<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6676" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/6676?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T22:12:36+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17008">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/c0a5c50bb94b6905fda17005e0e0bf43.pdf</src>
      <authentication>5e1f34182054eb105294a9ff100b785c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="21955">
                  <text>Sunday, November 9.

Pomeroy • Middlepo rt • Gallipolis

Page D6 • 6unbap Ctnutl -6mttntl

Make life around the
house a little easier

AP HOUSE OF THE WE E K

•

Revival ranch features two

2 003

vacuum cleaner hose and turn
on the vacuum.
• When all of the air has
been sucked oul of the bag,
sn' t il annoy ing when twist it several times, fold al
you attempt a simp le the twist and use tape or a
home improvement task rubber- band to maintain the
like hangin g a picture bend.
and it becomes a struggle'/
Thi s procedure will guarYou measure to center the antee an airtight seal - and
hook, you measure the wire freshness.
on the back of the picture so
thai the height will be just
righl and when you go to
hang it, you simply can't lind
the tip of the hook.
There are few things more
How can you get lhe wire frustrating than going to your
on the hook withoul becom- workshop to look for someing frustrated? The answer is thing and discovering that,
an everyday drinking straw. between that mo ment and the
You can leave it intact or cut last time yo u were there,
it in half_ depending on the someone jumbled the thing
size of the picture. The bigger you now need - be it string,
the picture. the longer the rope, rubber bands or bungee
straw must be. Place the cords - into a knotted mess.
straw over the end of Ihe picWe have a solution - pipe
ture hook. It will ex tend the or tu bi ng. We suggest a
Iine of the hook to a point lighter materi al li ke plast ic,
above the picture fra me.
but any kind of pipe will do.
Cut the piece a little longer
th an the cords you want to
store. Then all you have to do
is hook the bungee to one end
of the pipe, stretc h it slightly
and hook the bungee oyer the
other end of the pi pe.
If you watc h television at
Cut as many pipes as yo u
all , you've probabl y seen one have bungee cords. Th e
of those infomercials where di ameter of the pipe can va ry
they sell the latest and great- accordin g to your needs.
est vacuum-seal machine.
String and twine are easy
You buy in qu antity to save too. Cut the letter "H" out of
money and then take the big a piece of cardboard, plastic
package home and distribute or thin plywood. Wrap your
it into smaller vac uum-sealed string or twine aro und the
freezer bags. Well, they do center part (horizontal secwork and accomplish what tion) of the H. You' ll never
the spokesman claims. And, ha ve to fi ght knots agai n.
they reall y
are good
Fin all y, 10 kee p nuts and
mac hines. Bu1 , when you bolt s from workin g loose,
consider the its cost, and the coat !heir threads with clear
ex pensive storage bags that nail poli sh and screw the nut
they want to sell to you , you onto the bolt .
realize you could end up
Fur more home impro\-·espendin g more than if you ment tips and mformation,
purchased smaller quantilies visit our Web s ite at
- individually wrapped www.on th e/ro use. com.
di rectly from the butcher.
Readers cw1mail questions
We are not against vacuum to:
On
the
House,
sealing
anyth ing
from A PNe wsFeatures.
50
sweaters to food. But we are Rockef eller Plaza, New York.
in favor of not was ting N Y / 0020, or e-mail
money. Here's what we' ve Ca rn •bro( at )onrhelwuse.com
discovered; you already own . To receive a copy &lt;~f On the
a vac uum sealing machine- House booklets on plumbing,
it's your vacuum cleaner. To paiming, heating/coolin g or
vacuum-pack food, clothing decks/parios, send a check ur
or camping supplies do the monev urder payable to Th e
foll owing:
Associated Press f or $6.95
• Put whatever you want to per booklet and mail to: On
store into a hi gh-quality plas-- the House, PO Box 1562,
tic (food or clothing) storage New York. NY 1001 6- 1562,
bag.
or tlt ro ugh these online sires:
• Place the mouth of the \.vwu·.onrh ehouse.cvm
or
bag around the tip of your apbooksrore. com.

l ' nheaten Chief'i do\\.n

Bengals claw
Texans,Bt

Bt~o\\'11" 41-20,
- ·_:.:..

BY JAMES AND MORRIS CAREY
Associated Press

•

I

l

Bungee cords

---·APWB-132

For AP Newsteatures
anch homes once were constr_vcted on a
The centerpiece ['vinq room is the focal
of the house.
in\. It 1s reached rorrr the formal entryway
grand\·ose scale- sp,rawlina.att~irs" v.:ith
p entv ot room. Plan APW'Q-1"2 IS a
d eatures entab t re and ilasters.
return to tt)is pppular tradition.
ntertainina can ~i~ ~om the~iv1n~room to
e d1mnq r~m; th two sooces are parated
_This des1an fealu(es two separat!l
w1nas. one ror steep1ng_ ~uarte rs and the om thel&lt;itchen. t the Other end o lhe
oth!Jr fol'"family activities. 1)11 rooms are well plan is atarqe master bedroom with walk-in
defined and generous 1n s1ze.
closet. The oath is in keeping with the scale

R

~

APWB-132 Details
board siding
~ Foundation: slab
on grade
~ 2 in. x 6 in. stud
exterior walls
~ Roof material :
asphalt shingle
roof1ng
~ Shop area in
garage
~ Gas-forced air heat
and cooling
~ Large circle drive
in front
~ Te rrace that wraps
the living room

For a study plan of this house, send $5 to
House of the Week, P.O. Box 1562, New
York, NY 10116-1562, call (677) 226-2954,
or order online at APHouseoftheweek.com.
Be sure to include the plan number. For
down loadable study plans and construction
blueprints of House of the Week before April
2003, see www.houseoftheweek com.
/

~..... 1~\~tJ. IVol&lt;

APWB-132

\\t''\\1 \ '

. t

" ' ' \ l \\ t4l

t'

t 11.'

;.\'~' ·•

, ,, ,,, , , , , .,,,,, , ~-· • t • •• · l

.. ··

leaders for service
Chamber
honors,--commun
Bv J. MILES LAYTON
- - - -__,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

SPORTS

Jlayt,on@ mydailysentinel.com

• Kenseth wins first
Winston Cup title. See
Page B1

POMEROY - Community
leaders from all over Meigs
County were recognized for
their contributions to helping
triends and neighbors at the
13th Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce Recognition
Dinner in Middleport Friday.
After a stirring speech by
speaker
U.S.
keynote
. Congressman Ted Strickland,
Meigs County's most dedicated were recognized.
The list of honorees for
Community Service Awards
we re Bob Wingett, Kathryn
Han , Myron Duffield and

Please see Chamber, AS

Service to the commun ity is the true calling of the people
honored at the 13th Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
Recognition Dinner. Pictured from left to right: Myron
Duffield, Kathryn Hart, Susan Olive r, Ho race Ka rr. Darrell
Markijohn and Mary Powell who we re each were honored by
the Chambe r for their contributions to their fellow man . (J .
Miles Layton)

Eastern sends delegation to conference

Hailey Ebersbach. a cadette in Tr·oop 1208 . hands cans of
food to Olivia and Hannah Cleek of Junior Troop 1276. ins1de
the Me igs County Cooperative Parish truck. Th e parish will distribute the food co llected by the sco uts to families in need .
(Charlene Hoeflich )

Meigs girl scouts
collect food for needy
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
hoeflich @mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY - Di.; ad valllagcJ fami lies will eat a li tt le belter this holiday '"'N)Il. than b to Meig.s Coulll ) girl scouts .
Saturday aboul 200 scouh and their leade rs moved ae ro"
the co unty .:ollecting canned goods and other non-peri shable
foods to be di stributed lhrough !he Meigs Coumy .Cooperative
Pari sh du ring the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays. The over 2.000 G i llS of fruits and \Cge!ab\es. soup and
juices were broughl in In Pom eroy village hall bv the scouts.
their leaders and other vo lu nteers over a several hour period.
There it was ],laJed into a Meig s Counly Cooperative
Parish truc k and taken to the food pantry on Condor Street.
This is the 1hird year girl scouts have collected food for the
needy as a part of their 'couting program. April Smith. chai r of
the food drive. sa1d that the smuts not only benefit from lhe
good feeli ngs of do ing somelhing for someone less fo rtunale,
bu t qual ify for their community service badge by pmticipating.
Donalions arc still being accepted and residents with food to contribute who were mis-.ed Saturdav are in viled 10 contact a scout in
their community or 10 call Smi1h: 992-3483. to arrange pickup.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• John Rawlings, 67
• Ne ll ie Zerkle, 97

WEATHER
Cloudy, HI: 50s, Low: 40s

School to Work students Be~ky Taylor, Will Woods, Sarah Yost and Kayla Nave ha ve been
chosen to make a presentation about their job training program in Columbus on Tuesday.
(Brian J. Reed)
BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel .com

INSIDE

BY JAMES AND MORRIS CAREY
Associaled Press

• Honor rols, See Page A2
• Meigs County Girl Seoul
diary. See Page A3
• Applying for Social
SecuritY. See Page A6
• Community calendar.
See Page A3 ·

E

. !

' ·'

Dotallo on Pa&amp;e A2

Handy checklist for fall,
-~winter home preparation
• Attic insulation and ventilahome's biggest enemies
especially rainwater that is tion: According to the U.S.
shed off the roof of an average Department of Energy, a wellhome. When allowed to collect insulated attic is one of the best
ach fall American s at the perimeter of a founda- ways to improve energy effiturn clocks back an tion, excessive water can result ciency, save money and
hour, marking the in a damp and musty basement increase comfon. A well-insue nd of Daylight or cause foundation movement lated and properly ventilated
Savings Time. "Spring-for- lhat produces cracks over win- attic will also prevent ice dams
ward-" and "fall-back" clock- dows and doors. If your home from forming.
changing can also serve as a doesn't have gUtters and down• Heating: Give your home's
reminder to replace smoke- spouts, install them. If it does, be heating system the once-over
alarm batteries.
According to the Consumer sure lhey are clean before heavy to be sure that all components
Product Safety Commission, rains begin. Consider installing a are in good working order,
. h
d d'
gutter protection system to pre- clean and well lubricated. Be
fiIre 1st
e secon 1ea mg cause vent leaves and oilier debris
sure that the burners are clean
of unintentional death in the
home. Each year, nearly 2,700 from clogging gutters.
and the flame is properly
people die in residential fifes,
' Water heater and plwnbing adjusted. Replace dirty filters
and there are more than pipes: You can maximize your to improve air flow and effi 330,000 residential fires water heating dollar by remov- ciency and to lower utility
ti d
ing sediment at the base of your
water heater's tank. The sedi- costs. Also, consider installing
repone d to rre epanments.
Manufacturers and fir eone or more decorative.ceiling
safety experts say if your unit ment that collects over time paddle.fans to move heated air
is 10-or-more years old, an greatly reduces burner efficiency trapped high up at ceilings.
alarm that sounds when the and can even cause damage to Doing so will make your home
button is pushed just means it's the interior lining of the tank more comfortable and lower
getting electricity and not nee- when allowed to superheat. your heating bill. A side beneessarily that the sensor cham- Adjust burners for the most fuel- fit is reduced condensation at
her is activating properly. To efficient and safest combustion. windows and glass doors.
be certain, either test older For flames, blue is good, and
For more home improveunits with a smoke device or yellow isn't. Uninsulated waler ment tips and informatibn,
replace them. Sensor chambers pipes are an energy-waster and a
visit our Web site at
can become dirty and ineffec- burst pipe waiting to happen.
www.onthehouse.com.
tive or non-operational even if Insulating cold water lines will
Readers can mail questions
the button test works. For safe- prevent a burst pipe during
On
the
House;
ty's sake replace an older unit; freezing weather while well- to:
APNe
wsFeatures,
50
then you' II know it' II be work. insulated hot water lines will
Rockef
eller
Plaza,
New
York,
ing.
improve both energy efficiency
Though safety is first, there and comfort as hot water will be NY I 0&amp;20, or e- mail
Careybro( at)onthehouse. com
is a laundry list of other home- delivered more promptly.
maintenance tasks that should
• Roofing: The time to dis- . To receive a copy of On the
be performed as we move cover you have a leaking roof House booklets on plumbing,
thfough fall and into winter. · should not be during the mid- painting, heating/cooling or
The following tasks will help ·die of a rain storm. Replace decks/patios, send a check or
save money on utilities and damaged shingles, patch dam- money order payable to The
prevent the need for major aged flashing and remove sur- Associated Press f or $6.95
repairs, improve comfon and face debris to facilitate proper per booklet and mail ro: On
safety, save ener~ and pre- watershed and prevent leaks. the House, PO Box 15 62,
serve the integnty of your Binoculars provide a means of New York, NY 100 16- 1562,
inspecting shingles and flash- or through these bnline sites:
home.
or
• Gutters and downspouts: ings without getting on the www.onthehouse.com
apbookstore. com.
Wa~ard water is one of a roof.

••' " l '\ I " · \ . • . . }

A homemade
vacuum-sealing
device

Designer Comments
"You are welcomed by a large entry hall with sweeping full-height windows. A pair at
Corinthian columns frame the entry to the living room, which is rotated 45 degrees fo r
sweeping views of the yard."
~ Architectural style:
- Douglas Wells, Wells Kastner Schipper Ranch
~Total: 4,780 sq. ft.
Estimated
Cost
of
Construction
Architectural Glossary
~ Garage: Atlached
(excludes lol)
Pilaster- Asupporting column projecting
864 sq. ft.
$525,000
Northeast
partially from a wall. '
~ Overall width:
$420,000
Southeast
142ft. Overall depth:
$430,000
Midwest
-107ft.
$440,000
Northwest
~ Recommended lot
$490,000
Southwest
size: 160ft. wide, 170
ft. deep
~ 4 bedrooms
~ Baths: 1 full , 1
three-quarter, 1 halt
~ Laundry: main level
~ Exterior material(s):
composition concrete

B6

NlCHOtAS
V. tANliRY. D.O.
.
.

~/1(/1(/tl/(.~;rt;· '
.;

I•

'

'

•,

''

.

'

"/believe that:my m~st l"I(Jo~tqntf~~ i~ patie'ii"c:a~'ismy fOtnmitment to.
build a relationship with a patient bt1sed01i'frUi t, confidence aM the practice of
evidence-based medicine. I respect my patients and-their views and appreciate
when they become more interested in man11ging their'o'fn health. "

INDEX
2 SECflONS -12

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

PAGES
A6
B3-4

Bs
A6

Obituaries

A4
As
As

Sports

B1

t Osteopathic Manipulation Medicine (Employment, Sports &amp; Other Injury Reh~bilitatlon) .

Weather

A2

• Weight Control &amp; Sinus Allergy f\1anagement

Youth • Education

A2

Editorials

I ·;

• P~diatrics &amp;Adolescent Medi~lne ·
I

I.

·r' , '· :;

'

• Gynecology/Pap Smears, Birtlr,Controi &amp; Teenage Management
• Preventative; Adult &amp; Geriatric Medicine
·
"

.I

,

'

·I

'

Movies

• '

·.

e Pre-employment, D.O.T., Sports/School &amp; General Physical Exams

''

• Minor Stlrgeries, Skin Tumors, Mole Suturing &amp; Laceration Care

.'

© •••3 Ohio Valley PubU.hlng Co.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - A creative program using school staff
and Eastern Local facilities to
provide job training for students
will be showcased at the Ohio
State
School
Boards
Association's annual Capital
Conference in ,eolumbus on
Thesday. It is th( second year in a
row Eastern High School has sent
a delegation to the conference's
Student Achievement Fair.
Four students from the
School to Work program and
their teacher, 1anet Barnett, will
display inform ati on and a
power-point demonstration
outlining the program, which
places students in grades nine
through 12 in school offices
and classrooms for job training.
Students in the program
spend three class . periods a
week helping staff wi th
school -rel ated tasks. Some
work in kindergarten and elementary classrooms; copying
papers and creating bulletin
boards, while others perform
work in school and guidance
offices and the library. Still
others assist custodi al staff.
"It's a wir1-win situation for
Becky -Taylor and Janet Barnett, School to Work Instructor
everyone,"
Barnett said. "In
.at Eastern Hfgh School, complete display to be used at
this
area,
there
aren't a lot of
the Student Achievement Fair at the Ohio School Boards
Association annual conference. The-program was one of
Please see Eastern, AS
10D statewide to be Invited to participate. (Brian J. Reed)

a

Rac ine Mayor Scott Hill nominated Kathryn Hart fo r her commun ity service to the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
Hart has served in a variety of "''ays in Racine and is always
qu ick to offer a he lping hand. iJ . Mites Layton )

Hart gives heart to Racine.
BY J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
RAC INE One local
woman puts others tirst and thi~
has made all the differe nce.
Kathryn Han was honored for
her tireless work for Raci ne
Friday at the 13th Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
Recognition Dinner.
" My motto is putting others
fi rst." Han said .
She is active wi th the Racine
Area Community Organization,
the Star Mill Park Board, Meigs
County Council on Agi ng

board, RSVP Homeland
Security, Racine Fall Festival
Committee, Racine American
Legion Auxiliary and that's just
a small part of what she does for
the community. She credi1s the
membership of each group for
the success she h a~ shared in.
Hart retired in July 200 I as
a supervisor for the State of
Ohio Job Services which has
given her more time to devote
to volunteer projects.
Hart is qui ck to lake a piclure of someone putting up an

Please see Hart. A5

• Cholesterol &amp;'Diabetes M~agement
' '

'

This FREE support group is sponsored by lhe Arthritis Foundation and Holzer Medical Cenfer

Tuesday, November 11, 2003
'

5:30 - 8:00 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
"

M E D I CAL CE NT E R
Discover· the Holzer Difference

Toke a men active role in yoor healthl

www .holzer.org

'

A cnllal111ra1ive effnrl wilh P[HSA NT I'ALLEY HOSPIJ'AL

-r-- ~-~--~------------'~---...,---

Topics discussed will include...pain control, exercise, relaxation,
fatigue, depression and cloctor/patient relationship.
For more inlormction, or to regisler, call Min i Ross a!

(740) 446·1121 or 1·100·116·1131

------.....t._.

.,.

.,

,,•

'

�SCHOOL NEWS

_'The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, Nov 11
AccuWeather com torecast tor da

ovcs

•

Toledo

•

42 /56

PA

•

Youngstown f39"152~
Mansfield 41

/58 ~

•

Dayton 44 /60

•
/

•

Ci ncin nati 48 163

KV
\C 2003 AccuWeather tnc
( '
~~) """"""' Qj!i)

Sunnv Pt C oudy

Cloudy

~~

St owers

~

I.

Ratn

1 sto ms

@:- ~
•• ~

F1urr es

W!l!l
•

Snow

Ice

Showers after midnight
BY TH E ASSOC IATED PRESS

•

Today Partl y
cloud)
Htghs 111 lhe uppet 'iOs
Tomght Mostly cloudy A 10
percent ch,mce ol shmvets .tl1er
mtdmght Lows 111 tl1e lower 40s
Vetr,e rans
d,1y Most l)
cloudy With ,, 10 pet cent
chdnce ot showets Ht ghs m
the upper 50s
Tu es d c~y
nt ght Cloudy
wtt h .1 50 pe rcenl ch,mce of
showets Lows .trnu nd 5 I
Wednesd,ty ". 60 percent
ch.tnce ol showers Ht ghs
.tround 6 1
Wed nesday nt glll Most ly

cloud) A 30 percent ch,mce
ol shov. ers 111 the eve nm g
Low around 35
Thursday Partly cloudy
Htgh atound 45
Thursday mght Mostl y
dear Lows &lt;trou nd 31
Fnday Mostly clear Htgh
a10und 49
Fnd&lt;~ y mghl Partly cl oudy
Low ,, ou nd 35
Saturddy Mostl y cloudym
Htgh ,tround 49
S,!tutd,ty
nt ght Moslly
cloudy wtth a :10 percent
cha nce ol shov..ets Low
around 1'i

Literary club members hear review
POMEROY
Betsy
p,, so11s
tev te wed
The
Prolessnr ,md the Mc~dman A
T.1le ol Murder lnsamty. and
the Ox lord Engltsh Dtclionaty
bv Stmon Wmchcster at a
tecent meettn g ol the
Mtddleport Ltterary Club held
ctl the home ol Pdt Holter
P.1 rso ns descnbcd the
ctLll hm as a JOUrtMitst whose
style ol wnling rell e&lt;:ted th.tt
cateet He h,ts been a newspa·
per "" tle r 1m mme I han 30
ye,1rs and has v. ntten !01 the
Sm tthsoman magaz me and
Natt onal Geographtc
The book, accordmg to the
revtewer, IS constdered one of
the greatest literary achievements on the htstory of the
Engltsh language--the creatiOn
of the Oxford . English
Dtcttonary, commonly known as
the OED It took seventy years
to complete, almost enurely
under the edttorshtp of one man,
Professor James Murray Dr
rvtlltwn Mmor, " retired U S
Army capt,un ,md surgeon then
hv111g 111 England, was one of the
OED's mam contnbutors, send·
mg 111 thousands ol tllustrattve
quotattons to be used m the dtc·
ttonary Parsons sc~td the book
centered around three chamc
ters the dt ctton,uy, Professor
MutTay atld Dr Mmor
The
Oxlord
Engltsh
Dt clton.try ts " htstory ol every
wotd lhdl has eve1 extsted 111
the English language The lintshed v.ork comp11sed more
than IS 000 pages tn mot e than
ten vo lumes Prolessor Murra)

w,ts the stn gle edttor ot the gargantu.tn prOJect, and Dr Mtnor
contnbuted more than I 0,000
quotattons to the dtcltonary tn
rwo decades Thus, the two
men mamtamed a tnendl y and
professiOnal relattOnshtp, but
mamly by correspondence
lntt tall y Murray tnvtted Mmor
to Oxtord so they could meet
and lltscuss thetr work , but
Mmor al ways declmed
A popular story ol the ltme
satd that finally. a pu zzled
Murra) set out to vtstt Mmor
and dtscovered the truth about
htm That m add11ton to bemg
a bnlhant and prectse contnbutor to the proJect, Mmor was
a murderer, cnmmally msane,
and tmpnsoned m Broadmoor
Lunattc Asylum
In the eleven chapters of the
book, Wmchester traces the
mtertwmed stones _of the two
men and thetr OED It ts a true
story and 11 has all the suspense
and fascmauon of a well-crafted mystery, satd Parsons
Prestdent Frankte Hunnel
presented mem bers colo rfu l
ktwt btrd bookmatks she had
brought back from her recent
vtstt to New Zealand
Parsons reported on pages
of newspaper cltpptngs trom
the early 1980 's v.htch she
had found They wtll be added
to the club's box ot htstonca l
p.tpe" stored m the )tbrary
Nex t meettn g wtll be NO\
12 at the home of Pauline hor
ton with Ann Rupe to re\lew
The Gtrl Wtlh the Pearl
Earnng" by Tracy Che&gt;alt er

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co

Correction Polley

Pub llslied
every
aftern oon
Our mam concern 1n all stones IS to be Monday through Fnday 111 Court
accurate If you know of an error 1n a Street Pomeroy Ohto Penod1cal
story call the newsroom at (740) 992 postage paid at Pomeroy
Member· The Assoc1ated Press
2156

and

the

Oh1o

Newspaper

Assoc1at•on

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156

Postmaster Send address correc

ttons to The Da1ly Sent1ret 111

Department extensions are

Court

Street

Pomeroy

Ohro

45769

News

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

Editor Cliarlene Hoelhcli Ext 12
Reporter Bnan Reed Ext 14
Reporter J M1les Layton Ext 13

One month
'9 95
One year
' 119 40
Dally . .
.. .. . 50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month .
•a 95
One year
'98 70

Advertising
Outside Sakis Dave Hams Ext 15

Closs/Circ

Judy

Clark

Subscnbers

EKI 10

E&gt;l

should

remit

1n

advance d~rect to The Datly
Sentinel No subscnpt1on by ma11

Circulation
Dlatrlct Mgr TBA

Monday, November

10,

perm11ted 1n areas where home
camer serv1ce 1s ava ilable

17

Mall Subscription
lnolda Meigs County
130 15
13 Weaks
26 Weeks
'60 00
52 Weeks
'118 80

General Manager
Charlene Hoefllcli, Ext , 2

E-mail
news@mydallysenttnel com

Ralas Outside Meigs County
13 weeks
•so os
26 Weeks
'1 00 10
1200 20
52 Weeks

Web
www mydallysentlnel com

•

GALLIPOLIS - The fol·
lowmg sruaems have made
the A Honor Roll tor the firs l
stx weeks at OhiO V,1lley
Chnsuan School
•
Grade I Evan Bow man
Chnstopher Brumfield. Emtly
Carm,m, Alex ts Clark Ashten
Cr,mk, Te,lil Elltott, Hayden
Fltnner, Rac hel H,tddc~d
Phtltp Hollmgshead, Mtkayl.t
Jewell Paul Lethers, Jenn tfer
Loscar. Allison McClure,
Jacob Steele, Bmndon Troy,
Celesle Warner
Grade 2 Bethany Beaver,
Katelyn
Beavet, Sarah
Blodgett, Morgan Brumfield,
Maggte Cn ste, Mtch.tela
Drummond Logan Edmonds
Aly ssc~ Freeman, Bryanne
Ham ilton, Tommy Holley,
Jon Kostt val, Aubrey Long,
RanJtt Mavt, Ttmothy Mtller
Amy Ours, Cole P.trentt
Sarah Schoonover, Jose ph
Stone, Altvta Stover, Magg tc
Westfall , Scotty Wood
Gtade :1 Sarah Absten,
Jordyn Benson, Joshua Blevms,
Rtchard Bowm,m, Chance
Burleson. Madtson Crank, Alex
Haddad. Alex Lashwav. Ehse
Long Rtley Ntbert
•
Gt,tde 4 Bryce Amos,
Bran sen Barr, Jennt te r
Blev ms K.ttte Blodge tt,
Mt c hc~e l Fahmy. Samamh,l
McCilll e, Paul Mtller S,trdh
Sydnor, Ben Ttl its, Samamha
Westtall , Mtcaela Owens
Gmde 5 Heather Case, Josh
Curry, Tyler Eastman, Al lte
Hamtllon, Alexis Henry,
Kathleen Long, Sonya Lethers,
Ohvta Kosttval, Ehc ta lrwm,
Dantellrwm, Kate Moon, Kyle
Scott, Valenc Terre-Blanche,
M.ttthev.. Wnght
Grade 6 Halt Butleson.
Ash ley Coughenour, Rebecca
Evans,
Amanda Jat vts,
C1meron Lentz, Chnsttana
Lethers, Heather Mah,m,
Rtcarclo Maldonado, Lmdsey
Mtller Stephame Shuler,
Natalte Stone Mehssa Stump,
Gtade 7 An nee Carman,
Grant
Foster,
Jasmme
Gtbeaut, Jas mm e Owens,
Andrea VanMeter
Grade
8
Rt chel lc
BJ,mkenshtp, Ltndsdy C u1
Kattltn Dewhurst, Heather
Mor,m, Laurel Stone Brooke
Taylor, He.tthet Wagner
9
Brandon
Grade
Coughenour.
Kal ee
Ed mond s, Julte Hussell,
Megan Mahan, Crystal
Thomas, Mtchael Wtlltams
Grade I0 Sara Beckley,
Kn su
Davts,
Jacob
Eldndge, Kelh lrwm , Sarah
Dawn Jenkms, Cory Kelley,
Ketth Peck, Zach Weber
Grade II Halite Carter,
Kaleb Eldndge, Ehzabeth
Stevens, Chris Terre-Blanche
Grade
12
Brody
Blankenship, Hannah Burleson,
Lmdsey Wheeler, Alyssa Zirille
The following students
have made the B ~onor Roll
for the ftrst stx weeks
Grade 3· Braden Bowen.
Jesstca Burger, Caleb Curry,
Ohver Lentz, Lee Lethers,
Cratg Terre-Blanche
Grade 4 Kelsey Blackburn,
Hannah Brumfield, Chase
C lidv..ell, Peter Cannan, Alex
Gagucas, Joseph Ja1vts,
Maegan Jewell
Gr.tde 5 Aaron Dtllard,
Te ssa Roach
Grade 6 Seth Amos,
Joseph
Beaver
Cody
Bowen. Lacey Leport, Julte
Ttllts, Jon.tthan VanMeter
Grade 7 Joey Absten,
Braunlyn Carter, Henry
Patnck , Car,J Sandell , Ttna
Sargent, Kyle Scouten, Todd
Stms, Alex Trent
Gtade R Zachary Carr,
Saul McGmre, Chn slopher
Wtlliams
Grade 9 Kayla Frantom,
Jade Gtbeaut, Garnson
Salt sbury, Drew Scouten,
Mtranda Wood
Grade I 0 Joseph Barnhan,
Joee Jarvts, Shannon Pdtnck,
Luke Swmey, Bryce Taylor
Grade
II
Conrad
Buffington,
Denms
Daugherty, Andrew Holcomb,
John Hussell, Sarah Smtth
Grade
12
Nathan
Bowman, John Moran ,
Crystal Taylor

Eastern Elementary
T-UPPERS PLAINS These students were named
to the honor roll al Eastern
Elementary School for the
ftrst gradmg penod:
Grade 2 Jenna Burdelte,
Samantha Chne, Chase Cook,
Molly Dunlap, Davtd Frank,
Kaue Keller, Sarah Lawrence,
Enuly Moore, Joshua Parker,
Madtson Rtgsby, Kolton Snell,
Enn Swatzel, Alex Vtctory,
Christopher Yeater, all A's ,
Sarah Anderosn, Tyler Barber,
Courtney Bauerbach, Latham
Btssell, Zachary Browmng,

-

.

•

Wade Colhns M.ttthew Fnend,
Hannah
Hysell,
Phtlltp
Morehe.td Audnonn.t Pullins.
Whttney Putman , Amanda
Roush, all A's, D,uct Btssell.
Jacob Boston
Ntkolaous
Br,mnon, Andrea Buckley.
Lawrence Collms, Kartss,t
Connolly, Lauren Cummmgs,
Samantha Cummtns Enn
Dunn, Amanda Durham,
Ev,ms,
Dentse
Samuel
H,umum As hley Laudem1tlt,
Kunbetl y Mmear Devm Rtg;_)s.
Samantha Robmson, Chetse
Roush, Jeny Rucker, Hannah
West, Kell y Wmebrenner.
Jordan Wood Joshua Young
Grade 7 MJChael Moote,
Am het Wh tte
.til As
Heather Brook s, Morg,m
Burt Bntt,my C tsto Cody
H)se ll Alyss.t Newl,md.
Anthony Putm,m. Kyle
Sargen t Katl yn Sauvage
Katte Wtllo no
Gt ade R And rev. Btssell
N,tthan Canol! , Ryan Da'!s
Kyle Rawson Morg.m Weny
,,II A s Kathryn Bl.md. Dame I
Buckley
Sasha Collms
Joshua Collins, Chnstupher
Colwell, Kyle Edwatds
Lmdsey Grate, C tsste Hc~ubet
Kelsey Holtct Tyler Ke,u ns
Ltrold Kuhn S.tnstsha Powell
Cortne) Scyoc. Naktta Young

Southern
RACINE - Th e honot
10l l tor the first mne weeks
at Southern Loc,ll School
Dtstnct hdd the lollov.. mg
,JCade mtc achtevers on tl
Semors (,til A's) Bcth,my
Ambergc t. Sh.twn Bat nh,ul
Stephame Br&lt;~dl ord Codt
DctVIS, Chcl sed Dtlcher, s,udh
Hawley, Enuly Htll 1 abt thct
Jones, De,m,t Pulhns, K,tt te ,
Sctyre, Andy Smtth, J,tm tc
Smtth .md Jeremy Ye,mget ,
(NB honor toll ) Sash,t Collms
Bt,mdt D.uley Mtchael Depue
Ashley Dunn Stacy E,tkms
Davtd Gloec kner, Ty Htll.
Katelyn Hood. Tabllhd Jones.
Ad,un Lee, Kenny McKntght.
Patge Musset. An gel Ntlz.
Amy Norman. Chnsuna Rose.
Chn stopher Roush, J 0 Smtth.
Josh Smtth, Br,mdon Sturgeon

and M&amp;t Thomas
II th grade (,til A's) Ashton
Brown S.tr.t Cammarata
Jordan Netgler (NB honor
roll ) Susan Brauer, He,tther
Dtttly Hull) Dully Jotlds Han
Ntkkt Holman, Brooke Ktser
Kyle Mees Bn tt,my Philson.
Phthp Pterce. Cmtg R,mdolph.
Ashley Roush Rym1 Smtth
Chns Tucket N t ~ek t Tu~:ker
lOth gt.tlle (.til As) John
Bentz Br.td (much ,mel
Knsuna Wtlh,um (NB honor
roll) Ry.tn Amhetget. Dusttn
Btm.tger Amber Holsmger.
Zac hety lmtxxlen NtcoleJones.
Cbelse,t Smtdt, Jenny Warner
lJth gt.ttle (,til A\) Am bet Htll
M.tllory Htll J.twb Hunter.
Mmmua McEivey Adam
Phtlltps Al ltc Rccs, Ashlee
le.tlord. (NB honot roll) Ntkkt
Amolt, Ch,utce Collms, Ryan
Dr.l!Mklson J R Hupp Jestca
Lyons. Ndlhan McClure, Jesse
McKmght, Ade lle
Rtce.
Beth,my V&lt;mce, Mtch,tel Yost
8th gr,tde (,til As) Lmdsey
Buzz.trd (AlB honor roll)
Bpnnte Allen Mm g,m Btov.n.
Ryan Ch,tpmdn, Heathet
Cunclifl Steph.tme C undtf!.
Courtney Gtnthet, Ka tte
H.tyman Wht lney Rtltle, Noel
Selle" Kay I) n Spr.tdlmg
7th gr.tde (&lt;ll l As) Bry,m
H,ut" Emm,t Htmlet R.tchel
Pte kens, J,ume W.u ner, (AlB
honor w ll) Btody Flmt , Cl11ts
Hol ter Tos hc~ Junes Chelsea
Pa pe Sumc~ nth.t P.ttterson
Weston Robet1s
6th gmde (c~ll As) Breanna
Taylor ,md LY, nzee Tucket
(NB honor roll ) Ashley Walker
5th grc~de (dll A's) K,ttev
P,ntcrson (AlB honor toll )
Katt e B,IIT Bn.ma Bullington
Ert c Buzz,u d Wtl Crow
Brtdn Durham Bobbt Ham s
Mtk,tle Htll Dakut.t Imboden
D.tlton
Imboden
Zach
M,muel .tnd Tv let Wolle
Element.tt v' DH l.tl l A's)
P.ttttct.t Cl,ti k tAI B honor
1011) C h,ulcs Cook K.tl te
Ktbbl e, MtciJ.tel L.tudermtlt
Luke Ltwery N,\l e Me Bane
Tt,tcy Smtth J,tcob Stacy
,md Ntcole Young

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
MEDICAL
AUTOMOTIVE
Holzer MediCal Center

Noms Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

www.holzer.org
Pleasant Valley Hospttal

Turnptke Ford of Galhpolts

www.pvalley.org

www.turnpikeflm.com

NEWSPAPERS
CHURCHES
Galltpolts Datly Tnbune
Ltghthouse Assembly of God · Galltpohs

www.LighthouseAssembly.info

www.mydailytribune.com
The Datly Sentme l

www_mydailysentinel.com
Potnt Pleasant Regtster

www.mydailyregister.com

\- ~7J
'""J;t;;
v / '~ 1 ~
'~

}

&lt;

~
~ $)_00 ~.
~

{

ENTERTAINMENT

~

B1g B&lt;nJ

Serv~ee

(clcbralron ht.:h.J un (ktobcr 11
Eastern Brownie Troop 1316
Member~ of I he Ea,tan Bru\\ me

Unu ol Orr I Sr.: 11Uh "11! hold th

.tnnual Secret Santa r;; vent on
De~.:cmllCI 'l Tanu Putman and Judt

Troop 1116

Bt-.o,;ell are (Oordm,nor.,
Leader~ and other vo lunt eer~ w1ll
hold thetr annual ln w~111 urc und
l~ e dcdtLalum
Ceremony at tht:
Pomcwy L1h1;u y un Nm 20

Sou1h er n Doosy Troop 1292
1

tnp to

th~.: N~usc

Da1ry Farm

fh..: !! lrl ' oh~cncJ rmlkm g tnnc
,md k .trn ~d w h~rc milk r.:o mc..,
I rom \d11.:1~.: 11 guc' and the fuct tha t
tin: l.u rna;., hamh rH!Yt.:r touch rt
1 hey .1!-.o bou le led newborn r.:ah..:..,
.tnd .th.: hom~.:m.u.lt.: vanilla u..: t.:
Lrcarn D&lt;.~11y r;;olnn ng hooh pen
~o.1l~ hump ~..:1 . . t l\:k~o:r~ and ~.ow
d.t~~.:r..,
w~.:n.•
donated hy thE
Ameli~,; an Da11) A"~OCiiltiOn i.lnd the
gu !~ ,tiMl rci..~..:I\UJ ,, ~rcc 1 a l D.m&gt;
P.1tch
On OL1ohc1 ! 4 tlu.: mcetm£ hcgan
wnh the g •rl.., "'!!n' ng th.mk you
~.:ard' to C hn' H unm Roger and
Jc.m Nc.1~c D.tn and Ben N~asc
and \Val M.~rt A tt ~.:nJ,ng wt: rc
P 11 g~.: Hudll:y S 1 ~.: rr.t C l1..· land
All hon G1 hc.tut I c1a Gli mo1 c
Brynn H ;.u11 ~ H.tk y Hil l H.um1.1
Hil l M td1..,on M,lllh ~ws Brund}
Poner Bntt anv Powell Madel mc

Quillen

S.tm

Rtchard &gt;

Jumor Troop 1290

k1-.:kcd off the ' tart of &lt;.1 new yc.:ar ol
" ·uutmg by v" Hmg Swcetapp\c
Farm Ill Vmn•IIJ rhcy CllJOycd .I
ha;ndt.:: around the larm and we nt
through Lhe corn mat.c wh1ch .,
. . hapcd \J ke a ~carccrow hnldmg an
Ohm fiag 1n hono r ul Ohw...,
B1 (enten mal Hot c ho~..:olatc and
(OOk l e~ YiCrt:: -.cr.eU al tcrwarU ~
Bmwmc Gnl Seoul-. attendmg
v.ac Brcannil
B,nlcy
Halt:y
B1 sscll Ne111e BnxJk:-; K1 cra Casto
Pa1gr C lme S,unamha Chnc Ahhy

On Udoht.•r 7 14 ~p rh p.trtH.:Ipated

on

and

Col lrn'

and

Eltiahcth Wolf~.:
The l!llpm t.mcc o l nut l llt ~ nn g w,,,
di SU h'&gt;t:d lm ll,ttum " to the Odnhu
2X Jm nll!UI C l l.fl.: lllOII)' . . . CI C Ul l
orcd the tlm~ l.' r ut... nt the G1 rl
S~,.;ou t P101111 "~.: dJ..,Ul,,t.:&lt;.J .md p11.
tuf t.: dra''"'l hy c.ll h !:!lrl .md 11.,
mc.uun!! to th~.:m
A' tht.: G1rl Sumt Pr01m~c W.1-. rcu t
~.: d
1 dllll ruH -.:oi&lt;H cd stem wa . .
placed IIllo the D.:u ~y ll O\'- CI \'nsc
While s1111ng 111 tile Dtu sy cm: ll' the
gnl:-; dcmo nslri.IICd kriO\\ Icdg.e nl
wh.u 11 mean~ to he honest and l..ur
hy . m ~\H:nng qucslio ns by the
lc.uJer wlu-.:h c.trncd the hght blm.:
~;ol o rcJ f'l.:l 11 to go on thc1r tumcs
On Octubc• 2X the Hoop held us
lm. e ...ow rt t:l:H' mon v The stnr) nl
Juhctte GorJon l O\\ "'as read hy
Mat &lt;.: lct Arn old Th~.: o p~nmg cn e
muny htgan \\ 1th tht Pledge to the
Fl~!! l o ll o\\ ~;d b) the Gnl Slout
Proml\t tnd L.m
Kan Atnoh.J P.ugr.: Buckky SJ~.:If.t

Cld.tnd K.nn.tyn D1ddlc Alli son
G1h..:.tut B1 ymt H.u11s H.1lcy HJII
H.um .t Hill M uJt ~ on Matthc\\ ~
M tdt lmc Qw llc n S till Rldl.ll th
md El1 t.aht.:th \Volh: v.etc av. ,u dcd
thl' lllt.: tnht.:r:-;hl p -.. rtr ..md d1:-;c v.t.:l
l.lllllJ n g
-.:crtl l l ~;.t k "World
\ ..,sou.HJ on frdml prn the Prum1se
Ccntu \\ 1th 1-lnn vil mJ FaiT pdal
Stt rn v. hel l Pw ctlk JMlch Pm .u.Jc
p.ll&lt;.h .md .tn Amt.:tlcan Fltg p.ttch
Jt:·ncna Ehc ,, h.tdl SUA t;wght th~.:
g1 rls tht Gnl Scour hanJshakc upon
thura\\ iltt.b
S~o:\ cr.tl gn b and leaders Da wna and
Randy Arnold utended the Juliette

Mully Dunlap

Grace

C h,u ., Rodm.jut.:t. and Jue!l w~.:Jc.: l..:ol
ILCkJ h) Mt:KI!nne PJCrce
Maga tmc.: hooklet' wen: turned 111
monc) lor upcom111g C\l'flt~ v.-crc

pa1d

Wnt~.: A'"'" a) lr) It at th 1~ mcctmg
Rl.'l'!d,.,!llt.: Jumnrln.HJf' J f ~2
A.th.:nd•ng \\.ere Dar~.:l 81\\dl

thCJn&lt;tt.:hf'\ 10 (uri' "iLOUI' rhl \
al"'' reti!I\ CJ rhLir m~mher . . hlp

Shdh1 Smtih Whllne) Putman

lhc g1rl.., 111 canJk.., 11nJ &lt;t&lt;.~1J v.hJI
~.:alh rnl"ant to thrm CheJ,ca ..,t·n ...·d
rclre,hmt:nh allerv.MJ , and ~ he.:
then -.t;...nt•d rht.: Fncnd&lt;-.h1p ( m.:lc to
!:nd th~..: fl1Cdlll!,! rht: next fllt:e [lll~
1\ :) '{) j1 IJl
Oil ~ !1\
\(J ~~ thl"
!Jhmn.

Br~.:

G1rl~

Jllt.:kct.l Grcct.:c for thcrr t.:oun
tr~ lor 1 hmkmg Day tn Fehruary
S~..: ve ra l gut , got to go to th e
frca~un.• Box for gem ng thutr 10
. . t.tr~
Grrl.., earned thi.! tr E&lt;tnh &amp; Sk)
tr~ 1t lhcy tht:n made a Hallowt:cn
pumpkin 1..anJk ho!Ucr Fn~.:mhh1p
C~rde c.: nded thl.." mec11ng Other
g11b p l c~clll WL;;It.: ALiturnn Porter
ca ...... IC Rou ~ h I auren Dunn M:K ~Y
Hayman Tt.:l..oa Martm-.:L Megan
MlGcc
Kn:-.tt:n
Humphrq

Thc1~),.
Cht.:ycnn~.:
Et.J".trds Kcndrt~ F1Lk Mcrcd1th Bdh.my
Gaul N1kka Ullbndc Enn li la1:t.:
McMcckcn and A~hl y n Wolft.:
Kauc "' Keller Wh ul ey l eat.:h
Ouohcr 20 wa, the tro op~ 1nve:-;turr
Ra\.:hae l
Matl.-worth
Mallory
md rcdcd1t.: 111on ~.-~.:rc.:rnOn ) I am fly
t\.-k lntyre Km ta M1llcr I 1J..,cy me mhcr.., &lt;.:arne 10 cnJD)' the (.;Crcmo
Putm an Jess1c So.unpo;on and Hat11t:
ny Due" wac ~..o llctl~..:d hy Cha1'
Yonker
Rodnguct and attend m-.:c hy Sar.1h
Lc.ld c r~ and ad ulr s .J II Cillilng were
E.tk ms Fnr 1he openmg Cav.;1c
Rou~h w,t, tht: lbg calkr Bntt an;
Arn) Markwnn h Tma Samp-.on
Brenda Grady Pam GlitlC Dan)an Cogar the llilg hcarc1 &lt;tnd Han nith
Collm s Jac 1cnda Yonker Sand y Kn1g B~.:t han y The1s" 1nd K&lt;JtCI)n
H1ll were culur gui.lrds
Casto Ju;cc Cl mc Talll lliY Cline
L111d a Dunl.tp Norm.1 Arba ugh
Mtsty Porter Y. ckomt: J the l.tm lllc"
and
mt1 oducl.'d
t h~.:
lcad~.:1
lk l h G &lt;.~ul Hd cn Hcaton and L•nda
Putman and Ang1e E&lt;l\\. ard(,
Rcded~~,;a11 ng
th cmse l ve~
v. ere
The lollowmg g.1rb tbo :mended &lt;.t
Bntt.tn~ C()gar I lunnah Kmg Sarah
.Ju lti.!ttr Gordon Lo\\ eve nt on Ot.:t
E,tk lll~ Tara E&lt;:~km~ Ashley Deem
1 1 Breanna Balll'y Nettle Brooh
1 he) l! t the I 0 c,mdk~ that rcprc
Kendra F1d Mercdn ll U,IU] Erm
~c nt the parh ol th e law ,mU told
GIM c Rachac l M trkworth Lmt..l"'~.:)
'wllh,ll It mc,\111 to them r he'&gt;C g1r\...
Put man Kn , tm F1ck. Cat hcn m:
prc"entcd the toll ov.1ng gul :-; to b~.:
\11\ t:Sted S un,mtha Alk11e 1\; lcok
Grady nnd R 1vcnnc Recl.l
Pomeroy l.lrowme Troop 1271
Bndd e~. A.Jy,~.l Dct:m~.:r Lau ren
For the month ol Onobcr o u1 troor Du11n Kawlvnn Gumthl'r Mac~:)
has heen wo rk ing o n th r~.:_ Tr~ Jto;
Ha\ man, K.1t1e Hill C.utl vn Holter
G1rl Scout Way~ Maktng Mu'lt.: anU l doa Mortmc; Megan M(.;Gl. c
People Ta lk rng The g1rh trr pl.m
Mt.:Kuli'IC P1ercc Autumn Pnn ~.:r
mng a da) tunc :-;\umber party 111 C haa ~ Rodnguet C a~..,.mdr a Roush
November
Ashhn Wolle Knstt:n Hu mphrey
Bcth an;
T hC I:-iS,
Cheyen ne
I h~.:v ha\ t: chosl.!n our troup sh1rt ~
and v.e are pa)rng lor these v.nh our M ~o:Ml~kan Alex Cu ru.hll ~nd
nut sale~ We had 10 g1rls attend the • Cclc~u.t l-l endn x
Jul 1t:ltc Gordun Lov. Ct..:kb1at1 un The nc" Bruwruc:-. d1J the tv. I'\ me
e\lnt and f'hc g1rl s attend the Gem .tn t.! turn me and rcccl\-.:d thc1 r
B1 o"' me pm.., I he g1 rl ~ abo
ol .t Day C\ em W~:. ha ' e add tO
three new g1rls rn our trnnp t h1 ~ tcCt.: Jved thc1r mcm hcr-.hlp qnrs
month We arc also k.trnl!H.:._.I n~..:w AltctW&lt;.IJds the g1rls lit tht.:ll c.mdk s
song We Ch an~c the Wurl~ that .uuJ s,ud tht.:) \\nuld try thc 1r hLst In
11\ t h) the G1 rl Su1ut Prom1 :-;e
Wt w dl "111 £ .tl o ur ln,ntltur-.:/
RcdcU!cat1 on Ct:tt:lllony for vut par
Rc.:l rcsh mc.:Lit:-i wa.,; ~nvet.l h\
Cllt !-1
McKcll Z.IC P1 ercc .111J A l y~-.a
Metgs Hro,.nte froop 1100
D~..:~.:mt:r Novcml:"-~.:r m~.:e t 1ng~ 11 ~.: ,u
The troop mel.'ts l'\-cry WcJncsd I)'
'i (1111 on rhr 1hnd and 17t h ,uthc
&lt;tiler 'c hool ~ ~ MLlgs Elcmcnt .1ry Sy l .t~.:ust: Chur-.:h 01 the Naz.u-cnc
Sdtool Leadc1s .Jr~.: D~.:bb1c Smn h
MJJd!t.:p{ll! Brov.nl t Tronp 101 5
and R.tt' M.t. . h Thq ,1rc t.:urrentl ;
I he.: troop h td an outdoor l11Lcll g \m
workmg on the G1rl Sc11u1 \\ a) s Try Ou l l AI tlu:-; nu:~::llng thc g trb
worh :d 1111 thl ll nh l Try It p.liL: h
It
E.t-.:h g1 rl got to (]l;cor.uc ht.:r ow n
Southern llro"nte Troop 1120
On October 6 the meeung opc n ~.:d
tole h::tg \Uth l.thn -.: pmnt s ami
v. 1th !lag ct:runony Bntt.my Cug.1r -.t.unr s The ~._: t ot~: hag:-; " til l.x:
was l he llag (;,t ilt:! Hun n.1h Km g t.t k~.: n ~~ 1th thc gu h to events to
l11 g bc.u e1 ,md col01 guau.h were L 1 y thc 11 na lh agcnd ,.., d-.: On
Ashlc; Deem .md Ca1tlyn Holter
Oct 27 t h~..: troop had a drcs~ up
The Pledge \\a(, led h) Tar.! Eakms Halh m ee n m~.:ctmg
and Samantha Alk1 rc Prom1se "Wa:-; T h ~.:y m.tdc g h o~t '"" md so\,.b
ll"d by Sarah Eak. 1n s &lt;.~nd Nu.;ult.: pla\ cd g amt·~ ,w d h.td lt..·~uve
Bnd.le-. A ttcnd an~.;c "' ,,.., taken hy -.nacks The gu Is started on the

B arhcr
ant.!
Brool.. ~..:
On Oct 6 we l humc "'h&lt;-~1
-.1gn \.\t.: Will he workmg toward,
We.: ~;hov'~.: tht: "1gn ol the RamhO\~
!Jr.,t i.Jild "c p1d:cd out pat cht:&lt;., and
are~.~, v.t: \\Ill ~ worktng 111 alonf!
v.1th tun and 'ong., W~: are wor~m ~
on the Arct~..,pa-.: e patch
On 0\.:t ll \\t: 1..ulh:l..t l'!J rtut lJidn :-;
We ted\\~ .KU1111p11'hcd our go 11..,
\.\lth mo~t r..:x~,;ccdmi! thcrn
Wl' ram!d red \\hue anJ hlue T
..,huh \l) v.car
On Oct 20 v.~.: HHtJc piau., lor a
Jullcll t.: I em p tn y/Hallov.c..:;n tun
gc.:I-tog dhc.:r
Wt:mat:lc
.t
mummy (;a nd; holder our nl toilet
p&lt;.~pcr r(J]).., and tatm~, W e ... ang and
had lun
On Oll 27 u.-.: told th~.: Julidtt:
Luv.. e . , torv and had g~.~ m~.: ' anJ
fnod ~ care plannmg our o.::n.:mom
1n v. ckom&lt;..: .111 nt:v. ~t..:()Uh aud t h ~&gt;"~..:
rcturnlll); Wt.: v.tll he ~ 1'11lg nut
pm:-; .md pa tchc' Wt: hil\C al,u
den(h;J on \\.ha t outi ngs ~I..JIIH.: v.,mt
to ~ttlt:Jld dunng the mnnth o l
Nu\r.: mhcr and "-t ;m.: f'ILnnlng uur
Scl ret S.mt.J cvrm
South ern juntor I roup 1204
On Ckt Jlmcctmg wa&lt;t hdU .11 5 \()
r m .tl thL R nun~.: l l ~fJf) Th~.­
troop held t.:lt:dJon and thl'" lullo"
ITlg will hoiJ olflt:C lm ~ month'
Pl t.:Sil.knt Ch~.:bca Holtr.:J ScLICtar)
I-I :.I\ Icy Spr.tt.lhn~ and Ju~.: , md
,l\lt:nJ;.tn~,;~.: Bnhh1 Harn:-;
Thc lllt:LIIng \1.,1, hd.J \\rth Plt.:J~~,;
led h\ Kdl) 1-lu rnp hrc\ and
Pr o 1111 ~t Jed h) C hel!-tl"a H olt~-: 1
Tht.: V ....ud tht.:) v.-ant cd to do tht.:
S1gn (If the Ramhow .md ptckl:d
Gloh,l l Aw u cnes" a' thc1r t n ~t

nda

Juhm~o n

ht~d ge

Gtrls turned 111 nut order tor m~ and
magat.tn~,; hon ldt.:t&lt;t to Tanva Ho lter
Tht:y -.ct thi.! ITtroop tul l.!~ :..~nd p1Lkcd
l\\0 rcylllrcm-.:nh to sl H1 on th~.: J r
bwJgc
G1rl -. t.Jik cd .thotn up com mg
L"Cn h Kc ll) Homphrey sencd
tclr c~ hm c m :-; and Kun Dc.J\er kJ
tht Fn ~.: nd 'h'f' ( lf(:k to ~.: 1 1J lllt: t!
111 ~

2~ lll~d m ~ v.a~ hdJ orr
.11t er ~chnol K11n D~o:. J \1.:1
kd the- Pl edgt
111d H,t\ It: \
Spr u.ll111g the Pl om1 "c I flU I g trJ ,
\\etc pr~-: ~~..: 111 md due~ \\t:rc '.:nile-.:!
td hy Duhb1 II ams
f.t nya Holter tulU the guls thi.lt thn
h.tO 'old 7'i t.:.tn" of nut.., and thru:
g•rb tu rned 111 m .l gi.li lll ~.: \"11tt1kkt~
( ,111 -. Wl.' ll' temmdc.:d ahmu nr.:rw.

Tht.: &lt;.h:t
l u~.: ..,d,t)

LUilHng lip

Thcv dcudcd th u slfl(.;l' 1hc.:) v.ould
he gone on Nt)\ H the \ v.ould d11
th~.:1r lood d11 vt.: on Nm
I G1rl . ,
m.tdC' and pl.t\ ed thl' g.une nl
P1 ~,;ana to "tart the Puukr b.:tdg~.:
One ~p rl \\- a~ lm estrd Into G1rh
.Scouts ,m d thr~.:c g.1rls rc.: dedJt:atcd

,::.

\tar ...

bt~tf:rn

Jumor lroop

12~

Mcmh(:r, 11ltht tmop ~~L~ L J o il thl:
' tart 11l a n~.:v. )l'"al o f .... o utln ~ h'
\ ,..,111n g Sv. et.:t.1pplt..: hum m V111u'nl
on Ou 20
lh ~..:) cnJO\CJ a ha\nJc.: aroum.J th~.:
hmn anJ v. ._:nl thmugh tht: wrn
lllii/t.: v.hllh · ~ . . h.Jpt:d ll ... t: iJ 'l.ll l
~..:rn~ hokhng lin Oh1o !lag 111 tllll lill
of Ohlt ' hllt:llkllniJl Ht 1 Lht ll.tl
Ia!~ &lt;tnJ UJt,.,_h.:.., V.L rt '&gt;lf't:J altd
v..tnh
Jumor (Jirl SL tl UI\ allt.:mJ111 g V.tll
A.mlrt~;.~ RuLkk"
Dtlll tlk ~ lm~,;
Kmtrn h~,:~ larh~.:rm ~.: (JI.tth (t.:
A11.1
Pov.dl
\\hh~'
Ptnn,.rn
Ra v~.:ulL R ~,;~.: d ;,tlld Sh~;ul..t R1fllt
llad~.:r.., ,mJ ,u.Julh a\lt:llLllng "trt.:
&lt;\rn&gt; Mi.irk\\oflh T1n a S nnr,nn
f:ht..:mli.l (Had' Pa111 GIMt Dun),Ul
Cfl liJ n.., Ltllt:tH.l.t l on ~n S •nJ)
Ca."tt' JO)L&lt;' (J,nc Tamm~ (lint
LmJ.t Duni:Jp Norm,, Argau gh
Beth Gaul Hd~.:n 1-k aton ;.tnd I mda
PulllKIII and A nga: Edv.arJ ,
\1erg.' Jun10r Tr&lt;H&gt;p 127h
SLt lU t~ ~.:~.:khri.ittd S~.:ptt:lllh~.:r md
OLtt1her h•nhJ u,.., \~t th d 'Pt:~o: l ,ll
~.-.tkl.: hai&lt;. ~.:J In l:kth L'd•-.: \h ~.~~~~
th e BH thJ,J\ ~ong tn
Jou;c
Rummt:' Bn.m&lt;t S~.-hnoiLral l tnd
K.t,t k BaJ..,cr
Wt• \~dUHll~,;d 1\a \\ 111&lt;111 \ 1Jdad
M.tu Hnhu ,llld qut.:\llllllr.:J h m
.1hout li nk 'lt\~o:d ll\l..:r. . ~o:.t" dunng
th~.: ~ ,,r La't \ear lrt'PP 1276 't' lll
M.tco mhtl ,mel -. h1pnuHe.., g t~t)dlc"
whllr.: tht.:) ' t.:l\r.:d abtJan.l tht.: US S
Carl Ylll..,Oil ~-~~ Ill turn rrc . . emcd
the ~ 111 ' \\tth l1 'rtc.lal Endunng
Freedom r•Hch
Th~.: gn l.., taknH! r.trl 1n the ..,en ILL
plO)t:U 'Acre Sa rnan 1ha PnJcmorc
JtJ hnn u LvdK l-lamMh C led K.t' Ia
Sa h.,~.: I Jt')ll.: Rulll lllt.:\ ( lu l\tlall
WDod'&gt; md Jcn mh.'l Pt\nc St lt\
MaLomh~.:r .tnd A' hk\ Rom1n e~
1rom C.H.k tte Troop # I:!OX
Th r.: glfl ' \~Or~cJ m grour~ tl' karn
tbuut thL lw.tul\ of Gul SLPUt lll g
111d hm~ tr.tdllr nn.; ha\c ch,m gt.:J 11T
' la\ed th~.: :-;,un c.: o\t.: J tht: \~o:,l r' 'We;
ciJ -.n&amp; ~'&gt;ed c.L~..:h l t'W and htlV. \\c t:an
u..,~.: 11 nu)J n Dun ng ~.:H I\ mc:ct
111~ the gill '&gt; toiJ ht,.,~ the\ L"~.:d ont
ot th t: G S Ltv., ttr Promi'L
thtuug hthtv.t.:~.:~ A-.:htrtv.a~m.uk

1t 1 pO'&gt; I

L!uuJ lllrn... 1 ht gtrl' arc
t: llt..:OUJ,Igt:J to lulhm th~.: &lt;Jul Scout
Motto Do 1 Good Turn Dad)
G1 rl ~ n1.1d~.: purnpk1n t:t.:n tcrplt:t.:C"
!ro m "t \rolu,un hath .md t.thnc
Tlk'Y t.Jikcd ahou t l-l.tllo'Act: n i.:U'
tu me.., and Tnck. or-l1cat v.. h1 k
r.:nJny mg. a 'rcu.tl Hallm\C n cakt:
bakt·d hy Jordan A n dcr~on s mom

!\Jc.:v. m~.:mht:t' IAt.:ILnrnc:J 1hl\
munth 'ol.cn: 13n an~ \chookrdft
Heath~r
~ll'Y. i.Jrt
"iuntiJillha
1-'nd~.:rn t•rc.:
thc.:\t.:JHlc
Bc&lt;Ht'f
rt.:rc..,a
Ka1rlin
Ru,..,t!l
Shartag~r I ht') Jl.llll lilt.: mhcr~ J o\l~
R&lt;,tnl ne ' Ka..,tJc.: HJI..,t.:r I 1 una
I \ t.ii~L Ha nnah C kd Bnannu
Bulhngwn ( hn,tlall '" PI:KJ.., Ho\h
Md•rath Paula \ri..in Mctt.:r • ~hdt"l '
F11thpatnd: OIL \ta (Ink Jnrdan
\ndt:r&lt;.,on A~hle\ (are) Jcn ntltr
l-'a\ IlL Jnd KJ' Ia )JI\(:f
St:\l'n.il o1 the troop memlxr' .md
k.1der-. allcnJcd thl' Jul iette Lov.
Cdc hra111m un Olluhcr ~~
llt~tllend ( adeue lroop J2()g
1 h~.: troup mt.:l un Oct 2 '"-~.: d1"
tu..,...t:d anJ pli..inll ~d C\l.: fl h l1 1r
fktuh-.:r and \;mu11ht:r A,h lc \
Rwn llll . ,
( hL I..,~.:,J
)mallv.opJ Stan \ria ~. lfllh\.:1 .uld
Lc&lt;.~J~.:r J...rrc.:n~ Ehcr..,haL h \ 1' IIL'd
lronp 1271), mn:11ng tu aut'pt lhl
gdh flurn \t,~.h.t d Maum1ht:r/t ~S
(Jrl \, n,on
\ 1tcomht.'r 1,ilhcl to thl group JhPlll
hh \l~lh Ill JiiiOLll! I..OUiltflt.:' Ht
al..,11 toJJ th~ grour :.1huu1 \: H' '"' ' '
lorn.., and 1r tdl!lorh JllJ &lt;,ho"c.: d f'K
turc~

\r.:Jr 1.1.h..:;n tht gtrJ, \.\ ~o:f~.:
th~..:\ ...cnl th t: , htp I~~ ~~.:..,
o1 I..OOI-. I c~ and llli..tdt' a "l ritphook
lur th~.: "h1r and Mr 1\.latomht.:r pr~.:
'1: llli.:J tht.: !,!lfh a thank \ O LI r LIL h
On Ou 10 Manuh Hrl l Kum
S\.\1~ha \ 'h\1.:\ R.ommn lhJ"IJ\
"- •II,
Er~t~a
(, l!&lt;.IT
-\mhu
H uL~man Chd..,ea Sm&lt;JIIv. tJoJ .tnd
H&lt;~ll c.:\ Eht.: r, halh ~~:.n! 111 i..l Iilli
Jom au ol k1nJ n~.:" ~.-nmmuntt\
. . enJce m1~' ' on \~ e v.:. il~~.:d 10
Dollar Gcnt.:lal '~t nt -.hopp11 1_t anJ
th~.:n maJe up ~.:und) hag . . tor th~.:
PmncrO\ PoiiLC Dep:.~nmcn1 :. nd
pn~..,t:Tlh.'d 11 Ill them thank1ng them
lor lhCif '&gt;er\ ICL~
On Oct :!5 the tnlln~ mg g1 rl" and
k adcr ., \\\.:Ill 10 tht: (urn ~1att.: 111
R1o
Grant.le
and
Lake
T\U li)Jl &lt;\ttumn FhLr..,h 11.h Hatln
Ehn , h.tdl
Stal\
tlvbunnhcr
"111 . ,
(h~,; l..,ca
Cha"'''"h
Sm.dlv.nnd
-\,hit\
Rnm mt:'
Jcrren.1 E h~.: r.,hat.:h and ~ut:'"'
-\ndr~.: J Small~ mxl S 111lni\ Guhk
K ucn \\111 , md B rad ln \\ ill'
On 0Ll ~ I 1he fn llnv.m ~ gtr!..,
Jllcndt:d
th~.:
Ju!ldh.::
Ltn'
CdchratiiHl Pari\ Chd,..:; a O.n~-.
En~.~ 1 Cogar A..,hk' Rom me..,
Still\ \1al.ll!llbcr and HJdt.:\
Ebtr..,hadl Th... trnor v. ... J ... om~.:'
hu~.;k h nmlcr P:.l) nt :.tnO r\ ut umn
Ehcr..,h,t1.h
\\-c art&gt; prc..,t:nt l) "Drk m,g 1111 our
r\ctv.ork mg IPP and the r.r ...t &lt;.,tcr o f
tht: Cadette.: Chalknge -\ Nrl\clllht:-1
lm l''lll ur ~.:/Rcd~.:dlcatton C ~;remon)
• ~ ht.: tng plannl..'t.l allllll' v.nh a tnr to
Lucas\ Il k lor Grrl Zone:
L&lt;.~,t

Jun1or ~

Rutland Club plans flower show participation Court News
RUTLA ND - Pl ans tor
partt&lt;:tp,llton tn the annu al
co un ty-w tde
C hn stmas
llov. er shov. ,md mstallatton
ul new olltcets ht ghltghted d
recent mectmg ot the Rutland
Garden C lub held at the home
of Dcbbte Bullingto n
The holiday show wtll be
held at the Semor Ctttzens
Center on Nov 22 and 23 on
th e theme ' The Stghrs and
Sounds ot rhc Holidays' All
classes are open to res tdents
of th e Btg Bend area and to
,til members of Metgs County
garden club Show schedules
were dtstttbuted
The Rutland Club ts on the
placemenl and wel coming
commttee lur the show whtch
will be open for publtc vtewtng om the allernoons ot borh
days For the shov. cantee n
each club ts to fur msh a
dozen sandwtches two do zen
cookt es, and homemade can·
dtes Eva Rob son ts m charge
ol the club 's food donattons
Nel_" ofticers tnstalled by

Robson were Bulmgton prcstd·
net Dorothy Woodard, vtce pres·
tdent, MarJone Rtce, treasw-er,
Betty lowery, secretary Robson
presented each ollice wtth an
:mgel omwncnt Recogmzcd and
presentcedaplaque lor scrvtce
was Paulme Atk111s, rettnng
preSident
Dcvouons were by the host·
esses who used read111gs on
gardenmg For roll cc~ll members named bulbs rhey had
planted New progrdl11 books
were dtstrlbuted, and a report
was gtven on the recent regtonal board meetmg m Galltpolt s
,mended by Rob son, Atkm s.
Bulhngton, and Lowery
For the program, MarJone
Rt ce presenred "Celebrating
Autumn" wtth empha&lt;ts on the
use ot a comucopta as an
an-dllgement conramer for the
Thanksgtvmg sea&lt;;on She satd
that the hom-sh,tped &gt;esse) IS a
tmdttiOnal favonte tor display
dUilng the harvest months, parttcularly when filled wtth fresh
mgredtents that dry naturally and

fresh frull and !lowers whtch can
be replaced a~ needed
Her suggesuo ns tncludcd
bmers wect, tall hydrang ealo·
tus pods, wtld sumdc, and
prycaranth a, wtth artichoke,
baby ca uliflower, hgs, golden
beers camanll as, gourds and
red grapes She satd a btg
rock can be .tdded to ,1 cornu·
copta tor s tc~btilty wt th the
other contents pl,1ced ,u ou nd
tt c~nd spt llmg over
Lowery tal ked on st rc~wtlow·
ers notmg th at there be.tuty wtll
not dry up Aulumn's arnval
typtcall y stgnals lhe end ot
anorher growmg sedson. she
satd, and gardenet s v. ho plant
strawtlowers c.tn look forward
to a georgous cltsplay of
blooms, all wmter long
To bnng the beauty of
strawtlowers mdoors, Lov..ery
suggested gathenng them every
two or three dys so that mote
blooms wtll appear 111 their
pl,tce Then h,mg them upstde
down tn an rury place The buds
she satd, Will open tn about two

weeks ,md then they can be
arranged 111 a va-;c. on wreaths
or for other home dccomtmg
Bullm gton's toptcwas on
Amenc.tn Sv.cetgum, a popu l,tr
uec, m p.trks and front yards
She s,11d mature trees can
reach !rom 60 to 70 teet tall
and spread about SO teet
wtde Most gum trees sl&lt;~rl out
as 111ce pramtd shaped liees
but dev elop mto d broader
profile 0\ er time It denves 11
name !rom the sweet-gummy
sap tt produces, she satd
Fmches and other btrds love
the seeds. ,md the dned lrutts
nMke bea utilul wre,tths. candy
ca ne shaped decoralt ons the
frutl s are also good for mulch
to keep 'armtts and pets out of
gardens ,md !lower beds
Hmt of the month had to do
wtt h hyac tnth s ant! tultps
bulbs wht ch need to be platlt
ed stX·etght tnches dee p m
motst well-dratned sotl and
cove red wt th straw once the
gtnund freezes Rtee Wt II hllst
the Nov 24 meetmg

Charter Commumcattons

~-A~~~:_;~
1
"' y'f/\

Monday, November 10, 2003

Meigs County Girl Scout diary
POMEROY

Hatletgh
Bush
Ctsstd)
Clehmd, P.uge Cltne. K endrc~
Ftck Aliyah G,mtl , Mcrcdtth
Gaul Austm Gheen, Jenn,t
Hysell, Twmer Jenktns. Stdney
Johnson. Jotdan Koblcmz,
Jonathon Kuhn , Wh tt ley
Le.tch, Dakota O' Bnen Jotdan
Parker, Cody Rayburn. Jesstca
Sampson.
BenJ dmmm
Sampson B11 an na Te,1lord.
Davtd W,m1et, Phoemx W,ms
He,uhcr Wells, W) au Westl,tll
Gr&amp;le 1 Mat shall Aanes1,1d.
HantMh Ad,mls. Alex Amos,
Randall Armes, Rebecc.t
Ch.tdwel l. Bt eanna H,1yman.
Zakkary H e&lt;~ton, Ttmothy
Mtnedf, ThunMs Pullms,
Lanss.t
Rtddle
Emtly
Wheeler. all A's, Duhon Boso,
Max"cll CattMh dn K.nlm
Cl.trk, S,unuel Collms Ttoy
Gantt J r Vtctona Goble.
Garret Hall, Kayla Hawthorne.
Alex,mdna Hendn x, Addte
Htll, Jc~so n Kelley. R,!ch,tel
Markworth, Dylan Mil am,
Kn st.t M tiler, Ch n st o ~) he t
Morns Shdwna Murphy.
Mallory Ntcodemus Eth,m
Nottmgham Denck Powe ll
Ganelt Rtt chte. Jacob SnM1.
Savannah Speelmatl-H.tv.ley,
Julte Weddl e Shdnd.t Welch,
Ntcolete Wells. K)le Young
Gmde 4 Cheyenne Doczt
M,me Po11 ell , .til As
Chttslnphet Btssell l.tn.tc
Boyles, Damelle Chnc Tylct
Chne B.tylee Collms Enul y
D.J\ ts , Scout Facevmver Kn sttn
Ftck, Bt enna Holter, Attk
Homet. Brooke Johnson Kc~yte
Lawtence, Pc~ul Momson
Kelsey Myets. Tess Oldaket
Shal,una Robtnson JetMh
s,ullpsun Cmn1ney TitonMS
Grc~de 5 Haley Adnest,td.
JonatiMn B.tt rett , De\(lll
Bc~u m Bt dd) Btssell Meg,m
Carndhan Ash letgh Dufly,
Morgan H,tiJ. D,mtelle M,txey
Ashley Miller, Allte R.twson,
Jenmlet Reed Robert Wamet
all As Ry an Amos, (hamel
Bauer, Jesstca Cleland E11c
Oanston Bn,u Dill Scott
Gtlbnde,
Rachel
Ktlle
Ttmothy M,trkwonh, Beverl)
Maxson, Bt ayden Pt all Zan
Roush, John Tenogl ta, Lonn te
Westfall M c~tth ew Whttlock,
Morg,m Wmdon
G tc~de 6 Breea Buckley

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

2003

Honor rolls

Ohio weather

~=

PageA2

www.charter.com

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

More women die of
heart disease tha~ of
any other cause.

POMEROY - Ca~n rt:soh~.:J m
thL Mt: 1g.., Counr y Court ol Judge
SlC\e StolV hctwL:c n Od c;J .mJ Oll
26 u ~.: :1~ lulllm . ,
Bnnn~.:) \ R 1tll~.: R tunc trafh~: tOll!
dc\/,Jg.n.., "o20 ~ nd -.:n~b FJ1..'lk.l11.: l
Rnhm...nn Colum hu~ . , rx.•t•c:hng S10
md ~ I s UN.: ot un.tuthon;OO platt ...
$20 .mJ LOs t ~ Eln~r E Rtxkha\er
Pom..·rov um ~.:a~&gt;on,lbk ~reed torum{h
uon:-; ~20 and ~,.;o~t ~ Steven C RLhsc\1
1\lh&lt;my ~JX'I.:dlllg $~0 and wsl~
Call w s~!Sl.' ] R.KIO t.: 'PL'Cdmg
S"l.(l md n 1..,h Rlltx:n D Stgkr
Murr.t) C ll \ "Jl~o:Ldlng '5 \U J IIJ
UlSh
\e.lt hdt ~ \{) llld Ll''h
Md•..,,a J Sm1th R&lt;JLIIlL '~L'l1mg
S\0 ,md ul\ts Tere ~.~ '-\ S["h.'nu.: J
Po rm::rO) ' top . , ,gn S2 \ anU ~.-u . . h
W.tll~ll M Sprrng Mason ~IX":l'd1ng
~ l0 .md LOsts Mdl"•l "\. Stt.:\Ul'
Bew!lv ' lx:cJmg Sl'i md Lll"ts
John R s\~ t:VU Lanca .. lt.:r spccdmg
$30 and Ul' l ~ Chant) A fa, lur
Shade I 11 lurc to w nrn1l Mar' E

VaLCJ PQmt.: rm '~~.:dmg .':! ~0 ,mJ
ltl"i'
Du.mt.: .\
\ mDegJrl.lt.:
Mlltnrd lnd . .catht.:ll S10 .md t.:'l'\"
Ron,ddL \\o,tgiK r Rtt.:H~o: "fX'Lthn~;
S10 ,md co . . r... C h&lt;~riL' D \\ tlktr
Otark Ark '&gt;plcll1nu S \U and Lll'b
dl .,pl.l\ plnc&lt;;/\:Ihd ~ II Lk('r S20 tnd
lOsls lhoma:-; R \\ amcr Ra~.:mL
s(!Jthelr S10 and u'""
Ronmt: J W~.: Ib 1 upJXr' Pl am~
se:ubc lt $10 and Ul~l' Bobh' G
While t\.~,;nn a \\. Va 't:llh~.:l! p.t,
... cng~.:r s:;o.md Ul ... b c lfl E \\hill
Kenn.1 W Vt "t: llhch S\0 ~nJ
\..:O..,t~ C h all~~ R V. h1tc Gi.il ilpuhs
-.f'nttx~l! ~ \0 md -.: mr... An WJJh,
S\r,ILU't: ,c,llhelt ')~0 JnJ t.:ll"t"
RaL hel R 'N1 I h~ S\ mtu,c ..,...,tt hcll
ra...,,~nge 1 $20 and ~.o . . t... R\)txlt S
\\-\ lOl l Gnw~.: Cn) ~flt~t·dmg S1[)
and ttl'oh I allure to n:g1,ltr S "\0 .md
lO"h Regma J Young :\th en~ -..pecO
Ill!.! S\Oandlt\St~ Chari~' H z u..,pan
P111nt Pki.l~illll ~ V:.1 drl\ mg on
do'&lt;t.:d h•g.h,~w n\ S20 anU w . . r...

CARPETPADD

r

'

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
for only a $1 a day.

r • '

Ta lk wtth your doctor about heart
drsease Learn more about heart health
under O' Bieness' Health Resources at
www obleness org, or call (740) 59l·9300

~O'BLENESS

W

Memorial Hospital

The deadliest disease
'
for women is also the
most preventable.
-11~1·
~
~
tl~u-

OhioHealth

Th1s women 's heart health 1mt1at1ve IS prowded by O'Bieness Memor1al Hosp1tal
m collaboration w1th Oh1oHea/th

All nylea of carpet are lncludedr
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVEL
LOOP CARPET and SCULPTURED CARPET.

No extra cbarle for movtqlumlture
or re•ovtq old carpet.

Call us or stop ln.
We'll come to rour hoaae aad aaeaaure
for a free ao obllpdoa quote.

•

Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

�PINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher

.

'

I: ,.

Charlene Hoeflich

.....
..

General Manager-News Editor

J

T O DAY IN HISTORY
Today is M und&lt;~y. Nov. 10. the 1 14th day of 2003. There are
51 d &lt;~ ys leJt in the year.
Today\ Hig hlight in Hi story: On Nov. 10. 1982. the new ly
fin ished Vietnam Veterans Memorial was opened to its fi rst
~1s it or s in

Washington. D.C .

On th is date: In 1775, the U.S. Marines we re organ ized
under authori ty of the Continental Congress.
. In 187 1. journal ist-explorer Henry M. Stanley found mi ssing Scouis h missionary David Li vings tone in centra l Afri ca.
In 19 19. the Ameri can Legion held its fi rst national conve ntion, in Minneapoli s.
In 1928. Hirohito was enthroned as Emperor of Japan.
In 1942. Winston Chu rc hill deli vered a speech in London in
which he said, ' I have not become the King's Fi rst Mini ster to
preside over the liquidation of the British Empire.'
· In 1951 . direct-dial. coast-to-coast telephone servi ce began
as Mayor M. Leslie Denning of Englewood , N.J.. called hi s
counterpart in Alameda, Calif.
' In 1954, the lwo Jima Memorial was dediq ued in Arlington.
Va.
in 1975. the U. N. General Assembly approved a resolution
equating Zioni sm wi th racism. The world body repealed the
.r~s olution in December 1991.
In 1975 . the ore-haul ing ship Edmund Fitzgerald and its
crew of 29 vani shed during a storm in Lake Superior.
In 19H2, So~1CI leader Leonid I. Brezhnev died at age 75.
Ten years ago: A jury in Manassas. Va. , acquiued John
·Wayne Bobb itt of marital sexual assault again st his wife .
. Lorena, who'd sexuall y mutilated him. Lorena Bobbitt was
: later acquitted of malicious wounding. The U.S. House of
:Representati ves passed the so-called ' Brady Bill ,' which
:called for a fi ve-day wai ti ng period for handgun purchases.
: Five years ago: The Pentagon stepped up the movement of
:warships to the· Persian Gulf as the Clinton admini strati on
:swepi aside the idea of negotiations with Iraq over U. N.
:weapons inspections rejected oy the Iraq is.
: One year ago: Bush administration official s promi sed 'zero·
:tolerance' if Saddam Husse in refu sed to comply with interna: tional call s to disarm . About a d9zen tornadoes killed 36 peo·
:pte in Tennessee, Ohio . Alabama , Mis siss ippi and
:Pennsylvania.
: Today's Birthday s: Actor Russell Johnson is 79 . Blues
:singer Bobby Rush is 69. Actor Albert Hall is 66. Lyrici st Tim
: Rice is 59. Actress Al aina Reed-Hall is 57. Rock sin ger-musi: ci an Greg Lake (Emerson. Lake nnd Palmer) is 55. Actress:cbn cer Ann Reinking is 54. Actor Jack Scal ia is 52. Mov ie
:director Roland Emmerich is 48. Ac tor Matt Craven is 47.
: Ac tor-comedi&lt;lll Sinbad is 47. Actress Mac kenzie Ph illips is
:44 Actor Michael Jai (j y) White is 3Y. Country singe r Chri s
:Cagle is 35. Rapper· produ cer Warren G is 33. Rock sin ge r~ mu sici an Jim Adkins !Jimm y Eat World ) is 2X. Act~e ss
·: flrillan y Murphy is 26. Rapper Eve is 25. Rock musician
:Chri s Jannou (Sil ve rchair) is 24. Actor Bryan Neal is 2:1 .
,1\ ctress Heatl1er Matarazzo is 2 1.
.Thought for Today: ' A nickname is the heaviest stone that
the devil can throw at a man. ' - William Hazlitr , Briti sh
e.&lt;&gt;sayist I I 778· 18301.

OBESITY

IS ALLIN

YOUR

HEAD.

).~

11128

~AHiffl.. © 2003 by NEA. Inc.

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

Monday, November 10 ,

2003

Monday, November

and the literal war that is true in the past: What
waged to spread Islam. Both accounts for the nGw frankThe
American
meanings. it says , are 'equal- ness ·•
Institut e's
ly essentia l and must not be Enterprise
Michae
l
Novak
wo nders
dissociated, as if one could
Vatican
has been
whether
the
exist wilhout the other.' The
encouraged
to
speak
out both
Diana
article contin ues: ·obedience
to the precept of. ' holy war' by the fail ure of the so-called
West
ing hangs up on you.
explains why the history of ·Arab stree t' to revolt aga inst
You've certainl y struck uut,
Islam is one of unendin g U.S.-led wars in Afghani stan
anyway. But 'dialogue' with
warfare for the conquest of and Iraq, and by the large
John Borell i. the bishops"
numbers of Mu slims Mr.
staff ma n on Catholic- the Chri&gt;tian condition under infide l lands.' This sa me Novak believes are seekin g
'ohedience·
has
led
to
recent
Muslim re lations, didn'tlmld Islam ic rule. The article may
hu man right s in Iran and
much · promise after he said represen t a shift, if not a anti-C hri stian viole nce i11' elsewhere. ' My own hypothhe \\'Ouldn't comme nt on an break. in the long-standing Alge ria. Pakistan , Nigeria, esis.' he said, ' is that change
ext raord ina ry arltclc ~1 hnut Vatican poli cy 'of si lence on Java. East Timor, the in the Arab wo rld has
the despe rate plight of the persecution of Christians Moluccas and, most dramati- allowed the Vu tican to be
call y, Sudan. Lilli e wonder,
C h r i ~tian:-. in Islamic soci- in Mlls lim countries .
The artic le highlights the as the article also report s, more candi d.'
eties th at appeared in La
Others are not so sanguine.
Civil ta Catt oli&lt;:a. a Je"1 it ·seemingly rather cur io us that hetwcen ro ughl y one- Ni na Shea. director of the
quarter and one-thi rd of the
magarin~ thought of as the fact' that wherever Islam has
for
Rel igious
estimated Christi an popula· Ce nter
S~llli-o iTi~ ial voice or the imposed itse lf by co nquest
at
Freedom
House,
Freedom
- in wha t is now Egypt. tion of the Middle East lm.s
Va t i ~an .
st1
gges
ts
that
the
new
frank' I won' t comm en t on an Li hya. Tuni sia, Algeria . emigrated over the past ness in Rome ma y be linked
article that I have not rcucl in MorPcco. Lebanon . Syria. decade to the free world .
Such tidi ngs coul d bring a to the increasingly dire plight
its ent irctv,' Mr. Bore lli said. Jordan. Tu rkey. and in the
of
hi stori c pause in the 'dialogue,' blll of Christians at the hands of
noiing til•tt the Englis h trans- reg ions
Musl ims in Suda n, Nige ria
lation of the It al ian art icle. Mesopotamia and Palesti ne they provide plenty to ta lk and other partS of Africa. The
'Chri sti ans
in
Islami c - 'C hnstianity, which had abnut. ·1 personall y welcome situation in Eu rope, where
Coun tries' by Giuseppe De been c&lt;trao rdi naril y vigo r- the l! ' .1te r stra ightforward- immigration po licies have
Rosa S. l. . avail abl e at ous and rooted for centu ries, ness evident in these state- created large. unassimilated
disappeared.' me-nt s.' said Ri chard John
www.c hiesil .espressunl i ne. it/ prac tic ally
Ne uh aus. a Cath olic priest Mu slim communities within
e n ~l i s h under the headline And. the article fmther notes.
trad itionall y Christian, secu'The Church and Islam . 'La ·for almost a thou " md yea rs. and ed itor of First Things lar societi es. could also be
magazi
ne.
·o
f
course.
we
are
Civi lta Cattolica' Breaks the Europe was under const am
in fl uencin g Vatican thinking.
Ceasefire,' is incomplete. ill threat from Islam . whi ch co mmiued to (i nterfaith ) di a· ' Before the 1990s.· Ms. Shea
is a 3,083- word excerpt.) 'I lwice put its survi val in se ri- Iog ue, but we ask our 'said . ' the biggest persecutors
Muslim interl ocutors to ta ke
don 't know what the point of OLr&gt; dange r.·
seri
ously some of the ditTi - of Chri stians were co mmuThe explanation ? As if ta kthe art icle is.'
cul
ties
posed by Islam. · As ni st co untries.' With the fall
Here 's the point: For the ing a page from the historian
of the Soviet Union, radical
first time in almost 3D years. Bat Yc'or. the art ic le cites the examples, he listed Islam's Islam took co mmuni sm's
a source close to the heart of Islamic precepts of jihad fai lure to all ow religious place. ' We're still very
the Cathol ic Church (art icles (holy war) and dhimmitude freedom, its per se~:ution of naive,' she said. ·we need to
in La Civilta Cattoli ca are (inferi or status of non- Christian minorities and its
people.'
approved by the secretary of Muslims). It al so stipulate s hateful altitude toward Jews. educate
Diana
West is a columnist
state of the Vatican ) has pu b· tha t there arc two meanin gs Dial og ue, Neuhau s said, fin· The Washin g to11 Tim es.
li &gt;hed wha t Vatican-watcher of jihad - the spiritual war, 'cannot be purchased at the She u .m he crmtacied vw
Sand ro M ag ister ct.ill s 'a or struggle, to be faithful to price of'tell ing the tru th.'
Bljt wha t is true now was d ia11a H·u ·@ mt g Ioha /.net.
str ikingly severe' account nf the teachings of the Koran .

You just might think
you ' ve struck a nerve when a
guy who goes to work every
day at the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops to promote
interfaith dialogue - someone who keeps people talk-

HERE'S

THE

CHURCH...

HERE'S
THE

STEEPLE ...

ENTER

AGAY

BiSHOP...

AND

5PLITTH~

PEOPLE.

Nellie Zerkle
MIDDLEPORT - Nellie Zerkle, 97, Middleport , died on
Sunday, Nov. 9, 2003 at Pleasant Valley Hos pital in Point
P~ easan t, W.Va. Arrangements are under tbe directio n of
F1sher Funeral Home in Middleport and will be announced
upon completion.

John Rawlings
'

RAC INE- John Alsnn Rawlings, 67, Racine, formerly of
Stewart: d1edlate Sunday evemng, Nov. 9, 2003 at his residence, toll owmg an extended illness.
He was born in Marion. Ky.. on Nov. 22, 1935, son of the
late ,Robert and Aileen Spurling Rawlings .
H1 s w1!e, Nancy 0' Brien Rawlings, survives.
Services will be held at I p. m. on Wedn esday; Nov. 12, 2003
at Jagers and Sons Funeral Home in Athens with Pastor
Robert D. Raw lings offi ciating·. Burial will fo llow at
Burl ingham Cemetery.
Fri ends n1ay call fro m 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral
home. Mthtary ntes will be conducted at grave side by K.T.
Crossen Post 21 Amencan Legion and VFW Post 3477.

RUTLAND Revival
services wi ll be held at the
Rutland Freewi ll Baptist
Church,
Salem
Street ,
Rutland, 7 p.m. each evening
Wednesday through Saturday.
jackie Grimmett of Man, W.
'Ia. will be the speaker. There
will be special music each
night. Pastor Jamie Fortner
invites the public.

ESC sponsors food
pr~grams

at head

start sites
POM EROY
The
Athens- Meigs Edu cational
Service Center is sponsoring the USDA fund ed child
and adult carefood program

COL UMB US (API - Gov.
Bob Taft took a modest hit
with the narrow loS&gt; o f hi s
hi gh-tech development issue
in a vote that produced no real
wi nners, a political analyst
says.
Issue I, which would have
authnrized the state to borrow
$500 million over 10 years for
h1 gh-tech re search and job
development , was turned ·back
by vo ters last Tuesday 51 perce nt to 49 percent - a
46,000-vote margin otll of 2.4
million cast.
Taft , a Republi can, made
the issue the centerpiece of
hi s. Third Frontier program.
des1gned to boost Ohio's technology-based economy and
help its manufacturing sector.
The is sue was drubbed in
GOP-leaning runtl counties
but won in manufm:turingbased - and DemUI.:ratic coumie s. especially in northeast Ohio.
The scoreca rd was th e
result of the type of development Issue I promised. as
well as politics, said John
Green. director of the Ray C.
Blis s School of Appli ed
Politics at the University of
Akron . Rural Ohio would not

get the jobs, but urban centers
would , he said.
"A lot of the areas that
voted for it are areas that
tended to be Democratic and
more open to the idea of government help. They also were
areas that have had high job
lo ss in the manufacturing
economy," Green said .
Green said the keys to the
defeat could be found in
Hamilton County, Talrs home
base, and in Franklin County,
the seat of state government.
Iss ue I lost in . Hamilton
County by fewer thim 2,000
votes, but it lost by more than
II .000 votes in Franklin ,
which had the lowest voter
turnout in the election - 25
percent of those eligible.
Asking voters to fund a
bond program five months
after
he
signed
the
Legislature 's $2.5 billion twoyear sale s tax increase didn 't
help either, Green said.
"The fact that these counties
didn' t go for it may suggest a
certain disenchantment with
Bob Taft," Green said . "In
some areas, there is some hostility toward the tax increase
and it ends up being assigned
to him, fairly or vnfairly.''

Chamber
from Page A1
John Musser.
Wingett has been aiifelong
res1dent of Syracuse. He is
best known for hi s career with
Ohio Valley Publi shing which
began in 1960. After forty
years of service he retired in
late 1999 as publisher of the
company's three newspapers:
The Daily Sentinel , The Point
Pleasant Regi ster and the
Gallipolis Tribune.
In addition to his job with the
newspaper, Wingett dedicated
many years to public service by
servtng on Symcuse Town
Counctl, a a posttion he held for
12 years. In 1978, he became
Syracuse Village
Grants
Administrator, a position he held
until retiring in January of this
year, thus completing 37 years
of public service.
Wingett's most charit~bl e
contribution to the people of
Symcuse occurred recently
when he purchased the
Syracuse Elementary Building
and property from the Southern
Local School Di strict and
donated them to Syracuse to
establish a community center.
Musser, who was elected as
the mayor of Pomeroy earlier
this week, was honored for his
contributions to the village.
Musser was the point man for

Fair or not, the gove rnor has
not tried to hide from it, Ohio
Republican Party Chairman
Robert Bennett said .
'They always look at the
chief executive officer and the
governor has been very willing to step up and say this was
neces~ ary, " Bennett said. "I'm
not sure the voters trust that
this is temporary."
Taft should not suffer for Issue
I 's loss, Bennett said. He pointed
out that George Voinovich lost
two issues he championed: a bill
that would have changed the
workers compensation system
and his own sales tax increase.
He was elected to the U.S. Senate
the November after the sales tax
lost.
The di ssent in the rural
counties was fanned by the
200,000-member Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation, the only
major organization to oppose
Issue I. Bennett said technology helped the bureau get its
message out, because farme rs
use the Internet heavily to
communicate.
"The Farm Bureau is a
membership. We have constant dialogue and we are in
con stant communication at
the county level on all kinds

from PageA1

in July 2001 as a supervisor for
the State of Ohio Job Services.
"! meet all my goals for
each organization because of
the members of each organization," Hart said.
Darrell Markijohn, who coordinated the huge Morgan's Raid
event in September, received
special recognition for the effort
he and 190 raiders from 25
states contributed to Meigs
County. Markijohn said 35,000
people attended the event and
he was quick to thank the
Meigs County Commissioners
and everyone else who contributed to the week-long event
that took tour years to plan .
In 199?, a small group of conrented c1ttzens gathered to discuss the fate of the oldest standing courthouse in the Northwest

educ.Hion conference m the

opportuni tie' for adult' to
rece ive job train 1n1!. let
alone young stu den ts. They
receive on·the-job ·trai ning.
prov1de communi ty 'crvicc
and re inforce their w;adcmic
work all at the same t1me."
Tw o cia" peri od' e&lt;K"h
week

are spe nt lea rmn !..!

leadership and work-related ·
skills in the classroom.
The Stude nt Achievement
Fair is a four-hour celebration of learning and achi evement to be held Tuesday iD
conjunction with the fo urday state conference. Th e
OSBA estimates that IO.(XJO
sch&lt;Hl l boa rd memhcrs.
admini strators and

~ U C\IS

will attend the confe~re nce

United States. and more than
700 cxhihitor' wi ll di,pla\
their products at t,lle trade
..,hnv. .
Last year. the school''
hand bell. choir performed at
the fair. .md as " resu It was
k;,tu red in the Schoo l
Board\ A-.,..,oci;Jt ion· " annua l
c•tlendar.
·· Jt "s uncommon for a di. . -

trict to be in,·ited to' the con·
fere ncc two year:-. in a row."

Superintenden t Deryl Well
said. '·and an honor. for the
\tude nts."
"There were about 200
&lt;chool' .compel ing for I()()
' pots at the con ference. and
mo't of the sc hool' chosen
v.rerc much larger 1h an we

are.

Coming Thursday...

"G})fac~ fe, ~ f?
Thmg~ fe, J{;)e,"

green or ocean blue, but a splash of fall colors which Meigs
County and southeast Oh10 are known for. Her favorite book
is the Bible. Her favorite movie, really a miniseries, is the
Thornb1rds by Colleen McCullough . Thi s romantic movie is
about the one woman 's struggle with God and her love for a
pnest nam.ed Ralph di Bricassart - played by Richard
Chamberlam. Hart said she is a big fan of anything with
Chamberlain in it.
Hart's favorite vacation spots are a variety of places like
Mount Rushmore, Yellowstone Park and many other places
she has toured in the west with her husband Dale. They have
one daughter, Legina, who lives in Florida.

'

v. hich began Sunday and
continues through Tue,dav.
It is the fourth·la rge't staie

Eastern

of issues. We work hard at
having a good pulse acros;
the state relative to what o ur
positi ons are ," said Jack
Fi sher. the bureau's executi ve
vice pres ident .
The bureau said Issue I
ignored agri cultu ral iss ues
and that tax reform, lawsutt
limit s and other program s
would help farmers more than
high-tech development.
.
The farmers may have bee n
.happy for Issue I 's defeat, but
few winners emerged, Gree n
said .
.
Ohio Democratic Part y
Chairman Denny White said
the party was approached by
Issue I backers but decided to
remain neutral.
White said he felt the issue
would lose "the minute I'd see n
the governor's picture in the TV
commercial. What he savs and
what he does are just the. oppostte. It 's the trust factor."
Green said issue electio ns.
especially one as comple x as
Issue I, are tou gh to anal yze.
"Some of the opponenl' of the
governor inside the Republican
Party and some of the Democr•L'
will point fingers," he said. "We
have to be careful about overinterpreting."

securing the grant and oversee- Menagerie. Duffield is a
ing the riverfront walkway native of Middleport and
[Jroject that is nearing comple- 'graduated from Middleport
tion. Anyone who has ever High School in 1951.
been to one of the many festiOver the years, Duffield has
vals at the river's edge in served in various leadership
Pomeroy can thank Musser for postttons on boards which
the amphitheater and boat mclude President of the Boand
dock. He ha' served on various of Public Affairs, Chainnan of
boards in leadership roles the Middleport Planning
throughout Meigs County like Commission, President of the
Chaiiman of the Stemwheel Middleport
Community
Festival Committee and ihe Association, Chainman of the
President of the Pomeroy Middleport Tree Commission,
Merchants As8ociation.
and secretary of the Middleport
Musser has served a num- Citizens Committee for revttalber of years on Pomeroy ization of schools.
Duftield is an active member
Village Council and has
championed many ordi- of several groups which include
nances and iml?rovernents to the Mus1cal Box Society
the village whtch has made International, the Sons and
life better for everyone.
Daughters
of
Pioneer
"In my opinion, John is a Riverrnen, the American Steam
very important asset to ' the Boating Society of America,
Pomeroy and to the citizens of the American Carousel Society,
Meigs. County as a whole," said Circus Fans of America, and the
outgotng Pomeroy mayor Barber Shop Quartet Society.
Hart has been active hand
Victor Young ill. "Jokingly, I
have always told John he IS a working institution of public
)Iutton for punishmef!t" when service in Racine for a long
11 comes to these sttuanons, but time. She is always quick to
he always says with a smile, 'no help out and ha~ tireless energy.
problem- we'll worlc it out."' She has served as a president of
Duffield is the heart and the Racine Area Community
soul 9f Middleport. He is best Organization, Star Mill Park
known for entertaining chil- Board, Meigs County Council
dren and adults all over Meigs on Aging Board. RSVP
County as either the Homeland Security Volunteer
"Calliope King of the World" Racine
Fall
Festivai
or as "Professor My:roni" Committee, Racine American
with
his
Magmficent Legion Auxiliary and various
Marvelous
Musical other committees. She retired

winners

D1ane Milliron. right front. was the winner lor the best cos·
turl)ed at the Overbrook Center's stall recent Halloween
party which had as its theme. "F&lt;my Tales Do Come True .Among the others costumed from the left were Cass1e Lee.
left front: and back . left to right. Stehanie Deerfield. Sherri
Foster. Dehronda Hoover. Nancy Manleyu. Jody McGui re. and
Mi,chael C1 tes.

Taft damaged by loss, but no real winners

Ohio Bicentennial Banner or grab an arm and welcome a newcomer mto the commumty where she lives especially during a
fe st1val.
·
"It' s home, " she said. "It's where all my family, relatives
and fn~nds are that makes Racine special."
Hart s favonte . color ts a not just a single color like forest

.'

for enrolled participant' at
the Bradbury Learning
Ccritcr. and the Tupper;
Plains.
Clay
School,
Woodland and Duvi' Hall
Head Start prugr:ams .
Meals wi II be served at no
separate charge to all enrolled
part icipants of the centers in
accordance with Federdl law
and U.S. Department of
Agricu lture poli cy wi thout
discrimination on the basis of
race. color, national origin.
gender, age or di.'ability.
The eligi bility guidelines
for free and red uced-priced
meals effective through June
30, range from $11 ,674 a year
for a free lunch to $16.6 13
for a reduced·priced lunch tor
a family of one; to $40,248 a
year for a free lunch to
$57,276 a year for reduced
lunch for a famil y of eight.

Revlal announced

from Page A1

ers. a subject journali sts any state. Instead , delegates sentiment nse s in backavoid . both because it insults. will be awarded proportion- stretch.
Dick Gephardt : 6· 1. Strong
Seri ou s people di slike the customers and dimini shes all y to all candidates receiv111
low a.
win s
nativ e
ing more than 15 percent of
horse- ra ce politi ca l cove r- our own se lf-importance.
But publi c indifference the vote in each congression· Mi ssouri. union ·dominated
age. Apart from c;lhl e-TV
al
so
res ults from the fact that al di stri ct, from sea to shin- Mich1gan on Feb. 7, but
spectacles like the Kobe
could be out of the money
Bryant tria l, nothing's more so far, the Democratic con- in g sea.
before Super Tuesday, March
To
be
nominated.
a
candi
mindl ess than handi cappin g test makes for lousy televi sion . A recent debate on date mu st win a maj ority 2.
president ial campaig ns.
Wes ley Clark: 5-I. Must
Alas,
hi gh-mindedness CN N drew a 1.&amp; share, right (2, 160) of delegates to the
fini
sh third behind New
June
convention
.
Given
that
down
there
with
'World'
s
~nd s to be sclf-defeatin ~ in
rs
in
New
Englande
there
are
796
party-appointed
Ameri can politics. Bes1des Strongest Man' contests and
Hampshire,
win
in
South
titillation at hearing words infomercials on The Shaving 'super delegates,' to lock up
Virginia,
. the nomination before the Carolina ,
like ' panties' on telev ision, Channel.
ssee
.
Needs
to
act more
Tenne
Boston
convention,
someWith
nine
candidates,
peopl e follow celebrity tri als
like
general,
less
like
henbody
has
to
win
61
percent
of
for the same reason they there's no possibility of real
pecked
sitcom
dad
.
the
elected
qelegates
in
a
watch ball games: to see who debate, and the entire exerJohn Kerry: 12-1. Must do
ci se is contam inated by fak- nine-candidate field over two
wins.
thonths
between better than expected in Iowa
George W. Bu sh can cer- ery. Every minute spent short
February
and
early
April and New Hampshire or presgravely
attending
to
Dennis
tainly be beaten. A recent
sure will build for him to pull
2004
.
Given
stron
g
regional
ABC News/Washington Post Kucinich or Carol Moseley
poll shows him leading a Braun is a minute better di fferences and favorite-son up by mid-March .
John Edward s: 30- 1.
generic Democrat just 48-47, spent channel surfin g for a candidates, the odds of a
Dynamite
in the paddock,
deadlocked
and/or
brokered
beer
ad
with
cute
babes.
within the margin of error.
on
the
track . Mu st
weak
convention
appear
extremely
Nationally,
only
four
Only 47 percent approve of
in early
defeat
Clark
high.
his handling of Iraq; 51 per- among the Democratspoll in
to remain
Southern
conte
sts
Would that make for good
cent di sapprove. Even large r double figures : Howard
majorities disapprove of his Dean , Wesle y Clark, Di ck television" Maybe. Or it viable.
Joe Lieberman : 50-1 .
and
Joe could degenerate into farce,
record on the federal budget, Gephardt
Unpopular
with Dem bettors
perpetuating
the
notion
that
Lieberman.
Dean
leads
with
taxes, health care , Social
due
to
no·show
in 2004
are
too
ineffectuDemocrats
Security,
etc.
Most a paltry 17 percent. But the
Democrats would see hi s most striking figure in the al to govern . Anyhow, in the Cheney debate , softness durelection (I almost wrote ' re· ABC News/Washington Post interest of generatin g a little ing Florida debacle. •
AI
Sharpton,
Carol
election ') as a national cata- poll is that 76 percent of buzz, I asked e-mail pals
Moseley
Braun,
Dennis
the
country
whose
across
Democratic
voters
say
they
strophe. A Mari st poll show s
44 percent of registered vot- might change their minds: 53 opinions l respect to give me Kucinich: 1,000-1. Clear the
ers definitely planning to percent say they probably simulated pari-mutuel odds track for the real horses, you
on the Democratic race as if fool s.
vote against Bush; onl y 38 will.
Hillary Clinton: 100- 1. A
it were being held at
Of
course;
the
race
isn't
percent definitely support
sucker
bet. Dream on, Karl
Churchill
Downs.
Then
l
mn
being held nationally or even
him.
Rove.
She
ain't running.
But you can't beat some- state by state in the ordinary them through a kitchen
10-1. The
AI Gore:
body wi th nobody. and ri ght sense. What hasn't yet sunk blender and came up with a
Washington
press
would hate
tout
sheet.
in
among
journalists
covernow only party acti vists are
it,
but
Honest
AI
could plod
Here's
how
it
looks:
ing
the
race
is
the
likely
payi ng attention to the conhome
a
winner
in
the event
Howard Dean: 4- 1. Early
test for the Democratic nom- impact of the amazin gly
in ation. Poll s also reveal that complicated rule changes the speed in Iowa, neighboring of a nine; horse pileup in the
many ha ve no idea who's party has imposed on itself in New Hampshire . · Fades in clubhouse tum . ,
(Gen e Lyons is a Little
running or what they stand 2004 in the interest of ' fair- South Carolina, Oklahoma,
Rock,
Ark., author and recipMissouri
on
Feb.
3,
and
in
for. True, thi s is partly due to ness.' Massive confusion
of the
National
ient
the congenital sloth and 1appears likelier. There are no Virginia and Tennessee on
ignorance of American vat- winner-take-all primaries in Feb. 9. Anybody-but-Dean Maga'l.in e Award.)

Cont~st

Local Briefs

Hart

Somebody can't be beaten by nobody

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

10, 2003

Obituaries

Has the Ultican ckanged its ttJind about Islam?

BY GENE LYONS

;

Page A4

Your guide to weekend
entertainment In the Tit· State

Territory. The Chester-Shade A g i~ g and the Multi-purpose
Historical Association received a Semor Center. Under her
Distinguished Service Awand for guidance. the Center was one
its hand. work in restoring a jewel of the first 50 in the nation to
tor Me1gs County and Ohio, the rece i,·e national recognition .
· Noted businessman Homce
Chester Courthouse. A tearful
K•UT
received the David P Baker
Mary PowelL president of the
Awand.
Baker was one of the
Chester·Shade
Historical
founding
members of the
Association. accepted the awand.
Chamber
and
wa' a ureless supThe Chamber re cogni zed
p.nter
of
Meigs
County. Karr
Susan Oliver for her tireless
was
honored
for
his
lono service·
work serving seni or citi zens
to
the
community.
He
fias been
in Meigs County for more
111stmmental
111
the
business
and
than 25 years. As Executi ve
growth
of
the
county.
Karr.,
Director of the Mei gs Countv
Council on Aging. Oli ve"r most recent enterprise is the Wild
Horse Cafe 111 Pomeroy. He
wa~ resronsible for bringing
thanked
emplovees and fam·
reg1ona , state and nat1onal ily ti:Jr hishissuccess.·
recognition to the Council on

I would like to thank the residents of

Bedford Township
, for their support on election day.

John W. Dean
Bedford Township Trustee

-COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR-

"Living Life With 'Diabetes"
•
•
•
•
•

...

- ..

Friday, November 21, 2003
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-pwpose Room
Public is cordially invited

•

•

Vendors, FREE Rplldlaln Scriealqa,
Edu~al)aforlllltloa; ..
· · Promotionallte. . -t J)oor Prlzel:
'
.· .

- - --:-----__:..._- - - --

-.------

-.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�The paily Sentinel

PageA6

BY THE BEND

Monday, November

10, 2003

Wife with clinging husband

Social Security Column

needs space to stand alone
Applying for Social
Security Disability benefits
"How Much Work Do I Need'!"
If you're "insured" by Sociul
Special to the Sentinel
S ec urit y- an~ if you are forced
to stop working because of an
Did you know that one of the illness or injury and your docfastest growing segments of our tors tell yo u that you may be
populatton is men and women out of work for at .least a year,
aged 50-59° In t&gt;tcl , this age or it your condttton IS !alaigroup will increase by more yo u shoulu fil e for Social
than 33 percent in this decade' · Sec urit y c.Jisabilit y henefit s.
It so happens thai this age Just go online and visit our
group of workers is also most home page at www.socJalseprone to hecommg dt.sabled. curity.gov. Then click on
At Social Sewrity we expect "Apply for disability bc_netits
the number of uisabilit y appli- online. " If you prefer to tile by
cations to increase in the next phone or in person at your
few years, so we are making_ local Soci al Security otfice.
every effort to lei workers ol call us at 1-800-772-1213 to
all ages know how the disabi l- make an appointment.
ity program works and what
No matter how you choose
they can do to speed the dts- to fi le. here's a quick primer
abilily app licati on process.
on what you need to know
To be eligible lor Social about how the process works.
Security disabi lity benetits, you
You will be as ked a senes ol
need to have worked and paid questions abou t your di sability.
Social Security taxes for a suffi- The law says your disability
cient period of time to be must be severe enough to keep
"insured" for Social Security you from doing any "substandisabi lity. You become insured tial" work. When completing
by working. paying Social this section. please be as thorSecurit~ taxes. and earn mg . ough as yo u can. Li st all
credits. This year, for example. "impairments you have that
if you earn $3.560 or more, you keep you from workmg. and
get the maximum tour credits explain how these impairments
that can be ewned th JS year. The prevent you from gomg about
number of credits you need to your normal dai ly aclivllies.
be eligible tor disability beneYou wi ll also be asked to protits depends on your age.
vide us with the names,
For example, if you become addresses and phone numbe rs .
disabled at tl1e age of 54, you of all doctors and other healthwould need 32 credits, w1d 20 of care grofessionals who have
those credits must have been treate you, as well as any clineamed in the I0-year period ics or hospitals where yo u
immediately betore you became received treatment for your di sdisabled. You can find a table ability. And we wi ll ask you to
listing the credit requirements sign several copies of a form
for different "age groups at that authorizes doctors and
www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/l treatment facilities lo release
0029.hnnl. Once there. click on your private medical records 10
B Y LISA CRUMP

us. '(Health care pn;&gt;fessionals
will be pleased to know thai our
disclosure lorm ha~ been updated to comply with _the provisions of the recently enacted
Health Insurance Portabi lity
and Accountability Act.)
After you complete the initial application , you may be
contacted by our representatives who evaluate your disab ility claim. They may ask
you to complete another form
that requests more information about your work htslory.
Or they m&lt;ty sel up an
appointment for you to see a
medical professional (usuall y
a doctor) who will examine
you to help us decide if you
qualify for disability benetils·.
The initial application
process generally takes about
three months. Bul remember:
you can help speed along the
process by: IJ..giving us a thorough explanatton of how your
di sability keeps you from
work ing: 2) givmg us any medical records you may have and
a comJJlete list of all the medical professionals who have
treated you: and 3) promptly
respondmg to any follow-up
requests you get from us.
And, fmally, remember tha\
if your disability benefits
applicati on is denied, you can
appeal our decision . That
means you can ask us to look
at your case again.
When you ask for an appeal,
we will look al the enti re decision, not j ust the part you disagree wtth. If our deci sion
was wrong, we'll change it.
(Lisa Crump is th eSocial
Security Manager in Athens.)

Community calendar
Clubs and
Organizations

American Legoin Post 602 in
Racine 7 p.m. The Enduring
Freedom Support Group ard the
Racine
Area
CorT)munity
Organization
are
hosting
the proMonday, Nov. 10
gram.
Refreshments
.
will
be
POMEROY - The Meigs
served.
Ba nd Boosters will meet at
Wednesday, Nov. 12
6:30 p.m. in the band room at
MIDDLEPORT
The
Meigs High School. Parents
Middleport
Uterary
Club
will
meet
a re urged to attend.
HARRISONVILLE - The at 2 p.m. at the home of Pauline
Meigs County Republican Parl&lt; Horton. Ann Rupe will review
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the "The Girl wrth the Pearl Earring:·
Thursday, Nov. 13
Harrisonville Fire Department.
POMEROY
- Alpha Iota
Tuesday, Nov. 11
Masters
will
go
to Marietta for
POMEROY Retirement
lunch at Austin's. Members
planning seminar lor teachers 6:30
to meet at 10: 15 at the
to 8:30 p.m. Meigs High School are
home of Carol McCullough .
cafeteria. Speakers from STRS
and ORTA. Call Athens-Meigs
ESC office to register, 992-3993.
RACINE - Veterans Day
obseMnCe will be held at the
Wednesday, Nov. 12

Public meetings

POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Health will meet at 5 p.m.
in the conference room of the
Meigs County Health Dept,
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
: Thursday, Nov. 13 .
POMEROY - The Meigs
Board of Education will meet at 7
p.m. at Meigs High School.

Veterans Groups
Tuesday, Nov. 11
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 99, American Legion,
Veterans Day seJVice at Meigs
County Courthouse, 10:55 a.m.
Unveilirv;J of Medal of Honor plaqJe,
and message from Past Ohio
Department Commander Schol.
Music by Meigs High Scrod Bard,
Jim SoUsby. Public invited

DEAR ABBY: I mel
"David" eight months ago,
and we were married after
only a fe w months. He doesn't have many male friends,
by choice. Although I love
David, he is smothering me .
David works next door and
watches everything I do. lf I
go to the store, he has to go. If
I play on the computer, he's
right there beside me. It
seems I can't do anything
without him around. I'm not
cheating and he knows it, but
it seems he has to spend every
waking moment by my side .
I don 't want to be rude,
because I love my husband .
But I need some breathing
space. He wonders why I am
irritable with him so often.
Please give me some adv ice
about the smothering. CAN ' T BREATHE IN
COEUR D'ALENE, IDAHO
DEAR
CAN ' T
BREATHE: Your marriage is
in serious trouble. I don ' t
know your husband; however, he appears to be supercontrolling, hyper-needy and
insecure. That he has no male
friends is telling. For whatsoever reason, he is completely
dependent upon you.
Tell David exactly how
you feel. He needs counseling before he loses you and you both would benefit
from counseling together In
work on your communication skills.
DEAR ABBY: My 16year-old daughter, "Olivia,"
is pregnant. My husband ,
"B ill," kicked her out of the
hou se because the father is
of another race. Abby, she
has nowhere to live and is
staying with whoever will
lake her in each night. She
doesn ' I eat properly and she
doesn't sleep well.
Olivia has always dreamed
of going to college and
becoming a private investi-

",

The Daily Sentinel
S!;Jbscribe today¥ 992-2155

21 Games!! 3 Special Games!l Door Prizesl!
Over $3,000 in baskets PLUS an games baskets will
hold

"BINGO Santa"- an exclusive Ohio River Bear!!

Refreshments will be sold. Advance tickets on sale • Call 992·4055. Doors open at 5:00
Ad\'am;e tid,ets go in special drawing. Sponsored by the Middleport Com mun ity Association .
Not affiliated with or sponsored by The Longaberger Company.

A special thank you to the.
people who supported me
by putting signs in their yard.

Wllbur E. Robinson

Sandy lannarelli

Orange Township Trustee
the

Thank you
for your supJX&gt;It
in the recent election

. Lebanon Township Oerk
lhe candidate

It means alot to have
apersonal physician
you know and trust
'

.,

&lt;·

•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive •Point Pleasant, WV • 304-675-4340

Redmentop
Washington Bible
College, 113-29
BEAVER FALLS , Pa .
The Rio Grande men's basketball team overcame a
heartbreaking one-point loss
to Taylor the previous day as
the
Redmen
blaste!l
Washington Bible. Coile~e,
113-29. in the consolatton
game of the Geneva College
Tip-Off Tournament.
The Redmen jumped on
Washington Bible early, taking a 58- II lead into the half.
Five Redm en scored in
doub le fi gure s.
Freshman
Jeromy
Dishman , who was named to
the all -tournament team, led
Rio Grande ( 1- 1) with 26
points. Dishman went 6-for-9
from the 3-point li ne.
Also for the Rcdmen,
Cedric Hornbu ckle had 22
points . inc luding five 3poin ters , whi le Jarrod Haines
added 18 poin ts, Cain
Vandall 16 and Re.ggie
Williamson 10.
Haines also led the
Redmen under th e boards
with eight rebounds , while
Rashad Cooper had nine
assi sts .
Mauri ce Maxwell led
Washington Bible with II
points . while Bryan Floyd
scored 10.
The Redmen open up their
home schedule this weekend
as th ey play host to the Bevo
Fran cis Tournament. Also
sc hedu led to participate at the
Bevo on the men's si~e is
Shawnee Slate, King College
and OU-Lancaster.

Ohio unable to stop Cribbs, Kent State
~
,.ltJ'.

BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@mydailytribune.com
ATHENS - After Joshua Cribbs, laying in the
endzone for a few minutes after landing on the back
of his neck following an early fourth-quarter touchdown , returned on Kent State's following dri ve. one
scare was ruled off.
Cribbs later helped the Golden Flashe s avert
another scare - the Ohio Bolx:ats.
With I :29 left in the game Saturday, Kent State
took advantage of a Ryan Hawk fumble as Cribbs
took the ball down the right side for a 7-yard TD run
as Kent State defeated Ohio, 37-33.
Cribbs finished with four rushing tou~hdowns as
he had 79 yards·on 17 cmries on the ground for the

Hawk was IIJ-ol-12 pas,~n g for 16K yarJ, fo r the
Botx:ah.
Satun.fa) wa' Ohio·, second l&lt;•u rth -quarter me ht.lo wn in

.;':· -. I • , _;: f
,. .
·;._,l •
·-

37

33

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Enforcer Jody Shelley had
hi s first career two-goal game
and the Co lumbus Blue
Jacke ts rediscovered their
power pl ay in a 4-3 victory
Sunday over the Calgary
Flames .
Shelley, who led the NHL
in penalty minutes last sea. son, had four goals in hi s previous 145 games and only
one career two-point game.
Coiltlnbus was 3-for-8 on
the power play after failing to
convert on its last 12 opportunities. Geoff Sanderson and
Andrew Casse ls also scored
for the B Iue Jackets.
Steven Reinprecht, Jarome
lginla and Andrew Ference
had Flames goals.
Calgary, 0 for 5 on the
power play, had a seasonhi gh 45 shots , II more than
its previous best.

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - Marvin Black scored
16 points and made two free
throws in the final seconds
Saturday in Marshall's 77-76
exhibition
win
against
Coaches vs Cancer Team
Dasani.
Marshall blew a 14-point
second-half lead and trailed
67-66 with 4:31 remaining.
The lead changed hands five
times in the final four minutes
before Black's free throws
with 22 seconds left gave the
Thundering Herd the lead for
good.
Dasani had one last chance,
but Marshall forced the team
of former college players into a
turnover with I. 9 seconds
remaining, and the Herd ran
out the clock.
The exhibition game was
Ron Jirsa's first as Marshall's
·coach. His first regular-season
contest is at home Nov. 21
against UNC- Wilmington.
"Our goal is to win the game
with toughness, and we did
that," Jirsa smd: "!'hat's gmng
.to give us confidence the rest
of the way."
· David Anderson also scored
16 points for Marshall.
Freshman Tre Whitted added
II .
Grady Daniels, formerly a
guard at UNLV, led Dasani
with 21 points. Chris Crosby
(Washington State) and Mike
CampbeTI (Long Island) scored
12 apiece for Dasani.

'

a~

mun\ week..,

Two week' a~o al Hulfalo.t hc Bull ' outscored the
Botx:ats 16-0 in the fow1h. incl uding three Jield
!!"'~ 'by Dalla., Pelt , tn pick up their liN wm of the
seasun, 26- 17.
"We'w real!; tried to empha\is the li•u rth quarter
th e Jl"'' cm1pk.ol v.cck' 111 prauice ... 'aic.J Ohio head
coach B rian K norr.

TI1e Botx:ats. "ho kd throug hout mo't of the
Flashes (4-6, 3-3 Mic.J-Ameri can Conference ) and ga me, incl udtng a 17-poi nt kad midway th rough the .
M!co ml quan-.:r. found th~:m~d v~:~ lry 1ng tu hung on
was 20-for-1fi passing for 250 yards.
.
Brad Young led the Bobcats (2-7. 1-4) rushmg to a two-po illt :u.hantage .
with nine carries for 73 yarus. while Ray Huston had
Please see Ohio, 82
65 yards on I0 carries.

Ben gals
claw
Texans
BY JoE KAY
Assoeta led Press

CINC INNATI
Somebody named
John,on torm ~ nt e d the Texan' again .
Rudi Johtbon set a Bcngal s rec:ord by run . ning -B time,. picking up I ~2 yards and a pair
nl 'e cund -lt all touc:hdtow ns Sunday 111
Cincinnati 's .1-l-27 1ictury &lt;ll·er Houston .
Still fumi ng over th e way Chad Johnson
guaranteed th e Benuals' lopsided win last season. th~ T~xans t.1-i&gt;) were determined 10 shut
h1111 up in the rematch. The chatt y receiver
fui led t11 smre or do his promi sed touchdown
dance .

The Tex an' coul lln ' t kee p the other John w n
- the one that kee ps quiet uno avoids theatrics - from doing just about an ything he
wished.
Corey Dillon ·s unhcralc.Jcd backup kept the
Bcngal s (4 -5) in contention in lh ~ AFC North
and feelin o ra1l1er full of themselves headlllg
e
.
into a home
uame ne.xt Sunday uga111st
un defeated KatNts City.
"We will win - that \ a guarantee:· Chad
Johnson sa id. "II \ no offense to their organizat ion . It 's ju' t the way I feel. Some people
mi uht n&lt;'l like it. but I' m conlldent that my
tea'inmateo., v.. on' tlea,·e me han gin g.

" It shnu ld be the game of -the- week . the
tlllde kated team agatn 't th ~ ne w-era
Bcngul s."
The'e Benga ls are a lot more than JUSt
Dilhm.
.
Inacti ve lxcause of a strained groin. he wa,n't e1en on the sideline as hi s backup4uickly
won over the Bengal s' smallest home crowd of
the sea." Ill . The '\0.437 fans chanted "Rudt'
Rud t,.. '" he ex ploited hole ' in one of the
l ~ a cue ·.., wor~o, t .dcfenst::-,.

Cincinnati Bengals running back Rudi Johnson (32) is stopped by Houston Texans defender Marcus Colema n
(42) in the fourth quarter Sunday in Cincinnati. Johnson rus hed for two touchdowns. and 182 yards on a tepm
record 43 carries as the Bengal s won, 34-27: (AP

··'th e·~ did whatever they wanteu," Texans

Please see 8ensals. 82

Kenseth wins first Winston Police: Stenson
killed during
Cup title, finishes fourth
robbery attempt
BY MIKE HARRIS

Associated Press

ROCKINGHAM, N.C. - Matt Kenseth
earned his first Winston Cup championship
Sunday with a fourth-place finish at North
Carolina Speedway.
Bill Elliott won the Pop Secret Popcom
400 while Kenseth, who has led th~ points
since ihe fourth race of the season, wrapped
up the first Cup title for c.ar owner Jack
Roush with one race rernammg.
"I got all this stuff bottled up inside ,
because I didn't want to get too excited the
.•
last few months," Kenseth said. "I don't
.,
.' (
know what I'm Raing to do now. It's an
awesome feeling.'
The champion took a slower victory lap in
his No. 17 Ford, followed by a pair of open
• '
trucks carrying most of his Roush Racing
team, several of them waving championship
banners as the crowd stood and cheered.
"Tius is beyond my wildest dreams,"
Kenseth said. "I never thoul!ht I'd have the
opportunity to sit in one of these cars, much
less be the champion. I'm just thankful to be
in good equipment with good people working on it." ·
The championship was very emotional
for Roush, who finished second •in the
point~ four times with Mark Martin in his
first I 5 years in the Winston Cup series and
has acknowledge bitter feelings over sOme
of rulings by NASCAR over the years.
Matt Kenseth hoists his trophy after clinching
"It's kind of like going through a plate the NASCAR Winston Cup driving championship
by finishing fourth in the NASCAR Pop Secret
Pleue- KenHih, 12
Popcorn 400 Sunday. (AP)
'

j

"

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'
Monday, November
10, 2003

Marshall wins
exhibition game

Dorothy A . .
Roseberry
Paid forb

Prep football tourney pairings, Page 82
Browns tall :o Chiefs, Page 86
NFL Roundup, Page B6

Shellefleads
Blue Jackets
past Flames

al Middleport American Legion • 299 Mill Stree t, Middleport. OH

support dwing
the recent
election.

Mayor of Middleport

)! alar. I am afraid if she
c.Joesn 'I come home , she may
not be strong enou gh. to
make it throu gh high school
- es pecially with a baby to
take care of.
I am desperate to help my
dau ghter, but Bil l won ' t
budge. Shoul d I leave him
and let the chips fa ll where
they may? - WORRIED
ABOUT MY DAUGHTER
IN FORT WORTH
DEAR WORRIED : Your
daughter is in serious trouble. She needs you right now
to survive. Tell your husband , the bigot, that Olivia is
your responsibi li ty legally
and morally until she reaches adulthood . If he refuses to
back off and accept it, HE
should be the one to leave ,
nol you and Olivia.
DEAR ABBY: A friend of
mine was tlying from Seattle
to San Francisco . Her plane
made an unscheduled stop in
Sacramento. The flight
attendant explained that if

Thursday, Nov. 13 6:00 p.m. Tickets $20.00

For yow

who elected me to .
my second term as

Abby

BASKET &amp; BEAR BINGOH

Thank You

THANK YOU
TO THE VOTERS

Dear

passengers wanted to get off
the aircraft they could reboard in 30 minutes.
Eve ryone go t off th e plane
1
except for one gent le man
who was blind. His See 111g
Eye dog I a~ qui etl y under
the seat s in front of him . The
man must have been a regular on that flight. becau se the
pilot approached him and
said, "James, we're tn
Sacramento for almost an
hour. Would you like to gel
off and stretch your legs?"
James replied, "No, thanks.
But maybe my dog would
like to stretch HIS legs."
People in the terminal were
aghast and pointing when
they saw the pilot - wearing
aviator sunglasses - emerge
from the plane being led by a
Seeing Eye dog! . - STILL
LAUGHING IN TAMPA
DEAR LAUGHING : For
someone wit h a fear of fly ing, that may have been the
last straw. However, with
air line technology advancing at the rate it has in recent
years, what they surmised
may one day be reality.
Dear Abbv is u-ri/len br
Abigail Vtui Burell, at.&lt;(,
k11own a~ Jemme Phillips, and
was founded by her mothe1;
Pauline Phillips. \i:'rire. Dear
Abbv at Wtvl v.DearAbbv.com
or ·P.o. Box 69440, Los .
A11ge/es, CA 90069.

INSIDE

PHOENIX (AP) - Cincinnati Reds outt1elder Demel!
Sten son was kidnapped in a robbery of his sport utility
vehicle and killed while trying to escape. police said
Sunday.
Sten son. who had been playing in the Arizona Fall
League. was found dead Wednesd:ty in the Phoenix suburb of Chandler after a ni ght out with fri ends.
While police said the robbery lxgan at a Scottsdale
nightclub, the e vents leading up to Stenson's. body being
found were unclear.
Police said Stenson's hand s were bound during the robbery and that there was an apparent struggle in his vehicle.
Detective Robert Kra utheim said Stenson was shot
more than once while attempting to esca pe from his SUV
and then was run over.
Police aren' t calling the crime a carjac king because it
hasn' t been establi shed that Stenson was in the vehicle
when it was stolen. said Chandler police spokesman Sgt.
Mark Franzen .
Four men were arrested in Stenson 's death .
David Griffith was WTested without incident Saturday
at his mother's home on the Salt River-Pima Maricopa
Indian Reservation east of Phoenix .
Griffith, 20, was arrested on a warrant for vehicle theft
and was being held by Salt River police whil'e Chandler
police seek extradition .
..
Krautheim said Chandler police will seek add tiJOnal
charges against Griffith. but he declined to elaborate.
Kevin Riddle. 43 , has been charged with possession of
stolen property. He was stopped by police while driving
Stenson's SUV less than two hours after Stenson's body
was found, police said·.

�•

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel . r

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November

10, 2003

Monda~No~10,2003

'--------------------------------------------------------------------------

·'..

' ~----------------------------~

Ohio ·high school football
state playoff pairings

Roglonal Rnals
DIVISION I
All games at 7 p.m. saturday
Roglon 1
AtPonnaByero._
(1 ) Menlo&lt; (12-Q) vs. (3) Lal&lt;ewood St
Edward (9-3)

Region 2
At Lenin George Da~ Stadium
(5) WadSworth .(1&lt;&gt;-2) vs. (7) Tot St
John's (9-3)

Region 3
A1 U - Arllnglon
Moorehead Memorial Stadium
(4) OU&gt;in Coffman (10.2) vs (3) Dublin
Scio~ (11-1 )
Region 4
At Untventty of Cincinnati
Nippert Stadium
(1) Cin. Ekier {11 -1) vs. (2) Cin. Colerain
(1 2-0)
DIVISION I
All games at 7:30 p.m. Friday
Region 5
At Lakewood Stadium
(5) Copley (9-3) vs. (3) Chardon (IQ-2)
Region 6
At Fremont Ross Harmon Stadium
(4) Dettance (10.2) vs. (2) Avon Lake
( 12-Q(
Region 7
Dublin Sclo\o Stadium
( 1} Cols. Brookhaven (12-o) vs. (3) Cols.
Independence 11o-2)
Region 8
Al Cincinnati Princeton 1 •

•.
~-

._

Vlldng Stadium

(1) Trenlon Edgewood (1 2·0) vs. (2)
Kings Mills Klngs (11 -1)
DIVISION Ill
All games at 7:30 p.m. Frldoy
· Region9
AI Euclid DiBlasio Raid
~.

{1) Cle. Benedictine (11-1) vs. (3) Mentor

•.
..,

Lake Cain. (lo-2)
Region 10
At DubUn Coffman Stadium
(5) Kenton (9-3) vs. (3) Cots. W.llenJOn
(IQ-2)

Region 11
At Massillon Paul Brown

Wayne Heldkamp Stedlum
L~~ng

Valley (11 · )1 vs. (7)

from Page 81
"They're going to get some yardage,"
sai d Kent State head coach Dean Pees.
"You ain't going to stop them. Just don't
give up the big plays."
Up 33-3 1 after Cribbs early fourth·
quarter score. Ohio had the ball inside
Kent State territory late in the fourth .
Hawk was blitzed by the Kent State
defense and fumbled the ball away at the
50-yard line. gi ving the Golden Fl as hes
new life.
And Kent State didn 't falter.
The Golden Flashes moved the ball at
will on the Bobcats and, with theh elp of
an 11-yard pass from Cribbs to Antwan
Smith, has the ball on the Ohio 21.
But, on third down , Kevin Beverly carried the ball to the 15, but was inches shy

Ken seth
from Page 81

At Grove City Central
Croealng Stadium
(41 Gahanna Cots. Academy (10·2) vs.
(2) Belnbrldge Pain! Valley (12.0)
DIVISION VI
All gamao at 7 p.m. saturday
Roglon 21
At Huron M«nofttl Stadium
(4) Monroeville (1o-2) vs. (7) Sendusl&lt;y
Sl . Mary's (8-4)

Reglon22
At Uma Bath Stadium

(1) Columbus Grove (12-Q) vs. (2) CoryRowson (11·1)

Region 23

Tiger Stadium
(1) Steubenville (12-Q) vs. vs. (3) Canal
Fulton NW (12.0)
Region 12
Huber Heights

(4) Newark

Germanlown Valey View (11·1)
DMSIONIV
All gamont 7 p.m. s.turaay
Region 13
At Brunewtctr Judy Klroch Flold
II) Sullivan Btacl&lt; River ( IQ-2) vs. (6)
Cle. VAS.! (11-4)
Region 14
AtUmas.NMS!lldlum
(4) Della (11·1 ) vs. (6) Coldwale( (11·1 )
Roglon 15
AI Zaneavlllo Sulobofger
Memorial Stadium
(4) Bellaire (10·2) vs. (2) Coshocton (11·
1)
Roglon 18
AI Dayton Wol&lt;ome Stadium
(1) Clarksville Cllnton-Massle (12-Q) vs.
(2) Versailles (12-&lt;l)
DI\IISIONV
All games at 7:30 Friday
Region 17
At Youngatown Auattntown-Fltch
Falcon Sladkrm
(8) Usbon Oavkj Anderson ( 11-1) vs. (2)
Warren JFK (1 0.2)
Region 18
At Findlay Donnell Stadium
(1) HamO.r Pair"* Henry (1o-1 ) vs. (3)
DelphoS StJohn's (lo-2)
Region 19
AI-Whlle Reid
(1) Amanda-Ciearcreek (11 ·1) vs. (2)
Sarahsvi&lt;l Shenandoah 112.0)
Roglon20

Ohio

At Byeovllto Mudowbfook
Coli Sladlum
(1) Newark Cath. (11-1) vs. (2)
ShadySide (1 1-1)

Region 24
At WapakOnets Harmon Field
(8) Maria Stein Marion Local (9·3) vs. (2)
Dola Hardin Northern (11 -1)

glass window," Roush said. "There's a lot
of pain breaking through it. But I have
probably l'ussed and complained about
some things l probably shouldn 't have."
Kenseth came into Sunday's race knowing he needed only to finish seventh or
better to end the suspense after leading the
points and feel ing the pressure of being
out front since March 9 in Atlanta.
"There 's a feeli ng you gel in your stomach when you' re leading the race and you
see somebody coming up behind you,"
Kenseth explained. "It's an empty feeling
in the pit of your stomach, and that's what
it feels like, like I' ve been leading a q ce

cords was damaged when he

had surgery Oct. I to correct
chronic neck pain that had
spread to his right w1n.
He said doctors advised him
. that the procedure, done
through the front of the neck.
could hun his ability to speak.
" It has to get better if I' m
going to continue my coaching

career, quite honestly," O'Brien
said atier the auckeyes. first
exhibi tion game Friday.
o· Brien has had to use a
microphone in practice. The
team will look for other ways to
help him communicate with
players, Ohio State spokesman
Dan Wallenberg said.
'They say if it doesn't come
back after eight months, it's not
coming back," said O' Brien,
who had a raspy voice before
the surgery. ''It could come
back next week. It could come
back in six months. l think we
have to be a little bit patient, but
I'm of the mindsel l want to
coach. 1 want to coach these
kids. I really like this team a
lot.''

Bengals
from Page 81
linebacker Jay Foreman said. "Anyt ime
somebody runs the ball like that whenever they need to, it's JUSt nut good
defense."
Unlike the other Johnson. Rudi kept his
mouth shut and kept the celebrations sim·
pie. He simply flipped the ball to the ofti·
cial after l1is 17-yard touchdown run in
the thi rd quarter.
He quickly headed to the bench after a
1-yard touchdown run put the Bengals
ahead to stay 31 -27 earl y in the fourth
quarter. Johnson 's 18 2 yards rushing
matched Jon Kitna's passing total.
"The way the game was going. l fe lt I0
times better," said Rudi Johnson, who
also topped 100 yards as Dillon's ti ll -in
two weeks ago. "I knew I was doing
something right and making things hap·

ior
Discount*
on your home delivered subscription!
Here's all you need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

Ad ...

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-:,2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lytri bune.com

Of{ree !lowe-~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:.00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

1'\0t \C I

"I.\"

lribune

at:

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Ne xt Day's Paper

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

nday In-Column : 1:00 p .m .
For Sundays Paper

down at the I, and Kitna went to his knee
after taking th e next snap.
'The field goal wouldn't have helped.
other th an the fact th at if we did not execute it right. we could have gi ven them a
chance to ge t back into the game ...
Bengals coach Marvin Lewis said . "So
we chose to go for it on liJurth down.''
The Texans also ch allen ged several of
th eir team records.
'
Carr th i·ew a 73-yard touchdown pass
to Corey Bradford - the th irt.l -longest
recepti on in franchise hi story - and
Domanick Davis opened the second half
with the [ungest run in t e an~istory. a 51 yard das h that set up another touc hdown .
Carr. who sat out last week's game
with a sprained ankle. was 11 -of-25 for
146 yards. Twice he overthrew Bradford ·
after the receiver ran past hi s defender.
mi ssing chances for touchdowns.
"We didn't score enough," Carr said.
"You have to take advantage of the
opportunities presented to you . It 's fru s-

trating."

Class A COL Drivers
Wanted
$25 Reward lor information
concern 1ng covered wagon
schOol bu ses used around
1933-36 m Pomeroy A local
fam 1ly na med Riggs may
have 1nlo. SSO for Pictures.
call collect 303-27g-9393.

or;~'';,~~n:~~~.·~,;;

Thursday for

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publ ishin9 resen~es the right to edit, reject. or canc el any ad at any lime . Errort muat be reported on the first
Tribune-Sentinel-Register will be responsible lor no more than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the rirst inaertion.
any loss or e.:penM that rnulta from the publication Of omiasion of an advertisemant. Corraction will be made in the first avallatMe edition.
are always conllcHtntial. • Current rate card appliaa. • All real estate adv&amp;rtiumanta are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1~
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE atandards. We will not knowingty accept any advtn:tsing in viola1ion of the law.

ANNOU!';LBIENTS

Earn money for Chris tma s
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permi t by selling Avon call Joyce
for sal e. Chester Township. 304·675·6919
Meigs County. send leners
of 1n teres t to: The Daily Looking fo r Rock Guitarist
Sen hnel, PO Box 729-20. and singer to join band. Must
be seri ous to play a lot. Call
Pomeroy, Oh10 4575 9.
Robbie (740)742·3200
No vember Perm Special.
Part time delivery person .
Tue sday s only. Quantum
Must have knowled ge ol
perms $25 at Lin da's Beauty
Gallipol is area , good with
Shop call , (74 0 ) 985-~34 8
people. and good wr iting
Say good bye to h1gh phone sk1ll s. App ly in person at
bil lst New local phone serv- Floral Fashion . 244 Th1rd
ice w11tl FREE unlimited Ave. Gallipolis. Ohio.
nation wide long Distance
1·800-635-2906
or
www .Freedom Movie.co m/ilp
aysyou . Local Agents want ed.
·

For rent one bedroom apartment 920 Fou rth. Ut 1lit1es
mcluded $400 44 6-8677
days 256-1972 evenmgs

A'l fAR A&lt;, I I&lt;NoW
•
VJ'{ tl&lt;lfll'T HAVE' A
~A"f -sA Dl&gt;/..~.

wHY

0

0

•

I 1'\ \'\I I \I
BUSINESS

~

"'

pHtO VALL EY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
~u do busin ess with peo
le you know. and NOT tc
!send mo ney through the
~ail until you have investi
h:lated the offer ing.

I r.~--"'"'o::B:-u•s.'·
1140

.

.'N·=
NING
--·- - ,
=

~""'

I

Owner Financing · owner
payment (304)882 ·2890

3 bedroom house, 4 112
acres, cJa , fenced paSture,
vinyl siding, Thermalpane
window, (740)985-4288
3 Br., 2 bath , Ranch. 3 yrs.
old, 2 car garage, 1/2 par!laity finished basement.
;·800 Sq . ft .. CIA gas FP.
- - - - - - -MISC.'ELLANEOUS
front &amp; rear decks. 4 .5
Honda250, mustrunandbe •
• acres. 10x12 bu ilding 6
street wo rthy. 740-2 45-5027.
mi les from Ri o Grande,
25 Serious People Wanted
county schoo ls. $129,900.
Who want to LOSE weight
_
_ _
I \ 11'1 fl\\11 \I
740 379 2666
We Pay You Cash tor the
pounds you LOSE!
3br. 2 lull baths , deck,
Safe, Natural , NO Drugs.
whirl pool lub. Located near
600-201--0832
school in Ga ilia. Owner
financing
is
av ailable.
Surrogates
Needed . (304)675 _1352
Interested in helping cou A REALISTIC
ples complete their families? 4 Bedroom 2 Bath Pomeroy
OPPORTUNITY
Your eggs will not be used . II Ohio.
View
Learn To Earn
.
interested.
please
call
440Photo!lnlormallon
online
.
$1 Ok + per month Not MLM
356·4604.
www.ORVB .com
code
Training 13rovided.
80603, Call (740)992·3650

I

iro

l

' ''n tt t'

To Do ~
l·.iO~·...~..

1·800·881·1540
E•t 3256 . .
c_e_'_''_or
_'_
n»
_.__________

I

··········································-~·-···

A.NTEDii
· .·. .

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
lady
Honest,
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- Cleaning
dependabte ,
reasonable
675· 1429
rates. Call 740-256 -8 128
Neea a too·r "'" on
ask lor Tammy.
beh alf of Non·prolit or
Politcal
Georges F&gt;ortable Sawmill,
organizations. Make up
don't haul your logs to the
to $8/hour plus benelils.
miH just cen 304-675.-1957.
Full or part time
Will Cere for elderly, light
ahlfls avail able.
house work &amp; cook , ·odd
can today.
1·877·463-6247 ext. 2454 jObS. Call (304)£75·7480

II

~

0PI'OK!lJNTIT

PART- TIME HEAD
WOMEN'S SOCCER
COACH

www.comics.com

G)

ppraisa.l 11atue. For mar
nform ation. and pictures
o
www or yb cam( co
102703) . Or call evening
304 882·3973

&lt;Cl2003 by NEA, Inc.

r

2 BR. near Holzer, C/A. eco·
nomical gas heat. all appliHJRSALE
ances fu rn ished. including
WID, no pets. tease and
FINAL CLEARANCE
deposit required . $485. 740Just a lew 200 3 mo del 446·2957.
homes remrun, come early.
make your pick -then- talk to 3 bedroom hou se tor rent.
Ernie or Lynn, get th e best $450 per month . Call 740possible pric e, you' ll be 446·4543.
pleasantly surprised. foun ·
dalions. hea t pu mps, central 3 bedroom house in the
ai rs and septic systems our country. Water lurm shed , no
n1ce
yard .
specialty, Cole's Mobile pets.
Homes. 15266 US 50 E. $400/deposit . $400Jmonth .
Ath ens , Ohio 45701. PH . (7 40)245·5064
740·592·1972
3 bedroom, 436 Main St.,
New 14 wide on ly $799.00 Rutland . $3 50 a month ,
deposit,
HUD
down and only $169 .76 per $300
month .
Call
Karena approved. (740)593-7113

MOBILE HOMES

(740)385·7671 .
New 2003 Ooublewide . 3 BR
&amp; ? Ba th. Only $1695 down
and &amp;295 /mo. 1-800-691·
6777
Older 2 bedroom , ·12x65, in
great condition. Gas heat.
Needs nothing but moved ,
ready to live in. $4 ,500
Located in Bidwell- Vi nton
area (7 40)388-98 18

3&lt;10

B USINESS
AND B UILDINGS

8:00pm.

·-----· i
ACREAGE

Lot Sprin g Valley- Large tot
apro.11. 101"lc17 1' city wate r.
sewer, Nat . gas. electric all
House tor sate wl 12x60 tot. are available. Phone 740·
South 4th St. Mason WV 446·9539 .
price .neg. ca ll 304 ·773Lots 119 &amp; 1o Heatley s
6188
Addition in Bidwell Two
large level lots. Price to sale
In Syracuse , 3 bedroom, 2 now. Phone 740-446-9539 .
bath , new wi ndows , patio on
front. beautil ut covered deck
in back. 740-66 7-0674 or

1!1740!1:!1"·5~9~1-~8-298-~--..,

fW Moon.£ HOMe&gt;
lw--·FOR-iiSiiAiiiiJo:ii'-,..J
....,
10 Used homes under
$2.000.00. Call Nikki. Call
(740) 385-9948.

r;,;;:::=:;;===::,
0

1

H01..5FS
t\JR Jb.:NT

·J
.

1-3 BE D FORECLOSED
HOMES. Buy from $1 991mo
4% down , 30 yea rs @ 8.5%
apr. For l 1slingsllnfonnation
caU t -a00-719·3001 Ext .

1997; 14x70 Oakwood trail· 1709
er, for sale or ta~e over pay- 2 bedroom on Texa s Rd. in
Beautiful Dream ' Home ments. 74Q-379-265t .
Gallipoli s.
$260/month ,
3200sq. n. with wrap around
$200/depo sit. Call after Spm
deck, upstairs balcony, 4--1!2 COle's Mobile Homes
740-446-7309.
acres. 4br, 2b9 , large living US 50 Ee1t, Athens, Ohio.
room wlfi'replace , dining 45701 , 74Q-592-1972
2 bedroom . LRIDR/Kitchen.
room , 2 car garage. Owner
utility room. storage shed.
financing
is
available .
CIA. 42 Henkle. Deposit/Rei.
Mobile home &amp; lot for sale. (740)446-9313
(304)675-1352
Gatlip~ls city lot if40, 4
Compleloly refinished homa rooms &amp; 1 bath, 2 bed· 3 bedroom house in
Great location, in Gallipolis rooms, washer, relr., stove, Pomeroy • rent $300.00
$250.00
Ohio, 3 bedrooms, 2 full like new gas furnace. Only Oep. required
baths, pr'IC:ad to aaJe noW. SIO,OOO. Behind Pizzo Hut HUD approved (740)742·
Pflooo (740)446-9539.
Ptlono (740)448·9539
2896

SG=

3 Br hou se for rent. Locetect
on Sanders Dnvo. $5 50 per
month. Deposn and reterences
required .
Call
Rooms for re nt· Sa ck ot
Wiseman Re al Estate 740- Addison. close to Gavm and
446-3644 .
Kyge r Creek plants Call
367-0 102
.
4 br. 1 112 bath s. Located on
SA. 141 near Centen ary l ara
Town hbuse
$700 per month. Deposit &amp; Apartments . Ve ry SpaCious·.
reference requ ~re d . Call 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floo rs . CA. 1
Wiseman Real Estate at 112 Bath. Newly Carpeteo.
740-446·3644.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool.

Brick in Gal ltpolis. 3 bedrooms . 1.5 baths. ba sement.
Commerciali Inv est me nt carport. $650. referenc es,
property, 512 Second ave.. deposit. no pets. 740-446 Gallipolis. Great location 4 9209 .
rental units, S5,000 down , Very nice
3 bedroo m. no
land contract to balance pets, refe renced requ ired,
Contact Johnny Russell lor
secu ri ty
depos1t.
$725
month ly. 74a- 446 _242 3 after

Lars &amp;

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
WHITE 'S METAL
Chapel Road . Porter Oh1o
DETECTORS
{740)446· 744 4 1-877-830Ron A.ti1SOn
588 Wat son road
9162 Free Estrmates. Easy
tt nanc1ng 90 days same as
Bidwell Oh10
For rent one room eff1c1ency casn V1sa Master Card
{740)44 6-4336
apartment Ut1ht1eS rnc luded Dnve· a- llnte save alot
$300 Sin gle 5350 couple
Bt 'II.DI"'(;
920 4th Ave 44 6-86 77 days New love seat $100. dresser
SU'IJ'!J~~
$20 , and table w1th 3 cha1rs "---oiiirioiritiiiiiiioo-,.1
Grac1ous l1v1ng. 1 and 2 beo525 Call 740-446-4479
Block.. bnck. sewer p1pes .
roc.m apartments at Village
Manor
and
R1vers1 de Thompsons Appl1ance &amp; wmdows. lintels.· etc Claude
Apartme nts 1r Middleport Repa~r-67 5-7388 For sale. Wu1 ter s. A10 Gra nae OH
ca:u 740-245-5 12 1
From 5278-$348. Call 740· re-co nd1t1oned
automat1c
992-5064 Equal Hous1ng wa shers &amp; dryer s. refngera·
1'1:1,
Op oortu n1ties.
tors. ga s and el ect riC
mRs .. .~:
range s. aa cond1t1oners. and
Modern one bedroom apt
N
• r mger washers. Will do 3 male lull blooded Rat
740-446-0390.
reoa1rs on maJor brands 1n Tamer pu,:rs Born 9, 11103
North
2nd
Avenue. shop or at ~ou r home
wormed and ta tiS aock;ed
Mid dleport- 1 bedroom tur$100. 740-367-7468
ntshed apt. Deposit &amp; refe r· Used furniture store. 130
ence requ1red. No pe1s Bulav111e P1ke . Manresses." AK C Beagle puppy s. Blue
dre ssers.
couche5. T1ck Ana Tn colo r. St OO.
(740)992-5633
bunkbeds. bedroom suites. good
hunting
stock.
North 3rd Ave. Middleport. 2 recliners. Grave monu- (740)742·2726
740- 446-4 782
bedroom . turnished apt men ts.
Dep osi t
&amp;
reference Gallip olis OH. Hours 10- AKC Chocol ate Labs. vet
checked. 1s1 shots &amp;
required . No Pets (740) 992· 4pm. Stop by
worm ed .. ready 11 /7103.
0165
Washer $95: dr yer $95; 74()..441 ·093 1
Now Taking Applications- electric range $95: retrldger35 w est 2 Bedroom ator wh1te (l1ke new) St95: AK C Reg1stered yellow Lab
pupp1es 7 weeks old 3
Townh ou se
Apar tment s. Fridgidiare refrigerat or $150:
ma tes. $250 Call 740-367Includes Wate r Sewag e wa sher 5. dryer sets $300
0038 or 740-36 7· 7202
Trash. $3 501Mo., 740-446· each : gas range S95: couch
0008.
• (very nr ce. ta n &amp; brown)
$125. couch $50 . 2 lull s1ze
One bed room . lull ba th. beds w1box spn ngs and
ki tchen w/ stove. In town mattre sses S200. pictures
wtpnva te park1ng. Cable. $ 12 each: lamps $ 10 each . For sa le GUita r G1bson .
electric. gas wate r. &amp; n1ce f1replace msert S150. 2 DOVE 100 years anni versar y Ed
$2500
Call
garbage mcluded. $400
love seats 595 each. 4
month. 740-446-24 14.
(304)593· 3988
cha1rs S20 each.
Suzukt HP·B&lt;;l D1g1tal P1ano
Plea san t Valley Apartmen t
Skaggs Appliances
w1th 7 sampled keyboat d
Are now taking Applications
741).446.7396
voices. 2 track 4 000 nate
lor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BA. .
76 Vine Street
sequencer
and
MI DI
Appli catiOn s are taken
Ben ch
Monday th ru Frid ay, from ~j=---,.-----, lni out,thrupon s
mcluded Used very little
9:00 A.M.-4 P. M Off ice is
Located at 1151 Everg reen t.,~---liiiiiitiiiii.-,..J Excellent condttton. $1 .000
(740)985-4485
Dn11e Po 1nt Pleasant. WV
PhOne No IS (304)675-5806 Ma thews Bow with acces ·
FoR LE
sones $350 Call aft er 6pm
E H.O
740-368-0162
OR TK,\IIE

r

0

'

•

M

'{D/J A?K ~

Sub stitute
child
care
·provider. Police web check
fee has been pa1d. Mature.
fl exible work er to comply
with GCJ FS guidelin es.
S7 .00 hourly per 8 hour shift.
Call (740)245·9242
or
(740 )245-5 972 for further
detai ls.

r

·ro 8U\'

Kn
,jjRENT
.iiiniit
"Y.;.s.· _.J L.'o-•Hotiniitt,;JCiii'Jl(iiiiiiH•n-"'
'"P""-•
I\•1ts&lt;.
iiii.iii"F•l liiAN
iiiiiiHrii H..Si·.·i ,.
FOR
•
Gool.t;
'
!\olt.:RCHANIJ&amp;
t.,- ·'•\PiiAiii

lwright@llc .net

PICKY PAINTERS
Interior. &amp; Exterior
SE!nior Ci tizens Discount
Residential. Commercial &amp;
mobile homes.
Roofs, barns, pressure·
washing.
Experi ence &amp; References
ava1la ble
304-895·3074
Free esti mat es ca ll M-S
8am-7pm.

Minimum of 1 year experience. Medical Insurance ,
401 K. Home Weekend s,
Domicile in Jackson, OH ,
Sign on Bonu s, .34 C per
mile. 95% No touch NO
NYC freig ht.
Call 1-800-652·2362

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

Publication
Sunday

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

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WA~TED

Absolu te Trop o o11 ar: u. s.
Sil ver.
Gold
Coins, Gallipolis Career College
Proo!sets. Diamonds, Gold (Careers Close To Home)
Ring s,
U.S. Curren cy,- Call Today! 740-446·4367,
M .T.S. Coin Shop, 151
1·800·2 14-0452
Second Ave nue . Gallipolis, www.gallipoliscereercollftge .com
740-44 6·2842.
t:'l::'R;::eillg.:•:,::9:.0·;::0,.
5·~12:;.:7;;:4:;:B,_.,

attme• . j)euttnel

Mall or drop off this coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

pen."
He surpassed Dillon'&gt; team record of
39 carries in a game in 1997 against
Tennessee. when Dillon topped Jim
Brown's rookie rushing record of 246
yards.
There were four le'ad changes in a
game of contrast i n~ styles. Johnson 's
runs kept Cincinnatr moving slow-but·
steady, while the Texan s repeated ly made
bi g plays to keep it close.
They had one last chance after Shayne
Graham's 40-yard fi eld goal made it 34·
27 with 2:32 to go . David Carr's next
pass was tipped and intercepted, ending
the drama but not the torment.
Instead of kicking a tleld goal with 32
seconds left to pad the lead to I0 points,
the Bengal s went on fourth du\vn from
the 13-yard line. Kilna changed to a pass
play. then threw to Chad Johnson, who
slid into the end zone and jumped into the
seats in a celebration that had to rankle
the Texans.
However, the officials ruled Johnson

l\egister

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
(740) 992-2157
Fax us
E-mail us at:
classified@mydailysentinel.com

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

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

~

:Subscriber's
Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
:Address - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - :City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
I
:Phone
_______________________________________
1
I

Place
Your

r

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

I

To

r

• Once you have signed up lor lhe Senior Discount, your renewal notice will reflect your discount.

.-

lime on lap 186 an d gai n~ on to lead a
race-hi gh 140 of the 39:&gt; laps on the
1.01 7-mile Rockin gham oval.
Johnson was second and gut one last
shot at Elliott on a restart with II laps to
go. But Ellioll pull ed away steadily and
drove his Evernham Motorspur1 s Dodge
across the linish line 1.23-scconds
about I 0 car-length s ahead of
Johnson·, Chevrolet.
"It seems li ke eve rythi ng has just come
together for tl1is team the last few
months.'' Elliott said . "We had a great car
here today. That thing just came on when
the race stw1ed and stayed good all day."
J o~n son still faces a hattie tix second in
the standings with Dale Earnhardt Jr.. who
fmished 13th and fe ll from second to third
in the standings.
Earnhardt trai ls Johnson by 3X points
going to Hpmestead .

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 .PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
UI:ribune
Sentinel

r

Joint Jlea,attt ~egtl1ter
The Daily Sentinel
.-

u

r

If so, you qualify for a

j,unba~

•

T,lle University of Ri o
fJ10
HOMf:.&gt;;
Grande is taking applicaSE NIOR PORTRAITS!
FOR SAI.E
ti ons tor a Women·s Socc er
Get You best deal at :
coach to work part-time with
Main Street Photography.
the recruiting and coaching
511 Main Stree t.
of a newly formed women's
Po1nt Pleasant.
MONEY
soccer program . Must have
Call lor Ap poifltment
10 loAN
previous soccer coaching
(304)675-7279
experience and be availabl e
for recru iting as well as Mortgages, Mortgages!!!
All real u tate advertis ing
coaching. Position avail abl e We offer competitive interest
In this newap_aper Ia
es
on
mortgages
and
rat
GIVEAWAY
December I . 2003.
subject to the Federa l
debt consol1dation s and
Fair Housing Act of 1968
Please send cover let ter out- specialize in good and bad
which makea it ltlegal to
3 Kitten s free Gray &amp; bl ack
advartlsa ••any
lining e)(perience . re sume credit . Call ton tree to l1nd
str 1pped . 1111er train ed, 8
out about our low in1erest
preference, limitation or
list
of
names
an
d
and
weeks old . 740-256-91 25 .
discrimination based on
addr esses of three refer- rates and r~ ceive expert
advi ce.
raca, color, retlglon . sex
ences
to
Free kittens to good home
fam ilial status or national
1·888· 739-8719
(740}446-0907 alter 5pm.
origin, or any intention lo
Phyllis Mason. SPHR.
Need eKira cash? We are
make any such
Director of Human
Fre e wood pallets. pick up at
preference, limitation or
the loan spec1alist, we don't
Resources
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
discrimination."
speculate. good or bad credUniversity of Rio Gra nde
it excepted. There are no
FREE. 3 year old mal e cat.
PO. Box 500
This newspaper will not
fees, last approval . and low
He has been neutered. Call
Rio Grande. OH 45675
knowingly accept
intere st rates. For more info
(304)675·8801
Fax: 740-245-4909
advertisement• fo.r ree l
ca ll toll free 1·866·882·
estate which lain
e-mail pmason@ rio edu
6875.
Pretty kilties, 9 weeks old,
violation or the law. Our
mate &amp; femal e, assorted col· Sales: $4 ,000 to $8,00 0
readera are hereby
J'ROA'SSIONAL
weekly potential not MLM .
lntormed lhalall
ors. 740-441-0145.
SERvtCilS
ca ll800-694-5132
dwellings advertised In
Ve ry fri endly Calico lcitten.
this newspaper are
Call 740-25 6· 101 2 leave a The · Commu ni1y Chest
TURNED DOWN ON
available on an equal
Buyer"s Guide is now SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
messag e.
opportunity baees.
~~-~-----, accepting applications lor
No Fee Unless We Win!
LOST ANI&gt;
outside sa les representa·
1-888-582-3345
FOUND
lives. Requires exce llent
FORECLOSURE!
ll I I I I I \I I
~~---iriiriiiiii.-r' customer relation skills, hon4 bed 4 bath house on ly
10
Found Set of Keys found at esty &amp; dependability. To
$9,900. lor listinqs call
1-800-719·3001 ext 11 44
Rio Grande Elem. Call 740- apply: bring in or mail yo ur
resume to: The Community
245- 5333.
Chest Buyer's Guide 28
MUST SELL
""',...-.,..,.,...----., Locust Street, Gall ipolis OH 2 Bedroom House in New
WANllD
45631 .
Haven. $24 ,000 . Possible

Are you 65 or older?

~alhpoli• Dati.~

for the last three nmnths."
The
3 1-ye&lt;ir-old
dri ver
from
Cambridge. Wis .. took the title in his
fm111h season in NASCAR \ top stock car
series with consistency, winning just once
bu t coming up with II top fiv es and 26 lop
IOs in 35 races.
He is 226 points ahead of 111nner-up
Jimmie Johnson with only next weekend 's
race at Homestead-Miami Speedway
remaining. The mosl a dri ve r can make up
in one race is 15 1 points.
The 48-year-old Ell iott. who has been
the subject of retirement rumors, came up
with his first win of the season , the 44th of
hi s career and first since takin g the
Brickyard 400 in Indianapol is last year.
Despite qu alifying tifth. Ell iott had to
stan at the back of the field after his team
changed an engi ne Friday. He charged to
the front in a hurry. leading for the tirst

'Qtrlbune - Sentinel - l\egt~ter
CLASSIFIED

ScotJ Mayle). Ohio moved the ball to the
Kent 33 with 26 seconds left on the clu"k
Hawk. though, was sacked fur a loss of
18 yards and pass as ti me expired went
out -of-bounds to end the game.
Ohio Jumped out tt&gt; a 27-1 0 leat.l in the
&gt;econd quarter ory a Huston 4 1-yard TD
run off a pitch out by Huwk.
Kent State. though, countered with a
Cribbs 5-yard TO run later in the quarter
as Ohio Jed 27-17 at halfti me.
"We felt good going in to haltiimc that
we · were still in the game." said Pees.
"That was key."
Ohio had a pair of Greg DiM arino field
goals in the third quaner, hut a 33-yard
TD pass from Smith to Brian Bell sa w the
Flashes only truiling by .13-24 going mto
the founh .
Ohio trave ls to Akron Saturd ay. while
Kent State is at Bow ling Green. The
Bobcats play tl1e ir li nal home ga me of the
season Not . 22 against Mi ami.

To Do

Voice problems hampering
Ohio State hoops coach
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
. · State men's basketball coach
Jim O ' Brien hopes a damaged
.. vocal cord wi ll repair itself so
he can conli nue coaching without having to use a microphone.
"(Doctors) teII me there's a
chance thai can happen. But if it
Joesn't, the re\ more surgical
options to repair that." he said.
One of O'Brien 's two vocal

of a lirst down with less than th ree min·
lllcs renwin ing.
That 's then Kent State took a major
ri sk.
Wh ile a tield goal would 've given the
Qolden Fl ashes the lead, th ey chose to go
for the fi rst down instead and keep control
of the ball.
"Josh said ' I want to do it' .. so I said do
it." said Pees.
.
After a couple of time-outs by each
team. Cribbs leaped over the line-ofscrimmage and reached the ball out for
the first down.
"We don 't deserve to be 4-6 if we don't
ge t three inches," said Pe.es.
Kent State's cffon s paid off moments
later on Cribbs game-winning TD run.
Hawk and the Bobcats got the ball back
and made a last-ditch efl on in !he closing
seconds of the contest.
With the help of a a couple of 21-yard
passes from Hawk (to Adam Poner and

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

__

Patio St art $385/Mo. No
Pets. lease Plus Security
Depos1t Required, Day s:
740 -44 6· 3481 ; Even1ngs·
740 -367-0502
Twi n R1vers Tower IS acceptlng applications for wailing
list lor Hud -subsized, 1- br,
apa rtment , ca ll 675-6679

_
E Ka!O--~--...,

i

S

M~~ID\ I ~.,_....FOR_p.~~--,.1
• .......

i

s.•

A~1~

For rent· one and rwo room
apt with shared bath utilitie s
Included. $200 si n~le. $250.
cou ple . 607 Second 4468677
days,
256-1972
evenings

r

L.,_ _ _Gooosiiiiiiiiiii.-,..J
•
Go od Used Appl iances.
Reconditionecl
and
Guaranteed.
Wash ers.
Dry ers.
Ranges.
and
Refrigera\ors. Some start at
$95. Skaggs Appliances. 76
V11"1e St. . 1740)446·7398
Hot P'MI washer 575.
Wh1r1PQ&lt;)1 wasti er $75:
Whirlpool and OE dryer $60
eadl . All are wMs CAll alter
6:00pm 740-446-9066.

sheet s

7 16" OS B

1425
River1ne
Buy or sell.
Ant1ques. 1124 East Mam For Sa le-S acres of rea l
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740- estate Situ ated on Pau11ns
992-2526
Russ Moore. · Aoaa 1n CMSh1re Township.
owner
Gallla
County.
Oh10
54J l\fl."'(."tlL&gt;\N~
{Auditor'5 Parcel #003-002\-lERC..llAI'IUI..\"'E
171-00) Sal€ p1•ce $6.000
The real estate 15 un1mprO\I'ed woodland Inte rest ed
Buck fi rep lace Insert w' . par t1es may call 304-273·
blowe r. make olfer 304 -675- 41 70 or 740-992-7 10 1 ·
2560
I \R\1 'I 1'1'111 -.
~\ 11 \ l,lt iCh
H Du ty 1/4- 60 dr1 fl
M1lwauke e sawza ll and
blade. Rockwell screwdnver
HD. HD ster ling sande r
McCulloch chain saw and
blade. LP gas hose and reg- Mass ey Ferguson 50 li11e
ulator. Martin 35.000 BTV power, good condition. King
gas heater and p1pe_I Futo n Kuner brush
1ncluded.
co uch lr ke ne w 740-44 6·
87S6

Commercial properly tor
2 bel. w/w carpet. air. porch
rent- a store l ront in
Very nice. no pets. In
Hist orical
downtown
Gallipolis. 740-446-2003 or
JE T
Pomeroy, Oh lacing river.
74o-446· 1409
A.EAAT1 0 N MOTORS
1740)589·7 122 .
Repaired. New &amp; Aebu 1 ~ In
1440 APARThiF.N'JS
Nice new mobile home lot Stock. Call Ron Evan s. 1·
FOR ROO'
for rent. S125 a month . 800·537 ·9528.
1 and 2 bed roo m apart - 1740)446 -0175 or 1740 1675·
menr s. furn ished and unfur- 5965.
NEW AND USED STEEL
nished . security deposit Offices.
(Downtown Steel Beams. P1pe Reb11 r
;~~~~ed, no pets. 740-992- Gallipolis) to r rent All efec· For Concrete , Angle
!ric. 3 rooms and a 4 rooms. Channel, Fla t Bar. Steel
both on first floor. 400 blOCk Grating
For
Dra 1ns.
1 BR With stove and refriger- in Gallipolis. Both are ctean Driveways &amp; Walkways l&amp; L
ator, sta rt1ng at $2901mo. + &amp; nice. Phone (740)446·
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
depo sit 740·441 -1322
9539.
Tue sday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed
1 BR . near Holzer. WID
hookup. CIA. no pets . $359 ~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
HOliSEHOLD
Sunday. (740144&amp;-7300 ·
plus utilities. 740-446-2957 :ro

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
AT
BUDGET
MENTS
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 5~ Westwood
Drive from $297 to S383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Can
740·446-256 6
Equal
Housing Opportun 1ty

100

~--------_.1 board. $1.5000 (740)446-

LIVESTOCK
Angu s Bull s, Hei fers pl us
Ma•ne-Angus Steers· and
Heife rs. Top blood lines.
Slate run farm Jackson.
740- 286-5395
Arab 1an Geld1ng Croke to
buggy or
r~de
$550
1304)576-4079
IH\'-"'1'111 ~ 1

\ I I! I'-

AU'tU;
IURSALE
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps. ate!
Cars from $500. For listing&amp;
1·800·719-:3001 ext3901

Office Fumltu~
New. scra1ch &amp; Dent.
Seve 70%. 1-800-52 7-4662
Argonau1519 Br;dge Street. $5001 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Guyandotte/Huntington. M!F Hondas. Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Cars from S500. For listings
Washer, Kenmore large 1-800-71 9-3001 ext 3901
capacity, almost new, $350:
1987
Cadillac
Coupe
Gibson electric 'range. huge:
Deville. Ru n&amp;- excellent.
$350. Kenmore portable
power every1hlng. $1 ,000
dishwasher, almost new,
080. Call 304-675·5612.
5150: RCA2TinchTV $100:
all items $900. Eatate sale. 1993
Chevy
Cam~ ro ,
675-2208, 965-5597 or Col. Buroundy. automatic, fully
550·7153
loaded 740-3711-2369.

I

�Monday, Nov. 10, 2003

t 995 Chrysler Newyorker, 1994

S-1 0

Blazer.

Monday, Nov. 10, 2003
ALLEY OOP

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

4.3

ACROSS

loaded , mint condition , Vortec, 64 ,000 miles, $2.000
$4500 080, (7~01992-5737 excellent shape. 740-4462394
1997 Ford Escort. clean car.
r~J nS great $1995, {74019929!~

Phil lip
Alder

1995 FORD E350 CUBE

BOX

TRUCK .
CALL
(740)446· 9416 M·F 9·5.
runner, Located
1391 ·. Safford

t997 Toyota ,4
loaded. mint condition, call School, Gallipolis ..
for deta1ls, (740)992·5737
~~=,.-,-:--'--1999 F250, 4WO, cruise .
~ BUICk Regal LS, 41k AJC, AM/FM cassette , bed
.tniles, excellent condiiiOn , hner, topper also included.
$10.250.
Estate
Sale. Fiber gtass Tonneau cover
(304)675-2208, 965-5597 or extra wheels &amp; !Ires .

Cel 550·7 153

r•

I

•

(740)256·6877

Thursday, Nov. 13
·6:00pm
Middleport Ame1 1can Legion

...

NORTHUP DODGE

~i'""'-~v.
~--&amp;~-...,

(740)992-6na
.P5 ,Blue Neon , 5 speed, 4
dQOf, 86.000 miles. $1,400
or best ofler. 740·256· 1652

98 Neon $2,000; 98 Cavalier
$2,300: 97 Ponliac Grande
Am $2,000: 98 Ford W1nstar
Van $2.900: 97 dodge
Intrepid $2,000; 96 Cavalier:
95 Z-24 Cavalier; 97 Escort
SW 52.000; 99 Cavalier
$2,600: 97 Buick $2,000; 96
Beretla $1200: 92 Olds 88
.fklyale S1 .200: 98 Tauras
~.500 ; 95 Buick Regal
$1 ,100; 94 Buick Lebabre
.~00
8 &amp;0 Auto Sales
Hwy 160 N.
(740)446--6865
TllJ
TRUCKS
.

2761

~JO

L

'

·--ioii'OiiiiRiiiiiSiiiMii~il;-,..11

'

v

&amp;

.t~vs

Slln I(

I.f'lll MumRcvtu~ I 810

.L

·

1986 Honda 4-Trax 250, 4·
1989
Plymouth
Grand wheeler runs good $1100.
Voyager, runs good. new 304-675·3824
parts. $1 ,000 or make offer.
2000 Kawasaki Bayou 300.
1992 Dodge Caravan, 4 4x4. like new. Less than 50
cylinder, automatic, 161,000 hours. $4,000 firm . 740-256·
miles . very good condition, 6239.
second owner. $1.200. Call
740A46· 7215 or 740-446- 2000 XR80 in good co ndi-

l'

HoME

//

IMI'ROV1·:MEN"I";

I

-~ . '

(3041675·8931

FRA.NK &amp; EARNEST

Roofing

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

l' honc (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

,

Let me do tl for youl

After6pm
IBolore 6pm

&lt;~ ..JA~

Leave M eua~

NO MATTER
WHAT
STYlE. ..

" !if~

l

gg~ ,

Racine , O hio

4577 1

740-949-2217

, /S
IZes·S·, ,·x10' J._";
·.
t .'
1

!

•

i'·,. to
·10'X30.'rf~,,,·
' • '(,· ,·,;,. ·,;i.,, ,., ····&gt;
.~

Hours

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
1114/t mo . pd

•

,

r-tachlne Quilting - Regulated 6tltch
18 Patterns Available
Connie Curnutt
895-3982 Shop
owner/operator
895-3512 Nome

-

••

BARNEY
SHUCKS, WE DON'T
NEED NO SPECIAL

f# buy quilt tops

... THE
NFWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

you'll fin~
in tnB

HOWARD l.

Cla~~ifi~~~!

WRITESfl
: dOOFING
. *HOME
I MAINTENANCE
I dEAMlESS
GOnER
*free Estimates.

949-1405
HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing -All types

740·992·7953

Dean HID
New&amp; Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

THE BORN LOSER

.,If MOr-.'11&lt;\~ OE.C. I OC~ TO
1&lt;\0VE. II\\ 'N IT!-\ US, DO

1-800-822-0417

F"'

t-\0. IT WOULDN'T

V"':'&gt;1-\E.

1-JCX.X..D Fl NO

U:':&gt; (1/EN\UI\LLY I

DO /&gt;NY GOOD...

YOU \ l\11\\K WE ~CIJLD
COI\I~It:tR. 1&lt;\0 1/lt-1(:, TO

"W.V's # l C hevy. Pon tiac, B u ick , Olds
&amp; Custom Va n Dealer"

"Not mel
My money is wilh
Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Flnandal Services,
Box 189, Middleport,'OH
Phone. 843·5264."
O~l~•nll

HOME CREEK
liNTERPRISES

VERY
SI MPLE '

50 HOW AAE

DOIN(,

I'M

Tti 1S
"GRAND

EXPER1e1ENT";

SUI L PIN G
A e1A2E ~

Commercial Re.'iidemial
Bulldozer &amp; Back/we Trucki11g Service.\'
Septh: System bulallatitm
LAm/ Clearing

SP 1TSY WILL T RY To
F IND HI S WAY TO

THE DOG FOOD, AND
P i(I&lt; LES WILL TI'.Y T O

Wt·\IC.~

WE 'L L SEE
OF TH EM .. &lt;.&lt;

Ttl~T'S

T+tE

CAT fOOt&gt;~

~

GET TO THE CAT FOOD!

v-

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

'
i

l

~ f-4'::.....

,.

.!'..

~------------~ · L-----------~~

PEANUTS

Home Site.\· Po11d.\· f)rb,eway.'i

740-992-.1470
Toll Free 1-866-267-0072
Pom er oy, Ohio

YOUNG'S

Advertise
in this
space
for $50
per month

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

CD.

• Room Addition I &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garages
•
•
•
•

El ectrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl S.dlng &amp; PalnUng
Patio and Porch Decks

BETIY
NOTHING SAYS, ~I LACK
SELl' COHrfi,OI.'' L-IKE ~TING
ACAN~ Mit IN PU9L-IC

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

p

992·6215

I

J

!1
?!'

i~

Pt~l'ls

2 NT

Pa51i
PaSb

6•

Pa11s

4 •
P~:~ ss

Pass

+K

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeleDnty Crpner crypTogram~ art D'i!i!l!ld !rom CIJOiillo-'15 cv 1l;"101J$ JeC~e PitS! ana ~r~t

E1C!" lette r,, tfllt ~·t"l~ sta1C~ 'o• anomer
Today s clue Toqua1s C

" PH

0

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Sl
ffilddleport, OH

J&amp;L
Eledric .
Licensed &amp; 'Banded
Ph 740-991-GIJ:s
Cell 740-5111·1117:1

BISSEll

LPZZ

ce~m•cn•
·New Homes
• Garages

Advertise
in this
spoceforS25
per month.

• Complete
Remodeling

J41-112-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

' I

'

..

N 0 E

!. RUO

OA

OU D OZU
5

T Y OL V .

RWU

HSZZ,

TYOLV

NO£, "

IW S JEP Z ZU

C ' AU SZ

- - - - - - !looo

0 lour

lle~r r ong•

deLEO (Judly 23·Aug. 22be)- Should a mndisun·

•

close friend today, don't let it seethe to r
even a short penod of ttme _ Any lapse ot
resolving it could permanenlly hurt ltle
relationship.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) -You may be
materially motiVated tOday. but if you are a
poor doser. your chances tor personal
gain could go by the boards. Know when to
atop selling and ring up the sale.
LIBRA (S.p1 23·0C1 231 - A.....lng
matters aocuratelv and rea11sr1ea11y won't
be vour problem tod~. If you get yournlf
Into trouble, 11 will bto beeauee you end up
acting agalnll your bitter Judgmtnt.

SOUP TO NUTZ

RW Y D ~K W

L SZ BPAK

LWUA

DA

':~~~t;;y S©"R~)A-.[Gt. ~Sc

wit. so you don't end up stepping over the

you a

I R UO

PREVIOUS SOLUT ION - "Goldie (Hawn) IS a knock·ou1 g~rl Hones1 as a
child's stare and lull ol tun and gtggles • - Aodenck Mann

line.

1W. .n

N O£

at

T\Jeeday, Nov. 11 , 2003
By Bernice Bede Oeol
Special knowledge which you've acquired
O\ler time may be in demand in the year
ahead, and produce some handsome
rewards for you Th1s is one of those times
when it's a what-you-know world instead ot
a wh o- you-know one.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- You may be
reasonaoly astute in your commerc1al
aNairs today, but perhaps not equally as
sharp as the one with whom you'll be
negoiiBting. Don 't une!erestimate your contender .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21)- Jusl to
appease anolher . today, you could be
temp led to agree to something you know
you shou ldn'l. A lack of firmness on your
part could cause you complications down
the tine.
CAPR ICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Someone who may have had a sma ll hand
In aiding you In one ot your accomplish·
ments might try to take tull credit today for
somethi ng th at you did. Set the record
straight lmm&amp;dia tety.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It would
prove wise today to avoid a clique with 1ndt·
\liduals who cton't live up to you r high stan·
dards. You won't be able to tolerate the11
behavtor and you 'll end up havmg a m1ser·
able time .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Be careful
today not to show support for an outsider
against a member ot your own family. It you
feel strongly against your kin 's views, take
no sides rather than an opposing one.
AR IES (March 21-Apri l 19) - Th e mor,ats
and principles by which you abide could be
unpopular wtlh your peers who don't want
to live up to them . Don't lower your standards just to be accepted.
TAU RUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - II you have
any hopes ol recei\llng that 10 wh 1ch you 're
entltted today, you may have to startd up
tor your rtgh ts. Be bold, but don't ask for
more than your lair share - only that
which is yours.
GEM!Nf (May 21 -June 20) - Gett ing your·
se ll in a siluation today where teamwork is
essential, you'll need to associate only wlth
those who are able lo pull their own
Weight Slackers cou ld hold you back.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Co-work ·
ers. whether they are right or wrong . wilt be
as anx1aus to protect their pqsitions loday
as you are. Be prepared to respond with ,

rS1an 1ng erup1

,

[740) g92-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
992-6635

1113

1'HAT'5 NONE OF
&lt;rOUR 13U51NE55

IMPORTS
Athena

ROBEIT

740·992· 7953

P1:1s11

4 ...

·~~!r!,

BIG NATE
~ou

(11'x10' 61D'x20')

Foundations,
Septic Systems,
Water and Utilitie

Ea!il

~
- , Astro-

.f

WV

High &amp;Dry

740-992-5232

PasK

Supplies. Contact the owner
ad min@ nebridgesuppty.com

~~ecn,

33795 HilandRd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

~orth
P1:1 ss

The book is $21 poS1paid hom NE Bndge

"llostmyshirt
IP''IIV in the stock
market!"

Po ·neroy, OhiO
22 'l'aar Local

SeH-Storage

WPf&gt;t

esting deal. In this o. ~·you are South.
the declarer in sill s des. Aher West
leads the diamond k1 ng
dummy's ace,
how would vou continue?
North's two no-trump promised a bal·
anced maximum pass. When Sou1h used
Gerber, the ace-asking convention, he
was overbidding. But he was playing rub·
ber-bridge and needed to make a slam to
break even lor the session.
The declarer immedi ately led a trump to
h1s queen . Now he had to lose two spade
tricks and fi nished one down.
South was unlortunate. but the correct
play is the club finesse at trick two. tl it
loses. he must find East · with king-dou·
bleton of spade!s. But when it wins .
declarer can take the safety-play in
spades by cashing th e ace first. He plans,
if the king does not drop. to lead toward
his queen neKt.

DAY FER
~IOI!:;~THA~T !!

9 rrrilesfrom Pt. Pltasant
011 Sa 11d Hill Roa d.

1&gt;\l~IZ~st.

Pomeroy Eagles
BI NG O 2171
Every Thu rsday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
t ast Thursdoy of
n ery month
All pack $5.1Ml
llring this coupon
Buy $5.00
llonanza Get
5 ~' REE

fJ 'J Ill

Info
47 --cart•
1 8oby whale 48 Strong ,
5 Dent
11 meld
8 Poko• cord 50 Port of A'. II.
t 2 Breed
51 Spring
1pread
month
•
13 Attyo .' OI'V· 52 Single time
14 Flying prellx 53 Gl'o dinner
15 Portent
54 The eii!Cied
16 Volt.yboll 55 Lowool
nhigh llde
17 Whlll " vldl "
moono
DOWN
C2 wdo .)
18 Passionate 1 Murmur
20 Foigno
2 Diva
2t Grany field
- Gluck
23 Rhea kin
Chyph.)
22 t, lor
3 Luclvloua 24 Atlas abbr. 41 DNA ,
glance
25 -and
component
Woltgang
23 A Kennedy 4 Carened
hearty
42 Equine
26 Meh away
5 Miracle load 26 Old oo1dlera
ladder
29 Honey wtne 6 Aid and27 Freighter
43 Eggy
30 Philosopher 7 Wharf
localeo
deosert
· - Detrcarlel
denizen
28 Doer
44 Welles '
31 Poetic
8 Medilallon
of grelll
"Citiz011 _ ..
-orb
method
deed•
45 Gym org .
33 Web addr.
(2 wdo.)
3() Plraleo'
46 Oranll"
34 Ump's calls 9 Pause
quails
voggoe
35 Rabbh kin 10 Hurters'
32 DC figure
47 "How - 36 Oomalno
atalo
34 Norwegian
doing?"
38 Fable writer 11 " Ouch! "
monarch
49 Cowpoke's
39 Courtroom t9 Underwater 35 ~neycomb
afllrmllllve
ohocker
cell
V!Po
40 30, in Roman 20 Teen woe
37 Loves a lot
41 Blunder
22 Woosnam
38 Hatchel
43 Weird
and
40 Medical
46 Wine label
Flemin,.;g;_,..~,;,P_hotos lO'"'Io--,m;-"17'~

Some bridge newspaper columnists use
deals that appeal to the maJOrity of their
readers. Others concentrate primarily on
tournament-standard players. And a lew
teed on ly experts. One in the first category wa s Dick Cummings, an Australian
expert who wrote for both The Sydney
Morning Herald and Th8 Sun-Herald.
Now 64 of his columns are in a book.
~The Cummings CoUection .~ edited and
published by Denis Howard. Each nght·
hand page contains an introduction and a
quiz. Then, on the nexl page, you can
read Cumm1ngs' original co]umn .
The co mplexity level does vary, but
Cummings had a good eye for an inter·

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

j

A mix of problems
and columns

10/lfl.Y-·- ~ CAN /..IV~
y/ITtiiN MY
INCOM~. ,VT
.I CAN'T
tiAVf ANY
VI$/TOfl.l.

750 East St at e Stree t

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

liNDA'S PAINDNG
l140J 985-4180

y 7 5

• J 8 7 6
4o KJ 3

Opening le~d :

Ta~e

BASEMENT
WATERP ROOFING

lion. (7401992·2070
7669.
· J 9~2 Chevy 314 ton. 5· ~~:---::-----:-::-~
· i,...ae
;. d . wIt opper. $4 .800 . 1996 Chevy Blazer LT, 4x4,
loaded, leather. $5,500 abo.

I 6

740-992-7599

J 10 9

•

Dealer: North
Vulncrl:lblc : Roth

Soulh

FREE ESTIMATES

Ui!ip lay

Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references furnished. Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Bas ement
Waterproofing .

9 8 6

TFN

COMMERCIAL and
RES IDENTIAL

Ovf.'r 50 Mo1111 tJ
011

•

•

• 9
4o A Q

• Rcpla...:cmcnt

E.rperif.' IICe

1\ K 6

•

New Homes • Viny l
New Guragcs
Windows •

•

South
. AQ876 3 2

Siding •

&lt; OL'ff 15 Years

I· ~

t

BUILDERS InC.

Middl•poo·t, OH
(740) 992-7533

Jo &lt;rJ

•:afjt

8 " J z
KQ 4 2

•

BISSELL

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
137 S. St h Avenue

j

We1rl
• K

MQNTY

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

74C&gt;-4·il6-08112 • 949 - 1

miles. $10,500.00 (7401592· (7401256·6346.

t.'

: ci.n740·446-8832 .

\

UPIDer River Road • Gi!llipolis
Evenings

f'-1'1Lt

4-WDs

1998 Fo rd F-150, 4x4, V6, 5 2001 Yamaha Badger 4 ·
speed , AJC , 79,000 miles. wheeler. BOCc shatt, auto·
::-::---::-----:--:--~ $8 .500. Call (740)256-6346 matic dr.. like new $1800
98 Super Cab, White
304 -67 5-3824
Ranger: 4-wheel drive. 4.0L 2000 Ford F-150 XLT 4x4 .
engme, 4 door. automatic automatic. 5.4 engine. tonoverdrive transmission, air, neau cover. very good con·
C\M I'I·:R~ &amp;
cruise, tilt , power locks and dition , $11,500, (740)949MmuR Hum~
Windows , aluminum wheels 2700
with AT duelers, chrome
bumpers and grill. bed liner 2001 Dodge Dakota. ext. 2003 Touring Cru ise r, fully
and cover. Garaged. non cab. 4x4 , lo ade d 18 .000 loaded , asking $40,000 Call
(7401367. 7070.
smoker. Perfect! 37,000 miles,
$10,900.
Call

repair $400.00 080

:. I

Baskets hold "Bingo Santa"

11
~

•

t AJ 05:J
.. 10 7 " 'l.

Cellular

Hwy 160 N.
(740)446-6865

'91 Acclaim , new tires. Need

Norlh

.ALU&amp;L

BASKET &amp; BEAR BINGO'

$17,700 740·446·7554 .

2000
Plymouth
Neon , 96 Ford Ranger 4x4, V-6
56,000 mtles, $3.700. Call auto $3.200; 93 Ranger auto
$1.850; 96 Dodge Ram ; 97
1740)256·6346
Chev ~ S-10 Blazer 4)(4
2002 Neon, 4 OR, PW. PD. $4.400; 97 GMC Sonoma
PM , CO-player, sunrool. Pu $2.750: • 88 cnevy
spoiler. 21 ,000 miles.$6,495 Silverado $2.600.
080.
(740)256-6745,
B&amp;D Auto Soles

NEA Crosswor d Puzzle

BRIDGE

lette ~s

~.

WORD ·
UMI :

CLAY L POlLAN

of r!-1,

saamb ltd wmo~J bfl'-

low fc iorm fou r

wcrds.

slm~l,

I L \vO ELY
2

.I

1

IIII

S RYI

1\

I:~

~,
My uncle, who enjcys his liquor .
. _ was suffering from a severe head

cold . He tried all the remed1es and
d1scc vered that his favorite rem. - - - - - - - --, edy , even though ineffectiVe, was

6
1.

I. A N.l ) OI. R I. WI

:

,.0-C-~;1•••
.

bv

1.\e

c.\uckle

quare~::

filling il'l tke mi uing worCs
yov develop from ste;;~ No, :l below.

f9 FR!J\TTHEt.JVMSERfD
t f:ii ERS
SE SQUA RES

I

I~ J

6)
.,.

U~~ClAIASLE LETrE &lt;S 10

GET A.NSWER

SC:IIAM-I.ETS AN~ERS I 1 - 7- o l
Pop/on -Foyer- Bound- Dickey- FOOD and DRINK ·
Two w omen bra~ged to their friends about their trip
abroad One friend shrugged. 'Travel can be veT)! broadening , mainly when there's plenty of FOOD and DRINK.'

ARLO &amp; JAN.IS

~=~=======~
I

r--::---:-::-----::--~"1

r "'f6A&lt;J7; l'\lt. PUT 01.1

-

5DME PDUIJD5 MY5t.LF'· -

�II
I

Unbeaten Chiefs
down Brow·ns, 41-20
tion . A few plays later,
Holmes scored on a l·yard
run.
·on Cleveland's next possession. Ryan Sims recovered
James Jackson's fumb le and
the Chiefs went 52 yards in
seven plays, with Holmes
scoring on a 9-yard run for
his 14th TD rushing.
Warren 's action wa~ reminiscent of Dwayne Rudd's
helmet-throwing mistake in
the opener last season after
Greenlatereled in desperation
to tackle John Tait. Tait ran
for 28 yards and Rudd drew a
15-yard penalty. putting '
Andersen in positton to kick a
game-winning field goal with
no :ime on the clock.
"They've been a little bit
undisciplined and last year it
kind of bit them a little bit,"
said Waters. "Today again, it
bit them a little bit.''
Jackson had 66 yards in
place of Green. Kevin
Johnson, the Browns 'leading
receiver, was also benched
for much of the game .
After Jackson 's 1-yard
touchdown run in the second
quarter, Tony Gonzalez made
it 21 - 10 with a 14-yard touchdown catch.
Kelly Holcomb made it 2117 with a 2-yard TO pass to
R.J: Bowers.
Andersen added a 28-yard
tield goal for a 27-17 halftime
lead. The lead went to 34-17
when Green hit Johnnie
Morton on a 28-yard TD pass
in the third quarter.
·
Phil Dawson had field
goals of 50 and 22 yards for
the Browns, then Green
closed out the scorin~ with a
27-yard pass to Kenmson.

Bv DouG TucKER
Associated Press .

safety as though he had
scored the game-winning TD.
Hall immediately went over
tO console teammate Gary
KANSAS CITY. Mo. Stills. who failed to block tl)e
Sometimes only great plays oncoming Crocker.
stop great players.
"Dante said it's OK, that
Chris Crocker ·avoided a we' ll get-them next time. But
block and made a desperation it was bad JU
· dgment on my
ankle tackle of Dante Hall on pan," said Stills, one of the
Sunday. keeping the NFL's Chiefs' best special teams
most electrifying player from players. " It was a good play.
uncorking a record-breaking That was really good hustle."
ftfth touchdown return.
Hall , who had touchdown
Hall's return ended up returns in four straight games
going 77 yards and set up earlier in the season. totaled
Morten Andersen 's 29-yard 159 yards of kick returns.
11eld goal. paving the way for
"It doesn't surprise you that
a 41-20 victory over Dante Hall does that." said
Cleveland that kept Kansas Chiefs coach Dick Venneil.
City 19-0) the NFL's only "I promise you he will do it
unbeaten team.
again."
Green hit 29 of 42 passes
" I'm thinking 'Oh. my
God.· That's literally what for ·368 yards and Holmes
l'rn thinking," said Crocker. had 93 yards rushing and 66
"Somehow I managed to get receiving. He has six touchhim on the ground."
downs in his last two games
Said Hall. ''You've got to against Cleveland.
take your hat off to him. He
In
addition,
Eddie
played it well."
Kennison caught seven passTrent Green threw three es for 115 yards for the
touchdown passes and Priest Chiefs, who convened 12 of
Holmes scored two touch-' 16 third-down plays. their
downs a~ the streaking Chiefs highest percentage since the
took a tour-game lead over NFL began tracking the stat
Denver in the AFC West.
in 1972.
The Browns _(3-6), weak- " The Browns were leading
ened all yearby lllJUnes, were 3-0 early and had Green in
Without leadmg runnm g back trouble when he heaved the
William_Green, who was sus- ball to guard Brian Waters.
pe2ded t~r one game.
. , . Waters was immediately
.1 don t know ':'hen n s tackled and the Chiefs drew a
go mg. to be, but we re..go~n g 5-yard penalty for illegal,
to wm some games, satd touching. But Browns defcnCieveland coach Butch sive tackle Gerard Warren
Davts.
..
drew a IS-yard penalty when
As Crocker and Hall pocke~ he crashed into Waters as he
themselves off the !urt. lay helplessly in the pile.
Cleveland players htgh-hved
Suddenly, the Chiefs had
and congratulated the rookte momentum and tield posi-

MAC Roundup

Eastern Michigan breaks
into MAC win column
BY ANDY RESNIK

Associated Press
The Eastern Michigan Eagles
credit hard work and not a
coaching change for their tirst
Mid-American Conference win
of the season.
Anthony Sherrell ran for 155
yards and a touchdown on 43
canies to lead the Eagles to a
19-13 win Saturday over
Central Florida.
Eastern Michigan had been 05 in the MAC behind Jeff
Woodruff, 11red last Monday
after a 1-8 start and 9-34 record
in four seasons.
Interim coach AI Lavan, who
guided the running backs under
Woodruff. said the Eagles (2-8,
1-5) didn't break into the MAC
win column because he was put
in charge.
"The one thing this team has
done is continue to play with a
cenain level of energy," Lavan
said. "Now, we haven't always
played welt ... but we haven't
stopped playing hard."
Elsewhere in the MAC on
Saturday, Akron beat Central
Michigan 40-28, Kent State
edged Ohio 37-33. No. 21
Northern Illinois hammered
Buffalo 40-9 and Western
Michigan defeated Ball State
28-20.
Miami of Ohio, on the
strength ofTu~sday's 33-10 win
over Bowling Green, moved
into the Top 25 on Sunday at
No. 23. Bowling Green is No.
25, giving the MAC three
ranked teams for the first time.
Turnovers helped the Eagles
jump on the shoo1handed
Golden Knights (3-7, 2-4).
Two fumbles and an interception deep in UCF territory set
up a 15-yard touchdown pass
from Ken Bohnet to Alonzo
Harris, a 39-yard 11eld goal by
Andrew Wellock and a 16-yard
TD non by Sherrell for a 17-13
halftime lead . .
Sherrell didn't care that UCF
played without five starters suspended for the rest of the season
by coach Mike Kruczek. He
said it wa~ a relief to get a win.
"We stayed in there and kept
11ghting, fightinr, and lighting.
no matter what, ' Sherrell said.
"It was just our time· to win." ,.
Charlie Frye continued to
climb in the MAC and Akron
record books, throwing tor a
school-record 416 yards and
two touchdowns to lead a win
over Central Michigan.
Frye's .794 completion per-

..
!

Monday, November 10, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

centage (27-for-34) and 460
yards of total offense also set
Akron single-game records. He
became the ninth MAC qum1erback to &gt;urpass 3,000 yards
passing tor a season and the
eighth to exceed 8,000 career
yards.
. "He never ceases to an1aze
me, he is such a leader," Zips
coach Lee Owens said of Frye.
"I don 't know if there's a better
quarterback in the country. If
you look at his play week in
and week out, he is one of the
top."
After falling behind 21-3,
Frye threw a 59-yard TD pass
to Nick Sparks and Bobby
Hendry scored on runs of I and
7 yards to give the Zips (6-5, 43) the lead. Hendry ran for 132
yards and three touchdowns.
Jerry Seymour led the
Chippewas (3-7. 1-6) with 105
yards rushing.
Central Michi gan coach
Mike DeBord said Frye should
be considered one of the
MAC's best QBs. along with

NFL Roundup

Final two games
are biggest

Reeves finally earns No. 200
as Falcons defeat Giants
hold up against Bull'alo (4-5), which failed to
score a touchdown tor the third straight road
game. The Bill s have lost four in a row away
Dan Reeves finally got his 200th coaching from home, getJing outscored 95-21 111 those
games.
win. with lots of help from a lonner team.
Warrick Dunn ran tor 178 yards, including a
45-yard touchdown, and the Atlanta Falcons Jets 27, Raiders 24, OT
snapped ' a seven-game losing streak by defeating the mistake-prone New York Giants 27-7
At Oakland, Chad Pennington threw a 3-yard
on Sunday.
touchdown pass ,to Jerald Sowell with I:09 left
Reeves. who coached the GiUIIts before tak- and completed the 2-point conversion pass to
ing over in Atlanta in 1997, became the sixth Anthony Becht to force overtime. Then Doug
NFL coach to reach 200 victories (200-171-2). Brien kicked a 38-yard field goal in the ~xtra
The Falcons' had issued a release after the period for the Jets (3-6).
game saying Reeves was the seventh NFL
Brien made up for his botched field goal in a
coach to get 200 wins. Fonner Cleveland and 31-28 overtime Joss to the Giants last Sunday.
Cincinnati coach Paul Brown was included on He wasn't ready for the snap and had a 51-yard
their list with 222 wins. Later, the NFL said it
tield goal blocked.
does not recognize 52 wins he had coaching in
the old AAFC before the Browns joined the
Redskins 27, Seahawks 20
NFL.
The Giants (4-5) turned the ball over four
times, giving Atlanta (2-7) its tirst win since th e
At Landover, Maryland, Paid to catch passes,
season opener. It was a performance that got so Rod Gardner won the game for the Washington
ugly Giants fans chanted "Fire Fassel." Coach Redskins with a touchdown toss. Laveranues
Jim Fassel termed it a "trap game" early in th e Coles. also paid to catch passes. rescued the
week.
Redskins, as well. when he forced a fumble that
Randy Thomas recovered in their end zdne tor
a
touchback.
Steelers 28, Cardinals 15
At Pittsburgh, Tommy Maddox threw three
touchdown passes, two to Hines Ward barely a
minute apan in a 21-point third quarter, and the
Steelers ended their five-game losing streak.
The Steelers 13-6) merged an efficient
pffense and a dominating-at-times defense for
the first time since beating Baltimore 34-15 in
their opener. Antwaan Randle El's 52-yard punt
return for a touchdown was his second punt
runback for a score in three games .
The Cardinals (3-6) are winless in nine road
games dating to last season.

Titans 31, Dolphins 7
At Nashville, Steve McNair threw for 201
yards and two touchdowns, and Tennessee won
its fourth straight. game and sixth in the past
seven. .
. Miami (5-4) came in allowing just 13.8
points per gmne, best in the NFL, and the
Dolphins had been unbeaten on the road this
season. None of that mattered against the
Titans, who snapped a live-game skid against
Miami.

Chargers 42, Vikings 28
AI San Diego, Doug Flutie, 4l,juked his way
to two touchdowns and threw for two more in
his first start in nearly two years.
The big petfonnance from the pint -sized
Flutie and two touchdown runs by LaDainian
Tomlinson - including a 73-yarder, his
longest career TD - injected some excitement
into an otherwise dismal season for the
Chargers (2-7).

:;o

ll

'I~

• \ad .,) I

,tl.

SPORTS
'
• Johnson's win guarantee
puts Bengals on the spot.
See Page 81

Panthers 27, Sues 24

Page AS
• Nellie Zerkle. 97

,Showers, HI: 60s, Low: 40.

Rams 33, Ravens 22
At St. Louis, The St. Louis Rams' defense
bailed out an inept offense Sunday night.
The Rams forced seven turnovers and
knocked roo~ie quarterback Kyle Boller out of
the game in a 33-22 victory over the Baltimore
Ravens. That performance covered up tor a
suddenly incompetent offense that had been
ranked No. I in the NFL.

Details on Page A2

LOI'I'ERIFS
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 7·2·6
Pick 4 day: 9-7-3-0
Pick 3 night: 7-5-4
Pick 4 night: 9-5-6-5
Buckeye 5: 4·1 0·25-35·36

may be the tool to help you
grow and. expand your business.

., S~rta
~beep

Our loans work with your bank
to provide gap financing to help
your bu siness expand or help a
business with start up needs.

Plus hie"

Private for· profit businesses that
are creating and/or retaining jobs
in the Buckeye Hill s district
are eligible to apply.

12 PAGES

Business

A6

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

Obituaries

A4
As
As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A2

Movies

...

© a003 Ohio Valley Publishtlll! Co.

(Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Mqrgan,
Noble, Perry and Washington counties)

•on :;

'I I• ' '

son for the company 's MidAtlantic
Division
in
Roanoke , Va., said the company has made its last. best
offer to United Food and
Commercial Workers Local
400 during talks · that ended
last Saturday.
"Our position is we' ve
made the union an extremely
generous tina! offer: they 've

rejected it." Fralin said. "We
had a fuH discussion of the
facts last week over four
negotiating sessions and we.
at this point. don't see that
further negotiations would be
beneficial."
Fralin said the company ha~ no
plans to hire replacement work·
ers in order to re-Qpen the 44
stores that have been closed since

the middle uf Cbober. However.
he 'aid replacement worker'
could come into play at &lt;;Omc
point. marking the tirst time
since the work 'toppagc began
that the issue ha' been di&gt;&lt;:u''-Cd
publicly.
"That remain' an optio n
should this strike · continue
indefinitely.'' he said.
Kroger employee' wem on

it. He saw a lot of death.
Slater said his helicopter
crashed four times. Somet[mes
when his helicopter was at tree
level, a blade would clip a tree .
and break, sending the helicopter to the ground in some
scary areas.
When combat was over,
the
Vietnamese
living
around the Americans would
smi le during the day and
become enemies at night.
Slater said this made things
very tense and he sees some
parallels . between Vietnam
and Gulf War II . Unlike the ·
open deserts of Iraq.
Vietnam was fou ght in ajungle which hid and deceived.
But like Vietnam, Slater
said the enemy inside the
cities was concealed and
never in plain view. Some
of the same feelin gs that hi s
~eneration experienced with
· Jl,mgle fightmg ts what the
American troops are now
facing with urban warfare.
'1'hecontextofYietnam was
really heavy because we didn't
know where the enemy was
corning from," he said. "lrnq is
a different bal]garne, but they
are under a·Jot of strain."
Slater said Vietnam was a
political war and that in ret- Meigs High School history teache r Mike Gerlach teaches
rospect, he does not suppon these students about the freedoms that so ld iers have been
the reasons for the conflict. fighting for since the birth of the republic that IS commemHe has "mixed feelings" orated in the Veterans Day holiday. He points to Iraq on the
about Iraq but supports the map to illustrate that sacrifices soldiers have made for the
soldiers who are fighting nation . (J. Miles Layton)
over there. He said eliminat- . but why are they trying to
Coming home for Slater
ing Saddam was a good kiH our people," he asked. was no picnic . He came
thing, but he is uncertain
"If they want statehood so home to a nation still bitterabout some of the other rea- bad, why don't the Iraqi s ly divided about the ron sons for the going to war.
give up those people who
"Iraqi statehood is good, are doing all those things'!"
Please see Soldiers. AS

CHESTER - A total of
$237,000 has been included in
the fiscal year 2004 Interior
Appropriations Bill for restoration of the old Cpester
Academy, according to a
release Monday from U.S.
Senator Mike DeWine (R-OH).
The funding is being made
the
Chester-Shade
to
Historical Association which
recently completed a total
1823
restoration of the
Chester Courthouse on .a lot
adjacent to the Academy. ,
In his release DeWine
noted that the bill ap))ropriating the money for the
Chesler project has passed
both the House and Senate
and will now go to the
President for his stgnature.
The funds, ne said, are designated for the restoration of the
historic building to make it useable as a community meeting

place tor organizations, activities and heritage programs.
"As a member of the Sennte
Appropriations Committee, I
am .proud to help bring funds
back to Ohio communities," said
DeWine in his .announcement.
"Chester Academy is a historical treasure m Meigs
County. Restoring this schoolhouse will help preserve Ohio's
history and continue its tradition of education by pmviding
a place for the community to
meet and learn," he added.
The Academy constructed
in 1839 on land donated by
Meigs County pioneer, Levi ·
Stedman, first housed the
Meigs 'County High School
and Teachers Institute. Later
it became known . as the
Chester Academy of Higher
Learning and then in the late
1800's was the Chester elementary and high schooL
From 1928 when it was
vacated as a school until 1959
the building was empty. That
year the Daughters of

America. began meeting there.
Because of rapid deterioration of the structure, plans. for
its repair were started more
than a year ago. JoAnn Ritchie
of Daughters of America and
Dale Colburn of the ChesterShade Association were
named to co-chair the project.
An architect was hired and
preliminary plans tor work on
the three-story brio.:k Academy
building were prepared as the
two organizations began fund
raising. Colburn satd tina!
plans for the restoration will
now be completed so that
once money becomes available, the work can begin.
"We ' re just thrilled to get
this money and just as soon
as it comes in, we' ll be ready
to move," he sl1id.
"We ' ll take the building
back to the way it was as much
as we can but add electricity.
heating and air conditioning, a
.sewage system . and more
bathrooms,'' added Mary
Powell, Association presideo:tt.

FREE

FREE

Parking

or
MttJifriW
r.....WH. nura. S.t J.5

""'""""'

Layaway

.._ ..., 4k

iiiiiiio:N

"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES"

Rte 2, Gallipolis Feny, WV

675·1371

lttl

IZ
Ill

,t to!

•111t'",

••·n·

Plein see KJ'Oier. AS

approves land
purchase
Bv J.

MILES lAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
authorized the Board of
Public Affairs to purchase
land for a new water well
field on Monday night.
Meeting in regular.session.
counci l approved the purchase of 18.7 anes of land in
Hob,on at a co't of $~.000
per acre and a total cost of
$37.566. Jay Hall owns the
land . which has been subject
to an option to purchase for
nearly two years.
According to BPA Member
Bernard Gilkey. one well has
already been· drilled and a
second is nearing completion.
but neither will be operational
until a new water treatment

i·

plant in the planning st.ilges is
built and operational.
The land purchase will be
tinanced through the village's .
water improvement fund, for
which residents pay $5 per
month on their water bill .
The
purchase
was
approved as an emergency
measure . Counci I members
Kathy Scott and Roger
Manley voted aga in st suspending the rules and approving the measure last mght as
an emergency, but voted in
favor of the land purchase.
Council also approved the
renewal of the village's con-

Please see·Purchase, AS

Government funding for resto ring the historic Chester
Academy ha s been included in the 2004 appropriations bill.
passed by the U.S . House and Senate.
Both agreed that restoring this money to do work on the
and renovating the Academy Academy now. could have
is sure to boost tourism in happened had, not Meigs
the county.
Countians gotten behind the
"But none of this, not the project. They deserve the
Courthouse restoration. not credit." said Powell.

w

Joe Gage or Michelle·Hyer

&lt;II

'trike on Oct. 13 after the
uni on rejected a proposed
fou r-year contract that called
for 8 percent increases to
health bcnetit s.
Unio n officials said an
independent actuary determined Kroger would have to
contribute more to the health

m ..

For further details please contact:

(800) 835-8088

2 SECilONS -

II

Day celebrates timeless sacrifice by soldiers Council

hoeflich@mydailysentinel .com

Dally 3: e-7 ·9
Dally 4: 1-9-5-4
Cash 25:4-9-12-13-15-17

F-rCounting
e8 ·

Revolving Loan Fund

acarter@mydailytribune.com

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

INDEX

Di~trid

'Cl\ I '1HI I&lt;

2004 Interior Appropriations Bill includes funding for Academy restoration

West Virginia

Budc..eye Hills -Hocking Valley

BY ANDREW CARTER

POMEROY - Two veterans in two different wars
share the same perception of
service to country that has
come to symbolize the
importance of Veterans Day.
Marshall Slater, 52 , was
an attack helicopter crew
chief for the U.S. Army in
Vietnam, and John Weeks.
76, served in the U.S. Navy
in both World War II and the
Korean War. Both served
their country with distinc tion and have strong feelin~s about the importance of
military service.
After graduating high
school, Slater enlisted and
was sent overseas where he
flew 2300 combat hours
between 1969 and 1970. His
crew was responsible for the
safety of medi-vac missions
that . recovt:red injured soldiers. Slater said his helicopter flew at tree-top level to
"clean the air up" and "lay it
down" qn the ground below
to clear out any remaining
Vietcong soldiers before the
American wounded and
dying could be rescued.
In a "tire zone," anything
moving was fair game , but in
a "no fire zone," a helicopter
attack crew needed special
permission from headquarters before it could do its job
and dispatch enemy forces.
· Sometimes, Slater knew
enemy soldiers escaped into
the no tire zone but there
was little he could do about

OBITUARIES

~I)'' .

Kroger, union remain at standstill

J. MtLES lAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel. com

WEATHER

.At Detroit, Jason Hanson's right foot gave
Detroit consecutive wins for the tirst time in
three years. Hanson made a 48-yard tield goal,
his fourth of the game, with 39 seconds left.
The Lions have won two straight for the first
time since taking three in a row under Gary
Moeller, who now coaches Chicago's linebackers.

I (I

BY

Jaguars 28, Colts 23

Lions 12,.Bears 10

;-!

V~terans

At Charlotte. Jake Delhomme's 5-yard
touchdown pass to Steve Smith with I :06
remaining overcame a late Tampa Bay rally in
the matchup of two suddenly bitter rivals.
Tampa Bay defensive end Simeon Rice guaranteed a Buccaneers victory earlier this week,
but the defending champions are now left with
only a slight chance of even winning the NFC
South. The Bucs (4-5) trail the Panthers (7-2)
by three games, and Carol ina holds the
tiebreaker after a season sweep.

At Jacksonville, Fred Taylor delivered the
punishment he promised and the Jacksonville
Jaguars got a win not many people expected .
Taylor scored a 32-yard touchdown with
I :08 left. Taylor, who promised payback to
Colts safety Mike Doss for his rough play in
the first meeting between the teams this .season,
finished with a season-high 15 2 yards to help
the Jaguars (2-7) defeat the Colts for the first
time in franchise hi story.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS -. Kroger
officials said Thursday they
don't plan to go back to the
bargaining table with union
leaders representing 3,300
striking workers in Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky.
Archie Fralin, spokesper-

~

'\
(740) 374-9436

nrlsderneanorcharge,Bt

'for Buckeyes, Bt

...

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ben Roethlisberger of Miami
of Ohio and Josh Harris of
Bowling Green.
"He is a bit overlooked and
underrated," DeBord said.
By easily beating Buffalo (110, 1-6), Northern Illinois took
a half-game lead over idle
.
Toledo and Bowling Green in
Cowboys 10, Bills 6
the MAC West.
Michael Turner ran for 163
At Irving, Texas, Despite moving only 51
yards and scored three touchdowns (two rushing, one yards on their two scoring drives and going
receiving) and Josh Haldi more than 15 minutes between 11rst downs in
threw three scoring passes to the second half, the Cowboys (7-2) eked out
lead the Huskies (9-1, 5-l ), the victory.
who play at Toledo next
Dan Campbell caught an early 2-yard touchSaturday.
down pass, and Billy Cundiff made a 51-yard
"You try to get up for all of 11eld goal on the opening drive of the second
them , but there's different half. The league's stingiest defense made it
degrees," Huskies coach Joe
Novak said. "That's a big football game next week ."
Jon Drach threw for 250
yards and tied a career-high
with four touchdown passes to
lead Western Michigan (4-6, 33) over Ball State (4-6, 3-3),
which lost for the third time in
four games.

R..rgiolltll [)n)([ofmtml

Clarett.asks judge to dismiss

l!'fl?:
... .
I

,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="484">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9935">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="21957">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="21956">
              <text>November 10, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4299">
      <name>rawlings</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="738">
      <name>zerkle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
