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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September a,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2003

Sooners remain Bearcats rout East Carolina;·4Q-3
on top, Nebraska
returns to Top 25
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI (AP) - Quarterback
Gino Guidugli spent most of his time
handing off and taking off as Cincinnati
rolled up 40 points.
A trend? He hopes not.
Guidugli tied the school record for
career touchdown passes, but was little
more than a middleman Monday as the
Bearcats ground out a 40-3 victory over
East Carolina.
Guidugli, a junior who holds many of
Cincinnati's passi ng records, had as many
runs as completions in the first half, when
the Bearcats (1-0) pulled ahead 21-0.
"I'd rather throw the ball, but if that's
what it calls for and what the game plan
is, I'm willing to do it," said, Guidugli,
who was 13-of-25 for 121 yards. ''We
didn't even open up. We didn't show anything in the ~assing game."
.
They didn t have to. The running game
was so good that there was no need to
throw.
Ri.chard Hall ran for 117 yards and the
Bearcats· first touchdown. setting the
tone. Derick Eddi ngton added 138 yards
and a touchdown after Cincinnati took
control.
''One time I came to the sideline and
said, ' I haven't seen holes this big since
high school,"' said Hall, who initially
enrolled at Ohio State but transferred to
Cincinnati . " It was a big shock to me that

The AP .Top 25

Nebraska moved back
into the Top' 25 for the first
time in nearly a year
Monday. earning the No.
23 ranking following a 177 seaso n-opening win
against No. 24 Oklahoma
State.
"I think it is important,"
Cornhuskers coach Frank
Solkh said. " It' s something that this program has
been all about, being in the
Top 25 and being a top
footba ll team in the country."
In the firs t regular season
Associated Press college
football poll. the biggest
movement was caused by
Southern California's . 23-0
wi n at Auburn. The
Trojans earned si~ firstplace votes from the sports
.writers and broadcasters
on the AP panel and moved
up four spots to No. 4.
Auburn plummeted II
places to No. 17.
The top three teams
remai ned the same, with
Oklahoma at No . I fol lowed
by
defending
national champion Ohio
State and Miam1. Michigan
dropped one spot to No. 5
aft er beating Central
Michigan 45-7.
The USA Today/ESPN
coaches poll had the same
top three as the AP poll.
Texas was fourth and USC
fifth in the coaches poll.
Nebraska's run of being
in 34R consecutive polls
ended· Sept. 29, 2002, fol lowi ng a 36- 14 loss to
Iowa
State.
The
Cornhuskers went on to
lose seven games last year.
-~· their worst season since
196 1.
1
Ne braska began this seaj son outside the Top 25 for

Rec
1. Oklahoma (30J 1-0
2. Ohio St. (25)
1.()
3. Miami (2)
1·0
4. Southern Cal (6) 1-0
5. Michigan (2)
1·0
6. T8)185
1-0
7. Kansas St.
2·0

·

P!s
1,566
1.538
1.482
1,389
1,351
1,302
1,241

Pvs
1
2
3
8
4
5
7

B. Georgia

t-O 1,135 n

9. Virginia Tech
10. Pittsburgh
11 . Florida St.
12. Tennessee
13, LSU
14. N.C. State
15. Virginia
16. Purdue
17. Auburn
18. Wisconsin
19. Notre Dame
20. Arizona St.
21 Florida
22. Washington
23. Nebraska
24. Colorado
25TCU

1-0
0·0
1-0
1-0
1·0
1·0
1·0
0-0
0.1
1-0
()..0
0-0
1·0
o- 1
1·0
1-0
0-0

1,094
996
930
883
828
815
641
533
524
512
507
309
268
222
204
188
131

9
10
13
12
14
16
18
19
6
21
20
22
17

25

Others receiving votes: Oregon 51.
78, Alabam ~ 77, Maryland 66,
Penn St. 62. N. lllinois 43. Missouri
36, Iowa 30, Minnesota 28, TeXas
A&amp;M 24, Arkansas 18. Oregon 18,
Mississippi 15, Bo i s~ St. 11 .
Arizona 7, Colorado St. 7, Air Force

team that went 7-7 last season, including
a 42:26 victory over the Pirates that
clinched a share of the Conference USA
title and a trip to the New Orleans Bowl.
The Bearcats went 59 yards - all on
the g_round - to set the tone on their second possession, with Hall scoring standing up on fourth-and-goal from the I. An
interception then set up Tedric Harwell's
!-yard touchdown run.
Cincinnati went 90 yards in 12 ~lays
late in the half, with Guidugli throwmg a
29-yard touchdown pass to tight end
Dennis Hart. Guidu~li faked a handolf to
Hall, and Hart got tree behind the coverage for an easy score with 23 seconds left.
Guidugli, who set most of Cincinnati's
single-season passing records last year.
tied the school record with his 39th career
touchdown pass. He also ran eight times
for 45 yards overal l, often surprising the
Pirates on draw plays.
The Pirates managed · only two first
downs in the first half, one of them on a
Ilea-flicker. Robinson was 7-of- 11 for 70
yards and an interception before l:l!ling
replaced by Paul Troth late in the third

'\

... , \

...

\,

grass field at Paul Brown
Stadium [\lid went only 29-of49 on field goal attempts in
his first two seasons.
The Bengals drafted Travis
Dorsch in the fourth round
last year to replace Rackers.
Instead,. Rackers had a better
training camp and Dorsch
was kept as insurance .in case
Rackers failed during the season.
He didn 't. Rackers made 15
of his 18 field goals. and
Dorsch got into on ly one
game - as a punter. Dorsch

Th11nk You
Commi!l!lionet

Monday.
Etherton (2-2) didn ' t allow
a hit until the fifth inning .
The Brewers loaded the
bases with one out and
scored on a sacrifice fly by
pinch-hitter Mark Smith.

fot buying roy Cornrnerciql
l=eedet ~teet qt
the

Put Your Special Greeting In Our

Co11nty !=air.

"Grandparents Are Special"

-Jarnes Will

Edition

zoog Meig~

1x3 With Photo

Furniture
Carpet
Wallpaper
Insurance

•
•
•
•

Appliances
Electrical
Plumbing
And More ...

.

at 992-2156

111., 111 11 \ol,,,,

INSIDE
• Family Medicine. See
Page A3
:. Hospice nurses help
~ilies through tough .
times. See Page A6

STAFF REPORT

news@mydaitysentinel.com
LE~ANON
TWP.
Three juv eniles riding a
four-wheeler had an accident
at 12:40 p.m. Sept. I on a
dirt road in the Portland
area . Accordin~; to State
Highw ay Patrol reports,

minor -injuries were sustained by all three persons .
Two of lhc lhree juve niles
were transported to Jal'kson
General Memorial Hospital
and were released soon after.
The third was flnwn to
Cahell -Hu111ington Hospital
and reported ly will be
released Wednesday.
.

Bicentennial baskets
•
Detello on POl• A2

ssoo

l..oTI'ERIES
•

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 4-8-4
Pick 4 day: 9-6-8-o
Pick 3 night: o-o-9
Pick 4 night: 1-3-Q-8
Buckeye 5:2-17-25-28-31

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 4-5-3
Dally 4: 6·2·3-Q
Cash 25: 1·7·2D-21·22-25

Evan Bryce Rodgers

m love you Grandma

Larger Ad Available
If Needed

&amp; Grandpa Rodgers L'

2x3 ¥~s2ooo

INDEX
SEcnoNs Calendars
2

DEADLINE: Thursday, September 5, 2002

Humane Society provides county with truck

12 PAGES

A3
82-4

~--------------------------------------~
Send or bring your photo to:

Classifieds
Comics

Bs

The Daily Sentinel

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Movies

As
As

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

Dave or Brenda

1\t, ,l

Juveniles injured .in
four-wheeler accident

"~~ ~

Evan Bryce

DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ....

''""

Schatz said Meigs County
Dog Warden Bill Dyer found
a bruised, bleeding golden
retriever by the side of the
, mad a few years ago.
"M ikey's" bal·k leg was badly
injured and its pelvis wus broken. Dyer mude a phone cu ll.
" Dyer wi ll stund on his
head and walk backwards 1o
save a dog ," said Ambrose.
Mikey was rus hed to
surgery and aft er months of
rehabilitation is now a perfcctly happ y health y dog.
Ambrose and Schatz pay for
any fond or medical care out
of their own pocket. Schatz
estimates thm the dogs cat
more thun 75 pounds of dog
fond per week .· Schatz said
Wal-Mart donates bugs of dog
food when it can to help oul. Pamela Schatz feeds a group of dogs who were once abandoned, neglected or abused by their former owners. (J . Miles
Layton)
Please SH Dop, A5

flood w8tch tod1y, HI: 70., Low: 101

Rodgers

•
•
•
•

Page AS
• R. Gifford Beaver
• Patricia Potter ·
- ~ Stuart Matson

Ambrose and Sch&lt;liZ have
rescued &lt;md found homes for
almost 800 dogs in the past
five years. They have traveled hundreds ol m1les to
pick up u stray or drop off &lt;I
dog at a new home.
One golden retriever
Ambrose cared lor hut! never
had a family tn love. It was
chained up outsifle. The on ly
contact the dog had with people was when the owners
would wme out once a day to
. feed the dog table scraps. The
dog's chain was too small
and cut into it's neck. The
poor dog was terri lied of peopie. Ambrose took her time
putting the leash on the dog.
After 15 minutes, the dog
trusted Ambrose enough to
follow her into her van .
''Any dog I can save, I will
save," she said.

WEATHER

Grandpa &amp;
Grandma
Rodgers
I ® You!

Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

'1\~l~

1x2 Without Photo

$1~

will be here Th~rsday, September 25

jtayton@ mydaitysentinet.com
TUPPERS PLAINS ,_ A
dog's life is not always tilled
with treats. naps and ball. .
Janet Ambrose and Pamela
Schatz r~scue dogs who· have
been neglected, abused or
abandoned.
When Morsy was discovered, she · was one huge
manure-encrusted matted up
dog" said Ambrose. The starving skinny pooch was in pain
because its thick white fur was
tangled up. Today, Mopsy 's fur
is white us snow and she hus put
on a few pounds.
" I love animals," said
Ambrose. "I love dogs. I feel
that by rescuin¥ them from
needless death ts my reason
for being on earth."

OBITUARIES

And De~erve Recognition!

JIM ~HUT~

\1\;]j~,

BY J. MILES LAYTON

SeePageB6

son when Kasay missed 14
games at Carolina because of
a hernia. He was 13-of-18
under Panthers special teams
coach Darrin Simmons, who
joined head coach Marvin
Lewis in Cincinnati this year.
The Bengals also signed
runn in~ back Ray Jackson,
defenstve tackle Langston
Moore, ce nter Thatcher
Szalay' and receiver Kevin
Walter to their practice squad,
leaving them with one opening. All four we re waived in
the team's cuts on Sunday.

'I!

• Marshall hopes to eliminate
turnovers against Tennessee.

East Carolina lost top runner An Brown
to a knee injury .last month, and didn't
have mv effective replacement. Marvin
Townes carried 15 times for 36 yards, but
had few holes to exploit.

was released Sunday after
losing a com~etition for the
punting job wtth Nick Harris.
Rackers made all three of
·his atte m~ in a preseason
game agamst Detroit, then
missed one in each of the last
two exhibitions. The Bengals
had major problems just getting kicks off - Harris fum·
bled four snaps in preseason
and Dorsch mishandled
another.
Graham went 6-of-8 on
field goal tries for Buffalo in
200 l. then 11lled in last sea-

.... )

Lucky dogs·cheat death to find good homes.

I

CINCINNATI (AP) ·Kicker Nei l Rackers was
released by the Bengals on
Monday, ending his career in
Cincinnati with another surprising twist.
The Bengals replaced him
with
Shayne
Graham,
claimed off waivers from
Carolina.•Graham lost a preseason competition with John
Kasay for the Panthers' kicking job.
The Bengals also waived
defensive end Greg Scott and
added linebacker Keyon
Whiteside, who was waived
by lndianapol is.
Rackers was a six th-round
draft pick in 2000, replacing
the popular Doug Pelfrey. He
struggled on the chewed-up

\ \ , :) '\ 1 ' \ ) \ \

SPORTS

Bengals ·cut kicker Neil Rackers

the firs t time since 1'!69.
"It 's great to get back
in," Solich said. "1 think it
was obvious to everyone.
including ourselves, that
we had to prove ourselves
to get bal·k in. Now we
have to show that we
deserve to be in there by
playing well."
Oklahoma has 30 of the
65 first-place votes and
1,566 points. The Sooners
are 28 points ahead of
Ohio State, which won its
15th
straight
game
Saturday, 28-9 over thenNo. 17 Washington and has
25 firsts .
Miami has two firstplace votes, USC has six
lind No. 5 Michigan has
the remaining two.
The rest of the Top 10 is
Texas,
Kansas State,
Georgia, Virginia Tech and
Pittsburgh.

- 2003 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

• Hardware
• Paint
• Construction
• Banks

' \

qu;~ner.

Sunday, September 7, 2003
~

-

5, Hawaii 4, Washington St. 4,

Oklahoma St. 2. New Mexico 1.

Reds edge Brewers, 5-4
MILWAUKEE (AP) Tim Hummel, Ryan · Freel
and Wily Mo Pena hit solo
ho me runs to back · Seth
Ethenon's strong pitching as
the Cincinnati Reds beat the
M iI wa ukee ' Brewers 5-4

they were blocking that well . I didn't have
to make any of their defensive linemen
miss."
East Carolina (0-1) had a dreadful
debut under John Thompson, who signed
on as the Pirates· 18th head coach on Dec.
20. Junior quarterback Desmond
Robinson was erratic in his tirst career
start, and an offensive line that was supposed to be the Pirates' strength - live
senior starters - got manhandled.
"They dominated the line of scrimmage
the whole game," Robinson said. "It was
a rough day totally on offense."
Thompson. a defensive coordinator at
seven schools including LSU, Arkansas
and Florida, couldn't get his defense in
sync against · the Bearcats' no-huddle
approach.
The Pirates also were penalized twice
for roughing the passer on third-down
incompletions by Guidugli , sustaining
drives.
"There 's a lot of things we've got to get
so much better on." Thompson said. "We
got it stuck to us pretty good today. We
didn't do a~~thing all day to create any,
momentum.
East Carolina, which went 4-8 last season, lost its opener for the I Oth time in the
last 13 years. The Pirates' next two games
are agamst West Virginia and Miami .
Cincinnati returns 10 starters from a

Couch accepts new role
with Browns, Bt

Clarett may miss entire
season, Bt

Obituaries

Child Ds N a m e - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - Greeting--------------------

Sports
Weather

1 Must B.e Prepaid ¥' MC &amp; Visa Accepted

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

Bt-2, 6
A2

© aoos Ohio V• Uey Publlohl111 Co.

I

J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinal.com
BY BRIAN

POMEROY - A pickup
truck purchased by the
Meigs . Coun ty Humane
Society will be transferred t~&gt;
the county for use by the
Meigs County Dog Warden.
At their meeti ng on
Tuesday, county commissioners accepted title to the 2002
Chevrolet S- i0 pickup, on the
condition that the county con-

tinue to employ a dog warden. The S-1 0 truck will
replace a 1984 pickup now '
being used hy the dog warden
under the same terms.
The commi ssioners also
agreed to return the truck to
the humane society in the
event that the dog warden is
no longer funded through the
county.
Commissioners also discussed a request from Rohert
and Pam Price, asking thai

all but 1,240 feet of Price
Road in Oli ve Township be
vacated. The request was
referred to Engin!!Cr Eugene
Triplett. who will set the
mat.ter for a public viewing.
Commissioners met yesterday instead of Thu rsday
due to this week's Morgan's
Raid Re-enactment and Ohi o
Bicentennial celebration.
Present were Commissi01~ers
Jim Sheets. Jeff Thornton
and Mick Davcnpm1.

You can receive one of these beautiful bicentennia) baskets
simply by being one of the first 100 participants in the cos·
turned promenade from gazebo to gazebo at Saturday· s bicen·
tennial celebration 1n Pomeroy. The promenade wilt beg1n at
11:30 a.m. at the upper gazebo. Here Annie Chapman.
Pomeroy Merchant Association's observance chairman. works
on the baskets which wilt contain a variety of gift items. There
is no cha~e to participate . (Charlene Hoeflich)

Holzer Medical Center salutes the

Jacluon-Gallla Parent SuM111It
Saturday, September 20
9:00 am - 2:30 pm • University of Rio Grande · Wood Hall

Guest Speaker: Loyal Jones - Appalachian Humoris f

MEDICAL CENTER
Discove1· the Holzel' Di/.{CI'ence

Speciat programs and activities for teenage girls ages 12 · 17
Altend and gain skills for parenting in ioday'• world.
lnleractive workshops wilh-prolessionals • Free child core • Lunch will be provided
Pre·;.,gislraiion is required. Registralion deadline is 9/12/03
For more informo~on or lo
col/(740} 446-7866

www .holzer .org

••

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Sept. 4
AccuWeather.com to&lt;ooastto&lt; eta

'

-

-

-

Youngatown

i iiivion ' S9"ns"
r-·-·- I
•

1

•

PA.

-·-·-

S9_~n1

":;;;;;;.:;;.,.,

~----

~

Showers &amp;thunderstorms
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

rain 20 percent.
,
Thursday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Friday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Friday night...Mostly dear.
Lows in the mid 50s.
Saturday ... Mostly .dear.
Highs 75 to 79.
Sunday ... Mostly
clear.
Lnws in the mid 50s and.
highs ncar XO.
Momlay .. .Partly clomly.
Lows 54 to 5&lt;J and hi ghs in
the upper 70s.
Tucsday... Partly cloudy. Lnws
55 to 60 m1d highs ne•u· XO.

Today...Showers and thunj!erstorms likely. Rain may be
heavy at times. Highs in the
upper 70s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Toni£hi. .. Mo£tly doudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
lower 60s. Southwest winds 5
to I0 mph. Chance ·of rain 40
percent.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of showers and thum.Jerstorm)oi. Highs
in the upper 70s. Northwest
winds 5 In I0 mph. Chance of

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Aug. 27, 2003

10.00U

D:::1tl Jcns

....

jrrh;trials
9,333.79
Pel chango
lrom POIVIO&lt;J_, ·0.07

MAY
High
9,346.98

Low
9,306.49

7,000

AUG

JUL

JUN

--:=:----::-:-::---=--=:- 1,200
MAY

JUN

High

Low

· 1,783.12

1.764.83

Pel Cilln[lt

lromprwlouo: +0.65

JUL

AUG

Record hlgl1: 5.0~8.62
March 10, 2000

Aug.27,2003

stammi&amp;
:R:xlr'le 500

---=
996.79

Pel chantlf

+0-01

High

Low

998.05

993.33

Rtconl high: I ,527.46
Marcl\24, 2000

Local Stocks
ACI-22.26
AEP-26.74
Akzo- 32.65
Ashland Inc.- 33.78
AT&amp;T - 22.39

Bank One- 40.06
BLI -18.39
Bob Evans- 27.65
BorgWamer - 73
Charrjl&lt;lo- 3.9J
Charming Shops- 6.03
City Holdi1g - 34.79

Col-27.08

DG -22.91
DuPon1- 45.22

Federal Mogul - .2t
USB-24.12
Gannett - 79.18
General Electrl: - 30.44
GKNLY-4.30
Harley Davidson - 49.01
Kroger- 19.34
Ltd. - 16.80
NSC - 19.53
Oak Hnl Financial - 29.15
CNB-23.85
BBT -37.28
Pooples - 28.35
Pepsico - 44.94

Dally stod&lt; reports 1119 1M
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transac·
lions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of

Premier -

Gallipolis

9 14

Aod&lt;weB - 27.34
Aorlo{ Boots- 11 .20
AD SheD - 45,22
SBC -22.49
Sears- 45.70
Wai-Man - 59.92
Wendy's - 33.01
\Nor1tllng!On- 15.21

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atternoon.
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Reporter: Brian Read , Ex! . 14
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13 Weel\s

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26 Weeks
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52 Weeks ........... '118 .80

newsCmydailysentlnel .com

Rotel Outolde ~.etga County
13 Weeks .
. ' 50.05
26 Weeks .... . .......' 100.10
52 Weeks . . . . ...... ' 200.20

•

On Aug. 14, Minduugas
Stalyga, 9. of Cincinnati.
drowned in this Dayton subtll'b
when the canoe he und his
father and hrolher piloted
downstream linm a dam on the
Great Miami capsi7.t.'ll as they
tried to n.'t·over bobbing soc·cer
balls tmpped in the d:un 'swash.
The family emigrated
from Lithuania two years
agr, ami were unfamiliar
with low dams . The boy 's
mother said the dam did-n ' t
lqok huzardous.
"They " tid they had never
sl'cn ~lli.:h a slru\,;ture bet(&gt;rc:·
said Marilyn
Hinderer.
n:gilliWI
supervisor fnr
ODNK's watercraft uivisinn.
Thr Miami Conserv.mcy
Distric t has posted signs and
buoys up,tream from the Six
low dam-. on the Gr~al
Mi•uni in the Morainl' area.
" We need to put more
signs up. even downstream."

said Anthot\y Trick. deput y
chief of the Moraine fire
t.kJ."lartment. ' Thc water l·an
he very brutal. "
1

Two bodies found in car, flood warnings continue
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The vit:tims were identi dinging tn a In~~ for aho ut
three hours. said Auglai7.e fied as Feng Wei. 52 . the driCmmty
Sherill's
Sgt. ver. and her hu shand, Dai De
Wei. 56, both of Cindnnati.
Michael Vorhees.
1wo more days of rain . ·
In Gallia Count y along the The car was on its top in
Already, several cities haw Ohtn River. 15. to 20 trailer ahout .5 fe~'t of Wi.l(CJ", Said
rcccivctl nearly as ll) LU.:Il rain hnml!s in low-ly ing areas had Sgt. Matt Crow nf the
sin&lt;.:e Labor Day as they ttsu- to be evacuated. said sheriff's p~trol's Wilmington post.
ally gel in the entire nu1n1h dispatcher Allen Wall.
It was not &lt;mmediately
of Septemher.
h1 Warren County, about 65 clear if recent rain had conSt reams and ~:reeks rose swdcnts were rescued from a tributed to the deaths. but the
throughout the state Tuesday. school bus that was stranded . driver apparently lost conIn Jefferson County i11 on a llooded road. said Brian trol of lhe car and it skidded
eastern Ohio. firefighters Coniglio. metcornlogist for into the ditc:h. Crow said.
rescued three people who the National Weather ServiL-e
The patrol said the couple
swam to higher ground after in Wilmingtnn.
'
had left Cinc innati on
their car was swept away by
The bodies of a man and a Saturda y en route to
flood waters. Sheriff Fred woman were rtxovcrcd hum a Pittsburgh. When they diu
Abdalla said .
car that was lound overturned not arrive in Pittsburgh. famTwo men pulled another in a ruin-swollen drainage ily members filed a missing
report
with
from the swollen Auglaize dilch along Interstate 71 nonh person's
River in western Ohio . of Wilmington in southwest Sharonville police.
In Dm'kc County in western
Edm und Davis of St. Marys Ohio. the State Highway
1
Ohio, Tuesday's drenching
suffered bruised arms while Patrol said.

Flood watches wntinued
around Ohio mt Wednesday.
with fnrecasts of possibly

quirkly exh:lllsted the cmmty's &lt;tipply of signs warning
mohlrist:-. of high \v:.Uer.
"We had 50 sets ol' signs
out ." Joe Van Vickie, superintendent of the Darke County
garage.

s~1id

a... crews worked

to repair berm shoulders that
had \vashed out.
"We had walt'r on virtually every single roadway. We
didn't worry about any tl1ing
kss than .I or 4 inches deep."
VanVickle said the water
rt\ilched depths up to J feet
on u few roads. i.IIH.I the
L'ounty
sheriiT's offil"~
rcceiVl·d four to five
r~qucsts e.1o help strand ed
motorist-. whose vchides
stalled in the high water.
"We had tuad.' tl1m were dosed
tl1•rt lu•l never bt'Cn dtlSIXI," scud
Shetill limy S11enccr.

Jan. 14,2000

Nasdaq
1.782 .13

ahout the hazard nf the dams. a I&lt;J98 Pennsylvania law
Low dams were originally requiring dam owners to
bu iIt to create a pool of post signs and buoys
water for a mill or farm upstream and downstream al
operation.
suid Chuck dams 200 feet wide or wiu~r. .
Swte Rep. John White.
Minsker. a spokesman for
the U.S. Army Corps of another Republican from
Engineers. lhday. they haw Kettering. se nt a letter last
the effect of maintaining week to ODNR to see
whether the wsl of pulling
water levels for recreation.
Most are 1 to J feet tull. LIP warning signs can be
Anything below h feet is · minimized for the owners.
Three drownin gs at low
cx~.~mpt from slate r~gulation .
The dams have earned the dams were reported to
"drowning ODNR from 1998 through
moniker
ma'-.'him.•s" hccausc of how 2002. said Nancy Gogle. of
they capture and push the department's watercraft
objects helow the water sur- division. There have been
face as i~ churns in its four drownings this year.
Most non-littal acci9l&gt;nts •n-r
hydraulic tlnw. said Dillon.
" If an en~i.nct'r set out to not required to be n:pot1ed .
On June 20. Kevin Lodder.
make son11;thing to drown
people, they e·nuldn~t ha w 24. and Danny Brmlnick. ~IJ.
~ome up with something drowned when the engine of
their ::!6-foot cabi n rruiser
better:· Dillon said.
"I know how dangerous
Ohio has no standurds for stalled and the boat went over
they arc." said state Rep. Jon \\o'i.lnlin g signs al low dams the dam on the Great Miami
Husteu. a Republican from despite the haz&lt;ull. whkh also River in Hamilton .
On July 9. Trevor Lilly. 27.
Kettering wllo plans ro ~on­ has led to uncounted inJuries.
tbnwnt.
'li aller his t::lllne capState Rep. Greg Joliwtte .
tact the Ohio Department ,,f
Natural Resources and the a
Republican
from sit.ed uptiver linm a dam on the
Miami Conservancy District Hamilton. plans to loi1k into Olentangy River 11em· Delawml'.

MORAINE (AP) - Ohio
should re4uire warning signs
and buoys to be. posted
around low dums. which·
have a powerful hydraulic
undertow that can threaten
boaters. the head of a national 1.:anoc organi1ation say~.
··A ny owner of ·a :-;ile
where they h;~ve a low dam
h~s a responsibility Ill warn
people &lt;lf the hazaru." .,aid
Pam Dillon. executive dire&lt;:tor of the Springfield, Va.based American Canoe
Association.
Ohin has hunurcds or low
dams that slo\V water flow
and &lt;.:reate pools behind
them . The deaths of at least
seven people in Ohio sin&lt;.:e
1'19~ that were caused by the
umlertow of low dam &gt; has
gotten the attention of three
state lawmakers.

Record high: 11 ,722.98

Aug.27,2003

rutp:site
--&lt;•11··'" ' ..~"'

Wednesday, September 3, 2003

Safety measure$ urged at low dams

'Ohio weather
UK&gt;&lt;.

PageA2

Search for
children
•
on aga1n
TOLEDO (AP)
Investigators searching for
two missing children from
New Hampshire were
focusing this week on an
are.a near Toledo's airpon.
but there was no indication it was the Fave site.
"It's speculauon at this
point whether the children are
buried here," said New
Hmnpshire A~sistant Anomey
Geneml Jeff Sn1:lzin.
The latest search for the
bodies of the children - ·
believed to have been killed
by their lather ~md hpried
along lntet~tale 80 liJCu.sed on two interchanges.
Investigators said they
have new infonm.tlion that
brought them back to an
area south of Toledo and
ncar the city's airpot1 to
look for the bodies of
Manuel Gehring's children.
Sarah, 14, and Philip. II .
The children were last
seen at a July 4 fireworks
show in Concord. N.H.
Gehring has pleaded innol:ent to mun.h!r cbarges.
A resident who lives
near the searl'h area in
Ohio recently told invcsti ·
gators that •in early July he
saw u van with New
Hampshire license plates
that matched the desc·riptiun or a van belonging to
Gehring. Strelzin said.
About40 sl1eti If's deputies.
highway p&lt;tbnl troopers and
police officers met early
Tuc.,day and bnlke into small
groups to search remote~trea~.
They · tromped throu gh
woods and muudy fields
looking for a burial site.
They also joined in roadhy-road searc hes and
talked to residents and
business owners to find
clues about where the
children may be huried.
Alllhorities have already
searched a live-mile mdius
around each 1-80 interchange in Ohio. Strelzin
saiQ that while the latest
search was more extensive
than previous effons. it was
not an indication that
authorities were comi ng
closer to linding the graves .

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
.

AGRICULTURE

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

Holzer Medical Center

www.jimsfarmequipment.com

www.holzer.org
Holzer Clinic

AUTOMOTIVE

www.holzerclinic.com

Norris Northup Dodge

. Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
.

www.pvalley.org

The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, Sept. 3
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees , 6:30 p.m.
Pageville lownhall.
RACINE- A special meeting of the Southern Loeal
Board of Education will be
held at 5:30 p.m. at the high
school.
SALEM
CENTER
Columbia Township trustees
will meet at 7:.30 p.m. at the
fire station.
Thursday, Sept. 4
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township trustees, 6:30 p.m.
at the Salisbury Township
building on Rocksprings
Road .
REEDSVILLE
Olive
TownsHip trustees will meet
al the township garage on
Joppa Road.
Monday, Sept 8
Meeting time c('tange
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Board ol Public
Affairs has changed its meet- .
ing date from Sept. t to Sept.
8. The meeting will be held at
7 p.m . in the water board
office of Syracuse Village Hall.

Clubs and
Organizations
Wednesday, Sept. 3
CHESTER
Chesler
Garden Club, 7:30.-P.m. open
meeting at the Chester
United Methodist Church.
Linda Blazer of Athens.
herbalist. will speak. Open to
everyone. Special invitation
to garden club members.
Chesler members to take
door prizes.

BUSINESS TRAINING

www.turnpikeflm.com

Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

CHURCHES
'

Lighthouse Assemble of God -Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info
NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

ENTERTAINMENT

www.mydailytribune.com
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

HOME IMPROVEMENT

I

Quality Window Systems, Inc.

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

Point Pleasant Register

www.mydailyregister.com

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
'

Take your business into the homes
of over 40,000 consumers in
Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties
EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address in our

WEBSITE
DIRECTORY

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 7
POMEROY - Descendants
of the late John L. Jeffers and

BY THE BEND.
Mom lets daughter down
by urging her to the altar
Wednesday, September 3,

Viola Riggs Jeffers will hold
lnelr annual reunion at 12:30
p.m. at the home of Wendell
Jeffers. For more information
call992-7212.
Saturday, Sapt. 13
CHESHIRE - The 36th
Samuel Allen Eblin family
reunon will be held at the
Cheshire Village Park. There
will be a 4 p.m. social hour
with a covered dish dinner
lollowing. Family members
are to take table service. a
covered dish and their own
beverage.

Other events
Wednaaday, Sept 3
POMEROY
Oh-Kan
Coin Club Exhibition, 9 a.m to
3 p.m.al the Peoples Bank,
Pomeroy, for the enjoyment of
customers and the public.
Free coin to chldren ·six and
under. County currency and
lokens wll also be included in
the display.

Support groups
Thursday, Sept. 4
POMEROY
Holzer
Hospilal Meigs County "dinner with friends" will be held
at 6 p.m. at Grow's
Restaurant. Call992-7463 for
more inlormalion.
TUesday, Sept. 9
GALLIPOLIS .
Fibromyalgia Support Group.
5:30 to 8:30 p.m . in the
Holzer
Medical
Center
Education and Cnlerence
Center. To register or for more
Information call Missi Ross.
740-446-5121 .

DEAR ABBY : My 17 yeur-old duughler, "RIIIhie,"
was married &lt;t year llgo , The
night before her wedding.
Ruthk came 111 me aud said
she didn'tthink she wuld go
through with it. I told her she
was "just u nervous hrilk·:·
and that we had already paid
fnr everything . Ruthic ltas
always done whm we wauted
her Ill uo ami never ~ave us
an ounce of trouble w~hen :-o. hL'
was growing up.
A few month' after the
weddin~. I had a hunch that
something was wn.111~. l
asked Rut hie if I hmltuld her
it was OK to l'all on· the
wedding, woulu she have
gotten married. With t\'Hr' iu
her eyes, she told me, "Nt&gt;."
The marriage is not going
well at all . I kunw in my
heurt I let ·my daughter
down. What should I do
now'! -- SAD MOM IN
MICHIGAN
DEAR SAD MOM: Takt•
your dmt~htcr hy the hand.
look her m the eye. and tell
her that mothers snrnl'timcs
make mistllkcs -- uml this
was nne of them. Then let her
know that you'll sttpport lwr
in whatever she wants In do.
Suggest that sh~ consult a
lawyer. She may qualify for
1111 annulment.
DEAR ABBY: I am a .l5year-old woman with two
kids. I have been about XO
pounds overweight for the
last 10 yenrs. My mom drives
me crazy because all she
talks about is my wetght.
Yesterday she suiu. "If some-

2003°

CouilsL·Iing i~n·r so m ~ ­
thing only tel lw done as a
l;tsl rt•son . !VIy wife and I sl'l'

our L~olllht.' lnr at dHtrdl otll'L'
or IWi l'L' ;.1 yt•ar, just lo 1-..t.·cp
any " issLtt•s" Wt' may have
frtun escalating. With " ·lwdukd appoinmtetlls . tteithe·r of

oe._r

Abby

u ~ ~ch lkkn~i\'l' .

Cnun~l'liug pn1YidL:s ~~~· a11
opportu uily ll• l':+i.prt~,, our

ont• gaw yuu $10,tltXl tn lmc feL·Iing' hl an llllhia~L·d. 'u p)0 pPunds. \nntld Yt'LI do It ?'~ portivt• li :o.IL'IH.'I' -· ami ~L'l'P"'
Mother \.

rl'mark s haVl' IlK' lilll''

straulcd nur rt•lation:ool_lip. I
can't :-. land h~ing aruund h~,.· r .
Shuuld I put my foot down
nr just drop it ? -- TIPPING
THE SCALES IN TEXAS
DI'.!\R TIPPING TilL
SCALES : Your mother haq"
on your WL'ighl hct.:aust' :-.IlL'
is L'O IICCI"IlL'd ahtHt l )'tltll'
heal th . The next time she
brings up the suhjec·t. say. "' I
know you're worri ed ahunt
my v.:right hecaLI SC you lnvc
till'. But this i.s a battle I must
fi~ht lnysclf. No one can do
thts for me•. I will deal with
thi s issue wht•n I am re;1dy."
If shl!' cnntintlt'S to raisc- the
.s uhjctl, repeat yolll· s tate ~
metll. It's the truth .
DEAR ABBY: I'd like• to
re·spoml lo "Un happy East
Coast Wife." who is co nsid·
cring kaving, l)cr L'li i'I'CI H
husband for her high sc·houl
s wee 1heart.
When I read her letter. one
conunont jumped otf the pagt'.
She wwtc. "'My husband and I
went to l'ounscling ami tri!.!d
all the thin!(s you do when a
n'latiunsllip is failing."

llf

l..'llllllllllni~o:atiull

npl'll .

Our lll&lt;llnugc Is hli"fully
happy. I .highl y ren&gt;llllllt' l1li
nnlline . .cssions with L'ounselor"' fnr all i..'IHtpk ... .
IIAI'PII.Y MAKRII ' D IN
'fHE MIDWEST
DEAR HAI'I'II.Y MAR RIED : It Iukes courage to
\:nnfront problems in ;1 rL·Ia tionship as they Hri ... t: . TDo

many pcuph.·

~wn:p

under thl' L'arpet ami hopL'

tlw'y'll go uwu y. (They
don'u
I'm all fur ynur "pn.'VL'Il ·
ti\.'t' lllaillll'll;lllCL'" 't'SS hHl'i. .
Thank yon for sharing your
.. olulion to an almnsl Ulli vc rsal prohlcm
IJ,·ar Ahhv
. is ,,.,.illt'll h\'
.
Ahlgt1i/ Vm1 I.Jifrt•n. n!.w
k1101l'11 w · .lm1111e l'hillil'·\·
wui ll 'as .f(Jflllil nl hy htT

motht'l;

Write

Pt~ulim· Pl1illiJ'S.
/)ntr
t\/J/11· -or

li'II'IL IJt' lll'.'lhl'\',f'om or 1-~0.
/111.1 n•MAU,
1)/)(Jf&gt;').

'"''" A11gdn. CA

Situational depression, a common reaction
Question: My daughter left
liw college last week and I am
still wry sad and weepy about
her leaving. While I know
that t'ollcge is a good' thing
for her. this is very hard on
me. How long will this last'!
Is it normal to feel this way?
Answer:
E&lt;H: h parent
reacts differently to a child
leaving for college . And
while it is a joyous and proud
occasion to have a ch ild
attend college. the change in
home life can he very devastating to some people . When
your child leaves for school.
you sufft:r a loss. This loss
can cause a problem called
situational depression.
This type of depression is a
reaction to a specific event or
ere ~

ated a loss in the sufferer's
m·e. It is a normal reaction to
a painful event. Many people
suffer I his kind of depresston
when a lo ved one dies, when
they gu through a divorce. or
when they fail to reach a
majnr goal in their life. An
example of thi s last kind of
siluatton would be an nthlete
who loses an important sporting match. or in the case of
team 'ports, whose team
lose.s the hig game.

When there hus been a
death or divorce. the adjust ·
ment period can last li&gt;r over a
yem. In the case of a lost
sporting match, the depression
can be gone within a day. You
should become concerned
about a situational depression
when your reaction seems out
of proportion to the actual
painful event itself.
So, it's normal tor you to
feel sad for a while about your
daughter leaving. But, you
should notice some improvement rather quickly. If you
don't, it may indiCate that your
situational depression is slipping into a full-blown clinical
depression thnt may require
professional help.
There are a number of factors that can either lessen or
increase the impact of your
situational anxiety.
For
instance, if you have a large
family, the impact may be
less because you sti ll have
other children at home and/or
because you've been through
this experience before. Your
reaction may be heightened if
this was Jour first, last or
only chi i· leaving for college. Another factor that can
impacl your reaction is the
distance to the college. lf ~ he

is close enough to see frequently, you may tind the
separation easier to take than
if she will only be home for
holidays.
Finally, you may find it
easier to cope with your situational depression if you
work outside the home. A
working parent is often able
to recover from this event
quicker than a home-bound
one because while at work
the parent can focus on job
duties that take his or her
mind off the feeling of loss.
So what should you qo? If
you have friends who have
been through this, ask them
what helped them gel past the
first couple of weeks . Keep in
touch with your child. The
phone is great. I use e-mail to
correspond with my college
kids. Indulge yourself in your
hobbies if you have them. If
you don't have a hobby, this
may be a great time to start
one. Join an exercise club.
Go out on a date with your
spouse. If, after a few weeks,
you don't seem to be working
througho this transition in a
satisfactory manner, see your
fllmily physician. Someumes
a situational depression can
become a full -blown clinical

depression in people who arc
prone to depression. The
good news is that clinical
depression is usuall y very
successfully trc•1ted with
modern medications.
( F&lt;1mily M&lt;·dicit~e® i.&lt; "
weekly coltlllllt. 'li&gt; .mhmir

tfJ.U' slfons, H"ril~ · to Murtlw

A.
Siml&gt;'&lt;~ll .. IJ .O., M.II.A .. Ohio
U"i''''r.&lt;irr
Coll••gt·
o/
( ).\"I~OfUtllti, · Mnlil'int), J~ 0 .
/lox I 1/J. Atlwm. Ohio -15701 .

cloi 'S nut n·e/u(·,· tltc jt~tl,t..• ­
menr ~~r your /~«' rsm1rtl f'hy.\·i~ · ian . ll'ho should he rl'fi,•(l on
to '""g'IO.\"t' and l'tTotmnend

Medifal if(/(Jrmutimr in thi.~·
cfJ!atmll I.\· prm ·idt"d tu wr

cmulitions. Ptl .\'f cohmms arf
cn·(jtlahle mdim· ut H ' H'lf.j1ira dit'· (' ,·g(fin. J

educarional st&gt;rdcr only. It

rrl'llll!li' W _/(,,.

till\'

me1iical

1:15 p.m. Tuesday

Banks reunion
POMEKOY - The fifth
annuul Banks r~union re~cnt ­
ly at Royal Oak Rcsot1.
Butch Dean and Butch
Lightl(lot prepared h~.U on the
grill and Conard Bel&lt;.:hcr gave
grace hcfore thu meal for
de,cendants, family and friends
of Hnmer Banks. Alice Elliott
read a (Xll'lll she lml written.
"The Bumsidc at V&lt;tllcy View."
a poem written hy Wayne
Bank ~ -wa ... also read. An auc·
tion was held to raise money ·
fnr ncxl year's gathering .
Attending the 'reunion were
Cmwd &lt;tnu Thelma (Banks)
Belcher. Pomemy: Homer H.
Bm1ks. North Clwleston, S.C.:
:Robert anJ Marion Banks,

Onnond Be&lt;1ch, Fla.; Bulch m1d
Sharon (Banks) Dean, Largo,
Fla.; Jun1es m1d Mary Lou Banks,
Powellton, W.Va.; Butch and
Bonnie (Banks) Light loot,
Pomeroy; Jerry Lightloot.
Pomeroy;
Geny Lightf()()t,
Pomeroy; Brian a·nd Sandi
Reinhm1. Largo. Fla.; Bonnie
Moore, Belva, W.Va.
Gary Harvey. Belva, W.Va.;
Barbara Fusco. Aurnm, Shirley
Hollingsworth, Gralion; Larry
ami Linda (Banks) Rapp,
Racine; Juckie, K'Jll.lil;flmd Rym1
Nave. Racine; .l't'l'ij and Chris
Fields, Shade; Bin and Roxie
Rapp.
_Camdenon-Gauley,
W.Va.;
Barbara
Fields,
Pomeroy; Samanttm Barber,

Powellton, W.Va.; Heather Gmy,
Sod. W.Va.; Alben, Sandy, and
Jeremy Bm1ks. Pomeroy;
Dorothy Day, Pomemy; Lacy
Workman, Pomeroy;
Kim,
Bradley, Alexis, and Josh
Schwab.. Largo, Fla.; lim and
Slephrmie Fife, Cheshire; Fonda,
Danielle. Michelle. and Heather
Thomas, · Ashville; Connie
Gregory, Long Bollom; Wayne
m1d Jane_Banks, Syracuse, Jack
&lt;md Alice (Banks) Elliott.
Colonial Beach, Va.
Recipients of the two family
Bihles given away this year
were Sharon Dean and Sandi
Reinhart. The picture of Homer
H. Banks went to Alice Elliott.

Children are eager to explore the world around Ill em . That's why AEP
is helpiug teachers make learninu about scmnco and th e env1ronrnen1
mora fun . We're also us1ng theater pertormances and anunated characters to educate stlldilnts about electrica l sa lsly. So wl1en tt comes
to helping children dts co v8r more about lhetr world, AEP is there,
always working for you.

Hayman reunion
RACINE - The 45th annual rcunon of the late George
R. anu Vira Mae Crawford
Haynum family was held
recently :11 Star Mill Parik .
Waid Hayman. 'll , had grace
before the dinner.
Attending were Linda
Jewell. Virgil , Delorsc, Mtke,
Eileen, Mall , Sam and

•

tlwm

Family Medicine

series of events thai have

Turnpike Ford ol Gallipolis

Thuraday, Sept. 4
POMEROY - Hemlock
Grange will meet at the hall.
There will be a pizza party.
CHESTER - A meeting of
the Cheter-Shade Historical
Association schedued for
Thursday has been canceled
due to Morgan's Raid
ReeRactment and exhibits at
the Chester Courthouse. The
next meeting will be ·held on
Oct. 2.
·
Friday, Sept. 5
POMEROY
Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
meet at 7:30 p.m . al the
Hemlock Grange hall . All
women's acliviiles, art photography, and junior crafts will
be judged.
Saturday, Sept 6
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet for a
potluck supper at 6:30 followed by a 7:30p.m. meeting.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 will
meet at 7:30 p.m . Sadturday
at the
Masonic Hall.
Relreshments will be served .
Tuesday, Sept 9
POMEROY - The Meigs
Cunly Genealogical Sociely
wil meet at 5 p.m. Tuesdday
at the Meigs County
Museum. Anyone interested
in genealogy is welcome.
Those wanting to have their
family chart placed in the
upcoming ancestor chart
book should send it to the
society.

PageA3

Hannah Ours; Tilm, ls'abel
Shawn
Edwards;
and
Kimberly and 'Jeff Hull'man;
Bill, Teresa, Ben, Katelyn and
Emi ly Lawver; Ruby, Rhonda
and Jarod Wolfe, Jennifer and
Nautica
Wolfe ,
Kenda,
Kirsten. and Matt Moore ;
Waid Hayman . Chery le
Knight, Dan, Katie, Addie

and Hannah Hayman, April,
Erin and Mallory Roach, Don'
and Jean Carpenter, Ollllyf
and
vance
Richardson,
Tiffany
Taylor,
Gerald
Crawford, Dori s Rogers,
Bryce. Debbie and Bethany
Sayre, and Kamryn and
Dillon Smith.

rn lasm more abtwt ow work to
strongtl1011 oi111clftton. v1str aep com

�Wednesday, September 3, 2003

Federico de Jesus owes
Victor David Hanson an
apology.
De Jesus, a staffer for
House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi , D-Cal., falsely accused Hanson, the dis·
tinguis!led author of the just·
published
book
" M e~ifornia"
(Encounte r.
2003) of racism and ~eno·
phobia at a recent C.tpitol
Hill briefing.
During_ his introduction.
Hanson, a scholar of ancient
Rome and Greece, was aptly
described as "a 'classicist."
De Jesus somehow inter·
preted that to mean that the
author had a white "classist"
bi as against immigrants.
Pelosi's aide, who somehow
earned a diploma without
being able to make a distinction between a classicist and
a classist, got ugly with
Hanson and stormed out of
the briefin g in protest.
De Je sus' hysterics reveal
what kind of not-so-beaut i·
ful minds the House's top
Democrat has shaping her
views on issues, which is
troubling be cause there
hardly is a more urgent issue
facing America than immigration, particularly illegal
immigration from Mex ico.
And .Pelosi. the San
Francisco Democrat. ought
to know that better than
most of her colleagues on
the Hill. That's because
California is the state of
choice for an estimated 40
percent· of the nation 's legal
and illegal immigrants, a
disproportionate number of

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

.

-w.mydallysentlnel.com
.

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

VIEW

Wrongheaded bill?
Akron Beacon ]oumal on Ohio House possible new bill:

As Ohioans barrel along the highways this holiday weekend, the State H1ghway Patrol has been out in force. The
patrol cotints on the Jistincti w presence of it s cars and uniformed officers to act as a deterrent.
The patrol is also hoping to have a deterrent effect in the
Ohio House. where members are once again considering a
wrongheaded hill that wou ld allow tractor-trailers and all
buses to drive 65 mph on freeways. Cars and commercial
buses have been &lt;.tllowed to dri ve at 65 on Ohio interstates
since 19R7, but the limit wisely remained at 55 mph for noncommercial buses and heavy trucks.
The rationale advanced by state Rep. Bryan Williams of
Akron and other sponsors of House Bill 186 is that differential speed limits are hazardous. While the argument may seem
persuasive at first glance. the patrol offers overwhelming evidence that raising the speeJ limit for heavy trucks and non·
commercial buses would be a deadly idea .

Joseph
Perkins

whom !lail from south of the
border.
The nation 's most popu·
lous state has reac hed the
tipping point with Me~ican
immigration. Every year, it
adds not onl y I00,000 legal
Mexican immigrants to its
populatinn, but also, it is
estimated. just as many ill e·
gal Mexican immigrants.
Meaqwhile, the quality of
life further diminishe s for
the once-Golden .State "s
native-born population.
"Massive illegal immi gra·
tion from Mexico to
California. coupled with a
loss of confidence in the old
melting pot model of trans·
forming newcomers into
Americans. is changing the
very nature of the stute,"
Hanson
writes,
in
·'" Mexifo rnia ."
While Mexican imm1·
grants come to Amerin1 no
more or less poor. no more
or less uneducated than pre·
vious waves of immi grants,
they are far more resistant to
assimilating into American
culture. Hanson notes that.
of the millions of Mexica n
immi grants legally admitted
to thi s country since 1982.
only 20 percent had both·

ered to bel·ome citizens by
1997 .
A resistance to fully
assimilating into American
soc iety and the de-emphasi s
of "American" in Mexican·
American. has impeded the
Mexican immigrant popula·
tion's upward mobility in
California. That notion is
borne out by data compiled
by
the
Center
for
Immigration Studies. the
Washington-based public
policy group headed by
immigrati on expe rt Mark
Krikorian . Some 65 percent
of Mexican immigrant s in
California are hi gh school
dropouts. according to the
center. co mpared to only 7
percent of the native-born
population . So me 4 1 percent
of Mexican
immigra nt
households are on the public
welfare rolls, compared to
14 per~:ent of nati ves.
The sol· i o-e~,;ono mi c statu s
of Mex ican immigrants
harcly improves over time .
Nearly 55 pen,ent of
Mexican immigrants are living in or near poverty after
residing here in this country
more than 20 years. Some
45 perce nt are without
health care after 20 yea rs
and _,7 percent are still re ly·
ing on welfare.
The reality is thai second
and
third
generation
Mexican-Americans
are
barely betler off th an their
forebears who immi grated
to thi s country.
So why does America continue to all ow the ye;trl y
influ x of hundreds of thou-

R. Clifford
Beaver

sands ot· Me~ican immi ·
grants, not just legal, but
also illegal '? Because there
ure interests on both the
right and left that favor thi s
nation's de facto open borders policy. ·
Conservutive
corporaco ntractors
and
tion s.
agribusiness demand cheap
labor from Mexico. according to Hanson. no matter the
co nsequences.
social
Meanwhile. so-culled "progressive" acade mics. journalists. governmen t bureuucrats and La Raza advocate~
see illegal immigrants as u
vas t · new political constituency for those peddling
the noti on that victimhood,
not citizenship. is the· key to
advancement.
The Amerkan public sees
things different from both
ideological camps.
Twn-thirds believe the
United States should set the
goal of completely halting illegal immi gration. according a
Roper-ASW poll this past ·
March. And nearly half say
legal immigration leve ls
should be decreased, according to a Gallup poll last month.
It's not th at two-thirds of
America ns are rac ists. or
that half are xenop hobic . It"s
just that they recognize that
thi s nation . which admits
more immigrants each year
than any other, ca n no longer
afford to be so overly magnanimous.
(Josep/1 Pn·kins is a co/um ,

GROVE CITY R.
Clifford Beaver of Grove
City. passed away August 24.
2003 at Mt. Carmel Medical
Center.
He was the son of the tate
Edward and Bertha Beaver of
~acine . Also preced ing him
in death were brothers.
Ralph. Dale and Henry.
He is survived by hi s wife.
Virginia, and sons. Erii: and
Step hen. gra ndsons. Evan
and Cameron. Also surviving
is a nephew. Lowe ll Beaver
of Middleport.
Funeral services were held
Wednesday. August 27. at the
Miller Funeral Home in
Cirove City.
Pri vate interment will be
held at a later date.

Patricia
M~Eihinny

Potter
MIDDLEPORT - Patricia
Ann McElhinn y Potter, 75,
Glendal e. Calif. formerly of
Middleport, passed away on
Aug. 26; 2003. She was born
on April 15. 1\128 in
Middleport. daughter of the
late Charles and Gertrude
Ann Wells McElhinny.
She is survived by her husband, Stanley Potter. three
children. Lynn Hannington .
Eric Potter. and Kyle Potter.
all of Californi a.
Graveside serv ices will be
held at II a.m . on Thursday,
Sept. 4. 2003 at Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Ofticiating will be
Rod Brower. Friends may call
!rom 6 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday, Sept. 3, at Fisher

nistfor The San Diego Union ·
Trilnmt' and c·m1 be reached at
Jweph PerkiJJsUnim 1Trib.com)

•••••••

The ( Fi11dlay) Courier on spe11ding i11crease:

Stuart Matson
SY RACUSE Stuart
Dou glas Mat son was stillhorn
at
C.tmden-C lark
Memorial
Hospital
m
Parkersburg . W.Va.
on
Monday. Sept. I. 2003. Hi s
parents are Norman Scott and
Rebecca Dawn Lavender
Matson of Syracuse.
In addition this his parents,
he is survived by his brother.
Dylan Matson of Syracuse:
maternal grandparents, Ralph
and· Jan · Lavender of
Syracuse: paternal grandparent s, Mike and Donna
Matson of Racine; maternal
great grandmother. Rac hael
"Sis" Cundiff of Syracuse:
paternal great grandparents,
Charles and Marie Bush of
Racine and Eloise Matson of
Scottsdale, Ariz.; aunts and
uncles. Douglas and Teresa
Lavender of Middleport and
Fred and Crystal Matson of
Mr. Vernon: and a cou&gt;in, ·
Lauren
Lavender
of
Middleport.
He was preceded in death
by his paternal great grandfa·
thers, Glen Cundiff and
Kenneth Matson , an·d hi s
maternal great grandparents.
Estel and Clara Lavender.
Services will be held at 4
p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 4,
2003 at Fisher Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Rev. Allen
Midcap officiating . Burial
will be at the convenience of
the family.
Friends may send condo·
lenL-es and register oriline at
www. tisherfunemlhomes.com.

Local Briefs

After this week's pessimistic economic forecast, it may
seem like a poor time to propose a spending increase by the
federal government.
·
But that is exactly what is needed- for the U.S. mission in
Iraq.
We need to invest more money and more people in Iraq.
That much has become apparent over the past few weeks.
This is a mi.ssion in which we cannot aft'ord to fail. If we
blow it in Iraq, U.S. credibility will be shot over the entire
world. lf we cave, as many Democnits are urging us to do, and
hand over the mission to the United Nations, the world will
know that we bit off more than we were willing to chew and
will never tru st us again . Our moral weakness and lack of
commitment will be apparent and our enemies will rejoice.

Yoga class
offered

WHERE

I

POM EROY
A
Beginning Yoga class will be
held from 6 to 7 p.m .. Sept.
15 through Nov. 17 at the
Meigs County Senior Center.
All ages are welcome to participate . Information and registration are available by call·
ing 992-2681, ext. 233.

.CAN'T ST#f:QBIV£R

ARE WE?

Cloggers to
perform

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 3. 2003 the 246th day of 2003
and the 75th day of summer.
TODAY 'S HISTORY: On thi s day in 1777, in Coach's
Bridge, Md., the American flag was flown in battle for the
first time.
On this day in 1783, the Treaty of Paris was signed, officially ending the American Revolution.
· On this day in 1935, Sir Malcolm Campbell became the first
man to drive a car faster than 300 miles per hour.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Ferdinand Porsche (1875-1951),
automobile designer; Kitty Carli sle Hart (Catherine Holzman)
(I 910-), actress. is 93: Jean-Pierre Jeunet (1953-), director, is
50; Charlie Sheen (Carlos Irwin Estevez) ( 1965-), actor, is 38.
TODAY ' S SPORTS: On this day in 1895, in Latrobe, Pa. ,
the fi rst professional football game was played.
TODAY ' S QUOTE: "It is a risk to talk about generosity
because today it is more fashionable to speak about violence."
-· Jean-Pierre Jeunet
TODAY'S MOON: First quarter (Sept. 3).

•

CHESTER - The Big
Bend Cloggers will be performing during the Morgan's
Raiders· dinner hour in
Chester Friday.

O'Bieness
opens roadway
ATHENS With con·
struction or a new 87,000
s4u are- foot
outpatient
surgery center and medical
office complex underway at
0' Bleness
Memorial
Hosfital . traffi c into the haspita campus is being redirected.
A section of the current
roadway is closed and a new

section has been opened to
traffic goi ng into the hospital.
During construction, vehi cle traffic patterns will
change at vanous phases of
the project. The first of these
changes permanently closed
the roadway around the ~est
end of O'Bieness' emergency
department · parking lot and
medical office building,
Work is nearly complete on
the new section of road in
front of the hospital that will
re-direct traffic entering and
exiting the hospital campus
via West Union Street. When
thi s roadway opens, a section
of road will close that currently leads from W. Union
St. to O'Bleness' medical
·office building and patient
entrance in front of the hospital. At that time. all vehicles
entering or exiting via W~st
Union St. will travel on the
new section of road. The
parking lot at the west end of
the hospital's medical oft'ice
building will ~I so close soon.

Breakfast set
HARRISONVILLE - An·
all-you-can-eat
pancake
breakfast will be held from 7
a.m. to noon Saturday at the
Scipio
Firehouse
in
Harrisnnvi lie .

Homeless, homeless on ·the range

Moderately Confused

)'asked Vardon about the
bum
who'd
suddenly
appeared on Main Street.
Our adopted town is so
small that a bum stands out.
I'd never seen orie here
before. "Oh, that's Ben
Sperling, the lawyer."
"He's a lawyer?" I asked,
watching the guy rummage
through a dumpster out
beside the Gas n' Go.
"Well , he was when he
moved up here. Let's see, it
was Ben, his wife Nell and
their two kids. A real nice
family. They bought the old
Stinson place over on Trout
Creek."
I knew the propeny. You
could see someone had
spent a lot of time and
money on it . The barn was
totally restored, new shakes
on the roof with kind of a
Churchill Downs cupola on
the top, well-restored stone
fences snaking around the
property, landscaping for
days. It would make some
city people a nice hobby
farm.
"Yeah, I think they split up
in '02," Vardon said, "So it's

WE'RE TOO

DIFFERENT...
'tOU'RE
AT&amp;T. •

I'M

VERIZON.

'7TAUI£R.
C 2003 by NEA, Inc.

.
,..

Funeral Home in Middleport.
Friends may send condolences and register on- line at
www. fisher1"uneralhomes.com

-

.,..,. •

I ~· ,..

Jim
Mullen

been empty for a while."
"What happened to them '!
Bad investments? ·A cata·
strophic illness? Kid in col·
lege'l"
"Are you kidding? All of
that stuff you can deal with.
They bought a horse." He
said it the way you'd say,
"He got a brain tumor."
It seems that, last s·ummer,
he took hi s kids to the
Coun ty Fair ~nd, after a couple of hours · of running
around begging, "Daddy,
Daddy, can we get a horse ?
Oh please, please, please,"
Ben caved in. lt wasn ' t just
the kids. He'd been thinking
about getting one . After all ,
he had plenty of land: He
had a big empty barn. And
he· d been reading all these
•

"?'' ","'

.,_w•

magazine stori es abo ut the
simple life. And he loved
cowboy movies. So he
bought a pair, Ben and his
beautiful wife and his two
kids. who had never owned
so much as a cat, came home
that day with two Morgans.
The kid s loved them and
named
them
"Britney
Spears" and "Leona rdo
DiCaprio". They wanted to
ride them at once. Saddles
for the kids, sadd les fo r the
adult s, ka-ching. Then he
had to build a fence to keep
them in, ka-c hing. After the
kids learned that they had to
feed the horses and brush
the horses and clean their
disgusting manure -clogged
toes after the y rode them,
they lost interest. But the vet
didn't lose 'inte rest , ka·
cni ng. He was out once a
ka-ching.
week,
Unfortunately,
the
vet
couldn 't save Leonardo. Ben
had to pay the vel him di s·
pose of )he c:_u cass , ka·
ching. Ben was_tak ing a bath
Oij Britney and Leonardo.
Dan Thompson over in
Trout Creek told him he'd

take Britney off his hands
for $2.000. 'T il take it,"
Ben said .
"Take it ?" Dan answered.
"You' ll take it ! Th at's a
good one. mister. I meant
t.hat if you gave me $2,00Q,
I' II take it off your hands.
But you'd have to throw in
the trailer, too."
Ben was never the same
aft er that. That afternoon at
the county fair cost him
somethin g like $ 100,000.
The joy left hi m. He started'
losing cases at the law firm .
Pretty soon the wife left and
she took the kids with her.
The child ren sti ll blame him
for Leonardo DiCaprio's
death. anyway.
"They've put the house up
on the market," Vardon said,
"but he wanted $100.000
more than it was worth . The
bank took it over last week."
(Jim Mullen is tlw author of

"It 1i:1kes A Village Idiot: A
Memoir of Life After the City"
(Simon and Schuster, 200 1).
He al.w contributes regularly
ro Entertainmenr Weekly,
where he Cl/11 be reached a1

jim- mullen@ ew. com)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

Obituaries

Far too generous on immigration

The Daily Sentinel

STATE

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 3.

I

Anti-abortion extremist says he expects 'a great
reward in heaven' for killing abortion doctor
STARKE. Fla. (A P) Paul Hill. a former mini ster
who gunned down au abortion doctor, said he feel s no
remorse and sug&amp;este,d the
state wi ll be makmg him a
martyr when he becomes the
first person executed in the
United States li&gt;r anti-abor·
tion violence .
Barring an unlikely lastminute stay. the 49-year-old
former Presbyterian minister
will be put to deuth by lethal
inje~:tion Wednesday evening
fo r the 19lJ4 murders in
Pensacola of Dr. John Brittoit
and his escort, retired Air
Force Lt. Col. James Herman
Barrett.
Barrett's wife. June, was
wounded in the sh&lt;XJtings out·
side the Ladies Center in
Pensacola. Hill has not
appealed.

"The sooner I am executed
... the sooner I am goin~ to
heaven," Hill said in a Jail·
house interview. "I expe~:t a
great reward in heave n. I am
lo&lt;&gt;kinjl. forward to glory. 1
don' t feel remorse."
"More peoeic shou ld act as
1 have ac ted, · Hill added.
Abortion - ri~ht s
gro ups
worry that Htll's execution
will trigger reprisals hy those
who share his steadfast belief
that violence to stop abortion
is justified. Several Florida
ot'f'icials connected to the
case received thremening let·
ters last week. accompanied
by rifle bullets:
Gov. Jeh Bush, who was
named in one of those threatening letters. said Tuesday the
threats would not keep him
from carry ing out the law.
''I'm not going to be bul -

lied." Bush said.
Bush also said : ''I'm m)t
going to ~:hunge the deeply
held views that I have on
(the death penalty) because
others have deeply held
views that disagree .
"]·totally respect them. And
they should respec t what the
rule of law is here in our
state."
Death penalty opponents
have also pointed to the
prospect of violence as a reason to stop this execution in
part icular.
"We· re very concemed that
Paul Hill 's call for violence
may be picked up by wty per·
son to whom God speaks," s'!id
Abe Bonowitz. the head of
Floridians for Alternatives to
the Death Penalty. "That could
bt: prevented. It should be."
Hill , a father of three, has

supporters who have m:Untained a Web site· in his
honor. wi th snapshots and
ballads. but most major anti·
abortion groups have repudiated him.
Some of. his backers liken
him io John Brown. the abolitionist hanged fo r his
crimes. One militant anti·
abortion group, Missionaries
to the Unborn . likens Hill to
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the
from
Lutheran
pastor
Germany who was executed
after joi ning the plot to
assassinate Hitler.
"Paul Hill is being mar·
tvred
tomorrow, and that's
.,
wrong." said Bonowitz.

Habitat for Humanity Second loan OK'd
launches university for Cabela's
to train leaders
.AMERICUS. Ga. (AP) thi s summer at Harva rd
- Habitat for Humanity Busi ness School. The
International is opening its schnol \ publishing branch.
ow n uni ve rsity to train which spec ializes in c-learn·
leaders on the finer points
· ing for numagc ment and
of carrying on it s mi ss ion
of providing housing fo r lc;iJcrship development .
the needy.
will provide fundam ental
The ecu meni cal htmsing business
cm1rscs
and
ministry will officiall y Habitat will develop others
open the uni ve rsit y on to meet its needs.
Wednesday in a refur·
Students in developing
bished Victorian house L'OUJllries wi thout reliable
ncar its world head4uarters Internet connection s will he
in Americus, a southwest
Georgia town of 17,000 able to take the ~ourses
l()(;ated about 175 mile s using CDs.
south of Atl:mta.
'"Our initial push has been
Founded in 1976 by Linda e-learning - online coursand Millard Fuller. H;~bil&lt;lt es," Cmnpbell said. "There
and its 16,000 affiliates have will also be lectures that may
built 150,000 homes in 89 be hosted in Americus or
countries, hut there are still
more than a billion people elsewhere."
The uni versity also will
living in substandard houspublish an online newslet·
ing or homeless.
"Our greatest need is for ter devoted to community ·
new leaders to continue based housi ng issues.
thi s movement ," Millard
Habitat hopes eventually to
Fuller said. "Strong suc- make the training available to
cessful leadership, which
Habitat for Humanity anyone who wants to learn
University is designed to techniques foi· eliminating
help develop, will continue poverty housing, Campbell
to propel thi s housing min · said.
istry forward."
·
'This university has someThe university will offer thing for anybody in the
seminars ·and online cours- world," she said. "We hope it
es for sharing information allows us to get the message
and ideas, including tips on
the financial management across - first. that this probof affiliates, construction lem exists, and serund, that
practices and the selection now they can do something
of families for Habitat about it."
homes.
Habitat builds or reliubish"li won't he teaching peOple es .houses using volunteers,
how to hmnmer nails, or how donated materials and tinanto do architecture." said Shari
cia! contributions. The recipiCampbell, project director for
Habitat
tor
Humanity ents help with the constnJcUniversity. "But it will teach tion .and hu y the homes with
them how to 11111 lxJUrdmeet· no-iitterest loans. Their mon·
ings or get better support in gage payments arc used to
their communities."
build more homes.
As the tirst step in estab·
"The people we divine as
li shing the schooL nearly future leaders arc not just
400 Habitat employees ~nd
volunteers attended a lead- peopl e who work for
ership conference earlier Habitat ." Ca mpbell said .
"We hope folks understand
the urge ncy of the problem
and see that they ~:an play a
role ."

.. ,

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR 'LIFE.

.
·'·

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe toda~. • 992-2 I 56
www.mydailysmtinel.com

CHARLESTON.
W.Va.
(AP) - The Cabcla"s sport·
ing goods distribution ce nter
proposed fo r Wheelin g
moved one step closer to
escaping liti gat inn limbo
Tuesday by landing a $10.5
million state loan .
The West Vi rginia Council
for Community &amp; Economic
Dcvdopq1cnt is the second
state bod y to provide int erim
funding fnr the Fort Henry
Business and Industrial
Centre project. Last week. the
state Hou sing Development
Fund approved a $12 million
hridge loan .
Project backers say both
loans allow construction to
begin by Sept. 15, and help
Cabela 's hotH.&gt;r ~:ontractual
commitments to open its cen·
ter hy May 31, 2004.
The
Ohio
County
Development Authority, over·
seeing the project, is the ·actual
bonuwer. Both loans w-e meant
to tide the project over pending
the awardmg of $34 million
from the state Economic
Development Grdltt Committee.
That committee approved

the grant ti&gt;r the Cabela"s pro·
ject last month. But a threatened lawsuit has held up the
sale of bonds that would be
issued to fund the grants.
Grunts were also approved for
47 other projects in 27 counties.
The funds are nnw not like·
Iy to be available before
December at the earliest. As
long as the state prevails in
the legal challenge. the grant
would repay the loans.
Last year Wheeling had
app!.ied for a $70 million
grunt - the largest project to
he co nsidered by the commit·
tee ~ to construct a Victorian
Outlet Mall . But those plans
have sim:e fallen apan.
As with the grant. the loans
for the Cabela 's project are
earmarked for pre parin~ the
Fort Henry site and providing
such infrastructure as water
and sewer systems.
The outdoor superstore
promises to bring more that
500 retail and warehousing
jobs to the state, as well as
more than 500 temporary
construction jobs.

.·

For the Record
Marriage
licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to David Ward Adams, 40,
Tuppers
Plains,
and
Kimberly Rue Roush , 28,
Guysville; and to Howard
Jason Writese l, 23, und
Rachell e Eliza beth Diddle.
32. Syracuse .

Dissolution
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Clarence Lawson. Racine.
and Kimberly Lawson,
Racine.

TUES BARGAIN NIGHT
$3.l"!S ADMISSION IE•cll.tdealony

Plclur.el

Foreclosures

MATINE£913.75 ADULT 112+115.75
Child (11·1 IUS
WEII-FRI MATINEES END AUGUST 21
Augull 21th · September •th
A SMOKE FREE ENVIRONUt:NT

POMEROY - Foreclosure
ac tions have bee n filed in
Meigs Co unt y Common
Pleas Court by Beneficial
Ohio, Inc., Elmhurst , III..
agai nst Terry N. Waugh.
Pomeroy, and others; and by
Mid-State
Trust
IV.
Wilmington , Del. , and others.

BOX
OPENS
6:30PM MON • FRI.
&amp; 12:30 PM SAT· SUN
FREDDY VS JASON (A)
7:00 &amp; 8:30

7:00

MY

Dogs
from PageA1
A large majority of these
~ogs
ha ve been go lden
retri evers. but they ha ve
cared for many other types of
dogs including dachshunds.
beagle s and other hound
dogs. The only types of dogs
they wi ll not take in. are ones
they consider potenually
dangerous like ptt bull s or
rottweilers. If a dog ts mean·
spirited, Schatz said it will
not make a good pet.
"Sometimes it is hard taking an aninml in because we
don't know what kind of dog
we are getting," she said .
After gett ing these dogs
back to good hea.lth ,
Ambrose and Sc hatz ltnd

good happy homes for the
animals . Happy Fred is a basset hound who has bee n
adopted and is living the
good life in Florida. Hi s new
owners sent Schatz a picture
of the dog dressed in a cute
little prison ouhit, Another
ow ner sent a photo album
with pictures of a go lden
retriever th at was clearly
being spoiled rotten .
To adopt a dog, an potential
owner must prove that he is
worthy to both Ambrose and .
Schatz. Ambrose said she
will not adopt out a dog to
someone who will put the
dog on a chai n. Each new
owner must promise to spay
or neuter the dog. Families
and people that will give each
pet quality care and attenti on
are usually top candidates.
"I enjoy dmng this. I think
someone has to help these little

creatures and be responsible for
tlte in-eS)Xlnsibility of other people," smd Schatz as she petted
one of the house favorite s. Ugly
Puppy. a mixed breed dog.

7:10 &amp; 8:10
• 3:10

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8:30

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FREAKY FRIDAY (PG)

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�\

· PageA6

BY THE BEND
River Cities Nurse on Call Hospice nurses help families,
celebrates 11th anniversary patients·through the tough times

The Daily Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS River ·
Cities Nurse On Call celebrated II years of service to the
communities in the tri-state
rea on Aug. 16.
Thi s special service. formerly Holzer Health Hotline,
· was established in 1992 as a
' ervice of Holzer Medical
Center to assist the communirv with health care concerns.
· In 200 I, the service was
ncluded as a part of the River
, ' ities Community Health
_:oalition, a group of organiations involved in a consoli ,Jated effort to improve the
~ tealth of residents in southern
Ohio. northeastern Kentucky
·md western West Virginia.
_The staff of Nurse On Call
wo rk to educate and help ·
callers deal with their specific Three of the $even registered nurses who are a part of River
health care wonies. Stan·, Cities Nurse On Call are Sharon McNabb, RN, seated, Judy
consisting of seven registered Reynolds, RN, lett. and Sharon Galliamore. RN. The others are
nurses, use a combination of ~aye Hammond, RN, Terri McCarley, RN, Sherrie Might, RN and
computer-based
clinical Kim Stout, RN.
information and customized
According to the staff of
"Our nation is facin g a real
physician guidelines to quickly access conditions and problem with the increasing River Cities Nurse On Call.
de termine what is the appro- number of people with little since they began taking calls
priate course of action for the or no insurance", she contin- in 1992. they have assisted
caller.
Some callers are ued. "It is criti cal that a well over a half million peoadvised to go to their nearest resource be available to assist ple and in July 2003 they
Emergency
Department, and offer suggestions should received calls from 103 zip
whileilthers may receive self- anyone need help with a codes. Fourteen counties are
covered in their service area.
guided care that can be per- health con~ern.
The Nurse On Call service,
formed at home.
The Nurse On Call program
According to Sharon is one that is here as a benefit based at Holzer Medical
McNabb, RN, staff nurse for to our community and we are Center in Gallipolis, Ohio, is
River Cities Nurse On Call. pleased to be able to help any- currently available from 6 am
one of the biggest benefits of one who asks for our assis- until 2 am seven days a week.
the service is the convenient, tance." Callers are encour- Callers may use the toll-free
reassuring and professional aged to consult with their number (1 -800-462-5255)
ad vice and direction that is physician should they have and are reminded that calls
given with just a simple any question s or concerns will be answered on a first
come. first served basis.
phone calL
about medications.

Stargazers invited to view Mars
MARIETTA
Washington State Community
College will offer a once-in-alifetime opportunity to view
the Red Planet up close.
Stargazers are invited tQ
view Mars and other astronomical delights on Thursday
beginning at 9:30 p.m. in the
college's student parking lot.
Some telescopes will be provided. Those with telescopes
and high-power binoculars
are encouraged to bring their
own equipment.
This is the closest Mars has
been to the Earth in 60,000
years. It is usually about 140
million miles away from Earth,
its orbit has brought it about

34.6 million miles away. The
planet wi II not be so close to
Earth again until 2287.
With the right equipment,
Dr. Dean Hirschi. Washington
State's associate professor of
physics, expects to see important features of the planet,
including the polar ice cap
and the famous canals.
Hirschi, along with adjunct
faculty member Del Crandell,
will conduct the viewing.
For those interested in
learning more about the stars
and planets. Washington State
will offer an astronomy
course during fall quarter.
Survey ofAstronomy will
meet on Tuesdays and

Thursdays from 12:40-2:30
p.m . with lab sessions until
4:30 p:m. and evening v.iewing sessions to be arranged.
Cost for the ~ourse is $68 per
credit hour for Ohio residents
and $136 per credit hour for
nonresidents, plus a $15 reg.
istration fee, $2 per credit
hour technology fee, and any
books
or
materials.
Registration for the course is
now under way at the college.
For more information on
the Mars viewing, call the
college's division of arts, sciences and industrial technologies at (740) 374-8716.

Scholarship to be awarded
POMEROY - The deadline for submitting scholarship applicatoins to the Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association is Sept. 30.
Applicants must be a resident of Meigs County, and a
junor or senior currently
enrolled in a college, majoring in education with at least a
2.5 grade point average.
Applications must include a
current college transcript
showing the two previous
years of credits and grades: a

Scoreboard, Page 82
~ercl needs to cut back on turnovers, Page 86

Wednesday, September 3, 2003

resume of activities and
career objectives listing at
least three references (with
one being an instructor; current photograph for publicity,
and the name and address of
college attending.
All applicants will be evaluated on grade point average

and compliance with requirements, with consideration of
extm curricular activities and
career o~jectives.
Applications are to be
mailed to MCRT Scholarship
Committee, c/o Joan Corde,
297 Wright Street, Pomeroy:
Ohio 45769.

VVednesday,Septennber3,2003

BY CaRRtE ANN Wooo
cwood@mydailytribune.com

GALLIPOLIS
Res ponding day and night.
Hospice nurses stand by
patients and families during a
time they will not forget.
For some families, death it
is a celebration of life, a transition from the old life and a
joyous reunion in the next
according to their faith . For
other families. it is difficult
and bereavement counseling
becomes cruciaL
Through it all. the patient is
cared for, comforted and
helped to face what is ahead by
the hospice nurses and staff.
Holzer Hospice nurses
travel daily to Gallia. Meigs.
Jackson, Lawrence and
Vinton counties to offer comfort care, pain management
and the unique care only hospice nurses can give.
"Its nothing like I thought,"
said Jan Holcomb, a hospice
registered nurse.
Holcomb was unhappy
working as a tloor nurse in a
hospital. She said her faith
lead her to hospice. It is her
faith that sustains her and
gives her strength.
"You .feel like you make
you have made a difference.
This is an awesome ·opportunity," she said.
Theresa Stewart is also a
registered nurse with Holzer
Hospice . She said that death
is a very intimate time for a
family, but it does not mean it
is a negative experience. "I
don ' t see it as an ending for
them. I see it as a beginning,
helping them cross that
plateau. It is something
unspeakable:·
Stewart said there is a time
when the patient 's prognosis
has only one conclusion.
"There is a time when nature
has to take over and man
must let go," she said.
Hospice care can not
change the outcome of a
patient's prognosis, but it can
add quality of life and dignity Stewart said.
"Don't think of death when
you think ot' hospice, think
life." Stewart said.
Unlike traditional nur~ing,
hospice care goes into the
home , especially in rural
areas. The nurses work oneon-one with patients while
they are visiting homes. They
can see momentos collected
over a life time. They not
only see the patient, but the
nurses see the patient's life.
Bonds are formed with
patients and their families.
Having a close relationship
with patients whose diagnosis is terminal, who know
they will be celebrating their
last Christmas or birthday,

Prep Football

Prep Volleyball

ov.c

Illm
River VaHey
Coal Grove
Fairland
Rod&lt; Hill
Chesapeake
South Point

a&amp;

All

().()

2{)
-1-1

().()

().()
().()

().()
().()

t-1
1-1
0.2
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Friday's Games

SEOAL
sm

Illm

Seated is Holzer Hospice nurse Theresa Stewart and behind
her from left to right are fellow nurses Jan Holcom and Dana
Johnson. The nurses work in Gallia, Meigs, Lawrence,
Jackson and Vinton Counties, helping give comfort care to
patients with terminal illnesses . (Carrie Ann Wood)
takes something special
internally to face that day
after day.
'·You have to be well
groun ded sp·rt.ttta!Jv
1
, to do
h' . b .. S
.d
t 15 JO · tcwart sm ·
Holcomb said she finds so
much strength in her patients.
"Our patients are our hless,
ings. We learn from them."
Dana Johnson, regi stered
nurse and hospice nurse said
she knew thi s was what she
wanted to do si nce she was in
nurses training. She worked
in an emergency room for
while and oncology, but haspice is where she felt she was
meant to be.
"You have to want to do
this. It is a difficult type of
nursing, but we support each
other," Holcomb said.
,
"No one wants to think of
about hospice unless they are
· hospice eligible." Stewart
said. Holcomb added many
times patients and families
express they wished they had
come to hospi ce sooner.
"People think it is the last
breath, but that isn't haspice," Holcomb said. Stewart
said it is important for people
to make their wishes known
and to be proa~tive in their
own care.
" Patients , tend to live
longer after they are in hospice because we manage
their symptoms and we love
them," Holcomb said.
Holcomb said she recently
helped a patient go to Las
Vegas. lt was something the
patient had wanted to do, bu!
needed he lp ~hysically in

doing it. The nurses have also
done what seems like simple
things such as eating a hot
dog with a patient down by
the river. It is those moments ,
helping to make moments
like that for their patients
happen.
Stewart said the patient
that stands out was a young
woman dying of cancer. She
talked about the patient's
condition, of the constant
pain. She said the woman
was not afraid to die. but one
day said she was afraid
would die in pain. Stewart
held the patient 's hand and
looked her in the eye and said
she would not let her die in
pain. The patient passed
away. and she was not in
pain.
As tears welled in her eyes
Stewart said, "What if
nobody did this job and
nobody helped her and she
did die in pain'!"
Holcomb said it is ditlicult
some days. When she starts
to feel down. she said she
find s "golden nuggets" that
remind her why she is doing
this type of work.
She said she went to see a
patient who was laboring fo·r
each breath . Holcomb had
done all the comfort measures poss ible. The patient
had a music box that played
"Amazing
Grace"
and
Holcomb wound it up and it
played. As it played the
patient's breathing was not as
labored and when the music
stopped, the patient peacefully died.

Athens
Gallia Academy
Jackson

().()

logan

().()

Malietla
Point Pleasant
Warren

().()

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All

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1- I
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Friday's Games

-

Ironton at Ga!ia Academy
Point Pleasant at Sissonville
Athens at Alexander
Jackson at Vinton County
Pickerington North at Logan
Malietla at Greenville (Pa.)
Warren at Parkersburg South

Ohio State tailback Maurice Clarett, right, autographs a sign that reads "Free Maurice ," before the start of
the Ohio State game against Washington Saturday in Columbus. (AP)

TVC
Ohio Division
IYC
!11m
().()
Vinton County
().()
Alexander
().()
Belpre
().()
Meigs
().()
Nelsonville-York
().()
Wellston
Hocking Division
Illm
IYC
().()
E8Stem
().()
Trimble
().()
Federal Hod&lt;ing
().()
Waterford
().()
Miller
Seuthem
0-0

All
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All
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Friday's Games

River Valley at Meigs
Wahama at Eastern
Southam at South Gallia
Athens at Alexander
Belpre at Folt Frye
Nelsonvil&amp;York at Fairfield Union
Jackson at Vinton County
Waverly at Wellston
Miller at Berne Union
Trimble at Southeastern
Green at Waterford
Satunlay'a Game
Sdotoville at Federal Hocking

Company

Jam

All

lropton
Symmes Valley
Wahama
South Gallia
Hannan
Oak Hill

2{)
2{)

1{)
1-1
().1
().2

Southern at South Gallia
Wahama at Eastern
Ironton at Gallia Academy
Rod&lt; Hill at Oak Hil
Chesapeake at Symmes Valley

For buytlg my Q-and
Champion
Market Lamb at the
2003Melgs

11

The Boss!"

MS290 STIHL

F~~~.!~SS!

499 Richland Avenue, Arheru
740-594-6333
1-800-451-9806
......... brrwdiolog.com

e Present to win.

.Coming Thursday,in th~ Sentinel ...
'

.

634 E. MAIN STREET
POMEROY,OH

'.

Your plcle ·to weekend. .
··. entertalnatent
In• the nt-sstate ·
••

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.

'-·

COLUMBUS - Ohio State
coach Jim Tressel said the
Buckeyes might have to defend
their national title. without star
tailback Maurice Claret!.
"It appears ... the suspension is
going to be significant. It's going
to be long," Tressel said Tuesday.
Athletic director Andy Geiger
went a step further, saying he
doubted Claret! would play this
season.
"I'm not optimistic about an~
number of games at this point, '
Geiger said.
Tressel said Claret! will no
longer practice with the team until
questions about his eligibility are
answered - a reversal from an
earlier decision that allowed

)'
J

Please see Buckeyes. B6

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern
Lady Eagles played one good volleyball
game against visiting Alexander Tuesday
night, and it wasn't enough.
Eastern was upset by the Lady Spartans
in three games. 9-15. 15-J. 4-15. Coach
Howie Caldwell was displea,ed with his
team's performance .
"We were totally outclassed and should
be very disappointed hy the way we
played," commented CaldwelL "But we
played like we have been practicing. so
we should not be that disappointed."
Stacy Smith led the Lady Eagle scoring
attack with nine points followed by Katie
Robertson and Alyssa Holter with six
each. Holter and Kass Lodwick e;tch contributed four kills apiece.
Eastern was a winner in the JV ga me.
15-5. 15-4.
Eastern (2- 1) will look to rebound on
Thursday when it faces TVC-hocking and
county rival Southern.

National Football League

Couch accepts his new role with Browns
BY TOM WtTHERS
Associated Press
CLEVELAND - No injury hurt
Tim Couch as much. No loss has been
as tough for him to for~et.
When Couch was strtpped of his job
as the Cleveland Browns' starting
quarterback a few weeks ago, his
world briefly crumbled. He had not
been a backup since his first game as a
rookie, and the former No. I overall

draft pick
did not handle
the
demotion
very welL
But time
has helped,
and Couch
_
has finally
come to terms with his new role as
Kelly Holcomb's backup.
"It's never an easy thing," he said.
"But this is where I am and I'm goi ng

to do the best I can with it. I just real ized there is no reason to go through
this season miserable," he said. ''Even
though it's a tough time. you've to be
upbeat and you have to be positive and
you have to do what's best for the
team.
"This team isn't about how I feeL"
Instead of practicing with the firstteam offense, Couch is on the sideline
watching as Holcomb hands oil to
William Green and fires passes to
Kevin Johnson as the Browns prepare

for their season opener Sunday against
the Indianapolis Colts.
Couch isn't in this week's game
~Ian. The Browns are Holcomb's team
now. They have been since Cleveland
coach Butch Davis decided to go with
his "gut feeling" by naming Holcomb
as his starter to begin the year.
Last week. Couch admitted that
Davis' decision was a blow he never
expected. He struggled to accept it,
trying to llgure out wbat he had done
wrong to lose hi s _iob.

I

.

ATHENS - The inaugural
Coach Brian Knorr Show of
the 2003 season is set for
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
For the foutt~ year in a row,
Damon,s restaurant on East
·. State Street in Athens will
play host. The show moves
from its previous time slot on
Thursdays.
The Coach Brian Knorr
Show will air Wednesday and
every subsequent Wedne~day
from 7-8 p.m. throughout the
2003 season. It can be heard
live on WSEO-FM. which
can be found at 107.7 on the
FM diaL The show will also
be
available
at
ohiobobcats.com, the official
Web site of Ohio Athletics.
Fans attending the show
will have the opportunity to
pose questions to Coach
Knorr and various player
guests. Additionally, audience
members will again be able to
test their Bobcat mettle via
Bobcat Trivia, comprising a
series of team- and schoolrelated questions. Contestants
will be eligible for prizes
from Damon's and Ohio
Athletics .

Crackdown
Redwomen volleyball comes
up empty at Roberts Wesleyan near~ stadium
STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailytribune.com
ROCHESTER, NY - The University of Rio
Grande Redwomen volleyball team played hard but
had nothing to show for their efforts as. they
dropped four matches without a win on Friday and
Saturday at the Roberts Wesleyan InvitationaL
Rio opened the tournament with a tough live game loss to Assumption College. 30- 17. 27-30,
30-26,28-30 and 15-17.
Freshman Melissa Doss is establishing herself as
one of the best young players in the American
Mideast Conference as she smashed 17 kills and
added four solo blocks and three block assists in
defeat. Senior Rebecca Wierwille and junior
Chelsea DeGarmo each crushed 12 kills. DeGarmo,
a native of Patriot, also handed out seven assists
and registered 17 digs.
Jessica Veach had a busy game with 38 assists, 25
digs and four serve aces as well as serving a perfect
30-for-30. Pomeroy's Juli Bailey collected 25 digs
while Danielle Thomas tallied 13 and Kim Posey
had 12.
The Redwomen again went five games before
I

•

Clarett to work out with the second-ranked Buckeyes.
Clarett was suspended from the
team on Aug. 22, however he was
allowed to practice while the
NCAA and an Ohio State panel
looked into off-the-field problems
and charges of academic fraud.
· Clarett watched Saturday
night's 28-9 victory over
Washington from the bench.
Geiger said Clarett was sus-

pended for multiple games
because he misled investigators. a
violation of NCAA Bylaw I 0 that
deals with ethical behavior by student-athletes.
"We put great stock. as does the
NCAA. in forthrightnes s and
straightforward answers to questions that are bathed in truth. We
have yet to get there, which is distressing," Geiger said Tuesday.
Geiger also said Clarett violated
NCAA's Bylaw I 2. which deals
with amateurism, "i'mproper benefits and all those kind of things."
The NCAA and Ohio State
began an investigation in July into
Clarett's claim that more than
$10,000 in clothing. COs. cash
and stereo equipment was stolen
in April from a 2001 Chevrolet
Monte Carlo that Clarett had bor-

Eagles fall to Alexander

'

·~e're Giving Away

HOG

CocntyFa1rl

Ryan
Amos

Coach Knorr
Show moves to
Wednesday

-5

BY RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press

Non-league

Satunlay'a Game

Shelly

Clarett. may miss entire
season for Buckeyes

ROCK SPRINGS - The Mei gs Lady
Marauders successfully rebounded from
last week's upset loss to Nelsonville- '~fork
by defeating Miller 15-7. 15-8 in straight
games .
Megan Garnes led Meigs in scoring with 12 points followed by loti' Haning
with eight. Haning al so had : I of her
team 's II assists.
Jaynee Davis had team-hi gl wi th five
kills and two blocks . Team1 ,., Renee
t'ee kills
Bailey and Chrisy Miller ad&lt;
apeice . Justine Dowler aJs , ''·' a solid
ga me from the back row.
The junior varsity tean1 w ;1 1!'-d a winner, 15-2, 15-0 and improved " a perfect
3-0 on the early season .
Meigs (2-1) will tnt vel to River Valley
( 1-0) tomorrow for a tri -match against the
lady Radiers and Gallia Academy (2-2)

I

Friday's RBBu\18

Saturdav, September 6th

STAFF REPORT
sports@ mydailylribune. com

2{)
2{)
2{)

Hannan at Montcalm

If you can read this...
Your eyes are Great!
Now, how's your hearing?
Call today for a lree hearing screening.

Marauder
girls return
to winning,
top Miller

River Valley at Meigs
Chesapeake at Symmes Valley
Coal Grove at Fairview (Ky.)
Fairland at PikeView
Rod&lt; H~l at Oak Hill
W£¥113 at South Point

HEARING

Thank You

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.I NSIDE

'

succumbing to LeMoyne College.
20-30, 17-30.30-28,34-32 and 1416. Doss and Lindsay Unon led the
Rio attack with I 0 kills each .
Lynette Kiesling added nine ki lis.
Posey topped the stat sheet with 22
digs. while Wierwille ( 15).
DeGarmo ( 13 ) and Veach ( 12) also
posted double fi gures in that cmc gory. Veach also distributed 42
assists .

Bailey

On Saturday, Ri o Grande ( 1-7)
lost to the host school. Roberts
Wesleyan, in four games, 25-30. 30-27. 21-30 and
29-31. Wierwi lle posted 11 kills and Doss had 10.
DeGarmo led the defense with 13 digs, followed by
Posey with 12 and Thomas with 10. Veach had 31
assists and three serve aces. Kies ling registered
seven block assists.
In the final match. Rio lost to Ohio Dominican in
four games, 30-32. 30-27. 26-30 and 24-30.
Wierwille collected 13 kills while DeGarhlo and
Urton added nine each . Thomas was the"team leader
in digs with i 7, followed hy Bailey with 16, Posey
and DeGarmo 14 each, and Wierwille and Veach
tallied 12 each.
'

netted at least
85 violators

COLUMBUS !APl - City and Ohio
State police cracking down 011 akohu;
violations issued 80 citation&gt; and arres ted
at least five people tailgating around Ohio
Stadium during the Buckeye,· season
opener again st Washington .
The two police forces haw adopted a
stricter tailgating policy recommended tly
a joint university-city task force formed to
study the riots that followed Ohio State's
victory over Michigan last November.
City police cited 60 people Saturday for
carrying open containers of alcohol in
puhlic and nine for public indecency. Four
ticket s were related to underage people
attempting to huy or drink alco hol and
seve n others were for violations ranging
from di sorderl y conduct to littering .
Poli ce said a few arrest' were made but
the numhers were not availatlle Tue,day

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 3,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2003

www.

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\egtster

Scoreboard

CLASSIFIED

DIVISION II

Baseball
Frontier League Playoffs
Firat Round

(Boot-of-3)
Waatarn Dlvlalon
Tueaday'a Sept. 2
Gateway 7, Washmgton 3. Gateway
leads senes 1-0
Thuradey, Sept. 4
Wash1ngton at Gateway
Frldav, Sapr. s
Washington at Gateway If necessary
Eaate:rn Olvlalon
Tuesday, Sept. 2
Ch1lhcothe at Evansville, ppd ram
Wednaaday, Sept. 3
ChillicOthe at Evansv111e
Thureday, Sept. 4
Evansville at Chillicothe

1 A•ch f1eld Revere 3-1-0
2 Kettenng Alter 3·0-0
3 C1n Turpm 3·1-0
4 Cots DeSale s 1-1·1
5 Chesterland W Geauga 3·0·0
6 Cuya Falls Walsh Je su1 t 2 0 0
7 Maumee 3·1-0
S C1n Roger Bacon 4·0·0
9 Dayton Carroll 2-1-0
10, Dresden Tn-Valley 1 0-0
DIVISION Ill
1 CVCA 2·0·0
2 Worth Chnsllan 3-0·0
3, Gates M1tls Hawken 1·0·0
4 Warren Kennedy 4·0 o
5. Kahda 1-0-2
6. Mans Chnshan 3·1·0
7 Warren Champ1on 4·0-0
8. Loram Cath 3·0·0
9, Gahanna Cols Academy 2·0·0
Coshocton 2-0·0

Friday, Sept. 5

71
70
55
49
48
32
27

AROUND THE DIAMOND
w

17

16
15

(Boat-of-5)
TBA

Woman's National Baakatblll

Aaloc:latlon

Pia yona
All Times EDT
FIRST ROUND
(Boat·of·3)
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Cleveland 66, Detro1t 59

Tuaaday, Sept. 2
Detroit 77, Cleveland 63, Detro1t wms
ser~es 2·1
Charlotte va. Connectlcul
Thuraday, Aug. 28
Connecticut G8, Charlotte 66
Saturday, Aug 30
Connecticut
68.
Charlotte
62.
ConnectiCUt wm s senes 2·0

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Los Angeles vs. Minnesota
Thursday, Aug . 28
Mmnesota 74, l •'S Angeles 72
Saturday Aug. 30
Los Angeles 80 1.1 •mesota 69
Monda ~. Sept. 1
Los Angeles 74 Mmnesota 64 Los
Angeles wms sene. 2- i
Houston vs. sacramento
Friday, Aug. 29
Sacramento 65. Houston 59
Sunday, Aug. 31
Houston 69 Sacramento 48
Tuesday, Sept. 2
Sacramento
70,
Houston
68
Sacramento wms series 2-1

60

55
50
41
27
25
16
6
S
8

1, Cm Wyommg
2 New Albany
3 Bexley
4 Sprmg Greenan
5 Poland Semmary
6 Ham Badin
7 West Central
8 Warsaw R1verv.ew
9, El•da
10 Akron St V-St Mary

Major League Soccer
Eastern Division
W L T
Pts
Chicago
11 5 6
39
MetroStars
8
6 7
31
DC Un1led
7
8 6
27
Co lumbus
7
9 6
27
New England 6
8 8
26
Western Division

7
4

L
4
9
7
7

GF
39
30
27
28
37

GA
30
27
26
30
38

T
7
4
8
8

Pts GF GA
40 32 23
31 28 31
293632
29 27 24

14 4

16 23 46

Saturday's Games
Los Angeles at DC Un tted 7 30 p m
MetroStars at Kansas C1ty, 8 p m
Columbus at Ch•cago 9 p m
Dallas at Colorado 9 p m
Sunday 's Game
New England at San Jose 3 30 p m
Saturday, Sept. 13
Dallas at Columbus 7 30 p m
San Jose at DC Un1ted 7 30 p m
Ne\\ England at MetroSters 7 30 p m
Kansas Clly at Co lorado. 9 p m
Ch1cago at Lo s Angeles 10 p m

Boys and girls weekly soccer poll
COLUMBUS, OhiO (AP) - The firS!
weekly state soccer poll as complied by
the OhiO ScholaStic Soccer Coaches
Assoc1at1on

BOYS
DIVISION I
75
66
47
46
38
35
26
18
17
t6

W
11
9
7

•

NOTE Three points for v1ctory one pomt
for lie
x-c11nched playoff spot

Prep Soccer

1. Strongsville 2-0-0
2. Hudson 2- 1-0
3. Westerville North 2-0·0
4, Tol St FranCIS 3-0·0
5 Cleve St Ignatius 1 0·0
6, Cm St Xav1er 2·0·0
7, Centerville 2·1·0
8, W Chester lakota West 1 0-1
9 Mass Jackson 2·0-0
10 Beavercreek 3·0·0

66
61
38
:)6
30
29
28
24
22
19

Prep Soccer

x-San Jose
Co lorado
Kansas C1ty
Los Angeles
Dallas

t3
13
t7

los AnQtlea

DIVISION II

Detro•t vs Cleveland
Friday, Aug 29
DetrOit 76 Cleveland 74
Sunday, Aug. 31

:535
535
71 69 007
Montreel
61 76 .445
New York
Central Dlvlllon
W L Pet
St Louis
73 66 525
Houston
72 65
~
Chicago
11 67 , .&amp;14
Pittsburgh
63 72 ' ,'157
Mllwaukoo
&amp;t 11 , 442

·Ailzona
COlOrado
San Oiligo

Transactions
BASEBALL
American League
ANAH EIM ANGELS - Recalled

OF

•

W

'L

25~

GB

;

8
It~

,

1~

55

.464

' 20~

·~ 2n

63. 82

.

14\

•1 "

,

0-

LIAGU~

•' HOME RUNS-Bonilo, Sari Aanclooo.

40; Thome, Phlledllpllla, 38;' Pu\01&amp;, St.

• ,

~;., GitliN•'

n __

NATIONM.
LIA-18
BKITING-Pujolo, St. l,lluls, :361: OakiOIId
Holton, Colorado, .3S2; · Bonds, Son ' Sotl"la
fmnolooo.. 343: Sheffield, ·Atianta, .SSI; ,Anahtilm
Rente.rta, St. loulo, .328; LCeoilllq. FlOrtda. Taxaa
•.325.1.orvtta, So!&gt; OiegOj' .325,.

Pol . (l8 •

ea;j .6/JJ

Eoat 01'&lt;111011

p.m.

. t~

114 53. 613'. ~ .
72 65 . .~ '· 12 •
70

American League

Arizona Batista· 9~7) at Sen Diego
W"PotGB
(Lawrence1·14), M5 p.m.
' NqYQrk
83 63 .610 Ptttsburgh (Fogg 8·7) at Florida (Beckett Bofton
80 58 580 4
B-?). 7;~ p.p&gt;.
.
Tonmto ·
68 ' OP .496 '&lt; 15~
Clnolnnati• (Bale ,1-1) .at Milwaukee !lll\lmOM. ' ' 61' ' 1ii' ..445 22~
(Martine~ P'O), B:q5 p.m. •.
Ta"''!a B,y,
S3 ,~ .390 30
Houston (Robtrtton , t2l2) ' at Los ,
Gelltral utvlolan
!lnpoi8~ (KJiroWn 13·7), tp:1p p.m
W l P c t GB
73 M .529
.
Jh~:a~
Chicago
Pittsburgh at Fldrlda.·1:35 Aom. .
72 68 .522
Mlnnqots
Arllona at KaMIIt;eiiW2(11!1
70
Kansas City
e2 68 .5t5 2
Sl. LCUI$ at Chlca~ C~ t.~ p.m.
CleVeland
.N.Y. Mets at Plllladelpht.i, 7:~ p.m.
35 • t~ .255 37\

~~::~!13/l 12~

71
65

4, Westerville North 3 0-0
5, Dublin Coffman 3-0·0
6, Cuya Falls Walsh Jesuit 3-0-0
7 Llberly Twp Lakota East 2-0-0
8, Mento1 2-0·0
9, Co ls DeSales 2·0·0
10 Fmdlay 2-1-0
Sylvama Northv1ew 1 1-i
Westlake 2·0·0

Basketball

GB

Clnc11111att
'· . ,
'
San F!&amp;nctsco

DIVISION I

1 Strongsville 2-0 0
2. Cm St Ursula 3·0·0
3. Hudson 3·0·0

Cl'lamplonahip ·

Pet
(j30

Fk&gt;rlda
PhllarJolpllla

91
78
64
53
48
46
36
28
24
24

L

87 51
74 64
74 64

Man!&amp;

GIRLS

Evansvil le at Ch•ll•colhe. If necessary

Colorado (Jonn~ngs 1t·12) a1 Sen
Francisco \Rueter 7-5). 3.35 p m.

National League
l!aat Dlvlolon

-OMolon
W

L

83 55
81

57

Pet

67 71

486

.460

New YorH, 35, COetgado, Toronto, 34,
BBoone, Seattle, 32, APalmeiro, TelCas,
32 MAam1rfiz, Boston, 31.

16

19~

'
Moli&lt;hll':t GIIIIIH
.lllrdnto e, N.y. Yankoos 1

loulo, 37, Sexson, Mtlw-ukae, 38:
Clfll!oland 7, Qotre!lt 4
' &amp;ooJD!i 13, 'Phlladijpt;OI &amp;:.' , •' ' '·' Edmonds, St. Lolllt; 36;' ~ All-. Boston 1S, Phllodtlpnla 9
N.Y. Ma1S 3, Adanta ~
35; Sheflleld,,Atianta, 34.
.• .·
Anahtilm tO, MtnnMotl 2
• 'CinclrmaU'$, Mllwaul&lt;oo 4 '• q'
STOI.EN BASEs-Pierre, flcildo, 58;
TO&gt;Cu 7, K.n.., CIJY. 3 .• .
'· Chlplgol;~~i'.S1.loulo0 ,
DAoberts, Loo Angol.., • 36i• ~lk. , &lt; ·
1\o,.ccay'i·Gam..
,
!floJida·S, Monb'e012
' , 1~
Milwaukee, 36; loffon, Ch~.
Qeldaod 2, ~lmo,..o, 12'tnntngo "
• Son Fraoolsco 2. Arizona
&gt;,
RantG!ia, S1 louts." 28; ·~ng, Son
Oetiolt 8. CIIM!Iand 6
Hlluaton 10, Loa Angaleo 1 ' '
Francisco, '25; FUrcal, AUI!llAI;~.
S-a 10, 'lltmpli Boy 8, 11 IMin\11
1\oe~'l GlftlH
PITCHING (13 DeclsiOI)a)-RuOrtlz.
Mlnneeota 12, Anaheim 6 ,
,
Chicago Culls 4, S!.&lt;Loulo 2, 151nnfngs. Atlonta, 18-6, .783, 3.7t ; Prior, Ch~go.
Tol,ao 8, KanJUO!tY7 , . . •
1at game
1+5, .737, 2.38; Boh!ilidt, Son Franclooo,
so,ton 2, Chicago W1111o Sox:1
St. louie 2. Chicago Cubs o, 2nd game 14·5, ·.m, 2 21; HAtmlrez, Allanta, ll-4,
.
w.d~'t Gltmlt
Pl)lladlllphla Montteal3
,691!, 4.36; Ro(l8r\'ia, Qtnctnnaa, 9-4, 692, · Anellalm (Ra.Oitlz tll-,11) 'i l Mlnnooota
Pittsburgh 3, Florida 2
4.01 i WWIIIIame, St. Lolia11'14-7, 687, (1!41!our 1·0), I:QIIlp,lri
• '•
' ••
3.64; uttar, Newlt&gt;rl&lt;, 14-7; 687, &lt;1.06. . N.Y1Yahkeee (MilMine 1S.7l ~ To'fonto
N.V. Meto 3, Atlanta 1
MUwaut&lt;ae 4, Clnclnnat13
STRIKEOUTB--WoOd, Chloilgq~ 228; · (E~r IO.S), 7:06p.m:
· .
Sen Diego 6, Arizona 3
.jV&amp;zquaz, ,Monlroal, 2\0: Prior, ·!!:hicago1 Q!ll&lt;llnd (Hudson tf!l) at Banl®rt,
"08 Angeles 4. Houston 1
t93; S&lt;:hmldt !lan 'Franc:locQ,•. 176, '(l~ 6&gt;9) 7:0S p.m.. . ·
t~'
San Francisco 2. Colorado t ,
.' Bohllllng, Arl'¢na,, , t7fl; Nom9,' Loo
Cklveltnd 1'(S11bethla. l2.S) at DttrO~
Wodntadly:t Qamlt
~lf$,;J &amp;1; Kllr!lWn. Lns Angeteo, 'ISO, (FI~ !'()),·1:06 p.m. , ;, , " ·•
Atlanta (Ru.Onlz 18·5) at N.V. Mets • SAVESo-G~ne, L~. Ang,lb, ' +7: ' Boatqn ((ciWe 1~·6) at Chi~ """1".
(li'achSf!l t3.S), 1:10 pm.
Smoltz. A~a , 44; •e,..agnor, Houaloh, Sox (Buehrle 11·13),' 7:05 p.m. ·, ,"'
St Louis (Haran 3·5) at Chicago Cubs 37; Worrell,
n Frl!lOISCO, 33; .lliQQtt,
SeaHia (Galllla 1 t ·12) at Tampa B,y
(Ctomont 12-1 1), 2·20 p m
'"!&lt;lntrosl, 31;1.41Willlamo, Plllladtlphla, 27: (Waocntilt 1;0), 7'15 p m
Mon1rool ITucicor ll-11 ot PhiOidolphlo I.Ccij&gt;or, Flonda, ~
Kansos Coty (Gobble 2·3) at· Texas
(Millwood 13·9). 3 05 p m
(Thomson 12·1 1), a 05 p.m.

&gt;' ' '... '

·ae.

s,

Barry Wasson fro m Salt Lake of the PCL
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Activated OF
Melvm Mora from the 15-day disabled
hst
BOSTON RED SOX-Recall ed RHP
Todd Jones from Augusta of the South
AtlantiC leag ue Pu rc hased the contract
of OF An dy Abad from Pawtucket ot the
ll Des•gnated RHP Ryan Cameron for
assignment
CHICAGO WHIT E SOX-Recalled
AHP Jon Adl&lt;ms tram Char lott e of th e IL
Pu'rch ased th e contracts of INF Aaron
M1l es OF Armando R1os and AHP Jose
Pantagua from Charlot!e Oes•gnated
LHP M1ke Porz1o for assignment
ACtivAted RHP 81lly Koch from the 15day disabled !1st
C LEVELAND INDIANS- Act1vated C
V1ctor Martinez trom the 15-d ay diSAbled
list Recalled INF Zach Sorenson tram
Buffalo ol the ll
DETROIT TIGERS - Re ca lled AH P
Matt Anderson RHP Gary Knott s LHP
Enc Eckenslahler and C Matt Walbeck
from Toledo of th e IL Announced OF
Bobby H1ggmson dropped the appeal of
h1s two-ga me suspens ion stemmmg from
h1s ejeC tiOn from an Aug 10 game
agamst M1nnesota
KANSAS C ITY ROYALS-Recalled
LHP J1mmy Gobble, RHP Bract Voyles
and 38 Jarred Patterson from Ornaha ot
the PCL Purchased the contracts of C
Tom Pr~ce and OF Oav1d DeJesus from
Omaha Transferred RHP Kevm App•er
and RHP Kyle Snyder tram the 15·day to

the 60-day d•sabled l1st
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Activated OF
Jermmno Dye from the 15-day d1saDied
I1st
SEATTLE MARIN ERS-RecalleCI RHP
G11 Meche AHP Aaron Looper AHP J J
Putz, AHP Bnan Sweeney INF-OF Chad
Meyers a11d OF .Jamal Strong !rom
Tacoma ollhe PCL

TORONTO

BLUE

JAYS- Reca lled

RHP Bnan Bowles AHP V1nn1e Chulk
INF How1e Clark and RHP Dan Re•chert
lr om Syracuse of the ll
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES - Activated AHP
Roberto Hernandez from the 15·day disab led
list
Recalled
OF
Ryan
Langerhans INF M1 ke Hassman and
LHP Horac•o Ram1rez from R1chmond of
the tL
CHICAGO CUBS - Act1vated 28 Mark
Grud21elanek from the 15-day dtsabled
It s! Reca lled 1B Hee Seop Cho1 and
RHP Todd Wellemeyer lrom Iowa of the

PCL
CINCINNATI REDS- Acqutred OF Enc
Valent from Philadelphia as the player to
be named to comp lete Kelly Stinnett
trade Transferred 38 Brandon Larson
frorn the 15·day to the 60·day disabled
list
MONTREAL EXPOS - S1gned RHP
Jose Mercedes Des1gnated LHP Scott
Downs for ass1gn ment
NEW YORK METS- Recalled CF
P1ent1ce Redman . AHP Edwin Almonte
and LHP Ja1 me Ce rd a from Noriolk of the

ll Pu rc hased the contracts of 28 Danny
Garc•a and INF Jorge Ve landle from
Norfolk Tran sferred OF Cliff Floyd f rom
the 15-day to the 60-day d•sabled li st
Des1gnated RHP Jason Middlebrook tor
ass•gnment
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Ac qu1red
LHP Valeno pe Los Santos from
Milwaukee for a pl ayer to b6 named or
cash

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Activated RHP
Trevor Hoffman from the 60-day disabled
hst Recalled LHP M1ke Bynum and OF
Xav1er Nady from Portland of the PCL
Purchased the contracts of INF Khalil
Greene trom Portland and C Humberto
Quintero from Mobile of the Southern
League
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Recalled
RHP Kev1n Cerreta, OF Tony To rca to INF
Lance N1ekro and lNF Cody Ransom
!rom Fresno of the PCL

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Aasoclatlon
DALLAS MAV ERICKS-Signed G Jon
Stefansson

MINNESOTA

Cleveland •. 321: Mueller, Boston, 321,
Garctaparra. BostOn, 320 MOrdonez,

GB ,'

l

o • ',

AMERICAN LEAGUE LEADERS
New York, 322,
GAnderaon, Anaheim , 322; Bradley,
BATTING~Jater,

Chlcogo,

601

84 75

Thuraday·a Gom08
Clewoland al Dotrott. 1 05 p.m
Arizona at Kansas City, 2.05 p.m.
Ooklan~ at 88htmore. 3 05 p.m '
N.V..Vankees at Toronto, 7 05 p.m.
Sean!e at Tampa Say, 7'15 p.m

m

.887 2

TIMBERWOLVES-

Rescmded their quailfymg offer toG M1ke
Wilks mak1ng h•m a fr ee agent

FOOTBALL
Natlonat Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS-Cia1med RB
Woody Dantzler off wa1ve rs from Dallas
Relea sed FB George Layne
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Signed LB
Mlk e Caldwell Re leased LB Marqu1s
Smith S1gned OL M1ke Houghton and RB

319; Blalock. Texas, .318,

!Suzuki, Seattle, 318
HOME RUNS-ARodrlguez, Tell:aS,

40, Thomas. Chicago. 36. Jo!Giambo,

STOLEN BASE5-Crawford, Tampa
Bay. 4S. ASancha t, Dotrolt, 32.

To

!Suzuki, Seanle, 30: ASoriano, New

York, 30, Beltran, Kansas C1ty, 30'
Damon. Boston . 26; Baldelli, Tampa
Bay, 22
PITCHING (13 Doclslons)-THudoo~,
Oakland, 14·4, .778, 2.40, Halladay,
Toronto,

18·6,

750, 3 58; Loalta,

Chk&gt;ago, 18·6, .750. 2 45: Mayor,
Seattle, 17·6. 739, 3.59; PMartlnez,
Bos1on. 10·4, 714, 2.52; Peltotte. New

Ad ..•

York, 17-7
.708. 4 01: Ponson,
Baltlmorl8, 14·6, .700, 3.77; OLowe,

Boston . 14-6 .. 700. 4.78.
STRIKEOUTS-Hallodoy,

'

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

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (740) 992·21 55
Call us at: (304) 675·1333
Fax us at: (740) 992·2157
Fax us at: (304) 675·5234
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:

clalllfled@mydallytrlbune.com

classified@ mydallyaentlnel.com

Offtee 11o~~

York, 167, Loaiza, Chloago, 166;
Colon . Chicago. 158, Pstlltlo, Now
Yor~, 154

Oakland,

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

Trav1s Stephens to tt-.e practice squad
CHICAGO BEARS-Signed G Corbin
Lacma Wa1ved OT BernarCI Robertson

WR

Ced r 1c James to th e pract1ce squad
DETROIT LIONS- Placed RB James
Stewar t on th e reserve-InJU red Its!
S1gned G Davia Miller and DE Jonathan
Taylor to the pract1ce squad
HOUSTON TEXAN S-S•gnedtB Steve
Foley Blld LB Armeg•s Spearman
Wa•ved LB Er1k Flowers LB J•mmy
McC lam G Ed Ta amu and OT Keith
Wnght S1gned OL Garnck Jones to th e
pract1ce sq uad

NEW

ENGLAND

PATRIOTS-

Released S Lawyer M•lloy

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-S ogn ed WR
Talman Gardner FB Jeremy Allen OT
Kondenck Allen C Torence Wagner and
DB l eonard Myl es to the pract1 ce squad

SEATTLE SEAHAWK S-Sogned OT
Walter Jones to a one-year contract
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEE R S ~ S1gned
WR Edell Shepherd and LB Justin Smith
to the pract1ce squad
TE NN ESSEE TITANS-S•gned S Scott
McGarraha n
ReiA:tsed
LB
Fran~
Chamberlin

HOCKEY
Nat1anal Hockey League
DALLAS STARS-Announced
rawem ent o f LW K1rk Mull er

the

COLLEGE
FINDLAY - Narned
hockey coach

Pat

Ford men s

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •.•
\\ \ 01 \ 1 I \II \ 1..._

C-1 Beer Carry Out permll
for sale, Chester Township
Me•gs Cou nty, send letters
of mlerest to The Da•ly
Sentmat PO Box 729·20
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769

YAHDSAI.E·

-vs-

an Iron pin;

CHRISTOPHER
D.
SMITH AKA
CHRISTOPHER
SMITH, ET Al.
SECOND AMENDED
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order
of Sale Issued out of
the

Common

Pleas

Court
ol
Meigs
County, Ohio, in the
case ol the Home
National
Bank,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Christopher D. Smith
aka Christopher
Smith,
el
al.,
Defendants, upon a
Judgment
therein
rendered, being Case
No. 03-CV40 In said
Court, tho Shariff of
Meigs, County, Ohio,
win offer lor sale al
the front door ol the
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on tho
23rd day ol October,
2003, at tO:OO a.m.,
the following lands
and tenemonto, local·
ed at 317 Wright
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45789. A complete
legal de1crlptlon of
the real 11tate II ao
loll owa:
Slluata
In
the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
Malga County, Stall
ol Ohio and maro
fully dtlacrlbod 11 lot·
Iowa: Commencing at
1 point In lho Inter·
IICIIon of lho lXIII·
lng 01otorly rlghl of
way llno al Mulberry
Avanue end tho exlal·
lng northerly right of
woy fino ol Wright
SlrMI; lhanco N 44
dogreea 52' 28" E
along the oxlallng
northerly right ol way
llno ol Wrlghl Street,
871 .721eetto a point;
lhonco N 53 degreea
00' 00" E continuing "
along 11ld line 426.01
feet to an Iron pin and

thence N

2 degrees 00'00" W
along a line, 177.09
feet lo an iron pin;
thence S B4 degrees
00'00" E along a line,
277.00 feet to an Iron
pin; thence S 17
degrees 00" 00'" E •
along a line, 332.00
feet lo an Iron pin;
!hence S 26 degrees
30'00" e along a line,
21.00 feel to an Iron
pin ; thence S 53
degrees 00'00" W
along a line, 121.00
feet

to

an

1ron

pin;

thence S 26 degrees
30'00" E along a line,
125.00 feet to an Iron
pin in the existing
northerly right of way
of Wrlghl
Street;
thence S 53 degrees
00'00" W along the
existing
northerly
right of way line of
Wright Street, 43 .00
feet to the point of
beginning and contelnlng2.725 acres.
Subject lo all legal
hlghwayo and esse·
manti of record.
Description for the
above
described
lracla being the result
of a ourvey made by
Richard C. Glaogow,
FI.S. No. 5161 .
Reference
Deed :
Volume 115, Page
883, Melgo County
Official Recorda.
Audltor'e Parcel No.
16.()()302. 000
The above deacrlbed

TERMS OF SALE:
10% down day of
sale,

balance

on

delivery of deed. Sold
subject

2003

to

accrued

real

estate

taxes.

ALL
SHERIFF'S
SALES
OPERATE
UNDER THE DOC·
TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR. PROSPEC·
TIVE PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO. THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE
STATUS
OF
TITLE
PRIOR TO
SALE.
l?ougla&amp; W. Little,
Attorney for Plaintiff
(8) 27, (9) 3, 10

Silcond

Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
parking lol of The
Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Ia aelllng
lor c11h In hand or
certified check tht
following collateral:
1993 Ford Ranger
1 FTCR11XXPPB8432

2

Ia" without warranties

6

value.

appointment

to

inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date con~

tool s· Jeans · household·
1tems 588 Kerr Ad tread·
m 111 - po~tab l e-basket- ba II·
court- t ee ns -ladle s-p I ussize-name- brand -c lothes·
peg-board-much more

I w1il Not be respons1ble for
1915
any debts other than my Thurs-Fn·Sal 9am
own Oav!d Flowers 9·3·03 Chatham Ave behmd Sm ith·
Bu1ck hol1day-decoratmns
Say good bye to h1gh phona collectables lots of mise
b1lls 1 New local phone servICe Wllh FREE unl1m11ad Thurs·Sat 9am-6pm Hugel
nat1on w1de long Distance Indoor! In metal bUilding m
near
red 1·800-6 35-2906
or Chesh•re
www FreedomMov•e com/lip llght'park watch for stgns
aysyou Loca l Agents want- name-brand-clothlng-mlsc·
somethlng-lor·everyonel
ed

The Farmera Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio. reaervea the
right lo bid at thla
sale, and Ia withdrew
the · above collateral
prior to aale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Sovlnga
Company reaervea
the right Ia reject any

All t;pes of Industrial
Sewtng Machines for sale
Bltnd Stitch, Single Needle,
Upholstery, Surgtng &amp; Leather

r

304-458-1667

A Jump
on
SAVINGS

Independent Medtcaid Provider!.":
(LPN) avatlable for
11P-7A shtlt in
Metgs, Gallia and Athens Co.

1-304-773-5739

Shop the
Clossifieds!

FoUNil

for the famtly of the late
Andrew Lambert,
Rutland, Ohto .
The Benefit will be having the
Graceman Quartet &amp;
Joy FM Trio
Saturday, Septamber 6th
at 7 pm
Rutland Church of God
Rutland, Ohio.
I

Looking for a new
house, pet or career?
TP....
to sniff
the best b••v•cl
In the a

•-s

Find the111 in the
Classifi

Found blacklwh1te long ha1r
male dog w1th 2 collars
black lea th er flea collar
740·
Hazel R1dge Road,
256·1967
Found- female Yellow Lab
143JHorner
H1ll
area

(740)992· 7458

(740) 992-2531
81g one day only sate . Sept
5th at Laurel CliH F M
Church. all clothing $1 per
bag, m1sc 1tems $1 or less,
all proceeds go to m•sslon
fund ram or shme

70

1
pn

YARn SALE·

G.\1.1 ll~li.IS
3 Fam1ly Yard Sale 41/2
m1les ou t 325 on Wolfs Run
Road Sept 4 6
9am-?,
1oys -m1c rowavo hlgh -c hatrclothes. other stu I!

'

B1g
Yard
Sale
clothes
Fr•day/Saturday
dishes home -In! garde ntools lots more 3-m•les out
Addlson-P•ke

~allipoli' iail~ utrtbune

Com mumty Sale. Che rr yRidge R1o Grande, 5th -6th,
furn~ture -d • shes-toys, bookshuge
ant•ques-clothmg
selection ra•nlsh1ne

leoint ~lea,ant lt;t,ttr
The Daily Sentinel
iunbap uti me' ·ientinel

Estate/Fem11y
Frlday+Saturdey 1 2ml out
Raccoon
Ad off
218.
daybed en tertainment center,
color
tv
sewmg
mach1ne recliner, rocker.
baby Items kids/adu lt clothmg. newborn/adult shoes,
miSC hOuSehold ItemS, 4
tires. watch for s1gns

• Once you hevealgnetl up lor the Sen~o Dlacoun~ your renewol notice will raft eel your dlocount

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

Subscriber'sName __________
flddress _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1

Mall or dtop off 1hla c011pon along with a copy ol yout photo 10 to
l
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O.Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
:
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Fn·Sat
Gravelytractor/parts,
250-gallon
tuel·oll-tank on stand, 5012" new cement-blocks.
Brick School Road beh•nd
school

9·4

Proolsets D•amonds, Gold
U S Currency.·
Rmgs
MTS Coin Shop. 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,

WHo l&gt;o I SEE"
A~ol.li A 4~1JNJ:&gt; -fta:~/2.
fi.-Ai ~ I ~ve A
1"~/Nf:! A~iff Hl314HT?&gt;.

740·446-2842
1'11'111, , 11 '\ 1
-. 1 1{\ I( I "
;;;;;:::;::;::;::;::;::;;;;;;;

1116

HELPWANDD

$250-$500/week, will tram to
work at home helptng the
US Govt f1le HUD/FHA mort·
gage 1efunds no experience
necessary ca ll 1-800· 778-

www.comlca.com

li10
STNA's to become part of a

carmg team wtth managers
who hsten We bet•eve m
opeh
communicatiOn.
coachtng and encou raging
advancement We are proud
of our faclhty and have h1gh
standards If you do to we
would hke to hear from you
You must truly enjoy working
with the elderly and want lo
become a part of our 24·
hour team We offer com·
pet1!1ve wages and benefits
lf mterested please contact
Teresa Woods DON at 1740-446-7112 or app ly 1n
perso n at 170 Pmecre st Dr ,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
AVON I All Area sl To Buy or
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304·
675-1429
Busy Salon has great opportunity for expenenced stylist,
with managers 11cenae 740441 -1880

HELPWAHml

..__ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
Oommo's Now H1rlng all
toca!IOns
PI
Pleasant
Gallipolis, &amp; Pomeroy Safe
dr1vers must be 18 Apply in
person at locations

7pm

Mov1ng Sale, Fn 9/5-Sat 9/6,
8am-4pm, household items, Three Family Garage Sale
furmtu re, tools, 83 Herman Thurs . Frl . and Sat 25 i 4
Mt Vernon Avenue PI PI
Ad , Cen1enary

1116.

1116
•

Ofllce Manager needed for a
last paced office Must like
dealing with the public and
have excellence telephone
manners Prefer someone
with eMperlence in secretarial work Good pay &amp; benef•ts
Drop olf resume at
lrvms Glass Serv1ce 1273
eastern Ave, Gallipolis. Ohio

The AppalaChian Center for
Econom1c
Networks
(ACEnel). a reg•onal non
profit economic development organiZBIIOn. seeks
applicants for the pos1t1on ol
Tech Ventures Programs
manager
Thi S pos111on
report to the Director ol
ACEnet Tech Ventures Tecl1
Ventures 1s the dlv1s1on of
ACEnet that works to stlmu"
late the technology sector by
providing access to technology and to creating opportunitieS to r md1v1du als and
small bus.ness owners WithIn the Appalachi an Oh1o
regmn
The
Programs
Manager will be respons•ble
for the ptann•ng. staff management , and strategiC
development of th e Tech
Ventures programs He/She
will be responsible tor work
1ng w•th tho Tech Ventures
stall to prov•de cons!ruchve
leedbac~ on Tech Ven tures
systems and program s
focus on team development
and facilitate team/diVISion
meetings Tho Program s
Manager 1s respons•ble fw
the superv•s•on of a sta ll ol
seve n and directly account·
able for thEI evaluation and
reflectton of the outcomes ol
the
Tech
Ventures
Programs
Olher areas of responsibility
mclude researchmg potenti al lundmg opportunit ie s
grant writing and preparing
reports for lunde rt&gt;, tmd
developmg
re lati onshipS
with key people and organizations to further assist 1n
ACEnet's locus on econom
ic development (entrepre·
neusr1hlp and business
Incubation)
The Ideal candidate will pos·
seas a bachelor's degree In
edmin 1strat 1on
business
publlc admlmstratlon, eco·
nomic development or relet·
ed field plus 3 years of retal·
eel professional eMpenence
A master's degree Is pre·
ferred Candidate must also
possess elfectlve lnterper·
sonal skills. staff management and team building
skills and strategiC program

HELP WANIMl
HFJ.t•WANJ'toll
L.;.••••••_.l
L.--------'

Full Time positions, mostly
FleMible schedule's,
days
apply between 1Oam-11am,
McCiures
Mon-Thur-Sat,
Restaurant 820 Jackson 740-446·4423
P1ke, GallipoliS Ohio 45631
Part·hme maintenance pos1·
F u rmtu re-Wa rehouse/de ll II· t1on tor rental proper1tes
e r.y pos1tlon, Immediate must be able to do plumbopemng full-time Apply In •ng, electncal. some conperson, L1le Style F1,1rnlture, struction Must be able to
3rd &amp; Olive Gallipolis. OH deal w1th tenants Send
9:30-Spm No phone calls resume to CLA 573 cro
pleaael
GalhpOtls Dailey Tribune PO
Box 469. Gallipolis Ohio
Help wanted caring for the 45631
elderly Darst Group Home,
now paytng mtmmum wage, Reeplte Providers needed
new sh1Hs 7am-3pm, 7am· 1n the Pt Pleasanl area. 18+
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm· with WV license Call REM
7am, call 740-992·5023
OPTIONS (304)768-5575

Mon·Fn 9am to 5p m ask lor
Local lnsurallce Agency hlr· Mark
1ng Full or Part-lime position
for P &amp; C L1censed
AN/LPN (HOME HEALTH)
Insurance Agent
Send
Part or Full time. per viSit or
Resumes to JA28, 200
hourly,401 ~.cafeteria plan,
Main Street Pomt Pleasant.
mileage. umtorm
wv 25550
allowances CEU rei m·
bursement Sam s club,
Need to eam Money? Lets
Health &amp; Life 105 PTO
talk the NEW Avon Call
which accumulates from
Marilyn 304-882·2645 to
first work day Top pay In Trilearn all the ways •I can work
State Sign on bonus 800·
for you

759-5383
EOE

Up to $8 an hour, weekly pay. weekly bonue
potential and lull bentflla

$200 Sign-On Bonus!
Huge 3 Fam11y Yard Sale
Thurs/Frl 9-2pm Sat 9-12
Noon, 907 27th Street 9·4
thru 9·6

Dt ISINtl&gt;"
'I'KAINIMi

1180

WANilll

110

Hmu,;

To Do

mRSAu:

Will Clean Homes cook HIS!O! ICBI 3 story hom e,
take ca re of elderly/diS· adj01n1ng bus1ness bu1'd1ng
abled (304)6 75- 1365 or spac1ous parkmg private
(304 )675 7040
entrance frontage RT33
c1ty water sept1c system
W1ll pressure wash homes. $1 19 000, (740)773·9 151
tra1lers decks metal build· Homo with 3 Acres In West
1ngs and gutters Call 17401
Co lumbi a
Acres~
tram
446 0 151 as k lor Ron or
below
8al lt1old 0 Priced
leave a message
appraisal
$48,000

(304)773·5343

W1ll1ng to Sit w1th an elderly
pe rson 5 days a week Meadowbrook Dnvo 3br
hours 7am-5pm no week · 2ba Hmdwuod lloors l ary~::~
ends ca ll (740)949-2722
tam•ly room Privata. fenced
back
yard
and
1·1'1\11\1
garage (304)675- 1303

1210

Dt 'SINE'"

New Home 3BA 2baths 2
car ga1age Oebb1e Dnve
Gallipolla Career College
GAllipOliS VI8W photOIInlor
(Careers Close To Home)
ma11on
on
ltne
INOTICE1
Call Today' 740 -4 46-4367. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH · wwworvbcom code 81903
1·800·2 14·0452
lNG CO recommends that or ca ll 740-245·9268 afte1
www galllpollscarsttrcollttyu com
you do bus• noss With pooplo 5pm
Rea #90·05· 12748
you know and NOT to send
Ranch Style 3BA, 2balhs
money th1ough the ma11 un!1l
garage, 8nck School Road ,
you have Investigated th e
G~ll1polis, v1ew -pho10/Inlor·
ofter1ng
mat1on
on
lme
at
25 Serious People Wanted
www orvb com. code 8 1803
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI or ca ll 740·367-7039
Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash lor tM 60 Vending mac:hlnee with
excellent locations ell tor Remodeled 3 bedmom 1
pound s you LOSE•
1/2 bath Ill good ne•ghbor$10,995 800-234-6982
Safe Natural No Drugs
hood · 1n Middl epor t (740)
800-201-0832
992-7743
01
VIOW
llll
ll·lNiM lNAt .
www orvb com/181503
3 rolls 4 used hnk fence
SERVICES
740-367 -0144
320

01'1~ ll!'ll INrt'\'

INFOCISION IS
OFFERING
A $200 SIGN ON
BONUS

r0

H~1J' W.•NIHl

and quahf1cat•ons For con·
S!derat•on, send resume let·
ter at application SAlary h•story and the con!act 1nlor
mat1on tor three prolesslona l
references to the attent1on ol
Renee
Law hs-Ma rtm
ACEnet
94
Co lumbus
Road Atnens Ot)IO 45701
t:elli.lel~a.ceM.lWQJhs...O[Q A
19VIBW
Of
app llcafl0ns1resu mes will
beg1n on September 2'1st
and con tinu e until pos1Mn
IS fill ed

t..,

0353

Mu111-1am11y yard sa le, Sept
CNA s
&amp;
ReSident
corner of
5th &amp; 6th
Assistants· Applications Are
Flatwoods &amp; Rocksprings
Now Be1ng Accepted For
Roads 9-4pm Aa1n ca ncels
CNA s
&amp;
Resident
Ass•stants, Experience A
"Ra1d A b1g One' Rl 7 3
Plu s/Job Tra1mng On Site.
m11es north of Chester. Sept
Compet111ve
Wages,
4th and 5th 8 till 5, furniture.
Homelike
Atmosphere,
Home lntenor electnc fileSeveral Benef1ts Available,
place cethng fans, glass·
May
Be
Appl1catlons
ware. craft supplies and
Obtained Mon-Sun 9·4pm,
hundreds more greatltems
Ravenswood Care Center.
Washington
St .
Sept 3rd &amp; 4th 3 1amlly yard 1113
Ravenswood ,
WV,
sale, 102 Mary St , New
References Required
Haven. clothes. lots 101 toys
mtanl and up, ch ild's car
seats and booster. fireplace
mantle full size truck topper,
microwave, resin paho set,
and much more
--------Yard Sa~e September 4th
9am·4pm September 5th
9am ·3pm
Wolf Pen.
Pomeroy (Russell's)

Garage 'Sale
9am·3pm, Man's Yard Sale Cab1net
Thurs Fri-Sat, 3519 St Rt Maker suppltes·repa•r parts·
JUnk 2903 Parrish Ave , Pt
14 1
Pleasant Fr,da)l, 9am-4pm
Huge Yard Sale Jewelry Sat 9em-2pm
stuffed animals m1sc 568
Pme H1ll Road Sept-2,3 4
Movmg Sale Appliances
furniture. and more At2 S 4
Ladles Fellowship Is havrng
miles pas! S1tver bridge, turn
a yard sale at the Church
right onto Gills Lane (Gills
Sheher on Valley V1ew Or,
Farm) Sept 3rd &amp; 4th 3pm·
Crown City, 9am·4pm

J
•

Baby bed co mplete-boys
cloth1ng-exe rc1ser· s mall
k•tchen appliances-range
hOod-lots of mce Items

Lost- white envelope con Garage sale con llnuedta1 nmg valuable papers. 33695 Sw1ck Ad , Wed
VICinity ot Pleasant Valley Thurs, Fn
Hospital (740)949-2582
Large
garage
sa le September 4·6 Bradbury
~
YAunS•u:
Church parsonage bes1de
WYVKJWMPO
39558
BradDury Ro ad, MICidleport.

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

lwrlght(!!)lc.nel

Gl\EAW~\·

(.ANI' ANil

no

mBuv

Yard Sale
I 2 m11es out Arbors at Gallipolis a skllleCI
Route 218. Sept 1st-5th nurs1ng facility. IS seekmg an
AN , Stall Development
vanety of •tams
Coordmator Must posses
Yard Sale 4th-5th 2 m11es strong organizational SkillS
East of Porter on 554, n•ce and ability 10 function as part
clothes baby Items, day bed of an diSCIPlinary team We
ofler compet1t1ve wage s and
Ouahl1ed candiYard Sale 6·lam11y Sept 1· benefitS
3 temale cats I tam ale dog Sept4 8612 St At 7S
dates please contact Teresa
1 female rabbit 32565 Dark
Woods DON at 1·740·446·
Hollow Rd Pome roy
Yard Sale 9/4 1 mile out2i6 7112 or apply m person at
at Hanar's B 30·?
baby- 170 Pinecrest Or, Gallipolis.
8 K1!1ens L11ter tramed
Items, day-bed &amp; mtsc ra 1n OH 45631
(304)675-61 18
cancels
Arbors at Galltpolls, a skilled
K1tten
to
g1ve
away ~74
YARD
nursmg tac11ity, IS eeek1ng
(740)992-9425

good hOme. call (740)992· 442 South 6th -Middleport·
2531
Saturday September 6th

Senior
on your home delivered subscription!

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

The Montgomery Fam1ly
reumon
Will
be
held
September 14 2003, 0 0
Mcintyre Park Shelter K1ll ·
Deer, 1Dam-dusk

Klnens to g1ve away to a

If so, you qualify for a

tact Cyndoe Gillilan at
992·2135.
(9) 3, 4, 5

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE:Is hereby
given
that
on
Salurday, September
6, 2003, at 10:00 a.m.,
a public sale will be
held at 211 Weat

real eatate Ia aold "11
PROPERTY
ADORESS:
317
Wright
Straet,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
FIEAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$75,000.00. The real
eatate cannol be aold
for leas than two·
thirds the appraised

where is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty g1ven.
For further Information, or for an

Public Notice

1999
Chevrolet
Cavalier
CP
1GIJOI241X7306765
1886 Dodge Dakota
1 B7GG22V3WS59643

or covenanta.

or all bids submitted.
The
above
described collaleral
will be sold "as -is·

t

WAl'mlll

POUCIES: OtNo Vttlty PuDIIthlng retervtalht right to tdll, reJect, or cancel any ad It any time . Errore muet bt reported on the lire! day of
Trlb\ln..Stntlntt-Rtgllter will bt retponelble for no mort then the coet of the epen occupl.,;i by the error end only the flr.t lnurtlon We shell not bt I
tlll'f to" or ••penH thlt r..ultl from the publlcltion or orNetlon of an edvertl11mtnt Corr•ctlon will bt madt In tht tlrlt avelleblt edition • 8011.
ntiWIYI oontldlntllt. • Curr1nt rate Clrd applltl. • All real tttltt advtrttllmtntt trt tubjtct to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thll n""P••poorl
tcoepll only help wanted adt m•llng EOE etanderda We will not knowingly accept eny edvtrtielng ln violation ollh1 lew

Sept 5·6 9am. ~PJM.o Absolute Top Dollar US
Gold
Coins,
t::till:8J;t oil of Kerr Rd,guns· S1lver,

PtlMt:KOY/MU&gt;Ili.E

Are you 65 or older~

Jn•d•v Jn•Column: 1:00 p.m.
Sundaya P•per

De•crlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When NHded
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

G~UJPOLIS
ANNOliNCtl\l!:NTS

In Next Day•a Paper

• Start Your Ad1 With A Keyword •Include Complete

SAu;.

the real point of
beginning for lhe land
herein
described;
thence N 37 degrees
00'00" w a1on11 a line
passing an Iron pin at
131 .32 feet a total dlstanca ol499.39feet to

classified@ mydallyreglster.com

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DALLAS

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IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 03 CV 40

'•

Paid training, paid holldaya, paid vocations.

$200 Sign-On Bonus I
Allnfoclaloln we offer more than juata job,
we offer you e career.

Call today!
1-877-463-3247
ext. 2454

WANTED Pert-time direct
care workers needeCI to
teach personal and community skills to Individuals with
mental retardation In the
Athens Area
1) 38 hrs Jpm Frl thru aam
Mon. aleap-ovar required.

21 29 hre

10am-6pm

SaVSun
4-8pm
Wed/ThursiFrl
Requirements High School
degree ,
valid
driver's
license good driving record
and adequate auto lnsur·
ance coverage
Salary
7 00/hour Send resume to
Buckeye
Community
Services, PO Box 604,
Jackson,
OH
45640
management/development
Equal ACEnel Is seeking someone
Deadline 9·10·03
Opponunlty Employer
with proven e~eperlence In
systems development, net·
work bu~ldlng and economic
development •nitlatlves This
ls a lull-time position, otterlng a competitive ben~Jflts
and
salary
package
Anticipated salary would be
$35,000
ol
$40,000,
depending on expenence

'

or atop by:
242 3rd A venus
Gallipolis, OH
www.lnloclalon.com

..

,.

'

'

.

••

I'Rc

Monn.E Hmu :'

611.12 Till down tra11er new Darst Adult Group Home
$1100 740 446 -2927
has a vacancy for a malo Of
1emale. ca ll (740)992 -5023
8·1! pool·1able wl p1ng-pong
top good cond balls, sever
TURNED DOWN ON
al cue stiCks $250
after SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
5pm 740·446-0796
No Fee Unless We W•n'
Chest-freezer CB base SIEI
t1on 4 VW tires and wheels
740-256-930 I

1·888-582·3345
IH II i'l\11

310

Hmm'

For Sale 2 Grnvo lots at
IUHSAI.J..
Oh1o
Valley
Memory
Garden 740-256-6070
(3)FHA &amp; VA hornes se t up
101 unmed1ate possess 1on all
Large norse saddle black within t 5 m1n ot downtown
with sllvEH lnm on edge and GAIIIj)OIIs Rates as low as
chest plate, $150 call 7406~o (740)446·3218
446-0798 alter 5pm

HlK S.\t .E
1992 Redman 14x70 Mobile
Home 3BA 1 bath very
good condttl on all electnc
CA. and other ex:ras ask •ng
$12,500neg 740 245-5 122
Cole's Mobile Homes
u s so EEJs t. Athens Oh1o
45701 740 -592 1!)72
Land Homo Packages avall oble In your area (740)446

3384
Must so il n1co 2 bod room
14 x70 Vmyl Siding and 2x6
wa lls Ca ll Karena 740-365-

_
99_4_B_ _ _ _ __

New 14 w1de on ly $699
I 0 Room house 7 acres at down and on ly $167 98 per
land ftmced pasture , R1ve1 month Ca ll N•kk1 740-385
'Iloilo
740-367- 767 1
Valley DISII!CI
0144
Baby sl\fm g 1n Syracuse
New 2003 Doublow1de 3 BR
area coun ty cer!it1ed or pri&amp; 2 Bath Only $1695 down
2
br
House'
va te pay day s mghts &amp;
and &amp;295,mo t -HOD-69 1Only
$6
500
HUD
home
we ekends. (740)992-63 16
6777
F01 hstmQ ca ll I 800-7 193001 E~e t F t44
O&amp;J Picky Painters
No Problem Sale- Want a
F1ee Est1males lnlenor an
new sechonflt home? No
extenor pa1ntong G1ve you• 4BA house and 69 9-scws Problem Need toundatlon
Bnck 3200 sq- tt new home and sept1c? Nu Problem
home or garage a hash
new look We pamt homes Cla rk CIHlpel Rd $265k Need ut11111es run or drive7 40-256· 1226
garages mobile homes
way? No Probl em Wan t b•g
bu1ld1ngs, barns and roofs
sa v1ngs on a 2003 model
5 Mmn S!fOOt, Middl epor t 3 No Problem Co les Mobile
Lu;enced and 1nsured
bedroom bnck 1 ba th. Homes. U S , 50 East
(Call M·S, 8·6)
library ga1age. hardwood Athen~ Oh1o 740-592 1972
(304)895·3074
IIOO!S $74 500 (7 40)592 S1nce t967 , Where You Got
20 Years e~~:perlence
4409
and reterences
Your Money's Worlh

t80

w .wn:n

E•perlenced
Carpenter and Gardner
Has own tools &amp; Mow1ng
equtpment

L---A~
C,:;R~M~GI:iE,__.J

$107,900 740·446·2196

Country Land
Cou ntry Uvmg
Country Fun

NO JOB IS TO
BIG OR SMALL.
Cell 304·576-3320 or
cell304·593·1719
If no answer leave messago
all calls Will be answered or
returned as soon as poss•ble
-------,.-Georges Portable Sawmill.
don 1 haul your logs 10 the
mill just call304-675-1957
J1m's CarpentrY and small
landscap1ng 20 yrs expenence
Free
est1 mate
~ 740]4 46 - 2506

Trentml . .tont , all type1,
740 _245•5877 .
Will babySit m my hOme
come and enjOy a fun tbv
fng. and educatiOnal anvi ronment 1 am a Mathe• of!
two and have over 5 years
profehlonal experience with
c~ ldren
Flexible hOurs
Call or teave message 740
256-6338

I .OTS &amp;

8 Room Ranch on lull Dase
ment 3BR 2 112 bAths 2 112
acres covereo dec k FA

Recrea 1•onal Land &amp; Scentc
Homes1tes available
throug hou! Southern Ohio
All real Illata edvertl•lntiJ
In thll newepaper It
ubject to the F•deral
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which maktt It Illegal to
advtnlet "any
preference, llmit•tlon or
dltorlmlnttton buect on
rec•, color, retlglon, aex
familial etatut or n~~tlonal
origtn, or any lnt.ntlon to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
dltcrlmlnatlon "
Thll ntwtpaptr will not
knowlnglv acc•pt
tdVtrtlttmentt for r11'1
eetete which It In
violation ot the law Our
rtadtrt ere hereby
Informed thet al!
dwelling• advertla~ In
thta newapap•r are
avallabl• on an equet
opportunlt~ baMa.

GALLIA COUNTY
FEATURES
Home &amp; Hunt1ng
Land avatlable m three
areas. 3 to 33 acres, w1H1 on
11 +ac•e tra ct touching
Wayne National Forest
Owner Fmanc•ng Available
Call for FREE mapsl

800·21 3·8365
www countrytyme com
Lot

lor

sate

In

Aacme

(740)992·5858
New on market Beaulllul 5+
acres
Coun!r~ sethng, 5
mm from hospital and all
amenlt1es Homes ite ready
with stoned Clnveway end
water
T1mbe r se rtous
1nqumes only
740 -446 0908 Of 740·645-0244

·--------- ---

�Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2003

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

r----~~

NEA Crouword Puzzle

2218.
I~

Adutt· l'ool &amp;

233, Secon d Ave , 2 -story
house 2BFI. 11!2Bath , furnished kitchen. WID hookup, ott street parking, walk
anywhere downtown. 12
monthS min_ 5545. month.
·re!idep, no pets. 740-446-

1br All utilities- Included.

$325 , mon.th.{304)675·3854

SR .
unfurnished,
2
5300/mo. 53 00/dep. plus
util itles. no pets 740-4463 bedroom hou se
1n 4313
Minersville, $400 par month.
$250 depOSi t, (740)949- Applications being accepted
for very ntce. clean 2 bed2025
roo m apartment in co untry
3 bedroom ho use
in seH ing, yet close to town .
Syracuse. $400 per month, Large living room &amp; kitchen .
$250 deposi t. (7 40)949- w asher. dryer. stove, trig,
202~
and dish washer Included.
3 br. house for ren t wl full,
basement &amp; garage, lg. yard
$4SO. 8 man + $250 _ dep
304 •675 •4469

Taki ng applications lor 1 446-4425 01 446-3936
bedroom. S300 per month ·
plus dep(jsi t &amp; utilities &amp; ref·
erences. (740)992 ' 6154
t&lt;~)K

R ENT

Toy Rat Ttrrltr, 8 wuka md,

HOlRliOW

=

i ltl l':; Sel l

TRvacs

FOR SALE

tland·mada, finished $350.
1984 Chevrol•t SlllltrtdO,
like new, save 5150. 446Canning Toma1011. You pic+&lt;
....
2 5°6
125
$4 .00/buohol. We pick
•000 mlll4. •••. - ·000·
For Sale good us.ct wuher
&amp; dryer, glass top lable/2
chairs. 740-446-1630
Farms

Letart Falls

247-2113

740. Condition. -41'.4,
{~)593·19&amp;4

dozen, {740)949·1316

Ralrigerator $75., Whirlpool
Washer $95 .. Kenmore
dryer $125., G.E. refrlgera101. like
new, $195.,
Kenmore Washer ldrver set
$300., 3-couchs- $50. each,
table 4-chalrs, $95., Klngsize
box-spring/mattress
$1 00., chest/dresser w/mlrror $t40.
Skaggs 740446-7398
_:_:::_:_::::__ _ ::-----:
Thompso ns App liance &amp;
Repair-675·7388. For sa le,
re-conditioned automa tic
washers &amp; drye rs, relrlgera·
tors , gas and ' electric
ranges. air conditioners, and
wrmger washers . Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

1 \lnt "' 1'1 '111 '

r

.\ II \ I , IIUk

roBUY

..-

·-------1995 Ford E- 350 Van , 14 ft.
high cube box, excellent
cond. 740.446-9416

---::-::---:::---::---:-

91 Dodge Caravan LE ,
loaded, one owner, 66K,
$2,000, 740·949-2481 or
740·992-6145 1ea11e mes-

sage.
95 Nissan Pathfinder 4x4,

_.~

HAY&amp;

N 740-446·6865

Manor
and
Riverside 6308
· Apar tments 1n Middleport.
JET
From $278·$348 . Call 740AERATION MOTORS
992·5064 . Equal Housing
Repaired , New &amp;· Rebuilt In
Opportunities
__:_:_ _ _ __ __ Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
800-537-9528.
Honeysuckle Hills Apts.

MmuRCYa..:s

388-9325

Sui'H.llli

1993 Chevy Lumina, exc .
cond, 89,000 miles, call after
5pm, 740·379-2196

Announcements

t

-------C&amp;C
General
Home
Meintenence- Painting, vinyl ·

siding. carpan1ry, doors,
mobile

homo repair ancl more. For
free estimate call Cho1, 740·
992-6323.

NOMATTCDI
WHAT YO/Jl'l
STYlf...

On Sale Now:

Budweiser &amp; Bud Light
6 pk .....$4, 19 12 pk ....$8.39
Busch &amp; Busch Light
12 pk...$6.19 24 pk....$11.99
Corona ·
6 pk .... $6.49
Marlboro
Pack ... $2.80 Carton ... $27.99
Camel
Pack....$2.65 Carton $2~.49
DoraI
Pack... $2.35 Carton ...$23.49
USA Gold
Pack..,$2.15 Carton ...$21.49

..

..

21t1r

JONES'

Till~

(304)675-2728

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

heart-·
Till we meet
again
06/09153
09/03/93

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

LUI&lt;E.'l''S ALWA'l'S SNE.AKIN'

Bucket Truck

FOOD UNDER TH'
TABI.E TO THAT
DOG 0' HIS !!

./--......1

Dodue
Now lnllrviiWIDIID

Person

Location: 252 Upper River-Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio

...

UNLIMITED INCOME
POTENTIAL
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
Must possess good people ski lls,
ambitious attitude, and the desire
too succeed.

Announcements
9ue to " large
number or phone
mquiries concerning
the Reenactment of
Morgan's Raid in
Meigs County.
September 3 through
September 7. 2003,
the Meigs County
Historical Socicly
and Meigs County .

Museum gives
notificalion to the
public that they are
not involved with the
event and have no
responsibility or
liab~ity for the event.

25
28
30

- wool?"
41 Jltl
50 ltlort
51 Takt t
gendor 11
52 Fto1 jet

'
0~1Cil l'nir~.

Is lhu unllthc·

W11s

a wcnk jump

ovcrcn ll , prnm islnl{ 11 decent siX-l'lml

HE'S RIGHT
UP FRONT
'BOUT IT !!

:THE BOUN L.OSEit

t't

DOl{\ Fff.LGOOC&gt;, MOll\! "''
l WOI'o\ \ ()Crl.,e&gt;LE:. TO GO TO
~Cf-\OOL TOD~'(

l-800-822-0417

sullnnd snrnc 11-111 JtointN . &lt;Must Cll ·
(Wr\fll would c o n sid•~ r l hul hnnd l1111
stron!t( nnd overt·H II nne spn dt!.) South's
double wn!l fur tukco ut. North ' s four
nn·trmnJJ dculctl n lon~ot suit and uskctl
his pnrtn er to dmoxe tnm11111.
In five dlntn oncl.'l, t:rmlicr rufrt.~ thu
HJIIIC IC lt!t,d, Jtlnyt'tl U htlll l'l to dumllly'!'i

cnllecl rnr II trump. Enst I'OloiC

wll h hi s nee n1HI r et'f'lrncd th e h enri
queen to South's k ln,l(. Ucclnt·cr exited
wit h n t hi rrl lr uar t to Enst . who l ed
hiiL'k h i.~ lnst heart . South ruf£htM.
by Lula Campo•
Cronlor nocclt.Jd l.n Jilny huth m inors
Cotobflty ClphAr cryptograms are crel'l t&amp;d -lfOm quottll lons bv famous
wllhuttt furt her lnss. The hlddlnK told
people, ptlst And preaon t. Each letter In thtt Ci pher atandli lor ano!her
him t.hnt !·:" ~ ' twd s tarll!d with five
· Toaay's clue : B equals F
spnd es . From th e pl11 y, t•: n ~ t wns
'"'q knnwn ln hnvo four helll' l ~ . Ills rush·
lrq~ 111 wilh th e dlnrnoncJ act! m ~nnt " H Q M F
0
H M Y F
DP
L

!.

I"" 'I'OU

&amp;in:;~ NOi &amp; Fi'¥.1N~

'/OUI\\6 L~! l't'~ .)l)'!l\ I\\C.
Fl ~~i WEE-K. Of
SC.I-\00 L.. !

,..DOI\\'1 W OI&lt;:.~Y- -I'll\ NO\
1&gt;-..

or - tl rfl·d; nnd l1c c nusc E;ns t t111d
tho ttM,ht for u nwm c nt or tw o, Suul h
fe lt thut hfl hnd lhrel', not two. If !W,

IE.~I 0~ :')OMI:.\f\IN ' !

1

GEt Cash Today

..!i
:,,~
· r .~1· '._.

I '
I
1
I

,·. "t

...~ • ' 'l!1
•

~

loved ones.

I ..et me shnw you how .

If!·

Rocky Hup~ Insurance
and Financ1al Services

ll'i/1 11.&gt;/d l ·or i() IJ.rp

(740) 843-5264

flea ~arket
l'lept. lith 6 flth

Maplewood lAke

•. $7.50
740-949-2734

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mower•
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eater•
• Tillers • Edgers

• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

740·992·2432

HOWARDL
WRITESEL
*RIOFINB

•Ho•

MllmNIIICE

.Sa.ESS
liTTER
*Fnehllmllll*

949-1405

•

l'omeroy EaRle•

RINGO 2171
Every Thunday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:~0
Earlv birds starl
• 6:30
Lu•t ThurNday of
ev.ry monlh
AII pack $.~.1MJ
llrlng this coupon
Buy $5.1MJ
Bonanza (jet

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING'

! ~~~~:::.:~~=~jli!goj

Let m~ ]o 11 fe r ycu'

"

IN THE SIXTH CI-IAPTER OF PROVERBS. IT SAVS,
•' 60 TO T~E ANT, T~OU 5LU66ARD .. CONSIDER.
t-IER WA'(S, AND S.E WISE II

----.....

r-------

THE944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp;..Cars
County Rd . #35
Racine, Ohio

(740) 517-9138
or
(740) 949..()020

(740) 992-31~4
992-6635
Advertise
in this
spucefor$25
per month.

Sorn eonn fur whom you '"C&lt;o do no nice
111lngs In lhtt pust cnuiU !Jfl re!l pOnfllOie
t(Jdny fo1 on onlny up n cha nnt~l lor yo11
lllnt CQU1tl lnlJd to tmnolits ond per su nAI
gnln ol !\OIIl a 1\011. You doMrvo II.

CAPHt CU IIN ID• c 22-Jen

AMOVE, NOT
~ME. KIND

low ro form four tlmpl1 wordt.

I

J

RE VAG

,
1 1 1

"You

Wtll disc over."a

wise col..

league told me, " th at success ca n

N0 V0 CY

I I,

101 -

_

_

I
•

I

I Ia 0
_

_

.

Com plell Ike c:hvckle QUO!td
by filling '" '"• m l.~ln g word'
you d•velop from 1/ep N~ , 3 btlow .

~ PRI NT NUMBERED
~ l ErrE~S IN SQUARES

A

UNSCRAMBl E

U' AN SWfli!

fORI

•

SCRAM-LETS

I I

•

•

ANSW.IS

T
Uneosy . Ha unt . Adopt - Vo1ced · PAY for I
After having my first garag e sale I lea rne d a good

ltu :~

OF GLUE

in ways ntlmr!l mlglll not.
AOUAR IUS ~J tt n . 20-F eb. 10) - II you
wnnt to nprtv yow 1utll totlny , ymH orunlng po tenllnl I ~ ' 11!118 high . Mu r: ll will
dopencl on how Industrious you ore nnd
wt1 etlu.lr you l fll fl In nn ll llul'ltlons thut
offer 1111\ {l fARIO!il IB1Utll5 .
PI SCES (FelL 20- MArCil 20) - Those
with whorn you've buil t !'l lmng bomls of
friendship w1ll !m rt 1a ones who'U otler you
the grea test tmloyrnenllotlr:ty, Don' t waste
your lime on choul sh or jontouslype!l
ARIE S (Morch 2t ·Ap•ll 19) _. ThA1 6'1! An
01 11 RA)IIng, "II It nln'l brDkfl , don't !1 • II."
You'd be snwt tod!ly 10 con tinue tllong
tln e8 ti1 AI tuw o be en goi ng wen 101 you
an(./ hR VO IHHH1 pr odUCIIY8 t hUS ll'l l
r orago tuperifii OniB.
TA URU S (April 20 -Mily 20)- Ym1.
I!I ~ (Jve mos t other al gns. should appreCI ·
&amp;to the M 8e ot dolnQ som ethlnQ that Ia

-CAUFIELD
t'M OFf ON A L-ONG
~LlRNEYI

SOU P TO
Bass.

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month .

1 $' .....

-ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIICDII
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

.J40-992·1811
Stop &amp; Compare

•

m rtorly , nn e! 1111 &amp; hold!l rrue today . Oel
thing s orunniJad before nroc&amp;Mina wilt'
Any lli/II OI I !i piFlll

GEMINI (M11y 2 t ·Juno 20) - Don't let up
on thn t !'\ trong Cl)l1 !1 ol vou 'vH held aver yow
Htsourr.e!\ You'1e In n Q00c1 llnarlCtal poa1·
lion today ner.Ause ot M w yo1/ ve handled
and budgeted you r mpney In !he past.
CANCEn (.lut1fJ 21-.July 22) - It you CM
make !1 18 llr-tnslfl ! \Jetwflfl ll wtlat you concaptunhte Ml/ t1ow to put II Into practice,
you'll hftve 1111 H•t:uptlorl l'llly prOducti ve (JIIy .
Your rn1 mJ hold"' ntlthe t~ n&amp;we ra , eo use It
LEO I.Juty 23·ALJg 22) - Tapplnu Into a
narrow sourcn of mon ey lodav mav come
ftiUI Ar tor you than you cou ld lmnglnt,
but It wrm ·t ne aomethlng y ou simp ly
l lumblod onto You'll be amart t nough to
IIIJUrB II ou l

Classlfleds

Get

Fast
Results

--··-- .............

WHiffs

DEMONI C
Possess1oN

'.

th•

be·

Allhougll you l lfifl HIWI.I y!l lmpAII ll would
llo truo. todny yau·u fln(J out tor ~ure thAt lesson 1 discovered tha t a ny rtem tS worth what some ·
you nnvo nn [llfv umr c11r1 be de ~andfHt o ne 15 writing to PAY for IT
on.
p e1 r.o n wilt come lt110U(JI1 101 you ...;...;._ _...;;..._ _ _ _,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

LADY, OWE. 15

992·621 5

.,

lt11tu of
0 foRtorrgng•
ur terombltd word•

lhRI' R

SAGITTA RIUS !No•. 23-Dec 21) -

WV Contractors·Lie. #003506

(10'x10' 610'x2D'I

'fhls cQultJ b" vow yenr lor go ttl no tnlrl(l:\
donA hocm 1!\ e you won't wnsto vow limo
on ldenUsllt: SIJflr; ulatlon5 or Rllfllract cOt I:
!Jida lfltlons. You 'll comamtrul e on IIHH
whi ch Is re.1 1 nnd mAke \~r e fit s trlll t!9
townrd ~ u r.cess
v tnno (Auy 2:1-Sept. 72) .- Once yotl
take lho loylcn l ~tops towftrtls nc hlevln~ "
very difficult yonl tOtlny , f\tl or se should neatly lallmto plnce. ThO limo ytMJ Sp6rxll!llll'ltq.
Ifill your plfl tl will I&gt;O wAll worth the offot1
LIBRA (So-pl. 23 -0 c t. 23) - H 1£ue IH A

torlny . You t::rl11lrJ n•pmlonr. B A t,~rAAt viclory In n slmllnt mannnr to the way you
achteved t1 in lllo Jl AS I.

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

97 Beech St.
ffilddleport, OH

PR EVIOUS SOLUTION - "I wrl1e a book for no oth er reason
four hundred acres lo my magni fi cent
es1ato." - Jack London
ftl an to add three o r

fl ~llCtl y whAt lfl llkft ly to IHl ppen to you

MYERS PAVING

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

ZKPPWJJ

SQIII, 3. 200J

nlloul hi story ropDBIIng Itself -

V. C. YOUNG Ill .

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

~~~
High&amp; Dry

EWZFZMYR

1 1 1 1

Free Estlmales

871-2487 or 448-2112

MJJLHWFI

powetlul ''"'•
"::::·=;:::;:;:~·:_,_be m easured by how you reacl to
SC OfW tO !Oct. 24-No, . 22) - T• lk r
the obslacles - -- ·- the · ··."

CARPENTEit
SERVICE

Henderson, WV

GKNMY

EW

I

KNOW TI-lE ANSWEr{ , EITHER ..

'

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

HDJJ

two th ings you lutv8 oulny lor vou today : ~--------.,
one Is yo111 pmslsto nce, tmtlhe o ther Ia
T U RA l
::
yow pra ctir.u l i11s Unc:l11 . You 'll llo Wl9 0 ·
I
e11 ough 10 ll l~tnd th o pnlr Into 8 stnota
5
6 :

1 TRIED THAT .. TI-IE ANT DIDN'T

5FREE

• Room Addltlone &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garaa••
• Etectrtc11 &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Quner~
• VInyl Skiing &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Dick•

FGW

D

'bor&lt;JIIrthdo;y:
W mlnt~ Rdny ,

Pomtroy, Ohio

33795 Hiland Rd.

per
month

I&lt;. I Nt&gt; OF

IK9 Mlddlcpurl

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Advertise
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·5232
in this

$75

llu~

n,

A \oJOII.I&lt;.ING
V.A.C.A.TI ON

YOUNG'S

Self·Storage

space
for

I:

nlforduhle nnd ensy It Is 1o
get th~ cuveruge yuu need.

AstroGraph

FGMF

EWBLZW

Nw

TLYFDYKW

I.c llridgcur

f'or your romlly lind

BrIng your
1
I
'Laat chac:klng ototomon1
'Lilli pay c h ec k llu b
1'Photo 1.0. 'Phone
Bill
withSt.
nome ond oddreao
1.
M•ln
116
I
Pe
OH
12
T4CJ.IUlr~':llt (22741

r-----::--:-;

rnndc his L'll lliTncl.
fo'{) r thi s pcrfu rtlHH\ce , Cronillr wnn F~
l lle tJri'f.C fnr th P lwsl dc.•clnrer·f)\ lly of
the yenr fnnn l hl' French rnugm.tnc,

hurlul and nnul expenses·

1

ZWMPPKZMYTW

l·:niil hnd (lillYone t luh.
ROW
lltw klnl( hi!! jurll(mr nt , CrrmiCJ' h~r ln
low club In dumtny'··" 10! Wh on \hut
ZMTW
hold, rlcdn rcr flnm&gt;Hctl in tnuups nnd

~
Don't leuve the debt of ,

' '
( 1 .,

1\I&lt;INI&lt; IN I ill~. 1\ll
I () II i lr-J I Y ~ I I IHI I 'I II I Ill ~J I l Ill I l

1!

GO~/\ F~K.E. \\TI LL If\(~~ lh11 l he hud IH:c -qucun -duubl clun

"WVs #I C h evy, PanUac. l:lul&lt;:k. Olds
&amp; Cu !iiOill Van Dealer"

Pomeroy, OH 45769

Norris Northup

1'11/tl!

24

.

whn li\'l!R in r 1 nrl ~ .
Wcsl's two SJHulcs

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

32119 Welshtown Ad,

Help Wanted

ptrton

8 Subotantltl
7 Klllor
whalt
8 Indiana
Jon to
quoat
8 Unitt•

dctli , plny"d during the l tltlO

guropcnn

New&amp; Used

JIM'S SMALL
EN.GINE REPAIR

Help Wanted

22
23

Rill of thllt 0110, with lUI IHC!:CIIcn l di~ ­
tllny nf countlnJ( by l'hlllppc Cronlu t',

Dean Hill

WE REPAIR

We Take Trades.
Cook Motol'll

18
20

CELEBRITY CIPHER

All Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

2000 Bulcl&lt; Century $3,995.
1997 Ply Breeze $2,395.
1994 Saturn $2,195.

Always In our

l 'n 11~

thQd ub~ .

II('C, IIIHI

Betu,eerr Racine
&amp; Syracuse.
lArge spaces

(304)675-7873

33,000 miles. sun under
warranty. 2000 below retail.

l'nss

13
11

~tiVI

hlttlly
S.rov. up
Plon1
tcltnct
SIOYI ptrt
Pickling
tolutlont
Hurry
Movo
In 1 clrclo ·
JtP-11
dogt
Quito
raining
(2 wda.l
Couplt
Unprln·
olpltd ont

nut If he had dc!nycd thut campal~o~n
and tmltctJ the oth er three !!Uits flrNI ,
he woulcJ huve kn own how ,to hundh.t

-;:======~~=======::;

on St. Rt. 124

weekdays, (740)742-3020
weekends.

740·4-46·0103
2000 Toyota Camry V·6 XLE

+

4 NT

4
5

Rainbow
thape
Gratty
II old
Flotd
COttlng
Jordanlon
Dloplacod

34 Won't
commit
35 Quilt
40 Sudty
41 Comlct'
MI.. KoH
43 Flthlng
lurot
45 lncrtttt
45 Trouttr
htH
47 "HIYI you

•n,cloturl

In yesterdby'!\ L' olurnn, the dtH.: Inrt:t·
coultln't wRit ltJ ploy his key club suit,

740.992-7599

Waterproofing.

1998 Buick Century Gold
AKC Pomeranian pups, 2 w/Gold Interior, loaded, cold
mon ths old, 3-male, 1-red, air, garage kept, e•cellent
1-wolf-sable, condition. 57,000 mile&amp;, 35
1-whlte,
$300/aach. 740·388·8642 nilles per gallon. $7,500

1jJ~
Susan Weaver
Lightfoot

1'11 ~!1
1'11)(/t

Eut
44

II 'y l'h 1111 p Altlt&gt;r

Mlft/lO/lGL~!

MmuR

m~L

In Memory

J(rJow ...
_, IT'S A
~

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

For Sale
1963 Harley
Davidson XLH motorcycle,
runs
good/looks good,

$3,450 OBO, 740·992·3394

1994 Pontiac Sunbird, 4
cylinder. 100,000 miles, 4dr,
exc. cond. $1850 740-446·
4514 or 740-446-3248

2 t1tl

North
I'UI'IN

12

a•rmtnt

Windows • Rooling

Ing $5.900. 740·446-7168

baths,

Wt•ll l

• ReplaL:ement

2001 Honda Shadow Spirit,
VT 1100. 7,400 miles, ask-

windows.

3

BUILDERS InC.

(304)675-5509 after 5:30

1994 LeBaron LE, V-6,
loaded, 68,000 actual mites,

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applica tions for wailing Block , brick, sewer pipes.
list for Hud -subsized, I · br, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
1995 Saturn 4 door, has
apartment, ca ll 675 -6679 Wi nters , Rio Grande, OH
drawbar X,r lowing behind
EHO
Call 740·245·5121.
motor home. 100,500 miles.
Excellent Condition. $2,495
Phone. {304)675-3275

Ll___s_H_O_P_C_LA_S_S_I_FI_E_o_s_ _....,.l
Announcements

L.------_.1

i

8U1UlJNG

~

pm

1975 Ford Ellie, 118.903 nll'"'-~~--mllos. 351 w. runs great.
HOME
{740)949·0124. $500. good
iMPKoVEMI:NIN .
!lros.'falrcond•!lon
BASEMENT
1989 Ford Taurus, needs In
WATERPROOFINQ
tank fuel pump. good cond,
lifetime guarblack . no rust. 740·446· Unconditional
antee . loc:al references tur0796 after 5pm
nlshed. Established 1975.
1990 Chevy Caprice S.W, Call 24 Hrs. 1740) 446·
50,000
milo
on 0870, Rogers Basement
englne,$1000, Buck-stove·
tire-place-lnserl/34" blower
$250. 740--446·79~ 1
-:-:::-:-:::--:-:-:-:--:-::::-1990 CheiiY truck bed 8ft.,
5 H.P. Honda 2·man post
digger, · 1992 Ford Probe
$750., Greenbrier riding
lawn-mower 740-256-1102

2

Vulnor·nblc : Nellhcr

BISSEll

I 2I~IN~in"A-CA~H~
I
ii1"

2 SA, perfect , a1r. porch.
Loca ted on Colonial Dr.
very nice. 740 -446 -2003 or
behind H1ghway Patrol Pos t NEW AND USED STEEL
740-446 -, 409
on Jackson Pike 1 &amp; 2 br.
Steel Beams, Pipe Ae~ar
28A Mobile Home, no pets, rent starling $255. tow &amp; For
Concreto', Anglo.
$ 100/dep .,
$250/mo. moderate income. Equal Channel. Flat Bar, Stool
includes water 740-446- Housing Opp ortunity. 740- Grating
For
Drains,
446-3344 TOO 1·800·750· Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
3617
0750.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
3br mobile home with w/d. - - - - - - - - : Located
in Glenwood. Lg . 3 br. over Huttons Car Tuesdav. Wedne sday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
(304 )576-9991
Wash, $500. per man . all
Saturday
&amp;
Thursday.
utll. included except elec .
3BR Mobile Home. wa ter 304-675-7255 or 304-372- Sunday. (740)446- 7300
and gas paid $400/dep . 6094
Sports Card Collection, sets ,
$400/rent ,
2Br Mobi le
many
R.C's
Inserts-all
Home. 740 -446·0241
New 1BR apt, 740·446sports. All or any part of.
- - - - - - - : - - : - - 0390
3br. Mobile Home in Letart - - : : - - - : : - - - : : - - - (304)675·2473 or (304)675·
$325. month, $250 DepoSit . Now Takin., 'Applicalions- 6991
(304)895-38 65
35 West 2 Bedroom
Wooden Oinetle (table &amp; 4
Townhouse
Apartments,
$100.00 Walker
chairs)
Trailer for rent, 3BA , 2 lull Includes Water Sewage,
4
leg cane $20.00,
$35.00.,
bath, exc cond _on St. 160. Trash, $350/Mo., 740-446·
AU In gocxt condition. Call
in Porter, $400/mo + deposit 0008
{304)675·3423
740 -446-4514 or 740-446·
Small Apa rtment tor rent.
3248

1\ 4i .'1

1' ''td er : South

{304 )675·3 100·8:00-5 00

r

DOWN

t K ,I I 0 !1 t1 4
... AK7:1

llhl.

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

{304 )882·3339

• 740-256·6089

ANTIQUES

•

•

Limousine show cattle for 1998 Super Hawk 996, 600
sale, 2-black, 2-red , reg. miles. Excellent CondiUon.
sharp. $8,000.

r..___ Ir ·

&lt;l.

South
I t

Jyr old Mare Appalossa ..,
•
Pasa mix. Chocolate w/whlte
spots, saddl&amp;lbrldle broken. 1998 125 Yamaha Breeze.
Follows
commands. like new. $1500.

(304 )937 -2281

4 D!I 6 -4 '1.
• 1/ .I I 0 :t
t A (/ l
... 9

• "2
• 7
4 .I II 11

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garuges

~AWJ&gt;sP&lt;ll
&amp;

._______ F41

1•:1uoil

AA KQ 10 5:1

992-5479

{304)773-5640

5-spoed, $2600.

~TOCK

'1.

Ill ;, '1. .

Wr111'

Jeff Warner Ins.

1994 S-10 Extended Cab,
89,000 miles. 4.3 V-6: 5
speed. Sharp, EKcellent
condition. Muat aee to
apPreciate .
$4,500 .

r

r,

l'iltiHh

Older Pin ball machine In
wo,rklrl&gt;g order or not. 97 Ford Ranger 4x4 $4600
96 Ford Explorer 4•4 $4200,
B &amp; D Auto Sales HWV 160

GRAIN
For Lease: One bedroom. Buy or sell. Riverine
unfurnished. newly redeco- Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SR t24 E. Pomeroy, 740· Hay for sale. Timothy and
rated. second floor Apt. , at
992· 2526
Rus s Moore, Orchard
grass. Round
corner of Second and Pine owner.
Bales. $15.00. Square bales
A!C ; $300.00 pe1 month;
$3.00. Good horse hay. Call
water included. Security and
kev deposit. Ott street park·
ing References Required.
No pets 740-446-4425 or Baby--Grand Plano for sale, ~~"11'"--:~
--.,~
10
446-3936
needs tuning, $500. tlrm ,

$250. Month.{304)675-1365

Cellular

$8.000.

WANTllD

mR

Two Mobile Homes, both
2BA, waterflras h/ sewage
paid, no pe ts.
$400
rerit /$ 40 0 d e posi t ,
$285rent/$285dep.
740-

+ 11

4 tl

$5.00/buahol. Ploaoo coil a 130&lt;1)&amp;75' 1861
day ohood 10 ordor. O'Brlon 1998 Chovy Trilcl&lt;. Excollont

...

6954

• Au1 •

29670 Bllhan Road
RICine, Ohio
4S771
740oMf.2217

14x 70 Mobile Home 2BR
with don . Loca ted behind
$3500. 080 740·367-0399
Fox 's
Pizza
1n
Point
~Y..-.~ &amp;
Pleasant .
$435 .00/MO.
Auros
C"""'""
SALE
HOMI-:s
Referen ces &amp; Deposit Furnished 3 rooms and bath Dodge Ram with carpel
Required. Call 304-67:i- upstairs apt, clean , no pets. cleaning mount 740-4463423
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. 2002 Gulf91roam lnnsbruck
reference
&amp;
deposit 2200
Hondas,
chevys,
etcl camper, 27'. like new, queen
1519
740
446
'
1br Furnished Mobile Home. required.
Cool . . Downl l
Cenlral
cara.ltrucks from $500. For bedroom. full bath, sleeps 6,
tree water. No children or GraciouS living. 1 and 2 bed- Cooling Syslems, New and listings 1-8()1).719·3001 ext
pets. (304)675-8079
room apartments at Village Used. Installed . (740)446· 3901
2 bedroom. all elec tric, AJC,
m Spring Valley area
$325/mon th , $250/deposit
(304)675 -2900 or (740)441 ·

"' J 7

~~ l()l,lCJ&lt; '

•111'--!!!!"'_ _ _""1

L

u~t nl-11:1

North

B &amp; 0 Aukl Sllto HWY 1150
UKC. $128.00. 740·258· N 740 ue,oee5

Good Used Appliances ,
Reconditioned
and Country Product M•rktt
Guaranteed
Wash•ra , Potatoes,
Tomatoea.
Dryers.
Ranges.
and Melone. Corn. etc. In seaFlefrlgerators, Some start at son. Troyers Woodcraft 9
Landlord pays water and $95. Skaggs Appllanceo, 76 miles west ot Gallipolis
garbag e. Ter:~ant pays elec - V•ne St. {740)446-7396
along St R1141
tric. Total electnc w/AC. No
pe ts non smokers on ly Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark Potatoes
for
sale
4450 per Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio (Ken nebec. Red Pontiac),
$400 dep osit
month 446 -2205 or 446· (740)446-7444 1·877-830·
Mon-Sal. , 65002 State
9585 Ask for Virginia
9 t62. Free Estimates, Easy Route 124, Reedsville. Oh,
::-::-c-::=-::--'---:= ·-:= ' tlnanc1ng, 90 days same as 50411 S10
BEAUTIFUL
APART - cash . Visa/ Master Card,
Sweet corn for sale, $1 .50
AT
BUDGET Drive- a- !inte save alot.
MENTS

3BR . ! -bath. full -basement,
Evans " Heights
are a,
$500/mo.
4BR. 2-bath . very nice
home, near river. OIJ SA 75.
$700/mo. 1-year lea se. 740· PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
367-0299 or 709·0299
Drwe from $297 to $383.
For Rent - Nice 4 BR ho me Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
near Rio Grand e. $750 00 740- 446 -2568.
Equal
per month. Deposi t and Housing Oppo rtunity.
References required. Call _ __:__:_:_-:-:::----:-:Wiseman Real Est ate at Beech Street. Middleport , 1
740-446 ·3644
bed room furnished apartment . utilities paid, deposit &amp;
For sale or rent- 3 bedroom references,
no
pets.
house in Pomeroy. deposit &amp; (740)992-0t 65
refere nces
required. --'-'----:---:;-:--:-;~
(740)94 9-7004
For l ease · Beautiful. 1600
Sq Ft., restored, second
Home from $199/month. floor apartment in Historic
foreclosure homes 4°'o District. Ideal for professiondown . 30 yea rs at 8.5 ~o ap1. al couple. all mcxtern
'4 listings call 600- 319-3323 amM I!ies. 2 bedrooms:
aKI 1709.
spaciou s livi ng/dining; lot s
ol storage . 11 /2 baths: rear
Small 3BA- house. 47 112 deck: HVAC. $600/month
Spruce Street, Gallipolis plu s utilities. Security and
$400/deposit , $400/mon lh
key depos1t. No pets.
740· 44 6·0332
Reference11 required. 740·

Monii.EHOMES

rio

ltHor
3t Blrthdty
no.
40 Provldta
lor
42 Ptychlc
power
43 S.rtbblo
down
44 Ttmporory
lob
48 Rodeo rope
4t Way out
53 Mytttry
54 Slotpa
noltlly
55 Wondtrer
55 Condltd
10 Ftrm

116 Ford Prooo $11150.

2 bedroom apartment $2~
~
i080
plu s utilities. Third Street.
Racine. Oh. (740)247-4292 .Atmlln oak table, 2 chairs.

4926

•

l'oot,

Bo~y

---:-'---::--:-::---::--:- Parlo, Start $385/Mo. No Pomerenlan Pupplll, for 98 Ford Conturt $2500.
1 BA . CIA. Quill Locaflen, Pel&gt;, LOIH Pluo Socur11y :N_I_;o._7_40--:882:-:--3S-8_5_-:"_ 00 For:cl FOOUI .5·1Pitcl
near Holzer, W/0 Hookup. D•poslt Required , Oayt: PoodiM, Tiny roy pupplt1, $21500.
$359.00 plus utilities. leau 740·4-48-3481 ; Evenlngt: whlll, IIIO any wl'llte malt t2 CoYIIItr 11200.
&amp; deposit reQulrod , no peto. 741).387-01502.
for otud uNic&lt;t, (740)887· 98 Ford Conturo $11500.
87 l'on~IC Grand Am $300. ,
740·446·2957
340&lt;1, olynOooruom

I '\ I \ I "

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

Townhouse CKC Cocker Span!ll pupt 89 Ford Muotang 18500.
mobile homt IOta, QUit! 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Tara
country 11ening. $1 ~ S per menta. turnlshtd end unfur· Apartmentl. Very Sptcloul, for ~ale, buff, buff &amp; whlt1 &amp; 98 Toyoto Comry 14800.
montl'l . Includes wate r, nlshed. securltv depoalt 2 81droomt. 2 Fk&gt;ora, CA. 1 cr11m, ahots &amp; wormed, 98 l'ontloc Flroblrd $4800.
98 Oldo Cutlooo 2dr. 112500
sewer. trash. 740·332·2 167 required, no pols, 740·992· 112 Bath. Nowty Corpttod, $200. (740)892·7371
N~

?

"""

�Page 86 • The Qrily Sentinel

'

www .mydailysentinel.co~

·Wednesday, September 3o 2003
.

Marshall hopes to Brewers edge Reds
eliminate turnovers
against Tennessee
BY JOHN RABY

Associated Press
•

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. - Five turnovers
were only a temporary slowdown for Marshall
in a season-opening vtctory over Dtvtsmn 1AA Hofslra.
Doing the same thing Saturday at Tennessee
wou ld be devastating.
.
· Marshall knows it must be close to pertect
against the 12th-ranked Volunteers at
I 04,079-seat Neyland Stadium in what will be
the largest crowd ever to see the Thundenng
Herd play.
. .
. ..
''We've got a chore 111 front of us. coach
Bob Pruett said Tuesday. "The llliiiUte you
show a weakness, they're going to stomp you.
There's no other way to put it - we're in a
war.
"We ·have to go down there and certain ly
d iminate turnovers. We've got to be able to
protect the passer."
,. Junior quarterback Stan Hill fumbled the
ball away twice and threw three mtercepttons
in last Saturday's 45-2 1 win.
''They were my fault. and it just happens. I
guess," Hill said. ''I've got to hold on!o the.
ball a little tighter and be more prote(.·uve ot
the football."
Two of Hill's interceptions glanced otT
receivers' hands on sl ightly high throws . One
of those off the hands of Tremel Gmllory
resulted in a 94-yard interception return. The.
other tipped interception was off the hands ot
Brad Bates.
Overall. Pruett was pleased with the performance of Hill. who threw for a career-high
344 yards.
''He gets the ball up high every now and
then. He's just got to get the ball down a Ill! I~
hit. He was on target there prelty much.
Pruett said. "He had five drops and three interceptions out of 35 passes. He completed 25.
That's really a pretty good da{'
To have a good day agamst Tennessee.

MILWAUKEE (AP) While he's known for his
defense. ·Eddie Perez also
c:ln come through in the
clutch at the plate.
He certainly did Tuesday
night, hitting . a double and
two singles and .dnvmg 111
two nms. httmg the
Milwaukee Brewers to a 4-3
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
· .
"Eddie's defense is always
top-notch," Milwauk~e manager Ned Yost smd. But he
has a knack for coming up
with the big hit, too."
After the Brewers s4uandered a 3-0 lead. Perez hit a
tiebreaking double off
Danny Graves (4- 15) in the
eighth. driving in Wes Helms
from first on a hit-and-run.
Reliever Luis Vizcaino (43) pitched a peri'ect eighth.
- Dan Kolb pitched a 1-2-3
ninth to eam his 15th straight
save. tying the cluh's best
since entering the National
League in 1998. Bob
Wickman had 15 straight
saves in 1999. ·
Milwaukee has won 13 of
15. and 3 of 4 since having

Marshall receivers
will have to minimize dropped passes - the Herd had
five
against
Hofstra. They ' ll
also have to assist
top threats Darius
Watts and Josh
Davis. who combined for 14 catches and 210 yards
Saturday.
No other receiver had more than
twn t:atches..
.
"They're goi ng to be keying on Josh and
Darius . It will be good f(lf us Ill have a btg
game and help out the offense.'' said tight end
Jason Rader.

Bates. who missed half of last season with a
knee injury. wasn't satisfied w.ith.gelting just
two cat.:hes for four vards 111 hts ltrst start.
"This is a lot more serious than Hofstra,"
Bates said. "It was good getting my feet ":et,
hut I've ~ot T~mtessee up thts week. So we ve
llot to ~et mor~ focust"d. "
.
" Marshall also must have success on the
"round. The Thundering Herd ran .for 26 1
yards against Hofstra. but Pruett knows that
won't happen on Saturday.
"I don't know the last time anybody had 250
yards against Tennessee." Pruett said .
Fresno State was held to minus- I yard on 24
rushing attempts in a 24-6 loss to the .
Volumcers last SaiUrday.
Marshall will seek its first win against a
teani ranked in The Associated Press Top 25.
Marshall has lost its last li1ur games against
teams from major conferences. Virginia Tech
and Florida pi led up the po1111s early m
blowout victories the past two seasons.
"We've going to have to eliminate pretty
much all the mistakes. We can 't even make hitie mistakes." Watts said. "It's going to be a
precise game."

BY ELIZABETH

A.

DAVIS

Associated Press
KNOXVILLE. Tenn . Casey Clausen was so upset
about throwing an interception Fresno State returned 81
yards for a touchdo~n he
apo lo~ized to the detenstve
coordmator for blowing the
shutout.
Even though the Vols won
the season opener 24-6, it
was not the finest performance for Tennessee's senior
quarterback ..
His mediocre throwing and
two interceptions didn't he.lp
win over fans who sttll
haven't jumped on the
C lausen bandwagon and
believe he doesn't measure
up to his predecessors, Tee
Manin and Peyton Manning.
Clausen hopes to be better
when the 12th-ra nked Vols
( 1-0) host Marshall (1-0) on
Saturday.
"I wasn ' t as sharp as I
should have been . The
biggest thing is we won the
game, but I want to play
well," Clausen said Tuesday.
"There were a lot of things I
could have done better."
'Coach Phillip Fulmer
blamed Clausen's mediocre
game on Fresno State's shifty
defense and Tennessee's new
receivers. Offensive coordinator Randy Sanders said the
ball was slippery from the
center's sweatmg.
"Casey has played better
and will play better in the
future . He did manage the
ga me very well," Fulmer
said .
But Clausen didn't offer
excuses. He said the&lt;offense
adjusted to Fresno State 's
defense at halftime, the
receivers were mostly where
. they were supposed to be and
that a wet ball wasn't a problcni.
\'If I play well, we did
. gobd. I don ' t play well, I'll
take the heat," he said. "It's
part of it. If you can't take
the heat, you shouldn't play
quarterback ."
Quarterbacks usually get
the most scrutiny. But
c ·lausen had the additional
burden of following Martin,
who led the Vols to the 1998
national championship, and

the revered Peyton Manning,
who holds most Tennessee
passing records.
Clausen. of Northridge.
Calif., won the starting job
five games into his freshman
year and led th': Vols to SIX
straight wins betore a loss 111
the Cottoo Bowl to Kansas
State. Entering his senior
year. Clausen is second
behind only Mannmg 111
Tennessee record books in
six career categories. And he
did the one thing Manning
couldn't: beat Florida.
But to many Vols fans.
Clausen. isn't in the same
league .
"It's big shoes to fill when
you come in an\) you're the
next quarterhack alter two
guys who ' ve had streets
named after them:· said
Sanders. a former Tennessee
quarterback. "For a competitor like Casey, it's a situation
he wants to be in."
" In . a lot of ways ,
Tennessee fans are spoi led by
what we ' ve been able to get
from our quarterback position in the past."
Clausen and the Vols
.looked good at the stan of
the game, opening with . an
eight-p lay, 76-yard dnve
capped by a 9-yard touchdown pass to James Banks.
Clausen went 4-@f-6 in the
series. •

from Page 81
rowed from a local dealership. Claret! laler
said he exaggerated the value of the items
sto len.
Geiger said if Claret! had told the truth from
the beginning. "'This might h(tve been over 111
July."
.. .' .
Clarett's attorney. Scolt Schttt . dtd not
return telephone messages seeking comment.
Ohio State officials are currentl y 111 the
process of res~onding to. several pages of
NCAA &lt;lllegattons dealing wtth Claret! .
Geiger said the response could come as early

first inning with a single and
Ginter followed with his II th
home run of the season oil
P;ml Wilson. The Brewers
added a third run on an RBI
single by Perez that followed
walks to Rtchte Sexson and
Helms.
Wilson. who has given up
at least one run in the opening inning of 14 of his 28
starts. intentionally walked
Royce Cluyt?n to load .the
bases
betore
retmng
Obermueller on his 36th
pitch to end the rally.
"I just put us in an early
hoi~.' · said Wilson, who wtll
return to Cincinnati on
Wednesday to have· his sore
shoulder examined. "It's
tou~h to do your job when
you re .~own 3-0 in the lirst
mnmg. ·
The Reds got their first hit
and first run in the fourth.
Ryan Freel led otl with a single, stole second and scored
on a single hy D' Angelo
Jimenez. Russell B:myoil
singled but the rally ended
when Jimenez was doubled
off second on a line drive to
shortstop hy Tim Hummel.

Thant You

SPORTS
• Tornadoes blow inio
South Gallia. See Page 81

Wednesda~. althou~h

he was troubled
be~ause the mvesugmton kept uncovenng
new problems.
.
Clare!! set Ohio State lreshman records by
rushing for 1.237 yards and scoring IR touchdowns last season as the Buckeyes went 14-0.
Tight end Ben Hartsock said Tressel ~nd
Ohio Stute otl1cials had been very pattent
with Claret! during the investigation, but the
time had come for the team tu move forwanl.
"There's a point when being patient with an
individual starts to be detrimental to lhe
team," Hartsock said.
Tressd said he spoke to Claren on Tue.sday
to tell him he couldn't pructice . ·
"He was disappointed bccau~e people want
to he a pari of the grnup." Tressel smd. "But
that's what we're going to do right now."

Bant

For buying my 2003

Hartet Lambat the
Meigs Cowlty Falrl

Ryan
Amos

.

,f -4

-~"'

Thank You
Wesam
Construction
. For buying my'2003
Martet Lamb/

INSIDE

For buying my 2003
Hartet Larr*JI

Page B6

• Places to Go. See

WEATHER

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Showe,. -lble, HI: SO., Low: SOl
-

are speca.
And Deserve Recognition!

Detallo on PliO A2

Put Your Special Greeting In Our.

l..oTrnRIFS

"Grand parents Are Special"

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2·5-9
Pick 4 day: 3-6-9-0
Pick 3 night: 9-1-2
Pick 4 night: 3-9-8-7
Buckeye 5: 3-4-15-19-28
Super Lotto: 3-14· f9-24-4Q-49
Bonus ball: 20
Kicker: 2-5-1-2-4-0

Sunday, September 7, 2003
1 x2 Without Photo

ssoo

West Vtrginia
Dally 3: o-6-0
· Dally 4: 4-1-9-6

Grandpa &amp;
Grandma
Rodgers
I Q Youl

INDEX
a Sf.cnoNs Calendars

Evan Bryce
Rodgers ,
Evan Bryce Rodgers
tllove you Grandma
&amp; Grandpa Rodgers

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Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4

Movies

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Obituaries

A2

Sports

DEADLINE: Thursday, September 5, 2002

ones who went hefure me to
keep their memory alive."
John Perry. 32 . .:ame all
the way from Champlain.
Vu .,
with
his
hurse
"Sherman" to pm1it:ipule in
the raid.
"I have been preparing l(u·
over a ~ear domg as much
trail ridmg &lt;is possible," he
said .
Perry, who is &lt;Ill eyuipment operator in the real
world. s.1id history is impurtmn to him.
"History has alwa~s been
kind of a thing of nune.'' he
said.
Mark B&lt;liley. 55. is from

Pl•st s• R•ln, A5

Trying to escape the elements and stay dry, Morgan's men Ill •
erated a barn on the Cline Farm In Wilkesville. (J. Miles Laytor 1)

hoeflich 0 mydaltysentlnel.com

• Community calendar. Sae

Edition

MILES lAYTON

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Page A3

ll II

J,

Meigs Cooperative Parish buys former school Raid

Page AS
• Danny Staats, 53
• Nancy Hamm, 60

Page A3 . .

Morgan
B11rt

hours before a wet sunset.
The reenactors cume from
above and below the MasonDixon line.
WILKESVILLE - The
"I am looking forward to
ruin and the mud did not doing some raiding and
stop Morgan's raiders any maybe seeing the sun
better than the Yankees did shine," said Bill Raymond. it
as a large group of Confederute raider from
Confederate horsemen made Stanford, Conn.
their camp last night at the
Raymond, 55, is an avid
hi storic Cline Farm m rider who bus been practiCWilkesville.
ing a long time for the raid
Seeking shelter from the on his horse "Mosby." The
elements, Confederate cav- battle would give him a
alrymen liberated a huge chance lo remember those
burn on the Cline property U.S . soldiers who t:ame
along State Route 160. before him.
These were the lucky ones.
"The rnid will give me a
Several soldiers were still chance to participate in the
foraging for food and shelter armed forces to represent the
BY

jlayton@mydallysentlnel.com

0BITUARIFS

Thank You
Dan Tax

Morgan
B11rt

Meigs,RVon
different paths, Bt

•

• Extension Corner. Sae

Tennessee nmldn ' t repeat
another sustained drive. settling for field
goals.
Clausen's second touchdown
pass came after a bad punt
gave Tennessee the ball at the
Fresno State 23.
Despite a 24-0 lead after
James Wilhoit's 40-yard field
goal in the fourth quarter.
Fulmer kept Clau sen in the
game.
After a penalty put
Tennessee at third-and-14 at
the Fresno State 24, Clausen
completed an 11 -yard pass to
Tony Brown.
On fourth down with just
two vards to go. Tennessee
called a pass play in -which
all the receivers ran hitch
routes. C lause n's pass sailed
toward Brown. but Fresno
State's Richard Marshall
jumped in front to catch it
and raced to the end zone.
"I was mad," Clausen said.
"Our defense played great
the whole game for us to give
away a shutout.''
After the game, Clausen
apologized to defensive
coordinator John Chavis.
" He's a great player. He ·
knows how I feel about him,"
Chavis said. "We're a football team, and those things
are going to happen . When
they happen you don 't worry
about it. You go get ready to
play again ."

APPLICATIONS
FOR
RENTAL
ASSISTANCE FOR LOW/MODERATE
INCOME HOUSEHOLDS WILL BE
AVAILABLE AT THE OFFICE OF THE
MEIGS METROPOLITAN HOUSING
AUTHORITY AT 117 EAST MEMORIAL
DRIVE. POMEROY,
OHIO
ON
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23, AND
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2003
BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9:00A.M.
AND 4:00 P.M. INTERESTED
HOUSEHOLDS SHOULD ARRIVE AS ,
EARLY AS POSSIBLE. IF THERE ARE
ANY. QUESTIONS, PLEASE CALL
740-992-2733.
'

as

Buckeyes

Ohio Valley

Clausen not sharp in
first game of final year

its I0-game winning sireak
ended Friday in Chicago.
. Cincinnati tied it m the
seventh Of\ a two-out. tworun homer by Wily 'Mo Pena
off Wes Obermueller. who
was bidding for his first
major league victm)',.
.
·'He made a rookte nustuke.'' Yost said of the pitoh
to Pena. "It was a pitch that
was just s.:remning, ' Hit me
a long way."'
Obermueller had allowed
only three hits in the fourth
inmng until Pcna connected.
He struck out four and
walked four over seven
innings.
..
He said he shook ott the
sign for a fastball from
Perez. opting tnstead to
throw another s lid ~ r that
hung.
"That makes me sick.
When I let that ball go. I wish
I could have reached and
brought
it
bad .."
Obermueller said . "I let 11
float in there and you miss
like I miss - he's a strong
kid and can hit it a long
way."
.S.:ott Podsednik led off the

Meigs sweeps tri-match
atRV,Bt

Weather

B1-2
A2

© a003 Ohio Valley Publi:~~hlnx Co.

POMEROY- It took just
$1 to buy the old Pomeroy
Elementary School at auction Wednesday night.
The successful bidder in fact the only bidder was the Meigs Cooperative
Parish.
For ·the Parish which
ministers to the disadvantaged in Meigs County, it
was a long-awaited victory.
Several times during the
conslruction of the new
Meigs Elementary School
that resulted in vacating
the Pomeroy building,
Keith Rader. Parish director, had met with the
Meigs Local Board of
Education to discuss plans
on how it could be used to
benefit the community.
At lirst there was a plan
to transfer the building to
the
Meigs
County Meigs Superl~tendent William Buckley congratulates the Rev. Keith Rader, director of the
Commissioners who would Meigs Cooperative Parish. on his $1 purchase of the old Pomeroy school. Mark Rttonemus.
then lease il to the Parish. center, board treasurer, assisted with the auction. (Charlene Hoeflich)
But the Parish became concemed about the lack of
ownership when they considered the $350.000 it
needed in repairs and renovation tQ make it suiiable
for use as a timd pantry and
for the God"s•N .E.T. youth
program.
Leasing W&lt;ts dismissed
us an option, mtd buying
the building at auction
became a viable solution.
The Meigs Local Board of
Education already considering an auction for the
Harrisonv ille
school
decided to do the same
with the Pomeroy building.
Both auctions were held
last night.
The winning bid of
$26,000
on
the
Hanisortville school came
from Rex Vance of
Rutland. The property
Vance bough! includes the
building and 3 1/2 acres
around it. Earlier the Board
of Educalion had given 3
1/2 acres including the
balltields and adjacent land
around the building to the s;fpporters· of the Meigs Cooperative Parish 's effort to purchase the old Pomeroy school for
Scipio Township trustees expansion of family assistance and youth programs were ecs~atic when the auction was over
for recreational purposes.
and the Parish came out the winner. (Charlene Hoeflich)
11

expected to
boost retail
economy
BY BRIAN J. REED

breed@ mydailysentinel .co,m
POMEROY - Rt·staurant
ow ners, retail merchants ami
other local business owner.'
arc expel'h.'d to r~ap proti h
from the arrival of thousalll.h
of Civi l War and hi stor~ bttiTs
at this week's Morgan s Ratd
re-en ut·t ment.
The Meigs (\nmty Tourism
OfficL' ,·ontinu.:s to rcrciw
IL'lcphon~ inquirks about th&lt;
'
Ohio BicL'IItellnial t'VL'Ill ,
whidt ullicially hq~an in
Vinton
County
on
Wedttesday. ami L'\ I~Cts :1
n~ar- rccord cTowd to con v~rgc on tlw cntnlt y for the
fnur-day cek11ranon t&gt;l
Ohio's most rl'lt'llntlt•d Civ •l
War l'VC!ll. ;.u.:rnnling to
Meig s Co1n11 y Eronotn k
lkvclopment Dirt'ch&gt;r Perry
Varnadoe· .
"T it~rc 's r~ally no way w ~
can l'stimalc l1ow many pt~o ·
piL- arc goi ng In visit Meigs
Cmmty for this weekend '~
cwnts ." Varnadoe said. "but
our prl'iiminary estima te '
th,· fi gure at any whet ::
1e1we~n 10.111111 and ~0.000 .
With the cxcq11iur • 1 those
art ivc Iy i11 vul wd in 1he battle
re-enat:tme11ts. tltmc visitol\
will stay in hotds and hed
and br~akfast itllb throughou t
S,•uthenst~rn Ohi&lt;l, but wi ll
pmhahly cat in .lund rcstuu
rants and. hopclully. shop 111
local stores wl\ilc they enjoy
th,· re-etl&lt;t&lt;:tment. historic al
denwnstration s. halls an J
other hiqorical events .
Vamadoe said the Meig '
County Tourism Ollict· has
re.:cived inyuirics fro tH
atTnss th~ country about th•·
cwllt, includin ~ calls from
potential
visitors
fmm
1\1 inm•sota . ·Tc xas and tlw
New 1-'n~laml states .
" Th~ \'hones here arc ring.:
ing olt llt' hook. even today.
Varnadoe said Wednesday.
"and that's a good indit'ation
that Wl''ll have lot s of visi -

!'''."''

tors

"1-lotcls. motc•l, and inn .,
arc hooked throu ghmtt a wid.-Please see Economy, AS

Nicotlne: Taming Our Most
and Deadly Drug"

·I
I

Friday, September 12, 2003 • 12 Noon - 1 PM
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Rooms AB

MEDICAL CENTER

Presented by: Dr. Rob Crane

niscovel' th e Jlo/ze1· D(f.l'el'c/lce

Preventing Tobacco Addiction Foundation - Dublin, Ohio

1 Must Be Prepaid ¥' MC &amp; Visa Accepted

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Open to all health professionals and interested ,
members of the cOmmunity. Please register by calling (7401446·5057.
t.

'

·'I

www.holzer.org

1

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