc of the pre-empt1ve docstretch for China to claim it was threat- · · Even more cogently than Gore, the trine, he. said, 'The onlY. reason for not
ened by Taiwan, it could happen.
Bush doctrine has been- challenged by conductm!l a. first stnke a~amst the
· First enunciated in Bush's June I com- Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and one of the Sov1et Umon 1s that we duln t have the
mencement address ·at West Point, the Democratic PartY's leadil)g intellectuals, power to do it safely. ·
· · - :·
doctrine of .pre-emption was reaffmned former Clinton White House. aide Bill
"It's to say ~at (Air Force Gen.) CurtiS
in the administration's National Security Gaiston, a professor at the Umvers1ty of LeMay Y1as nght except for the fact that
Strategy report sent to Congress last Maryland.
.
.·
. .
the Soviets had nukes.' In th~ late 1950s,
Friday. , ·
At a breakfast meeting w1th reporters LeMay advocate~ pre-~mptlve nuclear
. "Given the" goals of rogue states and on Wednesday, Kerry observed that the strikes on the Sov1~t Y1110~, .
.. .
terrorists, the United States can no longer United States "always has a nght to
To g1ve the admmJstratmn Its. due, 1ts
solely rely on a reactive posture as we defend itself in the face of imminent National Security Strategy report
have in the past," the document declan:ct. threat," but that "it's better left unassert- . declared ~at "the United States will not
"The inability to deter a potential ed" because "1f 1t apphes for us, 1t apphes . use force m all c.ases to pre-empt emergattacker, the i.mmediacy of today's threats for other nations, too." .
.
.·.
ing ~eats, nor should nations . use.. preand the magnitude of potential harm that
Galston can be credtted wtth kicking emption as a pretext for aggressiOn.
could be caused by our adversaries' off the . Iraq debate with a June 16
In a foreword to the document•. Bush
choice of weapons do not permit , that Washington- Post op-ed piece. He's wrote that "no nation can build"a safer,
option. We cannot let our enemies strike. expanded upon his case in an article this better world alone. Alliances and multifirst."
month in The American Prospect.
lateral institutions can multiply the
As an aide to Senate Foreign ~elations
In that piece, Galston asserted, "a glob- strength of freedom-loving nations."
Chairman Joseph Biden (D-Del.) said al_ strategy based on the new Bush doc- . St~I. there's every reason to. fear sucl)
this week, "Normally, we'd have hear- tnne o.f pre-emption means the-end of the sentu:nents are wmdow-dressmg for a
ings on the strategy report, but we're too system of international institutions, laws policy not of leading the WQrld tow~
busy with Iraq."
.
and norms that we have .wo~~ed to butld,~mler an,d the ~ie of law; but of mspmng
But as they consider Bush's request for .for more than half~ ce~tury.
mtematJonal vigllantlsttl. . .
.. ·
authority to conduct pre-empuve war
"Rather than contmumg to serve as first
Pre:emp~ve war m!ly ~JUStified m the.
against Iraq, Biden's conunittee and its among equals in the i;&gt;OSiwar mtemation- case of Iraq ·- 1 think 1t 1s - · but the
House counterpart also should question al system," he cmitmued; "the United United S~tes shouldn't inspire everyon¢
witnesses about the global doctrine Bush States would act as a law unto itself, ere- to engage m it.
··
hasg nunciated.
ating new rules of international engage(Monon Kondracke is executive editor
This was done - vituperatively, to be ment without . the consent of other of Roll. Call, the newspaper of Capitol
sure, and not systematically- by former nations:· ·
Hill.)
'
•

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

High court should avoid.briar patch of redi~tricting
.

BY .lAMES J.

Kn.PAlRICK

The political game in Michigan this year
has a kind of barroom quality. It offers politics on the rocks - no water, no soda, no
olives and no umbrella on top. The game is
as old as Elbridge Gerry. The question is, is
it constitutional?
.
As every schoolboy knows, Gerry was a
statesman of the revolutionary era. He was
among the signers of the Declaration of
Independence; he was Madison's second
vice president; and more to the point, right
a{ter the census of f810 h was serving as
.governor of Massachusetts. l'n that capacity he signed a bill creating a new congressional district. To a cartoonist's eye, the
convoluted boundaries resembled a salamander. It wasn't Gerry's bill,- but he was
stuck with it. A critic said the district wasn't a salamander, it was a gerrymander.
Gerry died- in 1814, but the eponymous
1
.
device lives on.
The census of 2000 cost M tchigan one
_oL its I6' seats in the House of
Representatives. At thetime the official
' population figures arrived in ' 2001,
Reputilicans . narrowly controlled both
houses of the state legislature al; well as the
governorship. In the holy name of El~ridge
Gerry, they set to work. When they were
· done, at 2:35 o'clock of a September mom,
they had cobbled together seven districts
that promised to be rock-solid Republican.
and three. districts that were very liKely
Republican - a 10-5 delegation in a state
. that is roughly half Democratic.
' Naturally the Democrats sued. They
complained that the new district IY,es were
so' biased in favor of Republicans
that they
.

.

'

amounted to a "partisan gerrymander." deep into the very being of Congress,
The discrimination was intentional. Six.. CourtS ought not to enter this political
Democratic representatives had been thicket." .
This may have been SOIJnd advice, but it
squashed into three districts, compelling
them to retire or engage in frdtricidal com- was .soon swept away. Within a few years
bat. Seven Republican incumbents were the Supreme Court was deeply into a briar
given their safe .seats. The will of the peo- patch of voting rights, reapportionment,
pie would be frustrated for 10 years. redistricting, and one-man, one-vote. The
Democrats had been denied equal protec- pending case from Michigan offers an
tion of the law. They sought an i.njunction opportunity to revisit Bandemer.
to prevent the nefarious scheme from tak· . Assuming that Democrats have been
ing effect.
stiffed, how badly have they been stiffed?
·A panel of three judges in U.S. District Have they been effectively excluded from
Court refused to grant the Democrats' the political process? Have they no chance ·
motion. The panel relied instead upo~ its of ousting the triumphant ' Republicans?
v1ew of the controlling precedent, Dav1s v. Are they doomed to a decade in outer darkBandemer, decided in 1986. The case ness?
·
involve&lt;;! redistricting i.n Indiana.
My guess is that the Supreme Court will
There were two questi'?ns in Ban~mer. refu~ to hear the .Democrats' appeal. The
is pohtlcal genymandenng a JUsttct~bie case IS far removed from the.bad old days
issue? (The court, 6-3, said yes, it is.) Were prior to 1950, when rural constituencies
the newly drawn state legislative districts a controlled many legislatures· and city folk
denial of equal protection? (Voting 7-2, the were out in the cold. Until poll taxes were
court said no.) Justice Byron White wrote forbidden by the 24th Amendment in
a plurality opinion joined by Justices .1964, blacks wllre shut out of the political
Brennan, Marshall and Blackmun. Not sat- process in much of the South. It was not
isfied, Justices Powell and Stevens voted unusual for decades to pass without change
yes on both questions. !llot to be left out, in congressional or state districts.
Jvstice O'Connor, Justice Rehnquist and
Things are more antiseptic now. Courts
Chief Justice Burger thought that gerry- have vigorously enforced the Voting
mandering is none of the high court'sbusi- Rights Act of 1965. Minorities who once
ness.
,
.
were ignored are now ardently wooed. The
·The splinfered opinion in Bandemer gerrymandering i.n Michigan that led to the .
rested upon a contentious foun~on dat- pending case may be partisan mischief, but
ing from an Ulinois case in 1946. "A lower is it un&lt;!bnstitutional misehief? Not in.my
courl' ruled that the slate's statUtes appor- book. This lightly trimmed thicket is a
tiooing congressional districts were uncon- thicket to avoid.
stitutio!)al. Justice Felix Frankfurter object(James J. KilfXiiirick is a columnist for
ed. ''To sustain this actiorl would cut very Universal Press Syndicate.)
.

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' 11.

~

Baked Chicken
3
Mashed Potatoes with
Gravy
Buttered Carrots
Roll
Red Velvet Cake

8
Roast Be~f .
Mashed Potat&lt;;&gt;es with
Gravy
Coleslaw
· Cherry Crisp

'Bush doctrine' in need of a congressional challenge ·:

..

THURSDAY

Chili
Grilled Cheese
Sandwich
Coleslaw
Banana in Vanilla
Pudding

i

10

Baked Ham
Sweet Potatoes
Corn ·
Biscuit
Lemon Lush

15
Baked Steak
'

17

Mashed Potatoes with
Gravy
Green Beans
R.oll
. Peach Crisp

Pork Chops
. 22
_ Mashed Potatoes with
•
Gravy
Mixed Vegetables
•
1!' 1'
Crotssant ·
· Hot Fudge Sundae

••• 29

Fish
Coleslaw ·
.Potato Wedges
Fresh Fruit

Taco Salad
8

Roast Beef
•
Mashed .Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Glazed Carrots
Purple Plums
White or Brown Bread
Cook's Choice
15 .

BBQ Spare Rib
Baked Potato
CLOSED
Seasoned Wax Beans ·
Pears
White or Brown Bread
Ham· and Cheese
21
22
•
Italian Chicken
Bean Soup with Bacon
Mashed Potatoes
' ColeSlaw
B~ttered p~as
Fruit -Juice
Mixed Fruit
Ruby's Orange Delight
White or Brown Bread
Cornbread
Tex~s Tom
Chili
28
29
Pepper Steak
Scalloped Ham &amp; Potatoes
Potato Cheese Puff
Carrot Ra1sin Salad
Green Beans
Chocolate Pudding
· Grape Juice
Fru1t Ju1ce
Angel r;ood Cake .
White or Brown Bread
Cook's. Choice
Hot Dog

16

Baked Pork Chop .
Augralin Potatoes
Spinach
Banana.
White o r Brown Bread
Bread Sticks With Sauce

. 11 .

"n Dumplings
.Tomato Vinaigrette
Mandarin Oranges
White or Brown Bread
Chi~kan

Pizza

17

Chicken Supreme
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Mashed Potatoes
C reamed TomatoeS
Mixed Vegetables
AJ1plesauce
Stewed Prunes
Ginger Snaps
. White or Brown Bread
White or Brown Bread
l
Cook's Choice
Taco Potato
23
24
Spaghetti wilh Meat Sauce
&lt;lhicken &amp; Noodles
Monroe .Broccoli Salad
Three Bean Salad
Raisin Pudding
teed Chocolate Cake
Apple Juice
Orange Juice
Garlic Bread
White or Brown Bread
Sub
Hamburger
30
31
Tangy Baked Chicken
Chili· ·
Mashed Sweet Potatoes
Grilled cheese
. Lim-a Beans
Samantha's fi'asta Salad,
Apple
Tropical Fru it
White or Brown Bread
..
Cheesy Ham Potato Soup
Burrito

18 '

Breaded Fish Square
Oven Roast Potatoes
Brussels Sprouts w/ Cheese

Banana
Whil!l or Brown Bread
Broccoli Soup
25
New England Boiled
Dinner
Pineapple Rings
Cherry Chip Cake
. Biscuit
Cook's Choice

\

31

.,........

. It is time to get your lawn and
yard ready for fall. Join Hal
Kneen as he presents a program
on "Landscaping for Fall" on
October )0 at 11:00 a.m.

Wiener
Potatoes
Buttered Corn
Sauerkraut
Honey Bee Ambr us! CJ
Cherry Crisp
Bun
While or Brown Bread
Baked Potato
Cook's Choice
9
10
f
Johnny Marzetti
Baked Ham
Tossed Salad
Baked Sweet Potatoes
Buttered Broccoli
Creamed Cabbage
Warm Peach Crisp
Fruit Cocktail
White or .Brown Bread
White or Brown Bread
Chicken over Rice
Fish Sandwich
M~shell

Pot_3 1o Wf'r1gc5

of Crafts

: AClm/ITY SCHEDULE

Landscapiflg

Cheeseburger

4

Winter Wonderland

·'Thursday, October 3, Talent Show presented by the Girl Scouts
and will honor Veterans
:Thursday, October lOth Junior &amp; Rita will play 5:30- 6:30
Tuesday, October 22nd Blood Pressure Checks at 4:15- 4:45

: The M~jgs .. ~ultipurpose
Senior Cente.~ . is , jlpen Monday
ihrough Friday from 8:00 a.m.
until4:30 p.m. ~egularly scheduied. activities held throughout
ihe week include sewing, quilt,
ing, (lool, . bingo, cards and .
games.
.. Dance team practice is held
each Monday at I :00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session auended.
The Knitting Circle meets :on
Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.
until noon.

3

24

· Beef tips iri Gravy over Turke~ Roll with
Rice
·
, . , . Qresstng
· Californ.ia Blenq :t~,.: , ' ~as~~~Potatoes with
Vegetables
' . &lt;~ · :, : .Gn~vy
Hot Spiced Pe.aches
Green Beans
, Jello with Cool Whip
Roll
Strawberry Shor:tcake

...

2

Vegetable' So~p .
Poonut 8utter Sanclwicll
Peac hes in Red Jello
SugGr Cookie
"

Cheesy Scrambled Eggs
Hash Brown Potatoes
Fried Apples .
Tomato Juice
Blueberry Muffin
Cheese Burger
14

OCTOBER 2002
Menu IS subject to change
Menu's are prepared by Cynthia McMannis, RO,LD

1

-'

.·

of" the Ohio Valier P11blishinR Co. s ediwrial hoard,

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7

per.wnalitie.~.

'11nless mlw1wise noll'fi.

•

Evening ·M·eals

TUESDAY

Flt e opinions e.\jm'.\Xt'd in 1/!t' column below are the con~

.J

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM MENU ·
The Senior Nutrition Meal. is served daily at 12:00.

The Meigs County Senior ~itizens Center evening meal will be
served on Tuesday and Thursday. Spring and Summer hours for
serving are from 4:45- 5:30. A suggested donation .for the meal
is $5 .00. Attend the evening meal program for a good nutritional
meal at a reasonable cost with friends or meet new friends.

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

~

'""'l·:-''"'11 .

I

www.mydallysentinel.com

Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 5

.

'The Daily Sentinel

·'

WVJW.mydaiiYseAtinel.com

N8ws About Senior Citizens
..
I n ·Me-i gs ,q pUnty

•

•

•

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Mary Alice Bise (left) and Frances Reed (rigltt) are shown with
their fishing poles during "A Day at the Pond": The seniors visited
a pond owned by fatty Pickens to enjoy' fishing a.nd relaxing.
Twenty-five seniors attended the special day of fishing and wer~
served a picnic lunch.

---HEAP--The Horne Energy Assistance Program (HEAP). is one of several
programs offered by .the Ohio Department of Development
(ODOD) to help low-income Ohioans pay their utility bi lis.
Households may be eligible for assistance. if the household's
income is at or below the 150% federal poverty guidelines.
Below are guidelines for the 2002-2003 HEAP program :

Older adults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you can enjoy th.e reguiar meal. Ala carte items are Size of Household
1
individually priced. The sug2
gested donation for the noon
3
meal is $2.00.
4.

5

Social Security
Representatives from . the
Athens Social Security Office
will be at the Meigs Senior
Center ,at assist pe_opie with
Social .Security problems and to
provide ·information. The dates
are October 9 &amp; 23 from 10:00
a.m.- 11 :00 a.m. . ·

6
7
8

•

Total Gross Household Income
up to $13,290
up to$17,910
up to $22,530
up to $27,150
up to $31,770
·up to $36,390
up to $41,010
· up to $45.630

For households ·with more than 8 members, add $4,620 per
member.
,
If you need more info(mation about the HEAP Program, contact
Kathy Goble at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center at 740-9922161. If you need assistance With completing a HEAP application,
please call to schedule an appointment. Kalhy is also available to
make horne visits for individuals that are disabled or homebound.

Be 4- Shining Star .
Make-A-Difference Day
Tuesday, October '22, 2002
. "'
The Meigs Senior Center and Strides" for a healthier,, .you.
'The Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center is participating in "Make A
the
Heart Healthy Awareness Some ideas for small steps areDifference Day 2002" by having a Bake Sale and Soup Day. The
program
o( the M:eigs County take time ·to eat breakfast, drink
proceeds for the day will be used to make a special Christmas for
Health Department will host a one extra glass of water, or take
·seniors.
,
chair
exercise class on Tuesday. a moment to stretch.
Who are the targeted seniors?
,
October
15 at 10: 15 a.m. to cele- Please join us at the Cencer to
Targeted seniors are those who: Jive alone and have lillie or no
brate
"Small
Steps Week."
particip~te in th1 s program for
family and/or friends; and/or have a very limited income. (Some
·
Small
Steps
Week
is
a
time
'
t
o
Small Steps Week . Laura
. seniors have to make the decision of whether to buy food or
make
healthy
lifestyle
choices
Horsley, coo rdinator of the
-medicine).
·
·
by
picking
a
new
"Small
Step"
Heart Healthy Awareness
' How can you help to make a more memorable Christmas for
each
week
to
create
"Big
Program, will conduct the class.
those special seRiors?
'.
All community organizations, churclies anct local busmesses are
encouraged to participate in Make-A-Difference Day this
-christmas 2002!
·
;
The,following crips have been selected for the upcoming year.
Here's how...
·Come join us for lunch:
. The trips are scheduled through Park Tours . There must be at least
..
Where: 112 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
15 people regis1ered 10 ensure a pickup at the Senior Center.
.
·when: 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
·
.
. ·
_
-~· ..
••
Menu: Chili and-peanut butter-sandwiCh-or Soup beans~ NOV~MBER---rs:Ii- Smoky Mountains Ch ristm as, Pigeon _
,
cornbread and a dessert for $3.50. Take out
Forge Winterfest, Christmas at Dollywood, Biltmor~ Estate
..
,
.
orders will~ avaUable.
Candlelight To~r. Cost $380
:Bake Slile: Donate a homemade dessert &amp; come. and buy som~
goodies.
·
'
·
The Meigs Senior Center i,s sponsoring the following trips. There
-Donate Items: Personal Care Items ,(shampoo, soap, de~orant), . must be at least 35 persons registered to make final reservations
,non-perishable food items, blankets, or household cleanmg prod- for these trips.
·
•
;ucts (dish washing liquid, trash bags, papc;'r towel~, laundry· Tuesday, October 8- Fall Foliage trip through West Virginia
With stops at Haw~·s Nest , the New ~iver Bridge, a coal Mine
·detergent) . ·
.
.
"Take a star of our "Star tree". Each st.ar will have details of what. exhibit in Beckle!f&gt; and a Buffet dinner.''i"he cost is $50.00.
,pne special senior needs. All you do is buy the gift and return it to · Tuesday, Decerilber 10- Oglebay 'Park Festival of Lights in
,the Multipurpose Senior Center unwrapped w1th the star attached. Wheeling, WV. Includes a Victorian Home Tour. holiday lights
.or Make. a monetary donation to help purchase needed Items. :
tour. The cost is $50.00.
If you would have questions or would hke more mformat1on,
Alice Wamsley is the Volunleer Trip Coordinator for the Mei gs
pleaSe contact Patty Pickens or Ta~my Queen. at 740-992-2161, Senior Center and can be contacted at horne at 992-3938. Please·
l ~avj: a message if there is no answer.
.,.
All proceeds benefit the star tree project.

Small Steps Week

•

Meigs Senior Center
112 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769"
For more information call
Patty Pickens at 740-992-2161 ·

Annual plant exchange
Do you have perennials that
need to be divided? Do you have
top ,many of one kind of flower
and not enough or none of
another?
If you answered yes, then you
need. to attend the annual plant
exchange on October 24 at

· noon. There will also be speakers at · 11:30 a.m . on "'how to
make your garden grow."
Dj:m't worry if you have ~nthing to bring, there . is always
plenty. for everyone. Th.e plant
exchange will begin at noon.

Support groups
Lia Tiplon.
The Caring c/11d Shari11g the Center.
Support Group meets the fourth Occupational Therapist, Holzer
Thursday of each month at the
Meigs County Senior Center al
I :00 p.m. The meeting date is
October 24. Cou rtney Sim will
have an update on Tobacco Free
Ohio Information at the October
meeling .
The Stroke Support Group
will meet on October 9 at I :00
p.m. in the conference rn("Tl at

Rehabilitalion Center, · 1s the
coordinator.
Nancy Stevells, from Holzer
Medical Ce~ter, is the facilitator
for the Diabetes Support Group.
The meeting will be held on
October 17 . The meeting will
begin at 10:30 a.m.
The topi c for (he October .
meeting will be travel tips.

~&amp;OV ·
~J~:welen,
~ 212·EAST MAINInc.
ST.

WE HONOR

---------T R'Ip s

"WCLare For Yott Like Family"

• HOMI':~oxY~EN- ·HOSPITAL- BEDS

,,.

• CJ&gt;AP MACHINES ' • WHEELCHAIRS .
• OXIMETRY

• NEBULIZERS

24 llo11r t:mergency Service • Free Delivery
.

~

1-800-~58-6844
446-7283
'

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Inside:

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nte Daily Sentinel

•

Scoreboard, Page 7

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Tuesday, .

Page~

'Pro Football
•

HIGHLIGHTs
URG baseball
to host alumni

weekend
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
baseball program will host its
. 2002 Alumni Weekend Oct.
19-20.
A golf outing will kick oil
the weekend at 2 p.m. Oct. 19
at FranR!in Valley Golf Course
in Jackson. The $50 fee covers
a cookout arid beverages.
The-alumni will suit up one
more time and take the field
for a I p.m. match ~ up against
the cum:ilt group of Redmen
on Oct. 20. Batting practice
begins at II :30 a.m. at Robert
Evans Field.
Alumni interested in ,participating in \he event can
reserve their place by calling
the Rio Grande base ball
office at 740-245-7486.

OSU releases
Moms from
letter of intent
COLUMBUS · (AP)
Ohio State released Derek
Morris from his national letter of intent on Monday,
school officials said.
Morris. an offensive lineman from Huntersville, N:C.,
signed with the Buckeyes in
February but was never ruled
academically eligible by the
. NCAI\,
Initial-Eligibility
Clearinghouse to start training with the team:·
"Derek is now free to pur- ·
sue other options," OSU athletic director Andy Geiger
said. "We wish him the very
best as he continues his
career as a student-athlete."
The 6-foot-6, 360-pound
line man was a first-team
USA Today All-American
pick and the last and biggest
r commitment of coach Jim
Tre ssel's first full year of
recruiting.

Reels shortstop
• . has surgery to
fix toe problems

NFL

Ravens

.Southem wins
tri-match·

rock .·

Denver

BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sentinel correspondent

BALTIMORE (AP) Winless no more, the
Baltimore .Ravens made a
mockery of lhe unbeaten
Denver Broncos long
before Chris McAlister
taunted them during ·the
longest play in NFL history.
McAlister returned · a
missed field goal 108
yards to put an exclama- '
tion point on lin incredible
second q\larter, and the
Ravens cruised to a 34-23
victory Monday night.
Outscored 35-7 in its
first two games, Baltimore
(1-2) set a team record
with a 31 -point second
'·
, quarter. The topper ~arne
on an alert play by
McAlister and yet another
gaffe by the Broncos' special teams.
With one second left in
the half and Baltimore up
24-3, Denver's Jason Elam
came up short on a 57-yard
field goal try. McAlister
caught the ball deep in the
end zone, then hesitated
before bringing it out.
Following a. crushing
block by Ray Lewis on
Keith Burns at the
Baltimore ~. McAlister Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis tackles Denver
Broncos fullback Mike Anderson in the first quarter of game
Please see NFL. Page f
Monday at Raven Stadi!Jm in Baltimore. (AP)
·

Major League Baseball

RACINE -The Southern
Tornadoes , evened their
record at 7-7 with two home
non-league wins in a Trimatch with Ohio Valley
Christian and South Gallia
Monday night.
· Southern claimed the first
match 15-2, 15-2 over South
Gallia, then after dropping
the first gam;t13- 15, defeated OVC l 5-3, 15-3.
.Jn the South Gallia game,
Deana Pullins scored 13
points, Rachel Chapman had
nine, and Emily Hill six in
Southern's win over South
Galli a.
In addition to being one of
the top scorers, Chapman
went 7-for-9 serving with
two aces, 3-for-3 spiking
with a kill , and 5-for-5 pass"ing with a block. Pullins was
13-for-13 serving with
seven aces, 2-for-3 setting,
and 15-for- 16 passing. Kati·e
Sayre went 1-of-2 serving
and hammered the nets for
6-for-8 spiking and six kills,
while going 5-for-5 passing.
Amy Lee was 2-for-2
serving with an ace, 5-of-6
spiking with three kills, and
2-for-2 passing. Emily hill
was 5-of-5 serving with an
ace, 6-for-7 spiking, and .3for-3 passing. Brooke Kiser
was 2-of-2 serving, 17-for17 setting, and l 0-for-1 0
passing. Jeri Hill was 2-for3 serving with an ace. .
In the ·nightcap with Ohio
Valley Christian, OVC came

Miomi
3
New England 3

back to win the. first .game
I 5-13 after Southern werit
up 13- ll. The Tornadoes, ·
however, came back to
claiin 15-3 and 15-3 wins to ·
sweep the tri-match.
In game two, Katie Sayre
went 7-for-7 to start the
game, mixing in a couple
aces before ending that
·h · h
·
d
game Wit eig 1 pomts an..
12 points overall. Amy Lee
ended the set with ten over· all, and Chapman added 10.
In the second game;,
Pullins netted four points
·including ·the' game winner,
overall scoring seven points
in the match . Pullins went
46-for-50 passing, 23-of-24
setting, 6-for-6 spiking and
I0-for-10 serving.
.
Sayre went 16-for-16 with
six aces, 19-of-22 spiking
with a great front line gam(\
. and eight kills, with a 29for-29 · passing . game.
Brooke Kiser was 9-for-10 ·
serving, 6-for-6 spiking with
a kill, 20-of-21 setting, and
49-for-49 passing.
Lee was IJ-for-15 serving. with four aces, 5-for-6
kills, 5-for-5 setting, and 12for-IS passing with three
blocks: Chapman was 8-of-9
serving with a spike, 14-for16 spiking, 4-for-4 setting;
and 21-for-22 pa~sing with
three blocks; and Emily Hill
was 6-of-6 serving with 23c
for-29 spiking with six kills,
and . 15-for-16 passing.
Kristiina Williams and Jeri
Hill were each 2-for-3 pass-.
ing.
Southern
goes
to
Waterford today.

Bonds takes aim ·at \iuick Scramble
at Rocket ·and
Randy·already have· ~

Webb.out
for season

·..

•

Bob Werry, with trophy, shows off the hardware he, Rusty
Ballinger, John Blankenship and Ed Caudill won at the Buick
Scramble sectional tournament in Dayton on Sept. 10. The
foursome will compete in the national finals this week in
Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Also pictured, far left, Randy
Johnso'n, Brett Epling, and, far right, Glenn Lawson and
Greg Smith, owner of Smith Buick Pontiac in Gallipolis.
(Andrew Carter)

Ciallia goNers
compete in
national event
OVP staff report

County to qualify .for the
Buick Scramble National
GALLIPOLIS _ A team Finals. Teams from the local
of four golfers .from Gallia area also participated in the
tounty will compete in the event in 1991 and '92.
Bui ck Scramble National · The '92 team- featuring ·
h. h
b · Rusty Saunders, Randy
F'1031
s,
w IC
egm Pinney, Tom Meadows and
Wednesday at Walt Disney Johh Davis - won the tourWorld in Lake Buena Vista, nament title .
Fla.
·
The national finals feaRysty · Ballinger, Johri tures a field of 260 teams
BlankeilShip, Ed Caudill and comprised of one PGA Club .
Bob Werry wo n the local professional and four amaqualifying· event held at leur players.
· ' .
Smith Buick Pontiac,
Ctiffside Golf Course and
then captured the sectional sponsored the toea qualifier
championship · held
at and is helping cover ' the
Walnut Grove Country Club team's expenses for the trip·.
in Dayton to advance to the to florida.
,
.
.
natidnal tl nals in Florida. . . "We •re expeQ:ting to make
At Dayton, the foursome it to the last day," Ballinger
wpn a 6-hole playoff thanks said. "If we don 't make it to
to a string of five pars .and the last day, we owe (Smith
an Eagle on the final hole. Buick owner) Greg (Smith) ·
Blankenship chipped in a car wash. We hope we can
from 40 ya~ds to give the make Gallipolis p_roud."
Gallians the win. The team • andrew Timms is the
finished at It -under par in team's PGA pro.
·
the sectional tournament.'
The tournament is schedBallinger, Blankenship, · uled to run Wednesday ·
Caudill and Werry are the through Sunday with the
third foursome from Gallia final day televised on £lSPN.

f'

1

"""- ....,

I

Bullalo '
N .Y. Jelli

2
1

AFC.··
EM!
LTPetPFPA
1
1
2
3

0 .750 130

8s

~liege

0 .750 129 110
0 .500 132 131
0 .250 50 133

-napoli&amp;

Jad&lt;aonvillo
Houston

Tennessee

210
2 1 0
1 3 0
1 3 0

-

·san DiegO·
:Oaldand
~

.

• Kansas City

W
4
3
3
~

0
0
0
0

-

.500 103 91
.333 41 58
.333 47 73
.000 23 119

PA

1.00 102 38
1.00 113 59
.750 98 87 '
.500 142 133

2. TOJCaS (2)

NFC
• Phi~
1 Dalas

·
N.\'i.Giants

..

• Waslli~

3
2
2
1

1
2
2
2 ·

0 .750 140
Q .500 57
0 .500 55
o .333 48 .

&amp;I
86
64
110

Sau1ll
WLTPc1PFPI\
C&amp;rolina

31
1
3 1
1 2·

,New Orleans 3

' Ta..,.Bay

. l'lttanta

0.750 76
0 .750 111
0 .750 106
o .333 n

-

45
89
47
54

W L ' T Pel PF, PA

Mimesola

•

3
2
1
o

1
2
3
4

~
W-1, ~:.:; Pv~

Miami (71)

3. Oldahoma (1)
4. Virginia Tech
5. Ohio Sl
•
. 6. Florida
7. Goo&lt;gia

EM1
WLTPetPFPA

"

·

'

.•

W8dnoldoy, Oct. 9
A1~r~.TBA

0 .750 111 114
0 .500 91 98
0 . . 250 85 138 .
0 .000 99 141

-

WLTPetPFPI\

·-san Frandsoo 2 1 o .667 50 47
'ArizOna
2 2 0 .500 83 74
Seal11e
1 3 o .250 &amp;4 87
Stlouis
o 4 o .000 61 . 88
,,
.SUnclly'a. Dallas 13, Sll.CI!I.is 19,.
• • Buffalo 33, ChiciiJ'!'27,
•• De1r0i126, New Orleans 21
Kansas Ci1y 48, Mlani 30
, G!een Bay 17, Galoliria 14
, ' Pil1sb\Jrgh 16. CIIMIIand 13,
• Jaol&lt;aonvllle28.N .Y.-3
Philadelphia 55, Houston 17
·' ArWlna 21. N.Y. Giants 7
•• Tampa Bay 55, Cincinnati 7
San Diego 21, N"' England 14
Dakland 52, TllllnOSMO 25
- Saal11e 48, Mlmesola 23
' ' Open: lndianopolia, Washington, Atlanta,
; iSan Francl&amp;co
Manar'oGanw
• BaMimore 34, Denver 23
SunMy, Oct. 6
' N.Y. Giants a1 Dallas, 1 p.m.
• • Daldond at Buffalo. 1 p.m.
. . Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Arizona at Cirolina, 1 p.m.
Washi~ at Tonne-. 1 p.m. ·

or

or

· ' CinciMati at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
New England at Miami, 1 p.m.
Pitlsburgh
Orleans, 1 p.m.
- Kanoaa Ci1y at N.Y. Jets, 4:05p.m.
Sen Diego at 0ei'IY8r, 4:05 p.m.

at New

saturday, Oct. 12
At higher seed , TBA, if necessary
1

8. Oregon

5-0
4-0

4.()

...a

19. Wisconsin ·

5-0

Michlga'n

3

1 ,605

5

2

1,537
6
1,411
7
1,393
6
1,299 . 9 •
1,245
10
1,087
11
1.039
4
912
13
858
15
651
14
817 . 19
724
t7
7m
16
700
18

4-1

9. Notre Dame
10: T""""'seo
11 . Florida St.
12. Wasllington
13. Kansas St.
14.
15. 1owa St.
16. N.C. Slate
17. WashingtonSt
18. Soothorn cal

t ,729
1,724

3-1
4-1
3-1
4-0

4-1
5-1
6.()
4-1
3-1

541

21 '

20. Penn St.
3-1
337
12
:(1. LSU
' 3-1
327 22
22. Alabama
4· 1
246
23. T"'"'s A&amp;M
3-1
230
24
24. 1owa
4-1
228
25. Colorado St.
4-1
206 25
Others receiving wotu: Al.b.Jrn 119, Air
Force 84, Clomsoo 58, Kentucky 40,
Louisville 36,
ZT, Oregon St 21,
UCLA 17, Colorado 16, Nel"aska 10,
Bostcn COllege 8, Bo\Wng Gll!l!n 7, Georgia
Tech 5,
St. 5, Arizona St. 3.

Malshal

Michigan

Soccer
Major League Soccer
M.LS Cup Ployolfo
(SHdlng In paNntheul)
· Quorl8fllnolo
(Flntt10 live palnll. Threo points
lor victory, one poinllor tie.)

Dallal

Coloiado (5) VI.
(4)
Wodrieodoy, SepL 25
Dalla~ 4, Colorado 2
· Slturdlty'l Game
ColOrado 1, Dallas 0. series tied ~
·,
·
Wednoodoy'l Game
ColoiOdo al DaMas. ,8:30 p.m .
;

Kania• Clly (8) vo. Loa Angela (1)
Wednoldoy, SepL 25
Los Angelos 3, Kansas City 2, OT
S.tunloy'o Game
Kansas City 4, Los Angeles 1, series tied
3-3

Wednesday's Game
Kansas City at Los Angeles, t0:3Q p.m.
Cqlumllua (6) vo. Sen Jooe (3)
Wednooday, SepL 25
Columbus 2, san Jose 1 .

1
Slturday'a Game
Columbus 2, San Jose 1, Colurrbus wins

series 6-0 .
Chicago (7) ••· Now England (2)
Thursday, Sept. 26

the Ravens, who added plenty rnore over the next 14 minutes.
Top draft pick Ed Reed
from Page&amp;
ended Denver's next posses'
sion with the first blocked
: broke to his left and easily punt in Ravens history, giv; outran. the coverage. He mg Baltimore the ball at the
t..began waving the ball over 13. Jamal Lewis then scored
~s head at the Denver 25 and from the 2, his first touch[1righ-stepped lhe rest of the tlowQ since the 200 I Super
t-way into the end zone.
.:: "That's the, way we prac: tice 'it," McAlister sa1d at
~Jtalftime. "I watched and
"hung· in the end zone an.d let ,
; my guys set up the wall. All I
:saw was purple jerseys and
:green until l . hit the end

St. Louis (Morris 17-9} at Arizona ·
(Johnsoo 24-5), 11 :06 p.m. (~C Family)
Thursdoy'o Game
St. Louis (Fililey 7.-4) at AriZona (Scnitling
23·7), 4:06p.m. (ABC Family)
•
•
Sotunlaty'l Game
Ariiona at 51. Louis
SUndWj, Oct. f
AriZona at St. ·Louis, if necessary
Mondoy, Oct. 7
St. Louis at Arizona, if,necessary

Hockey

~

.C olumbuo (I) vo. Chlc_,..w

·

Sundlly's Gamea
N.Y. Rangers 4. Boslon 3. OT
COlumbus 5. Pittstlurgh 3
Detroit 5, Chicago 4
LOS Angeles 7, Anaheim 4 t'
Cilgary 6. Edmqnton 5
•

,.

8

PUBLIC NOTICES

hlllkN.tknio~

---

v..r RiPt t. "-"· DtU¥n't4 RJ;.t ~ YMir Dew.

Metgs Industries Inc: 4576!1:"'
H. Copies Not
Is accepllng sealed 9.
Pub 111 h e r: Dlstrlbpted: 334.
bldllor the following Den Dlckenon, 111 · t. Total: 4,565
MondeY'• Games
three vehlclea:
COUrt St., Pomeroy, Average No. c.,Ptes
Ec!montoq 4, calgary 3
1919 Ford. Van Ohio, 45789. Managing of Single .tuue
Vancouver 2, San Jose 2, tie
Automatic
Editor, Bene Pearce Published Neareal to
·
Todly"1 Qamu
Ttansmtaslon Y-8 Gaa 111 Court St, Pomroy; Filing Data:
·
New Jtmey at N .Y. lslandeJ$. 11 a.m.
MLSCup2002
Engine
Vtn.
No
.
Ohlo45789,
,
15.
Extenf
and
Chicago at Nas!Mllo. 2:30 P·!"·
·
SUndoy, OcL 20
!FTJE34HIKHB 71366
10 .
0 wn e r : nature ot Circulation.
N.Y. Rangers a1 Philadillphla, 7 p.m.
AIF_M_.
2.
1990
Suburban
•
Newspaper
Holdings A. .Total No. Copies
Boston at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
Semifinal winners, 1:30 p.m.
(Gil C)
Automatic Inc., 3500 Colonnade Printed: 4,197.
St. Louis at Oetroi1, 7:30p.m .
.Ttansmtsalon V-8 Gaa Parkway, Suite 800, · B. Paid and/or
Atlanta atTampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
Engine. Vtn No. Birmingham , AL,"·requutedCirculallon:
Anaheim at Minnesota , B p,m.
IGKE18K8!F512720
35243.
1. Pald/Rej!Uetted
Vancouver at Phoenix, 10 P
.m.
3,
1987
Dodge
Van
·
11.
Mortgegee:
Outside-County
Mall
MLB DIVISION SERIES
Wednead•y'l Games
Automatic
Retirement System• of •Subscriptions Silled
N.Y. Ra!"'f'rS at COiuinbus, 7 p.m.
American League
Washington vs. PittSburgh at Wilkes~ TransmlnioQ 'V-8 Alabama, 135 S. Union on Form 3541. (Include
New York vo. Anoholm
Engine (Gas). Yin No. St., Montgomery, AL adverllfer'a proof and
l;!arre, Pa., 7 p.m.
Taday'oGama
2B7KB33'1\'3HK286814 36119
exchange coplea.) :
Philadelphia at N v lslandel$, 7 p.nl.
Anaheim (Washll&lt;Jrn 18-6) at New 'Obrk
All veh!clea will be Average No. Copies 135
A11anla at Cirplina. 7 p.m.
·
.
(Clemens 13-6), 6:17p.m: (Fox)
Boston vs. Florida al Esloro, Fla., 7:30 sold 11 11 condition. Each 111ue During
Meigs lndu1trlas Preceding 12 Months: 2 . Pajd ln·County
Wedneldoy'l Game
p.m.
,...rves the right· to 15 ....... Extent and Subscriptions stated
· Anaheim (Appler 14-12) at Now '!brk
Montreal al Toronto, 7:30p.m.
reject
any and all bids nature of
on form 3541. (Include
(Pettitte 13-5), 8:17p.m. (Fox)
Colorado at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
or to · .. 11 to the Circulation.
· advertlaer'o proof and
Friday's Game
h lg h11 I
b ldde r A. Total No. Copies exchange copies): 69.
New Yoll&lt; (Mussina 18-tO) at Anaheim
IndiVIdually or 11 a lot Printed: 4,565.
3, Sates through
Transactions
(Ra.Orliz 15-9), 8:17p.m. (Fox)
whichever brlnga the B. Paid end/or Dealers and Carriers,
S.turdly'a ~me
lgh811 return to . Requested
Street Vendors and
BASEBAU
NewYorl&lt; (wells 19·71 at.Anaheim , KneeMeigs Industries Circulation:
Counttlf S.lu: 3,512.
Americlln League
essary
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-fired Hal Incorporated.
1. Paid/Requested C. Total Paid ancUor
Sundoy, OCt. I
Sealed Bids to be Outside-County Matt Requuted
McRae, manager, who wiU remain with the
Anaheim at New York, if necessary
Subscription• Stated Circulation: 3,716.
learn as assistant to the general manager. 1111t to:
D. Free'Dlstrlbutlan
Reteased LHP-' Wilson Atvarez, SS Chris Executive Director on Form 3541. (Include
MlnOesota. vs. Oakland
edvertr-·s proof and by .Mall.
Gomez and LHP Tom Martin. Ooslgnated (Bids)
Todoy'o Gome
·exchange coplet.) 151 1. Outalde-County
Minnesota (Radke 9·5) at Oakland INF RusS Johnson "for assignment. Meigs Industries Inc.
2. Paid In-County 11 stated on form
Activated. RHP Ryan Rope ·ard RHP Kevin ·P.O. Box 307
(Hudson 15-9). 4 :08p.m. (ABC Family)
McGIInclley ~om tho 60-day disabled list Syracuse, Ohio 45779 Subscriptions alated 3541: 0.
Wednesday's Game
To Inspect vehicles, on Form 3541. (Include 2. In county as
Minnesota (Mays 4-9) at Oaklard and di.siilnatod 'McGlinchey lor assigncall 1-740-992-8881 advertt-·s preot and stated on form 3541 : o•.
ment.
(Mulder t 9-7), 4 06 p.m. (ABC Family)
3. Other cta11e1
TEXAS RANGERS-Granted
free durtng normal working exchange coplel): n.
' Fridoy'l Game
3. Sates through mailed through the
oakland (Zito 22-5) at Mlnriesola (Reed agency to OF Ruben Rivera, INF Donnie Hours (8:00a.m.- 4:00
Dealers and Carriers, USPS: 0.
sadler and LHP C.J. N~kowsl&lt;i alter !hoy p.m.)
15-7), 4.06 p.m. (ABC Family)
Bids wnt be open Street Vendors and E. Free Distribution
retused outright assignments.to Otdahoma
5aturdlly'o Gama ·
12:00 noon Septtntber Counter Sates: 3,988. Outatde the ' Mel!
o1 the PCL. .
oakland at ·Minnesota, If necessary
30,2002.
C. Tota't Pal.d (Carrier or Other
Nationol l.Mg. .
,
Sundoy, Oct. I
Circulation: 4,218
Meana): 14 .
FLORIDA MARLINs-Named. Michael (9) 14, 24, (10) 1
Minnesota at Oakland, if ~ssary'
D. Free Distribution F. Total ,Free
Hill assistant oer:-eral ma~aget".
Public Notice
by Mall.
Dlolrlbullon: 14.
National L.ugue
BASKETBALL
Atlanta va. Sin Franclaco
1. Outalde·County G. Total Dltlrlbutlon:
National Buloltbllll AIIOCIIIIon
The Melgl County as stated on form 3,730.
Wedneodoy'l Game
CLEVELAND CAVALIER5-Signod G
San Frahclsco (Ro.Ortiz 14-10)at Atlanta Anthony Johnson, G Vontoego ,Cummings Sub-Committee tar
3541: 0.
H. · Copies Not
Round
t7
SCIP/LTP
(Giavino 18-10), 1:06 p.m. (ABC Famityj
2.
In
county
as
Dlalrtbuted:
487.
and C Ike Nwankwo.
Thumlay'o Gome
lilted on form 3541: 0. !. Total: 4,197.
DETROIT PISTON&amp;- Signed G Rielly Projecta will meet
San Francisco (Rueter 14-8) at Atlanta Moore, F Gabo Muonei&lt;o and C Anthony Thursctey, OctaiHir 3,
3. Other cla11e1
,1. Den Dlckeroon,
(Maddu• 16-6}, 6:17p.m. (Fox)
2002, at 10:30 a.m. at malted through the ·
Publlther
Pelle.
·
saturdly'a Gtme
USPS: 0.
October .1, 2002
GOLDEN.. STATE WARRIORS-Signed the Melgl County
Atianla ~illwood t 6-8) at san Francisco
E. Free Dlatrlbullon
G Rafer AlstOn, G, Joe Crispin, G Elvin Commlaaloilero
(Schmidt 13-8)
·
In the Outs.tde the, Mall
Mims,
G
Dean
Oliver~ F Antnony Miller·and Office
Sunday, Oct. 6
Courthouse on (Carrier ·or Other
F Glenn Whlsby.
•
Atlanta at San Francisco, if necessary
Seco_
nd Street In
MIAMI HEAT-signed F 'Sean Lampley.
Mondoy, Oct. 7
Pomeroy,
Ohio. The ~na): i~tal Free~~~MILWAUKEE
BUCK5-Sign'!d
F·C
san Franci~ at Atlanta, If necessary
Committee
11 com·
Jamal Sampson.
7
posed
of
one
repre- OI~~rl~.:'~ro~~:ibution: ·
ORLEANS
HORNET$-Signed
F
NEW
Arizona va. St. Loula
aantallve appointed 4,231.
.
.
Lee Nailon to a one-year contract.
Today'aGame
by the v11111111 of the
county, one rapreoenHelp Wanted
tatlve appointed by
Bowl, for a 14-31ead.
Baltimore wasn ' t done. the township trusDtmver fell apart on . Ray .Lewis picked off a pass tee•, one repr1taenblBaltimore's next dnve, start-· · by Griese .and took it to the tlve appointed by the
commltltaning with O'Neal's pass inter- Denver 36, and Redman county
era, one repreaentaference call and foolish chest immediately threw a pass llve appointed by the
llunlna and RehabllhaUon cemar
bump of the official. The . into double coverage that county eng!- and
IBIISind Dlelhlan
Broncos were Cillled for five Heap caught at the 3. On a . · filth member
selected
by
ttie
lour
Comparable
salary &amp; benefits. Join our
penalties."(otaling 51 yards on third down, Heap · caught a appointed represena march that ended with a 23- floater in the left side of the tatives. The purpo1e family of professionals to be the resource
yard field goal Q&gt;'Y Matt end zone over Sam Brandon. ot the October 1 for communily health service needs:
meeting !1 to lllect Registered dietitian wilh the Com,;.ission
·
Stover.
the fifth member,
on Dieletic Registration. Licensed dielitian
with West Virgi nia Board of Licensed
(10) 1, 2002
Satunloy'o Game
At higher seed. TBA ..
•
.
W8dnoldoy, OcL 9
At loMJr seed, TBA
~Idly. Oct. 12
At higher seed, ll!A, I nooossary

Baseball

*II

Dietitians.

Public Notice
Please submit resume to:
- -,.,Pleasant Valley Hospital
STATEMENT.OF
c! H
. OWNERSHIP
o uman Resources
MANAGEMENT AND
2520 Valley Drive
CIRCULATION .- V Point Pleasant, WV 25550
1.
T 11' e ./" ,
www.pvalley.org
publication: ,..,..
.
AAIEOE
Dally Sentinel.
.
2.Publtcetlon No.

. .zone."

.. McAlister's IOS~yard romp
;"topped the record of 106
yards, set three times previously on k.ickoff,retums. The
last time it happened 'l'was
when Roy Qreen of th:e St.
Louis Cardinals took a kick·off all the way against Dallas
in 1979.
McAlister's second career
· t9ui:hdown all but spelled the
end for the Broncos (3-1),
who were victimized as much
by their own mistakes as they
were by . an inspired
·Baltimore team. looking for ·
•'
'Tedemption.
Brian Griese was intercepted three times, Tom Rouen
·had a punt block~d~d Pro
Bowl comerbacl( . Deltha .
.O'Neal was ejected in the
second quarter for bumping
)lead linesman ,Tom Stabile
. ,while protesting a pass inter' ference call.
.. , The Ravens' Robert Tate
took the second-half kickoff
64 ya!lls to set up a field goal
·to rnat{e it 34-3. The Broncos
fought back, but it was too
big a hole to make up.
O'Neal's double foul
accounted for two of ·eight
·· fmt-half penalties totaling 86
·.yards against . the Broncos,
, ;who had only 15 penalties in
their first three games.
, Down 3-0, .Baltimore used
.a 15.yard punt return: by
·McAlister to take over at the
!Denver 46. ' On third-and- I
· frOm the 23, Chris Redm;u~
· ...faked a handoff and threw a ·
strike to tight end Todd Heap.
.who made a leaping catch m
the end zone over safety
•
Kenoy Kennedy.
1 That ended a run of 22 pos~-sessions without a score for
!.
.

NEW YORK KNICK5-Signed F Tim
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZER5-'Ro·
James. F Marl&lt; POpe. G Toby Bailey. C signed G Bonzi Wells to multiyear con·
Todd Undeman, G Darlny Johnson and G tract.
'
Jomeil Rich. .1
F00Tli4LL
I
PHILADELPHIA 76ERs-Agroed to
NIIHonal Football League
terms with G William Avery and F Art Long.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-WaiVed T
Nam8d Jim McNutty director &lt;&gt;f sports
Austin
J,.ee and WR Antoine Toliver trom
medicile.
the
ptaeliee
squad. Signed TE Marl&lt; Anolli
PHOENIX SUN5-Signed G Antony
Goldwire, G Maurice Baker, F Chri~ and WR Aaron Lod&lt;oH to the praCtice
Burgess ard F BolliJy Lazor.
s:quad ..

NHL Preseaaon

•

Engl•nd winner

IOnking:
1.

n.e polntl)

CcACN u... Osn,. wtnner .a. K8Mu
ctty.l... . AngotuSaiu!doy'o Gomo
At higher seed. TBA - .

.667&amp;149
.. first-place ·votes in · parentheses, recqrds
'.667 '76 47
, through Sept. 28, total points based on 25
.250 42 92
points tor. a firSI place vote through one
.250 93 128
!)oint tor a 25th plaoe vote and prevtous

L T Pet . PF
0 0
0 0
1 0
2 ·a

Football

The Top Twenty Fiwe teams in The
Associated Press college football poll. with

WLTPetPFPA
2 2
1 2
1 '2
.o 4

Stmlfln1l1

Associated Press Top 25 .

SOUth
WLTPetPFPA

.

New England 2. Chicago 0
SUndoy'l Game
Chicagd 2, New El'91and 1, series tied 33 ,
Wednoldoy'l Garno
cniCago at New England. 7:30p.m.

(Arwt to

NFL

BY BEN WALKER
. Associated Press

The eventu al Wofl!; Series Wednesday afternoon at
champion Mets, that is.
Turner Field.
"It's a great position to be
Anaheim manager Mike
•
From the start of spring, Scioscia pl ayed on two in, but these are little series,"
Barry Bonds has insisted· tie championship teams ·with Bonds said. "We've seen it
has only one goal _ and it 's Los Angeles. He thinks his__ before. I can have a fivenot the career home run Angels will do fine, too.
game slump, I can · have a .
record.
, "I've found that there's no seven-game : slump, · I can
It's that elusiv'e World way to really pass on my have a two-week slump. ·
Series ring. And starting this playotl' experience to these Anything can happen."
week, he gets yet another guys . The only way to get it
Including a big series
chance to win that piece of is to be in the playoffs," he . against the Braves, provided
jewelry Roger Clemens and said . ."But there 's . nothing they don 't si mply walk him.
Randy Johnson waited so that says that a team that He broke his own major
long to earn. .
doesn 't have pl ayoff experi- league record with 198
Fresh off his first batting ence isn't going to do well in walks, including 68 intentitle and certainly headed to the playoffs. And with the tional.
.
'
his record fifth MYP trophy, makeup of our club, I' m very
Bonds has enjoyed excepBonds is hoping thi s will be confident that we'll be all tional
success
against
the year. Because at 38, he right."
Atlanta's top three pitchers.
won' t get many more shots
Bonds can only hope he He's hit eight homers off
at
the
World
Series.
does
so well.
.Maddux and closer John
CINCINNATI (AP)
Following a regular season Clearl y one of the greatest Smoltz and is batting .32 1
- Offensive lineman Richmond
tinged
by tragedy and tar- players ever, he has just one lifetime against Glavine.
Webb tore a muscle in his
nished
by strike talk, base- mark against him - hi s •·The Cardinals also figured
chest and il expected to miss
ball fans can atleast.focus on postseason fa ilures.
to see plenty of pitching as
the rest of the season, leaving
the
fun
part:
October.
The
single-season
home'
they
take · on - the
the
winless
Cincinnati
"I
have
no
nerves,"
Bonds
run
king.
has
been
in
the
DiamondbacksA:lne.star
that
Be'n gals with yet another
said.
"I
think
th~
playoffs
are
playoffs
five
times,
and
his
St.
Louis
will
not
see:
big
major problem .
just more thrilling. You ' re teams in Pittsburgh and San hitter Luis Gonzalez, who
The Bengals (0-4) will give
more nervous on opening Francisco have never won got the hit that won the
top draft pick Levi Jones his
day.
That nervousness is from even one round. He's a big World Series last · year but
first NPL start Sunday in
having
162.games to go to the pari of the reason - he's hit-' then separt~ted hi s left shoutIndianapoli s. Jones· was used
postseason. You do get excit- ting only .196 with one llome der in arf outfield collision
as a blocking ;tight end in the
ed
about this part of the year." run and six RBis in · 97 at- last week.
first three gaines, and played
The
postseason beglns bats.
...-'\. The Yankees, who were
the second 'half of a 35-7 loss
Tuesday, and many of the
" It preys on his mind the b~ir fourth straight
to Tampa Bay on Sunday in
game's old; familiar faces more you guys bring it up," title by Gonzalez's -hit in
place of Webb.
are back for another run .
Giants manager Dusty Baker' November, retu rn to the
Webb has played poorly in
Schillirm
ancj
said
. "You ' re not goi ng to playoffs with a revam.ped
There's
.
C
urt
his 13th season, getting beaten
the Big l'Jnit trying to help. stop people from talkin g lineup.
around the end by pass rushthe Arizona Diamondbacks about it. But instead of peoPaul O' Neill and Scott
ers. The Bengals have used
repeat
as
champions
when
ple·bringing
up
the
positives,
Brosius
retired,
Tino
Jones at left tackle on occa·
they
take
on
St.
Louis.
Greg
they
seem
to
bring
up
tl'ie
Martinez
.went
to
St.
Lo!Ji
s
sion, but he also has struggled.
Maddux and Tom Glavine negatives."
~nd David Justice landed in
Jones was the lOth overall
are all warmep up in Atlanta, . · "Pe!sonally, .leave all those
als!Jind. But _the :Vankees
pick in the draft. The Bengals
set
to
face
Bonds
imd
the
San
l]egauves
back
m
past
years.
a
ed Jason Gt!lmt&gt;J, who's
mten ded to break ,him in
Francisco · Giants. And DQn't bring them forward eager to play his first postslowly at left tackle, then
Clemens· starts Tuesday wit~ you. Barry's on top of season game in pinstripes.
changed their strategy when
their two inexperienced tight · · night at Yankee Stadium his. game - ·.370 is a good · "There's definitely an aurp
against Anaheim.
.
·week or a good month. Over ·here. No · doubt .about it,"
ends had problems . .
Plus, these playoffs feature a season, that's a lot 'of hit- Giambi said Tuesday.
RigiJI-'
tackle
Willie
a lot of newcomers.
ting. The law of averages are
"You see it year after year,
Anderson was listed as quesThe Minnesota Twins , who on hi s side," he said .
they wa~hey came oack
tionable Monday with a
strained left sho ulder and
play Oakland, and Anal1eim • The Giants head into the ·from 2-0 against l)S last year,
pulled right hamstring, but
do not have aposi!ion player playoffs with an eight-game all the last at-bat wins they
has who ever appeared in the winning streak that won got in the World Se ries.
• said he will play. Guard Mall
o: Dwyer also was listed as
postseason ·- it's the first them the NL wild card. That's a lot to battle when
questionable with /a strai ned
time that's happened si nce Bonds is l ooki~g forward to you've never been through it
. right elbow.
the 1969 New York Mets. th1s opportu 111ty,
startmg ' before," he said .
.,
C INCINNATI (AP) - ·
Cincinnati Reds shortstop Barry
Larkin underwent surgery
Monday to remove bone spurs
from his right big toe.
•
Larkin batted .245 this season
with seven home runs, 47 runs
batted in and 13 stolen bases in
·145 games for the Reds.
Reds infielder Juan Castro
is to undergo arthroscopic
surgery on Tuesday to clean
out loose material i.n his left
knee . Castro hit ..220 in 54
games
this
year 1 for
Cincinnati.

w

Prep Volleyball

Philadelphia at Jacksonvilte. 4·15 p.m.
St. Louis at San Francisco, 4; 15 p.Ql.
Battimore at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m.
Open: Seattle, Detroit. • Minnesota,
Houston
Mandoy, OCt. 7
G"""' Bay at Cll"-, 9 p.m .

NmiONII Foalbllll League

'

TtJESDAY'S

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1Uesday, Ocotber 1, 1002

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E~~::~=~::=-:=~~~:::;fort!!

$495" week.
•
Gutt-Front Homes directly on beach.
'Ends t 212CV02
www.gullsideresorts.com .
800-587-811113

~W~T~

THE . .

CLASSIFl EDS·!

eDaily Sentinel
•

,. ,

992~2155 ·
.)

•

\.

..

.I

�.
Pege A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

...

..

•

,

-., ....

e - Sentinel - 1\.e · t~ter •
C L A 5 5 I F I. E D
.

'
\~

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~.

/•

Sunset Home ,
Construction

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • ~moval · • Trim
• Stllnp Grinding ,
• Bucket Truck ·

Callla q,u.ty, OH

.

ca~f;~::v~..

..

' COOL DOWN,

, ; Condition«~

2002 H~ay Davidson Ultra
Ciaaalc,
2,400
mites,
(740)379-2899
,
.' mateo. (740)4411-6308 and
Black 1999 Ha~ Davidson
1 112 -•r old wh'"o laying F .,_, low l1e $
.• 1-800-291.()098.
·..
at........
m s, IS,SOO.
hans,
SOc a piece, Call (7.0)44t·9318 aHar
; Couch Florol $50.. Dinette (740)985-3956
8:00pm.

Monday thru Friday
a.m. to S.:OOp.m;
HOW I.Q WRITE AN AQ
Items

~ Po=Y~I£

PERSONALS

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
For SUndays Paper

Oescrlptlqn • Include A Price • AvOid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

To Help Get Response ...

r

Display Ads
All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dls~lay : 1 : 00 p.m.
Thuf-sday for Sundays

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • ·Include Complete

Successful Ads

\\\Ill\( I Ill· \ IS

Word Ads

11"0

IIELPWANnD

11"0

Includes
U p To
Over 15
· Ads

~R='.

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

r
Md~U:s~MFS Ie :~
= ,

I

·: Jotel wood burning stove
· wlih lnoulalad pipe, EliCel·
lent
condition,
$500.
(740)379·2218 ·
Keroaun htater $125 Ul8d
- vary
illlio. '(Omnl~105).

1 1

NI!W AND..USED STEEL
S\ael Boamo, Pipe Raber
For Concrato, Angie, Chan·
nel, Flat Bat, Steal Grating
- For Dralno, Drlvewaya &amp;
Walkwaya. L&amp;L Scrap Mel·
ala 0pan Monda)', - y .
Wodnud.... &amp; Fndal', Bam·
4 .30pm Ctoood. Thurodoy
sAiu) ~ .&amp;
Sundai
ti
(7&lt;10

1

neW

with

°

r:

.r

I. ,

POM~:ROYIMIDDI.E

(:i'J:i6;~~~olzors,

--,

.,

.•·

741)..992·7599

-tar

30

COOK

M

Specializing In:
. Rooting, Decks;
· Reniodefing,

· Siding, &lt;jnd

ES Jackoon, Ohio, 1-600Liwly'a Auto Sales
92 Dodge Dynasty, $1000;
537·9528
Mercury Topaz, $750;
·194
Gao
Metra, $650:
,.,.........,
• 90 Chevy Cavalier, $750;
87 ~ Daytona, $650;
•
·
67 Pontiac lloMaviHe $800:
Bloc:k. brick, _ , plpoo, 90 Pcntiae Grand Am S&amp;&lt;io·
. wjndoWI, llntofo. etcr Ciouda 91 Plymouth Acclaim 59
Wlntara, Rio Grande, OH 90 Ctoevy Caval'*' ' $800:
Call740-245-5121 .
89 Chevy &lt;;elebrnY. $700;
89 FordThundolt&gt;ird, StOOO
~ .
Cali (740)386-9303

• Air CondHioners
• Service On All Bra~

es

Wrecked 95 Monte Carlo,

pupo, 6 -tci old. will soli whole car or lor
·c~. &amp; at·~ call 304-675- parts. Call Ruaa (740)446-

: AKC Lab

7284 loaw measage.

r

AKC uibo, Chocolato or
Biact&lt;, 6 old, ahota
and wormed. (740)441· t992 Dodga Four Whool
0931'
Drlvi Pickup. 'long bed,
. Bo..( pups, lull blooded, $2,000 (740)446·7800
GMC Slonra X 71 Urn$tOO. Call (740)441·0315
19115
after 8pm.
hod Edition extended cab
Labradorl· 2 year old, yol· ••4 tully leaded 77,000

low, mate, noutarod, 1200:
., 5-112 yoar old, yettaw, mate,
. noularad, $200. 4 yoar old,
, chocolate, lamale, not
.. apayad, S275. (740)245·

~!,:•~!rt=.':.Tnc~:';~

8577

.

mu.. P~ $12,500.00
.::985-35=..:::.:.75:.:.·- - - •
Grum.man atop van. 14 ft,
while, ,2,000. (7.0)379·

eua

.

• Heating &amp; Air Conditioning

www.amerlcanatandilrdalr.com

"SALES AND SERVICE"

WbLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

949·1521

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

l{ o rk~

Foreman: Larry

Owner:
Ronald "Mick" Haning

740·367·0181

Christina "Chris'' Haning-

740.·992·0780
Cell: 591·8393

Cell# 740·591·0919 ·

DeliCIOUS fOOd .

Cellular
.
.

· 213 n. Sec•d nue.

.

' middleport, OH

Jeff Warner Ins . .

(740) 992-1705
Tonia Reiber

992-5479

licensed bg lhe Ohio

Stat' medical Board

!~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~

The CRAFTY,

WINTER STORAGE
Molgo County
.
.F•Irgroundl
Arrlvol: Oct 5 &amp; Oct. 19
, 9om·12pm
Releaao April 21, 2003
A fee ol $20 will bo
chargt~l for early arrl·
val, late arrival, early
remov11, late remov11,
or anytime access II
wanted to fairgrounds
other than stated dates.
Building space Ia ftrot ·
come 11rst serve.
lnoldo Storage; $&lt;1.00111
Open Span: $2.00111
lnaldlo Fence: '1.0am

TFN

.,
l11811 Jeep CJ5 ooft top, 8
C'/1 .. 4 apct. t~na. . driven
daily, prtcod 10 IT1DIItl $1250,
(740)949-2021

CuhCadAC &amp;·Gravely

BLIND SPOT

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

(Factory Outlet)
All vei'lieal)linds are
made to order at

our locatioO

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

• Vei'liealo • Wood

. 4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45.631

• Minis • Etc
144 Third Ave.
Gallipolis 446-4995

Toll Fill! .1-888-745-8847

YQ'U
446-8237, 675-7!116 or 1-800-730-4!53!5
5ancl. ~. Stone, aMttt 11 Coluh -."tlon Suppl,lu

.

.

(740) 446·1044

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8·2pm

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

ROBERT
BISSELL

West Shade
BarberShop

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Glnges .

GeorgeKorn

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•ColllJIIete RBmodettg

BOORS:
Thes·Frl B:JOa·l:J()p

Hill's Self
Storage

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Sat 7:00.·12 Noon
Monday

Clo..a

~lltlfor J!IIJ.W...u.blt

Room Addlllona I
Romodlollng

741)-992·1671

985-36.16

• PMwGar•u••
Etectrlcalll Plumbing

Roofing II GU11ar1

SEAL JT
CONSTRUCTION

VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pado •nd Porch Oecka

Koortna, Sid~n1

Free Eslima1es

Pllnt1n1, Gutten, llec'ks,

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'Free f.JIIIm•tH!

(740) 992-1189
(Affordable Prices)

L_..ii:ii!IJ.'iiiii._...J

r--------..., •••••-llitt-.
lint 17
Your

OfiCRit CoatHCtioa, L

n..n.. .

740-742-8015

POMEROY
APPLIANCE
STORE

IL.:,

•-

.

...

a .rnl
·•

·--

1 ....1

'Ia

200

·e. Main Sf.

Open 9am·6pm ·
Mon lhru Sot

31 dap;

(m.Ju.7tn)

Phone 112.0515

Callb""'"'inlirt lieecsimate
IWIJtl!6

Washers, d!)'ers
Like New
Freezer; Electric
Ranges, D ishwashers
Refrigerators, and

I.
'

Ha~ng's Construction·

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Ellpenses;
'
Cancer &amp; Denial,
.· .
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K RoiJovers;
(!I
Mortgage; Major Medical
•NunmgHome
~

FREE DELIVERY

.. l..~.--

Roofing, Siding, Hdd-Ons, Electrical,
Plumbl!lg, Decks, ·Remodeling, .
Drywall, Painting
·

R. llupp Ins.
ancl

1-'inanl'ial Sl'n ill'~

· much mora

··-· -

. (740) 591-9239.

•.

New Chars Taste

~'
•._22.1;;,8-"!!'!'-~-.., c..n~~ lllllilllo&amp;
"'""'""!

Roglattr~ · AKC . B~agla. ul...7_.r.Wns_&amp;_ _.l

pupa, 8 old, St2s
' uch. (740)2•5·5597 or
.(7&lt;10)246-5358.
' Roglllarad Pn
pupo, AJI
&amp; WC(ITIOd. (740)246~~

or

CALL 667-6329

• Residential &amp; Llglit Commercial
• 10 yr. parta &amp; Labor

50.

I

· Plains, OH

(740)441·
weekdaya,

====..:..:.:.:...---..

"""

..

You Need It
Done, We·'If Do It
(740) 949-4026

Hre you stressed?
Call now for your

lion,
any $75 each, please $1500
92 Mercury
New toYorker,
call (740)256-64o7
OBO. Como
62 A~
ian Avenue to view.
Wakens Produolll: double :;::....:.::;:::::::..:::..::::::._ __
sirangth white &amp; dark vanil· 96 Camero, T-topa, $6,895.
Ia, aplces, salves, llnlmenls (740)388-0t89.
and o1her produoto, call 96 Intrepid SE, rod, 84,000 .
(740)849-3027
miles, V6, auto, stick, $6500
· Wato~lna Special:. 314 200 080. (740)256·1539.
PSI $21 .00 Por 100; 1' 200 Good used starters and
PSI $35.00 Per 100; Ali alternaloro. ' ClM,
Ford,
Braaa Comproaaion Flnlnge Ch~lar S20 each Call
In Slock
·
.,. '
'
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS. (740}446- 7804

43'86

Painting, Power
Washing, Mowing,
Weedeatlng

~
s~

.•HOlltlng

1 mo.

(10'x10'_&amp;10'x20')

me.

'I

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDmONING &amp; HEATING

.

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

O~DJOBs·

Open 24 hours.
7 Days per wegk.
S&lt;. At 7 Tuppers

Gallipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015 ·
ISA Certified Arborist
l-866-4DR-TREE

(740) 992-0739

Sofa, recliner, two chalrt weekends ·anytime.

i

has openings, 15 yr.
e~perience; Certified
in Meigs, Athens and
Washington ·counlies,

&amp;.,e&amp;cuu,, ~~-·,,e,
?~tuo. ~ f!MNI
4,1w., Are'ertuw. ·a..~ &amp; &amp;""t-f'
Scotll. Swain

CINSTRUCnON

Connie's
Child CARE

~
304·773-5800 •
mftSSftGE
PIIPII•IIIW ThiDII mEIGS
THERftPY

Ill

2000 Alara, whlla wfth gray

BliDJliNG

eau s,~~ea~~

·

Terry Lamm J .

1066 Second Street

dey guarantee, (740)4411-0103

· ~-- ,

"WV's #I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, O.lds
&amp;
Dealer"

~
We Ca~e For Your Trees~

992-3194
992-6635

19116 Saturn, 7•K. like now,
$3,796; 1998 Contour,
1091&lt;, S2,495; 11188 Mellbu,
53K,
15,895; 12 other
oara/ truokl alar~ at

I:IWII•.
· CIEU&amp;

"'S.urb. ~

UMM'S .

.

MIIRIIIMI~I~IIII

1-800-822·0417

?~tee

·Owner:

•.II•·

Wlllii-UEUCJIIC

Ripley, WV 25271

Additions

'90 Plymouth Sundance,
good condition, high milo·
$500 or ball offer;
(740)992·2077

1150.00. Appro•. 3 acres
.
land, Ploaaant Ridge Rd. 91 Subaru Loyale, 4x4
304-675-1636
wagon, runs good, high
mllaage, 2 olhoro lor pods,
1'wo rod Ha~oy Motorcycles $700 OBO, (740)379-2688
wtth batte~. good condl·

s

r

FREE ESTIMATES

KBB $2,200. Will oalo
$1,..SO. (740)446-0186

(740)992·2.31
$10,700 080.
.:........;_
______ 9885
after 5pm

I

~

Windows • Roofing
CO,MMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

aene heater. like new, cellant i condition, asking

iiT.I1""__.;..___.,

I

• Replacement

1990 Bonneville,
good
shape, $1,500 dollaro,
(740)446-7800
1990 white Grand Prix LE,
excellent condlilon, high
mileage, $1600, avanlnga

Rldl~ mower,
$175.. AMIFM ca,..tt0 with CD, ,
·"(7_40.:..:1=2-·1"'09"'3---- - ' · 43,000 mlloa. War·
- ROboon ttOOO BTU kara- rinty to 100,000 mil.., E&gt;c·

1

tram

.:..::~:.__·____

(7&lt;10)448·2018.

c

r

74 16

~:'-'-""'-=~--:=:- Interior, opollor, 4 now llraa,

co.

r

t986 Moroury Granda Mar·
quia, good condillon, runs
good. $1850 firm. (740)446·

10 atationary bike, $50. Call - - - - - - - -

i

r

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

TRUCKING • TRENCHING
IIPTIC liiiD.•WCI lEft 111111W1.

South Church St.

' BUILDERS IRC.

HOWARDL.
. WRITESEL
•

188ll Uncoln Navigator,
. Pool llllla, alate top, rod loaded with TV ayotorn,
cloth, axcelient condition: 51 ooo mlloa now tlreo
Pool tablt PI Pong !able
'
'
'
with nat 'lnctuld, S800; al: 128,000 080, 992·2209

c

F

1990 OLDS Touring, 5ad·
dan·Loodod
·
.()62
·
992
2 _____
::.=:..:.:::..

. wa. (7o!Ol4*-HS2

Lw---GooilliiiillS--_.1

RENT

r--------..

Loaded

Nloo IBM Pontium
with monitor, lnlornot ready 1350.

"'62

1

Business
Services

'

'·.

BA4::K~IOE • DOZING • END LOoA.DEoRI

New&amp;Used

·BISSEll

Roofing· Home
MaintenanceUtterS • DoWn
SpOUt
. Moving: Maytag wuhor, (740)992·7573
Free Estimates
• dryer, $&amp;00 j)lllr: bedroom 19112 Chavrolet Lumina, 4
· oulie, S400: daybed, end 18· door Sedan, (740)446-3479
g4g.1405
"9209
bioi, bar lloolo, (740)446• .1995· .F&lt;IIIl
· Aapite, good car, ~-=;;;:;TF:N:.:::::::::=:~=
40n1pg, regularly ..W:ad,
· (740)446-0893
Uke new Used Furniture.
. Gravely walk behind electric
. atar1 with buoh hog mower,
. $1500., 22h. camper troller
$2200. (304)675·4004 or
(304~74-13t5

1

r.

FOR SALE

I.

(7ol0)440,12ol0

-------ale

J3i!tpt~rts

E_~gi-

I,

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

• Independent Horbli'- Dla· 19&amp;1 Cadillac Dovilte loodttlbuiOr, Cali For Product Or od, hColle&lt;&gt;!. coridlllon,·
Opportunity. (7&lt;10)441-1982 63,000 ~~"!~~letr. Mull
JET
Seel
$2,200
080.
AERATION MOTORS
(74(l)44Hl87.5
Repaired, Now &amp; Ratrulli In 19611 ChrySler 5th. . Stoclt. Call Ron Evano, 1· Loadod.
800-537·9528.
1987 CHEVY Caprice Cia•

I

~~at:rRo~t~.

~

. 7~5

L-•llllil

:a~-S~m,

r

740•667•0363

1

Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;·
·
.
Ropalro. Probioml? Nood 11168 Uncoln continental, 4
Tuned? Cali Tho Plano Dr. door, proJoct car, $1100.

r,

r76

nu~Oblano rBoATS&amp;M~

tlea02200l!lyahoc.com

r16

r•

Ir

HORSE/SALE: R
• • room suite, recliner, gun A.P.H.A. Ch..
J:.LI'A.IKI
u
•" calllnot. (740)742·1800 · paint mere 5 yra. old, big
FOR SALE
REI"RRGERA110l"[
. •.
oolld horae. Very gentle, ax· L,~-oiillililliiiO...,J
: DIRECTV, $0 lwo TV hook· collont kid horae. Anyone
•
up, ordar nore and oarn can~ $1,800.00
1989 19" aylvan Sl&lt;l boat. Residential
.
$$$, 800-283-2640.
(7&lt;10)742-3802
1o10 hlp Inboard .motor. Ask·: ;:~~gi.t;;:, t"~~:.:0 ~:
Rrewood. Split and
HAY &amp;
lng $o4,000. can (304)895- lrician. Ridenour Electrical,
8705
· onod. Foce cord, S30; DeilY· .
GRAIN
WV000306. ':304-675-1786.
, ·8rad wttnln.10 mllell of Holz.
1997 M4rada MX· t sport,
: .... $40. (740)44&amp;-7604
tTtO' with 135 MafCfUiser,
·
80·15001 batao
oovera, goodies! In exce~ 1:NEWSPAPERS
Free lnlormollon on lndlvid- grau/ml•.
lent condition, gara,;. k~t.
Cover All The
uai Cornputorlzod Astrologl- buy now
"" -·
cal Ho&lt;oocopea. Packat InTrailer has iparo lira1Allor
Major Subjeclst
ciudoo Doecrlptiono, price
$7,000. Cali (740)446-2444.
• Uol &amp; Dellnillona. Send $1
• lor Pootago to; Pooollilllletr,
P.O. 8o&gt;&lt; 13&amp;, Pcmora;, Oh ~;t;r;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
45769,
poaolblll· (110
Alll'!JS .

i

rw!,,Piper.,.

~~~~:~chalt&gt;o'::

Dean IUD

Case-IH Pans
Dealers

lOOOSt. Rt. 7 South
C / '//e, OH 45723

'

740-742-3411

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authon'zed

Let Custom Building &amp; Ae· .
' modeling help you, call
(740)992·1119,1or an typoo
of home. repair at affordable
oosts wolh a Free estimate 00 VI

Gallpotla. Call tho T~buno
7
2342
laterad lordotalls.( 40)446tostart.v.--.CA·'

·c;;;;m;;;;;,

rs ...

~Ktlmln•llon."

leave ~ge.

Cuslom Building &amp; Remodeting, all types ol home ropair, over 18 years eMperlonce. !roe estimates, fully
insured, no job to big or
II (740'992 t119
sme •
•
•
"Winter; Utilities; lnct.aasos"

FREE ESTIMATES!

740·992·5232
1"':::::~::::"-::::".,
DEPovs
AG
·I
niB..
r, I iJ

r---------,

Fall Rummage Sale- Car- Ingram Barge Company will
STNA
URGENTLY
NEEDEDNew 2003 14x70, 3 br/2bth. · House for sale or rent, $375
mel-Sutton UMC basement, be accepting applica,tiOns WOuld you tike to Jo:ln our plasma·donors, earn $50. to
Only $995 down &amp; only mo., 101 Pleasant Ridge, Twin Rivera Tower tor eldWh~ ·wait ? Start meeting Racine·Bashan Road, Octo·
for Deckhands at the Ash· dedicated team ot CS:re..glv· $60 per week for 2 or 3 Allruleltlteactvenlslng· $195.65 per month. Call Pomeroy, (740)698-6763
~rlyl disabled.
. Ohio singles tonight, call toll ·ber 3rd-4th, 9am-4pm, land, KY Dept. for Employ- ers? If you are a nurse aide, hours weekly. Call Bio lite
In lhls newsp1per Is
Karena 740-685·7671.
Now accepting applications
· tree 1-800-766-2623 ext ra in/shine.
ment Security, 1844 Carter and would like an opportunl· Plasma Service, 740-592·
subfec:tlo thl Federal
Nice house in Tuppers for 1 br all ullllties paid
. 1621.
Avenue, Ashland , Kentucky, ty to work al the area's pre- 6651 .
Flllr Housing Act of 1968
NB'I)' Home on 5 acres in Plains, ale, $450 month plus HUD -a~sisted, carpeted
4 Garage Sale· Oct. 1sl, 2nd, 41105·2620 on 101712'002 mlere Alzheimer's care fa·
which ~n~okes H lllegllto
the country. (740}446-3218. deposit &amp; util~ies, (740)667-, apartment. rent is 30% ol
ANNOUNCEMENTS
3rd, Hall~n Items, nice through 10/812002 from cility, please can Scenic 114)
BUiiNFBi
8dvert1H "any
New Manager's Special, 3487·
your adjusted l~ome call
1
• clothes &amp; g1fts. 33400 New
TRAINING
"prwfentnce,llml111ionor
new 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2 3 . bedroom 2_112 bath 304-675-6679 be tween B·
Lima Rd., Rutland, rain or 8:00am till 3:00pm. Heavy Hills Nursing Center today •
labor background is prefer- at (740}446·7150 and ask
dlacrlmlnltlon b. .ed on
bath, reduced 10 only 2 car garage, furnished:. 4:30 pm weoekdays.EHO
·c -t Beer Carry Out permit . ::•h.::i".::"..:..._ _ _ _ __
red (I.e. farming, logging, for Jayne Darting. Or stop "GIIII II C
C
II
race,
cotor,
MUGion,
Mx
$27,900
delivered and set Kanauga Mobile Homes. - - - - ' - -- - - 0
for sale. Chesler TownShip, GARAGE SALE: 6 tami ly
construction, etc.) You must by In person and pick up an
po ' 1 •reer
ege
f•mlll•lsta1us or nllllon11
up. You ·save over $6,000 (740)441 -o3 10
Honeysuckle Hill~ Apart·
Mei~s County, send letle_rs Oct. 2,3,4 Peach Fork have a Social Security to application. We are located (Gareers Close To Home)
origin, or 1n~ Intention to
including underpinning, an~
.
~ents l_ocated behind Colo·
740 4 4367
of mteresl to: The Dally Rd.C.A.19 Maurer resident
•
apply. EOE, MIFN.
· ip Gallipolis, (behind the Call Today! 214 -4 6maQ lf'IY such
chars, vapor ~rler, 1 set fi· 3_ bed~ h,ome, .Mn~rs- n1al .DtNa behtnd Hlghw~y
1
52
Sentinel , Pq Box 729-20, . a.ooa.m.- 3:00p.m..
Spring Valley Cinema)
·800- 5..()4
•
pr-.ferwnce,llmliltiOn or
berglass steps, 20' at utility VIlle, Oh10, nver v1ew, no Patrot!iilost;d!o BR now avatl·
12748
Pomerov, OhiO 45769.
··
fngram Barge Company will
·
Reg H90-Q •
lines under home all instal- pets, references required, abJB.
$310/
Last season yard sale· We be accepting applicattons The Gl;lUiB County Local 1170
, .
led, One only, Q,les's Mo- . $450 month, call (?40)992- mo:t:~th. L~m~ A~ moderate in·
040
got "everything~ you ·need, tor Deckhands at the Point School District, fiscal agent
MfsCEu.ANEous · Thll newspaper wilt-not bile Homes, U.S. SO East, 6m after 5pm. , .
. come . . EquatrcHouslng OpGIVI-:AWIIY
priced to sell, don't miss this Pieas"ant, WV Employment for the GaNia County NHe!p
bath Ia
·
.
· ~r;nowlngly•ccepl
Athens Ohio 45701
bad
portunlty.•ff40)446-3344 or
3 . room, 1
one, come &amp; see, rain or Security, 225 Sixth Street, Me Grow" Ptogram, is actldveniMments for i"eal
'
• rge TOO t~b00-750-0750.
Htate whlch .laln
. Must Sell· factory misiSke, tam1ly roo"!, washer/ d_ryer, - - - - - - - - Neutered cat, nice compan· shine, Bradbury Ad ., Mid· Point Pleasant, wv, 2555()· ceptlng resumes lor the lot- Rqbertl Pauley .,
0039 on 101812002 through lowing parHime position:
Congratulationsl You have
2002 3 BR· 2 BA. wm Mcri· stove, re~ngerator, m1cr~- Modem 1 BR ~partment.
ion for older person, call dleport, Oct. 3rd·Sth.
101912002 from 8:00am till Hetp Me Grow Family Sup- won 2 free movie tickets to
violation of the law. Our
fice, many extras very nice. wave furmsh.ed, C~ntral a~r {740)446-0390
(740)992 ~7104
2 family carpon sale- Fri., ~:OOpm. Heavy labor back· port SpecialiSf J to provide the S~tring Valley 7 In Gal~:.-=:.~Y
Save $8,900J)O.' (304)736- ~a~ gara~~ m;l~~r~7 North ard Ave Middleport
Nice young ins1de ·cats to Oct. 4th, Lee residence, ground is preferred : (I.e. family support to parents of lipolis. Call the Register todwelling ldveftlsed 1
3888, .1-888·736-3332.
· ~-:~ $4~ d~ · 1 bedroom furnished apart:
5475
goOd
homes.
Phone Tyree Blvd., Racine, weight farming, logging, construe· lnfanV toddlers birth to three day lor details.(304)875·
,
n.
Reduced
Norris
Morererences,
' rto
pets: ,.rnent, no pets, deposit &amp; ref1111
1996
bench, pivoting Xmas tree lion, etc.) You must have a with disabilities/ delays or at 1333
(
(740)446-3479
,.
II ~.
. bo'le · Homo 14xBO 3 bed· (740)"" "565 after 5pm.
erences, (7401992·0165
stand. bedspread/matching Social Security to apply. Mrisk·. This will Include pa· 11811
lVI ~- on an ~I
"-..2..~.....:..=:.:..:=...2_:__
'
rent supporl groups, parent
WANTED
opponunfty baet.
room, 2 bath, one has gar·
valances-shams, clothing, EOE, MJFN.
.:...;;~.;.;....,;,;__ _ _ _ _ trainings; parent .to parenl
To Do
den tub. Complete Kitchen, Older 2 Story Farm House Upstairs , One Bedroom
mise
Jewelry Salesperson FT/PT. support and parent educadining area, covered porch. 3br. bath 112. 3 !'Iiies from Apartment at '651 2nd Ave .,
Must be d$pendable, outgo- lion. Qualifications:.,._parent
HOMF.S
A-1 condition. Call SOmer- Rio Grande College. Newly · Gallipolis. $350 per tilonth
Large. short hair white pit Rai n or shine, Docr-iciiley ing, _enjoy working with the of a child with a disability!
AlE Construction
FOR SALE
ville Realty (304)675·3030 renovated. No inside pets .. plus deposii; Water and
bull. Bunker Hill, Ball Run Res., Barringer Ridge Rd. publiC -&amp; have .excellent delay or at MrlskM, experi· Roofing, conc;rete, siding,
,I .
,
,
. ,Must have
Trash fncluded in renJ; can
Peach Fork gone since Portland, Oh, household ~ath skills. Apply at Acqul.s· ence W.orklng wllh young remodeling, decks, painting, At1ractlve, sPacious ~- ~ Aepos and Used ·homeS.
Debbie or Judy at (740)446·
0
8
Tuesday 5 16-5321
items, plus site clothes, 1t1ons, 151 2nd Avenue, · children and their families dry waU.metal buildings,
storv brick ranch style Company
Liquldatlon
7323 at Bossard library. ,
.tools, much more.
Gallipoll!i. No phone .calls ability to communicale with pole barns&amp; footers\
ho,;e, attached covered across the nation. $500
· ;,,;;,;;.;;,;;;;;;;--~'"""
LOST- Or~nge and white
please.
famines and an understand- (304)674.0118
carport, _3 bedrooms, hard· down a~Jd take over payFlJRNJSHFJ)
Beagle ml'ssing !rom 276 Rainer Garage- Tackerville
I
ments (740\446·3570
RooMS
1
's
lng
o
.
hOlistic,
lamily
con·
wood
a
lh
h
t
1
n
·
•
Debbie Drive, Gallipolis. Ant. Ad., Racine Oct. 3-4-5. fur- LPN
All types at masonry bricl\,
oors mug ou, u
swers to the name 8 ooc~ n'lture , ' tools, collectibles, Are you looking for a chal- tered servk:es. Please send block &amp; stone 20 yrs. Expe· basemenl, central heating! Wanted- No Credit CustomPlease call (740)446-2,89
plus size clothing. ·
· lange? Would you like the resume by. October 11, rlence free esUmate.
cooling, new heat pump, 1.4 ers to Purchase New home . 2 bedroom mObile home, no Joann Cole
::::.::.:_:c==="'---- challenge 10 use your nurs- 2002 to Gallla County Help 1-304-773-955o .
acres, located on quiet under Government flnanc· pets, $250 month, $250 de~ · 74()..94g..2517
y.·nnSALE
TThhrueersdalayml&amp;ly Fmrlrwdalngy, sa301e5. ing skills to •make a diftor· Ma Grow, ~0. Box 943,
.
I country road 1/2 mile !rom lng program. St200 Income poslt.(740)446-405t '
.
~
once?" If so oonsidor what Gallipolis, OH 4563t .
Georges Pon- Sawm II, high School, tO miles !rom reqUired . Cali to pre-quality. - - - - - - - - Tyree Blv., (Teafords) rain the
leadership team at Truck Drivers Immediate ~n'! haul your logs to the Gallipolis on Little Kyger (740)446-3384.
2 bedroom, central air, total"
or shine.
RocksPrings Aphabllltatlon hire, class A cr)L required, mill JUSt call 304-675-~ 957.· Road. Contact (740)446· Wanted: Local company electriC, absolutely no inside U~~~~~~i:~:
Yard sales- Oct. 4·5, Tup- Ceryt.er has to offer: Com- eMcellen1 '-'• J, experience M&amp;M Pressure Washing &amp; 3157 or (740)446•1387.
wants to purchase 1- 10 pet~. ·$350 month, $350 de- ~
pers Plains, St. At 681 east pelltlve . Salary, ~ Flexible required. Earn up to $1,000. Painting. Decks, Trailers, Count
H
with 11 _
acre sites for new hOmes. POSit. Call (740l 245 ·5i75
112
to Joppa Rd . •(Co Ad 43) Scheduhng, Educatlonal .as· perweok.Call 304-675·4005 Houses, Boats, Lots, Inc. acres.ry314~~ba 2 Car- Call (740)446-3093.
6:00am·4:00pm, Ask lor
2nd &amp; 3rd house on right SIStance, Job sat1sfact1on.
Call
for
Estimates.
·
..
·
Tim, no Sunday call please.
5 family yard sale- baby. watch for signs.
For a limited time only. Y1~1ncy Announcement (740)388-1532
Garage, above .ground poo.l. We have approximately 10
bed
mob"l ho
,
3
1e me 1or c~ ~rli~ bile Home
adult clothes. boat. tillers, i:~...;~;;.,;~_.,......, Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Handcralted . kitchen c.abl- used homes for under
room.
van, lots of other misc. S~pYARD SALE:
Center is offering a $2000 . The Gallia So1l and Water Nuner Construction WV nets. Off Leon Baden Ad. $2,000, call1-800-837-3238 rent, Pomeroy area, no Pa
~ nA 9
' t be 30 0 t b
12
sign-on bonus for LPN 's . ~Conservation District cur- 031734 General Contractor, (304)458·1580
tor info.
pets, (740)992-5858
: AI
'at theY. call 304 _
2
1'333
Pr. PLEAsANT
For more inform_ation please rentl¥ has a Forestry!
residential . &amp; Commercial For Sale B)' Owner Ranch ·
96 14x76 trailer, 2 bedroom, 675·3818 or. 304·675·5137.
7 North.
contact: Oebb1e Stewart, neer~ng Technician posi11on construction. new houses &amp; Style Home 3 BA 1 5 Baths 2000 sq. ft. home on 1 acre, 2 bath, all electric, no pets,
5 ·Family Yard Sale. Oct. 3rd Assistant Director ot Nurs· available.
roots. siding, windows, ect Ex c e 11 en 1_L 0 c '8 tl 0 n · 10 minutes from hospital. $400 month. (740)446- 1062 ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
64 Sycamore Street, Octo-' &amp; 4th. Duncan's ~es. 115· lng, 740-992-6606. Equal Tliis position will entail as· No job t~ big or 'to small . $SD,900.00
· ~lUI under construction. 4
· I:!
'ber 1St, 2nd &amp; 3rd, 3lamlly 4th St. New Haven. Table &amp; Opportunity Employer En- 'sisUng landowners with for- Free estimates. (304)593· (740) 446-7825
Bedrooms/. 2 Balh with Two . bedroom trailer for r .10
HOUSOIOW
9:00·5:00
·
Chairs &amp; more.
c?uraglng Workpl~ce Diver- estry management and en- .t6rJ7 or (304)882·2174
. swimming pool. (740)446- rent, (740)441-9455
Big Yard Sale· October Community Sale Gunvllle Slty
gineerlng assistance In the Top' to Bottom Cleaning Foreclosurel ~- bedroom, 4 3570 ·
AI'ARThu;:r.rrs
2,3,4 9:00-S:OOpm, 185 Am~ Ridge Ad. Oct. 4-5 Fri. &amp; M~Ciure's RestaUrant now installation ~ of natural r~ Se"':ice, ~rofesslon.al, resl· ~t'6al ~~t-s~\~~~ ~~~ 98 Clayton 4br. 16x80 on
JoUR
Appliances: Reconditioned
belside Drive across !rom Sat. From Point Pleasant At hlnng all 3 locations, full or source conse~atlon pract1 denj1al, offiCe cleaning, also Ff
rented tot in Gallipolis Ferry ..._
• Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
44
Kerr · Post Office. Brown 2 North to At. 87 go aboul6 pert-time, piCJ&lt; up applica· ces. _
yard~ gutter, at an affords304·675·3689. Nlce 14x60
Aefrigrators, Up To 90 Days
trailer, lots of nice things.
miles, Follow Signs. 9·5
tion at location &amp; bring back Minimum qualifications are ble priCe. (740)992-2979
, Hunting and Fishing Cabin 2br. In Crown City, Ohio 1 and 2 bedroom apart- Guaranteed! We Sell New
between
9:30am
&amp; an A.A.S. or B.S. or comple- lN'II
back part of Tycoon Lake area. We trade for ,anything ments, furnished and untur· Maytag Appliances, French
G age Sale 700 Th ' d
ar
•
lr Garage sate. Antiques. Oct. 10:00am, Mof-lday thru Sat- lion of an undergraduate
1. pressure wash houses, on Edoma Trail. (740)446· of value. .(740)256·9315
nished, security deposit re· City Maytag, 740·44&amp;-7796.
Avenu·a, Octol ber 3,4,5, 2-3-4·5. 7 miles North on urday
core program in forestry trailers, and decks. Call 1360 .
Good used 1995 14x70, 2 qui red, no pets, 740-9929am-5pm, ant que kitchen At. 2 al Eckard Chapel Ad.
·
management orretated Ueld 441·4238 ask lor Ron or
2218
Beds· complete, couch, re·
Cab'·not · go·rls bedroom suo'te
Nl
h
br., vinyl sidlnglshlngt~ roof, ___· ~---'---,
· 2nd Drive on Left.9-?
NOW HIRING
or study, or 12 months ex- 1eave message.
ca
orne,
entenary call Harold 7 46-385-S94S
cllner, spring &amp; mattress,
men's sweaters, womens
Make up to $71hour
.-..:orience In fbrestru manRoad, Green Township. In1 bedrOom apartment in Rio microwave ,
microwave
shoes. Household items.
Huge Yard Sate VVl.
~ t ' 2 •3 •
Paid trammg
··
.....
'
G rande, 1 bloc:k 1rom co·
1 stand. (740)446-9742
.
agement. Basic computer
groun d poo,1 2 bed room ,
-Garage Sale· October 4&amp;5, Sandhill Ad. Letart. Lots 01
Call1-877-463-6247
skills required . Training or
'large bath, nice yard, almost
Lon; &amp;
liege. $375 month, utilities
10
3997
Bulavllle
Pike, clothes, nice coats, bridesext.2458
experience In public relaBUSINE$
an acre. (740)446·631 0 ·
ACREAGE
paid, · $200
deposit, , Black-Metal traf'!"'E' .futon wit~
maid dresses, and flower
1
h as spaoc h ,. com·
01'1'0'~
~~
(740'446
~98 Shown ......,
• (740)669-8405
mattress, excellent
cond1g ·. ooam·?
~ou
'nt
e•ocu·
tons
suo
ftwo•"
1
~
•
.
•
Qirl dress, ·compound bow, Now Hiring ,.._
·ppolntment $64 900
tlon, $50: Bedroom furni0
report
·
•
·
·
Inside · Sale October 1 furniture, lawn can, comput- t.1:ve1sa1es person tb call on munlcations, and
·
!NonCE I
112 acre
lot on Tycoon Lake 1 b r. ap1 1or rent $100 . sec. ture,
·reCilner,
cheap!
., through Oct~ber 5, 9am- er printer. Lots of Misc.
professional installers &amp; ~rltlng. ·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· One bedroom house; Aa· .w/12x60 Trailer $16,500.00 dep.&amp;$300. ·a mort all utU. (740)446-8391
5pm, 14728 Stale Route
dealers in Pomeroy, Middle· The Forester/ Engineering lNG
recotnmonds that clno,Ohlo.(740)992·5039
(740)247·t100 .
lnctuded304-6~5·3654 .
554, Bidwell. Gra~Jely mow- Moving in Sate 3rd, 4th; 51h, porJ, Ptllnt Pleasant &amp; Gal· Tech~ will be located in Gal· you do business with people
.
For Sale: Reconditioned
er. Trcybuilt tiller, antiques, 6th. 10-5. Truck topper, llp6!is area . ..Competitive !Ia Soil &amp; Water ConServa·
·
P:rlvate country house, great Mason Co. 73 . + acres, 2 BR, $325 month,_ $30_0 de· washers, dryers and refrigwooct stove, furniture , sm. wages and benefits based
you know, and NOT 10. sen~ for family, 6 bedrooms, 2 Pond, city water, elec1ric. posit, close to Umverslty of erators. Thompsons Appli~
furn iture, Nascar Collec- appliances. Much more. 722 on experience. Contact lion District Office in Galllp- moneythrO';'Qh th~ mall until baths, 'sllling area, living 1/oery no·ca trao'ler Included. Alo Grande, (740)245-9060 ance. 3407 Jackson Ave·
lions, 1.500 to 2,000 videos Sandhiii •Ad.
oils, Ohio. Starting -salary you .have 1nvest1gated the room, kitchen &amp; dining
388 · _ _
130.,.:4~)67
&amp; games. pictures. Fenton - - - - - - - - - Pomeroy Auto Parts (Auto commensurate with ex pori- offenng
.
Great Hunting, tlmt&gt;e'r. Nice s..tOOm apartment with dryer"·.u:.;~:.:.·.:::,;
~5·:.:7+..:
Value), (740)992-2139 lor ence. Benefits
Include
·
room, basement, swimming development for home slte.~k-up, nice, $400 month, glass. candiBf. !lowers, Yard Sale Wed. Thurn. Oct. applk:ation.
h
pool, new barn, new porch· StSO
, ••
GE washer, heavy duty,
.
IOQis &amp; M1 sc.
2-3.47 Burdette. Misc.
:-:-'-::-:----.:.
•_
ea 1th 1nsurance, vacation, Start Your Busi ness To· es,
approx. 5 acres, .
•000 · 1304' 8uc;·3131
Kanauga area, no pets. $95; Whirlpool Dryer, heavy
Now Hl·r,·ng· macho'no'sl or s!ck leave, Workers Com- day... Prime Shopping Cen- $90 000 (740\742 1049
n ..... J ; ' - ~
(740)367-7015
duty, $95: GE electric
A•'l.JO....u
~ON AND
pensatlon, Medicare, and ter Space Avao'lable At AI'
I
I
•
AfAL 1:..3Ji\TE
. Multi G~~age Sale· infant to
1
t
ft
apprentice for operating var:
.
W..a~
BEAUTIFUL
APART- range, $95; GE RelriQera1
~usse:~~=~. ' m~· ~~~b=~ L-..ifu:t.liliiiiiMARKf;rtiiiiiiliiiili_.J ious automotive nlachine partie pation In Public Em· fordable Rate. 2 Nice .Exec- Reduced for quick sale. ~~----Niiiit"~iit-_.1. MENTS AT BUDGET PRJ. tor, almond, $95; Whirlpool
shop equipment Including, pi&lt;Jitees Retirement System ulive Offices. Newly Ae· OWner's relocating &amp; wants
refrigerator, white, nice,
1st thr.ough Oclober~ 1st and
brake lathe, cylinder head of OhiOI andpDeferred Com- modeled. Spring Valley Pia· to listen Ia all offers. 4 bed- Small lol In Gall Ia County ~AEJSes",T52 JWAoC•K-SONDErl~e- S 195; Upright freezer, $150;
3rd . 8:30·? 1853 Neighbor- Big Clear&amp;nce Auction, 333
pensaton rogram A sl•
11(740"'6 34
3 b8th hom 8 'lh In
••
"
h
R d
machine &amp; alternator/starter
·
za. a
,_ • 81 .
room,
WI
• ready tor mobile home sel- from 5297 10 $3BS. Walk io Whirlpool washer/ Dryer set,
ood oa ,
Meche
Street, Pomeroy, repair,· competitive wages &amp; month probationary period
ground pool. Call (740)441· up (740\446 9209
. $300, also have furniture
1
•
Ohio,
ct. 2, starting at b
will be In allect as set forth
PR~IONAl.
0021 anytime.
·
shop &amp; movies. Call 740· now. S+taggS.anpllances, 76
1.
OCtober 1.2,3, 1157 Upper 10a ' appliances, misc., ene ItS package, contact in ltle Gallia Soil and Water
'. SERVIW
446·2568. ~ Equal Housing Vine Stroot, 'G"'a' lllpolis, OH
2nd · Avenue:. everything 1 ps, wooden carved stat- Pomeroy Auto ·Parts {Auto C
.
E
3 Bedroom with garage on
Opportunity.
cheap, rain or shine 10Value) (740\992-2139 tor onserva tlon mployment
:~::::::::::;~---~ 45631 (740)446·7S98
ues, antiques. some new
'
Polley.
·
approximately 1 acre On
Spm.
items, Auctioneer lt7693, for app~calion.
·
,
•
• 2 pri e rooms available Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry. ~1'111611""-~~---., Beech St., Middleport, Oh. Good Used Appliances, AeOcteber 2,3,4. ·All kindS of more info. call (740)992- Part-time cashier onry. Ap· A valid Ohio driver's .license · ~Iober 15 for 2 elderly Ia· (304)675·5332
HOUSES
12 BD Furnished Apt. Utilities . condtlioned and.., Guiuan.clothes. 100 much to men- c9:i:734::;.-"!'!':""---., ply In person, Sail~ Beauty is required. A more com· dieS, spacious house, nice Count
senln - 314 acre.· -.
fOR RENT .
• ~~~~~~:;)'~;!~;~-;es, teed. washers, Dryers,
lion. On 588 right behind
WANIID
Supply, Gallipolis.
plete job description and scenery, ~ned ~nd oper· Watch~he de:. while your
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
Bodlmers, 9-Spryt
'
application era aVailable ated by ex-activity director. only 5 minutes
down· 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Furnished 2 Rooms and Some start at $95. Skaggs
::::::::::::::c.:.::o::::_~.,....- ___
m Buv
Medi Home Health Agency, upon request. Questions (740)256-9315
town Gallipolis. 3 bedrooms, Homes From 1991Mo., 4%· Bath, Upstairs, Clean, Ref· Appliances. 76 Vine St.,
September 28th &amp; 30t~; Oc·
I . ls seeki'1Q RN's {FTIPT) and concern~ may be di·
TURNED DOWN ON . lull dry ba&amp;8fl'l8nt, central Down, 30 Years at 8 .5% erences and Deposit Re· (740)446-7398
tober 1Sl thru 4th. 1.2 miles" Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
Physlc~l~ Therapist in reeled to LOIS M. Snyder, SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? air, very neat home. Home· APR. For Ustlngs, B00-319- Qulred. No ~Is. (740)446·
218
Mollohan carpel, 202 Clark
out route
·
S1tver, . Gold Coins, p
th Gallipolis, Ohio area District
Manager,
at
N
(740)446 -0369·
Work 3323 Ext. 1709.
1519
Thursday · Saturday, Pearl sets,
Diarrionds,
ld
offer 8 cornpetitlve {740}446-6173. .
F~n= We Win! (740)446-9753 '
-::=-:--,.=-:-:-::--'---:- ~:..:.::._______ Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. ·•
&amp; Lillian 's yard sale. 6 miles Rings,
U.S. Cur ncy,~ salary, benefits package, .
•
.
1
•
-3345
.
1 BA house; Oak Hill, partl· Gracious · living. 1 and 2 (740)446-7444 1-8,77·630·
South on Route 7, large va· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec- 401~ ang.fle.M lime. Please Sf!lnd completed application,
~
ally furnished. References. ~'o: apan~en: at ~1- 9162. Free Estimates, Easy
riety
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 74Q- con ct
lana HarleS,f or cover letter, resume, and
MooJLE H""~ Aenta.l lease, dent\Cll.• No age . nor a
Ivers e financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
·
Laura Massie at (740)441· ~ferences by 4:00pm, OcVll't.£,3
r-~..
Apartments
In
Middleport.
446 _2842 .
10
Yard Sale a1 1939 Cnatham
t779 or 1-600·461-6334.
lobar 4, 2002to:
HolliE!
· mR SALE
pots.
1235
month. From $276·$348. Call 740· Drive· a- tittle save alot. ~
1
fOR SAT.E
17401266-3405
9~2·5064 . Equal Housing
Streel . Oclobe• 1st. 2nd ,
Used furniture store, 130
PT Tax preparers needed
.
n.........rt .,.
3rd , 9:00 'to? Furn1ture,
tor busy taJC oHice, F:»omeroy
Galha Soli &amp; ~atll!r
12x60 3 bedrOom w/c/a, 2 BR, bath &amp; 8"' halt. ..... .....,... un1 1es.
Bulaville Pike. We sell matdishes, &amp; etc.
location. We will train: comConservaU~n 01stnct
$69,000, 3 bedroom, 1·112 washer &amp; dryer, stove, New sto\18 &amp; refrigerator. .
.
tresses. bunk beds, drEiss·
74
YARD SALE..
1"0.
puler skills required. Send 111 Jackson P1ke, Ste.1569 bath, 2 car garage, 10 ml· $5,495, 740-992·2167
(740)~46-9279
Now Taking Applications- ers, couches, appliances,
much more. Grave monu·
•
HELP WANnD , resume to : Tho Daily San· • Gallipolis, OH 4563t
Ohio. t2&gt;&lt;60 mobile home, portly 2 bedroom, f . 112 bath, du·
.....iiiiliiiiiiililliiiiiiiiiiiij.l
tina!, PO. Box 729·t3 Pom· wanted· Baby oilier,' de·
furnlshed,asklng$3,000,al· plex, Ra:lno, (740)949· Water . Sewage, 'Trash, manto. (740)446·4782 Gal·
lipolls, OH
·
· ACCESS TO A PCI
eroy, Ohio 45769
non-smoking 2 bedroom house, $24,000 sc t Ox45 mobile homo, ask· 2517
$350/Mo., 7•n ••6.(]()()8.
pandablo,
.
oCt. 4 &amp; 5, 9am·5pm, State $1 ,000· $4,500 PTIFT Securit)i Guards
adult to care lor 'thr&amp;e chit· if'! Gallipolis, 911 4th Ave· lng, $1,000. (740)446-1452
'Route 124, 2nd house past
~ Online Traininn
M I be ' Ill I0
k
dren {2 preschool, 1 school nue. Call (740)446-8585
3br. House located In Me- One Bedroom Apartment in
Church of God. rain or
•
us
fl e
wor any age) and do housework In
1994 Champion Park Ridge son, WV. $495. + Utilities.
ANTIQUES
shine.
www.betterliletoday.com
shift, incl~ding most week· our hQme. If Interested mail: 2yr. old house. on· approxi· t6x70 w I shingles roof VJ- ~Pets. (304}n3-588,
Pt. Pleasant. Furnished.
Free Report
ends. Must have verifiable 7
•• 2 ba
-'---'-~
· .:.._"""_ _ _ Very clean and nice. No
1 1 2 acres, 3 .....
.
Name, address, phone maey.
, nyl siding 2M6 energy
•
Pels. Phone(304)675 _
1.800 . 884 . 4965
1386
4 family yard sale· Oct. 3-4· -.,-------~- years work histol)', resi- number and three work ref- ·2 car garagft_ attached w/" pedl.ed walls catherlal cell- 5 rooms &amp; bath, 50 Olive St,
Antique Show Oct. 5, 6. WV
•
AVON! All_Areas! To Buy Qf ~~::~~ ~:~~~~n~~~ erences to: P:M .F.F., P.O. breezeway,
located . on , ings , drywall through out $32&amp; '!'0· {740}448·3945
· 5, Fisher
Tara Townhouse Apart- · Farm Museum, Pt. Pieass residence take 338 to Aa - Sell. Shirley Spears, JQa. ~rivers license, home phone Box 723, Gallipolis, OH be· SandhUF-- Ad.
Ptlone central air porch included. 7 rooms , 2 bath, GallipOlis. ments, Very StJacious, 2 ant .. stoneware, bottles, ad·
cine Locks &amp; follOW signs. 675-1429.
and must have black steel lore Octobet 10, 2002.
(304)675-5004 after Spm. or Very Nice $15,000.00
No pels, water pald, $550 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1 118rllslng, marbles, coins,
bften 4 yrs. s1nce last one,
leave message at (304}674· (740) 985·3858
month, deposit &amp; referenc·e. 112 Bath, Newly Carpeted, coca· cola collectibles. Etc.
cleaned wall to wall, lots of Help wanted caring tor the lOB satery shoes. Pa~ starts Wanted- live in caretaker for 1479 anytime.
·
(740) 985·4116
.,.
(
)388- 1QO
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Free Admission, fREE AP·
740
1
tools,
quills
blankets, elderly, Darst Group Home, at $6.50 per hour, 32-40 my mother (Includes some .:.:.:..::..:::.:!::::.::::....,____ ~-'------- ::...:=::..=.:.:...--~-'
tio, Start $375/Mo. No ·Pets, PRAlSALS. Deater Space
sheets, Pillows, towels. cur· n~paying minimum wage, hours per week. Ca_ll lite housekeeping) in ax- 3 · BedroOm neWly remod- 2000 14 X 70 Clayton 3BA . . House tor rent In Syracuse Loaae Plua Security Deposit available. (740)992·5086 ·
tains. rugs, floor TV. lots new shihs: 7am-3pm, 7am- (740)669·0196 Monday-~n- change for roorrvboard plus eled, in Middleport, call To_m 28th. Appliances, Porches, Ot'lio $475.00 a mon. + Required "' Days: 740·44~
·
more, to long to mention ev- Spm. Jpm-1 tpm, 11pm- day, 8arn-4pm for appomt- $750 per mo. salary, · ,l(ncferson after 5 p.m.
skirting, like new, must go $475.00 61ep. no pets 304· 3481; Evenings: 740-367· ·Beautiful Fireplace Mantel
oiylhing.
7am. call 740·t92·5023.
mont.
(740)36M302
992·3348
$19,995.00, 14().992·007~ · 671&gt;;5332
0502.
$300.00 949•2202 '

I

Anguo Bull ~ lor oato..., Flelda
5 tigh quality pure bred An- Congratulations! You have
gus BWI calwo. (7&lt;10)669- won 2 tree movie tickets
9507 o
(740\648-0200
to the Spring Valley 1 In
1

s.u.

I~t__A.~.:.·.RENrMi iEJI 'i ._

~

HFJ.pWANIID

ri::

:: : :.•
" eralor · $125., Stove-gao
, . • $50. (304)675-4123
ft 5pm
'· : • ar
·
·

POLICIES: Ohio Valtey Publlll'llng reserves the right to edit, rettct. or e~~nc.tany ICIIal .ny time. Errors
reported on 1M I
Tn~M~ne-Sent~MI-Refiater wlll ·be responsible for no more thlln the coat of the apace occupied by the efTOI' ..,d only the nrtt Insertion.
any kiu or eq*IN thlt rnutla from the lJUbtlc:Jitlon or omlulon of an actv.rtiument. CorncUon '!Ifill be mladlt In the first available edftlon. •
1111 always confldenu.l. •oCurrenr rata etrd appUea. • All reel eabte .tdvertla.menta are subject to the Federal Fair Hou~lng Act of 1te8. • Thla
EOE atlloo.da. W.
..tv.nlalng In vlollltion of the law.

JlruoW~ 11"0

LivtNrocK

·' .;..:=::;,=:..:;_,...---

ro ;!:~~~-~~o~rF~ax~To~~9~92-~21~57___;
Dally In-Column: 1:00 p .m .
Monday -F riday for lnsertlon
In Next Day's Paper

Centro! Air
and Heat

. . Pumpo. 11 you don't call us
.; we both loH. Free aatl-

·:

Should Include T hese

1995 Yamaha Kodiak 400 - - - - - - ' - - - .4x4, 12 actual miles. C&amp;C General Home Maiflte53;000. (304)675-5906
nence· Painting, vinyl sid·
ing, carpentry, cloOrs, wi~2002 Ha~ay Davidson Etoo- dows, baths, mobile h011lo
Used King WOOd fta Ggpa, standard, 3,000 repair and more. For free
milee,
some
eMti'aa, eslimate call Chet, 740·992Plaaae
call St6,500. 17401379·2666
6323.

In one week With us

REACH OVER 285,000 .PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD · NOW· ONLINE
To Place
~ribune
l\egister
Sentinel 2 (740) 992-2156 (304) 67~-1333
740 446
&lt; )
675-5234

New Homes, Room Additions,
t;arages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
·

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, OhiO:

Boxad stongo """'· 11 ,500
eech, (740fC-411-7800

•

Bryan Reeves

-·-·

..

.Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171.
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
'Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
.tst Thursday or
· every month
. All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

Ire VIII llld aHll
YIICIIhlllllllll-

1111111 DIE IIIID
11niii111Ck II
nit

fiiiDII
llfiiiUJIDII CAU

BIIUIMIIIS
CIIIIIIIIIIJ lcdori

IIIIICI
74D-9Q2·2222 or ·
740.446-1018

·" ..
'

I

•

�..

•

..

Page A 10 • The Dally Sentinel ·

WWW;myctellyMnflnel.com

,Tuesday, Octobltr 1, 2002

......
BRIDGE ,

ACROSS
1 ......
I P\w1ilwto

'=l.aloel

I - locillo
11 . _
12 Tuee. .

.. .AQ~5·

•• •

1! 2

•

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. .
13

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.. !"' .

15

• 1ee '42

•

liS

I

16

So11til

It K t I

¥

LO 4

•

A K J

1 N'P
2: 9

Dealer. North
Vulnerable: Both
West

North

ra.~•

PISI
,2 t

PUI

l NT

41...,..

44 Sin 'I

lll'ft*ll

·=..r...

• aan.,to ·.

...... -

51 ' Noo .....
53 Ollw
.........
54 &lt;:amply .
Alley Oop'l 55 llllliWI
.......,
ldlly . .
Meadow
57 IMr
radllnl
81 RuM'
UniY.
62 Nelther'l

follower

c~eg,...

17 Quarty
53 Fllh-eltlng
18 Holp. lreM
bird
. 20 L11m1 klri 64 Mitro RRI
22 Homed
65 Compua
animal
pt.25 Ullll8lcl. 11 66 !lolled

6 AQ'Hl

Sou~

,PNP.Volleyball:·Meigs gilts ~II unbeaten, 81

NEA Crossword Jluazla ·

PHILLIP
ALDER

· Weu

•

Eaai·

I.
Pan

• blll .
26 Study
27 Mlny many

All p111

Openins lead: • 3 ~ ,...

yea,.

.

28 Opened

·count cards

wide

. • 31 Kuwolll
leader
33 Poker lilies

.

Hlgh-flblr
19 Trlgger'o

14

food

, rkllr

21 Sheltet'acl

-

42
-

BuciiiJUI.

FlU ·immunizations to be limited

What's inside

CllmpUI

43 - Lllnka
45 Arlb - '
41 ll8gllme'o

. -Blake

22' Rc~Fk ~ t4n~ela whiff
23 Coinputln . · ·Of
kay
·so~

DOWN

1 Slai~-VIP

Uproar

4 Peacocks

24

Put one'•

25

u-

.

3 Elrth'llllr . .. foot-- . 52 Brill

2

t.elllltla

do II
29 lloornemlg 53 Empty
Paul Simon wrote
5
11r11ty kldl
lhroMr
56 HoWird'or
the song "A merica,"
34 Eurc:IH
6 Crt of
30 Do b.llk
Guidry
which includes these
aYIIIm
delklht
32 Cold and
511' Sllckum
38 Gnoek·oalld 7 Not111Z8d
windy
58 Wolllll\
· lines: ~"Counting the
ct.H
8
Mounllel'
35
Elllpaa
.
j)GIIIiJW
cars./ n the New
.39 Bullfight
org.
38 Mocking
eo
loiT grad
Jersey
pike." I
yeti
9 Trolan aplc
411 ltarmful
10 29.3 g,.mo 37 Cry o f -·
remember trying to
do that in 1971, when .
--r-""'r'-mI first visited this
country. It is not easy,
With s1x lanes oftraf- ·
fie in each direction.
It is"much simpler to ·
count to 13 at the
bridge table.
Look at today' s
North-South hands.
you reach three no: .
trump after East
opened one spade.
West leads the spade
three: two, jack, king.
/ YOLI'Rt RIGtiT ..... tiH. · BLil&gt;DY.
How would you con- ·
.
Ill
'tti~OyJ
tinue?
This deal occurred
. IN .A
during -the European
LOTT~~y
Mixed Teams Championship in Ostend,
TI'I'~T. .
Belgium, last March .
It was handled per·
"/.If~ • $NAX .
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
. fectly by two players:
JOF'T' Pfl!N/&lt;f
by Luis Campos
Monica Cuzzi, who
Celebrily Cipher cryp10grama are craatod from quolattonl by famous
was on the winning •
people, past and i&gt;'8SOnt. Each letter In the lllpher standi lor another.
Italian team, · and
Today's clue: D equals N
Catherine d'Ovidio,
France.
.
':l\\OUl.D ( C.IIJE 'f..M-q from
• c ZIJH BHYBCPPHD I .. ~·
Ndrth' s two dia- ·
1\ \:&gt;OS[ o' ~RI&lt;:O\ D:i
"~
monds was a transfer,
H J H B L
Y A B 0
C
Z I J H
H.J H B
~-:- 1\ND 5rnll) 'a.\ TO
promising at •.least
five
hearts . His jump
KHDWCTM
KSETCMZHO.
RL
Tfi.E. 0Yfv\ 7r~~:'l to three no-trump of-_
l•
fered a choice of
AJIPTIMP
Pii:'HCB
HBIMHBM." ;
games. Although four
hearts makes eas i Iy,
JTIOCRCB
DIEA·XO"
thq.t was .impossible
· PREVIOUS SOI.:I:JTION - 'He was one ·of t~e .P''at hustle,. of·
for South to know.
baseball. He always ran hard and played hard.- '
.
With eight top
.
.
·
- Stan Musial on Enos Slaughter
.
'
tri"ks (one spade, two
diamonds and five
£h. .(
f) -,:4 a, .a WOlD t·
clubs), most declarers ':~~:t:~Y p@'\t~ ~).-~ Pl/'-.:J. OAMI '
crossed to dummy
tdltod by cu.Y R. POL~N .- '
with a club and took
·
,.
.
·
f'
, 0 R•arronge l•tr•rs of tnt
-the d~amond messe. four sciomblotd words bo·
However, West pro- low to form f"ur simple words.
duced the queen and
returned a spade: two .L1__,_L-rE,..-C,--,Ac..,....N,--l
'·
down,
r .
12
1 _
Cuzzi and d'Ovidio
. . .
wondered what East
would keep if they ~ - - .L I E E X
rim the club suit. Eve- ·
4
,,
ryone would be down .
. . .
to seven cards . . East
would have to retain
I p {) E S
-four spades (other·~5
f
.
·
de I
ld
1 1
1 ~
After inteiViewing twentyteenag~fe~y ~~i~~e~~o~he . r ' -~ - ~ - ers for an after school job, the
heart ace), the heart .I
woman sighed, 'The best subslilule
ace (marked from the .
T I N·M E T - ~ fqr experience is being - • -~ • • • -I'
. opening bid), and _
G) Complele the chuckle quoteq ,
' 1
by filling in tho missing words ,
h
f
t ere ore on Y two
you develop from slop No. 3 bolow.
diamonds. This made.
·
the diamond finesse
A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
unnecessary. So, after . '.:1 IN THESE SQUARES
·
ttie clubs, Cuzzi and
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
d'Ovidio c;~shed their . A
~ GET ANSWER
top diamonds. dropSCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
ping West's double- ·
ton
queen.
Nicely
M~ PoiNT IS, IT IS
Wisdom - Vomit - Piano • Napkin ~ DON'T KNOW .
counted!
SO\IE11l1NG TO \j/01&lt;1(
·
"Tell me," I as~ed my son, "what is your,kind of mu ~
AT, TO ?RI:fAitt. 1'01&lt;.
:sic
all about?" "That's the great thing about it," he an"
WE CANT JUST GO ·
swered,
"you just' DON'T KNOWI"
·
To BED ANO ..,_P€C.T

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST.
~~~~

ANl&gt; S'NACI'S!--DON'T YOLI f'Vf'~

TtiiNIC AIOLIT
INVfSTING
FO~ Tti~
FLITLI~f'1

THE BORN LOSER

.. . .

""'l

.sof!IE\f\IN' w~c;?

Staff writer

. ~ERE'S TI-lE F=IERCE
OCTOBER 6EA5T SNEAKIN6

· UPON A VICTIM ...

I

UETTY
Wf. TAK~ SLEi?
fO~

sur 11le 111un1 1S,
mlP •IS IMPO~T~NT

GIW!Tf.O

TO OUR ~EALTH
AND WOU.·II&lt;\~

TO S{#P,

be your able ally al this time.
Should you find yourself Sly·
'
' BY BERNICE BEDE .0stJL.
mied with anything. look to
Friends and associales may
your paS! 10 unlock today· s
play more important roles in
dilemma.
your affairs tn lhe coming
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
year lhan they have· in the
· 19) .. Today . .do 1ha1 nice
past. It behooves you to culusomething you ' ve wanted to
vole relationships, even those
do for a certain person, but do
who might now be mere. ac·
it with liule fanfare. Others
quaintances .
will loot your horn loud and
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ·
clear to all the right people.
· Be an alert listener today,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
especially i( you find yourself
19) ·· News y0 u have to share
31 a gathering wherl!onew peowilh others should be ·relayed
. pie '\,tid topics are being disto each person in the order of
.cussed. What ~ow pick up on
the importance of the relation·
can be exceptiOnally helpful
ship. In order to, avoid any
down ihe line. Libra, treat
misunderstandings, start at 1he
yourself to a birthday gift.
top.
Send for your A.rro-(;raph '·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
prediclions for the year ahead
20)
·· Capitalize on any opby mailing $2 and .an SASE to
portunity that ari!'ie~ today to
Astro-Graph. c/o this newspa·
get closer to&lt;one who can ad·
Qer, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe,
vance your career aims.
OH 44092. Be sure to. state
Yo.u'll. move up the ladder
your zodiac sign.
faster with this person's coop·
. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov,
eration.
·
22) -- Conditions will be
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
more ad\lantagcous for you
·· One of your besi abilities
loday than they will be lomortoday is to organize. If you
row or even the nexl day, If
see others fumbling arou~d in
you have anything important
disarray, step in and take over .
to get on \he "drawing board,
.the helm youroelf, especially
Wednesday, Oct. 2. 2002

GAHJIIELD

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'ffME. 1"0 WA'fER
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,·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- ·
Dec . 21) -- Knowledge gained

t from study or exp: ricnce will

\
'

. ... .

r

' if the _endeavor concerns you/

TAUI!US (April 20-May
20) ·· You have the krtowhow and _inner r.esolve to get

everybody putting on lhe''
same oar today. The changes
you are able "to effect will "
bring harmony and benefits
for all.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
.. This is an excellent day to
sit duwn and discuss in depth .
a matter on which you and '
someone important to ~ou
disagree. By the lime the cis·
cussion ends, all differences
will be resc)lved.
CA:NCER (Jun~ 21 -July 22)
' .. It's not every day thai you
have the ~olden touch for acquiring thtt\gs you desire. but
today might be one of them.
Circum.~ lances are extremely
- favorable for getting what you

•Plan breakfast
. Ft;JJ~~'(, -~~d
kick-otT&gt; ·bre::kl:'st will be
lield at 8!\.m. on Oct. 24, at
the·seruor Citizens Center. .

To meet
CARPENTER
Township
Columbia ·_
Trustees will meet at 7:30
p.m .. Monday at the ftre station.
·

CarldiE;e B&lt;arb•~r. Rachel
lisa Deem, Amy lee and Amanda Miller, ,left to right, are candidates for the 200 2 Southern High School homecoming queen to be named at Friday night's
game between Southern and Miller. Selected as class attendants are, left to right, Jenny
, Wamer, freshman ; Ashton Brown, sophomore, and Stephanie Bradford, junior. (Charlene
· Hoeflich)
..
·
·

Festivities to·· kick off Friday
•

Staff report

Correction
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's Fire Safety
· Week Parade will be held
Oct. 7 at 6:30p.m. The date
was incorrectly reported. 1
'

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 8·2·9
· Pick 4: 1-7·5-5
Buckeye 5: 5-11-14-25-35·
Pick 3 night: 2-6-5
Pick 4 night: 6-7·8·8
·.

W.VA.
)•
Daily 3: 0·2·9
,'
Dilily 4: Cl-0-5-5
Clsh 15: 1·3·4-10· 11·23
•

Index
Pas~ifieds

Com1cs
bear Abby
Editorials
Movies
. 0bitua ries

R
I

.

daughter of Becky and Keith
Bentz of Racine; and Amanda
Miller, daughter of Teresa
Alley of Racine.
· The !lttendants are Jenny
Warner, daughter of Sheila
and Michael Warner of Forest
Run, for the freshman class:
Ashton Brown, daughter of
Cindy and Robert Brown of
Syracuse, Jor the sophomo~e
class;
and
Stepha me
Bradford. daughter of BeckY:
and. Apthony Bradford of
Racme.
·

1\vo·authors on hand for

I

..

·.

.

r

.
~ Jo Ann Crisp,
chairman of the Relay lor Lila

...

the people of Meigs
County are truly commit'ted to the fight against cancer.
"That's what the Relay
for Life is all about - a
community that takes up
the fight, and recognizes
that there is no finish until
a cure is found," she .commented.
The year more than 300
luminaries were purchased,
in · memory or · honor of
loved ones. They Iined the
track at Eastern High
School where 46 cancer
survivors opened the relay
by walking the first lap.

Days

Staff report

State College. He studied
Foster published his first
Civil
War history at historical novel , "When
Marshall University's gradu- Gauley Ran Blood," after
POINT
· PLEASAN~, ate school.
·
more than 25 years of techW.Va. ~ Numerou.s acttv!:
His publications include nical writing. He has ances·ties are- planned for this "The Battle of Scary Creek: tors who fought on both
weekend's obs_ervation _of , Military Operations in the sides of the Civil War..
Battle Days . m Pomt Kanawha Valley April-July
Foster is presently 'at work
Pleasant, and among them 1862," and "September on another historical novel
will be the presence of two Blood: The Battle of that- examines his family's
regional writers at the "Meet Carnifex Ferry."
hi story in western Virginia
Lowry . is
currently durin g the .Indian and
the Author" set for TuEndie-Wt:i · Park at 2 p.m. employed at ' the . West Revolutionary War periods. ·
Saturday.
Virginia State Archives.
. Lowry -and Foster will be
Civil War historian Terry
Foster, a native of SahJons - on hand from 2 to 4 p.m.
Lowry will ' join fiction Creek, ncar Summers..,ille, Saturday to. autograph their
writer Rocky "Dock" Foster has been tagged "The Voice books and discuss Ctvtl War
at the event.
of the Mountains" by Dr. AI . history with the publie .
Lowry, a South Charleston Stuart, _former professo~ of
Battle · Days Will be
native, has a bachelor of arts education
at
Indiana observed Fnday - through
degree from West Virginia,.._ University of Pennsylvania. S11nday.

AS
83-S
86

AS

A6
A3
A3

,Sports

B1~3

Weather

. A2 .

_ c ipo2 Ohio .Valley Publishing Co.

In recognition of .outstanding contributions to the 2002
Relay for Life, the American Cancer Society pre5ented
• plaques to Tammi Zirkle for the Farmers• Bank, Sue
Maison for the Meigs County Democratic Party, Jo Ann
Crisp for outstanding achievement in income development, Des Jeffers "for the Middleport Church of Christ,
and Theresa Wolfe for the Holzer Home Care of Veterans
Memorial . (Charlene Hoeflich)
·
,

Cou1cse
Sponsored by the Arthritis Foundation -•

o

''That's what
the Relay for
Life is all
about-a
community
·that takes up ·
the fight, and
re~ognizes that
there is no
trnist:t until a
cure is found;'

1

l s.ctlons-, 12 Pips ·

Calendar ·

Homecoming ceremonies
will be held at half-time and
•· · after the game a homecoming
.
ACINE~ S~uthern 'dance will be held in the
H1gh School home- school gymnasium untilll :30
.c~niin~ . festiv~ties p.m.
Will kickoff Fnday · Candidates for homeconrwith a peprally followed by a ing queen are Candise Barber,
2 p.m. parade beginning on daughter of Tammy and
the school parking lot and Randall Congo of Portland;
moving through the village. . · Rachel Chapman, daughter of
At 7 p.m. before the ga¢e · C. T. and. Tammy Chapman of
between Southern and Miller Syrac11se; Lisa Deem, daughgets underway the class floats ter of Kristi and Denver
Will be presented to the fans. · Deem of Portland; Amy Lee;

------....;f'!"''----

'•

•

•

want.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ··
You will sparkle and shine today in situations where you
can express your crealive tal·
ents. Should you have an ,
equally imaginative assistant.
there's no end to what you ,
can collectively'design.
VIRGO (Aug. 23:Sept. 22)
··There is ~ s,lron~ possibility
that you wtll recetve a favoror gift from someone you
· would least expect today.
This gesture may chan~e the
way you th_ink abq~ !hiS per·
son.
r
.

POMEROY - In recognition of raising $31,808 in
the 2002 Relay for Life,
the American Cancer
SoCiety presented plaques
to the chairman of the
event and four groups· for
outstanding participation.
The . Farmers Bank 's
"Glowworms': · received
special recognition for
having (aised the most
money overall and the
Holzer Home ~Care of
Veterans
Memorial
" Rockin '.
Hospital's
Relayers" for the most
money raised on site
The Middleport Church
of Christ's "Roadrunners"
received a· plaque for the.
best banner and the most
team spirit, while the
Meigs County Democntlic
Party was recogni zed for
the best decorated campsite.
·~
Special recognition was
given tp Jo Ann Crisp,
chainnan of the Relay for
Life, for "out standi ng
achievement in income
development." .
Crisp, who has chaired
the event for several years,
described the event as a
"huge success with · 23
teams participating and
proceeds far exceeding the
goal of $20,000."
She sai'd that proves that

High: 80s, Low: 60s
Details, A1

·•

•

against -can~er

Weather

I"'

-----~a~-~~---'--

T
"
J
~~

Event ra1ses
S~lK . for ·fight

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLIQH
News editor

I

11 'S~

•

•

Details, Al

I

I

. -.

~-

·'

'

vaccinations !II private · physician's officials ·expect a dramatic change in .
offices. Torres said the $15 charge is the virus which may make it more
necessary because of the increase in·. resistant to any vaccine, Torres said.
charges ~ the health department for
"We're expecting a shift in influenthe vaccme.
za's cnaracter this year, meaning it
Tfie state provided the department will likely be more resis_tant to any
with the 900 .vaccine doses for seniors vaccines availabl e," Torres · said.
at a 'lower negotiated cost, but the "There have been shifts in flu before,
health department was required to such as in 1917 and 1918, when it
spend $2,400 for the remaining 400 was especially deadly."
·
~
doses, and pays 84 cents for each
In addition to senior citizens, Torrt:s
syringe used to administer the vac- said others with compromised
cine.
immune systems, including, those
While the vaccine for llu is with heart disease and lupus, are
changed every year to compensate for . strongly encouraged lo have a flu
changes ·in the virus, many health shot. · ·

- ·Deaths
Renee Stone, 66

It I I; I I

-:::&gt;~
. ·...

·

Commissioner Nonna Torres .
The · Meigs County Health
Department has purchased I ,300
influenza vaccines, 900 of -which
have been reserved for senior citizens. Thos'e vaccinations will be
given Oct. 25 at the Meigs Senior
Center.
On Oct. 28, remaining flu vaccines
will .be adminisiered to ihe general
publiC · on a first-come, first-served
basis, Torres said. Tl\e cost for all flu
vaccines this year is $15, and
although that price is higher than the
nominal fee charged in the past. it's
still less expensive than the cost of

-Southern homecoming

Tressel juggling playing time, 81

g

I' I I 1

'

POMEROY ·- Local he"alth officials are encouraging senior· citizens
and others at high risk .of influenza to
be immunized, although the vaccine
will come at a price. Public · healtl!
experts expect an epidemic - and
possibly a p;p1demic -. of flu this
season,
according to
Health

r

11 _I

.Expected epidemic
concerns officials

BY BRIAN J.. REED

com-

;

'

funded by ~e United Way

Se~n Consecutive Tuesdays .- October 8 ·- November 19
. 5:30 - 8:00 PM in the Hospital's French 500 Room
Cost· $10.00- scholarships available as needed .
Topics discussed wilt include.: .poin. control, exer'ti~, rel~xation,
· . fatigue, depression and doctor/patient relationship.
,

Take a more active rok! in y~r health!

M .EDICAL ' CENTER
Discover the Holzer D!fferen

www:holzer.org
•

'

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