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Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, October 10, 2~ .

www.mydallysentlnel;eom

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Slmpllton ·

BriBge classes fea·a Roughen
32 Advmlty
24 Utility bill 41 Dog dayl I~
33 Sllrllld
!tom cold
ture textbook deal s.
·
Olton .bird
7 WOlfMan
25 -Pie-chart
51 NoiiV
And sometimes stupoltl'l)'lf
llnH
52 Bil-e
35~10W
dents complain that
8 A.D.WQrd 21 Gun, In e 53 Santa Fo
37 FJOrd terr.
cop thow
hre.. ·
9 01!1111 lnthey never get such
31 Donewllh
40
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terpreltt
27
DtpL
atore
hands in real life. It is
hard to argue with
them, but textbook
deals do occur. For
example, this layout
arose during lhe Cavendish Calcutta Pairs
in Las Vegas last
May. How should the
play proceed in three
no-trump?
I like South's oneno-trump rebid. With
4-3-3-3 distribution,
it is usually best to
aim for no-trump, unless partner has ;m
unbalanced hand. Bid
two suits with a twoor three-suiter.
Wesl led the diamond five: · four,
queen, ace.
..
Declarer had five
CELEBRITY CIPHER
top tricks: three ·
by Lula Campo•
spades, one diamond
~Cipher ctyptog..,.. .,. created from quolationt by tomous
people, putonct pntHnl. Each Iotter in ll1e cipher stands lor another.
and one club. Another
TOday's clue: A eqUII/s K
diamond trick was
guaranteed, and the
. )
club finesse was win- "' "ZLCHSKSX
RVL
YZOLM
KM
ning, but South s~ill
c PCRRLH NO ROHSKSX
neeiled to establish
two heart tricks.
IV C R FNO
DLLZ
KSRN
Some declarc(S led
a low heart from hand
POMKO
Z KDL
KM
RVL
at Irick two, making it
easy for East to win
•
OMOCZ
Ri.COVLH"
. with the king and return .the diamond
OVCHZLM
AOHCZR
nine. This established
West's suit while he,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "In a happy marriage, It lathe wife
who provides lhe climate, )he husband the landscape. •
West, still had the
-Gerald Brenan
·
heart ace as an entry:
one down.
WOlD .
.T DAILY d ~
Some Souths did THA
GAM I ;
PUZ!LEI 0~
better, · crossing to _...;.._ _...:,._ ldltod loy
dummy with a spade
a:alll. ng for a 0 Roarron;o lottors of tho
and 'Ill
four ·scrornblod words b..
heart. However, two low to form four slmplo word!.
Easts, Doug Doub .,. .
and Zia Mahmood, ......,,..:.T_H;;....:E::..,.:.R;_;C_W:..:....,..,-l
1
were on the right
page ofplayed
the textbook:
They
second ,.~=·=~-===·=~·~.J
hand high, winning
I 0 RAT
with their king.
f-_,..l·"§. .:r-.:..:.. ,..,
. 1
_ 1
. 1
.
..
Nole that if East
d ucks his king, the
I were
contract succeeds. If
West wins with the
C T H 0 N .~ ing about ai bit of gossip
we ha'd
ace, his entry is gone~
15
heard when granny interrupted by
And if he ducks, de- . . . . .
asking, "Have you ever notic!!)J
darer can collect nine
that a rumor without a leg to.stand
· tricks via four spades,
RY CG E L
~o~ _u_s~~~~ will get around some;one heart, two dia- .
7
a
t..Om.:.ite the chuckle quoted
moods and tWO clubs. .
.
by filliny In the mi!Sing weirds .
When your partyou develop rom step N~ . 3 below, ,
ner' s suit is one lead
away from being established, try to win
the next defensive
trick.
SCRAM·LE7S ANSWERS
_____ .....,.._,...8
•
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Have you ever noticed that most creative people are.
Jsually fun loving but basically very unorganized? They ·
usually. haven't a clue as to where THINGS are PUT. ·

... ~)-

BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

A project you thought was
dead in the water may be rescued in lhe year ahead by a
Strange set of circumstances.

You may not get all you originally anticipated out of it, but
gainscan sttll be made.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) ·
· ll is a mistake today to invite criticism from un associ·

TilE GIUZZWELLS
~'t\

D\lVIMY! nW'S ~E
Cft \WOE F~ WDt.S

l\.11\1 ~65. C\JT
\6\'\o~Ml1\lS? II'\ l\1~ ~D IH
l.ffi\CA!

....,....../ ........
I I~

'""'"'-~"''

,,

i

I

ate who always tells it like it
is . You're not likely lube prepared to deal with the frankness of his/her opinion. Get a
jump on life by understanding
the influences that' II govern
you in the year ahead. Send
for your Astro-Graph prediclions by mailing $2 to AstraGraph. c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Bo• 167 , Wicklifle, OH
44092 . Be sure to state. your
zodiac sign .
SCORPIO , (Oct . 24-Nov.
22) ·· Today it behooves you
to guard your spending habits.
Any long-term debi you take
on at this time will be excep-

tionally difficult to pay off
and will weigh heavily on
your budget.
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23Dec . 21/·· ·Alihough you may
!hink yo u can't achieve your

purposes today without the
assistance of slrong allies, in
reality you will be far more
productive acting on your
own.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) ·· Trying to be a good
guy/gal can get you in a
whole heap of trouble today,
so don't volunteer to do
things for others that they're
capable of achieving on their
own. If trouble ensues, you'll
be blamed.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·· Select your friends and
your participation in social

activiltes today very carefully.
Something that sounds fun
could turn ou1 to be a fiasco.
PISCES ·(Feb. 20-March
20) ·· Should personal objectives need to be temporarily
shelved loday in order to take
care of things for another,
take it in stride. Adding anger
to the situation will only
make things worse.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-~ 01There · s not a ghost of .a
cliance that you are ltkely td
yield an inch should anyone
opposes your views or opinions today . This lack of fle•ibilily could be your undoing.
TAURUS (April 20-May

Weather
High: 70s, Low: 50s
Details, A2

Deaths
.E~aine

Rouse, 87
Jaunita Hull Richards, 83
Kevin Hickel, 28 .
Detlllls. A3

. :Grang~ plans
, ._ hol1day .
· :remembrances
·. POMEROY- The collection of canned goods
to ~o into baskets for
families during the holidays was announced at a ,
recent
meeting
of
Hemlock Grange at the
ball.
Non-perishable foods
are to be taken ·to the next
two grange meetings.
Rosalie Story, master,
noted that Hemlock will
Pomona
be
hosting
Grange on Nov. 8. The
officers conference will
begin. at 6:30p.m. following by the 7:30p.m. regular meeting. New officers
will be installed from aU
granges in the county that
night.
· Reports on drought in
fl!r'lllands, snake head
fish, 'lind· coyote destrus;tion was given by Roy
Gru"eser, legislative chairman. Rosalie Johnson,
lecturer, had a program on
Halloween with rea~ing
being given by Barbara
Fry and Opal Grueser.
A turkey potluck dinner
will be held at 6:30 preceding the November
meetil'ig .

Whafs inside
• Band Boosters launch
fund-raising campaign, AS
• Pastor Ron Branch's
column, AS

Lotteries
OHIO
!'lck 3: 7-2-2
Pick 4: 2·2·9-2
Buckeye 5: 9-22·23-30-31
Pick 3 night: 5·1-0
Pick 4 night: 2-5-3-7

c»aily :s: T-4-7

Daily 4: 6-4-o-4
Cash 25: 1-2-4-7-9-13

2 Sections- 11 Plea

·calendar
ctassifieds
Cpmics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

could lead to larger headaches
later.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
·· Every problem has several
altcrrtatJves. Tuday, however,.

J. REED

A7

85-7
88
A7

A6
A3
A3
81-4
A2

Q 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

County Sheriff J.D. Taylor, also of OxyContin addiction among men,
Gallipolis, mel with Meigs County but has expanded its focus to
commissioners Thursday to discuss include men dealing with an addicthe
Gallia-Jackson -Meigs tioo to alcohol and olher drugs.
Southeastern Ohio Advocate for
The group will meet at Rejoicing
Recovery, and the group's plans to Life Church in Middleport at 6 p.m.
offer rehabilitation services to adult Thursday, Oct. 24, and the public is
men with drug and alcohol prob..,_ invited to attend to learn more
!ems.
I
about the plans for a recovery
SOAR has applied for incorpora- house.
lion and non-profit status and its
"At this point, we don ' t plan on
board is now meeting monthly to taking any court referrals at the
continue plans for a recovery house ," Moore said. "The man·who
house.
wants help from SOAR will have to
According to Moore. the group seek it voluntarily. Any clients who
was founded in June to help address stay at the house will have to work
a growing problem in the area with while in treatment, pay rent and be

· subject to drug testing."
"We want to help people who
want to help themselves."
Moore said several organizations
have pledged financial support to
the project once the group's nonprofit, tax-exempt status is established.
Commissioners approved appropriations adjustments for the
Probate Court, and approved payment of bills in the amount of
$250,034.10.
Present were Commissioners
Mick Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Red Cross·
struggles
to meet
needs

After the voting

BY CHARLEHE HOEFliCH
News editor

Sens. George Voinovich, R-Ohio·, left, and John Breaux, O.La., second from left, leave the Senate Chamber in the Capitol
building in Washingto,n after voting on a resolution giving President Bush broad authority to attack Iraq, early Friday morning. On the right are liaisons to the White House counting the votes of the senators as they leave. The vote was 77-23. (AP)

Eastem ~lebrating homecoming in a big way
KRIS DoTSoN

Staff writer

Index

care of them now or they

BRIAN

POMEROY - A group formed to
help local men fight problems with
addiction to Ox yContin and other
drugs has started seeking funding
and a location for a recovery house.
Gallipolis City Comissioner
Richard Moore and retired Gallia

BY

.

W.VA.

20) ·• Several old obligations
may clamor for attentmn today. However,· even if they
inconvenience you, try to take

if you refuse to get past thinking negatively about yobr
problems, you could fail to
look for any solutions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)·
.. Be careful today not to e,.;
ceed your physical limitations;
when domg 1asks. If you have
any heavy work to tend to, acquire a helpmate who ~as the
muscles to assist you .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
Should you find yourself in-.
volved in an activity todar.
that you don· t feel is too en~
joyable: but others do. don'r
let your attitude spoil the fun
for them. Be a good spon.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22}
·· You may think ,YOu're get~
ti ng away w.ith shtrking you(,
responsi bilities today, but thepowers that be will make notC:
of it, and the necessary ac-:
tions will be taken.
.

BY

Sl!iff writer

'

-----~~ .........-....-, ---Friday, Oct II , 2002

,.

u

Splint· Gulch· Prune- Kitten· THINGS 'are PUT

~ WIIK N.wspof"IS J'

IS GOII&gt;lG 10

I I

Commissioners
meet with
SOAR reps

20 Orpnlc
45 Si&gt;unk
compound 48 Old Rom~n

"

~f'I\OTION,O~
t.L~(I

Regional group forms to help addicts

number -

TUPPERS PlAINS- It's
Homecoming · Week
at
Eastern High School, and the
kids and staff are ready . to
have some fun.
·
The homecomin~ dance "A
Moment·-Like Th1s" (named
after the Kelly Clarkson
song) will begin after the big
football
game
tonight
between the Eastern Eagles
·
and Miller FalcOI'Is.
. "The student council will
be decorating the gymnasium
in brick red, daffodil yellow
and . sage green · to set the
mood, hopefully to celebrate
our big football victory,"
senior Nicole Phillips said.
The game and dance are
only the beginning of homecoming at Eastern High
School.
· .
The kids have been celebrating and planning all week
with . fuhky · clothes and
events.
·Monday was pajama and
hat day, where the student

council also auctioned off its
homecoming court as slaves
for the week.
Tuesday was retro day,
Wednesday was "go bananas"
and twins day, Thursday was
camo and hicks day, and
today js green and white day.
· Thursday, students also
held a seniors versus teachers
v(llleyball game where the
teachers "humiliated" the students in every game, according to ' Principal Rick
Edwards.
. Today1 during the school
day, homecoming floats will
be paraded in front of the elementary school students
around I p.m.
There will be four floats,
one representing each grade,
and three trucks decorated
representing the cheerleaders,
football players aild volleyball playeFs.
After the elementary school
parade, the ninth throu~h 12th
graders will compete m their \Several seniors put some final touches on their homecomversion of the Olympics.
ing float. Pictured are Jenny Thoma, Nicole Phillips, ana
Each grade is ~onsidered a Sonya Frederick, back, and Erica Lemons, Cody Faulk,
Chelsey Wood and Jenifer Chadwell.
Ple!lse see Eastern, Al

POMEROY - While the
American Red Cross is
slowly rebuilding blood
supplies after a difficult
summer providing patient
needs, the agency cautions
. that blood donors are needed every day.
With that constant need,
area residents are encour·
aged to turn out in support
of the lifesaving program
when the bloodmobile visits Meigs County next
weeK.
'
- .. ~
It will be at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens
Center
on
Mulberry
Heights from 1 to 6 p.m.
Wednesday.
Anyone . at least 17 years
old who weighs at least I 05
pounds; is in good general
health, and has not given
blood within the · past 56
days can donate.
Donors can give blood
when taking most medications, including insulin and
high blood pressure medications, if their medical
condition is stable, according to Cheryl Gergely, Red
Cross spokes person.
She reported that currently inventory levels are hovering around a three-day
supply 'for most types. She
noted that type 0 negative
is still in short supply at a
one-day level.
"We need to make sure
enough blood is collected ·
every day, of all · blood
types, to have enough
available when hospitals
place their orders," she
said.
Gergely explained that
while the dptimum inventory is a five-to ,jjev.en-day
supply of blood, · a threeday level should be the
minimum.
"Blood donations are,
needed to help save the
' lives of trauma victims,
emergency and planned
surgeries, and for ongoing
medical treatment. That
means at least I, I 00 blood
donors are needed every
day
in
the
Greater
Alleghenies Region," said
Gergely in encouraging
residents to donate at the
Oet. 16 visit of the bloodmobile in Meigs County.

.

Men
FREE Prostate Screening

sponsored by Holzer Medi~ol Center Community Health ond Wei/ness ancJ·Holzer Clinic

Saturday, October 19, 2002

·

8a00 am
• 1 1 zOO
aM
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J

•

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islimiled to lhe first 100
&gt;

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men .

deadline is 10I 17/02 at 4 PM.
•

.. .

·I

�'•

•

OhiO
Pizzeria orker mnvicted of killinJ friend,
student in 2000; could face execution ·

The Daily Sentjnel

•

1~rlday, October 11,2002

PageAl

Saturday, Oct. 12

MCAR'IHUR (AP)-Afoma pizzeria
.staffer was convicted Thwsday of killing a
fiiend in 200) and, mcmhs later, a college
student who worked with him. ·
GregO!)' McKnight, 25, could he sentenced to d~ for mwdering Kenyon
College student Emily Murray, 20.
. McKnight was also convicted of murder
in the Qismembennent of Gregory Julious,
20, of Chillicodle. Prosecutors didn't seek
the death penalty in his case beCause investigators could not determine how he died.
The case generated debate over death
penalty costs. Common Pleas Judge
Gregory McKnight sits in court during Jeffrey Simmons had ruled in August that
the sixth day of his murder trial Monday, prosecutors could not seek the death penalat the Vinton County Common Please ty because of the high cost of proper prosCourt in McArthur. (AP)
ecution and public defense. He later

•I ColufT111ualsvo"ao I

.~
KY.

~~~. ~W~ ·

-

_,

Local Briefs

\) ---~-·~·
Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Showotl

T-siOrml

-

F~

Snow

Ice

More rain expected this weekend
Weather Forecast
Today... Rain and drizzle
with fog. Rain tapering off by
afternoon. Highs near 70.
Light and variable winds.
Tonight...Drizzle with fog.
Lows in the upper 50s. Calm
winds.
·Extend Forecast
Saturday...Drizzle with fog
uniil
mid-moming .. .Then
partly cloudy. Highs in tb~
upper 70s. Ltght and variable
wjnds.
· Saturday
night. .. Partly
cloudy. A chance of showers
from late evening on. Lows in
the mid 50s. Chance of rain
30 percent.

Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Cooler. Hig!ls in the _lower
60s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Sunday
night. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
30s.
·
Columbus.
day ... Mostly
clear. Highs in the upper 50s.
Tuesday... Panly · cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs in the lower 60s.
Wednesday...Partly cloudy.
Lows near 40 and highs, in the
lower 60s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the mid 60s.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Memorial services
· felr Elaine B un!ette Rouse,
· ;~7.
Canton, who died
' 'Saturday, Sept. 28, 2002, will
·,_tie held at 2 p.m. Saturday at
"·Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church in Point Pleasant,
~ ·with the Rev. Carol Woods
:. ·officia!ing.
.
The family will ·receive
':friends after the ·memorial
. service at the church.
~ ,.· Memorial
contributions
•· :may be made to the Point
• 1&gt;ieasant Presbyterian Church
t Memorial Fund, P.O. Box
-'415, Point Pleasant; W.Va.
t-·25550.
Arrangements are under
the direction of Crow-Hilssell
. Funeral
Home,
·Point
·Pleasant.

..

changed his mind. ·
•
. Authorities say Mwray, of Cold Spring,

N.Y., disappeared ill November 200), ~
she and tdcKnighl left Wid wilhin .minutes of each other near the college· in

Gambier.
.
Her body was found a month latec. in
McKnight's trailer near Ray. She !)ad been
shot in the beadA sean:h · of the property turned · up
Julious' bones and teeth.
.
Julious; girlfriend, Dana Bostic, has s3id
she last spoke to him by paging McKnight
in May 2000. She said Julious told her- he
was in Colwnbus and planned to ~ to a
pany. McKnight said later the pair ~
ended up in Cincinnati with some : of
Julious' friends. ·

A roundup of the dally markets
Oct. 10, 2002

12,000

·Dow Jones
Industrials

11.000
10,000

7,533.95

+3.40

tlgh
Law
7,560.93
7,197.49
Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

8,000

. OCT

7,000
2,000
1,900
1,900

+4.42
High

1,185.83

•
Law

1,200

t,108.49

· Record high: 5,00.82
Moren 10,2000

OCT

1,000

Oct. 10,2002

Standard&amp;
Poor's500
•

803.92
Pet. change !loin pnMoua
· +3.50
High

Law

806.51

788.83

Record high: 1,527.48
Marcl124, 2000

JUL

A~G

SEP

OCT

.AP

Local Stocks
AEP-21.20
DuPont- 39.39
Pepsico- 41.57
Arch Coal- 15.50
Federal Mogul - .50
Premier - 6.21
Akzo- 31.09
USB -17.36
Rockwell - 15.68
AmTech/SBC- 21 .25
Gannett - 68.87
Rocky Boots - 4.90
Ashland Inc.- 24.82
General Elec1rlc- 22.60 RD Sh&amp;ll- 41.80
AT&amp;T-11.32
GKNLV - 3.10
Sears - 29.91
Bank
35.05
Harley Davldsm- &lt;48.46 Wai·Mart- 51.84
BLI-13.54
Kmart- .40
Wendy's ..:.. 31.96
Bob Evans- 22.89
Kroger- ·12.27
Worthington - l 8.25
BorgWarner- 42.76
Ltd. -13.51
Dally sled&lt; reports are
Champion- 2.30 ,
NSC-20.56
the 4 p.m. closing
Charming Shops- 4.56 Oak HI Flr1llr1Cial- 22.39 quotes ot tile previous
City Holding- 22.29
OVB - 19.80
day's transactions, proCol-22
BBT-33.04
vided by Smith· Partners
DG- 12.-5
Peoples- 24.30
. al Advest Inc.

One-

AIDS ad/campaign
focuses on minorities
'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Buses
in seven Ohio cities will be used
. as traveling bitlboards for a cam· paign to· increase AIDS awareness among minorities.
The program will begin
Saturday, when the buses will he
d1splayed at a Statehouse rally.
The veh1cles, will be wropped
.th ..
fbi ks Arne.
. WI Images o ac '
ncan
Indians, Asians and Latinos and
the slogan "Know the Facts. Get
Tested "
The;'GetontheBus"program
is the first phase of a $325,1XKJ
campaign which health officials
descrihe as the fU"St statewide
effon to raise awa.rent;ss about

Receives TOPS
awards

.Eastern royalty

t11''

!~::.

Kevin Hickel

' ' MARYSVllLE - Kevin
'·ftickel, 28, Marysville, for, merly of the. Tuppers Plains
' ltnd Cpellville area, died
'Thursday; Oct. 10, 2002, at
•tGrant Riverside Hospital in
'•Columbus. . Arrangements will be
:i!pnollllced by White Fimeral
· Home In Coolville.

Refresher
course for
older drivers
offered

.,
"

:·;.~
·;:: urtNews

J

IDV among minonues. It is
mostly federally funded through
the Ohio Commission on
Minority Health.
The ads cost about $6 500
. each for the six-month ~am­
paign, said Joyce Calarnese,
assistant director of the Family
De
c
h
· velopment enter at t e
Col bus Urban Lea
hi h
. urn . ·
gue, w c
IS ?verseemg the grant.
.
'People have gotten pass1ve
because they don't hear about
the-deaths that we heard aboui 20
years ago, so people aren't taking it. seriously and they aren't
getting tested," c'aiamese said.

____ .. --

.:.._

r::

::......=...:.:.:.-=-~---I

lssqed license
POMEROY- Marria~e
licenses have been issued m
Meigs County Probate
Court ··· to Joshua David
Leachi' :22, . Pomeroy, and
Tara 'Beth Davis, 22,
Middleport, and to Matthew
Alan Justice, 21, and
Amanda Sue Napper, 22,
both ofRutli!nd.
t;,,' .

Your Friends
&amp; Neighbors

1,~

Pet Char'QIIIoin praYioua

Jaunita Hull.
Richards

DAYTON - Jaunita Hull
Richards, 83, Dayton, formerly of Meigs County, died
Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2002.
She was preceded in death
. by her husband, Welby
1
• Richards.
1·;- Serviclls were held . on
, Monday, Sept. 16, 2002, at
' 'Tobias
Funeral
Home
l·]'jeJmont Chapel in Dayton.
; Burial was m the Miami
' ·Valley Memory Gardens.
··Donations may be made to
•:Hospice of Dayton, P.O. Box
'3'509, Dayton, Ohio 45401. .

school bus collide

Citations
issued

R,ader SeiVices

'

. frolri'

Bridge in last stage of
building when it collapses·

&lt;usF&gt;s 213-960) .

• Co1'1'11Crtlon Polley

Oh.lo Valley Publlahlng Co.

main concern In all stones"Is to be Published
every
attemoon,
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and
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Our main number Ia
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Postmlller: Send address correcDeplr\ment ext'"alona are:
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Ol81riCI Mgr.: Mike Jonklns, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E....tl:

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MARCY, N.Y. · (AP) ·master mechanic forthecOinpaWorlrers were pouring concrete ny, was pronounced dead at the
in the final stages of building a · scene from massive blunt force
pedestrian bridge when it col- trauma.
lapsed. killing one man arid
"Normally a deck pour is
inl~ at least nine others, two stressful in certain res~ts; but
cntJ y.
not from the standpoint of a
The span fell about 20 feet bridge suddenly collapsing,"
onto an unfinished highway said Charles Sirowatka, a proshortly before 11 a.m Thursday. ject engineer for Tioga in
Consttuetioo workers. were .Herkitnrr. He and Ohemesser
pouring concrete for the last both said it was too sooo to tell
time of the season and running a why it fell. .
'
fmishing machine halfway
The company, in business
across the top of the bridge since 1984, has never had a simwhen it twisted and collapsed, ilar incident, he said.
said Paul Obemesser, regional
It took dozens of emergency:
construction engineer for the workers about 45 minutes to
state
Department
of free aU the workers from the
Transportatioo.
debris of the fallen bridge,
One of the injured was a state which was to he completed
employee. The others wod:ed within the next month. About
for Tioga Construction, the con- two hours after the collapse,
tractor doing the work. Scott Couchman's body was disCoochman, 46, of Mohawk, a looged from the debris.

One ye1r , •••• •• ••• • .'119.40
Dally ..................50'

Mall Subacrlpllon
Inside Melgo County
13Weeks ......•.. .... .'30.15
26Weeks "., . . ..... . .'60.00
52 Weeks . ...... . .. . .'118.80
RBIM OUtslda Meigs County
13Weeks ... . ....... . .'50.05
26Weeks .... ... . . . . .'100.10
52 Weeks .... . • .. ....'200.20

Til

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

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Telephone: l304J 615-5911
Fax: 13041 615-8182

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l.oi":..--------~---------------~.--..:.l.it•.l

... -·

Eastem

The Daily Sentinel

(F JJJ Farmers Bank
for

speed for conditions by the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol fol lowing a one-vehicle accident early today on County
h
Road 28 (Bas an).
Troopers said Fitch was
northbound, one-tenth of a
mile north of Ohio. Route
248, at 12: 15 a.m. when he
lost control of the pickup ·
truck he drove on wet
roadway. The pickup went
off the left side of the road
and struck a guardrail.
The pickup had func- ·

Democrats open headquarters

CHESTER -Two members accepted state commissions at a recent meeting of Chester Council
323,
Daughters
of
America.
Receiving commissions
from Carol Douglas were
Erma Cleland as deputy
state councilor and Doris
Grueser to the state
orr.hans committee. · · f
nspecuon o the council
was conducted • by Betty
Biggs. It was .announced tiona! damage, troopers
that Guiding Stir Council .said.
~issey R.A. Walker, 19,
will celebrate .its 100 year
anniversary next month, 33201 Hysell Run Road,
and that a friendship meet- Pomeroy, was cited on
ing will be held Nov. 2 at . three charges by the patrol
the hall.
It was reported that following a one-vehicle
Erma Cleland is home accident Wedn~!Sday on
from the Rehabilitation CR 15 (Hysell Run) near
Center and that two mem- Rutland.
bers, Debbie Grueser, and~. Troopers said · Walker
Joann Ritchie, had family was northbound, one-tenth
of a mile north of Ohio
deaths.
Route 124&gt;, at 4:25 p.m.
The official opening of the Meigs .County Democratic Party headquarters on East Main
when she attempted to
Street in Pomeroy took place Tuesday night. Sue Maison, county chairm;m , left, rolled out
navigate · a left curve and
the "Vote Democrat• stickers as ..she posed with candidate, John Lentes, probate-juvenile
lost control of the pickup
judge; Mick Davenport, commissioner; Frances Strickland representing her husband, Rep.
she drove.
Ted, 6th Congressional District; and Jim Pancake.• 92nd District, Ohio House, outside the
The pickup went left of
COOLVJLPE - Connie
headquarters. (Charle'!e Hoeflich)
· Rankin of Tuppers Plains center, then off the right
received · the weekly best side of the road and overloser certificate and a fruit turned., Walker allegedly
basket during the recent fled the scene following
meeting of Coolville
Taking Off Pounds Safely the accident, tr~pers said.
The pickup had dis2013.
.
She was also presented a abling damage, and Walker
charm and bracelet for was cited for left of center,
meeting her first · weight driving under suspension
loss goal. Carolyn Taylor and a seatbelt violation.
was also given a charm for
reaching . .her half way to
g"oa!. SuAnn Powell was
given the trophy for quarter!)! best loser, and Corina
Neff received a charm for
no weight gain in six
weeks.
The group will hold an ·
officers training at the
Reedsville
Community
ATHENS A classChurch from 10 a.m. to I room course aimed at
p.m. All TOPS members in helping older people to
Ohio are welcome • to
attend. Registration is not refresh and improve their
required, and light refresh- driving .s)dlls is being
ments will be served. offered
at · O'Bleness
. Information is available by Memorial Hospital.
calling 667-7399.
The 55 · Alive/Mature
TOPS
meet
every Driving program will be
Tuesday . at Reedsville given from 1 to 5 p.m. on Eastern High School homecoming court takes a moment to _pose for a picture in the gym dur·
Coi_nnn~mty
Church. Oct. 15-16 in the basement ing camo/hick dress day this week. In back row are Jason K1mes, Jared Hupp, R1char.d M1sner~
Wetgh-ln starts at 5:15
B 11
Jonathan Owen, Dustin Riggs and Derek Roush. In front are Brittany Davis, Erica Lemons, Abb1
p.m., with the meeting at · confe~e~ce room - ·
·
.
6:30.
·
Parttctpants are asked to Thompson, Alyssa Holter, Jessica Kehl and Kayla Siders.
, attend both afternoon sesblindfolded 3-point basket- half time during the football
, sions. All drivers, espeball shpt contest, egg toss, game which will start at 7:30
cially those who are 50
water balloons toss, tug-of- p.m.
·il'
years old or older, ar~
Page
A
1
war, weird talent contest,
invited to participate in the
C~STER - Brandon program.
cross dress contest, obstacle
L. . Ft~ch, 17 • 36659 ' To enroll in the course team and will vie for the cov- course, and wheelbarrow
. .
.
Township Road 275; Long
Bottom was cited for whtch has a $10 fee, rest- et~ trophy in activities like race;
Eastern's · homecoming
,
dents may call 740-592- .· popcorn toss. gross eating
contest, , treasure hunt, a queen will he crowned during
9337.

more

9,000

Pd. change lrom preylola

Ohio lawmaker emerges Driver, eight students • 2·
as leadi~g voice of
injured when car,
opposition to war
WASHINGTON. (AP) accepted a United Nations
Rep. Dennis Kucinich, a post, and
I ames A.
ERIE TOWNSHIP, Mich. Rod~ers, said while waiting
Democrat from northeast Traficant Jr., who was
(AP)
Second-grader outstde the Detroit. charter
Ohio, emerged as a leading expelled from Congress.
Johnnie
Grayson
was one of school earlier Thursday. ·
voice against President
The Senate added its
the lucky ones.
The truck loaded with .38
, Bush's request to use force approval to the m&lt;!asure
Though the youngster tons of steel coils barreled
against Iraq, rallying many early . Friday in a 77-23
broke an arm, lost his front into the . side of the bus :in
of his colleagues to vote vote. Kucinich said the
teeth
and needed stitches, Erie Township, about ·I0
measure coalition would continue to
against · the
his family was able to take miles northeast of Toledp,
.Thursday.
oppose a war in Iraq and
the
boy home from the hos- Ohio, on ~hursda y morning,
It was approved 296-133, promote diplomacy. He
pita!
Thursday night, hours · throwing a.t least five clu1'but Kucimch and others plans to address the issue at
said the high number of upcoming speaking engage- . after a tractor-trailer struck dren onto the pavement and
the school bus carrying him into a yard. The truck
lawmakers voting against ments in Seattle, Detroit
5!) other children an pushed the bus about 100
and
the measure, which was and Los Angeles.
dchaperones
from Pierre feet and to.re a hole in its
expected to game·r across"There must be a way of
ToussaiJit Academy to a side and the bottom of ~he
the-board support, shows resolving conflict in a
field trip at an apple floor.
.
.
their campaign against a peaceful manor wi!hout
orchard.
.
·
·
At
least
48
children
and
war in Iraq has gotten wide- violence and bloodshed:"
Thirteen · other children adults were injured, inc!Wlspread attention.
Kucinich said . . "It starts
and three adults remained ing drivers of both the b,us
''That's a powerful state- with votes like today, where
hospitalized - including and truck. Several · wete
ment and I think the leader- members begin to take a
five children in critical con- pinned in the bus.
ship understands that," stand de.~pite the convenThe
Monroe · CouU!y
dition and six others in seriKucinich said. "It su¥gests tional wisdom and despite
ous condition Thursday Sheriff's Office said the 27that there is a rising tide of
an appearance that there is
opposition to the war.
night.
year-old bus driver failed to
some widespread support in
One child was listed as yield at an intersection.
People want to see a peacefair and another was stable.
Pierre
Toussaint
ful resolution to these con- the Congress."
•••
1\vo
adult
chaperones
were
Academy,
which
has
flicts and theh don't want
On the Net: ·
in
serious
condition
and
one
than
400
K-SJ?upils,
was to
Americans fig ting wars all
Convressional
was listed as fair.
over the world."
«
be closed Fnday. . School
It's not 'the first time the
Progresstve Caucus:
"It was hard to be out here spokeswoman Kelly Updike
former Cleveland mayor, . http://bernie.house.gov/pc/
at first because a lot of peo- said counselors woufd be
·
h' h'
Rep. Dennis Kucinich:
pie
have been crying," available when pupils return
.now servmg 1s t trd term http://www.house.gov/kuci
Grayson's aunt, Adrianne Monday.
.
in Congress, has been outspoken about differences 1 _ _ _..,n1111i c • h / - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
between
the
liberal
Democratic agenda and
Bush's policies.
Since the terrorist attacks
of Sept. 11, 200 I, Kucinic h
has challenged the administration on the· way it's
handling the war on terrorism overseas and· civil lib-·
erties at home. As chairman
of the
Congressional
Progressive Caucus, .which
consists of 55 of the most
liberal members, Kucinich
has pushed for a worker•
friendly economic stimulus
Meet Donna Schmoll, Compliance Officer
package and touted an
at Farmers Bank.
alternative
prescription
drug plan .
"Banking is always changing, nothing is ever static.
· Now,
Kucinich has
become the voice of oppoEvery day you come to work there Is always somesition to an Iraq war. A
thing different happening, I. like the challenge of
longtime advocate of estabthe constant changes in banking. When I worked
lishing a Department of
Peace, Kucinich has spent
with customers, I especially liked helping them
much of the year leading
with their financial needs."
p~ace rallies and rallying
hts fellow lawmakers to
speak out against sending
Donna .has worked at
troops to the Middle East
Farmers Bank for 25 years. She started out in the
nation.
"Our constant pushing,
.record keeping department, and was promoted to
and deliberation and delivmanager of that department. She was promoted to .
erance moved (the president) from 'I'm going by
her current position of Compliance Officer in 1990. :
myself.' He's now going to
In this capacity she is responsible for loan review, ;
the U.N. (United Nations)
making sure the bank follows state ;md federal reg- :
and· to Congress seeking
our · support,"
said
ulations, complying with requests by examiners, .
Democratic Rep. Stephanie
and general marketing. In 1992 she was made an
Tubbs Jones of Cleveland.
officer of the bank holdKucinich started building
the coalition to oppose an
ing the title of Assistant Vice-President. She is one
Iraq war this summer,
of only eight bank officers.
scheduling weekly updates
and meetings with key
"Donna is originally from Qallia County. She
opponents to the adminisand her husband, Bob, reside in Rio Grande. .
tration's policies, such as
Edward Peck, the former
Donna holds a Bachelors of Arts in Business
U.S. ambassador to Iraq.
· Management from Tiffin University. She worked
The opposition group grew
in management before joining the Farmers Bank
from about 18 members to
133 votes of opposition
team.
Thursday.
"A few weeks ago, no
She is a member of Trinity Church, and is viceone gave us a chance, but
president on the Board of Directors of the Gallia·Meigs Community Action :
we. ve heen relentless on
this," Kudnich said.
Agency. She is active with th.e cancer society, loves.to travel and enjoys
·
Ohio's congressional delresearchin_g genealogy in her spare time, especially her Scottish heritage.
egation split down party
She and her husband have
line~ over whether to give
· the president the authority
two Old English Sheepdogs.
•
he sought. The state's six
•
Democrats voted against
••
the measure and II
~ We're Your Bank
Cijeill
•
Re{&gt;ublkans supported it.
•
•
Ohw has two Democratic
Member FDIC
•
vacancies : Tony Hall, who

Commissions
accepted

Elaine Rouse

C 2002 AocuWealt'&lt;!r,lnc.

Sumy

The Dally Sentinel• Page A 3

i~~~~~~~--------------~----~~~~~----------------------~--------.•.

Friday. OctoMr 11.1011

'

Ohio weather

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www.mydallyaentlnel.com

physician.
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PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
·,

�Page A4 • The Dally Sentinel
Sat. COft. 4:4S-5:15p.m.: M&amp;Sl- 5:30p.m.
Sun. Can. -8:4}..9:1.5 a.m ..
SWI. Mus - 9:30a.m.
o.iley Mui • 8:)0 LDl.

Cit- u( Ja. CltrillA........
VanZandt and Wan! Rd.
Pastur. James Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
En~ning- 1:30 p.m.

Wednesdlly Srrvitts - 1 p.m

1Uppen Plaiao; SL PlluJ

Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Second &amp;. lynn, Pomeroy

Hmloct Groft Cluildu Clnudl
Minister. Larry Brown
Wonbip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School• 10:30 LDl.

Aposoolic Wonllip C&lt;n!tt

873 S. 3rd Ave .• MKidleport
Kevin Kootk:. Pastor
Sunday. 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Youlh Fri. 7:)() p.m.

Pasloc Rev. Jack Noble
Wcrihip I [¥.2~ a.m.
Sunday School 9: 1:'5 a.m.

Robinsoft
Sunda)• School - 9:4.5 a.m.
Paslor. Bob

., CIHirdt.L,C iuilt

Wednesday Services -7:30 p.m.

G.-.rr Fphoopll O.urda
326 E. Main SL. Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki. Rev. Katharin Foster

212 W. Main St
MiniSICr. Ambonf MonU
Sundly Scbool- 9:)0 a.m.
WonhiP.l0:30a.m.;6p.m.
Wednesday Servta:l · 7 p .m . .

Thurs. 7:00p.m.
Paswr Many It Hwton

33226 Qlildom•s Home Rd.

UI&gt;Hty ........., ufGod
P.O. Box 467. Dudding !.Ant
Mason. W.Va.
Pas1or: Neil Tennant
Sunday Savices- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Bapli't

\:Vorsbip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p .m.

-y

Sllflllllly School -9:30a.m.

Zloa CbW&lt;h u( Cbn.t
Pomeroy, Harrisooville Rd. (RL 143)
Putor: Roger Watsoo
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:~ p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Old Bethel FlU Will Baptisl Churth
28601 St Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Ev~:ning

·7:00p.m.
Thursday St:rvices - 7:00
Hillside Hapdst Churth
St. Rt. 14] just off Rt. 1
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acn:e. Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedn~:sday Services -7 p.m.
Victory Bapfut Independent
52~ N. 2nd St. Middleport .

l'a.'itor: Jamc.~ E. Keesee
Worship - !Oa.m.. 7

P.m.

Wednesday

Services~

7

p.~.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St.: Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m.

Ml. Moriah Baptl1t
Fourth &amp; Main St .. Middleport
Paslor: Rev, Gilbert Craig. Jr.
Su nday School - 9:30a.m.

Wormi p · 10:45 a.m.
Anti~uily

75 Pearl St., Middlepon.
PaStOl": ~ev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship -9:30 p.m., 7:]0 p.m.
~dne~y ~rvice -

Worship - 10:45a. m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Laurd Cliff FrM Methodisl Church
Rev. Les Strand! and Myra L. Stnandt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Worsllip- IO:JOa.m. and ti p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7_:00 p.m.

Latter-D;I\ Saints

.

St R1. I6!J. 446-62;47 or 446- 74H6
Sunday School 10:20-1 I a.m.
Relief Society!Priesthood -II :05- 12:00
noon
Sacrament Service 9- 10: 15 a.m .
~omemaking meeting, lsi Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~y SerYice 7:30p.m.

I ,ullwran

RetdsYWe Church of c•rilt
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 8.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
Dexter Cburcb ol Cbrbl:
Pastoi-: Nathan Robinson
Sunday scllool 9:30a.m.
Nonnan Will, superintendent
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m .

Cbun:ia of Cbrkt
Intersection 7 and 124 W
EvanJelist: Dt:nnis Sargenl
Sunday Bible Study-9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Cbrild• Un.lon
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Oavid Greer
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Rutland Free Will Baptist

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Schoo l . 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service.~- 7 p,m

Second Bapllst Chureh
~aven s wood, WV
Pustul": [},~vid W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMorni ng worship 11 am Evening - 7 pm .
Wedne sday 7 p.m ..

( 'atholit
Sacred Heart Catholic Church

Sunday School - ., 0:00 u.m.

Our Saviour Lulheran Church
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

St. Paul Lulhenm Church
·Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Sund9y School -9:45a .m.
Worship - II a.m.

Graham Unlled Metbodlai
Worship · 9 :jo a.ITi. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun), '
'
7:30 p.r:n. (]rd &amp; 41h Sun )
Wednesday Sen·ice ·7:30 p.m.

Mr. Ollvr·Unired Methodisl
. Off I 24 behind Wilke sville
Pastor: Rev, Ralph Spire.~
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Worsh ip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday ScrYices - 7 p.m.

wonrup. !0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

( 'hurrh ol ( ;od

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Paslur; Jane Beatt ie
Sunday Schoo!· 9:30a.m.

ML Mortob Cbureb of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: James SatUrfield
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
Rutlond Cbun:h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship -" 10 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

·sy~ Flnt Church ol God
A
Apple and Second Sts.

992-7028

•t.f ut Nnd y~ut thootfltt wltlt ~J~aelal ctt11•

74o-992·2644

~thany

Paslor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.
Cannel-Su1t,911
Cannel &amp; Basllan Rds.·
Racine, Ohio
. Pastor: Dewayne S1utler
Sumluy St..ituul - 9:30 a..m.
Worship_· I0:45 a.m.
Dible Shtdy Wed. 7:00p.m.

MorningStar
Pa:;1or: Dcwayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - I I a .m .
Wednesday 7 p.m.
Coolville United Methodist Parisi!.
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth SL

Su nday S\:hool -' 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tue!\day Services- 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C
Sunday SchOol - 9 a.m.
Worship- .IOa.m.
Wedilesday Services· 10 a.m.

Hoc:klngport Churth
Gmnd Slreet
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.
Torth Churth
Co: Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

\atan·ne
Middleport Chul'l'h of the NRZarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Rffilsvillt FtDow!lhip
Church of tlle Nazarene
Pastor: Te{esa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won hip - l 0:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Syracust Church ol the Nazarrne
Pastor Mike Adkins

Sunday Schoo.! - 9:30 a.m.
Wonihip - I0:30a.m .
Reedsville

WciJnesduy Services· 7 p.m.

~~tate

Pomeroy

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh

WOBhip - 9:15 a.m.
Bible St~dy: Monday 7:00 prn ·
SooWlille
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WorshiP- 9 a.m.

Sund9y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30a.m., 6 p.m.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES ·
214 E. Main
992-5130

169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

Stivenvi&amp;- Conunuaily Chun:h

Community of O.risl

Pastor. Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services. - 10:00 Lm. &amp; 7:00 p.ni.
'I't!ursday - 7:00p.m.

Portland -Racine Rd.
Pastor. Michael Duhl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
· Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wedne!iday Sl-;rvice.s - 7:00 p.m.

"Let your light so shine before
me11, that they may see your
good works and 11/ori.fy your
Father in Heaven."
Mallhew 5: 16

Rejoicing Uft Churdl
500 N. 2nd A\'e., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman

Betltd Worship Crater
Tuppers Plain.s Grade School
Pastor: Rob BIUber
Assistant Pastor: Karen Da.vi§

Pastor: Emeri1Us Lawrence f«c:1un
Worship- !O:OOam

Wednesday Servkcs • 7 p.m.

Sunday Wocship: 10 am
Evening Worship: 6 pm
Youth group 6 pm
Wednesday : Power in Prayer
and Dible Study - 7 pm

Clifton Taberucle O.urda
Clifton. W.Va. '
Sunday School - 10 &amp;..m·.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.•

1\sh Street Church
Ash St.. Middlepon- Pasror Glenn Rowe
New ur~ Vktory Center
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
3773 Georges Creelr: Road, Gallipolis, OH
Surltby Service - 7:00p.m.
Pa.s!Of": Hill Staten
'
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
Sunday SerVices · I0 a.m . &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp;. Youth 1 p.m.
Appt l..ifr: Ctnter
"Full-Gospel Church"
Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service: time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Full Gospel Cbur(-h ol the Living SaviOr

Past01'5 John &amp;

Rt.338, Antiquily

Pastor. Jesse Morris
Services: Satu~ay 2:00p.m.

Salem Cdinmunity Churdl
·· Lieving Koad , Wcsl Columbia, W.Va.

Abundanl Grace R.F. I.

Hobsoo Christian Fellowship Churdl
Pstor: Herschel While
• SundaY School- I0 am
Sunday Chureh service - 6:30pm
Wednesday7pm

Long Bo.tom
Pastor Steve Rttd
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m .
Fridny - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Reslora tion Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens
'r-olStor: Lonnie Coots
Sunday Wonhip 10:30 am
w. dnesda 7 •

The 8e6el'en' Fellowship MJnislry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson ·
Service5: Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ·
Sunday, 2:30 p.m . .

I 'e 11 t l'l"( 1s I a I
Pentecostal Assembly
S t. Rl. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m~
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hanison'fllle Commu•lty Chun:h
Pastor: lberon Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7·p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Middleport CommunJty Church
575 Pearl St. Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.

Syr11cut Flnl United Prabyleriaa ...
Pnstor; Roben Crow
Worship · II a.m.

E\'ening - 7 :30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7::\1;1 p.m.

Fallh Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Se rvice · 7 p.m .

Saturday, and Joe and Noami
Gwinn on Sunday.

New pastor

MIDDLEPORT
Revival services will be held
DEXTER
Bill
at the Hobson Christian Eschelmail is new pastor of
Fellowship Oct. 14-19.
the Dexter Church of Christ.
Speaking at the 7 p.m. services Monday through
Saturday will be the Rev.
Junior Preston. The 6:30
p_m. Sunday services will be
conducted by the Rev. Joe
Gwinn.
·
BRADBURY - Guest
Singers will be Aaron Sunday will be observed at
Grate on Monday, Joe the Bradbury Church of
McCloud orr Tuesday, the Christ Sunday. After the
Hobson
Singers
on 10:30 a.m. worship service, a
Wednesday, Proclaim on , dinner will be held. For more
Thursday, Claudette Harbm · inf~nnation call ~92-7'369 .
on Friday, Martie Short on
·

Guest

Sunday set

Homecoming to
be observed
MIDDLEPORT
Highlighting the 38th annual
homecoming celebration of
the Ash Street Church
Sunday will be the burning
of the mortgage at 1:30 a.m.
following the I 0:30 . a.m.
worship service where Pastor
Glenn Rowe will preach.
A potluck dinner will be ·
held at noon and at I p.m.
there will be special services
with Bobby Siders of
Columbus and Earthen
Vessels of Gallipoli s singing,
and the Rev. Paul Stinson of
Cheshire preaching.

With an attentive ear, truck-stop minister
tends to constantly changing flock
CARLISLE, Pa. (AP) Truckers and other weary
travelers who pull into the
Carlisle Travel Plaza in search
of food, fuel or a rest room
can find much more than creature comforts if the Rev.
· Donald Mason is around.
- Since 1990, Mason has
overseen the ·:pastoral care"
of truck-stop patrons as chaplain of the Carlisle/West Shore
Area Trucker and Traveler
Ministry. His territory encompasses the Carlisle Travel ·
Plaza and two other truck
stops alon~ a commercial strip
of Route II in central
Pennsylvania, where the rigs
•
that rumble along ·nearby
The
Rev.
Donald
Mason
waits
for
truckers
to
stop
at
one of
Interstate 81 and the
the
three
truck
stops
along
the
commercial
strip
of
Route
11
Pennsylvania Turnpike can
near Carlisle, Pa .. Since 1990, Mason has overseen the
find a respite frgm the road.
One of Mason's objectives "pastoral care" of truck-stop patrons as chaplain of .the
is to encourage truckers to Carlisle/West Shore Area Trucker and Traveler' Ministry. (AP)
unload the mental freight
they're hauling, whether it's .families for days and even for lunch on a driver's birth~
day to heavy-duty counseling
anxiety over meeting tight weeks at a time.
The
pastor'sjob
can
be
anyfor wrenching matters like the
shipping deadlines, or the pain
of being separated from their thing from picking up the tab death of a loved one.

Hanisenrille Prab'""riau Church
Pastor: Robert Crow
Worship - 9 a.m .

Syracuse Mission

•

14 11 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
RC\'. Mike ThompSOil,Pilstor
Sunday SchoOl· 10 a. m.

Middleport l'l&lt;sbyterla•
Pastor: RohefCrow.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednc~day Senrice- 7 p.m.

Hazel CommunJty Churth
OffRt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart

S1•\

Sund ay School - 9:30a.m .
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
DyesvUie Community Church
Sund2y School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .

l'JII h- 1);1\

\ d \ 1· 111 i'l
Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulberry H1s. Rd.. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Serv ices:
•
Sabbath School -l p.m.
Worship 3 • m

I nitl•d Brdhn·n

Morse Chapel·Cbun:h
Sunday school • I0 il.m.
Wor'ship • I ! a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

MI. Hermon United Brt:thren
In Christ Churth

•

Texas·Community 36411 Wickham Rd :
·
Pastor~ RQben Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:00p.m.

Faith Gospel Churth
Long Bottom
Sunday School· 9 :30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4.'i a.in., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olin Communlt'- Church
Pastor: La~rencc Bush

I lil ~· ujIJ jllij·li 1111 j:\ 1hj j118
1

Eden United Brethren In Christ

State Route J24, Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Bill Duty
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - I0:00 a.m . &amp; 7:00p.m:"'

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedneday Senricc · 7 p.m .

Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service~ 7 :00p.m.

Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

:
•

• 16" Aluminum

Pas10r: Roy Hunter

Whitis ·

theltY Truck,DetJie'!
Pontillc Dealer! ·
GM Dealer!

Brand New 2003 Chevy
Monte Carlo SS

• Power Windows

-•-

• Keyle11 Entry
• Cruise Control

•

, Silver Ridge.
Dible SIUdy 9 a .m. Sunday
Carlelon lnltrdenomlnadonal Churth
Kingsbucy Road
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Service 10:30 a.m .
Evening Se~ice 6 p.m.

• CD System
• Onstlr

OVER
'1111
Chetti rrueks

5

And
IIV c~rrs In St«k Now!
, , . , . 2DOJ POntiiiCS And
~UV Buicks In Stoek
2DDJ

•
•
•
•

)

Freedom Gospel Mission
BukJ Knob, on Co. Rd . 3 1
Pastor: Re v. Roger Willford
Sund11y School · 9:30a.m.

t§onoulftr'l
174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265

Clyde Ferrell

Sunday Schoo19:30 am
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Wedr.esday service 7 pm

Faith FuU GosPel Church

White Funeral Home Crow's Family Restaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried ·
Since ·1858
Chicken"
9 Fifth Street
228 W. Main St:, Pomeroy
Coolville, Ohio
992-5432
110
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Dnu•,nnv fLOWER SHOP
PHARMACY
106 BlTI'URNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions
'Flowers for all occasions'
992-2955
Pomeroy .

';u-~eual ~CJ.HC-e

Pa.~tor:

923 S. Third St., Middleport ,
P9stor Teresa Davis
Sunday service. 10 .a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

South Bethel Commu nity Chur'ch

LonaBoUom

Worship 10:.30a.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

( lthlT ( 'hurdll''

Revival
announced

Branch

Calw.ry Bible Churd
Pomeroy p.jke, Co ..Rd.
Pmor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Sundliy Service -6:30 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

740-992-3325

Meigs Coun(y"s Oldes(

Salem Center
Pastor: Wiliiam K. Marsh91l
Sunday School- 10: 15 a.m.

Wcdnesda)l Bible Sutdy - 7:00 p.m.
Foldo Follo11'51olp CI'IISIIdo r.,. Cltriot
Paslor: Rev. FRJJk.Jin Dkkeos
'S;crvke: Friday, 7 p.m.

Suqday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.
Worship . 7:00p.m.

Ponlllld Firsl Churdl ol tbt N~11!1M!
Pastor: ~lliam Justis
SUnday School · 10:00 a.m .
Mornin.8 Wonhip . 10:4~ a.m.

Religion briefs

Recently at church late one
Christian symbols. such as the
afternoon, I went back to the
Cross or pictures of Christ. I
prayer room for some more
found none.
closet time with the Lord,
The spirit of Satan was
after which I headed for the
more represented there than
sanctuary to play the piano
Ron
the presence of 1he Holy.
for a few minutes.
·
Spirit of God!
However, voices just out. Does any church member
side the sanctuary doors got
really believe the Bible teachmy attention. Two young fel GUEST VIEW es that all cats go to hell? It is
las had been riding their bikes
absurd, isn't it?
on the church grounds and
Then, why would any
had stopped to rest and talk in It is called Halloween.
church member believe the
the shade close to the doors. I
Despite the cute children's Bible teaches it is approved of
eased over to lhe doors to costumes and bags of candy. God for His people to willingeavesdrop on their conversa- Halloween is no more than a ly and visibly identify wilh
lion.
subtle appreciation and sup- Satan by celebrating that
For the most part it port for evil themes. I under- which is .saturated with evil?
involved general talk about stand how many people think
The Bible poses a more bithome, though the one indica!- that Halloween is a hannless ing question when it asks,
ed that his mother had gotten festivity. Each community · "What concord hath Christ
mad at his father the night generally schedules specific with Belial? .What commubefore for some reason or evenings and hours for kids to nion hath light with darkfill their sacks with sweets nessT'
another.
At that point, the other from their residential rounds.
The powerful principle
responded with a . comment
But, it is the participation of underscored by these ques·
lhal utterly amazed me.
church in Halloween that tions from II Corinthians 6 is
"' "Well , it just goes to ~rove stands as a gross inconsisten- that Christ has nothing to do
that all cats go to hell, • he cy in the application of with Satan by any stretch of
said. Just as I started to step Biblical principles.
the imagination.
out to find out more about his
Some churches have the
By contrast, the church is
notion, I heard the study absurd notion that Halloween stretching its ·own imaginaj&gt;hone ring. The boys were is a . Bibli_cally sanctioned tion when it believes participracllce lor th~ church. pation in a yearly celebration
gone by the time I returned.
Admittedly, I got a chuckle Churches gJve lhe 1mpress10n of evil is an accepted spiritual ·
out of what the boy said, but it . that the B1ble .teaches su~h an principle to be teaching our
rather gives rise to a certain absur~J.ty by literally uphftmg children.
.
consideration which involves Satamsm and 11 complemenGod rather expects Hi s peothe Church at large.
tary occultist agendas, partic- ple to show peculiarity with
1 have heard some crazy ul~ly _when there are_ youth Christ rather than partnership
ideas. over the years about actiVities promoted m the with Satan!
.
what people think the Bible name of Halloween.
Anyway, I wonder if the
teaches. But if yoli think a
l once_ ,preached. rev1val boy who believes all cats go
child's idea that all cats go to - meetmgs m a c.hurch ·~ wh1ch to hell has seen the cartoon
hell takes the prize for spiritu· cutouts of wttches, Jack-o- movie, "All Dogs Go to
al absurdity, I know of one lanterns, and other Halloween Heaven"?
eveli worse.
themes deco~ated the walls of
(Ron Branch is pastor of
It involves a seasonal abslir- the fellowship hall and class- Faith Baprist Chwch .ill
dity that comes each October. rooms. When I looked for Mason, W.Va.)

Pa!iior: Driarl May

SuOOay School· 9:30a.m.
Wordtip - 10:30 a.m., 6:3f) p.m.
'Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Friday, October 11, 1001

." All Cats go to Hell!"

F - lllblo Cbood!
Le:wt, W.Va. Rt. 1

Rudaad Cll.urdl of lht NUIII"fDt
PastOr Rev. Samuel W. Basye

CheAter
Pa§tor: Jane Beanie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a. m.
lln~rsda y Services- 7 p.m.

Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.n1.

O.J . White Rd. off St Rt 160

Cheslrr O.•n:b vi the Naz;aft!at
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Orale
Sunday School · 9:30a.m .
Wonhip - 11 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wcctne5day ScrvittS - 7 p .m.

Sunduy School -9:30a.m.
Worship -·10:30 a.m., 6 :30p.m.

216•E. Second Pomeroy

Ingel's Carpet

Rutland

WldW's Claapel WaieJU
Coolville ROIId
Putor: Rev. PhiUip Ridenoor
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday S;ervice - 1 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wonhip • I I a.m., 6)0 p.m.

Joppii

Chun:h of God ul Prophecy

Florist

RMk Springs
Paslor: JS.eith Rader
Sund9y Sshool - 9: 15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fcllows~ip , Sunday·- 6 p.m.

Pastor: Jan Lavender •
Sunday School - 9:30 a.nt
Worship . 10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m.

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Worship- 7 p.m.

PomnvJ Church ol dw Nuareot ,

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E_veni ng 7:30_p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

PaStor: Bob Randol ph

Pastor. Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m .
Evenina Servk:es- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p .m.

992-6677

Pas1or: Rod Brower
Wor~h ip • 9:30 a.m .
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

'
Racine
Pasi!Jr: Brian Harkm:ss

Won;hip -9:00a.m

l\eal

Bill Quickel

Purl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a .m .
Worship - 10 a.m. '

Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

l nited \lelhodisl
Haitrord Churc:b of Chri11 in

MiMnville
Paslor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m .

Eut Letart
Paslor: Brian Harkness

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove

Baptii:t

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
. Worship - I 0:45a .m.
Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Marlr: McComas

.

The Church or Jes.s
Christ of Lalter-Day Saints

Hkluicy IIUis CburCb of Christ

l.aop.nlo Cbristiaa Cburdo
Pas1or: Robert MUiSer

7:30 p.m.

Hysrll Run Holines.10 Chureb
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School - 9:30a.m,

Bndlonl Cbo..Jo ufCbrist
Comer ofSt Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug ShJJDblin
Youth Mini'iter. Bill Amberger
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m.. I0:30a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wednesday Se~ices - 7:00p.m.

Evangelisl Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pas1or Rob Brower
Su~y S&lt;.:hool - 9 :30a.m.
Wur.IDip - I 1:00 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Fomt Run Baptist
Pasror : Arius HUn .
Sunday School· 10 a .m.
Worship . II a.m.

Su!)day School - 9:)0 a.m
Wonhip - 10::\IJa.m., 7::\0 p.m.
Wednesday Servke - J:.l,Q p.m.

Brodbury Cbuod! ol Cbn.t .
Minis1er: Tom Runyon
39538 Br.ldbwy Road, MKldloport
sUnday School - 9:30a.m.

......... Cblll&lt;h "Cbritl

·Bethlehem Baptist CburdJ

112 mile off Rl. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Munley

lnsttumental
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School· IO:JS a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School - Hla.ru
Worship· I lam., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Great Bend. Rcxne ·124. Racine, OH
Pastot : Dlllliel Mecea
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Wor'ship · 10:30 a.m.
wronesday Bible Study-6:00p.m

Pine Grove Bible HoUness Church

Tuppen Pblo Cbuod! u(Cbrlst

WOf"Ship- 10:30 a.m.

· Heath tMiddleportl

Pomeroy ·
ROM: of Sharon Holine!iS Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. ~wcy King
Sunday school- 9:30 11.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Selvi&lt;es · 6'30 p.m.

Sil•er Run Baptist
Pa.&lt;ilor: Jotm Swanson

Even1ng · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Harrisooville Ro;td
· Pastor. Charles McKenzie
Sunday Sehoul 9:]0 a.m.
Worship - II a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

lsi IUid 3RI :Wnday

Sunday School- 9:.30 a.m.
Worship · !0:30a.m

ML Union Baptist
Pastor : D~vid Wi~
Sunday Schoul·9:4.'i a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim CLapel

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace

ll&lt;onoallow RJdae O.un:h u( C1uisl
Pulor.Bruce Terry

Racine First Baptist
· Paslor: Riclr: Rule
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Sunday schOOl-9:30a.m.
· Sur~ay.worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
W~y prayeF service - 7 p.m.

Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

. Pomeroy First'Baplht
Paslor Jon Brocken
East Mair1 St.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - iJ a.m .

Oanville HoliDl':SS Church
JI057"St.are Route 325. Lan{!:!i\'lle
· Paslor: ~Jackson

Keao Ch•rd ol Christ

I

ForatRuo
Pa.~tor: Bob Robinson

Main Street. Rulland
Sunday Wom.ip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Servi'---e-7 p.m.

Puur.AIIIuboo
Youtb Mini.sw: Bill Fnzier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, IO:JO.a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hopr Baptist Cbaorl&gt; (Soulhmo)
570 Grant St., Middkport
Pastor: Rev. David Bryan
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Wo..V.ip- II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
R.utbbd lint Baptist Churdl
Sunday School· 9:JO a.m.

Pa.'Otnr: Keith Rader ·
Sullday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Community C.urdl
Pastor: Steve Tomek

MlddloporlU.od! "n.w.
SthAnd Main

Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
flatwoods·

llolilll' ~'

SundaY School · ·II a.m.
Wonhip- IOa..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p._m.

Enterprise

Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunday School and
Holy EucharUI II :00 a.~ .

.........., Watsldc CluonhufCbrist

First BaptW Chun:•
Paslor. Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. Middleport
Sunday School - 9: IS a.m.
Worship - I 0: !5 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednc~y Service- 7:00p.m.

Asbury (Syracw;c)

WorYiip - II a.m.

. Emmuael Apooleli&lt; I - . - IJI&lt;.
Loop Rd. off lima Rd. 1\odand
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.

Sunday ~hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 8: 15 a...m., 9:45am&amp;. 7:00p.m.
Wl!dncsday Services - 7:00p.m.

Ceatral QustB

Bibk- SlUdy - 7 p.m.
p

4J872 Pomeroy Pike
P:woc E.lAmarO' Bryam

WOI'Ship- 10 a.m.
TIJC'Sday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Trinity Churrll

RiluVIMey

First Soothrm Bapti.'it

Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
first Sunday or Month - 1 :00 p.m. sc:rv1C't'

Pastor. PJ . Chapman
SIID!iay School- 10 ot.m
Worship . ! I a...m.

Pucor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Worship- 10:45 a. ~.

Friday, October 11.2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com
161 Mu.lbary Ave.. Pomeroy. 992-~898

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• Taxes, Tags. lltle Fees ext;a, Rebale included In sale price of new vehicle listed where applicable...On approved credit On selected models. Nol responsible lor lypographicalerrors.
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Page A&amp;

nion

'

The

OctoiMir 11, :ZOOl

'Please call police'
· WHAT WOUlD
PRESIDENT ~ARTLET

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

banneffis~t~leffi

DO?

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publisher
Managing Editor

Abby

'

Letrers to the ediw r tire ~re/f'om e. Th ey should be less than
300 wo rds. All leiters are .mbj ect to editing and must be '
,-igned and include address and telephone number. No
un1·igned letters will be publi&gt;'hed. Letters should be in good
taste, addressing issues, "ot personaliries.
Tlie opinions expressed in rhe f'olumn below are the consensus of the Ohio Val/ev Publishing Co.&gt;· editorial board. ·
rmle.\·s mhen ..,·ise noted.

NATIONAL VIEW

Ill-timed
Mexico spullout from Riq .
treaty was inopportune
•. San Antonio (Texas) Express-News, on Fox renouncing
Rio treaty : Last year, just before the Sept. II attac;ks, Mexican
President Vicente Fox said his nation would 'withdraw from
the Rio Treaty on grounds that, with the end of the Cold War,
it is outdatea ;
The 1947 agreement says an aggression against one Western
Hemi sphere nation is an aggression against all.
·
Fox obviously didn't know the attacks were coming. But the
- Me xican leader announced the withd.rawal right after
President Bush feted him at a state dinner. .
Fast-forward to late September. What did the Bush administration get from what is being called the most pro-American
government in Mexican history ? An announcement that after
a yearlong delay. Mexico renounces the Rio Treaty. The move
came as the United States was about to commemorate the first
anniversary of the Sept. II attacks and Bush was seeking
international support to go to war against Iraq.
.
This was a cold reminder to Washington that Mexico does
not believe in war. Mexico is a sovereign nation, and Fox has
· to do what is best for his country.
.
But it is ironic that he renounced the agreement as his
. administration is again pressuring the United States to adopt
.an open border policy and legalize the estimated 3 million
: Mexicans illegally on American soil and while Bush is mov. ing toward war.
· . ,
At the least, the timing of Fox's announcement to renounce
b~ · the Rio Treaty was ill-considered and bad diplomacy.

....
'•

•
•

~

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.

~-------------~------------------------~

.:~.: . TODAY IN HISTORY
.
•:. · :.

SY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

;: : : Today is Friday, Oct. II, the 284th day of 2002. There are
.;'-:81 days left in the year.
;~.· : Today's Highli'ght in History:
:.:_ - : On Oct. II , 1942, the World War II Battle of Cape
:, :Esperance began in the Solomon s. resulting in an American ·
...
.
,, VICtory
over the Japanese.
;: , · On this date:
:: ·: In 1779, Polish nobleman Casimir Pulaski was killed while
;: :fighting for American independence during the Revolutionary
:• ~War Battle of Savannah, Ga.
.; ..-: In 1811, the first steam-powered ferryboat, the Juliana, was
~ , put into operation between New York Ci~y and Hobo~en, N.J.
:. · lh 1890, the Daughters of the Amencan Revolution was
:~:founded in Washington D.C.
,
~•.~: In 1932, the first American political telecast IOC!k place as
; ~;-the Democratic National Committee sponsored a program
·• ' from a CBS television studio in New York.
;; : : In 1958 , the Iunar probe Pioneer I was launched; it failed to
··. go as far out as planned, fell back to Earth, and burned up in
:: the atmosphere.
·
. .
·: · In 1962, Pope John XXIII convened the first session of the
~· . Roman Catholic Church's 21st Ecumenical Council, also
.: .known as "Vatican II."
: ~: · In 1968, Apollo 7,. the first manned Apollo mission, was
:: :t:aunched with astronauts Wally Schimi, Donn Fulton Eisele
·• and R. Walter Cunningham aboard.
·: :. In 1984, space shuttle Challenger astronaut Kathy Sullivan
! became the first American woman to walk in spaC!f.
·1 · In 1991 , testifying before the Senate JUdiciary Committee,
. ::' law professor Anita Hill accused Supreme Court nominee
:: Clarence Thomas of sexually .harassing her; Thomas re: ~ appeared before the panel to denounce the proceedings as a
· : ''htgh-tech lynching .'
·
: · . In 1991 , comedian Redd Foxx died in Los Angeles at age
· ~

.

.

: . Ten years ago: Presidelit George Ji .W. Bvsh, Democrat Bill
! Cl·inton and independent candidate Ross Perot met for the first
· · ! of three debates, this one held at Washington University in St.
; Loui s. ·
·
; . Five years ago: President Clinton blamed pop culture for
! glamorizing illegal drug use as he heralded a new $195 mil! lion anti-drug ad campaign during his weekly radio address.
: Retired .Associated Press chief Wes Gallagher died in Santa
• !larbara, Calif., at age 86.
: · One year ago: In his first prime-time news conference since
: iaking office. President George W. Bush offered the Tali ban a
; ·chance to stop America's punishing assaults on Afghanistan .
: by turning over suspected terror mastennind Osama bin
: Laden. The FBI warned of possible terrorist anacks in the
: days to come. Trinidad,born writer V.S . Naipaul won the
• Nobel Pri ze in literature.
: Today 's Birthdays: Actor Ron Leibman is 65. Country
: singer Gene Watson is 59. Singer-musician Daryl Hall is 53.
• Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.. is 52. Rhythm-and-blues musi. cian Andrew Woolfolk (Earth. Wind and Fire) is 52. Actress! director Catl in Adams is 52. Actor David Morse is 49 ..
: Count ry si ng~ r Paulette Carlson is 49. Football player Steve
: Young is 41 . Actress Joan Cusa_c k 1s 40. Comedy wnter and
: TV host Michael J. Nelson is 38. Actor Sean Patrick Flanery
: is 37 . Ac lor Luke Perry is 36. Country singer-songwriter Todd
• Snider is. 36. Actress Jane Kmkowski is 34. Rapper MC Lyte ,
; Is 3 1. ~ inger NeeNa Lee is 27 .
'

DEAR ABBY: Two years
ago, you gave infonnation on
how to order "Please Call
Police" banriers for the car. I
had previously ordered some,
but somehow lost them. I
would like to replace them
and purchase some more for
family members.
·
Following my husband's
ADVICE
heart surgery, they came in
handy. After he was dis. charged fr?m the hospital,
To order, send check or
· our car d1ed on the way money order (U.S. funds
·home. We displayed the only, please) to: WCIL
bright banner in. the back Banners, P.O. Box 92501,
window, and the police Los Angeles, . CA 90009.
arrived quickly and helped us Allow four to eight weeks for·
to get holile.
delivery. For more informaWould you please share tion, visit the WCIL Web site
that information again? I'm . at www.wcil.org.
sure I'm not the only person
Your orders not only proneeding a replacemeni. vide a safety measure for you
WILMA IN EAST TEXAS . and those you love, but they
DEAR WILMA: I'm also assist WCIL in providing
pleased to do so. However, much-needed services for
before I do, I'd like to share individuals with disabilities.
_some comments from other
DEAR ABBY: I am a 28.· readers about those banners:
year-old housewife and
·: "The barulers are a great mother of three, ages 2, 3 and
idea. I have had two hip 8. 1 recendy returned to ni~ht
rephi'cements, but still drive.l school to get my teaching
was going to get an emer- degree.
gency phone for my car, but I
My husband is frustrated
bave two hearing a1ds and the and upset because he says
volume on the phone is not everything is falling on him.
adequate for me, so I need After working eight hours a
your 'Please Call Police' ban- day, he resents having to
ners."
A.M.
IN feed, bathe and baby-sit the.
TAUNTON, MASS.
kids for six hours every night
"'Please Call Police' ban- while I iun in school.
· ners- whata brainstonn.l'm
He supports my decision,
· 86 years old, but still drive but constandy pulls little
because our small ·town in guilt trips on me. What
Texas has no public trans· should I do? - BEITER·
~rtation. (I call t&gt;ur town lNG MYSELF
DEAR
BETTERING
Sleepy Hollow.') What a
godsend those banners are. MYSELF: You and your
Please send two of them." - · husband are both carrying a 1
D.E.J. IN TEXAS
heavy load right now.
: "My grandmother is 80 and Arrange for child care at least
drives more than 25,000 one night a week so your busmiles a year. I would feel band will feel Jess trapped.
more confident about her Also schedule much-needed
' safety if she had the banners "date nights" so the two of
in her glove compartment. you can talk (uninterrupted)
.PUt tWO of them in her and catch up 'with each
other'·s busy lives. You won't
Chnstmas stoekiEfi' · BRIAN M., ORAD
• N.J. be a student forever ·- and
· Readers, these lifesaving once you have your teaching
banners can be ordered by certificate, you' II both be
writing to the Westside glad you did it.
Center for Independent
Dear Abby is written by
. Livin_g. It is a nonprofit orga- Abigail . Van Buren, . also
nizallon that helps people known as Jeanne Phillips,
with disabilities live . more and was founded by her
independent lives. You will mother, Pauline Phillips.
.rece1ve one banner for a $5 Write
Dear Abby . at
contribution 1111d another for www.Dear}\bby.com or P. 0. ·
,. each additional S4 contribu- Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
tion (plus $1 per order for 90069.
postage aud handling).·

Dear

Den Dickerson
Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

OUR · READERS' VIEWS
Where is the wisdom?
Dear Editor:
1 have been waiting for another letter
from Rob Painter 10 see what was
meant by his scriptural references and
comments as they certainly could not
apply to Mrs. Alice Click's lifestyle,
her method of research, or her intent in
educating the public. I thought surely
he had another letter to the · eq . in
progress and had somehow confused
his notes. As none has come forth, I
would like to address this matter of
making choices at the polls.
Too many of us let others do our
homework. Mrs. Click is . one who
checks the votin!l records of the candidates which, mcidentally, do not
a! ways coincide with their speeches
and promises. She looks at their
lifestyles and who they are connected
to politically -· you know, birds of a
feather, if it walks like a duck, talks
like a ... Why she even attends Meet
the Candidate rallies and contacts
many of them directly to develop "eyes
that see and ears that hear the works of
the candidates.'' What better way to
"develop eyes that see and perceive
and ears that hear and understand."
I didn't intend to address the scriptural texts used because quite frankly I
don't see how they apply. However, in
the reference to James 1:5 "If any of
YOll lack wisdom, let him ask of God,
that giveth to all men liberally, and
upbraideth not..." l'he "any of you" .
here applies to the Christian Jews of
the 12 tribes who were involved in the
dispersion. Reading through the whole
book of James makes it obvious that it
· was written for these Christian Jews.
Pagans , according to Webster's
Dictionary, are those who are heathens
and a contrast with Christians or Jews;
non-Christian. It would be sad for any
pagan to run to the polls thinking the
Jiiiod of th~ Christians/Jews who ; had
written a letter specifically to them, a
letter that was to handed down to oth-

ers of like faith, could ask for such well child clinics.
wisdom.
Over the ye.ars, I was privileged to
I agree that we must educate our- see many programs established. These
selves concerning the candidates. I programs were operated on a sliding
agree the choices are too important.
fee scale, enabling many children and
But to tell anyone not to listen to pregnant women to become enrolled.
someone who has done their homeI was fortunate to be part of an
work, gotten the facts and then taken establishment that served low-income
the t1.me· to share those w1'th others f ·1· h
1· 'bl ~
am1 1es t at were not e 1g1 e ,oro
would be like telling a classroom of health care . .
students that it is not necessary to do · Some health Insurance plans did not
their homework. Such reading and cover well child check-ups, and some
researching another's writings would families w1ne financiall~ unable to
certainly misinform them. Why would· purchase health insurance.
we need our libraries or text books?
I worked with a group of competent .
Rob Painter's approach implies that professionals who believed in team •·
the proper method of learmng is to work. lf.everyone bad not cooperated,
come to class, listen to the teacher, go we would not have been able to offer
home,' return to class and take a test on the quality of services that were availthe knowledge acquired from that one · able.
source. Then, of course, if you think
I believe the health department has
you don't know the right answer, just b~n responsible for the diagnosi&amp;~ of
t~ke thar ni'oment of silent prayer to breast and prostate cancer. Some of ;
ask God, a God Whom you may have these individuals would not have been
never met, and He will tell you the able to afford the quality atld timely
answer.
testing provitled.
Oh. that life were so simple. We
A "yes" for the levy will h~?IP the
wouldn't need the Alice Clicks of the health department continue many ·
world who do their homework of study important programs. . .
·.
and investigation.
Carol Tannehill
Yes, the deception is out there, but if
Middleport
we really know those who labor among
us, ~e don't have to WOI!Y about being
dece1ved. And we certainl:t would ~ot
'./ 1
want the pagans to be dece1ved or mlsDear Editor:
..
led to thmk that they can go to the polls
The public has generously supportand ask God, a. God that they do not
ed
the Chester Volunteer Fire
even know, to g1ve them names.
Department
in our fund-raisers and
That is simply not · scrip~ural. And
going to the polls on a wmg and a we want you to know that we appreci·
· ate that
prayer is not wisdom.
Just
a
reminder
-this
is
Fire
pre·
·
Gerri Tate
New Haven, W.Va. vention Week. Reme!Jlber in case of
smoke, stay low and go. Education is
the
key so feel free to contact local
levy
fire departments for lifesaving inforDear Editor:
mation. It's free for the aslcing.
I was employed at the Meigs
Oct. 30 is trick or treat night in
Chester.
County Health Department for 16
years.
.
Bruce .Myers
I was child health nurse, conducting
Chester Volunteer Fire Department .

Stay saFe .

Support.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Fourth Commandment also applies to parents
''Thou shalt honor thy father and thy
mother, that it may be well with thee,
and thou mayest Iive on the earth."
(Exodus 20:12 and Deuteronomy 5: 16).
This commandment was not directed
so much towar&lt;l children and minors as
it was toward adults burdened with the
care of an aging parent. In some ancient
societies, helpless dependents were
abandoned when they could nb longer
look out for themselves . Even up to relatively recent times, an Eskimo tribe
would take an elderly person along on a
fishing excursion, leave him or her on
an ice floe while the tribe went off to
fish, and then "forget" to come back.
But this commandment did more than
just remind the ancient Israelites of their
obligations to their parents. It appealed
to self-interest. It is the only commandment that has, as St. Paul noted, a
"promise" attached to it - "that it may
be well with thee, and thou mayest live
long on the earth."
The promise is both psychologically
and medically sound. Good feelings
toward parents can result in better physical health - 'and, by extension, a
longer life. A study ·at John s Hopkins
University found that of students who
later developed cancer, most confessed
feelings of estrangement from their parents.
·
·
. But this Commandment creates · its
problems, too. What about children

"We now know that our parents' theologX was founded on mistaken geology,
b1ology, astronomy and history. ··
• .
"We are quite clear that their morality
too was largelY. a matter .of taboo's,
repressions, inhibitions. and the like,
"We know that in many matters they
were wrong where we are right. Bot
there was a right in the wrongness that
bothers us. We look into their faces as
their pictures hang on our walls, and we
have the disquiehng suspicion that, in
COLUMNIST
spite of our gains in scie!ltific accuracy,
they were better men and women than
we are."
.
.
h
W ose farents are not wo rth Y 0 f thelf
This commandment therefore carries
resrc:ct · Not that they are cruel or heart- an obligation not only for children b11t
less m the ordmary_ sense. Fe~ parents for parents as well. Children will find ~t
would abandon the1r .small children f~r easier to honor parents who exhibit bonseveral days as a Midwest couple d~d . orable qualities.
,
recently. But _w: often abandon !hem '.n
Ask yourself, 'What have 1 done: ·
other ways that are harmful and msens1- first; in my lifetime and, second, late!~.
live.
which would give my children reason 1o
We leave youngsters alone at home be proud of me ."
after school, or, '" the case of 2- or _3Epitaphs on tombstones are not comyear-aids, Jn day-care cen~ers: despite mon anymore, but if they were, what
volumes of researc~ that tndl cate the epitaph do you think your children
natural arrangement ts parental care. We would write about 'you?
tell ourselves that youngsters must l?e
Write epitaphs for your own parents
exposed early to adult .expe~1ences m _ living or dead. This will get you to
order to sufV!ve later 111 a harsh wor~d . concentrate on the qualities about then!'
Wen: old-fash1oned parents better .
in which'ypu can take pride.
•
In h1s book, "What You Owe Your
· •
Child,"· Willard L. Sperry, the late dean
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
of the Harvard Divinity School, o,yrote: Newspaper Enterprise Association.) "

George
Plagenz

"

Bend

I,

lo

r11

c

Literary dub reviews Ray
Bradbury's 'Martian Chronicles'
MIDDLEPORT Ray
The retired teacher said that
Bradbury's ''The Martian Bradbury's stories are often
Chronicles", a classic about included in school antho1o,man's attempt to colonize gies llecause of the creativity
Mars, it's effect on the of his writing aud the high
' Martians, aud their reaction to interest they hold for young
an atomic war on earth, was readers.
reviewed by Gay Perrin at a
She noted that several of his
, recent meeting .of . the works were made into screenMiddleport Literary Club.
plays for popular television
'· The book deals with what shows
including
"The
the reviewer described as "the Twilight
Zone"
and
far distant realm of space "Something . Wicked This
travel and settlement on other Way Comes."
planets ... the years from 1999
The
public.ation
of
to 2005."
Chronicles in 1950 brought
"Of course his ideas were · the author to national attenconceived before men in lion, Perrin said, and lead to
spacecrafts actually ·broke the awards including the 0.
bonds of gravity," she said, Henry Memorial Award and
·"before we ~ould get a clo~- the World Fantasy Award for
up look "':'th a telescopiC Lifetime Achievement from
camera to du;~ver thet:e real· the Science Fiction Writers of
h ~. no s1gns of hfe on - America.
.
Mars.
She said that Bradbury's
~ven tho~gh we .read suc_h message is still valid after
:sc1ence-fi~lon stones as f!ris more than 50 years, with its
:from a dlffe~nt perspecl!ve warning that the greed and
.11ow, she s111d The Martian
. . f
h
Chronicles is still a "beauti" egotis~:D 0 ~0 many '!mans
fully written and haunting can bnng rum to many m our
'story that will remain a clas- modem world ~ugh open
-sic mto the future." .
warfare and terronsm. .
Le~
Ord, pres1dent,
. "Bradbuiy. is a man possessed by the beauty of the ap~mted Pat Holter. and
'written word and his work Pauhn~ Horton to the bbrary
·reflects this passion into comnuttee, and . Jeanne
• imaginative literature-- of a Bowen; Martha Hoover, and
very high order," she · com- ~lita. Heighton t?.the memormeoted before reading sever- 1al tribute coi!UIIlttee.
.
. al passages from t_he. story !O . Jean Ann ~ur w~s a guest.
mustrate his descnption wnt- The next meetmg "';'ill be Oct.
·ing.
16 at the Eastern Ltbrary.

Friday, October 11, lOOl

.Community Calendar

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CHESTER -Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR,
·noon luncheon Chester
Frklly, Oct. 11
POMEROY- A gospel sing will Courthouse. Beverly
be held at the Pomeroy amphilhe- Schumacher, Soulheast district
Bier trom 6:25 lo 9 p.m. The IMlnt director, to speak.
is sponsored by Trinity
Monday, Oct. 14
Congregational Church for the ben·
POMEROYMeigs County
alit of God's N.E.T. youth ministry.
Republican
Party
to meet at
Trinity Church choir will open the
7:30p.m.
at
the
Republican
sing, with the Sounds of Praise
headquarters.
Quartet to perlorm from 6:30 to
7:30, flmi Perrin from 7:30 to 8
POMEROY - Meigs County
p.m. and The Proclalmers Quartet
Association
of Garden Clubs, 7
from 8to 9 p.m. In 1he event of rain
p.m
.
at
the
Laurel
Cliff Church.
the concert will be held at the
Regional
meeting
plans will be .
church.
discussed.

Concerts, Shows

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Bette Pearce

·.~ -Th_e·n_ail.___y_se_ntin_ei_ ____;B=-y the

PageA7

Clubs and .
Organizations
Friday, Oct. 11
POMEROY Widow's
Fellowship, noon at Crew's
Family Restaurant.
Sllturday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen, 5:30 p.m.
at the hall. Theme Halloween.
Hogdogs, cider and donuts
provided. Take covered dish
and come In costume.

Thuradlly, Oct. 17
GALLIPOLIS- Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon In
Golden Corral meeting room.
Amy Bowman-Moore, investment rep for Edward ones, to
talk on "Weathering a Bear
Market." Emphasis will be on
investments for seniors.
Reservations not necessary.

Church services

Bashan Road, 7 pi.m.
Saturday; 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday. Denver Hill of Foster,
W. Va . to speak.
REEDSVILLE- Reedsville
United Methodist Church will
dedicate its new fellowship hall
at 2 p.m. Public invited.

Homecomin~s
Sunday,Ocl

RUTLAND .- Rutland Church of

Chrisr~ 173rd anniversary to be
~Bled Bl homecoming day,

10:30 a.m. worship and commu-'
nion service; noon C811Y·In dinner;
1 p.m. afternoon service with Bob
Werry, minister, and 'Forgiven 4.'

Other events

want to play with the band at the last
home game on Oct. 18 to be held 6
to 8 p.m. at Southern High School.
Music will be provided, reeds will be
available.
TUelday, Oct 15
POMEROY ~ Five week begin·
ner computer classes available at
Gods N.E.T. SlJ!jgellted lee is $2
per session. To arrange enrollmerll
can the N.E.T. 992-D261 or C.P.U.
992·1135.

Saturday, Oct 19
TUPPERS PLAINS - Harvest
moon festival, 6 to 10 p.m. at
Eastern Elementary under sponsor·
ship of PTO. Variety of activities
including an auction, country store,
dance, bingo, cake walks. All pro·
caeds to be used to benef~ students.

Sunday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - God's N.E.T. and
the Meigs County Heal~ Heart
Coalition wiU host a skating party
from 4 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday at the
CHESTER- Thelma Hayes will
Skate-a-Way in Chester to. kick off observe her 90th birthday Sunday.
Small Steps Week. Gods N.E.T. and . Cards may be sent to her at 48238
coal~io~ members and their families State Route.248, Long Bottom.
are invited 1o aHend free or charge.

Birthdays

Monday, Oct 14
RACINE - Special services,
RACINE - First practice for
Red Brush Church of Christ,
Racine alumni band members who

College news
I

On honor roll

out a majority of her undergraduate career.
COLUMBUS _ Joshua · She is a 1998 graduate of
Meigs.High School.
Craig Ervin . and Jesse
Smith . attends Capital
Clayton Little, both of University Law School in
Racine, were named to the
b
honor roll at The Ohio State Colum us. She plans to pracUniversity for the summer tice family and adoption law
quarter. Students on the in Pomeroy. .
honor roll must earn a grade .
point average of at least 3.5.

Dean's list
ATifENS- Nicholas Avis
of Coolville, Heidi Delong
and Natalie Morehead, both
of ·Pomeroy, Dorothy Sayre
of Racine, and Mary Grueser
of Shade were named to the
dean's list at Ohio University
for the summer quarter.

Graduates from

ou

ATHENS Michael
Hayes· of Cheshire and
Jessica
Johnson
of
Middleport were among the
606 students from Ohio
University receiving degrees
at the end of the slll1imer
quarter.
Amy S. Smith, daughter
of Todd and Nancy Smith of
Pomeroy, recently graduated
with honors from Ohio
University in Athens, with a
degree in sociolo~ and I?relaw and a minor m political
science.
· She is a member of Alpha
Kappa Delta, a national
honor society for sociology
majors, and maintained a
dean's list average through-

Name
achievement list

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Career College has
released the list of students
named to the achievement list
fo.r summer quarter.
Students obtaining a perfect 4.0 grade point average
were: Diana Adlll11S, Donna
Aleshire, Tessa Allen, Kemlie
Brown, Melissa Cain, Betty
Collins, Tonia Davis, Vicki
Ellis, Cindy Every, · Sharon
Fiala, Tonya Fuller, Sheryl
Gibbs, · Denise Gibeaut,

Christy Gillispie,
Leah
Harrison, Angela Jeffers,
c\rolyn Jordan,
Vikki
Lieving, Marie Martin, Rae
Mash, Molly McWilliams,
Glen
Parsons,
Ashley
Pennington, Wanda Rupe,
Kim Seth, Jack Simpkins,
Tonya
Sinclair,
Jerry
.Stephens, Kathy · Stump,
Jaime Supple, Deborah
Whitlatch
and
Carol
Whittington.
Students achieving a 3.5 or
better. grade point average
were: Brenda Fuller, Brenda
Cook, Medina Angel, Sheila
Atha, ·Diana Beaver, Jill
Blake, Mark Bowen, Myla
Bush, Sheila Doss, Mary
Evans, Pat Gay, Larry
Greenlee, Debra Hatfield,
Susan Hill, Maranda Holmes,
Melissa Hooten, Delila
Lantz, Lora Moore; Dawn
Myers, Ellene Nickels, Tara
Oliver, · Ron
Parsons,
Kay Ia
Shelonda Petty,

Pullins, Nicole Ramey, David
Ross,
Kelly
Saunders,
Amanda Saxon, Marilyn
Shafer, Teresa Spencer,
Shauna Spires, Steve Spires,
Linda Stover, Florence
Tomlinson and Candace
Tuttle.
Those
students
who
achieved a 3.0 or better grade
point average were: David
Barnes, Amanda Buck, Jaime
Doss, Charles Flowers, Paul
Gauze,
Kami Griffith,
Heather Harless, Regina
Harris, Randy Harrison,
Diana Henson, Kimberly
Hively, J.R. Martin, Carolyn
McGuire, Charles Miller,
Tammy Moore, Jonathan
O'Dell, Demetras Parsons,
. Greg Peck, Devin Radcliff,
Elizabeth Robinson, · Sharon
Rutherford, Kathy Sands,
Britany Settles, . Bessie ·
Simmons, Sherry Smith,
Crystal Spurlock and Larry
Stephens.

Elvis special
to air on NBC
NEW YORK (AP) ' · Britney Spears, No Doubt,
Sheryl Crow and Bono
will
celebrate Elvis
Presle.y 's legacy · on an
hour-long NBC special to
·
air later this year.
"Elvis Lives" will pay
tribute to the King with
performances an!i int!,:r·
views with entertainefs
including Dave Matthews
and Tom Petty, · the network said Wednesday.
Even Chuck D from the
rap group Public Enemy,
who once derided Presley
as. a racist in the song
"Fight the Power," is
scheduled to participate.
The special, to air in late
November or December,
is one of several projects
commemorating the 25th
anniversary of Presley's
death. )
"Elvis 30 No. I Hits"
debuted . at . No. ·I last ·
week,
selling
about
500,000 copies. The CD
will retain the top spot for
a second week. Industry
figures
released
Wednesday show it sold
337,000 copies for the
·week ending ·Sunday, outselling · , the
Rolling
Stones' greatest hits · CD,
"Forty Licks," by about
2~.000 copies.

2001 Malibu lS

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1998 Buick ParkAvenue ,........... $8,900
2000 Pontiac Grand Prix GT LS .... $13,900
1998 Chevy Lumina ................... $6,990
· 2002 Grand Am GT.. ................ $16,900

1997 Cadillac Deville ............... $10,900
1999 Ford Taurus ....................... $8,900
1997 Olds Cutlass ........ .............. $7 ,990
1994 Chevy Caprice .................. $6,990

USED TRUCKS
1999 Chevy Blazer 2 Door ....... $13,900
1997 Ford Expedition ............... $11,900
2001 Dodge Ram Pickup ....... :.$14,900
.1997
Suburban ............. $15,900

2002 Cadillac Escalade·........... $30,900
1999 Chllv SHverado Ext Cab 4x4 .$19,900
1996 GMC Sonoma ................. .. $5,850
2000
Tracker ................ ..

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_Th_eo_&amp;--=·ly:.._s_en_tin_ei......;........_
Police banners save
the day for those
needing ~oad help

Dear
Abby

!

Community Calendar
Red Brush Church of Christ,
Bashan Road, 7 pi.m. Saturday;
tO a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday.
Friday, Oct. 11
.
POMEROY - A gospel Sing ~II be Denver Hill of Foster, w.Va. to
held at lhe Pomeroy amphitheater from ·speak.
6:25 to 9 p.m. The !Mll1t is sponsored
REEDSVILLE- Reedsville
.l1f Trinity Congregational Church br the
United Methodist Church will deditl91efit of God's N.E.T. PJth ministly
&lt;:ate rts new fellowship hall at 2
. Trinity Olurch choir ~II open the sing,
wilh the Sounds of Praise Quartet to · p.m. Public invited.
perform from 6:30 to 7:30, Am,.Perrin
from 7:30 to 8 p.m. and The
Proclaimers Cluartet from 8 to 9 p.m. In

Concerts, Shovvs

Homecomings

.Ire event of lain the c:orcert ~~be

Clubs and
:Organizations
Friday, oCt. 11 ·

POMEROY - Widow's
Fellowship, noon at Grow's Family
Restaurant
Saturday, Oct. 12
POMEROY- Burlingham
Modem Woodmen, 5:30 p.m. at
1he hall. Theme Halloween.
Hogdogs, cider and donuts proVIded. Take covered dish and ·
come in costume. ·
· CHESTER - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, noon luncheon Chester Courthouse.
Beverly Schumacher, Southeast
district director, to speak.
Monday, Oct. 14
POMEROY'- Meigs County
Republican Party to meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Republican headquarters.
POMEROY- Meigs County
Association of Garden Clubs, 7
p.m. at the Laurel Cliff Church.
Regional meeting plans will be
discussed.

,Sunday, Oct 13
RJTlAND- Rutfand Church of
Christ's 173rd anniversal}' to be celeboated at homecoming day, 10:30 am.
worsllp and communial seNioe; noon
carry'in dinner; 1 p.m. afternoon ser·
vice wilh Bob Weny, minister, and
"R:Ygiven 4."

Other events
Sunday, Oct 13
POMEROY- Gods N.E.T. and the
~ County Heaitllf Heart Coalition
~~ host a skati~ party from 4 to 8:30
p.m. Sunday at tre Skate-a-Way in
Chester to kid&lt; off Smal1 Steps WeSt&lt;.
Gods N.E.T and ooalitial members and
their families are invited to attend flee of
cllarge.

11J811day, Oct..15
.POMERJY -' FMI week beginner
oomputer classes available at Gods
N.E.T. Suggested fee is $2 per session.
To armnge emollmerrt. call the N.E.l
992-0261 orC.P.U. 992·1135.

S81urday, Cl!:t-19
· Thursday, Oct. 17
TUPPERS
- Harvest
GALLIPOLIS - Meigs County moon festival, 6PLAINS
to 10 p.m. at Eastern
Retired Teachers Association,
Elemental}' under sponsorship of PTO.
noon luncheon in Golden Corral
Variety of activities including an auction,
meeting room. Amy Bowman·
store, dana!, t;;ng&gt;, cake walks.
Moore, investment rep for EdWard oountry
All
PI~ to be used to benefit SUIones, to talk on "Weathering a
Bear Market." Emphasis will be on dents.
investments for seniors.
Reservations not necessary.
CHESTER -Thelma Hayes will
observe her 90th birthday Sunday.
Cards may be sant to her at 48238
RACINE - Special services,
State R?ute 248, Long Bottom.

Birthdays

Church services

RACINE - A fund-raising also 18 sixth grade instrumental
catnpaign to buy uniforms for the music students. •
Southern Tornado Band is underFor now, the band membe'rs
way by the Southern Band wear T-shirts donated by a local
Boosters.
business and jeans for their perThe newly-organized band formances. The boosters have
boosters have taken on the task of launched the fund-raising camraising the money needed to out- · paign by asking areas businesses,
fit the band. The goal, according organizations, alumni and othen;
to Kim Romme, booster presi- who su~rt the bani! to donate to
dent, is to raise $20,000. the fund. Special activities are
Uniforms, she says, cost $400 also being planned. .
each.
Fanmen; Bank and the Mason
· Band was discontinued at the Veterans of Foreign Wars kicked
school in 1989 and most of the off the fund with donations of
uniforms, as well as instruments, ~500 each. The American Legion
are no longer useable. It was reac- m Rutland, the Eagles Club in
tivated two years ago - when Pomeroy and the Racine Home
Jeanette Oldaker took the job of National Bank have pledged
director, Romine said.
$500 each.
Since then, she has been
Contributions can be mailed to
rebuilding the instrumental music the Southern Band BooSters at
program. Last school year, she P.O. Box 98, Racine, Ohio. For
had 15 students. in the marching more information, or suggestions
band. This year · there are 30, on how to assist residents, contact
grades 7 through 12. There are Kim Romine at 949-2611.

·

The Daily Sentinel

Claren tumbles and fumes, Page 82
NAscAR drivers Ignore Injuries, Page-92
Scoreboard, Page 85

Friday, October 11. 2002

Page 11
.·

•

•

~ay.

October 11. 2002

.Smith rolls high
game. series at
Mason Lanes

Farmers· Bank made the first donation to the Southern
Band uniform fund. Here Paul Reed , president, gives a
check for $500 to Jeanette Oldaker, band director.
(Submitted)

' MASON, W.Va. - The
Wednesday Mixed .Bowling
League at Mason Bowling
Lanes was again dominated
by Sammy's Construction,
~owever, The Kingpins continue to lead the league standmgs after play this past
Wednesday.
·· Individually, Sam Smith
bowled the high game and
series, while Pat Carson
dpminated the women's plliy
for high game and series.
_Smith outdueled Clyde
Sayre of Racine 235-197,
with Chuck Burton third at
!93. for the series, Smith
again led this time winning
over Burton 646-494 with
Sjiyre third at 481.
·Carson nipped Margaret
Eynon 185. 184 for game·
high honors, taking the series
499-484 over Eynon. Debbie
Sayre was third for game. high with a . 162, while
Shirley Simmons was third in
the .series with a 446·.

·Wesfsalma
. mater yields
few mementos
EAST BANK, W.Va. (AP)
- . Dozens of fans showed up
for the demolition of the high
school where NBA · legend
Jerry West began his basketball career in hopes of getting
a t;nemento, but many left disappointed.
. · "We w~re. expecting there
would .be people out here
scramhling for a piece of the
gym floor," said Terry Sayre,
deputy director for the
Kanawha County planning
department.
But the aging wooden floor
at the former East Banlc High
School gymnasium, which
was opened in the early
1940s, frustrated fans who
tried to pry the ·planks loose
before . demolition began
Monday. The planks splintered upon impact.
The school was built in
1912.
"We had two people come
in ... from Roane County and
they wanted to take the whole
floor," said Bob Drennen,
owner of Aztec Cprp. and
head contractor for the demolition project "They starfed
trying to pry it up and finally
just gave up."
Someone did manage to
remove the school emblem
from the middle of the court
the night before.
West graduated from East
Bank in 1956: and led ihe
Pioneers to their first state
championship that year. The
63. year-old Cabin Creek
native was hired earlier this
year as president of basketball operations for the
Memphis Grizzlies.
West retired as general
manager with the Los
Angeles Lakers in August
2000 after four decades witli
the team; as a player, coach
and executive. He helped the
takers win seven NBA
championships. one as a
player.
The East Bank school was
converted into ajuniot high in
1971, and was closed in I999.

Howell. Furyk
lead in Vegas

Monday, Oct 14
RACINE - First prllCIQl for Racin&amp;
alumni band l1'l8fl1bels who want to play
wilh the band at the last home game on
Oct. 18 to be held 6 to 8 p.m. at
Southam High School. Music \\ill be
prtMded, reeds will be available.

Inside:

Band·Boosters launch fund-raising campaign

DEAR ABBY: Two years
ago, you gave information on .
how to order "Please Call
Police" banners for the car. I
had previously ordered some,
"but somehow loST them. l
would like to replace them and
purchase some more for family
rilembers.
· ·
.
Following my husband's
heart surgeey, they came in
ADVICE
handy. After he was discharged
from the hospital, our car died
on the way home. We dis- and handling), . .
played the bright banner in the
To order, send check or
back window, and the police money order (U.S. funds only,
arrived quickly and helped us please) to: WCIL Banners. P.O.
to get home.
.
Box 9250 I , Los Angeles, CA
Would you please share that 90009. Allow four to eight
information again? I'm sure weeks for delivery. For more
I'm riot the only person need- information, visit the 'I'{ClL
ing a replacement. __ WILMA Web site at www. wcil.org.
IN EAST TEXAS .
Your orders not only, provide
DEAR WILMA: I'm a safety measure for you and
pleased to do so. However, those you love, but they also
before r do, I'd like to share aSSISt WCJL in providing
much-needed services for indisome comments from other viduais with disabilities.
readers about those banners:
DEAR ABBY: 1 am a· 28 _
· "!he banners are a great year-old housewife and mother
1dea. I have had. two_ htp . of three, ages 2, 3 and 8. I
replacements, but suU drive. I recently returned to night
was gomg to get an emergency school to get m:t teaching
phone for my. car, but I have degree.
two. heanng mds and the volMy husband is frustrated and
ume on the. phone 1s not ade- upset because he says every:
~uate for me, so need Y~?J' thing is falling on him. After
Please Call Police banners. - working eight hours a day, he
- A.M. IN TAUNTON, resents having to feed, bathe
~SS.
. ,
· and baby-sit the kids for six
Please Call Police banners hours every night while I am in
-- what a brmnstonm. I'm 86 school.
· ·
years old, ~ut still . dri~e
He suppons my decision, but
because our small town m constantly pulls little guilt trips
Texas has no public transporta- on me. What should 1 do? -(Ion. (I call our town 'Sleepy BETTERING MYSELF
Hollow. ') What a godsend
DEAR
BETTERING
those banners are. Please send MYSELF: You and your hustwo of them." -- D.EJ. IN band are both carrying a heavy
TEXAS
load right now. Arrange for
. :·My grandmother is 80 and · child care at least one night a
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a year. I would feel more confi- less trapped. Also schedule
dent about her safety if she had much-needed "date nights" so
the bannen: m he! ~:Jove .com- ·the t~Q, aJi&gt;you can talk (uninpartment. r. II put two of them terru~'red) and catch up with
m her Christmas stocking . " -- each other's busy lives. You
BRIAN M., ORADELL, NJ. won't be a ·student forever -Readers, these lifesaving and on~ you have ~our teach~anners can be ordered by wnt- mg ceruficate. you U both be
mg to the Westside Center for . glad you did it.
lnde~ndent Living. It is a nonDear Abby is written by
profit organization . that 'helps Abigail Van Buren, also lawwn
people witH disabilities live as Jeanne Phillips, and wa~
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will receive one banner for a $5 Phillips. ' Write Dear Abby at
contribution and another for www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
each additional $4 contribution Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
(plus $1 per order for postage 90069.

:fleld at Ire cllurch.

Ben(l

Page AI

"LAS VEGAS (AP) Charles Howell III, playing
with the confidence of a first-'
time winner, shot a 7-under 65
before the wind slatted to blow
and tied three-time champion
Jim Furyk for the lead in the
~nvensys Classic at Las Vegas.

Koch on top at
·Toumament of
Champions
· MOBILE, Ala. (AP}
Sweden's Carin Koch shot a
I 0-under 62 on rain-softened
greens to take a three-stroke
lead after the first round of
the LPGA Tournament of
Champions.
- Annika Sorenstam had a
66, while Nancy LQpez shot a
68 in her final event as a tour
'regular.
~~

·--·

Bv Seen WOIJ'E
Sports correspondent

Southern for a non-league
Tri-match with Southern
and River Valley. Meigs
BUCHTEL _ · Meigs then begins tournament play
came out smoking Thursday · Saturday, Oct. 19 at
. night as the Marauders put Alexander.
an exclamation point on
their' championship season
by dropping NelsonvilleYork 15-8, 15-7.
Having already clinche(l
RACINE - Southern put
its lthird consecutive Tri..
Valley Conference Ohio the icing on the senior night
Division title, Meigs (18-0, cake as seniors Rachel
16-0) easily handled the Chapman, Jeri Hill and Amy
Lee led the ·Tornadoes to a
division runnerup. ·
"I told the girls it would 15-5, 15-3 win over Trimble
be hard to improve on their Thursday at Charles W.
previous track record," but Hayman gymnasium.
Southern ( 10-8) guarantonight I was glad to see
they were able to do it," tees itself of at least a .500
.coach Rick Ash said. "These regular season with one trigirls have a great deal to be match remaining.
proud of. Tonight we beat a
Southern .jumped to a 5-0
in lead behind five Amy Lee
very ·solid team
Nelsonville."
serves, then followed that up
Nelsonville-York ( 13-3) w1th .five more from Katie
had been beaten only twice Sayre for a 10-0 lead. With
previOusly, one loss to Lee serving Katie Sayre had
Meigs and one loss to a couple booming kills. ~
Hocking Division champion while Rachel Chapman had
Eas(l:m.
·
a couple big blocks .
. · Balance again was the key
Trimble made it 10-3, but
to Meigs success.along with Hill dropped in four key
a contin11ed trend of excel- serves for a 14-3 lead for
lent serving. Going 13-for- Southern. Allory Hooper
13 on the night, K'lltie Jeffers notched two for Trimble, but
netted II points, including after a side-out, Deana
both game-points in an over- Pullins delivered the gameall 49-for-50 serving perfor- winning point for the win.
mance as a team.
With Southern leading 4Jaynee Davis drove home 0, Chapman put the second
five kills to lead tl)e team, game out of reach early with
while sister Kayle pounded nine slicing serves that led
four, and Chrissy Miller to points and a 13-0 advanadded three. The thundering tage. Pullins gave the hosts a
spikes of the Davis sisters 14-3 lead, then after a .
off Mindy Chancey and Trimble missed serve, Lee
Jeffers ~ sets took much of notched game point for the
the pre-game confidence out win.
of the Buckeyes sails.
Lee was 8-for-8 with six ·
Nelsonville-York went up points, 2-of-5 spiking, 8-for2-I in the first game, but 8 setting and 9-for-9 passsur.erb floor play and Meigs ing.
sp1king
thrqtt'led
the
Hill had a good game of 4- .
Buckeyes into a spiraling for-6 serving and 7-pf-8
free fall. Behind the Davis- passing. Sayre was 6-for-7
Jeffers-Davis serving com- serving with five aces, 7-forbination Meigs slowly 7 spiking with five kills and
pulled away, 4-2, 6-2 and 11-of-14 passing. Emily Hill
II-2 before Nelsonville- was ·1-for-l servipg, 15.ofYork gained second wind. 21 spiking with five kills
Meigs held on for the 15-8 and 4-for-5 passing.
win behind five Jeffers
Chapman was 13-for-13
points.
serving, 5-for-7 spiking and
Nelsonville-York again 13-of-14 passing with three
went up 1-0 in the second blocks. Pullins was 6-for-6
game, but Meigs took a 7-4 serving _and 4-for-4 .spiking
advantage on four Jeffers and a kill, 13-for-13 setting
serves and coasted home to and 32-of-33 passing.
the !5-7 win.
Nikki Riffle had nine
Mindy Chancey had five points, Kristiina Williams
cruCial assists, also j!Oing 5- had seven, and Ashley
for-5 with one pomt, and Roush had six points as
Maria Drenner went 9-for- Southern claimed
the
10 with six key points.
reserve match in three sets,
·
Meigs won the reserve 13-15, 17-15 and 15-6.
game 15-5 and 15-7 to also
Southern hosts a tri-match
remain undefeated at 18-0, with Meigs arid River Valley
16-0.
on Tuesday before opening
Meigs is idle until tournament
play
at
Tuesday when it goes to Alexander on Oct. 19.

Southemtops
Trimble

San ~ranc.lsco Gla_nts' J.T.. Snow slides home to score on a suicide squeeze bunt by Ramon
Marttnez 1n the m~th 1nm?g dunng Game 2 of the National League Championship .Series
jll!alnst the St. Louts Cardtnals Thursday in St. Louis . (AP)

&gt;

·-Giants take 2-0
lead in NLCS
ST. LOUIS (AP) - ting· two home run§ and
Only three times 1·n
t
Halfway to the World Series Schmidt shut out . the season history has a re:~
and heading home, the San . Cardinals until the eighth lost the first two games at
Francisco Giants can tell inning.
home and come back to win
they're close. .
A day after the teams near- a best-of-seven series - it's
"This is six years in the ly came to blows in a noisy never happened in an LCS.
making. It's been building opener, there were no hostil- · "To come in here and win
and building," second base~ iues. Barry Bonds was quiet two games, you think about
man Jeff Kent said. "Now aside from overrunning a fly how many times we've been
we're . finally making ~ood b~ll in. lef! field, 'b.ut the heartbroken in the bottom of
on the talent that's existed G1ants d1dn t need therr slu!l- the ointh in this park,"
here for quite a while."
· ger as-. for. the first time m Giants manager Dusty !lake!'
Rich Aurilia and Jason franchise h1story - th.er.' ;.; ~; "We had a· mfin~"&lt;lf
Schmidt took their turns at oeehed a po~tseason s~n~§ li~rl&gt;es tonight."
.
starring · roles Thursday ~th consecutive road .v1ctoMeanwhile, the emotional
Cardinals, coming off a firstnight, leading the Giants nes.
. ·
over the St. Louis Cardinalsc . ·"People ·look at us as a round sweep of the defend4-1 and giVIng them a 2-0 ·ooo-man show. But you can't
lea~ in the NL championship '. get this far with just one ing World Series champion
senes.
man," ·said Kenny Lofton Arizona Diamondbacks, kept
Aurilia kept up his .post'• who contributed another key going more quietly than anyseason power surge b~ hit- play.
·
·
Pluse see NLCS, B:Z

NASCAR .

Tony Stewart's ·oumey
&amp;om worst to rst
;;'."

CONCORD, N.C. (AP)- ered it 'all to climb from the
·
His season · absolute bottom all the way
started with to the top..
·
heartbreak, . Stewart, one of the preseacaused by a son picks to win the Winston
b l o w n Cup, is on the verge of actu,
engme two . ally doing it With six races
laps mto the · left in the season, he's on top
D a y to n a of the points standings for
500Th.
d the first time in his
. e roa NASCAR career.
smce
has
It's aspol he di~n't know if
been fuhll of he could get to, especially
Stewart
c r as e s , ft h. 1
fi . h
controversy and criticism, a er IS ast-p 1ace I filS at
but Tony Stewart has weath- Dayt?na - a race ~e was
heav1ly favored to wm after
I

dominating runs in the days
leading up to the event.
"There was no way I ever
could have dreamed after
Daytona that we were going
to be where we are today,"
Stewart said on a media con·fetence call to discuss his 72point lead over Mark Martin.
''I'm ecstatic, to be honest.
... 'fhat first race of the. year
when we lefi Daytona, we
were devastated after the
week ·that we had had. It just
Please sil NASCAR, J!ll

·Junior wins, Stewart takes control
'

Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the win.
Tony Stewart took control. '
Many may not consider a 72-point
lead in the Winston Cup standings
actually having control, per se, but
the 31-year old Indiana native defi:
nitely ·now holds the trump card in
pursuit of his frrst ever points title .
Stewart served as Junior's wing
man during the final laps of the EA
Sports 500 at Talladega Sunday,
ensuring Earnhardt would complete a
season sweep.of the events there and
win his third straight overall race at
the fastest track on the circuit It also
helped Junior take ·home his second
Winston-No Bull 5 Million · Dollar
Bonus of his career and may have
earned Stewart a teammate by proxy
down the home stretch of the season.
"My hat's off to Tony Stewart for
being a friend there and helping me
out, sticking behind me," Earnhardt
said after winning the event in which
Stewart fended off a pack of runnersup .to finish second and meanwhile

.

Derek
Taylor
ON NASCAR
keep the heat off the wjptler.
It was on the surface a selfless and
friendly gesture, Dig a little deeper
and you find a bunch of well-timed
strategical thinking. ·
When Mark Martin's steering went
berserk on a pace lap, causing him to
careen into then-points leader Jimmie
Johnson, it opened the door wide
open for Stewart to take the points
lead. Johnson eventuallr finished
37th in the event and shd. to third
place in the points ralce, while Martin
fared little better on the day, finishing

30th.
All Stewart had to do was run an
average race and stay clear of
mechanical ~roblems and the lead
was his. What better to do, then, than
make a buddy }\lith six races left in
the season?
·
A buddy who is running 13th in the
points and out of contention himself,
but will be a major player in the
remaining races.
Martin has t.he entire legion of
.Roush Racing looking out•for him as
he sit~1 in second place right now.
Matt Kenseth (6th in points), Kurt
Busch (II th) and Jeff Burton (14th)
.all will have Martin's back on the
track in the home stretch, and will
make thtir loyalties known, for sure.
Johnson? His car is owned by none
other than defendi.ng Cup champion
Jeff GorMn. With Gordon all but
eliminating himself from contention
with an engine failure at Talladega
(one of 6 Hendricks Motorsports cars
to go down with similar problems at

the track) you can bet when push
comes to shove he's going to be will,
ing to help out his employee rather
than Stewart.
Stewart has one teammate: Bobby
Labonte, who 's currently 18th in
points and has one win .this year, but'
only five top ten finishes this season
(as opposed to 18 for Stewa•'' , The
2000 Winston Cup Champion IS surely a threat in any event, but when
matched up against the rest of the drivers the other title contenders have
working with them, hedpesn't add up
to much at all at the current time .
Martin won the spring event at
Lowe's Motor Speedway, this week's
stop on the circuit for the UAW OM
Quality 500. He'll be a favorite this
week, as well. Johnson runs well
there, too, as d~s Stewart, ~o there
may yet be another change in the top
three by Monday.
The Joe Gibbs .Racing teams Stewait and Labonte- are changing
Pleese see hylor, II:Z

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Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

College FOQtball

drivers ignoring
injuries for points

Clarett~ fumbles

and·fumes·.

c

CONCORD, N.C. (AP)- In 1992,
Davey Allison gingerly · climbed
thmugh the window of his No. 28 Fonl,
wincing with pain, as he prepared to
start a race at Talladega.
The previous Sunday, he had survived
• a crash at Pocono, somersaulting 11
times after colliding with Darrell
Waltrip, and the wreck left him with a
broken forearm, a shattered wrist, badly
bloodShot eyes and bruises virtually
from head to toe.
Allison, in fact, was still healing from
separated cartilage, fractured ribs and
tom ligaments and muscle in his right
shoulder from a crash earlier in the year.
Now,
the
second-generation
NASCAR star found himself waiting
for the Talladega race to start so he
could drive a few laps and earn that
day's championship points before giving up the .seat to relief driver Bobby
Hillin Jr.
Allison, who later died ill a helicopter
crash, endured pain most of the season,
going into the last race with a shot at the
.
title before windin¥ up third.
If a NASCAR dnver wants to win the
Winston Cup championship, he can't
afford to miss races. Allison is just one
of many examples of drivers racing
while injured in the sport's 53-year history.
·
Two weeks ago, Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
whose father drove numerous times
with broken bones and other injuries,

on tel.evision
COLUMBUS (AP)
Maurice Clarett has played
I ike a man in Ohio State's
backfield, · yet there are still
times when he's just another
18-year-old kid a long way
from home.
Clarett clashed with Ohio
State running backs coach
Tim Spencer on the sidelines
Saturday during the fifthranked Buckeyes' 27-16 vic'
tory at Northwestern.
Television camems. caught knowing what goes on."
the two yelling at each other.
Quarterback Craig Krenzel
Clarett could also be seen · said discussions - someexchanging words with. a "times loud ones-· frequentteammate another time. A ly take place on the field and
close-up showed tears rolling the sideli~s. He said the pri·
down h1s cheeks after he was mary concern regarding
taken out after losing two . Clarett was the fumbles, not
early fumbles.
the fuming.
Ohio , State coach Jim
"It's something he hasn't
Tressel said Tuesday there done much-this year ~J~d it's
would be no ~enalties something he can't do any
·
Cl
&amp;
•
more this year. He knows
agamst arett .or IS emo- that," Krenzel said. "He's
tiona!
outbursts.
The
J
Stat done a great job of securinll
B
k
h
S
· uc eyes ost an ose
e the ball for us this year, so It
·on Saturday and Clarett, of
Warren, is expected 10 be in was a little bit of a surprise.
the starting lineup.
At the same time, things like
"They •re both pretty com· that can happen."
petitive folks," Tressel said
Krenzel said he wasn't the
f
Cl
d
s
fi
tyj:le
of person to yell at a
0
arett an. pencer, a or-. coach- even thou~Tressel
mer standout running back
himself at Ohio State who joked that Krenzel
uently
went on to play pro football yelled at him. He said somefor seven years.
times emotions. rule the
He said Spencer "can be moment.
pretty forceful" and that the
"It happens more than peaconfrontation came in the pie think, more than people
heat of the moment in a close see. Obviously, it's not
game.
always captured on camera."
Tressel said part of · the he said. "There·~ nobody
problem was that the argu- who wants to win more than
ment was televised, therefore the guys who are playinj:.
amplifying what is a com- The guts who are next m
moo occurrence on most terms o wanting to win that
teams - a sideline disagree- much are the coaches. You
ment.
put them in.a hostile environ''That's a rea!Wi that a guy ment like a game situation,
· like Maurice cfifrett, who all throw in a couple of mistakes
of a sudden has had a lot of and -~ust ·depending on the
notoriety and so forth, it's an type 0 people - words are
awareness thing that the exchanged.'
camera's going to follow you
Tressel said he wasn't warwhen you're not even part of ried nearly as much.about the
wbat 1s haopening," Tres.sel harsh words between player
1
and coach as he was about
~~~k::rhat s the way that it Clarett's three lost fumbles.
Clarett rushed for 140
"We have to make sure
yards and two touchdowns th~re isn't any more of that,"
on 29 carries, but also lost a he said.
· ··
third fumble late in the game.
Tressel said the 'turnovers
were not what Spencer and
Clarett were hollering about.
"Interestingly enough, it
had nothing to do with tbe
fumbles," he said. "Tim was
trying to get him to move
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio
back (from the sideline) State cornerback Richard
because the officials were McNutt likely will miss the
yelling at us."
restoftheseason because of a
Clarett - a blip on the degenerative condition in his
radar screen at. tailback last right ankle.
spring - has become the
"The way we're talking
No. I offensive weapon for about Richard at this moment,
the Buckeyes. He has totaled we're planning as though we
715 yards rushing and his won't have him," Buckeyes.
average of 143 yards a game coach Jim Tressel said
is fifth in the country. He Thursday.
already has 12 touchdowns,
"He came in with an injury,
among the highest totals ever
for an Ohio State freshman, he's tried like crazy, he's sacwith seven regular-season rificed and he's played .with
games remaining. .
pain. But we knew there was
Clarett has accounted for. going to ·be a day when the
one-third of the Buckeyes' medical people said 'Hey; ,
points and almost half of enough,' and that day has
·come."
·
their 26 touchdowns.
Is too much being put on
McNutt, a junior, undergoes
Clarett's shoulders too soon? regular examinations on his
"Maybe he has too much right ankle. During the most
pressure, but !\think he's the recent exam, the team's medkind of guy who can handle ical staff told Tressel the
it,'' free safety and captain ankle was too bad for McNutt
Donnie Nickey said. "He's to play.
· intelligent. He knows what
Freshman E.J. Underwood
he's got to do. He's not the will start in McNutt's place
kind of guy who can break Saturday when the. fifth·
from it."
. ranked Buckeyes play San
Another Ohio State cap· J
St te
•
&amp;
M' h l o s e a . .
tam, strong, sa.ety
IC ae
McNutt has been the suh'Doss, said the entire situation
was blown out of proportion. ject of a tongue-in-cheek
'A 1 0 f
1
11 Reisman Trophy campaign
'
ot
keop e are rea Y the last two seasons. "McNutt
• trying to rna e somethin~ out for Reisman" T-shirts can be
of nothing right now, he
said. "I really don't appreci- spotted in the crowd at Ohio
ate that, being a player and State games, and the cam·
being inside this family and paign also has a Web site.

McNutt out

NLCS
. from Page

Taylor
from Pip 81
from running the Pontiac
Grand Prix to the Chevrolet
Monte Carlo in 2003. It just
so happens, of course, that's
what Jr. drives right now.
Earnhardt pointed out in .his
postrace ·interview that
Stewart had the best car .and
.(

\

•

revealed he drove part of Ibis season
with' a concussion ·'that left him unable
to concentrate fuUy or communica!C
with his crew chief.
Earnhardt said he did not report it to
doctors because he was worried about
an ankle injury, had had concussions
before and dido ' t think this one was
serious, and, most importantly, dido 't
want to be barred from the track.
That's what Sterling Marlin was
thinking about before it was determined
last week that be· would miss .the final
seven races of 2002 after fracturing a
vertebra in his neck in a crash at Kansas
City.
"If your ann was cracked or some·
thing else, we'd go on and race," Marlin
said. "But you talk about your spine,
and that's a pretty delicate piece."
He didn't think about that ioitially.
Marlin. who was fifth in the closest
points race in NASCAR history after the
race in Kansas, would have been in his
No..40 Dodge at TaUadega on Sunday if
the team trainer hadn't been persistent in
urging the driver to get X-rays..
"When I called him. be was on the farm
cutting weeds," car owner Chip Ganassi
Said. :'Now he sa~s 'If I just dido 't
answer the phone, I d still be driving."' .
That's the mindset of a driver dealing
with a points system that puts a premiurn on·getting into a race car, no matter
what.
.
In the wake of Earnhardt's revelation,

other drivers talked about driving while
affected by concussions. NASCAR
reacted by setting a new pot? requiring 11 driver to undergo a
scan if
racetrack doctorS suspect a concussion
following a crash.
H the scan shows a concussion, the
driver will not be allowed to compete
until obtaining a medical release,
NASCAR president Mike Helton said.
Will that change the way drivers
approach their jobs? Probably not,
unless NASCAR changes the points
system.
·
"The option you have is .to say, 'No,
I'm not going to drive it,' or suck it up,
and everyone sue~ it up," said Maile
Martin; second in the points heading
into Sund;ly's UAW-GM 500 at Lowe's
Mocor Speedway. · · · .
·
'This 1s a manly man sport. ... I real- ·
ly don' t think -you need someone to tell
you that you have a head injury and you
shouldn't be driving. I would assume . ·
that you would know that yourself,"
Martin said.
.
Marlin, who now has plenty oftime to
ponder the situation, says the solution to
keeping injured drivers out of their ~
could be as simple as changing the rules.
."You (could) have t\vo races a year
where if a driver gets injured you can
get him healed up and put somebody
else in the car," Marlin said. "It probably will never take off, but that's niy

-~
992-2825
.

..
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&gt;
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... .

one could have imagined. At
Busch Stadium, no less.
...In one sense, it's a perfect
setup for us," St. Louis manager Tony La Russa said.
."It's been a really hard year.
It's been a really hard start."
This
Busch-whacking
complete, the Giants headed
home to Pacific Bell Park for
Game 3 Saturday. Russ Ortiz
will start for San Francisco
against Chuck Finley;
, Aurilia connected on
Woody Williams' fourth
pitch of the game and later
· added his fourth home run of
this year's playoffs, giving ·
him II RBis in that span.
· Slowed by an elbow
injury, Aurilia's home run
total dipped from 37 in. 2001
to 15 this year, and he did
not have a two-homer game.
''This is how I'm used to
· · hitting the ball," he said.

triggered the ci:aziness. To
Cardinals fans, his display
made him Public Enemy~o.
I -coincidentally. tht: nuni·
ber be wears for the Giants:
Aurilia was up next, and
he quickly hushed the fans
wben he followed by hitting
a high drive over the fence.
Aurilia struck again ill the
fifth for a two-run homer
with two outs. After Lofton
struck out lookin~ for the
second time, Auriha reached
out - too far, it looked on
contact- and still managed
to loft a fly ball over the wall
in left-center.
·
·
"I think the same fan
caught both balls," he said. :
When the inning ended,
Aurilia stood up in th!l
dugout and got ready to go
onto the field. Lofton came
by and, with a big smile on ·
his face, playfully pushed
Aurilia on the upper cbest · ·
with his right hand.
·
Bonds went 0-for-3 with a
· walk. He struck out twice for
just the fifth tirne in a game
this year.
:

The Dan Sentinel • Pa

aEJ

I tfi-CUC-12

Valley Lumber

Dave or Jessica
992·2155

Middleport ·

'

'555 Park St

NASCAR
,. from Page
81

shows that you can't give
up.''
·
There have been plenty .o f
times Stewart could have
given up on this season, his
fourth in Winston Cup. He
rebounded after the Daytona
disappointment by winning
at Atlanta in March, but he
had a nasty wreck the next
week at Darlington that left
him hospitalized for ~ night
with a sore back.
,'
The injury forced him out
of the car the next week at
,_Bristol midway through the
~ race puttin!l Stewart back
into 'his routme of struggling
through the early part of the
schedule.
"We've always known that
the first eight races of the
year are where we get ourselves at such a deficit that
we never can recover from it
for the remainder of the sea-

a Winston Cup title.
And they pointed to last
season,
wondering
if
Stewart's. almost yearlong
stint on probation prevented
him from making a stronger
run on champion . Jeff
Gordon. Stewart finiShed a
distant second to Gordon in
the standings, never challenging for the lead.
But Stewart's team is
putting all the problems in
the past and focusing solely
on the task at hand.
"What some people have
said in the .past . is that
because of that emotional
roller coaster- we've been
up and down - that . we
can't, we won't be able to
overcome some of those
things and win a champi·
onship, but we 'II win our
share of mces," said crew
chief Greg Zipadelli. "I want
the statement ·to be that we
can win races, we can lead
laps and we can win a cham·
pionshif'
They re certainly the
favorite, starting with this

weekend's race at Lowe's
Motor Speedway. He's woil
. at four of the six remaining
tracks on the circuit and ha~
always been strong at the
suburban Charlotte track.
Although he's never won
at Lowe's, he scored a
career-best second in the
October race here last year
and has four top-fives and si!
top-lOs mi the !.S-mile track.
· But Stewart, the 1997 Indy
Racing League champion,
isn't malcinll room for the
championship trophy just yet
. "I'm cautiously optimistic
nght now," he wd. "I've run
for enough points champi~
onships in 23 years of racin~
and won enough champ•·
onships. I mean, there are six
races left to go and the best
attitude that we can take going
into those six races is, 'We've
got to win a couple of tbese. •:
"As much as we want to·
protect our lead, the best
way to protect our lead is g0
out and win races, and theit
the points seem to take c~
of themselves."
·

•

•••
•

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UPCOMING ON THE TRACKS

ON THE TUBE
1I I

WlnsloD Cup: UAWGM
. Quality 500, pre-rac:e arverage
noon EDT Sunday on NBC. .

.
'

craftsman Truck: Las
Vegas 350, S p.m. EDT Sunday .
onESPN.

. Not all teams adjust
.' to smaller fuel cells
.' By ' MINTER
'

{

'

RICK
Co~ News Service

.
·, 1

'I

WINSTON CUP

Buoch: LitUeTn!es 300, 1 P:m.
EDT Saturday on TNT.

(

l*e: UAW-GM Quality 500
WheN: Lowe's Motor Spe€dway, Coocool, N.C.
When: Sunday, 12:30 p.m. EDt
l*e distance: 500 miles; 3341aps
llellondlng champion: Ste~ing Marlin
l*erecord: Jeff Gordon, Hl0.306 fll)h, Oct
· 11 . 1999.
Qualifying.-: Ward Burton, 165.759 mph,
Oct. 5, 1994.
storyline: The driver atop the NASCAR
Winston Cup point standings after the UI\W-GM
Quality 500 has gone on to capl1n the title 25
times 0\18r the past 30 .,...rs.

I

1
I
I
I
I

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I

BUSCH SERIES

I
I
I
I
I

l*e: Utile Trees 300
WheN: Lowe's Motor Speedway, Concortl, N.C.
-lenglh: 1.5-mile oval.
.
.
When: Salurday. 2 p.m. EDT.
Dolancllng ch!impion: Greg Biffle
Race niCOid: Marl&lt; Martin, 155.996 flllh, May
25, 1996.
_Qualifying reconl: Jeff Burton, 179.485 mph,

Race: Las Vegas 350
Wllent: Las Vegas Motor Spe€dway
Track length: 1.5-mile oval.
When: Sunday, 5 p.m. EDT.
Defendlilg champion: Ted Musgrave
Race record: Jack Sprague, 130.801 mph,

1

Series sclledule, Greg Billie, defending champ"
on of the Little Trees 300, bas a 127·point lead
over Jason Keller.

I

NASCAR NOTES
Engine woes take steam
out of Hendrick's teams

attempt to break up the big packs of cars that
often lead to big wrecks in restrictor-plate rnces.
Moot drivers said the 13-gallon tanks (normal
lanks hold 22 galloJ1S) didn't seem to be as effective
in breaking up the packs as supporters of the
change thought they would.
All teams 11111de more pit stops, and some made

By RICK MINTER
Cox News Service
Talladega, Ala.
hen the Winston Cup circuit left
,
Kahsas City, Kan., a week ago, the buzz
was about Jeff Gordon's dominating
-and the newfound horsepower at Hendrick
Motorsports.
When Sunday's EA Sp6rts iiOO at Talladega
Superspeedway ended. people again wen. talk·

mistakes on pit road. But as soon as everyot'l.e

;j

''

. ,.

'

'

' r
,,

(

' '·

(;
· ,..

'

ing about Hendrick's engines. But this time the

news was bad.

All six cars using Hendrick engines at

Talladega suffered problems. Jimmie Johnson,
who entered the race with the points lead, had
the engine in his No. 48 car go sour :Ill laps from
the fmish. Gordon lost power on lap 125 and finished 42nd. Joe Nemechek was out by lap 155
and·Terry Labonte's engine quit on lap 164.
Even the engines Hendrick furnishes to the No.
36 car of Ken Schrader and the No. 10 car of
Johnny Benson·blew. • "' · •· ' '
The failures dealt serious blows to the cham·
pionship hopes of Johnson and Gordon, who
fmished 37th and 42nd, respectively.
They aJso·were disheartening for Schrader,
who has had a disappointing season but ran as
high as third in the early going before his

lafe.-race stop for gasoline.

rules

.

'

en&amp;ine quit.

Ricky Rudd, who finished third. said the small·

•

•

···································································~··
I
.
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•

~

AI Shuford, who advises
MarUn's team on health and
fitness matters, has recom-

mended the switch to Marlin.
The Hutchens device uses a
series of straps to restrain the
driver's head: the HANS is a

Collar made of carbon fiber
_
that works in conjunction with the driver's

shoulder belts.

Earnhardt's run pays off for fan

ALOOK AHEAD

For the third straight year, an Earnhardt has
made a lucky fan a millionaire by winning the
EA Sports 500 at Talladega.
Earnhardt Jr.'s win was part of Wmston 's No
Btill5 eveni, which offers the opportunity for a
$1 milliori .bonus to the top tive drivers in the
previous No BullS event, in this case the Monte
Carlo 400 at Richmond.
The program also pairs a fan, chosen in a
tl.rawing, with the drivel: If the driver wins, both
driver and fan collect $1 million. Debra Polzun
of Manchester, Conn., was Sunday's winner.
Earnhardt Jr. won the race ~ and the bonus
- a year ago. His father, the late Dale
Earnhardt, won it in 2000. The late Earnhardt
also won the fall Talladega race in 1?39, but the
bonus was not in effect.
·

v·

Martinsville Speedway
Oct. 27 - NAPA 500,
• Atlanta Motor Speedway
Nw. :i - Pop Secret 400,
North Carolina Speedway
••
Nov. IO- Checker Auto Parts 500
\
Pl'!'OO'Ited by Pennzoil.
Phoenix International Raceway
NOv. 17- l'ord 400,
Homestead-Miami Speedway

Plate raclne
car a real ride.

.

...

.

..

13. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 3,481 .
14. Jeff Burton, 3A17.
15. Michael Waltrip, 3,362.
16. Ricky Craven, 3,292.
17. Jeff Green, 3,224.
18. Bobby Labonte. 3,111 .
19. Robby Gordon, 3,089.
20. Dave Blaney, 3,025.
21 . Kyle Petty, 3,010.
22. Kevin Harvick, 2991 .
23. Terry Labonte, 2,901 .
24. Jeremy Mayfield, 2,817.
25. Ward Burton, 2,762.
28. Jimmy Spencer, 2,755.
21. Ron Hornaday, 2,584 .
22. Casey Mears, 2,572 .
23. Jeff Green, 2,!;58. ·
24. Kevin Grubb, 2,502.
25. Kevin Lepage, 2,411.
26. Ricky Hendrick, 2,125.
27. Jimmy Spencer, 2,047.
26. Shane HaU, t ,813.
29. Michael wanrlp, 1,740.
30. Jeff Burton, 1,810.
31. Kasey Kahne, 1;396 .
32, Mark-Green, t ,395 .
33, Chad Chaffin. t ,393 .
34. Jeff Purvis, t ,309.
35. Jay Sauter, 1,295.
36. Joe Nemachek, 1,288.
37. Brian Vickers, 1,288.
38. Mike Wallace, 1,t97.
39. Mike Harmon, 1,1 74.

40. Brad Teague, 1,032.

details

Dave or
Jessica
992-2155

Rutland Bottle Gas)
Main Street)
Rutland, Ohm

740-742-2289 .
1-800-837-8217

27. Elliott Sadler, 2,755.
28. John AndreHi, 2,633. ·
29. Ken Schrader, 2,531.
36. Mike Skinner, 2,350.
31 . Bobby Hamilton, 2.345.
32. Johnny Benson, 2,330.
33. Casey Atwood, 2,271.
34. Jerry Nadeeu , 2,126:
35. Joe Nemochek, 2,101.
36. Steve Park, 2,041 .
37. Brett Bodine, 2,026 .
36. Hut Stricklin, t ,781.
39. Todd Bodine, 1,683 .
40. Stacy Compton, 1,490.

t. Mike Bliss, 2,742.
2. Rick Ctawfurd, 2,687.
3. Ted Musgrave, 2,635.
4. Oavid Starr, 2,568.
5. Tarry. Cook, 2,565.
6. Ja&amp;on Laffler, 2,546.
7. Oannis Setzer, 2,533.
8. Robert Ptassiey, 2,514.
9. Coy Gibbs, 2.4e0. ,
' 10. Travis Kvapll, 2,428.
11 . Brendan Gaughan, 2,332.
12. Jon Wood, 2,298.
13. Lan~ Norick, 2, 150.
14. Bobby Dotter, 2,071.
15. Man Cranon, t ,948.
16. Carlos Contreras, t ,904 .
17. Bill Lester. 1.8.60.
18. Lance Hooper, 1,850.
19. Brian Rose, 1,812.
20. Steve Portonga, 1,800.

S

Track: t .5-mile oval; banking in turns

Winston 'Cup points race has several drivers
talltin~ aboUt modifications to the current ··
system, which rewards consistency over the

1·4, 24 degrees; banking in straights, 5
degrees; length ol frontstretch, 1,952
feet; length of backstretch, 1,360 feet
Where: Concord, N.C.
· Pum: $3,814,495 (event record)
Date opened: June 1960
Firat Winston Cup race: Wortd 600,
June 19, 1960.
Grandstand seating: 167,000.
On the Web: IWIW.iowes

entire schedule.
Defending points champion J eff Gordon is

among them .
"They can maybe stop paying points from 2i;th
or 30th place on back,'' he said. "That way, if you

do have a 40th-place finish or even if you miss one
or two races, maybe it would work itself out." .
Gordon also believes his suggestion would elirn·

inate the need for teams to patch up wrecked race
cars and send the (iriver back on the track just to
gain a few points.
·

motorspeedway.com

- Rick Minter

'

.

.

Longtime Lowe's Motor Speedway announcer 'steps aside'
Concord, N.C.
o longtime Lowe's Motor
Speedway race fans, his
booming voice is as much
a part of the NASCAR experi·
ence as military exercises prlor
to the Coca·C.la 600 and drama!·
ic car stunts befon. the UAW-GM

T

Quality 500.
Sinc:e May of 1968, public
address announcer 8111 Connell

has kept fans informed and
called the on-track action with
an wunistakabie tlare.

However, when activities
kick-off for the UAW-GM
Quality 500 Week, Connell's ·
voice will be silent. Battling
helilth problems, the
Kannapolis, N.C .. resident has .
decided to "step aside and make
room for the young guns," ending one of the most colmful
chapters in the history of
Lowe's Motor Speedwa)(
"Bill hact the unique ability to
make the action on the track
bigger than life," said H.A.

"Humpy" Wheeler, track presi·
dent and general manager.
''When he started there was ·
no live television coverage, no
radio and no scanners. In addition, there was very JitUe media
coVerage and limited inform•·
tton available on the drivers, so
the public address annmp100r
was an integral part of the show.
"Blll put a little color into the
black-and-white lives of the fans
who attended our races," he
added.

.

..

.

•

--1 ·-li.-· - ---

/.

.

BANKS
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-5009

.. Larry W. Banks,

Ow11er!Operator

DlstrlbtJted by Universal Prasa Syndicate for Cox Nows Service. (800) 255·6734: 'For r~ease the week ot October i. 2002.

...

·cave or
Jessica
992-2155

LOWE'S MOTOR SPEEW.Y

terling Marlin's sudden exit from the ·

.

Place Your
Business's
Ad here
Call The
Daily
Sentinel for
details

...- TRA£K PROFILE ....

Points system debated

-----------------------------------~-----TRUCK SERIES STANDINGS
20. Kerry Earnhardt, 2,594 .
BUSCH SERIES ·
S'IIINDINOS
t . Greg Biffle, 4,018.
2. Jason Keller, 3,891. ,
3. Scott Wimmer, 3,673.
4. Jack Sprague, 3,611,
5. Mlko.McLaughlln, 3,498.
6. scon Rlgga, 3,493.
7. Kenny Walla~. 3,467.
8. Jamie McMurray, 3.41 ?,
9. Bobby.Hamttton Jr., 3,394.
tO. Randy Lajoie, 3,366.
11 . Tony Ralnea, 3,222.
12. Stacy Coinptor&gt; , 3,173.
13. nm Sauter, 3,013.
14. Hank Parker Jr., 2,916.
15. Johnny Sauter, 2,876.
16. Todd Bodine, 2,837.
17. Shane Hmlel, 2,752.
18. Ashton L&lt;~wts, 2,642.
19. l.jlrry Foyt, 2,606

glvethe ,
'

"We work hard on that car,• Eury said.

DRIVER STANDINGS
WINSTON CUP
STANDINGS
1. Tony Stewart, 3,958.
2. Mark Martin, 3,886.
3. Jimmie Johnson, 3,876.
4. Ryan Newman, 3,821.
5 . Rusty Wallace, 3,811 .
6. Man Kense1h, 3,757.
7. Jeff Gordon, 3,757.
e. Bill EllloH, 3, 729.
9. Rlcl&lt;y Rudd, 3,712.
tO. Sterling Marlin, 3,703.
11 . Kurt Busch, 3,643.
12. Dale Jarrett, 3,594.

Sterling Marlin says his season-ending neck
injury has convinced him to
switch from the Hutchens to
the HANS.head·and-neck

restrilint device. ·

.,

•

•

,..

Oct; 20 - Martinsville SOil, ·

••
•••
•••

.
l unba!' ttimd -6tnttuel !
·~

4

Only four races remalri on the 2002 NASCAR .
Craftsman Truck Series schedule for a new cham"
pion io emerge. Only 196 points separate the topsix drivers in the series. The top-lwQ drivers have ·
55 points between them, while the distance fronl
frnt to third is 112 points. The difference from
third to sixth is 89 points, fourth to sixth just 22.
· ' , While the series will crown a first-time champ!·
- " .. on this year, none of the competitors is ready to
think about the championship yet.
·:u·s been a IDJ)!! time since I \vas involved in a
championship battle. In all honesty. rve been trying not to think about it too much," said points
leader Mike Bliss, driver of the No. 16 Chevrolet.
"We've got four races left and our focus is to win
all four: If we can continue to·win races. the cham- ·
. pionship will take care of itself."

•
'

Daily Sentinel for

·

Martin to wear HANS

.

'

'

"They were all rea1 strong in Happy Hour on
!'at:urday,"' Eury said.

Tlgtlt race in Truck series

,.

·•

here Call The

design to get more power. .

1

"!think we expected a bigger change," he said.
"When the*'it stops start~ taking place, for about
15 laps, the cars
kind of spread out and then
it seemed like IS laps later, everybody was all back
toge~er again and in one big huddle."

""

Business's Ad

1bny Eury Sr , crew chief of Dale Earnhardt
Jr.'s winning Chevrolet, said It appeared the
Hendrick group was trying out a new camshaft

ure that one out"

er·tanks didn't make that m\,lch difference.

Place Your

W

returned 1o the track. only a lew laps ...,.. run
before the cars were back in a biB pack again.
The big dllferonce was that some drivers,
Including race winner Dale Earnhardt Jt, were
able to stretch their fuel mileage while others,
Including 14th place-flnlshlng Matt Kenseth, bad
to make an extra pit stop.
·
"With 22 gallons, it was all set up where everybody could make it on the same stops, • Kenseth
said. "But hen., everybody cnuldn.' t make it on the
same stops, so it kind of shafted some of us who
couldn't make it all the way on fuel."
· With no.caution periods in the 500-mile even~
some teams eventually fell off the pace. At the
end, the top eight drivers were running single flle,
with a larger group trailing them several car
lengths back.
, . ,''Thl\ onlrJhiJli.it d,\d was.I\Bparale,the race at
llie entl,'' said 11th place-finishing Jeff llurton,
wl;lo was among the drivers whO had to make a
Michael Waltrip, Earnhardt's teammate at Dale
Earnhardt Inc., usually is a factor in the finishes
of races at Daytona and Talladega, but the new
fuel-cell
indirectly cost him a chance to win.
· "!stopped, did my normal deal, and (the car] fell
off the jack," Waltrip said. "We'll just have to fig- .

'

,

Qulltllylilg record: Jack Sprague, 161.803
flllh, Oct 13, 2001.
·Storytine: The Truck series resumes-at Las.
Vegas Motor Speedway Sunday fottowilg a
three-week hiatus. Thme drMlrs am within
174 points of points leader Mike Bliss.

I

T
•

992-5432
..

Nov. 8, 1998.

Oct 5, 2001.

~.W'i111 six races remaining in the Busch

228 Main. St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

. CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

'l'81ladega, Ala.
he smaller fuel cells NASCAR required
teams to run Sunday...,.. a gas for some
drivers, but led to a lack of it for others.
NASCAR mandated the smaller a!lls in an

•

•••
••
•••
••
••

Featuring ·
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

The 43ro runring of the UAW-GM Quality 500
on s....day wiU be worth a recool $3,814,495,
an increase of $402,631 over last~"""'·

.' I
·.~

Restaurant

Big ..t-1,_1
--1-.

.•

•
••
i

••

Family

'I.

.
•
•
:•

••
•

Crow's

992-6611

were

son," Stewart said. "Starting
the first race of the year,
leaving there 43rd in the
points, it was falling right
· mto that pattern again."
·
His Joe Gibbs Racing
team eventually got Stewart
and the No. 20 Pontiac flack
on track - even as the driver was battling a series of
off-track problems.
In August, he punched a
photographer following a
disappointing
day
at
Indianapolis
Motor
Speedway. That led the temperamental Stewart to . seek
anger management help, but
the worst was still to come.
He was bombarded by other
accusations in the weeks after
Indy, with one fan's claim that
he shoved her at Bristol even
going to a grand jury last
month before he was cleared
of any wrongdoing.
It meant thaf no matter
how good he was running on
the track, critics still
shrug!led Stewart off"'- certain· h1s problems woull;l prevent him from ever winning

83

252 Upper
River Rd.
Gallipoli~, OH

Place Your Business's Ad here
Call The Daily Sentinel for details

.,

I'dea"
.

Schmidt made · the lead . got four outs for his second
sta11d up. ·He Mlowed· four save of the series.
hits and struck out eight,
All was calm at the ball·
reaching 98 mph with his parlc. following Wednesday
fastball. It was fine redemp- night's fracas. La Russa and
tion for him, having lost to Baker were each fined $500,
Atlanta this month in his and non-roster players only other playoff start.
many of whom left the
"It was probably my best dugout to join the pushing
gaine because of ,the CU'CUm- and shoving - were banned
stances," Schmidt said.
from the bench.
Lofton, in the middle of . Umpire crew chief Randy
Game . l's skimiish and Marsh, after talking with
booed because of it, helped commissioner Bud Selig and
out. He caught a fly ball in other • baseball officials,
short center field and threw decided not to issue a warnout J.D. Drew at the plate to ing to the clubs about inside
end the third. ·
pitches. There were no probe
Backup Ramon Martinez lems, either, dispelling
also made a neat contribu- thoughts that the rivals had
tion. After replacing Aurilia become Arch Enemies.
at shortstop in a double
The crowd of 52,195 jlOt
switch, he had a suicide- right into the spirit, jeenng
squeeze bunt in the ninth for Lofton when he walked to
insurance.
the plate to iead off the game
· "It'll probably be five and cheering even louder
years before we call another when he flied out.
one," Baker said.
·
Lofton scored three times
The &lt;;ardinals finally . in Game I, and· the way he
scored on a pinch-hit homer twisted out of reliever ·Mike
by Eduardo Perez with two Cruaale's
high-and-tijlht
outs ih the eighth. Robb Nen fastball · in the fifth inmng

,

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

.·

81

indefinitely with
. ankle inJury

could have won the event,
but let him instelld take. the
· .clieckered flag.
not
supposing
While
Earnhardt or Stewart for that
matter are about to make any
jumps from their · current
owners (after . all, J11nior's
mom owns his ride), fans just
may have seen the founda·
tion laid for a long friendship
on the track between •two of
/ the so-called "Young Guns"
of the sport. ·
.

'

sentinel.com

Frkllly, October 11,2002

www.mydallyaentinel.com

-··

�•

•

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•

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday. October 11, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Scoreboard

It takes·• lot of traininq to become a Fi~~qhter,
but an.,one can become • Fire Preventerl
Use these tips during

Baseball

. Cincinnati. .... 0

w

Oakland ........ .4

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP
SERIES
1
Amertcan League
•
Tuesday. Oct. 8

Denver ...........4

San Diego .....4
Kansas City ...3

Minnesota 2, Anahe im 1, Minnesota
leads series 1"-0
·

•

Fire Prevention Week, October 6-12,

.3
Philadelphia ... 3
Wash1ngton .. 2
Dallas .......... 2

·A(laheim 6, Minnesota 3, series tied 1-1

;

Frlday, Ocl.t1
-Minnesota (Radke 9·5) at Anahe im
(j'Jashburn 1B·6) . 8:19p.m. (Fox)
Saturday, Oct. t2

w

New 01eans .. 4
Tampa Bay .. 4

"MinOesota (Mitto'l-.., 13 -9) at An3he im
(~acl&lt;ey H), 7:50 p.m. (FOK)

Carolina ..
Allanta ..

Sunday, Oct t3
'Minnesota at AMheim, 4:50p.m .. if

w

Tuesday, Oc:t. 15
: Anaheim at Minnesota. e:20 p.m., it nec-

essary (Fox)

Middleport 992-3345

Pomeroy

0

90

01.000 162

1 0 .800 124
1 0 .BOO 111

9f
64
2 0 600 171 158
NFC

18 LSU .
. ...... 4·1
19 . Kansas St. ....
.4-1

L T Pet PF PA
2 0 .600 76 B1
2 0 .600 165 92
2 0 .500 79 94
3 0 400 74 107
South
L T Pet PF PA
1 0 .BOO 143 11B
1 .o .800 126 53
2 0 .600 89 pi
3 0 250 83 74
North
LTPciPF

PA
1 0 .BOO 145 135
3 · 0 400112 132

a o .2sd' as
4

0 .000

w
Miami ..... ..... .. 4
New England .. 3
euffalo .. .. ...... 2
N.Y. Jets ......... 1

• Security Systems &amp; Fire Alarms (Residential 1Commorclol)
• CCTV Cameras/ Alarm Installation I Testing
• Fire Extinguishers/Equipment (SaiHIServlce)
Rastaurant Suppression Systems
• C02 Beverage CyUnders

w
Indianapolis .... 3
tlacksonville .... 3
Houston ...... :... 1
;rennessee .. ... 1.

Let our FAMILY help prot:ect YOUR FAMILY!

'eaH:imore .......w2
Cleveland .. ... 2

(740) 446·78ZS

992-2955

l'lttsburgh ......1

LTPctPF
1· 0 .BOO 156
2 0 .600 142
3 0 .400 163
4020075

PA
9B
106
1BO
162

99 141

West .

WLTPctPFPA

T Pct . PF PA
1075092 70
1 0 .750 104 72
3 0 .250 42 92
4 0 .200 107 159
North
L T Pet PF ·PA
. 2 0 .500 67 79
3 0 .400 124 117
3 0 ..250 76 105

6. GeOrgia ..
. ... 5·0
7. Oregon .
.. .5-0
8. Notre Dame
.. 5·0
9. Florida St. .
....... 5- t
10. Tenne$.,see·.,.. . ...... 4-1
11 Iowa St.
...... 5·1

14
16

71 0

20

687

6
24

582
569
435

21

1,485

7

1,390
1,349

B

1,182

Thurwc:tly's G•me
. No. 4 Virg inia Tech 28, Boston College 23
Saturday•• Game•
No. 1 Miami vs. No. 9 AOf ida State, Noon
No 2 Oklahoma at No. 3 Texas at Callas,

3.30p.m.

.

9
11

1,132
1,000

10
15

·· ·1

Atlanta..
Indiana.
.: ... 1
New Orlea ns ..... 1
· Chicago ...
.... 0
Milwaukee ......... 0
Toronto ..
.... 0
Cleveland..
... 0

.

No. 5 Oh~ State vs. San Jose State,
Noon
No.6 Georgia vs No. 10Tennessee. 3:30
p.m .
No. 1 Oregon at UCLA, 3:30 p.m.
No. 8 Notre .Dame vs . Pittsburgh, 2:;30
p.m .
No. 11 Iowa State vs . Texas Tech, 7 p.m.
No. 12 Washingtorl State at Stanford, 5
p.m.
.
No. 1 3 Michigan vs. No. 15 Penn State,
3:30p.m.
No. 14 North Carolina State at North
Carolina, Noon
No. 16 Florida vs. No. 18 LSU, 7:45 p.m.
No. 11 lowa ·vs Michigan State, Noon
No. 19 Kansas State vs . OklahOma State,
2p.m
No. 20 Southern California vs. California,
6:30pm.
No. 21 Air Force vs. Brigham Young , 10
p.m.
No. 22·Washington vs. Arizona, 3:30p.m
No 23 Wisconsin at Indiana , Noon
ND. 24 Auburn vs. Arkansas, 12:30 p.m.
No. 25 Mississippi vs. Arkansas Sta~. 2
p.m.

· Thursday's Games
EAST
Villanova 17, Penri 3
Virginia Tech 2e. Boston College 23

SOUTH
Ncrthwestern St. 40, SW Texas 27

MIDWEST
Minnesota 45, Northwe·stern 42

•

NASCAR
Tho 2002 NASCAR Winston Cup
schedute (winners In parentheseal and
driver point standings:
Feb. 17 - Daytona 500 , Daytora Beach,
Fla . (Ward Burton)
Feb. 24 - SubwaY 400, Rockingham,
N .C. (Matt Kenseth)
March 3 - UAW-OaimlerChrysler 400,
Las Vegas. (Sterling Marlin)
MBNA Ameri ca 500,
March 10 Hampton, Ga. (Tony Stewart)
- M arch 17 - Carolina .Dodge Dealers
400, Darlington, S.C. (Sterling Marlin)
March 24- Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn
{Kurt Busch)
Apr il 8 - Samsung/AadioShack 500,
_Fort Worth. Texas. (Matt Kenseth)

Wednesday, Oct 9
Los Angeles ~. Colorado 0. LA w1ns
SelieS 6·0

.5
5

New Jersey ...
0 1.000
Washington
0 1 000
New York
1
1
500
Oflando ....
.. 1
..,
500
Miami.
... 0
1
000
Philadelphia ..
.0
2
000
Central DivlsiQn
w L Pet
Detroit
2
a 1.000

Columbus (6) vs. New England (2)
Sunday, Oct. 6
Col umbus p, New England 0 , tiel senes

GB

tied 1·1
Wednesday, Oct. 9
New England 1, Columbu s 0. NE lead s
series 4-t
Saturday, Oct. 12
Columbus at New England, 4 p m

.500
.500
.500

1
.1
2 .

1

.000
.000
.000

15
15
15

.Ooo

2

Midwest Olvision
w L Pel
Dallas ..
2
0 1.000
Houston ..
.1
0 1.000
Minnesota ..
.1
o 1.000
Memph1s..
. .. 1
1 .500
San Antonio
... 1
1 .500

MLS Cup 2002
Sunday, Oct 20
At FOxboro, Mass.
. Semifinal winners, 1 30 p.m.

GB

Transactions

.5
.5

BASEBALL
American LeagUe
BOSTON RED SOX- Ass igned INF·OF
·B ryant .Nelsorl. C Kevin Brown . AHP
Paxton Crawford, RHP Jason Shiell, and
INF Juan Diaz to Pawtucket ot the
International Leag ue. Reinstated LHP Jeff
Wallace and INF Calvin Pickering from the
60-day disabled li st
NEW YORK YANKEES-Announced C
Alberto Castillo and RtrlP Mike Thurman
have refused outright ass ignmen t to
Columbus of the IL and have elected free
/
agency.

Ulah..
..... .. .. 1
2 .333
1.5
Aug . 4. - Brickyar.d 400. Indianapolis. Denver , .............
1.5
(Bill Elliott}
Paelllc Olvi&amp;ion
Aug. 11 - Sirius Satellite Radio at The
L
Pet
GB
Glen, Watkins Gler;l , N.Y. (Tony Stewart)
Porliand ..
Aug . 18 - Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
....... 2
0 1.000
.5
(Dale Jarrett)
.
Golden State ..... 1
0 1.000
1
~ Aug. 24 -Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn L.A. Clippers ........ I
1 .500
1
(Jeff Gordon)
Sacramento ......... 1
1 .500
1
Sept. 1 -Southern 500, Darlington, S.C
Phoenix
..... 0
0 .000
1
.5
(Jeff Gorckm )
L.A. Lakers ........ 0
1 .000
2
2 .000
Sept. 7 ·- Chevy Monte Carlo 400, Seattle ................ 0
Richmond, Va . (Matt t(enseth)
Thur&amp;day's Games
New Hampshire 300,
Orlando 9e. Atlanta 86
· · Sept . 15 Loudon. (Ryan Newman)
Washington 99. Philadelphia 84
Sept 22- MBNA America 400. Cover,
Boston 115, Chicago 104
Del. (Jimmie JOhnson)
Oefroit 85, Cleveland eo
Sept 29 -Protection One 400, Kansas
New York 97. San Antonio 93
City, Kan. (Jeff Gordon)
New OrleallS 95, Indiana 93
Oct. 6 - EA Sports 500, Talladega. Ala .
Dallas 91, Denver 83
(Dale Earnhardt Jr.) ·
Portland 99 1 L.A. Clippers 75
Oct. 13 UAW·GM Quality 500,
Sacramento 102, Utah92
Concord, N .C.
Friday's Games
, Oct 20 - Martinsville 500, Martinsville.
Minnesota vs. Miami at santo Domingo,

a
w

coo

TORONTO BLUE JAYS--Assigned RHP
Soon Cassidy, LHP Gustavo Chacin , OF
Brian Lesher, OF Pedro Swann and LHP
Scott Wiggins outright to S_yracuse of the

IL.
National League
CINCINNATI
REDS-Named
Bill
Moloney pitching coach for Chattanooga of
the Southern Lea·gue, Larry Pier~on pitching coach for Potomac of the Carolina
League, and Billy Wh ite hitting coach and
Jamie Garcia pitching coach -tor Dayton of
the Midwest League .

V~. 2? _NAPA 500 , Hamp
· ton, Ga.

Dominican RepubliC, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at New Jersey, 7:30p.m'
-Nov. 3- Pop Secret 400 , Rock ingham ,
N.C.
.
,
Toronto at ~hicago. 8"30 p.m.
Dallas at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Nov. 10 _ Checker Auto Parts 500K ,
Avondale, Ariz.
.
Memphis vs . L:A. Lakers .at Little Rock,
Nov. 17- Homestead 400, Homestead, • Ark.., 8:30p.m
Seattle at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m .
Fla.
Driver Standings
Portland at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
..3,95e .
Saturday's Games
1. Tony Stewart .......
2. Mark Martin .......
...... 3,886
Orlando vs. Miami at Estero, Fla., 7:30
3. Jimrltte Johnson .
. ...... .3,876
p.m.
4. Ryan Ne!Nrnan ..
...... .3,821
Phoenix at New York, 7:30p.m.
...... 3,786
Atlanta at"lndiana, 8 p.m.
5. Rusty Wallace
6. Man Kenseth ....
...... 3,757
oe"nver vs. L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City,
7. JeH Gordon ....
......... 3,757
e:30 p.m.
·
e. Bill Elliott ...... .... .
..3,729
San Antonio vs. New Orleans at Biloxi.
9. Ricky Rudd ..
........... 3,712
Miss., 8:30p.m.
... 3,703
Golden Stat e at Sacramento. tO p.m.
10. Sterling Marlin
1, . Kl.Jrt Busch ..
. .. 3,634
Sunday's Games
Philadelphia at Toronto. 6 p.m.
12. Dale Jarrett ..
··· 3 ·594
13. Dale Earnhardt Jr..
..3,481
Cl
Memphis at LA
. . ippers, 9 p.m.
.. 3 ,417
14. Je ff Burton ..

15. Michael WallfjF
16 Ricky craven ...

3,362
.3,292
17. Jeff Gteen .
....... ...... ..... .3,224
te. Bobby Labonte .
.3, 111
19. Robby Gordon ...
. .. 3.089
20. Dave Blaney ......

.3,025

Basketball
NBA Preseason
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
Boston ....

W
.... .2

L Pet.
0 1.000

GB

"

1

1.5
2

WESTERN CONFERENCE

(Bill ~ioff)

Winston Cup Sarles

W·L Points Pvs
1
1. Miami (73) .:
.... S-0 1,649
3
2. OklahOma .......... 5~0 1,707
2
3. Texas (1) ......... .... S.O 1,69B
4
4. Virginia Tech
5"..() 1,632
5
5. Ohio St
.6-0 1,552

L

en

Apnl 14 - V•rginia 500. Martinsvi!le
(Bobby j..aoonte )
April 21 - Aaron's 499, TaHadega, Ala
(Dale Earnhardt Jt.)
Apnl 28 NAPA Auto Parts 500,
Fontana, Calit. (J immie Johnson)
May 4 Pontiac Exciternent 400,
Richmond. (Tony Stewart)
•
May 26- Coca·Cffia 600, Concord. N C
{Mark Martini
June 2 - MBNA Platinum 400. Dover.
Del . (J immie Johnson)
June 9 - Pocono 500, Long Pond; Pa
(Date Jarrett}
Ju.f1e 16- Michigan 400. Br~lyn (Matt
Kenseth)
June 23 Dodge/Save Mart 350,
Sonoma. Cal~. (Ricky Rudd)
July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla
(Michael Waltrip)
'
July 14- Tropfcana 400 , Joliet , Ill. (Kevin
-Harvick)
July 21 -New England 300, Loudon,
N.H. (Ward Burton}
JUly 28- Penosytvania 500, Long Pond

138

ra~k ing :

South

17

25 Football Schedule

Top

The Top Twenty Five team s in The
Associated Press college football poll, with
· tirst.place \IOtes in parentheses. records
through Oct. 6, total points based on 25
points tor a tirst pl;;~tce vote through one
point lor a 25th place vote and previous

. East

99e
986

13
20 . Southern Cal
' 3-2 .
301
18
21 . Air Force ........ ... 5-0
29e
22 . Washington ..
. 3-2
293
12
23 Wisconsin ......
.. 5-1
223
19
24 Auburn ................. 4-1
222
25 Mississlppi ............. 4-1
113
Othen receiving votes: Alabama 150,
UCLA 123, Colorado 97. California 80,
Te~tas Tech 50, Kentu cky 43, Bowling
Green 39, Marshall 39, Louisville 23,
Pittsburgh 21, Arkansas 15, Nebraska 9,
Bosto n College 7, Colorado St. 7, Oregon
St . 6, Michigan St. 4, Texas A&amp;M 3,
Clemson 2, Boise St 1, SOuthern ~iss. 1.

East

Associated Press Top 25

National Football L.eague ·
AFC

Fire U Safety

Pomeroy, Ohio

PA .

.,.he

Snouffer's

PH.AR~ACY

112 East Main Street

West
L · T Pel PF

College Football

LOHSE

Kenneth McCutlough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

12 Washington St
5-1
13 M•chigan ..
4-1
.. 6-0
14 N c State
15. Penn St. ........ . .4-1
16 Florida ................ 4-2
17 Iowa ................... 5-1

44 147

Bowling

Pro Football

Quality
Print Shop

0 .000

-o

.,

T

5

Slr1Ftrdox&gt; ... 3 1 0 750 B7 60
rjssary (fox)
Arizona ....... ... 3 2 0 .600 99 87
seanle .....•. ... 1 3 o .250 84 e7
National Lague
St. Louis ......... 0 5 0 .000 ·74 125
•
Wednesday, Ocl 9
Sund•y, Oct. 13
• San Francisco 9. St. Louis 6, San
Buffalo at Houston, 1 p.m.
F.ranclsoo leads series 1
Carotina at Dallas, 1 p.m
Thursday, Oc:t. 10
Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at lndianaports, 1 p.m.
• San · Francisco 4, St. Louis 1, Sail
New Orleans at Washington , 1 p.m.
~ranclsco leads series 2-o
Green Bay at New England, 1 p m.
· Saturday, Oct. 12
Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
: Sl. Louis (Finley 1 1-15) at San Francisco
PiHsburgh at Oncirinati , 1 p.m.
(Ortiz 14·10), 4:20p.m. (F&lt;»&lt;J
Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. t 3
Qakland at St . Louis , 4:15p.m
:St . Louis (Benes 5-4) at San Francisco
JaCksonville at Tennessee. 4:15p.m.
Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m.
(Hernandez 12-16), 7:50p.m (Fo•)
Miami at Denver, 8:30p.m.
,
Monday. Oct. 14
Open : N.Y. Jets, Arizol')a, Phi!adelphia,
+St. Louis at San· Francisco, 8:20 p.m ., if
Chicago
~eoessary (Fox)
Monday, O&lt;::t. 14
Wednesday, Oct. 1 ~
San Franc•sco at seattle, 9 p m
· San Francisco at St . Louis, 4 :20 p.m., if
Sunday, Oct. 20
~eoessary (Fox)
Caro lina at Atlanta _. 1 p.m.
Thursdav, Oc:t. 17
Jacksonville at Baltimore. 1 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit, 1 p.m.
• San F!3ncisco at St. Louis, e:20 p.m., it
Denver at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
~ecessary (Fox)
BuHato at Miami, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Minnesota at New York Jets, 1 p.m
Tampa BaY at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Seattle at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
.Mason Lanes
Houston at Cleveland, 4:05p.m.
San Diego.at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Wednesday Mixed league
Dallas at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
King Pins.. .. .......
......... 44-12
Washington at Green Bay, 4:15p.m.
Pine Hills Golf Course .. ..
. .... 34-22
. Open Date: Cincinnati; New England,
:Sammy's Construction ....
...30-26
N.Y. Giants, Tennessee
·
Powell's Super Value .
..... 26-30
Monday. Oct. 21
Wally's Warriors ......... ...... ..............22-34
lndianap_olis at Pinsburgh, 9 p.m.
Meigs Industries ..
. ..... .12-44
High team and series
:
Sammy's ·Construction .........719 - 2,056

Keep a Flashlight
Charged and Handy.
If there's a fire in
the home, it can become
smoky and too dark to see.
·Use a flashlight to get out
or signal for 'help.

SWISHER

Green Bay ..... 4
Chicago ......... 2
Detroit ....... ..... 1
Minnesota ...... 0

:
Wednesday, Oct. 16
•Anaheim at Minnesota, 8.20 p.m., il nec -

Plan and Practice
an Escape Route.
Create at least two ways
out of every room in
the home. Practjce
getting out quickly,

Stay Alert ... Stay Safe!

.. 3

nee·

ossary (FoK)

Matches and
Lighters Are Not Toys.
These are tools for
adults, and are not to be
used without supervision.
They should be stored in
a secure place where kids
can't reach them.

w

,. "! Y Giants

Wednesday, Oct. 9

to .help you get started.

Change Smoke
Alarm·Batteries.
A good way to
remember is to change
the batteries when you
tum your clock back
to standard time in
the fall.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 11, 2002

HOUSTON ASTROS- Declined 2003
option on RH P Shane Reynolds . Assigned
C Alan Zinter outright to New Orleans of
the PCL.
MONTREAL EXP05-Signed RHP Julio
Manon . Released INF-OF Wilton Guerrero.

..

NEW YORK METS-claimed RHP Joe
Orloski oft wai\ters from Toronto and RHP
Frailklin Nunez. from Philadelphia.
PITTSBURGH f"IRATES-Fired 18
coach Tommy Sandt and catching instructor Russ Ni,.;on. Reassigned hitting coach
Dave Clark , 38 cqach Trent Jewett and
field · coordinator Jeff Banister within the
organizatio~ . Released OF Ad rian 8rown.
Claimed RHP Jim .Mann off waiver~ from
Hou.ston.

HOCKEY

Soccer
Major L.eague Soccer
(Seeding In parentheses)
Quarterfinals
·(First to five points. Three points
tor victory, one point for tie.)
Semifinals
(First to five points)
ColOrado (5) vs. Los Angeles (1)
Saturday, Oct. 5
Los Angeles 4, Colorado 0. Los Angeles
leads 3-0

National Hockey League
DALLAS STARs-Placed C Jason Arnon
on injured reserve. Recalled AW JDn Sim
from Utah of rhe AHL: ~
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING- ACquired LW
Boyd Kane from the New York Rangers tor
LW Gordie Dwyer.
American Hockev League

CHICAGO WOLVES-,Announcep D
Luke Sellars ·ha s been reassigned to
Greenville ot the ECHL. Signed RW Judd
Medak and assigned him to Greenville.
Released C Krzysztof Wleckowski .

Public Sale and Auction

&amp;C

Anornevsat

., .

StRte248
'' Chester · 985-3301

8580

.,

992-3785

(740) 698-1428
house Into a mobile home.
HOUSEHOLD· Sofa and malching chair, coffee

OUR 'EXP_ER.lS' BREAK DOWN NEXT WEEK'S ' MATCA, PS

and end tables, lamps, area rugs, artific ial trees,
Pioneer 48" co lor TV, GPX 5 disc CD player
w frecord player' and dual cassette, Computer
desk, King size bed, 9 drawer dresser w/mirror,

992-6059

3 drawer dresser w/mirror, 4 drawe·r chests ,

.,

•

The

D.aily Sentinel

I

FAMILY RESTAURANT
Pomeroy 992-5432

Valley

ron•

Point Pl~asan t at

Jackaon

Mtilll at

'\burBank/n~...
-·~ ~~k

a

-•• t t

992-6611

---

--

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

-·-·

.

Gallia Academy
at portsmgyth

Gallia Academy at
Portsmguth

· Gallia Academy
at P9rtsmouth

point pleasant
at Jackson

Poin1 Pleasant
at Jackson

Point Pleasant at
Jgckson

Point Plalnnl
at JackSon

~ al

M$I

Point Pleasant at
Jackson

'

Molgt

Alexander

~al

at Alexander

Alexander

Rock Hill at
RIVervaney

Rock Hill
at River Valley

Rock Hill at
R!verYallay

Rock Hill
at River Valley

Miller at

Miller at

MiiiBr at

Miner at

Euliil1

·MAlliS a1
Alexander

Miller at

Miller at

Enllm

Enllm

Enllm

South Gallia
at Wabama

South Gallia
at Wahamll

South Gallia
atWahama

Qyyan Valley

Gyyan Valley
Southern at
Watedord

e11tern

Euliil1

sOuth Gallia
at Wllbeme

South Gallia
at Wahamo

Hannan at
Guyan valley

Hannan at
.Guvan Vallev

Gyyan Va!lev

Hannan at
Guvan Valley

Southern at

Sou thern at

Southern at
Waterford

Southern at
Watedord

Southern at
Waterfprd

Athens

Alben~
at Logan

Athens at

·Ll!!llll

at Logan

Wellston
at Nelsonville· York

Wellston
at Nelsonville -York

Wellston
at Nelsonville-York

· Wtttrford
Athens

al Ll!!llll

South Gallia
at Wahama ·
Hannan at

al Ll!!llll

Wellston
at Nelsonville-York

Wellston
at Nelsonville· York

· Hannan

at

Hannan at

AIIWll

'~UI

smoker grill, lawn chairs, Coleman lantern in

D~lUR
with a
Daily
,. Sentinel
classified
Ad!
I 992•2155

case.
ANTIQUE AND PRIMITIVES: Jadeite, McCoy,
3 gal. _Stone jugs, crocks, and more misc .

Richard Workman, Auctioneer
NOTE: Please note we w ill be starting at' ·
5 :30PM. Not res onsible for accidents.

·~·············~····················•
!*
ABSOLUTE AUCTION
!

i* As Agents for ~~,._---~~~--~**
~berta C .
Uhrig, Mary ..
A . Leasure,
Atty. In Fact .
we will sell
:
the
following on
the premises

:

*
!
!
!

*

SAT.
--OCTOBER 26, 2002 10AM
BE ON TIME !!I THERE ARE NO SMALL
ITEMS .. .DURATrON .OF AUCTION APPRO X.

*
!
!

'h hr. Located from Chi lli colhe. Ohio take US :
Route 50 East 6 miles ; tum .right at ·Freeman!

Subdivision*

onto
Terrace !
Or. then left on !
Maple Rd . to
107 Maple Rd ., !
Londonderry : :
Ohio
REAL!

In Memory

!

Gallipolis
99-2-2136
446-2265
Tuppers Plains
985-3161

lrr Memory

Howard C.
Birchfield

.

212 8125 . 10/9/00

Gone but not
forgotten
We love'and
miss you.
•

RACINE

SYRACUSE

949-2210

992-6533

-·---- ··------\

Gailia Academy at
· Portem~yth

Gallia Acader:ny
at eousmouth

Rock Hill
at River Valley ·

J.ggan

•

[

Bryan L.ong
Copy Editor
Record : 45·25
Last week: 4-6
(winners in bQ!ll)

Rock Hill
.it River Valley

Wellston
at Nelsonville-York

DEALER

.

Derek Taylor
Sports Slaff
Record: 46-24
Last week: 6·4
(winners in !l2k!l

1

.llact•e·lhaeN
740.992-2825

Dan Hermes
Sports Staff
Record: 42128
Last week: 7·3
(winners in !m!2)

at Alexander

Athens at

[3]@csfSrrc~)[Kl~0 _
Yo11've go't queatlone. We've got anawen•
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH 46760

Hoosier Daddy
The Masked Picker
Record : 41-29
Last week : 5·5
(winners in bQ!il)

Butch Cooper
Sports Staff
Record: 58-12
_ Last week: 7·3
· (win~ers in b.Q!Q)

Alexander

Wftlpdprd

Pomeroy

... aw~D0

9 Fifth Avenue • Coolvltle
740-667-··

Co.

Middleport

(

~-----·

Gaflia Academy at
mouth

Pomeroy992-2115

·. &amp;Supply

Best

Mike Putman, Owner

•

Middleport ··992-5627

Pomeroy 992-6682

VVhite Funeral Home
Since· 1858

992-5141
992-5444

Andrew Carter
Asst. Editor
Record : 47-23
L.ast week : 9·1
(winners in bl!ld)

B,rogan-Warner
Insurance

992-2155

CROW'S~

.

Middleport
Pomeroy ..

111 Court Street • Pomeroy

.

TOOLS: Nuway 4xt2 Bench bandsaw, 10" com·
pound Miter saw, 14" BenchPro cutoff saw, 6
speed drill press , 4x6 bell sander, Rotozip ,
Bench ~rlnder, Poulan Chainsaw. ·Craftsman
AC&amp;DC Welder, Black &amp; Decker hedge 1nmmer.
Weed eater Super blower vac , Ranch hand
15hp 42" cu t riding mower (runs good) . wheel
barrel, . steel fence post driver &amp; posts. yard
tools, Sm roll around lool boK, car ramps, furni ture clamps, plus lots more misc. picnic table,

Funeral Home

992-3381

Pomeroy

Bassett Annoire, Dinette set w/4 chairs, Dining
room table w/2 leafs and 6 chairs , China hutch"
tip, Misc. tables, Sm. Kitchen appliances .. fans,
assorted pictures, WeskJ Cadence electric
treadm ill, 2 air conditioners .

Fisher

Downing Childs
Mullen Musser
Insurance

•

TRI·COUNTY AUCTION
ST RT 588 • GAL.L.IPOL.iS, OH .

We wm be selling the personal property of
Lo11n1e Medley. He has movetl from a large ·

11 0 West Second • Pomeroy

212 E. Main Street

Pomeroy

PUBLIC AUCTION

FRIDAY, OCT. 11 5:30PM

I
'

.\•

v

····---~--------·

Love, Marie, Jim,
Rob, Teresa ,
Kimberly. Ray.
arrd
Grmulci!ild re11

Sharp

1925 •

Model T FORD !.
Touring 3 dr. 4 cyl. w/starter' option ; black ext . !

~~~~ ~~~~~s;:~:~n r!p0a~~t~~ =~e~ 8b~~=B4 dr. i

:

! straight ' S gas motor, 3 spd ., Valva -N-Head~ !
! showing 28,737 miles Style #374419, Body:
!.-u#25667 (Note: some peeling paint) 103091292 •
! 1966 Buick LeSabre 400 4 -dr. hard top 375 !
:. ve Wildcat motor, auto trans power. steering &amp; !
* brakes, original car w /82,2 11 m 1les: Shop !
· ! made tandem axre bumper pull traile r, riding !
! mower, push mower &amp; wheelchair ramps . •
! Only 7 items·to auction so please be on tinie . :
! .This auction will .be short &amp; sweetl R!=MOVAL
: is day of a.uction . Cars have always been ga·
: raged ; tor further info. Call Larry Leasure
• 740.887.4471
TERMS: Cash or cashier's
: chOck: everything sold aiS·is to highest bidder:
.:. no warranties express or implies; all sales

!

•

final . STANLEY &amp; SON, INC. (740) 715·3330

www.s.tanlevandean.com

!
:
:
:
:
•

!

*

.......•...•••••••••.••.•...•.•..••.,
,,

:

Henry M Stanley. Ill, CAl , .&lt;ARE AudiOflllllt &amp; RE Brohr

:

�·, Page B 6 • The Dally SentinAI

• Friday, October 11, 2002

~~ r

.... t'

~rtbune

- Sentinel - l\egfster
CLASSIFIED
'

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

: Purobrod Cockar Sponiot 94 Honda Accord E
• " - - . 2 Block, 1 122 000 mlloa ......... ____!·

:• -wormod. 8Vet
-

C-.ct
verY

· --~-

'

'-"·
lion. $4500 (740}448-8239
nlcelll130. _,, call1·740- ·car. trom $500, polict lm• 441-44112 8 to 5 p.m.
poundo lor salel For lilting

Me9tCou.My. OH

0

:

~ Tllrier puppy,Swkl old

;

•.

~~· =5-~med

r

1-800-719-3001 ext. 3901

WINTER STORAGE
lletgo County
Flif._.,cll
Arrival: Oct5 &amp; Oct. 19
8om · 12pm
Roleue Aprtl29, 2003
. A too or $20 will be
cho!gea for . .rty
val, late arrt¥al,aarJy
NmDVal, late retnDVII,
o.r 11n~lme accus Ia
wanlld to folrgroundo
othlr than atated clitia.
• Building apoco lo tlrat

I

~~

• Rat/ Fox Torrlar pupt, .a
• -lea old,. $50; Beagle 1883 Ford 1so, 8 cylinder,
.: mixed pupo. F""'l 8 - 4WO, runs good, $1,550.

• old. (740}&amp;45-2599

(740}446-4999

I

1990 Dodgo Pick-up, 2WO,

• AKC B&lt;luett Hound pup-

~~ -=~i~is~

:•

C.aiiM. &lt;;:owUy, OH

2126

110.000 millis. St800
(740)256-1875

.

oeo

com~~

\!tribune

To Place

Your Ad, .

Sentinel

= :':01-'-:211.:....._ _-:.: - - - ~

Register

... Malteu pups- P1,.1rebred,
: AKC reglotarod. Available
- Ocmber 18.3 rnalea.- ·tho po:fect pot 1or all. ca1
: : (740)446-7454 leave moo-

(740) 446-2342 . (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• - Or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To (740)992·2157
675-5234

••r
·~

Monday thru Friday
to 5:00 p.m.

.
'•

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ.

.t

\ "\\ ()1 '\( 1· \11 '\ l "i

l'ruooNAU&gt;

Ir~

~~.

__
·•

Display Ads

Dally In - Column: 1 :00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insert[on
In Next Day 's P.aper

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
PubllcatiOI1
Sunday Display: 1:00 p . m.

In -Column : 1:00 p .m.

..

110

11

IIELPWANml

sal~

110

..
11

i

· I

""lny misc. items

AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Sell, · Shirley Spears. 304·
~-------· Junction of Jackson Pike 675-1429.

and Watson road, 9:00 Sat-

C·1 Beer ·Carry Out permit
tor sale, Che$1er Townsh ip,
~ei~s CQunty, send lette_rs
of Interest to: The Da1iy
S9(ltlnel~ PO Box 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

r

I

urday. Name bl~nd clothes,
and many other 1tems.
Aaln or shine, lhside saleFriday 8.Spm, 10• 112 miles
out 141 ar Gage in btue &amp;
white trailer. (?40) 379 .2306

Community Action is ·seek·
lng temporary Intake Clerk

Acyld~rog~o~amrks.w0ithrgaEnlmzaargaUonn:

ai skills, computer exportence, and ability to deal with
persons ol various socloeconom:c . b9Ckgrounds. Valid
Drivers hcense, hiQh school
~raduate or _equivalent.
el~ resuma .wtth three (3)
re e~ence~ to Mrs. Edwards,
Gen:a Me•gs C.A.A, 8\)10 N
State ,Route 7, Cheshire,
"'' ·10/IB/02
OH 45620 UJ
.
.
GMCAA is EOE.

.

: For oolo•
:
.,

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

•

.

.... alwwp confkMntf... •&lt;Cur'nlnt r.t. c.rd 1ppi6M. • AU ,..IMtlit• Mverf:IMment. .,. •ub)ecllo "thll Federll F•lr Hou.lng Act
.ccepts only '*P . .ract Ida ....Ung EOE ttlndllrda. W. will not knowtngly ICcept ...y aC:fvtfllllng In vlolltlon of Uti Jaw,

IriO

lb:LPWANm&gt;

B~

I r'o.

OPfORIUNITY . ·

Ir

ro~
H

Land home packages. No
payments while under con·
INOTICEI
structlon.
Little
or no
OHIO VALLEY PiJBLISH· down payment required.
lNG CO. recommends that (740)446·3218
you do buslneoo with people
you know, and NOT lo send New 2000 sq ff home, 10
moneythroughthomailuntll
1 t
1
H
11&amp;1
~o.-.I ..... ..__ mnuas . rom
osp .
~"•
you ·
- Im•etllgat~
,,. Complete above ground
Good O&lt;ganizatlon skills
ottonng.
pool with porch, driveway
noed&amp;d. Will work dlradly
and garage foundation.
for head of corporate opera- Start Your Business To· Price ·below appraisal.
tions. Based in Point Pleas- day•.. Prima Shopping Cen- ,(740)446·3384.
ant, WV._Send resume and ter Space Available At Al·
·
·
salary requirements to:
fordable Rate. ·2 Nice Exec· PRICE REDUCED. 3 bedFruth, Inc., P.O Box 332,
utive Offices. N8wly Re- room, 2 bath Brick Ranch
Poln_t Fl'leasant, WV 25550. modeled. Spring Valley P·la- on 1.5 flat acres, newer carAttn. Human Resources
, za. Call (740)446-3481 .
per, doors an appllance.s,

_O.~pt_._______

r

SERVI~~CE'l~..

~~E

Ir · .AIIFOR~
.......

,.
.

or 1tea.

•Thl•

r.
~ ~~~.
~~ I
...........

.

One bedroom, upstairs 11740 Caae Skid Loader,
apartment (partially lurnish- $3500. (740)&amp;43·0508
ed) at 651- Second Avenue,
Gaiilpo!la. $350 par month 3 lots In Mound Hill Comeplus $350 deposR. Water &amp; · tory. Must oeUe beat price.
trash Included (no other uUI- can &lt;7401446·2!58 """'
30
acres, ·•. $55,000. Illes Included In .rent}. No _
nl-'ng,_a._ _ _- - ' - - - (740}379·9257 .
.
pets. Six month lease ro- ' 6600 BTU L.P ••• hooting
REALFm'Am
qulrod. Call (740)448·7323 otove, warm• 5 roorno. $2~
WANilio · · (tlbrary} lor more lntorma- ' (740}247-3373
·
~
• tlon.
------'--~-' COOL DOWN, Central Air
.Will pay top dollar lor -prime Tara Townh;ouse Apart- . Coildltloners ·and Heat
tand . New . home buUder. ments, very Spacious, 2, Pumps. If you don't call us
(740}446-3093
Bed_
rooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1 we both lose. ·Free esti·
112 Batt\ Newly Carpeted,. mates. (740)448-8308 and
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa -. 1
291
98
;;:=:;;::===~ tio, Start ·$375/Mo. No Pets,
·
·
~~~s;mc:~.toi':!~ll~ f~ f!l
Lease Plus Security Deposit DIAECTV, SO two TV hookpl, 3481;
Required,
Days: 740·446here and oam
above
Now
Haven .
QliSI;S
E,.nlngs:
740·367·, up,
$$$, order
800·283·2640.
(304)882-3897
FOR RI!Nr
0502.
Wanted! Good credit cusBectric BaBe Board Ha8t·
tamers to purchase new "1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Tw
, era, Electric range &amp; refrig.,
. In Rlwirs Tower tor eld· Hot water heater, breaker
homo wnand. $0 dQWn to Homes From $199/Mo., 4% My/ disabled·.
box wlbreakera well tank
qualllled customers. 1-5 Down, 30 Years at 8.5% Now accepting applications wen ""'mp, windows. Much
tracts ' available. APR. For Listing~ 800·319· 1or · 1 br. a 11 u111"1
(acre
"es pat·d More.••(304)875·3686
·
740)446-3093 ·
3323 Ext. 1709.
HUD -assisted, carpeted
·
apartment. rent is 30% ot . Electric cook stoVe excell~nt
FQrecloaed SW on 2 acre 234 Sanders. "3 BR, . lire· your adjusted Income call. condltiori. Sears 88Wing matract, SSOO down to quallllad · place, $550 per month. Ref· 304-676·8679 between 8· chine wlcabinet dining room
buyare. Gall (740)448·3570 erencos &amp; dei&gt;osn required. 4 ,30 pm weokdays.EHO · suite, table wneaf &amp; 5 chairs
for a quick aale.
· C~ll (740)448·3644.
· ··
&amp; chii'IJI hutota. 2teta
Modern 1 BR aparttru!nf~Uctiaff~'T' -' kMck~riilcl{,'?'~leU,
House for sale in . ~rter, 2br. References &amp; Deposh . . (740)446-0390
. small Ice maker, rAn. queen
1800 sq. H. 3 BR, 2 bath. No Pets. (304)615·5.1 62
size high poste.:-bed. 112
(740)441-4705 Prtced to sell
Now Taking ApplicatlonsLand Conlact- "deposit re- 3 bedroom home, Miners· 35 West 2 Bedroom Town- ~~~ mat~l bed. (304)67 5·
quired. 3 bedroom, 2·112 vi~le, Ohio, river view, no hOuse Apartments, 111cludes ~---~---bath, farm house· In Patriot. pets, referencps requlr~. Wa'er
Sewage, Trash, Fisher Price Harley MotorAsking SN 900 17401379_ $450 month, call (740)992· $350/M&lt;&gt;. 740-448-0008.
cycle, good cbnd!Hon, only
9887
' :
6777 ahar 5pm.
One Bedroom •""rlmant In $75,
ballery
Included.
...,.
PI
II (740}256 •••7
M~n~U~-,3br. House localod IQ.Ma· Pt. Pleasant. Furnlahed.
.... ca
~
............:.SPUMI!.i) .-on, WV. $495. + Utilities... Very clean and ·.niCe. No .=loa:::ve::..:m:;;e:;:ssa=g&lt;=e;;..- - FOR ALE
N 0 ~ (304}
r.,ts.
n3·5881
Pet8. P'hone (304)875·1311 For sale- 12 wooden win·

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I

j76

=

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r10

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WV.

I

1

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(740)~83-0730

1

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4pm· ·

5 12 74

.

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C.AI!Ie . .

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BuiwiNG

r• .

13

r

1990 Sylvan 25 foot Crulsor, loaclod, Aok tor Paul
17401446•9177

, o· Excolltnl .corn

•

olago

·

2000 Wave Yamahe Wave
runner, GP .1200R, 155hp;

lr·cIt
.

.

..
.
~

·.

c

'

the Best Price

Your
oacme Connection, L

(177.J53.70U)
Call ror fi10it inf'CI"J &amp;cc cslil!lllt
WWJtl!6
Opon'Oam·Spm

~==r:~u::
(740) 446-1811
,....., • •, ••,
Smlc. n~t

·

v.e

,!t

'------....1

, . Ullllllllllllll- .
IIIII fir~~~~­
.. . . . .clllll

Local 843-5264

I~~~;;~M:~I\I~;or

446-8237, 67!5-7!516 or 1-800-730-4!53!5

.a....-·s•-· Cutwrt

- " " ' Suppt~ao:

....

ilJ
,.,_,

Medical

740.992·2222 o.r
7 4li-441H018 .

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)

High&amp; Dry

All vertical blindo are
made to order at
our location
• Verliealo • Wood

Seff-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Minio • Elc
144 Third Ave•

740·992·5232

Gallipolis 446-4995
Toll Fite 1-aas-745-6847

0

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
1st ThlU'Sday or
every month ·
AU pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00 ·
Bonanza Get
5FREE

Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover •
· Ventvisor • Bug
Shield &amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories
Bedliners •

'I

•

\

I •I '

11 1

POMEROY
APPLIANCE
STORE
200 E. Main St.
Open 9am-6pm
Mon thru Sat.
Phone 1112-41115
Washers, dtyerli
Like New
Freezer, Electric
Ranges, Dishwashers
Relrlgeratora, and

much more

FREE OELIVI:RY

Top • RamoYOi • Trim
• Stump Srinding

• Bucket TN:k .

COMMiiACIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

I~, I

(740) 992-5822

Tree Service

Roofing"'

11 1

\ l1 1!11 • 1l1 11 1 ( l ltll,

lOllS'

ODD JOBS

Connie's
Child CARE

me.
Painting, Power

experience, Certified

Waalilng, Mowing,

in Meigs , Athens and

WeedBitlng

Washington coun11es,

You Need It
Done, WI 'II Do It

Open 24 hours.
7 Days per weak.
Sl. AI. 7 Tuppers
Plains, OH

(740) 949-4026
or

(740) 591·9239

has openings, 15

yr.

CALL 667·6329

Sunset Home
Construction
· Bryan

Re~ves

· .

New Homes, Room Addiflons,
Garage,, Pole Buildings, Roofl,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More
·

fREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES!

740·992·7599

740~742-3411
II

I

..........

Celil•nltJ Ieiiia

The CRAFTY.

~ ~eltt"9

Windows •

YQ\)

Willi
fii ••E
111111111111 CIIJ.

Medicare Supplemer~t; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;

I

(

TFN

AriJGilald IIIP

• Replacemem

1 ·

11100
Vor·
. . tee, new tiNI, niOI rima, be. , tlrallo. $4,500. (304}S75·
71173 after 5pm.
·

Cellular
992-5479

New Homes ·, Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

all treata...
Looklnthe
Classlftedal

(340 773· 5412
C.ll 304 B74 30112

Jeff Warner Ins.

BUILDERS IOC.

.

." 1995 'Chevy

29870 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
·
45771
741)-848-2217

BISSELl

Notrlcka...

Jim Au•rk
El.atrlo, Plumbing,
•nd Sm•ll Ho"'Malnt"enanoe Joba

Hill's Self
Storage

Htrballla lnclopondent
Dloirlbutor

I

: 1882 Chevroltl Lumina Eu·

.,;, Ol&lt;ltndtcl -..my. -

basket!!! Call:

Call jeanie
and aJic how.
740.992·7998

•,, ro, • door Sadan, (740}441-

' · 80,000 M. radlolo. 110,000.
' . (304)1116-3882

PLUmBinG

"W.Vs lll ·Chevy, Pontiac, Buick. Olds
&amp;
.

Superior Homo
Molntanar:co
wo ·do all repoire on homoo
&amp;
Corpentry,
work, otc.

. ...- 1991 Bulok Alvara. Burgun•
, rt;l Burgundy lilalhar lnltrl·
' or. Loodtd, kevltoo entry,
1. t &amp;OK, t~Qollonl oondltlon,
12415. (740}441-11128

Flrablnl, oliver. v-e. 5·
tpHCI, tlttlcrulae, Air, CO.
:.,.ps, A~. dull otr·
blga. 40k miiH, 2 v-are loft

J&amp;S ElfCTRIC 6

1·800-822-0417

Everyone receives a

832=::3·;...__ _ _ _ __

fl._ 62-o822

...
, ee

4715 SOuth Chun:h St.
Ripley, WV 215271

I

74().74i-8015

; ;;,:(,;:40:;l44~
~:,;-llfi::.:I.:.O_ _ _.,.. Atoldei111al or commercial
· wtrlng, rrw~ urvloe or re~: 1968 Chrylior 5th. Avanuo palre. Muttr Llo:or:aod oloc'
. L.oacfod,
trlolon. Rldtr10\lr Ellolr~l.
. : 18110 OLDS Tounng Sod· WV000308 304-875·17811.

34'18

New&amp;Used

Deadline: Oct 20, 2002

.

•lliiiiiiliiiiiiillllli•l

'

750 East State Street Phone (74t~)5!13~i671
Athens, Ohio

Dean Hill

November 30, 2002

Free Estimates

COMnle ftolsl:li(lod 110n!

, 'f1''ndor, "'"' good, ,,3110.
den Loaded.

LARRY SCHEY

(740) 992-1705
Tonia Reiber

V. C. YOUNG Ill

(lulliy •

,.;: 811 Jeep Cho.-_ OUIO. 8·

}o il

(740) 992· 1189

(Affordable Prices)

·. 213 n. Second nue.
' middleport, 011

Pomierov, Ohio

bathe, mobile home
replilr and mora. For freo . .
"tlmatt call Chot, 740-9112·

Dodge

7122!11'N

Roctft"', Sidl"'
1'1111111,.. Gutten,Deekl,
(l'ne Estlmalel1

• ElectriCal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gunora
• VInyl Siding Ia Plln11ng
• P•llo and P"o rch Dtcka

992-6215

~

· " 6236 ,..
·.· : 85 Chevy Impels Co'nvarU·
• · btl. Machanlcally llCcollant.
Compittl car. Great drlvar.
. '·· Good to tootoro. $5,000
" " (740)258-8i36
CheVy 4x4; 88
Rom von, 380 motor, tinted
,~ wlndowo, $7,110 080; 88
. •: Dodge Oynuty, $11100
I•. 080. (740)258-8333

740.992·1671

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

• HewO.rlgH

ii!i"O";;;;;~!iiiiiiO..--, .....- - - - -..
rio
HOME
Best Serv:~e
IMFRo
"' at

2001 Mittubllhl Ecllpae R.S C&amp;C Gentiral Home Malnt• .
- ·. 161&lt; mi., olloy whla, tholt rM:nce- PaliiUng, vinyl old~· roc,. 5apd(~}8;ii)~ln 3 • lng, carpentry, doore, win-

FREE ESTIMATES

• Room Addition&amp; 6
Rornodollng

'

f

; n

in thIs
SpOCe
fOr
$75
per·•
month

" I ll\ H I ...,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Ur:Conditionallllatlme guar·
antH. Local rolarences fur·
nlshed. Eotabllohad 1975.
Call 24 Hro. (740} 448·
0870, Rogera Ba~ement
WetOrPf!&gt;OIIng.
.

Cuql liE AeiiiCidellg

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Advertise

Dear Huntora Spoclall
1971 Cobra 21 Ft. Troller,
good condition, no Ieake
$t,075.00leavoMeoaage
(740} 949-2083

1888 Buick Century, V·6,
1111/crulea, CD, and good
condition, 71,000+ mile~
$8500. (304)882·2640
.
. 2000 Chevy cavalier 011iy
: · · 29,000 mlloo. 2 door, white
•• 5-opeod and AIC, $4,995.
'· (740}446·2927

0

YOUNG'S

camper.. Elccallont Condl·
lion. 2 F~ll beds, stove,
!ridge, generator. MUCH
morel
$2,600.
FIRM.
(304)675-2327 before 9 pm.

. ';
"·
.'."
· I·

•NaliliQIIIII
. oGaligal

r---_.:..---, r-';";':;-n:;::;;;;;--,

Attn: camper, worker&amp;. huni-

• ~-:-:-.,..-::-~--:--:7

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING
949-1521

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
. Dealers .
Jl}()(j St. Rt. 7 South
LoOiville, OH 45723

era. 21' Shoal&amp; Pul! behind

'' MOTORs 1740}448-0103

CONSTRUCTION

Stop &amp; Compare

"SALES AND SERVICE"

PARTS

1984 Camper Coachman:
32 ft. perfec:t for perment
camper lite; Priced reason·
able, good condlllonl
(740} 1185-4293
·

eRi~c

www.amerlcanstandardelr.com

DEPOYI

~w..;;

' Two trade-lno 1968 Eecort,

A

• Heating

• Air Condlllonera
S~
• Service On All Branda
• Realdenllal &amp; Light Commercial
•10 yr. parta &amp; Labor
• Heating &amp; Air Condlllonlng

$65 .00- Space Limited

...

ROBERT
BISSELL

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDmONING &amp; HEATING

mEIGS miiSSIIGE .
THERIIPY

Sat.,

305

·' $350; 1988 eo:Jgar, $59~.
·: 10 othttnlln otock. CDOK

Monday-Friday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

1 mo.

.

Bus Trip

1968 Dodge CbarQir, facto- Lots .Of chroma, small block
· ·: ry RT 440, $6500 OBO. Chev. Intake cart&gt;, scoop &amp;
(740}245-5087
mora, (740)742-3805 .eve-

:' Comanche Truck. 4.0 IKor
• HO, auto, AIC, 1.13K,
.:" $2195; 1997 . Range' XLT,
auto, AJC, 711&lt;. $4295.
1994 S·IO, 1986 Silverado
· , 4x4, 1998. AchiOYo, 1988
:. c Malibu, 1995 Gland Am GT;

(740) 446·1044

(740) 992·0739

Longaberger!Dresden

New Chars Taste
.'To ~~ It A~ I Delicious Food

11188 ()Ide Cutlaaa Supromo
Broughan,
V·8,
$500,
.. , (740)992-1949
·
. 1994 Black cavalier RS.
. V·8, ...C.uonl condition,
931(, $3495; 1991. Jeep
1

Gallipolis, OH 45631

..

~~~~ •

1989 Jaoo Dsalanod Sarlos,
35ft ..5th.Whooi,Goooo neck
camper, new awning, , _
rolrigalor, a lot of extras; exOoilantoondlllon.
(740) 59t-eo5s or 367-7221

Owner:

Utensed by the Ohio
Stat' medical Ieard

PIOPII• Naw Tbl••s

' . lng, dsllverod or stored. condftlon, motor &amp; tralor In... (740}379-2181
eluded. $2000 OBO. Call
441 8299
II &lt;\ '" I ' ~ lit I \ Ill 1\
••
belora

Rt 160

Terry Lamm

ftre you stressed? .
Call new for your

304•n3-58QQ

foot flahlng boat, excallent

1985. Pontiac Perlolanno
Automatic
motor
w/overdrlva, corvette rally
·' wheels, has J•nMn CD
_ pl&amp;yer, power Hata, air
. , ohocka., 11187 Pontiac So.. ; larl Stattonwagon 307 automatk: motor w/ollerdrlve,
power windows &amp; soat, leff
front lander has dent but
runo good., 1986 Chevy C..
ltbrl1y 4dr. V-8, auto, averdrive, notKis wlndthl~
bolh driver aida wlndowa.
.• Runa good. 2 now front
·- tires. $1,000. QBO. For all
: ~.(304}895-3408

4359 St.

(740) gg2-]1g4
gg2-6635

1066 Second Street

~=~4J~t~irJtor.

Stand-

,

~

:::-:~-::--:-:--:--::-::-

. ""~...,;...,;GtwNiiii-....rt··

,

.

I

U.w&amp;

cau;

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

.appt.

. (740}258·1399
FOR
, Two weanling colts, by .__ _iiiiiiiii;;,.,.,.I

: grown.

Ronald "Mick" Haning
740~ 367·0181
Chrislina "Chris" Haning ·
7 40·992-0700
591·8393
Cell# 740- 591-0919

Decks,

97 Beech St..
.middleport, OH

Business Services

Owner:

Forsman: L.arry

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

MasonVFW
Karaoke Starbound
9·1 Sat. Nite
Members &amp; Guests Only

2000 400EX, runo groat,
looks groat $3500 OBO.

,..

APHA otud. SUnny's calico
Bar, toaltld April 2002 ·
.. $450. Each or $800. bOth.
• Very nice oonlorrratlon, well
(304}675-3117

Scon L. Swain
GaUipolis, O!lio • (740) 446-2015
/SA Certif'nd Arborist
l-866-4DR-TREE

(10'1110' 610'120')

Cub Low
MoToRcvaD •
• lcrr. 5 loot belly
mower, L,,________.~1
8018

Octob~r

..~\:r.ny ¥:'· :~ r:==~Maroas
--~~~Ji-·l·N-·~-----·
~
SAlE
.
·
·

I"-'---,,...-'--.,..___ r.tO__.:____

....,

• hog, 52" tiller, 5ft. llnlah Garage kept, OliCOiont con: mower, grader blade, lfti'OII dillon. $17;000 negotiable.
... plow, pig poles. $8,200. (740)268-1021
.... (304)576-2887

2002 Kawaookl · Prairie V·
650 4x4. 1200 mllea. Ex2tHO pound plge, $20-$25 tended wananty until 4·
each. (740)643o0508
2005..20001b warn winch of·
tar market 11res $7,500. new
· Fair calwo- A-1 olrad, Heal will sell for $5,900. Cali
Seekar· plus Who Made (304)862-3622 or (304)874Who, black &amp; halter broken, 3588
. (740)887-8837
~~~=,.....,,.....,-­
::.:;:.::;::.:..:;:;;;;.____ 98 Honda Valkyrie, 1700
: Roglotortld Anguo Bulls, miles. Lots of extras, $9500.
. (740}298·1480
Garage kept. like now,

==---- ---

""*"-·

1 owner, lois ol new ports
$2.500.304-875-6693 .

.. ,... 1111ch, $1850. (740)858·

&amp;•r*'f

CtNSTRICnll

·

Rutland Gun Club
3 Money Matches
Pattern Slug x $100'.00
on each match. Plus all
regular matches.
'
Everyone welcome
.

3441 . .

" "-••.,.___.,.,.I

1

;. . , J

I

Sunday,

(740}441-1716

-oo

-. PSYCHIATRIC AIDES
n .. ~~- I
GI'&gt;lAWAY
Rummage Sale- Debbie
..-.......
Drive Activity building. t .7
Prestera Center Is looking
~~--------'·. miles - out State Route 141,
for an upbeat Individual to
Free puppies. (740)992· OCtober l, . 112 off, OctOber
work one-on-one wllh a
JURNED DOWN ON
9229
12- $2 00 a bag 10·4pm
special needs consumer In
·
•
·
the Mason County area. SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
Free · to good homes. 7 SaturdaY•.10/ 12/02 .937 POrSome of th&amp; responsibilities
NO Fee Unless We Win!
week ol!=l puppies! PJaylul &amp; ter Rdo Misc. building sup·
tnclude helping the consum. 1,888-582·3345
.
FJuffy. Gentle &amp; loyal in na- plies, clothes &amp; household
er with dally living Skills, ac·
(;)
lure. Never a better family items
.
companying on doclor vis· ·
pet or companion. Call . .
Domino's Now Hiring all So· its, and·helping the consum.
(74o)245_9372 evenings dr Saturday, OC1ober 12, 2238 cations Pt. Pleasant, Gallip- er to be more Independent.
-Graham School Road, 4th oils, Eleanor. Sale driven~, H. h
h·
dl .l
.
(740) 441 _••63 anytime '
_
"1-Q
•
house olt 141 pasl Cent&amp;- rrjust be 18. Apply in person lg sc 001 P oma or
-~
8
Puppies- 1 male, 1 female, nary. Large variety of new &amp; allocations.
·
GED and valid drivers II·
mom· lull blooded Irish Set· old. Decoration kerns, Kero- .
.
cense are required. if you AU rtlllntate edvenlalng
ter, dad· believed to be sun heate r, furniture, lots Gall•a· Meigs . comm_ur;~lty would like .ftle opportunity to
th thla newap~per ''
black l:ab, shots, wormed, 3 more.
.
Action Agency IS seektng a. have a positive effect on
aubJect to lhl F.CS..I
·mor)ths old, to good homes
temporary: Records clerk. someone'&amp; file, visit our Fair: ttou.lng Al:t of 1118
only {740
. )992-1328
r4
YARD SALEPosition will requlrr a de- website
at
whlchmakuttl.eplto
.
·
·
PoMFllOY!rdmoLE pendable, accurate, i:ietailed www'.prastera.org tor an apldYwiiM ....Y
Losr AND .
oriented person with export- . plication or mall resume/ aP.
u m - or
·
FOUND
ence in Microsott Office and plication to:
diiCI'Imlnatlon baled on
Huge Moving Seie· bet. 10· typng skills of 40 wpm. FilPRESTERA CENTER
cot -·~ton
~
12 9 5 t 24 c I
HAIM
p
AI
.-,
or,.~.,. ....
Older Brown Male Dog Lost
' :· : 1.
o lege Ad , ing records will be a large
aeon sych de
f8mlllll11alua or niUOntl
41
In Syracuse. Collar with Corner of h &amp; COllege Syr- part of the positi9n. Htgh
P.O. Box 8069
.....aa1n or •ny Intention lo
tags.~upper At. 124..
acuse, 1st I~H afte~ roadside School diploma or GEO with
Charlesten, WI/ 25705
""'ljl ~.any auch
. 992·2307
Park. ~urntture, little ty~es 2 years oflice experl.ence
EOEJAA
preference,llmlllltlon or
12~24tt. ~dd ori room tor 4 BA unfurnished, free gas r~
SPACE
dows. $100 (double hung)
-------~- toys, ktlchen·wares, kidS required . Applica11ons with
dlwlmlnetion."
Mobile Home. Carpeted, to heat and cook with. 4
FOR n~~
(740)446.0893
Recovered- lost air tank at clothes &amp; Adults (a» sizes) . resumes will be accepted Hirln~ an ex&amp; perie~ed cook,
pan,led.·
Musl
move. miles trom Rio Gfa_nde on 1.~.,.-·oiiiii:O"""'iii:ii.'-pl. Freezer. 22 cu. ft. Sears, all
bottom of Middleport 'Hill, Many collection new loys, \lOIII 4:00pm on October 18, evemngs
W&amp;eru;~ndS. ApThle new8piperwlll not
$3.000. (~)675-8714
Cora Mil! Road ..$400 month . '
new parts.· $150 firm, call
1t;).-4-02, call Was Gilkey much misc. all very reason- 2002 al the Cheshire office. ply In person at the cafeteria
ll:nowingly IICCePI
plus $40Q depOsit In .ad- Mobile home lot, takes 12· (740)949 _4000
(740)992-3 966
ably priced.
GMCAA Is an Equal Oppor· at the University of Rio
lldvertiHIIWita for ,.11
121180 3 bedroom w/cJa, vance. Must have referen· 14-16 wldas·. $100 dePosit,
~:;;:';.;..;..;.;.;.._ _ __,
tunityEmploy"er.
Grande. for. more lnrormaHllllewhlehlaln ·
washer &amp; dryer, stow, cas and no pets. (740)245- -S125rnonth.-(740)446-0175 • Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp;
70 ·
Rummage Sale:
tlon call (740)245·5660. ·
$5,495, 740-992-2167
5622
Repairs. Problems? Need
YARD SALE
HOath U.M. Church Friday Gallipolis !QCaled home vlolttlon oflhllew. Our
Tuned? · Call The Plano Dr.
~;===;==~==~·Oct. 11- 9 to 3, Saturday health agency soekir\g a Truck Drivero, Immediate
-nheNI&gt;y
1984 two Bedroom Mobile 5rooms&amp;bath,SOOiiveSt, l'l:l!""~:-.;,;...;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 740 •446•4525
1
Oct. 12_ 9 10 1, $2.00 a qualified Individual to per- hire, claas A COL required,
lnformocl tho! Otl
Home, 2 full baths, cathsrial $32S·mo. (740}446-3945
j10 . H()!g]f()U)
YARU,SALEBag.
form chart audits. Apply at excellent pay, experience
dwelling• aciYeri:IMCIIn
ceilings 8x12 Deck, . NiCs
· Goons
Independent Herbalife Dis-GALLIPOLIS
· 3084 State Route 180, required. Earn up to $, ,000.
thl1 MW~PIIpi;r •re
H o·me, New F u rna nc e . 7 rooms. 2 bath, G~lllpolis.
'
· tributor, Call For Product Or
1
~~--oii:iiiiiii:ilili-.,1
yonn"'"~.
.Galllpolis, orphonetoillree Ptr .-k.Call304-875-4005
avolil:biOon. an-.. ~
$8,500. 985·9831
No pets, water paid, $550 . A
Opportunity (740)441 1982
.
"""'~~~1-866-441·1393.
IN:-;;:'' ,-1-99~4-0_a_k_w_pC((
month, depoon&amp; roiorence. 2 lmond frost tree relrigar.
.
2 lar11oiy garage sale. 186
r •· .-~,
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
__1_4x_7_0_,-2 (740}388·1100 . ·
atora, $75 each; Wh:to Ken- .
JET
Greenbriar Drive, Saturday
Help wanted caring for the plasma donors, earn $50 to
BA, 2 full baths, newly
more washer, $65; Ropper
AERATION MOTORS
&amp; Sunday. 9-5pm.
1105
Meadowbrook elderly, Darst Group Home, $60 per week tor 2 or 3
painted interior. Newer LR Large, two story, three bed· Dryer, $60; Almond Whir) - Repaired, New~;· Rebuilt In
Fri.!Sat. 9.5. canning jars, now payl11~ minimum wage, .hours weekly. Call Blo Lila ~iii~;;;;;~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ carpet. 3 tqn. AJC, skirting, room .house at 853 SeCond pool washer &amp; dryer set, Stock.. Call Ron Evans, 1· .
2 family yarQ sale· Furni· cloth· diapers, Christmas· new s~lfts. 7am-3pm, 7am- Plasma Service, 740-592·
~
Musl
selll
$15,000. Ave~ue, Gallipolis (near Li· $150. Call after 6pm, 800-537-9528.
lure, antiques. clothing, dec· i1ems, gas stove, 2·Lawn Spm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm- ~66::5:.:1.:.·_ _ _ _....;.__
fOR SALE
(740}388-0436after5pm,or brary} $800 per month wilh (740}446-9066
·
orative items. Thursday; Fri· mowers, Electric Hospital 7am, call7~92·5023 .
." AN DRIVER
leave message.
$800 deposit ~uired . No
--------"
·"·
pets. Water lnciuded in rent Applia.nces: Reconditioned Kitchen cabinets soHd· WOOd
, day &amp; Saturday. 9am-? 7 bed L0 t8 0 f Good
·
stuu .
Jewelry Salesperson FT!PT. Full·time posUlon required $69,000, 3 bedroom, 1-112 2 tfa.ller tor sa·le on 1 acre (no other utiUtles) . SIN Washers, Dryers, Ranges, with bulchei"block tops, gas
High Street. across · from
• Baptisl Church in Vinton.
2 family Garage sale at Mus! be dependable, outgo- tranJJportlng consumers to bath, 2 car garage, 10 ml- lot, $36,000 . Nice rental. months lease required . Aefrlgrators, Up To 90 Days stove top &amp; side oven, elec• 4 family yard sale. October " 29 16 &amp; 2923 Maple Ave. ing, enjoy ·wor~ng with the and from med~l appoint- nutos lrom Hotzors, Ohio. (740)446.0118 Call lor do- {740}446· 7323 (Library) for Guaranteed! We Soli Now tric si0'/8,' oak kitchen table
tails.
more information.
Maytag Appliances, French &amp; chairs. (304)875·2536
Oct. 10,11 &amp; 12. Good pubtlc &amp; have excellent ments In the .Mason County, · (304)675·2364
12 &amp; "13, Saturday &amp; Sun- clothing &amp; lots of misc.
malh skills. Apply at Acqulsarea. Must ~ able to
City Maytag, 740-446·7795.
day 9-5pm, lots ol name
itions, 15 1 2nd Avenue, ma1ntaln accurate ~aport.!, 2 ~roOm, 1 bath, 1 car 2000 14 X 70 Clayton 3BR.
MoBILE HOMES
Maylag washer, $55; Up- brand clothing, children and Don't Miss this One. Last Gallipolis. No phone calls and be able to assiSt con- garage. Fenced back yard. 28th. Appliances, Porches,
FOR RENT·
Corne·r dining s~t, $1 00; right tree~er, $50. Wooden
adult si zes. Mise household sale unW Spring. Come and please.
.
sumers off and on van as Coot, tree- shaded lot locat· ski~iflg, like new, mUst go ~~--llllitiiitiiiiii•-'· washer: &amp; dryer, $200 set. dining room table with 6
items, ·1 mile east on State gel a Bargain. Fill a bag or '
·
needed. Required HS dlplo- ad at 107 8astlanl Drive. $19,99~.00. 740-992-ll078
Microwave, $40; Set of Ia- chai"!,.Bnd 2 leavos, $200;
RoUte 554 from 160 inter· box lor $1.00. Special area KVC Behavioral Healthcare rna or OED, safe driving re- Call (740)446-()123
2 bedroom all elec1ric mo- ~e lamps, $40. Cub ·eade~ . Oklet'.l'naple cabU;let, sewing
1 99~ 14" 70• ~ bile home. Spring Valley· riding mower. (740)256· mach(ne, $35; 2 Kerosene
section . Watch lor signs. videO~ .25 each. Lots of free Point Pleasant·, WV. Thera· cord and knowledge of local
~oodlnyu~lng/
1
5 nge-roo
8
·Rain cancels.
·• 11
• Area, $350 rent, $250 de- ' 1045
'
heaters, $10 each. Older
stutl. Friday and Saturday pist needed. Must ~ a routes. Apply In person or 3 Bedroom with garage on
8:00 to 3:00 Rain or Shine. Masters degree and a WV i'nail to:
.
.
~pproxlmat&amp;ly_ 1 acre On cp.ll Harold 740·385-9948
posit. No pets. (740)441.
..
electric rang~. $?0; ~ndy
486f? State Route 850. Oc- 1.76 Milton A"d. Camp Con- social work -license or LPC:
PRESTERA 'CENTER
Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry.
. 6954 (304)67&amp;-2900 .
For Sale: Reconditioned · Trombone $125; Barbie
Iober 10.1 1.12 9am-5pm. . ley
Salary is $28,000. + DOE
HA/Mason Van Driver
(304)675·5332 .
Now 2003 14x70, 3 br/2bth.
washers. dryers and refrlg - house, )eep, car, $25 for Oil;
- ' - - - - - : - - - - - Family Service ~ciallst
~0. BOx 8089
Only 5995 down &amp; only 2 bedroom mobile home erators. Thompsons Appli· Brown sleeper .sofa, "$50.
5 lamily· October tl -12ih. G
Oc
~...,
3 bodl1l0m, 2 bath, ranch $195.65 por month. Call and
re 1 ~ v·
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- 174013!1. 7 ~.
2. ac
Rout e 160 North, beside
ara ge sa 1e
I. 10,11,1 2. ·case Management Need·
. Huntington, W¥.25705
style, open floor house plan, . Karena 740-685·7671 .
""· ery, very n·u e (304)675-7388
-vvu 7
. C~ M Auto Parls. Girls c;loth- 3 miles off At 2 on Crab ed" must have bachelors
EOEIAA
·
covered lront porch. Side
nice, no pets, IOC!J.Ied In
. •
·
, NEW AND USED . STEEL
• , mg! Adul ts coats. micro- ...,c...,re,.
•k...,R_d_._B..:
:30,_·5.:.p::-m_
. - - degrf3e &amp; have a WV social lr:lll"--:::"""~.....- - , sundeck, approx 1 mile from New Manager's Special, Rodney, OH. (740)446- Good Used Appliances Ae- St . el Be
. Pf Reba
work lice nse .. pay starts 11410
B~
town on State Route 588. new 16x80, 3 bedroom, '2 ~409
condltionid and Gu8ran· ·Fa~ Conc~e':' An&amp;: Chan~
• wave. small household ap· Multi- Family Yard Sale
; ; pliances, Clishes.
2907 Maple lAve. Oct. 12 $10.57 hourly. KVC pro- •
TRAINING
Buln in 1998 oil - 1.2 acres. bath, reduced to only Mason· 2 bedroom trailer. teed. Washers, . Dryers, I nei, Flat Bar,' Steal 'orating
8
..__ _. .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo-,.1
Or (740)446·
aS':.:J $275. + $275. Deposit. Ranges, and Aetngerators, .For Drains," Driveway&amp; &amp;
• 85 Dodge Diplomat, SSOO Lo.ts of everything, rain can. ; OBO. New tires. ever\othing ce
c_:..:l•c.·-::-~-:-:-----:- and familia&amp; KVC offers ax- Golllpollo Coreer Coltoge 6161 .
Including underpinning, an· Pt)ona (304)675·1911 after Some start at $95. Skaggs Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Mat6 Vine St., awl~~opeedn Mo&amp;n(jFay, Tuesd8y,
' fJorks. Can be seen at Yard Sale. 166 North Park cellant training,
Including "'c(Ca ~rs C to se To Home) 4 br., lr; &amp; dr.; 2 baths, 112 chors, vapor barrier, 1 aet fl·
~
A '::e;39;
1
1
• 2910 Birch A'enue. Call Dri\10. Sat. Oct. 12. Weather LPC SUp&amp;Piislon, and benea oOday 1 740-446-4367, . baseman!, lg. kitchen wllota berglesa atop~ 20' of utility
-n' ay
rlday, Sam·
{304)675·7682
permlning 9-?
Ills. Send resume to HA
R~~,.;.2!4~S2 B. .
of cupboards, alc·fan &amp; lines under home, all Instal·
~ARI'MENTSR
n-......
Uke new washer &amp; dryer 4:30pdm. Clos&amp;ed · ThSursddey,
·
Dept, 200 Bradford St., ·
"" ";nrv
h6at, water softener, new led, One only, Coles's Mo·
rv IUn •
set Delivery option. $390. 8 a1ur ay
un ay.
963 Mill Creek. Saturday, Yard Sale SSt. OCt. 12. No Charleston, WV 25301 Call llltliiJI!""-'i:u-::",,.
.....
~"'"",;.,..., windows, lg . front porch bile Homes,. U.S. 50 East, --·(304)874·0711
(?40)446-7300
October 12, 9-3pm, Toys, clothes. household items, 800-835·5277 Fax: 347·
nn~..... UJI
overlooking river, will con· Athens Ohlo45701
1
d 2 bed
boys levi's as, drapes, etc. 2103 Monroe Ave. Point 9728 . E·maII: wvhr 0 kvC.org
"'O
'
an
room apart· Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark Sears preform c~oss walk .
.a• Do
alder trade, p40)992·9012
ments · lurnlshed and unlur
d 1
(740~441 -19 13
Pleasant
EOE
.
MuSI 8811- factory mistake,
'
,
• Chapel Road Porter Ohio tree mt l, like new; bottle
Baautllul custom built home 2002 3 BR, 2 BA. Will sacrl- nlshed, aacurlty deposit re- (740}4411·7444 t -sh-83o: , gas wall vonlloss heater. a
Community . Yard SaleFlA.EAUCI'IONMAioo:rioo&gt; . ,
AlE Conatructlon
with 3 Ia""' Bedrooms, 2· flee, many extras, very nice. q22ultr8ed, no pets, 740-992· 916
. 2. Free
. Estimates, Easy bumer, (740)949·2375
JoAnne's Jut &amp; Kurl and
.
Local Bar &amp; Grill seeking Roofing, concrete, siding,
··Sa $8
next door, 65 WestwOOd or.
waitress/ bartender for day- remodaltng, decka, painting, 112 baths, large family room
ve
,900.00. (304)736·
financing, 90 days same as Waterline Special~ 314 200
between Flea market &amp; Bob
shift (10:30·5pm) Must be dry wall.metal buildings,
with fireplace. All brick with 3888, 1-888-736-3332.
1 br. apt tor rent $100. eec. cash . .Villi Mealer Caret. PSI $21.00 Per 100; 1• 200
reliable, honest and have pole barns&amp; footers
wrap around porches. 3,200 we have approximately 10 dep.&amp;$300. a mon. aU util. Drive- a· little eave ·alot.
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All
Evans Farm . Saturday, ()(:- AUCTION
Iober 12 @ 9:00am. Weight Every Fr~ay a~:30 Angie's prior waitress experience. (304)674-0118
.SQ.ft. 01 Uvtng area. Custom used homes for under Included 304-675-3654
used lurniture store, 130 Brass Compression Fittings
bench baby st ff toy
· 1 Fl88 M
·
great pay and '"""" tips. . , . . - - - - - - - - - built ~Iehan &amp; bath cablnato $2 ~
11 1-800 837 •ooo
B 1 111 Plk8 w 8
In Stock
·
'
u ~
s, g1r s
ar~«~ot 333 Mechanic
"""""'
Chlldcare available In ClOwn- from Smitha. Sits on 5· 112
,uw, ca
·
·.x:vy 2 BR garage, tdoveJ ralr"'· u av 8
sell mat· ·
·
clothes, very large womens Street Pomerw, Ohio Call ~poll~~
. 4~)!:~2-9C37o1urotrSatreppolty, town Fomeroy, ·prlvate pay acres with pond with 301140 lor Info.
. enuor; Central Air. No pet~. tr&amp;S88S, bunk beds, dress- RON EVANS ENTEAPRIS.
For Information: 992·9734
Gallipolis
Only. provldlll_9 .~4 hr.· IBN- detached garage. 4 mile&amp;
B
. Refere.ncel Depoah . ra· era, couches. appliances, ~7-~=~· Ohio, 1·800clothes, dirt cheep!
, Friday &amp; Saturdav. 9. lpm, ~
· WI'-~
Ice, call (740)992-5827 lot from Holzer Hospital on
~
qulr&amp;d (740)446-4336 leave much more. Grave manu' Longatierger
' baskets,
I
roB~
McClure's Aestaurarlt now more Information.
160. A real buy at $289,000. .
AND BUilJHNGS
meu8ge;
.
. ~~:.· 4014464782 Gal- Watkins PrOducts; double
, clothes , crafts &amp; toys. 1.~---i:ii::iill:i.-_.1· tJiring .all 3 looauons, full or
Call to IH. (740)446·2927
atrength white &amp; dark venitHouse beside BP in RiO '
pan-time, . pick up appllca· Georges Portable Sawmill,
Building for rent, located at 3 Bedroom Appanmen,t,No· Whirlpool washer, ·$95; Ken- Ia, spices, salves, liniments
, Grande
Absol ute Top Dollar:. U.S, tion at location &amp; bring back don't haul yOur logs to tha Country Home wi1h 11-1/2 28 Cedar Street, can be .Petl992·5858
·
more dryer, $95 ; Kenmore .and other productl, call
Silver, Gold COins, Proof-· between
9:30am
&amp; mill Juai call 304-875-1957. acreo. 314br. 2ba., 2 Car· Used for olfiC8
I
BEAUTIFUL
APART· olectrlc range, S9e; Caloric (740}949-3027
Friday- Saturday, 11 &amp; 12, sets.
Diamonds,
Gold !O:OOam, Monday thru Sat·
Garage, aboveground pool,
MENTB •':r BUDGET PRI gao ranhit
$150
Bam-2pm, clothing, prom Rings,
U.S. Currency,- . urday.
Top to Bottom Cleaning Handcrafted kitchen cabf·
CIS AT"' JACKSON ES: Kenmore
rr!: white:
dresses &amp; · miscellaneous M .T~. Coin Shop, 151 Sec·
~":'"'1" 1 • -'':"" nets. Off Leon Baden Ad.
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive refrlgiuator, $150; upright
SUPI'LII;8
11';,"·
items. 325 Larial Oriv.e; ond iA11enue, Gallipolis, 740· Need manager tor Womans
.-• 0
eanQQ. a so ,:;1304=.,:1:.;4::;68::;.·.::1680=-::-::::-~ · - from
to $3&amp;3. wa~ to freezer, .5.1 25·, Maytag 1.~
..
-ooiiiiiliiiiiit.,..,I
7
Gallipolis.
446 2842
Fitness Center, must be yard G gutter, at an afforda- ::
'
4v
II\
~---'-..J
S
•
-·..,...-·~----- physically lit &amp; work well bloprlce. (740}992·297~
Forsalob)'ownor2BA .. IIv·
shop &amp; .m011ios. Call 740. "-~" dryer aot, 275;
briC!&lt;, sewer pipes,
with peOple, honest.&amp; willing
lng room, k", dining room, 112 acre lot .on 'fiCOon lake 446·2568. Equal Houalng Sola, $75; creaser with
Garage Sale· · so Kristi
• Hntolo, oto. Claude
· mirror, S75; Nice sotld wood
Drive, October 1 tth &amp; t 2th. Web PV !'Ius Unit Should to work any_hours. Send Will pru1ure wash houses, bath and utility, partial base· w/12x60Traltel$18,600.00 · Opportunity.
Rio . Gronde, OH
9am -?. Jackson Pike. lurn be compatible with HP· 670 Resume too: 3004 Meadow- trailers, and decks. Cfll ment, patio and front porch, now $13,500.00
•
bedalde . stands
with
TV Printer. (304)576·3364
brook Drive. Pt. Plea&amp;4nt, 44,_·4238 ask for Ron ot llnle over 112 acre, !3- car ga- (740) 247·1100
Furnlahed 2 Rooms and drawe11, $40 each. Skaggs
at ;John Deer sign.
leave messa_ge.
rage, In Bashan clou to
Bath, Upstairs; Clean, Ref· Appliances 78 Vine Street ,
Garage Sale- 7.9 Brook
hi
·
112 a9relot on Tycoon Lake eronces and Deposit Re- (740}448-7398
'·
Drive in Rodney just before
Truck Drlvere, Immediate Will work for elderly nights, 538
new 000 ~way QOing In, w/12~60 Trailer $18,500.00 qulrad. No .,ta. (740)448·
·
.· - - - .
1'1'111"_.__ _ _ __,
weekends. Exp. and •efer•
·
now $13 500 00
1519
co ra Mill . wact h Ior Signs.
hire, class A COL req.ulr8d, ences. 13041675•7961 "
(740)· 949·2252 call eve·
'
·
u
nt~
111 1-.rv~
Computer desks, weigh! 1110 ........ - u. r.....~
excellent pay, experience
nlniHl or I
(740) 247- 1100
G I
' II I
.
bench w/weights, girls &amp;
Ill'..L.Y nn.n 1 r:.u
.,....
eave meiSBge.
rae ous. v ng. 1 and 2
"Rottweller puppies, born
OO)o:s clothing up to 4T. Lots ..__ _ _.· .,.
· _ _.,~ $~~d~r ~:k.C~~ ~~
For Sale By Qwner Ranch ' , 5 acrea · more or 1881· lo· bedroom apartments at Vlt- ·
8f11102, 100% purebred
of Misses Fall &amp; Winter ,
6~5-4005
Style Homo 3 BR f .5 8athi: cated on Groen valley . !ago Manor and Rlvoraldo Buy or oeH. Rlwnne AnU· (not regloterod)lall docked
J. 1h.
96 Fo d EsCort &amp; Apply al Coun1y Corner
.
,
·Ex c e II en t. L o c a II on . Drive, State Route . 160; 5 Apartments in Middleport. ques, 1124 East Main on ,.dewclaws
removed:
J ~fs ~~~~- Oct~ber 10th &amp; Cafe in Letart 9-1pm. Sari- Need 7 ladies to sell Avon.
minutes from Holzer. Will From $278·~. Call 740· SR 124_E. Pomeroy, 740- worm'ed, axceltent tempera·
11th, 9-Spm, ra in or shine.
ous lnqu~res Only.
(740)446-3358
.
llljli I. ~!;~~825
sell in pen or whola. Call lor 992·5064 .. Equal Houalng 992 -2526. Russ Moore, rnoni 3 malea, S10C&gt;-$150;
details. (740)446-0118 ·
Opportunlt:es.
owner.
(740}992.09.32
1'-&lt;
.j l

I

GUN SHOOT

I::92:-::flotlgo-:--:Converslon~
.-.--'¥-an-.

· : lnlernotlonal

&amp;"'-1 &amp;

J!.ddHions

::334
:-::8:----,..---~

-

~,y.,,) ~rYu.

Sltllng, !)nd

"i · LivEsTocK I

I

-aoo-

....

F.Qu!PMFNr

1n~·"'tn. ~ &amp;eut

' Remodeling,

·• • 88 Model Dleael John 99 Jeep Sahara, 33,000
: Deere "Ti'actor 850. 510hra. mila&amp;· new tires, lois of
• ' like - · Alao 5ft. brush chrome. Hard &amp; soff top.

2 &amp; 5 acres home sites.
EaS1ern Local School Dis·
tr~. utilities available. approved road, sorry no trail·
era, (740) 885-36i5

j

:;.:t_ •

Haning's .Construction

l'tci!Y'cf, ;WTC,.,C~

Speciali~lng In :

98 Chevy 4::4 , 305 v.a, au·
to, air, 31nch !Iff, $8000.
304-885-3364 or 304-895-

FARM

&amp;·t

first .aerw.

Roofing,

1990 Dodge R:un. Charger.
4 wheel drive. :ita Engine,
1 auto. Body ln Excellent condillon. $3700. {304}937·

rod potatoes,

~

, .

We Care For Your Trees . ' .. ,

Cuh CadeC &amp; Gravely

1888 Joap Chorolreo 4x4,
rebuilt tranamloolon, rebuilt ·
front end, good body and
Urea, neado onglna or rebuill. 51200. (740)446-7928

lll'llr---=~,;.,-;;;;;~

a_·~.p.iO'

POliCIES: Ohio v•~ey Pu.,.._hlng .....,..,.. tM
-.yimt. ErT'OI'W must be rwported on the first dly
Trlbune-SenUnei-Regltter wll be rwtJ)Onllble for no mCM'I th.n
lhe ·~ occupleel by the error ancl only Ifill flrat tnllttlon. We
1ny lOu·Or txpenM thlt ,.ulla from the· pubUciUon or omlulon ol11n advwiiMrMnl. CorNclfon wtll ~ madllln lhl first av1llabae edntori. • Bo•

Huge MultHamlly yard
ATIN: Point Pleasant.
MIS TECHNICIAN
Friday &amp; saturday, OCtober Postal positions. Clerks/car· Per1orm troubleshooting
Froggy4418 Call Travis 0 11 &amp; 12, Sam-dark, 3810 rlers/sorters. No exp. re- · mainteiiance and enha00e(304}674-0578 lor smiles.
State Route n5- 2 miles ,.quired. B&lt;lnellls. For exam, riient of a point of sale reg·
past Mcintyre Pork. Natural !lalary, and testing lnlorma- Isler and lnvehlory system
Why wait? Start meeting gas space heater &amp; dehu- lion call. (630}393·303.2 ExC in central office and muRiple
Ohio singles tonight; callloll mldlller, used 6 months; hu, 782. 8am·8pm. 7 days.
retail store.locations. Workfraa 1-800- 766-2623 ext mldlfler, girls clothes sizes
lngknow~
· Involving
1621 .
8· 12, building materials.
WinandOOS.

ANNoUNCEMENTS

Includes
Up To
ver 15
Ads

Thursday for Sundays

Sundays Pl!lper

• Start .Your Ad5 With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviatio ns
• Include PhOne Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should R.un 7 Days

Successful Ads'
Should Include These Items
'ro
p Get

VF.GETAJ~J..D

: ·

Roofing, Siding, ftdd-Ons, Eledrlca~
·Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,
Drywal~ PalnUng

JA~J....,

UMM'S

""•ar-~:""""-:-.,
Ji'Rurrs &amp;

::

Word Ads

I.

._.,._llllitliiii--,.1

- oage.

~------~--~--------~-

Offtee 11o~.f'

~WDs

Dl Se....... ()i4

tnolde Stonge: $4.00111
Opon Spon: $2.00111
lnoldo Fence:-SI.00/11

____

I

t!aM St-

.n-

• .,.,.,.,....,..,......,~..,.---- S7 Chavrolet 1 Ton dump
: AKC Blue T1c:k Beagle pup- truck; $1600. Cal Howard
• fl'lo.end ator1ed dog's, Dla- (740g45-93e8
• monel bloodlne; axcalletit 7::~=.:;::::....
0
doge $100 to $175 98 Ford Ranger XLT, Ex·
• gun 7742·1'
' landed cab, 4x4, 8 cylinder;
: . (740}
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o .Lib Puppyo AKC Chocotott (740)710-01le8
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ineffective today, so just be
your old sweet. affable self
BY BERNICE BEDE 0sOL
and you'll draw those to you
This could be an exceptionwhom you'd like to be with.
ally good year for you as a
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Janc
numoer of goodies you don' t
19) -- .Even though the opponeed bul have coveted come
sition could. be impressiye tointo your possession. The e~- · day, the odds still favor you if
Ira work required to get them
you assert yourself and go all
will fall in your lap. '
out to achieve what you want.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) especially ff your goal is im- Being too s~t upon having
portant.
everylhing your way always
AQUARIUS (Jan·. 20-Feb.
invites confrontation -- and
19)
-- If your purpose is to entoday will be np exception.
courage
and inspire .someone
Be willing to go along with
today.
you
are going to have
the wishes of others from
to
physically
demonstrate
time to time. Trying to patch
whal
you
are
proposing
s/he
up a broken romance? The
do.
Words
al
nc
won't
work.
0
Astro-Graph Matchmaker can
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
help you understand what to
20) -- Don't get involved in
do to make the relationship
any
group or clique that has
work. Mail $2.75 to Matchsome
members you-don't like.
maker, c/o this newspaper,
You
won't
have a good ti!l)e
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
and you'll only find more rea44092 .
sons to dislike lhem.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
22) -- It 's all in 1!).!' way you
-In your intensity to accomlook at things today. If you"re
plish
your aims today, you
negative, there won 't be anymay
feel
that oth.er cohorls
thing anybody can do to
are
just
in
the
way. Instead of
please you . If you're positive,
getttng
frustrated.
find a cornobody will have to gratify
ner offby yourself where othyou.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2J- . ers dori' tlread ..
i AURUS (A~ril 20-May
Dec. 21) -- Flamboyant ges20) ·- You won t be able to
tures will be both cosrly -and

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

~_...._

__

have a good time today umi I
you think all your responsibilities are out of the wax.
Any tasks left . undone wtll
prey on your mind and· you
won' t be able to relax.
.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- It is best thar you don"t get
involved in any social activity
today that involves the chipping in of money. If someone
doesn' t anre up his/her fair
share, things could get out of
hand.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- This is a day when two
heads are definitely better
!han one, so don't make any
family. decisions without consulting with your mate. S/he
might have a bener idea._
LEO (July 2il'Aug. 22) -- If
you can't fully focus on what
you"re suppose to take care
of, it might be wiser to walk
away from !he task. Withou(
proper concentration, you
could mess things up.
VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- You ' re likely to be in a sociable mood today and that is
~ell and good. The bad part
1s, you're also willing ro be
extremely e~travaganl in order to appease your resllessness, and !hat's not.
(

'·

'

DAN POLCYN

News editor

Deaths -.

I .

.,_lis, AS

.

, •

~

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va." - Many people are c;~uiie .
uninfonned on issues of mental illness.
For example, a label like "schizophrenia" often invokes a
fear response - fear of personal harm or violence.
Now, imagine being a person with such a chronic mental
illness. The stigma attached to bearing such a label can
make finding a suitable place to live nearly impossible.
'
· "For most of the tenants, it's hard to find housing," said
Elizabeth Gerlach, the apartment manager for the Main
Street Apartments, which will hold a ribbon-cutting and
open house at 3 p.m. Monday, Oct. 24.
. .
. j
"When people hear that somebody has schiwphrenia.
they back off from them," said Gerlach. "They become •
afraid that these people can't function within the community or that they might hurt them.
.
'That's mostly the fear that I have seen: Physical violence; people are afraid that they are going to get hurt."
. · The apartments - located in th~ old NAPA Auto Parts
· building at 233 Main Street in Point Pleasant- will offer
housing to individuals who qualify under the Department of
Ponnefl&gt;y poses ·for silhouette artist
Housing and Urban Development's Section 811 , those who
Farm Festival F~day afterare diagnosed as chronically mentally ill, but with help of .
ful~tllllt'l artisan that ~n~Yels to fine art ·
medication and other therapies can live independeQtly. ·
America with his Sllouetie
The building - a publicly funded project operating
can be purchased tor no for~
through the Prestera Center for Mental Health Services, Inc.
IJ•~. and Naslbyan gunntees
- is not a halfway house, as some rumors have_suggested:
It is a place where those who are managing their conditions
can find housing, free of the stigma attached to chronic
mental Hlnesses.
.
"When people whO have mental -illnesses are on their
medication and h{l.ve the co!UlCt dosage down, they function just like the rest of us," said Gerlach, who has no reser' " •..
....._vatjO"\Is.
W.i\bo.woiiing Wl\hsiiclnffiliYKiii31s: some-of\yho
•
"1 Pluse see Ap•rbnt'iltl, A3
.

.

Worl&lt;ers at the Bob Evans Farm ·FestiVal-fOod tent prepare Smokey Boys and sausage sand·
.
wiches at itle ~festival Friday. (MIIilssla Russell photos)

Hildegard Ma.ckamul, 93
Olene Burdette, 68

,

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2002 Bob Evans
.

•."

I

.

,;Farm Festival
· Continuing .
.·through Sunaay

·· Weather
High: 70s, Low: 50s
Dltlllls. A2

Massey could
face $85,500

in fines
-

after spill

- CHARLESTON, W.Va.
.•(AP) ~ A Massey Energy
·co, subsidiary could""'face
$85,500 in fines by the
West Virginia Department
of
·
Environmental
Protecti.on after. a ·coal
treatment plant spilled
I 00,000 gallons of coal
. slurry into two Logan
. County .streams .
. The DEP will recommend Bandmill Coal Co.
be fined between $3,200
and $3,500 per day - a
maximum total of $10.500
- in administrative penalties for three days of coal
~lurry cleanup on Rum
Creek and the Guyandotte
,River, DEP investigator
:Joe Hager said Friday.

''

'

..

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Saturday, Oct. 12,2002

BU"T' l CHOO!'&gt;E 1'0 .JU!l T
!li"T' HeRe WI"T'H ' YOU

-

.

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. .

I COUL.P 6E ON A
17ATt;; NOW

Pierre

27 Wlnda
dOWn
21 Gnb I !'lb
31 Chlm.-n-

Main Street
aparbnents
to open
October24

IWirdl

41 Pu1
42 Actor

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51 DeviOUI

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DOWN

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food

34 T0111111 dip
dollar
Yesterday, I gave a
50 Plumbing
31 Dover'l at
deal from the Cav•
31GIWI
32 GoH•rendish Calcutta Pairs.
54
Trevlna
clenlll .
33 Talk, t.lk,
This is the major pair
tllk
event in this country
35 Rocked
with cash prizes. The
collected entree fees
are awarded to the
pairs who do well in
. each session. Also,
before play begins ,
·each pair is auctioned. Last May, this
raised just ov,er one
million dollars. AI. most all of this
money was returned
to the buyers of the
leading . pairs. (All
pairs .buy back some
· of themselves, and
usually there are others who purchase positions in pairs they
expect to do well.)
' In second place
were Tiitek Sadek ·
and Walid EI Ahmady, from Cairo,
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Egypt. There were 19
by tuls Campos
pairs in a grand slam
Celobrliy Clplter cryploarama ara craatod from quotations by lamoos
on this deal, 18 in
people, peat and prooent. Each letter In !he clpllor stands '"' ariolher.
seven spades and one
Today's clue: I squsls M
in st;ven diamonds.
·. However,
surely
KFGTXPGVXT
F·N p
Tarek and Walid had
the shortest auction.
WRRGJRGT
GR
WPVNG.
F.
Walid o'perted with ·
two clubs, strong, arCPZT
J R
FLTP
UCPG
F
tificial and forcing .
After East's four-club
IT P J
SA
GCPG."
overcall, Tarek's pass
promised some valU R R LA
PKKTJ
ues; with a near-YarPREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Learning the blues is a matter ol
borough he would
turning what you leel Into music: ... lila Is the usual teacher."
- Charles Kuran
have doubled. Then
Walid's five-club
cue-bid showed a
THATDAILT C.~"O ..i\"tt...(
/)"C.~~ WORD
powerhouse · 4-4-4-1
,UZZLIR 0~ 1.'~ ~).- ~ 1,:. (/' \J II&gt; GAM I
or 4-4-5-0. That was
ld!lod ~r cu.v R. 'OLLt.N
sufficient for Tarek, 0Roorrong 1 Iotter• of tho ~-...... ~--..'""'-'
who jumped straight
four ~eromblod words beto SeVen SpadeS.
low IO form four simple words.
After winning the
first trick with dum- f-~N~E..:0;.,..,. .~..:;E_,....L:..,frmy's club ace, Tarek
1
·
,
1
playedruffed
a truinp-to
his ~~·:;:::·
===~....J
hand,
the club
r
jack in the dummy. ~-__,_r_w.....,..Y""T"N--rD---11
and drew trumps .
13
Then he cashed dum. '
,..
my's.. top diamonds.
. ,,,
1
· en they spI'It 3•2•
L A V T U ;:
One cutie was irying io cheer
Wh
he could claim. How--,,;;,.:.;.-=..,..:....:;-~ 1 1 1
'her depressed friend. "The best
ever,
if
West
proved
~=====~~::_.,thing
abut the future," she ,feeto have four or five
"is that it comes only - - •
diamonds, declarer
' L Y- C L 0 D ,.lured,
-.at
a time."
would have cashed
dummy ' s ace· k'mg 0 f
51
16·
~ Complete tho chuckle quoted
.
. v by filling in tho missing word•
heatts, ruffed a heart .
you develop from •top No. 3 below.
in hand, and finished
his trumps, squeezi!Jg
West in the red suits
(unless East had four
hearts, when the contract would always
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
fail) .
Wretch - Triad- Notch - Clergy· OTHER WAY
Some friends and I were talking about a bit of gossip
NEWSPAPERS
we had heard when granny interrupted by asking, "Have
Cover AI The
you ·ever noticed that a rumor without a leg to stand on
Majof Silbllclll
usually will get around some OTHER WAY.
1--

ACTUALLV, THEV DON1T
~EAR ANI(ni1N6!

HuHh
18 Babyual
. 22 Spiral
23 lluolc
media
24 Compilelion
25 llajl, for
13

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member

I

MUSICIANS PLAV A LOT OF
LOVE SON6S, SOT T~EV OON1T
REALLV ~EAR TJ.!EM,DO TJ.!EV?

movie'"

G:.uc
lettan

II

50 CENTS • Vol. 1, No. 8

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Pl Pleasant • Odober 12, 2001

"R....I

30 NATO

I

HA HA HA HA

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

se Wallop

21 Raoet lltter

Bidding boost

IAl&gt; Ntwt, .file--- Tti~
tCONOMY TU/lN~l&gt;

Hometown News for Gallia. Mason a Meigs counties

11

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Wut

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52 Sucldllll
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53 40-cup
55 WrlhorllllanOkl

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51 Lang

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11 Tnl..... 56 Crumb-

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42 MlegiVIfl9
44 FIMcy

1 Caonlc11111111111
book 1hucl 48 Undtrabied

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7 Whlrlpoal
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11 PU1U,..
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~~da~Ckrtober11,2002

I

www.mydallysentlnel.corn

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick S:' 0-5'4
Pick 4: 0-9-9-9
Buckeye 5: .6-14-15-20-25
Pick 3 night: 1-4-4
Pick4 night: 1-7-5-8
•.

W.VA.
·Daily 3: 4'9-5
Daily 4: 0-1-2-6
·
Cash 25:3-7-15-16-18-24

·Area . _
wo•nan__celebrates.
be1ng 101 years young
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position 8$ caretaker. "I was the
oldest and I had to take care of
my family."
Nellie
married
Homer
Oldaker Sept. 26, 1920. "Homer ·
was the first man . for me, · "
Nellie said with a smile. "I was
only 19 when we got married."
Following her marriage, Nellie
continued to care for her father
and siblings.
"Dad never did get married
after Mom died," she said. "He
worked and I cooked and
cleaned and raised my brothers
and sisters as best I knew how."
Nellie and Homer had II children, and ironically Nellie has
outlived 'six children and her
husband. Homer Jr., died when
he was only about a month old.
Francis, a daughter, died when
she was two after contracting
measles. Lloyd, David, Martha
and Don also passed away.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Mrs. Nellie Oldaker may
have physical limitations at 10 I,
but her memory can be compared with that of a person
much yonger.
"I can't remember everything,
but I got a pretty good memory," Nellie said proudly.
Oldaker was born Sept. 22,
1901 in Buffalo, W.Va., to
· Henry Clay and Mary Thcker
Whittington. She was the oldest
of five children.
Her mother died while giving
birth to her sixth baby who
Only 100 yea~s and six sadly also died. Nellie was. only
months to go - Nellie holds 12 or 13 at the time, but
her youngest great-great- assumed the role of adult mothgrandchild, Preston Tucker er to care for her brothers, siswho is six months old. Nellie ters and her father.
celebrated her 101st birthday
"I really didn' t have a
Sept. 22. (contrltJuted)
choice," she said regarding her ·'- Please see Birthday, A3

Elizabeth Gerlach, the apartment manager of the new Main Street Apartments in Point Pleasant, prepares to
continue clean-up in anticipation of the buildings' upcoming opening. The apartments -located In the old NAPA
building on Main Street - are designated for tenants
who have been diagnosed With a chronic mental illness .
(Dan Polcyi'l(
·
.

New Cora Mill bridge job to
Bv KEVIN KELLY
News editor

1 $edlons - 12 ......

~11

•

Bv CHRIS Cozzi.
Staff writer

Index
Calendar
· Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
. Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather •

,..,..,,,r,,l~"'

··~.-( 1. , \.·,,

•

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio _ The new
bridge over Raccoon Creek at the historjc Cora Mill will be ready for bidding l)y December 2003, the Gallia
County engineer said...
That's when federal funds that will
wholly fund the project will be available, said Glenn Smith, who expects
construction to begin the following
summer.

Cl 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

The new bridge will replace the current Perry Township span, built in
1932 but now inadequate for current
and future traffic demands. Smith said
putting in a new bridge at the site has
taken several. years to plan al)l:l obtain
funding.
'
"I've bq,en working on this thing
sin~e I.. c~e ba~k in office,"_ sa!d
Smith .• ~ut If you re persistent, 1t wrll
· happen.
.
.
The new span rs e~pected to cost
$1 ,017,300 and will be a contemporary box design. The project also calls

. for straightening out the curve the
bridge now sits on.
"We wanted to use the old stone
piers for the bridge to help straighten
the road, but we couldn't,'' said Smith.
"It was e·asier to put in new ones rather
than try to salvage the old ones."
The funding. will be administered by
the County Engineers Associa_tion of
OhiO. The pro~ram from whtch the
funds ~ere obtamed schedules a~ards
years rn advance, and Smrth sard he
has an application in for the 2005
round to do a bridge replacement on

next year .
Gravel Hill Road near Cheshire.
Applications are now being accepted for the 2008 round, where Snuth
hopes to obtain funding for a replacemem job along Symmes Creek near
Cadmus.
"You have to get way in line for that
kind of money," he said.
Smith said he wanted to replace
Cora Mill with a covered bndge,
which had once been there before it
burned.
But he discovered that height
Please see Bridge, AJ

Surgical weight -loss with
a -personal touch.
'

......

,

If}·

.
'----.......,..;====.~ TriLL FREE (866) 821-4541
..

I

...-~

I

•

••

I

WWW.CCWL.INFO

I

•

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