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                  <text>Page B6 · ·The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, September 22, 2008
'

·Pryor's four TD passes lead Buckeyes, 28-10

CoLLEGE FOOTBAlL AP ToP 25.
The Top 25 teams 1n The Associated

COLUMBUS (APJ Terrelle Pryor took charge
of Ohio Srare·s offense.
·fhrowing four rouchdow n
passes lo lead the slugg ish
Buckeyes to a 28-10 vic!O·
ry over Troy on Sa!urday.
· In rhe wake of an ugly
~5-3 defeat a! lop- ranked
5ourhern
Ca lifornia .
coach
Jim
Buckeyes
Tress~! had said !hat the
narion 's wp quarterba&lt;.:k
recruit last spring and fifth year senior Todd Boe&lt;.:kman
would sp lit the job 50-50
against rhe Trojans (2- 1). · ·
Pryor became !he firs!
rrue freshfluw to st~t rt for
the Buckeyes in 30 years.
since Art Schlichrer in
1978 . He played all but rwo
snaps umil the game was
. decided - and an undercapacitY . crowd ' loudl y
booed Boeckman when he
threw a first-half incompletion on one of those.
Pryor's 1ouchdown pass·
es covered 39 and 16 yards
to Brian Hanline , 13 yards
to Rorv Nichol anti 38
yards to Brian Robiskie.
AP photo
The 6-foot-6 standout from Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor (2) runs against the Troy defense during the first
Jeannette . Pa., who won'! quarler of an NCAA college football game Saturday in Columbus.
attend his first college class·
until nex t week. completed more likely, it was the trois. the Buckeyes punted Jermal e· Hines all missed
10 of 16 passes for I :19 Buckeyes· dismal showing on their nexr three posses- clear shots .at Jernigan on
yards with one interception . in Los Angeles that damp· sion s after Nichol\ catch. th~ play.
wilh Troy responding with
Pryor made several big
He also ran 14 rimes for 66 ened the fans' spirits.
Web
sites
were
selling
Sam
Glusman\
22-yard
plays
. but wasn't perfect.
yards.
He was sacked for a 16Still. the Buckeyes (3-1) tickets all week at around field goal.
half
the
$62
face
value.
Kurt
Coleman's
firs!
of
yard
loss on the nex t-to-last
Jed just "14-10 all he srart of
There
was
a
large
palch
of
two
·
interception
s
he
play
of the half. then .was
the fourth quarrer, at which
poinl Troy had more firS! empty seats in the so uth took theball right our uf the intercepted by Tavares
end . zone. and manv other hands of receiver Gerald Williams in the end zone on
downs and total yards.
empty
seats could be seen Tare - set up Ohio State\ a desperation heave on !he
But Ohio State turned
two punts from the Trqy around the stadium. The second score. On th ird and nex! play . Two of his touchend zone in the fourth quar- announced attendance 'fig- 12 froni the Troy 39, Pryor · down passes were looped in
te r into short touchdown ure of I02,989 was the threw a pa ss high over the !he air, with the defense
drives. Pryor's four TD Ohio Stare's ,smallest home middle ro a wide-open failing to recover after the
passes set a. school fresh- crowd in more than ·six Hartline at !he 5. and receivers were open by sev1T)Un record for one game - , years -- since a 2002 game Han line fell into the end era I yards.
aga ;mt Ken! State drew zone to make it 14-3.
A 60-yard punt by A.J ..
and for a season.
· Af!er another Ohio State Trapasso
pinned
the
If thi s was the coming out 2002.
The
Buckeyes
led
14-10
punt.
the
Trojans
needed
Trojans
at
their
own
2
to
parry for a star. it sure
at !he half and looked our of just five plays to cover 80 start the fourth quarter.
arrived quierly.
Maybe it was a fallout sync on both sides of the yards. Jamie Hampton After. a 40-yard punt , Pryor
flipped a shan pass to arched a TD pass to
from Sunday's arrival of ball .
Pryor hi! Nichol for a Jcrrel Jernigan : who cov- Robiskie a! th.e goal line.
Hurricane Ike that knocked
After a 17-y ai·d punt,
out the power to thousands score on Ohio State's first ered . the fin al 45 yards for
of homes in Columbus. possess ion, bur tht;n the the touchdown. Coleman. Pryor hit Hartline for his
· Washington. s~c on"d rouchdown recepDonald
some of which remain offense floundered.
With Pryo\ at the con- Ma.rcus
Freeman
and tion of !he day.
withour elecrricity. Or.

Press colt&amp;ge football poll, with firstplace votes In parenJheses, records
through $apt. 20, total points based on
25 points lor a first-place vote through

one point lor a 25th-place vote. and
previous ranking:

Rec · Pts

1. usc (621
2. Oklahoma
3 Georgia (2)

2·0
3-0
4·0
4 , Florida (1)
3·0
S. LSU
3·0
6. Missouri
4·0
7 . TBX8$
3·0
4-0
a. Alabama
g_Wisconsin
3-0
10 Te~~:as Tech 4-0
11 . BYU
4-0
4-0
12. Penn St.
13. Souih Florida 4·0

Pvs

1,621

1

1,464 2
1,475~ 3
1,442 4

1,363
1,360

6
7

9
8
11
14 ,
16
12

1,091

962

919
891
796

790
785
711
574
555
363
300
242
224
201
117
105

.EVANSTON, Ill. (APt Northwestern got off to a 4-0
start for the firs! time since
1962 by blocking two field
goa ls. recoveri ng rwo fum·
bles and holding pesky Ohio
to four yards rushmg in a 168 win Saturday ..
The Wildcats survived an
offensive drought in the second half and four intercep- ·
tions hy CJ . Bacher. as well
us an injtuy to starting rail back Tyrell Sutton.
In . the third quarter,
Northwestern ru shed for
minus-4 yards and failed to
pick up a first down wi th
Sutton on the bench because
of a leg injury. But they did
enough on defense and special teams 10 hold down the
Bobcats (0-4) - who pu! a
scare into Ohio State two
,

Amado Villarreal niacle
rhree field goals and Omar
Comeh had a 1-yard touchdown run in the second quarter to give the Wildcats a 160 lead ar halftime.
It turned out to be en()llgh
because Ohio couldn't establish any kind of a runni.ng
game against

~u11hweslern ..

The Bobca!s had 14 plays of
negative yardage.
Ohio.'s Barrel! Way was
without usual Ion~ snapper
Kyle.Robbins and rt showed.
He missed a 42 -yard field
goal in the firs! qumter and
had attempts blocked in the
third and fourrh quarrers .

22

•·

15
25

OthEfrS r~eiving votes:
100,
Oklahoma St 98, Virginia ec_h 63,
Colorado 39, Nebraska 32. Connecticut
26, TulSa 19. Miami 17, Michigan St H .
Georgia Tech B. Kentucky 7,
Northwestern 7, Ball 51. 6, South
Carolina 3. Florida St. 2. North Carolina
2, Wes~ Virginia 2. Minnesota 1.

1\ ,.rrhwestem hadn't blocked
a field lioal in four years.
Late 111 the second quarter,
Vince
Browne
sacked
Jackson fo r a nine,yard loss
on 4!h and 5. giving the
Wildcats the ball back near
midfield wirh. just under 2
minutes left. On 3rd and I,
Sutton broke free for a 31yard gain Ia the II, and
Comeh scored with 13 seconds left to make it 16-0.
Sutton left ufler the lo;1g
curry and didn ' t return. ·
Sulton .ran for 76 yards on .
nine can·ies and caught three
pa&gt;Ses for 27 yards, going ·
over I .000 yards receiving in
his career. The senior is the
second in school to . have
more !han I .000 yards rush-"
ing and receiving in a career,
joining Ricky Edwards from
1979-84 .
Lare in the third quar!er,
Ohio scored on Jackson·'s 12yard pass to Andrew
Mooney. followed by a pass
to LaVon Brazill for a 2poi nt conversion lo make it
16-8.
Bacher went 18-for- 35 fo r
133 yards , and ran for anoth·
er 37. Conteh ran for 35
yards in relief of Sutton, who
missed time last year wilh an
ankle injury.
Lickson went 27-for-42 for
228 yards and two interceptions . and ran for minus-28
yards. including the five
sacks. Harden led Ohio with
19 yards rushing.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

•~ Meigs competes
at Jackson Invite.
SeePage 81

'At last night's regular
meeting , council passed the
second reading and took a
POMEROY .,.. Pomeroy unanimous vote on the new
Village
Council has ordinance which will lower
taken another srep in low-. the speed limit and in fm;r
ering . the speed limit extend the downtown busidowntown from 35 miles ness district. The ordinance
per hour to 25 miles per requires one more reading
hour from Fisher Funeral and vote to become effective.
Home on East Main Street
Also receiving its second
to the corporation limit reading and vote, though
with Middleport on West not unanimous, was an ordiMain Street.
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INDEX

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Comics

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Editorials

A4
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Obitualies
~ports

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B Section

"''"' \ ,._, _

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'r...,. ro.,.lf :&gt;.,- 0.-,J 1r. 11111 '~ 1•:•.11 &lt;&lt;"( 'tJ:Io.t '" " G'"'l •~;:-~~

~i,lie's Mailbox

,.

FAMILY 01\NED SINCE 1996
"1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE • ONE MI LE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
ATHENS, OH 45701 • (740) 593-l279
, LANCASTER. OH 43130 • (740)653-2827
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FR IDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 900-5:00
..
()I·!' '$ I• ~..:.• t ~" ""' Cl'''' ' ; I G~ lol0~1 1!.1• t II: ~ ·· ~ '&lt;l •\"' •,•' .-,. f' ~ td ~! ~~ ' •'' t "'f.. ·-;)-• !'·' ; I ' '&lt;';J •· ·.o, ~~ ) ~ ~~ '1' l i.' " OC • ( &lt;,&gt; CI~" &lt;'I'·' ''f'' &gt;I" •
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Weather
© aoo8 Ohio Valley Publlohlni; C&lt;&gt;.

BE'IOHD TIE EXPECTE!r

•

.

'

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.

"

.

. ..

purer free on mayor 's court
costs. Councilwoman Mary
McAngus once again voted
against the fee which would
raise courr cosrsfrom $65 to
575. The fee would be used
to cover upgrades and maintainence for the mayor 's
court computer program
called GBC.
Council granted permission to the Meigs County
Right to Life members. who
are reaming up with Mid-

www.m~d:oil~"·nlirwl.cmn

Ohio Valley Christian
SchooL to have a right to
life rally along the public
sidewalks in Pomeroy near
the Firs! Baptist Church
from 2-3 p.m .. Sunday. Ocr. ,
5. Adam Will from !he
MCRTL presented council
with the idea and was joined
by Brenda Barnharr .
Council approved the E 91-1 second draft as presented .
Clerk Tre a ~u rer · Kathy
Hysell repmted the . village

sal ! thi s
canna! . get
year ro rreat the roads for
winter. However. the vi II age
does have some in storage
and . workers ·are to use
it sparingly.
Hysell also brought Lrp the ·
issue of !he parking meter
money and the iss ue of
council's ordinance which
states it was to be removed
weekly . Chief Mark E.

Please see Speed limit. AS

storv

ing :which is _permitted to
cont111ue until Aug. 21,
2009, if necessary. This
means the proceedings have
been pushed back by six
months.
The official· ruling on the
changes gives no reason for
them, only stating ERAC
received the .appellants' (the
Natural Resources Defense:
. Ohio
Council,
Environmental
Council ,
Sierra Club, the National
Parks
Conservation
Association) proposed case
management schedule and
the appellees ' proposed case
management schedule on
Sept. 8 after which the
Commission made the t'ol·
lowing changes. No word
yet on how or if the delay
will affect the $2.9 billion
project though AMP-Ohio
will be making a stalement

on the matter for an upcom111g story 111 The Darly
Sentinel.
Expert reports shall be
exchanged by Jan. 30, 2009 ,
supplemental witness lists
shall be filed by April 3.
2009, the deadline to serve
written discovery shall be
April 10. 2009, discovery
cut-off shall be April 30,
2009. final witness lists
shall be filed by May 15 ,
2009; dispositive motions
deadline shall be May 27,
2009. pre-hearing · briefs
(25-page limit) shall be
filed simultaneously on July
20, 2009, exchange of
exhibits shall be July 20.
2009.
The final prehearing conference on . July 27, 2009
will be held via telephone
with counsel for appellee
diretor initialing the tele-

phone call. The de novo
heanng on . Aug. 3, 2009
will be held at ERAC's
.offices in Columbus at 309
South Founh Street. Room
222. A de novo hearing is a
rrial or a heming rhat is
ordered ' by an appellate
courr that has reviewed the
record of a hearing in a
lower court and sen! the
matter back to !he original
courr for a new trial , as if it
had no! been previously
heard nor decided .
The appeal was filed by
the NRDC, OEC, Sierra
Club and the National Parks
Conservation Association ,
Knoxville. Tenn. (which is
not to be confused with the
federal
government :s
National Park Service) in
March
agai.nst
OEPA .
Director Chris Korlenski
and AMP~Ohio.

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

DEALER.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

'

Details on !;'age A3 ·

AS LOW AS ·

.• FuUy hydraulic power steering

h'l-'1, :~~ !\.&gt;

COLUMBUS
- The
Ohio
Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commission has pushed
back both a prehearing conference and de novo hearing on the appeal of the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency's
issuance of a final air permit-to-install for the coalfired power plant proposed
by American Munia.ipal
Power-Ohio.
The original preheadng
conference was set for 10
a.m., Jan . 27, 2009 while
the de novo hearing was set
for !0 a.m., Feb. 9, 2009.
.The new dates are July 27,
2009 for the final prehearing conference and Aug. 3,
2009 for the de novo hear-

Attachmtnh sold separately.

• 32 HP' 3-cylind.,. direct
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WEATHER

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~

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AMP hearing pushed back six months

/MONTH*

L&gt; W '

· ~VE ~ ~ . :;;"

• More anxiety on Wall
St.: Stocks dive, oil
soars. See Page A2
• 5-K Fox Trot set for
Oct 4. See Page A3
• Wii go bowli~g.
See Page A6 ·

AS LOW AS

to aet orl" and off the tracto~ easily

•

'

POMEROY
The
charges contained in an
indictment agarnsl Keilh
Ridenour. filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court. on Aug. Rare: aggravated vehicular homicide.
Ohio Revised Code 2903.06
(A)(2)(a): aggravated vehicular homicide. O.R.C.
2903.06(A)(I )(a): improp·
erly handling firearms in a
motor ve hicle. O.R.C.
2923.16(0): opera ting a
vehicle under the intluence.
O.R.C. 4511.19(AJ(I)(a):
operating a vehide under
the
influence , O.R .C.
4511.19(A)(I)(b).
Ridenour was released at
arraignment on a personal .
recognizance bond and
charges are pending.
.
According to the Ohio
State High way Patrol,
Ridenour was driving a
vehicle which struck ;mother on Ohio 24R on Aug. 13.
2007. Devi~ Riggs, 15. a
passenger 111 the second
vehicle, driven by his father.
Kenneth , died at !he scene.
Kenneth Riggs has not
Charlene Hoelltchlpholo been charged and has Q\lt
Chrysanthemums in an array of colors filling the shelves of local ·markets and flower shops is a sure sign that fall has , appeared on any charges
arrived. To usher in the new season , pots of yellow, white, maroon and lilac mums are beginning to replace containers of relating to !he case.
tired summer flowers around many homes.
The
Daily
Seniinel
regrets an error in n previ -

• V •o Wt~l'"h v.•ou~•·

~

~· ~

·I

corrected

I

AS LOW AS

. ...:!i:, ·:··~
'

'

Fall colors

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Pomeroy closer to .lowering speed limit

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TUESDAY, SEYl'EMBER 23.'2008 '
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Making a donation, As

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Northwestern 4-0 for
time since 1962

\\'eeks ago.

Hits for Hospice
tournament a hit, A3

13'
10
18
20
19

Or!3fe"

s

1 ' 174
1'132

3-1
3-1
16. Wake Forest 3-0
4-0
17. Utah
3-1
18. Kansas
19. Boise St.
3-0
3-1
20. Clemson
21 . Vanderbilt
4.0
22 . Illinois
2·1
23. Eas~ Carolina 3-1
4-0
24. TCU
2-1
25. Fresno St.
14 . Ohio 51.
15 Auburn

Survey: Voters continue to support smoke-free workplaces
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Smokers
may grumble about Ohio's
Smoke-Free Workplace Act,
but the public overwhelmingly supports the state's
smoking )&gt;an, according to a
by
survey
conducted
SmokeFreeOhio.
The coalition which campaigned to pass State Issue
5 two years ago conducted
a survey in response to a
proposed ,Senate Bill which
would exempt certain businesses from it. That survey
shows that those who sup-

ported the ban at the polls . According to the survey the Ohio. Senate, would
in November, 2006 intend- recently conducted, 74 per- exempt such private clubs
ed for all restaurants and cenr of the voters surveyed and businesses owned and
bars to be smoke-free agree that bar employees, completely staffed by a
places . even bars and pri- roo. should be protected family from the law.
Meigs County's business
from second-hand smoke .
vate clubs.
Further, 85 percent of 72 percent agree that community has, ,by and
voters agreed that all work- employees in private clubs . large, come into compliance
ers , should be protected should be protected, and 66 with ,the law after a year of
from second-hand smoke. percent of veterans and enforcement by the local
department.
While many smokers per- those serv ing in the mili- heal!h
bars contin However,
some
ceive the law as an infringe- tary bel ievc thai private
ment on their rights, irs aim clubs. such -as Ameri can ue to be _subject to comwas to create smoke-free Legion and Veterans of plaint s from the public
job environments for those Foreign Wars clubs. should abour non-compliance. and
who work in places where protect their employees Hcal!h Commissioner Larry
smoking was once still from the dangers of sec- Marshall said earlier this
monrh th"ey may soon be
common, such .as bars and ond-hand smoke.
restaurants,
SB 346, now pending in subject to fines.
l

ous edition.

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Perspective.
E
t" .
XeCU 1Ve ·
power teSt
under way
Bv STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

COLUMBUS - Gov. Ted
Strickland has proved him- ·
self adept at wielding execulive power to ~ichreve
Democratic goals. despite
the obstacle of a Republican·
controlled Legislarure.
But his recent decision on
when union-scale prevailing
wage should be paid on pri·
vate projects receiving
some state money has raised
·tensions to a new level, and
Republican lawmakers are
preparing for a fight.
Goverhors pushing the
envelope on execu tive
power crin go only so far.
said Grant Neeley. a polirical science professor a! the
University of Dayton.
"You can do i! as much as
the Legislature will allow
you to do that. until they
smack you down." he said.
While Strickland says his
ruling is meant ro clarify
w·hen prevailing wage should
be used. Republicans say he
is changing the rules so that it
is used more often. They fear
that if businesses have 10 pay ·
prevailing wage more frequently, the state's already
shaky business climate will
be further damaged.

Plene see Power, AS

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NATION
ORLD
Texas mayor· to More anxiety on Wall St.: Stocks dive, oil soars
request $2.3B in
aid.from Congress

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 23,2008

BY PATRICK RIZZO
AP BUSINESS WAITER

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NEW YORK - Elation
in the financial markets
over the $700 billion bank
bailout plan evaporated
Monday and was replaceu
·'It's 'llotthere to sustain life by · all-too-familiar anxiety,
BY JUAN A. LOZANO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
on the i&gt;land," LeBlanc said. pummeling stocks and
·'We cannot possibly provide sending oil prices to their
GALVESTON. Texas shelter and homes and setups biggest one-day gain.
As repair news work to for you long-tenn."
Worries that the rescu·~
m;!ke thi, hurricane-rav City leaders are also look- package would cost too
aged ;,land cit y inlaabitable ing at setting up a shuttle ser- · much, drive up inflation,
fur the thousands of resi- vice to take residents from swel l the already-bloateu
dents set to return this week. the temporary shelters on the deficit and hurt the ailing
the may\·Jr h seeking more mainland to their houses economy also led global
than $2 bi llion in emer- during the day so they can investor; to nee the U.S.
gency federal a·id .
make repairs and clean up.
dollar.
The fina l price tag to fully
LeBlanc reminded resi The Dow Jones industrirestore Ga lveston after dents who planned to come . als lost 372 poinh, wiping
Hurrican ~ Ike ploweu ashore
back Wednesday that the out the g&lt;(ins the ind ex..
early Sept. 13 and displaced city stil l only has limited made Friday after adminismost of the 57.000 or so res- medical , power, water and tration official&gt; and conidents i, still unknown .
sewer system capabilities ,. gressional leaders promised
Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas. and that life for them will be sw ift action to get bad debt
along with &lt;,lfficials from the dif(icul.t upon their return. It off the books of banb (md
Port ol Galveston and the cou ld · be several weeks end the financial crisis.
University of Texas Medical before services are restored.
'·[nvestorshad a weeke nd
Branch will meet with a
Residents of the island 's to look at the news that was
Senate ad hoc committee in west end, which was severely streaming out, and they are
Washingto'n on Tuesday. damaged by . Ike , were now finding fault in it," said
They will seek $2.3 billion allowed to begin visiting their Joseph Ballipaglia. market
1n emergency appropna- homes Monday, but they will 'strategist in the private
tions : nearly $1 .2 billion tor not be allowed to live in them client grou p at the in vestGalveston ; about $600 mil - until their power and water ment firm Stifel Nicholaus.
lion for the city's hospital; services are restored.
Oil prices briefly spiked
and about $500 million for
About one-third of cus- more than $25 a barrel
the p011 .
tomers in the Houston area before falling back to setHurricane Ike · battered remained without electricity tle at $ 120.92. up $ 16.37.
Galveston with I I 0 mph Monday. Entergy Texas, on
AP photo
the
New
Yor~
wind' and a I 2-toot stonn which ·serves much of Mercantile Exchange. That Trader Jason Weisberg, right, studies his handheld device as he works on the floor of the
surge and has been blamed Southeast Texas, said it shattered the previous New York Stock Exchange Monday. Wall Street fell in early trading Monday as investors
for 61 deaths. including 26 ex pected to have electric record for a one-day jump nervously awaited further news about the government's plan to buy $700 billion in banks'
in Texas.
'· service restored to its hard- in crude o~l. $10.75.
mortgage debt.
More than I million peo- est-hit areas by Sunday - ·a . Monday was also the last
ple evacuated the Texas . week sooner than previou s- day for investors to trade trolled Congress would ask tiona) safe-haven invest-·
"The whole world is
coast , and about 45,000 res- ly forecasted.
ment in times of financial watching," President .B ush
the October oil futures con- for to approve the plan. ·
idents
fl ed
Galveston
American Red Cross offi- tract , adding fuel to the
The Bush administration turmoil, rose $40.30 to set- said. prodding Congress to
Island . about 50 miles cials said only about 7,600 rally. But the November i's already . forecasting that tle at $909 an ounce.
quickly pass the plan ..
evacuees remain in shelters contract also saw a sharp the federal deficit will hit a
southeast of Houston.
The Dow finished at
By the time markets closed
Many are expected back around the state. That's gain. up $6.62 to $109.37.
record $482 billion next 11,015.69, down 372.75 Monday. the Bush adminisWeclnesuay, the first day . down from a peak of more
The government agency year. Analysts say the points, more than 3 . per- tration and leading lawmakofficials were al lowing res- than 40,000 in the days after that regulates commodities bailout' costs mean a $1 tril- cent. The sharp drop was · ers had agreed to tack mortidents to return to an island Hurricane Ike came ashore. markets said it was working lion an nual deficit is not out reminiscent of last week's gage help for homeowners
still sorely lackin g basic
But the relief agency said with Nymex to "ensure that of the question.
wild trading, which. includ" and strong cong.ress ional
services. Galveston City Monday it isn't sure . how no one is taking advantage
·'When you try to print $1 ed two days of 400-plus- oversight on to the legislaManager Steve LeBlanc long Texas operations will of the current stresses fac- trillion, that will kill your point drops for the Dow tion , said Rep. Barney Frank,
said officials are working last.
ing our financia l market- currency. lifting oil prices, and two days of 300-plus- D-Mass., chairman of the
''I can tell you we won't be place for their own manipu- which then in turn will not point increases.
on a plan to provide tempoHouse Financial Services
rary shelters on the main- measuring this operation in lative gain."
help the stock )llarket," said
Credit
markets , the Committee.
land for those who find weeks," said Joe Becker,
The Commodity Futures Gary Kaltbaum, who runs lifeblood of the economy,
Even assuming it passes,
homes they can' t live in. senior vice president of disas- · Trading Conimiss1on said in the money management loosened a bit . They had the bailout might not be a
But LeBlanc stressed the ter services for the Red Cross. a statement it was "closely firm . Kaltbaum
and seized up . last week when · quick fix for the economy
shelters would be available "We will be measuring this monitoring today"s large Associates in Orlando, Fla. LeHman Brothers Holdings or financial markets.
operation in months,"
only for a sho11 time.
According to research by
movement in the price. of ··· 11 is a vicious cycle, and we Inc. filed for bankruptcy,
are seeing that right now."
Merrill
protection and the govern' economists · at
crude oiL"
Lacking specifics, many ment rescued giant insurer Lynch, after the Resolution
Analysts said some of the
gain could have come from investors - especially for- American
International Trust Corp. was established
large investors trying to eigners - sold U.S . dollars Group Inc. with an $85 bil- in 1989 to stop the savings
cover short positions, or on worries that paying for lion , two-year loan.
and loan crisis, · it took a
bets that prices would fall.
the plan would increase the
Late Sunday, Goldman year for the stock market to
Four days after word of federal Jeficit and exacer- Sachs and Morgan Stanley, hit bottom, two years for the
a massive government res- . bate inflation. Over the past the country's last two economy and three years for
Baby formula and other cue plan began to hit the year, overall inflation is at major independent invest- the housing market.
BVTINI TRAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
milk products have been market , investors had little 5.4 percent.
After Japan put a bailout
ment banks, were granted
pulled from stores around by
way of details .
The IS-nation euro rock- government permission to plan in place, its stock marBEIJING - The head of the country and Chinese Treasury Secretary Henry eted past $1.48 in late after- change their status to bank ket took another five years
China's food safety watch- dairy · products, including Paul son introduced the noon trading Monday, up holding cgmpanies and to recuperate, and by some
dog resigned Monday for baby fonnula, milk candy plan Saturday in a docu - more than 3 cents from open commercial banking measure&gt;, its economy still
fa iling to stop the wide- and ice cream, have been ment .that ran less than Friday in its largest single- subsidiaries.
hasn't had a sustainable
spread contamination of recalled or banned in Japan, three full pages.
day move against the dollar
As Wall Street sold off, recovery . according to
baby fonnula as the number Singapore,
Malaysia,
By Monday, investors still since the European currency Washington was tinkering ·Merrill's
chief
North
of children sickened in the Brunei and Hong Kong.
knew little about ho"! the was introduced in 1999 . The with the plan, trying to find American economist, David
scandal soared to nearly
In a reflection .of the Bush administration would British pound leaped to a compromise that Congress Rosenberg .
53,000, including four breakdown in supervision pay for mopping up the bad $ 1.8584 from $1.8365 , and and the Bush administration
"This is a complicated
of the dairy industry, Sanlu debt, how the process would the dollar dropped to 105.40 could present to American process that will encumber
infants who died.
The shake-up came as and several other leading work, who would run it and Japanesc yen from I07 .Dl .
ta~payers who W(\Uid be the economy for many
investigators revealed that companies embroiled in the what the Democratic-conThe price of gold, a tradi- footing the bill.
years," Battipaglia said.
China's bigge st producer of scandal had been given
powdered milk, Sanlu · inspection-free status by the
Group Co. , had received food safety watchdog.
complaints as ea rl y as
That privilege . has since
December 2007 linking its been rescinded, but the
infant formula to illnesses World Health Organization
in babies. Months later, tests. stressed Monday it was only
revealed the milk was taint- a first step and urged closer
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
ed with the industrial chem- monitoring.
ical melamine, whic h causQuality issues can crop up
Ple~se see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sen.t lnel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
es kidney stones and can at any point in the supply
lead to kidney failure.
chain, from the fann to the
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads m1,1st be paid for in advance.
"During 'these
eight retail outlet, said WHO
months, the company did not China representative Hans
inform the government and Troedsson, adding: "It's .
2 Col. x 4"
2 Col. x 5"
did not take proper measures., . clearly something that is not
therefore making the situa- acceptable and needs . to be
tion worse:· China Central rectified and corrected."
1 Col. X 2" ""'
$54.24
$67 ..80
Television repotted. ciiing an
The re.signation of Li
1 Col. x 3" ,.,
investigation by the State Changjiang, who headed the
Council, China's Cabinet.
General Administration of
$13.56
$82.80
Melamine. used to make Quality
Supervision ,
$103.50
$20.34
plastics and fertilizer, . has Inspection and Quarantine
been· found in infant fonnu - since 2001, comes a year
. $20.70
Ia and other milk products after he and the government
$31.05
from 22 of China's dairy promised to overhaul the
companies. Suppliers trying system in response to a
to cut costs are believed to series of product safety
have added it to watered- scares.
down milk because its high
New regulations and pronitrogen content masks the cedures were introduced; in
resulting protein deficiency. an attempt. to restore conThe tlllmber of sick chil- sumer confidence and pre2 Col. x 3"
dren reported by the Health serve export markets after a
Ministry ha., j 0 mped from string of recalls involving
Weekday $40.68
6,200 to ne&lt;~rly 53.000. Of tainted toothpaste, faulty
Sunday $62.10
those , 12 ,892 remain hospi- tires, contaminated seafood
talized, with 104 of them in and in March 2007,pet food
serious condition. Anoiher containing melamine that
2 Col. x 2"
39,965 children have been was blamed for the · deaths
of dogs and cats in the
treated and released.
· Weekday
The ministry did • not United States.
explain the ;udder~ increase
A series of improvements
. $27.12
in the number.of ..:ases but it were announced from estabsugge sted health officials lishing a national food recall
Sunday
were combing through hos- S:fstem to random inspecpi tal records from May lions
to
·increasing
through August to trace the ,exchanges with quality
origins of the contarrunat!On. i]lspectors in other countries. Borders and Artwork

China's product safety
watchdog
steps
·
d
own
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Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...

Weekday

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Weekday

Weekday

Sunday

Sunday

Weekday

YTHE

The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'Bare' truth not·azl
:·that uncomfortable

END

·PageA:J
Tuesday, September 23,

2008

Community Calendar

Sunday, Sept. 28
Eastern Stars. special meet- meet from I: 15 to 2:15p.m.
RACINE
·
at
the
Meigs
Senior
Center.
ing, 7 p.m.. lodge hall. wear
Those attending may bring Homecoming at the Eagle
chapter an ire.
Thursday, Sept. 25
their loved ones for a time Ridge Community Church .
RACINE
Racine
Area
SYRACUSE - Meigs
.of
structured activity during Eagle Ridge Road. dinner at
Community Organization,
' Bv KATHY MITCHELL
house after church to visit County Board of MRIDD regular meeting. Star Mill the support group's 1i1eet- noon. si nging at I p.m by
my so11 before goi1ig some regular meeting, 4:30 p.m., Park, potluck, new mem- ing. Kathy McDaniel and Bi&gt;se lls, Jerry and Diane
. AND MARCY SUGAR
20 miles back to their · Carleton School.
Sharon Dean are co-facilita- Frederick . and South Bound
bers welcome .
Dear Annie: For the past home. The first year. I
tors
for the support group. Express.
Thursday, Sept. 25
20 vears. we have vaca- would fix refreshments and
POMEROY Meig s For more information. call
tiom!d with an(lther family. visit with them before
County Retired Teachers, 992-2 I 61.
Now that all our kids are in excusing myself. I was
Tuesday, Sept. 30
Saturday, Sept. 27
noon at Trinity Church in
college, we decided to take bothered by the fact that
RACINE - · Thomas and Pomeroy . Speaker. Andrew
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Thursday, Sept. 25
. a cou'ples-only trip this win- they had no manners and Isabel (Weaver) Stobart Tinkham of the Ohio Coin Club, change of meeting
RACINE
- Southern
: . · ter. w~ all agreed to go to a were not pleasant company. reunion I p.m . at Star Mill Consumers
Counsel. from Monday to Tuesday at toea! · School District's
The girl has a whiny per- Park in Racine . Take cov- Musical program too. Call the Pomeroy Library. 7 p.m.
&lt;· beach resort .
Fitness Center. open house.
Our friends , read about sonality and a ·'pity poor ered dish. · In the event of 992-3.21-1 tor lunch reserva4-7 p.m .. Southern High
nude resorts on The New me" attitude.
ram, the · reunion will be tions . by Tuesday. Guests
School, free health screenNow when I know thev held at the Racit;e Library.
York Times web page and
welcome.
mgs .
deciued that's where we are coming. I go to another
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Friday, ept. 26
should go. I have no prob- mom cmd feel imprisoned
Masters , I I :30 a.m. KFC .
MIDDLEPORT ~ The
. lem being naked in private . unti I they leave. My son
REEDSVILLE
Middleport Chu rch of
, · My huslland and I frequent- , says he plans to break up
Riverview Garderi Club. · Christ will hav~ a free com:: ly sleep in the nude. and with the girl, hut has yet to
Wednesday, Sept. 24
7:30 p.m. at the home of munity dinner. 4:30 to 6
·. before we had kids, we do so. He isn't financially
LONG
BOTTOM Tuesday, Sept. 23
Ruthann
Balderson. p.m .. 111 the Middleport
. · found· it exhilarating to able to get a place of hi s
CHESTER
Past Reedsville .
Church ol Christ Family Ralph Ballard will celebrate
·· skinny dip in a secluded own, so that is not an Councilors Club , 7:30 p.m.
friday, Sept. 26
Lite Center. Fifth and Main . his 85th birthday on Sept.
··· ponu. I have even done option. Any advice' Menu, biscuits and gravy. 24. Cards mav be sent to
the hall.
POMEROY
housework in the nude o'n Aggravated in Alabama
RACINE
. - Racine Alzheimer"s/memory loss eggs·. potatoes anJ bacon him at 34665 Bashan Road.
Dear Alabama: If your Chapter 134 Order of careg iver suppor1 group wi ll ·and dessert.
hot days when I was alone .
Long Bottom. Ohio -15743.
But I've never bcen· nude in son doesn't find his backbone. this whiny girl could
front of others.
Our friend s went to a · end up becoming your
Please
nearbv lake where nude daughter-in-law.
bathi1ig is allowed and continue to be cordial. It
enjoyed it lot. hence their might belp if you could run
desire to go to a nude resort. errands instead of locking
Thcv assure us the resort is yourself in your bedroom,
:clothing optional. so we and suggest to your son that
don't have to undress if we he occasionally meet his
feel uncomfortable. They friends at church and enterassume we will feel totally tain them elsew here.
Dear Annie: I was very
comfortable au natural once
offended
by
·''New
we are surrounded by other
Yorker's'" letter about loiternaked people.
My husband is willing to ing teenagers. I am 14 years
try it , but I just can't imag- olu and found it extremely
. ine being naked in front of insulting to be compared to
stran gers or even being cockroaches. Talking about
· clothed looking at naked teenagers as if we are ~II
people. We are both 50 and alike is as silly as saying all
- our bodies are not nubile. senior citizens behave the
We were so looking forward same way or all middle- .
to this joint vacation that I aged people like to eat the
hate to give it up . I also hate same foods. I wonder if
- being the only person "New Yorker·· has forgotten
objecting to it : Wi II I lose what it was Iike w11en he
a · teenager.
. my inhibitions like they say. was
or will I likely be miser- Indignant in Montreal
Submitted photo
Dear Indignant: We
able' - Austin; Texas
Here are the Team Sweepers which took first place in the Hits for Holzer Hospice 2008
Dear Aus.tin: Most peo- don't think ."New Yorker" '
Tournament.
ple at nude resorts are not intended to impugn all
interested in showing off teenagers, only those .who
their bodies. They si.nply. are maliciously disrespectenjoy the feeling of going ful. Most teens are terrific
without c lothing. meaning ~:i tiz ens who care deeply
you will see qllite a variety about their environment and
of loodies - most of which volunteer more than previare u lot less nubile than you ous generations. We re in
imagiQe. However, ·you your comer.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
should not feel forced to do
something that makes you tell by Kathy Mi.ichell and
uncomfortable.
Your Marcy ·Sugar,longtime edifriend s· suggestion to check tors of tlte A 1111 l-anders
out the nearby lake is a good column. Plea~e e-mail your
one.lt will allow you to see questions to amriesmailwhat you arc getting · into. box@comcast.net, or write
without making a vacation to: Armie's Mailbox, P.O.
commitment unless you Box 118190, Chicago, It
60611. To find out more
want to .
Dear Annie: Nearly five about Annie's Mailbox,
· years ago , my son (now 24) and read features by other
¥
started datit1g a girl from Creators Syndicate writers
our church. At least two and cartoo11ists, visit tire
On Books, Tools, Kitchen Items, Rugs
nights a week. she ·and her Creuton- Syndicate W~:b
ulder brother stop by our page at www.creators.com.
Towels &amp; A Little Bit Of Everything

Public meetings

Reunions

Other events

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays

'I

Annual Event-Prices You Will Not See Again
Both In The Tent &amp; In The Store

.'

Local Weather
'

.

1'hursday.. .Sunny. ,Highs
. Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
: • in the lower 80s. East winds in the mid 70s.
· · around 5 mph.
· Thursday night through
Tuesday night .. ,Mostly Saturday ... Mostly cloudy.
clear. Lows in the lower Lows in the lower 50s.
· 50s.
Northeast
winds Highs in the' miu 70s.
Saturday night ... Mo~tly
around . 5 mph in the
evenlng ... Becoming light cloudy in the evening .. .Then
and variable.
becoming partly cloudy.
Wednesday ... Sunny. Lows in the lower 50s.
Sunday and Sunday
J-liglts around 80 . N011heast
night ...Mostly clear. Highs
winds around 5 mph.
night ... in the upper 70s. Lows in
Wednesday
Mostly clear. Lows in the the lower 50s.
· Mondoy...Mostly sunny.
upper 40s . Northeast winds
Highs in the upper 70s.
arou1\(l 5 mph.

Sunday

Local Stocks

Sunday

...
:
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'
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'

Gift Items for Mom, Dad &amp; Grandpa.r ents
·
All Under $5 • Valued $10-$20

'

AEP (NYSE) - 37.05
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 60.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 28.94
Big lots (NYSE) - 29.90
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 27.45
BorgWarner jNYSE) - 36.11
Century Aluminum (NAS·
DAQ)- 40.23
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.77
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-5.17 .
.
City Holding (NASDAQ) 45.19
'
Collins (NYSE) - .48.59
DuPont (NYSE) - 45.39
US Bank (NYSE) - ~5
Gannett (NYSE) - 18.01
General Electric (NYSE) 26.15
Harley-Davidson (NVSE) 41
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.80
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.72
Limited Brands (NYSE) 18.44
Nol'lolk Southern (NVSE) •

66.97

Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 20.55
BBT (NYSE) - 39.23
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 25
Pepsico (NYSE) - 71.08
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.99
Rockwell (NYSE) - 37.93
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 4.34
Royal Dutch Shell - 63.60
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 96.82
'
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 58.89
Wendy's (NYSE) - 21.32 ·
WesBanco (NYSE) - 29.09
Worthington (NYSE)- 17.63
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Sept. 22,
2008, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
lsaa~ Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero· In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

In Our Store

50% - 75% OFF Book Pre-Price
Childrens Books, Inspirational· Books
Cookbooks, How-To Books &amp; Etc.

5-KFox
Trot set
for Oct. 4
RIO GRANDE - Alpha
Mu Beta Sorority of Rio
Grande University will hold
their Second Annual Fox
Trot 5-K on Saturday, Oct. 4.
Registration will held at
the University Bob Evans
Farms Hall parking lot at 7
a.m. with the race to· follow
at 8 a.m. Registration fee for
school aged and University
students will be $10. adults
will be $15 for early registration. Day of the event
registration will be $20 . .
All proceeds 'bene!lt the
AMB Sorority and Holzer
Hospice. Holzer Hospice
servtces patients with a1ifelimiting illness regardless of
ability to pay in Athens .
Gallia. Jackson. Meigs and
surrounding counties.

For more il!formarion or
to regisrer foi tire eve111.
please call 740-649-9800
or email alplwmuberafoxes@yahoo.com.

45" 100% Cotton Fabric-Thousands Of Yards
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Our Price .$1 to $2.29yd

�•

.PageA2

NATION
ORLD
Texas mayor· to More anxiety on Wall St.: Stocks dive, oil soars
request $2.3B in
aid.from Congress

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 23,2008

BY PATRICK RIZZO
AP BUSINESS WAITER

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NEW YORK - Elation
in the financial markets
over the $700 billion bank
bailout plan evaporated
Monday and was replaceu
·'It's 'llotthere to sustain life by · all-too-familiar anxiety,
BY JUAN A. LOZANO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
on the i&gt;land," LeBlanc said. pummeling stocks and
·'We cannot possibly provide sending oil prices to their
GALVESTON. Texas shelter and homes and setups biggest one-day gain.
As repair news work to for you long-tenn."
Worries that the rescu·~
m;!ke thi, hurricane-rav City leaders are also look- package would cost too
aged ;,land cit y inlaabitable ing at setting up a shuttle ser- · much, drive up inflation,
fur the thousands of resi- vice to take residents from swel l the already-bloateu
dents set to return this week. the temporary shelters on the deficit and hurt the ailing
the may\·Jr h seeking more mainland to their houses economy also led global
than $2 bi llion in emer- during the day so they can investor; to nee the U.S.
gency federal a·id .
make repairs and clean up.
dollar.
The fina l price tag to fully
LeBlanc reminded resi The Dow Jones industrirestore Ga lveston after dents who planned to come . als lost 372 poinh, wiping
Hurrican ~ Ike ploweu ashore
back Wednesday that the out the g&lt;(ins the ind ex..
early Sept. 13 and displaced city stil l only has limited made Friday after adminismost of the 57.000 or so res- medical , power, water and tration official&gt; and conidents i, still unknown .
sewer system capabilities ,. gressional leaders promised
Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas. and that life for them will be sw ift action to get bad debt
along with &lt;,lfficials from the dif(icul.t upon their return. It off the books of banb (md
Port ol Galveston and the cou ld · be several weeks end the financial crisis.
University of Texas Medical before services are restored.
'·[nvestorshad a weeke nd
Branch will meet with a
Residents of the island 's to look at the news that was
Senate ad hoc committee in west end, which was severely streaming out, and they are
Washingto'n on Tuesday. damaged by . Ike , were now finding fault in it," said
They will seek $2.3 billion allowed to begin visiting their Joseph Ballipaglia. market
1n emergency appropna- homes Monday, but they will 'strategist in the private
tions : nearly $1 .2 billion tor not be allowed to live in them client grou p at the in vestGalveston ; about $600 mil - until their power and water ment firm Stifel Nicholaus.
lion for the city's hospital; services are restored.
Oil prices briefly spiked
and about $500 million for
About one-third of cus- more than $25 a barrel
the p011 .
tomers in the Houston area before falling back to setHurricane Ike · battered remained without electricity tle at $ 120.92. up $ 16.37.
Galveston with I I 0 mph Monday. Entergy Texas, on
AP photo
the
New
Yor~
wind' and a I 2-toot stonn which ·serves much of Mercantile Exchange. That Trader Jason Weisberg, right, studies his handheld device as he works on the floor of the
surge and has been blamed Southeast Texas, said it shattered the previous New York Stock Exchange Monday. Wall Street fell in early trading Monday as investors
for 61 deaths. including 26 ex pected to have electric record for a one-day jump nervously awaited further news about the government's plan to buy $700 billion in banks'
in Texas.
'· service restored to its hard- in crude o~l. $10.75.
mortgage debt.
More than I million peo- est-hit areas by Sunday - ·a . Monday was also the last
ple evacuated the Texas . week sooner than previou s- day for investors to trade trolled Congress would ask tiona) safe-haven invest-·
"The whole world is
coast , and about 45,000 res- ly forecasted.
ment in times of financial watching," President .B ush
the October oil futures con- for to approve the plan. ·
idents
fl ed
Galveston
American Red Cross offi- tract , adding fuel to the
The Bush administration turmoil, rose $40.30 to set- said. prodding Congress to
Island . about 50 miles cials said only about 7,600 rally. But the November i's already . forecasting that tle at $909 an ounce.
quickly pass the plan ..
evacuees remain in shelters contract also saw a sharp the federal deficit will hit a
southeast of Houston.
The Dow finished at
By the time markets closed
Many are expected back around the state. That's gain. up $6.62 to $109.37.
record $482 billion next 11,015.69, down 372.75 Monday. the Bush adminisWeclnesuay, the first day . down from a peak of more
The government agency year. Analysts say the points, more than 3 . per- tration and leading lawmakofficials were al lowing res- than 40,000 in the days after that regulates commodities bailout' costs mean a $1 tril- cent. The sharp drop was · ers had agreed to tack mortidents to return to an island Hurricane Ike came ashore. markets said it was working lion an nual deficit is not out reminiscent of last week's gage help for homeowners
still sorely lackin g basic
But the relief agency said with Nymex to "ensure that of the question.
wild trading, which. includ" and strong cong.ress ional
services. Galveston City Monday it isn't sure . how no one is taking advantage
·'When you try to print $1 ed two days of 400-plus- oversight on to the legislaManager Steve LeBlanc long Texas operations will of the current stresses fac- trillion, that will kill your point drops for the Dow tion , said Rep. Barney Frank,
said officials are working last.
ing our financia l market- currency. lifting oil prices, and two days of 300-plus- D-Mass., chairman of the
''I can tell you we won't be place for their own manipu- which then in turn will not point increases.
on a plan to provide tempoHouse Financial Services
rary shelters on the main- measuring this operation in lative gain."
help the stock )llarket," said
Credit
markets , the Committee.
land for those who find weeks," said Joe Becker,
The Commodity Futures Gary Kaltbaum, who runs lifeblood of the economy,
Even assuming it passes,
homes they can' t live in. senior vice president of disas- · Trading Conimiss1on said in the money management loosened a bit . They had the bailout might not be a
But LeBlanc stressed the ter services for the Red Cross. a statement it was "closely firm . Kaltbaum
and seized up . last week when · quick fix for the economy
shelters would be available "We will be measuring this monitoring today"s large Associates in Orlando, Fla. LeHman Brothers Holdings or financial markets.
operation in months,"
only for a sho11 time.
According to research by
movement in the price. of ··· 11 is a vicious cycle, and we Inc. filed for bankruptcy,
are seeing that right now."
Merrill
protection and the govern' economists · at
crude oiL"
Lacking specifics, many ment rescued giant insurer Lynch, after the Resolution
Analysts said some of the
gain could have come from investors - especially for- American
International Trust Corp. was established
large investors trying to eigners - sold U.S . dollars Group Inc. with an $85 bil- in 1989 to stop the savings
cover short positions, or on worries that paying for lion , two-year loan.
and loan crisis, · it took a
bets that prices would fall.
the plan would increase the
Late Sunday, Goldman year for the stock market to
Four days after word of federal Jeficit and exacer- Sachs and Morgan Stanley, hit bottom, two years for the
a massive government res- . bate inflation. Over the past the country's last two economy and three years for
Baby formula and other cue plan began to hit the year, overall inflation is at major independent invest- the housing market.
BVTINI TRAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
milk products have been market , investors had little 5.4 percent.
After Japan put a bailout
ment banks, were granted
pulled from stores around by
way of details .
The IS-nation euro rock- government permission to plan in place, its stock marBEIJING - The head of the country and Chinese Treasury Secretary Henry eted past $1.48 in late after- change their status to bank ket took another five years
China's food safety watch- dairy · products, including Paul son introduced the noon trading Monday, up holding cgmpanies and to recuperate, and by some
dog resigned Monday for baby fonnula, milk candy plan Saturday in a docu - more than 3 cents from open commercial banking measure&gt;, its economy still
fa iling to stop the wide- and ice cream, have been ment .that ran less than Friday in its largest single- subsidiaries.
hasn't had a sustainable
spread contamination of recalled or banned in Japan, three full pages.
day move against the dollar
As Wall Street sold off, recovery . according to
baby fonnula as the number Singapore,
Malaysia,
By Monday, investors still since the European currency Washington was tinkering ·Merrill's
chief
North
of children sickened in the Brunei and Hong Kong.
knew little about ho"! the was introduced in 1999 . The with the plan, trying to find American economist, David
scandal soared to nearly
In a reflection .of the Bush administration would British pound leaped to a compromise that Congress Rosenberg .
53,000, including four breakdown in supervision pay for mopping up the bad $ 1.8584 from $1.8365 , and and the Bush administration
"This is a complicated
of the dairy industry, Sanlu debt, how the process would the dollar dropped to 105.40 could present to American process that will encumber
infants who died.
The shake-up came as and several other leading work, who would run it and Japanesc yen from I07 .Dl .
ta~payers who W(\Uid be the economy for many
investigators revealed that companies embroiled in the what the Democratic-conThe price of gold, a tradi- footing the bill.
years," Battipaglia said.
China's bigge st producer of scandal had been given
powdered milk, Sanlu · inspection-free status by the
Group Co. , had received food safety watchdog.
complaints as ea rl y as
That privilege . has since
December 2007 linking its been rescinded, but the
infant formula to illnesses World Health Organization
in babies. Months later, tests. stressed Monday it was only
revealed the milk was taint- a first step and urged closer
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
ed with the industrial chem- monitoring.
ical melamine, whic h causQuality issues can crop up
Ple~se see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sen.t lnel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
es kidney stones and can at any point in the supply
lead to kidney failure.
chain, from the fann to the
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads m1,1st be paid for in advance.
"During 'these
eight retail outlet, said WHO
months, the company did not China representative Hans
inform the government and Troedsson, adding: "It's .
2 Col. x 4"
2 Col. x 5"
did not take proper measures., . clearly something that is not
therefore making the situa- acceptable and needs . to be
tion worse:· China Central rectified and corrected."
1 Col. X 2" ""'
$54.24
$67 ..80
Television repotted. ciiing an
The re.signation of Li
1 Col. x 3" ,.,
investigation by the State Changjiang, who headed the
Council, China's Cabinet.
General Administration of
$13.56
$82.80
Melamine. used to make Quality
Supervision ,
$103.50
$20.34
plastics and fertilizer, . has Inspection and Quarantine
been· found in infant fonnu - since 2001, comes a year
. $20.70
Ia and other milk products after he and the government
$31.05
from 22 of China's dairy promised to overhaul the
companies. Suppliers trying system in response to a
to cut costs are believed to series of product safety
have added it to watered- scares.
down milk because its high
New regulations and pronitrogen content masks the cedures were introduced; in
resulting protein deficiency. an attempt. to restore conThe tlllmber of sick chil- sumer confidence and pre2 Col. x 3"
dren reported by the Health serve export markets after a
Ministry ha., j 0 mped from string of recalls involving
Weekday $40.68
6,200 to ne&lt;~rly 53.000. Of tainted toothpaste, faulty
Sunday $62.10
those , 12 ,892 remain hospi- tires, contaminated seafood
talized, with 104 of them in and in March 2007,pet food
serious condition. Anoiher containing melamine that
2 Col. x 2"
39,965 children have been was blamed for the · deaths
of dogs and cats in the
treated and released.
· Weekday
The ministry did • not United States.
explain the ;udder~ increase
A series of improvements
. $27.12
in the number.of ..:ases but it were announced from estabsugge sted health officials lishing a national food recall
Sunday
were combing through hos- S:fstem to random inspecpi tal records from May lions
to
·increasing
through August to trace the ,exchanges with quality
origins of the contarrunat!On. i]lspectors in other countries. Borders and Artwork

China's product safety
watchdog
steps
·
d
own
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Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads

SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...

Weekday

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Weekday

Weekday

Sunday

Sunday

Weekday

YTHE

The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'Bare' truth not·azl
:·that uncomfortable

END

·PageA:J
Tuesday, September 23,

2008

Community Calendar

Sunday, Sept. 28
Eastern Stars. special meet- meet from I: 15 to 2:15p.m.
RACINE
·
at
the
Meigs
Senior
Center.
ing, 7 p.m.. lodge hall. wear
Those attending may bring Homecoming at the Eagle
chapter an ire.
Thursday, Sept. 25
their loved ones for a time Ridge Community Church .
RACINE
Racine
Area
SYRACUSE - Meigs
.of
structured activity during Eagle Ridge Road. dinner at
Community Organization,
' Bv KATHY MITCHELL
house after church to visit County Board of MRIDD regular meeting. Star Mill the support group's 1i1eet- noon. si nging at I p.m by
my so11 before goi1ig some regular meeting, 4:30 p.m., Park, potluck, new mem- ing. Kathy McDaniel and Bi&gt;se lls, Jerry and Diane
. AND MARCY SUGAR
20 miles back to their · Carleton School.
Sharon Dean are co-facilita- Frederick . and South Bound
bers welcome .
Dear Annie: For the past home. The first year. I
tors
for the support group. Express.
Thursday, Sept. 25
20 vears. we have vaca- would fix refreshments and
POMEROY Meig s For more information. call
tiom!d with an(lther family. visit with them before
County Retired Teachers, 992-2 I 61.
Now that all our kids are in excusing myself. I was
Tuesday, Sept. 30
Saturday, Sept. 27
noon at Trinity Church in
college, we decided to take bothered by the fact that
RACINE - · Thomas and Pomeroy . Speaker. Andrew
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Thursday, Sept. 25
. a cou'ples-only trip this win- they had no manners and Isabel (Weaver) Stobart Tinkham of the Ohio Coin Club, change of meeting
RACINE
- Southern
: . · ter. w~ all agreed to go to a were not pleasant company. reunion I p.m . at Star Mill Consumers
Counsel. from Monday to Tuesday at toea! · School District's
The girl has a whiny per- Park in Racine . Take cov- Musical program too. Call the Pomeroy Library. 7 p.m.
&lt;· beach resort .
Fitness Center. open house.
Our friends , read about sonality and a ·'pity poor ered dish. · In the event of 992-3.21-1 tor lunch reserva4-7 p.m .. Southern High
nude resorts on The New me" attitude.
ram, the · reunion will be tions . by Tuesday. Guests
School, free health screenNow when I know thev held at the Racit;e Library.
York Times web page and
welcome.
mgs .
deciued that's where we are coming. I go to another
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Friday, ept. 26
should go. I have no prob- mom cmd feel imprisoned
Masters , I I :30 a.m. KFC .
MIDDLEPORT ~ The
. lem being naked in private . unti I they leave. My son
REEDSVILLE
Middleport Chu rch of
, · My huslland and I frequent- , says he plans to break up
Riverview Garderi Club. · Christ will hav~ a free com:: ly sleep in the nude. and with the girl, hut has yet to
Wednesday, Sept. 24
7:30 p.m. at the home of munity dinner. 4:30 to 6
·. before we had kids, we do so. He isn't financially
LONG
BOTTOM Tuesday, Sept. 23
Ruthann
Balderson. p.m .. 111 the Middleport
. · found· it exhilarating to able to get a place of hi s
CHESTER
Past Reedsville .
Church ol Christ Family Ralph Ballard will celebrate
·· skinny dip in a secluded own, so that is not an Councilors Club , 7:30 p.m.
friday, Sept. 26
Lite Center. Fifth and Main . his 85th birthday on Sept.
··· ponu. I have even done option. Any advice' Menu, biscuits and gravy. 24. Cards mav be sent to
the hall.
POMEROY
housework in the nude o'n Aggravated in Alabama
RACINE
. - Racine Alzheimer"s/memory loss eggs·. potatoes anJ bacon him at 34665 Bashan Road.
Dear Alabama: If your Chapter 134 Order of careg iver suppor1 group wi ll ·and dessert.
hot days when I was alone .
Long Bottom. Ohio -15743.
But I've never bcen· nude in son doesn't find his backbone. this whiny girl could
front of others.
Our friend s went to a · end up becoming your
Please
nearbv lake where nude daughter-in-law.
bathi1ig is allowed and continue to be cordial. It
enjoyed it lot. hence their might belp if you could run
desire to go to a nude resort. errands instead of locking
Thcv assure us the resort is yourself in your bedroom,
:clothing optional. so we and suggest to your son that
don't have to undress if we he occasionally meet his
feel uncomfortable. They friends at church and enterassume we will feel totally tain them elsew here.
Dear Annie: I was very
comfortable au natural once
offended
by
·''New
we are surrounded by other
Yorker's'" letter about loiternaked people.
My husband is willing to ing teenagers. I am 14 years
try it , but I just can't imag- olu and found it extremely
. ine being naked in front of insulting to be compared to
stran gers or even being cockroaches. Talking about
· clothed looking at naked teenagers as if we are ~II
people. We are both 50 and alike is as silly as saying all
- our bodies are not nubile. senior citizens behave the
We were so looking forward same way or all middle- .
to this joint vacation that I aged people like to eat the
hate to give it up . I also hate same foods. I wonder if
- being the only person "New Yorker·· has forgotten
objecting to it : Wi II I lose what it was Iike w11en he
a · teenager.
. my inhibitions like they say. was
or will I likely be miser- Indignant in Montreal
Submitted photo
Dear Indignant: We
able' - Austin; Texas
Here are the Team Sweepers which took first place in the Hits for Holzer Hospice 2008
Dear Aus.tin: Most peo- don't think ."New Yorker" '
Tournament.
ple at nude resorts are not intended to impugn all
interested in showing off teenagers, only those .who
their bodies. They si.nply. are maliciously disrespectenjoy the feeling of going ful. Most teens are terrific
without c lothing. meaning ~:i tiz ens who care deeply
you will see qllite a variety about their environment and
of loodies - most of which volunteer more than previare u lot less nubile than you ous generations. We re in
imagiQe. However, ·you your comer.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
should not feel forced to do
something that makes you tell by Kathy Mi.ichell and
uncomfortable.
Your Marcy ·Sugar,longtime edifriend s· suggestion to check tors of tlte A 1111 l-anders
out the nearby lake is a good column. Plea~e e-mail your
one.lt will allow you to see questions to amriesmailwhat you arc getting · into. box@comcast.net, or write
without making a vacation to: Armie's Mailbox, P.O.
commitment unless you Box 118190, Chicago, It
60611. To find out more
want to .
Dear Annie: Nearly five about Annie's Mailbox,
· years ago , my son (now 24) and read features by other
¥
started datit1g a girl from Creators Syndicate writers
our church. At least two and cartoo11ists, visit tire
On Books, Tools, Kitchen Items, Rugs
nights a week. she ·and her Creuton- Syndicate W~:b
ulder brother stop by our page at www.creators.com.
Towels &amp; A Little Bit Of Everything

Public meetings

Reunions

Other events

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays

'I

Annual Event-Prices You Will Not See Again
Both In The Tent &amp; In The Store

.'

Local Weather
'

.

1'hursday.. .Sunny. ,Highs
. Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
: • in the lower 80s. East winds in the mid 70s.
· · around 5 mph.
· Thursday night through
Tuesday night .. ,Mostly Saturday ... Mostly cloudy.
clear. Lows in the lower Lows in the lower 50s.
· 50s.
Northeast
winds Highs in the' miu 70s.
Saturday night ... Mo~tly
around . 5 mph in the
evenlng ... Becoming light cloudy in the evening .. .Then
and variable.
becoming partly cloudy.
Wednesday ... Sunny. Lows in the lower 50s.
Sunday and Sunday
J-liglts around 80 . N011heast
night ...Mostly clear. Highs
winds around 5 mph.
night ... in the upper 70s. Lows in
Wednesday
Mostly clear. Lows in the the lower 50s.
· Mondoy...Mostly sunny.
upper 40s . Northeast winds
Highs in the upper 70s.
arou1\(l 5 mph.

Sunday

Local Stocks

Sunday

...
:
.
,
'
'
,
'

Gift Items for Mom, Dad &amp; Grandpa.r ents
·
All Under $5 • Valued $10-$20

'

AEP (NYSE) - 37.05
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 60.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 28.94
Big lots (NYSE) - 29.90
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 27.45
BorgWarner jNYSE) - 36.11
Century Aluminum (NAS·
DAQ)- 40.23
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.77
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-5.17 .
.
City Holding (NASDAQ) 45.19
'
Collins (NYSE) - .48.59
DuPont (NYSE) - 45.39
US Bank (NYSE) - ~5
Gannett (NYSE) - 18.01
General Electric (NYSE) 26.15
Harley-Davidson (NVSE) 41
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.80
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.72
Limited Brands (NYSE) 18.44
Nol'lolk Southern (NVSE) •

66.97

Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 20.55
BBT (NYSE) - 39.23
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 25
Pepsico (NYSE) - 71.08
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.99
Rockwell (NYSE) - 37.93
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 4.34
Royal Dutch Shell - 63.60
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 96.82
'
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 58.89
Wendy's (NYSE) - 21.32 ·
WesBanco (NYSE) - 29.09
Worthington (NYSE)- 17.63
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Sept. 22,
2008, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
lsaa~ Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero· In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

In Our Store

50% - 75% OFF Book Pre-Price
Childrens Books, Inspirational· Books
Cookbooks, How-To Books &amp; Etc.

5-KFox
Trot set
for Oct. 4
RIO GRANDE - Alpha
Mu Beta Sorority of Rio
Grande University will hold
their Second Annual Fox
Trot 5-K on Saturday, Oct. 4.
Registration will held at
the University Bob Evans
Farms Hall parking lot at 7
a.m. with the race to· follow
at 8 a.m. Registration fee for
school aged and University
students will be $10. adults
will be $15 for early registration. Day of the event
registration will be $20 . .
All proceeds 'bene!lt the
AMB Sorority and Holzer
Hospice. Holzer Hospice
servtces patients with a1ifelimiting illness regardless of
ability to pay in Athens .
Gallia. Jackson. Meigs and
surrounding counties.

For more il!formarion or
to regisrer foi tire eve111.
please call 740-649-9800
or email alplwmuberafoxes@yahoo.com.

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Our Price .$1 to $2.29yd

�OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel
.

;~ ·The

••

•.
.•.
.·.
..:

.--. -....
.-.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

h 's sad that it has taken a
Wall Street meltdown ·to do
11 . but at las.t the presidential
campaign is off trivialities
- as in " lipstick on a pig"
and is . fo~used on

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting a11
- establishmmt of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereof; OJ abridging the freedom
:. of speech, or of the press; or the right of tl1e
• people peaceably to assemble, a11d to petitio11
· the Goverummt for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today 1s Tuesday. Sept. 23. the 267th day of2008. There
are 99 days left in the year
· Today's Highlight in History: One hundred years ago. 011
Sept. 23. 1908, one of baseball 's most famous blunders
occurred in a game between the New York Giants and the
yisiting Chicago Cubs. With the score tied 1-1 in the bottom of the ninth and two runners -out. the Giants batted 111
what should have· been the winning nm. However, Fred
Merkle,. who was on first base, began to leave the field
apparently without bothering to tag second; the Cubs then
. claimed to have forced Merkle out. Merkle was eventually
ruled out, negating the winning run and leaving the game
lied. (The Cubs won a rematch game on Oct. 8 and with it,
the National League pennant; Ch icago then went on 10 wm
ihe World Series.)
On this date: In !779, during the Revolutionary War. the
Amencan warship Bon Homme Richard, commanded by
John Paul Jones, defeated the HMS Sempis in battle.
In 1780. British spy John Andre was captured along with
papers revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West
Point to the British.
.
.
· In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St.
' Louis more than two years after setting out for the Pacific
' Northwest.
· In 1846 , Neptune was identified as a planet by German
astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle.
I~ 1938. a time capsule, to be opened in the year 6939, was
buned on the grounds of the World's Fair in New York City.
In 1952, Republican VICe-presidential candidate Richard
M. Nixon went on television to deliver what came to be
known as the "Checkers" speech as he refuted allegat 1ons
of improper campaign financing.
In 1957 , nine black students who had entered Little Rock
Central High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw
because of a white mob outside.
• In 1962, New York's Philharmonic Hall (since renamed
Avery Fisher Hall) formally opened as the first unit of the
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.
In 2001. \3 coal miners were killed in explosions at the
Blue Creek Mine No.5 in Brookwood, Ala.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Mickey Rooney is 88. Actress
Margaret Pellegrini ('The Wizard of Oz") is 85. Singer
Julio Iglesias is 65. Actor Paul Petersen ("The Donna .Reed
Show") is 63. Actress-singer Mary Kay Place is 61. Rock
star Bruce Springsteen IS 59. Actress Rosalind Chao is 51.
Actor Jason Alexander is 49. Actress Elizabeth Pena 1s 47.
Country musician Don Herron (BR549) is 46. Actress
LisaRaye is 42. Singer Ani DiFranco is 38. Rock singer
Sarah Bettefis (K's Choice) is 36. Recording executive
Jermaine Dupri is 36. Pop si nge r Elik-Michael Estrada
("Making the Band") is 29. Actress Aubrey Dollar is 28.
Thought for Today: "Each generation imagines itself to
be more intelligent than the one that went before it , and
wiser than the one that comes after it." - George Orwell
(Eric Blair). British author ( 1903-1950).
.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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"the fundamentals of our
economy are sound" even
as he said that "the economy 1s in crisis" - then
sc rambled to define '·fundamentals" as the productivJty
Morton ,
of American workers and
America's Ui1e economic
Kondracke entrepreneurship of small
problems .
ll's hard to believe the
business.
'
economic issue won't favor
McCain also has reverted
to his sometime role of
Dcmonatic Barack Obama.
Roosevelt-style
especially if Wall Street's place where it is most pro- Teddy
reformer, trashing "greed"
turmoil spreads to Main ductive.
Street,
which
seems
"Without transparency, on Wall Street and "misinevitable
111
thm cannot happen. If the managenient."
h'e
A week ago. though. the information is flawed, if Washington, which
Gallup Poll found that there is fraud. or if the risks vowed to fix.
Obama 's lead over John facmg financial institutions
His .campaign adviser.
M\:Cain on economic issues are not fully discl'osed , peo- former Hewlett-Packard
l1.1d narrowed from 19 ple stop investing because CEO Carly Fiorina, spec ifpOIIItS prior to the tWO they fear they're being had. ically
blamed
the
nat1onal conventions to just When the public· trust ·is Securities and Exchange
3 points.
abused badly enough. 11 can Commission and the Bush
The economy has been bring financial markets to adm111istration for being
"asleep at the switch."
hsue No. I on the mmds of their knees ."
voters for months, but the
Ohama isn't blaming
Obama 's ar~ument was
McCain
specificall y for the
and
i'
that
the
1999
McCain campa1gn managed fur two weeks - with deregulation of financml crisis - even though he
some mistaken help from markets, allowing mvest- used to be chairman of the
· Commerce
Obama - to d1vert nation- ment bank.1. insurance Senate
Committee
but the Bush
companies
and
hedge
funds
al attention onto GOP vice
administration,
its (prepresidential nominee Sarah to get into busine&gt;Ses for- ·
Palin and whether she was merly done by commercial Treasury Secretary Henry
being treated with the banks. was not accompa- Paulson) laissez-faire phirespect due a 'lady. tough nied by a new governmen t losophy and "tri ckle-down
· oversight regime. leading econom1cs," which McCain
lady though she IS.
But this week, as newspa- to excesses that brought o,n also favors.
Neither,
candidate ,
pers printed World War Ill - the subprimc mortgage crithough.
sis
and
a
worldwide
dryingIS
offering
any
sized headlines about the
brand new solutions to the
col lapses of Merrill Lynch, up of lend 1ng. ·
crisis.
Specifically, neither
At
that
time,
McCain
was
Lehman
Brothers and
Amencap
InternatiOnal still declaring himself a has taken up the proposal of
Gt· roup and the stock market "deregulator." He only former Federal Reserve
ell by hundreds of points, caught up ·on March 25 of Chairman Paul Volcker to
th~ \:lmdidatcs started talk- this year. after the U.S. gov- create a huge. taxpayerbrokered
the funded Resolution Trust
mg serious ly about· the ernment
takeover of Bear Stearns, Corp. (RTC) to. buy up
economy.
and
then his recommenda- dicey
mortgage-backed
On the merits. Obama
securities - or even mortcertainly can claim to have tions were ~enera l, at best.
Obama -was far more gages - and restore confibeen addressing instability
m the housing and fmancial detailed two days later m a dence to fmancial markets.
Neither has taken up the
markets
long
before speech at Cooper Union in
New
York.
expanding
at
idea
of investment guru
McCain - on Sept. 17 •
2007 · in fact. wh~n he length on the regulatory Dav1d Sm1ck, editor of
Economy ·
spoke to Nasdaq and began principles he ' d outlined lnternational
callmg for a modernized s1x months before. espe- magazine, for an internacially govern ment supervi- t10nal· summ it after the
regulatory regime .
sion
of firms that require election where heads of
With some prescience.
~bama · declared that govern ment rescue and state - and the presidentmarkets can' t thrive enhanced transparency of elect - would pledge to
financial keep international credit
without the trust of complicated
in
struments.
!lowing .
Investors and the public
This week, amid the meltSmick, author of the new
At a most basic level ' capdown,
McCain
made
the
hook
"The World
is
ita I markets work by
m1stake
of
declaring
that
Curved," describes internasteering capital to th e

2008

-

tional 'red1t as "-the
lifeblood of the world ,economy" and warns it's in danger of shutting down
because of collapsing confidence and the short-sightedness of central bankers
other than U.S. Fed
Cha1rman Ben Bernanke.
Significantly , even the
free-market Wall Street
Journal editorial page has
endorsed Volcker's RTC
1dea - evidence of true
pan1c among conservatives
that the fi.nancial system
may yet crater.
It would be a massive
government intervention
1nto the economy, but it
worked during the savings-and-loan crisis or the
1980s.
Smick
says,
though, that unraveling
toxic, hard-to-value securities will be harder than
selling off S&amp;L assets.
Even though combined high energy ·prices, sunken
home va lu es and the finan\:llll crisis have not caused
the economy to go into an
official recession - the
growth rate last 4uarter was
3.3 percent - it seems
likely that conditions will
get worse.
Retail sales already are
down. indicating that consumers have reached the
limit of th eir borrowing
capacity. A dry-up of credit
will prevent small businesses from opening or
investing. increasing unemployment. And . sma ller
banks m:~y fail if businesses and other borrowers go
into default.
All this ought to benefit
Obama. as {he nominee of
the party not in power. If it ·
doe•n 't, it will mean that
th ere's somethmg fundamentally wr.ong with his
candidacy - a failure to
connect with average "Main
Street'' voters who certain!~
are suffering from the mistake s of Wall Street and
Pennsylvania Avenue.
( Mortoll Ko11dracke is
executrve editor of Roll
Ca ll , tire 11ewspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

Abortion wars crescendo
Pennsylvania Sen. Bob
Casey is a pro-lifer and a
loyal
Democrat.
He
assures us that Barack
Obama h.is caring,
charismat ic leader - will
Nat
hnd "common ground" on
Hentoff
abortion in the fiercely
fought closi ng weeks of
the presidential campaign .
But botl1 parties ' platforms and their troops on in stant infanticide) legal
the gro und w iII need agam. Obama and h1s party
Obama ·to be :1 magician are also against the Hyde
to create that ca lmin g Amendment, which bars
cease fire .
taxpayers' dollars to pay fur
Anita Dunn, senior advis- abortions.
er to the Obama campaign,
So. while the Democratic
tells the New York Sun Party platform graciously
(Aug.
29): · "Senator permi.ts a wom&lt;m to can-y a
McCain has a more radical child to term, 1t strict ly
anti -choice position than removes any and all impedeven George W. Bush, and iments to abortion. Indeed,
we're going to make sure its standard-bearer, while in
that voters across the coun- the Illinois state legislature,
try understand that."
. voted to block a bill requirStripped out of the ing the doctor performing
Democratic Pm1y platform an abortion to notify at least
is an assurance we used to one parent before proceedhe&lt;lr
from
President ing on a girl of minor age
Clinton
that
abortion from another state.
, should be "safe, legal &lt;~nd
On the equally uncomprorare.
Howev.er. in an mising Republican side of
attempt to reach pro-Iife this war. its platform
Democrats, the platform affirms that "the unborn
also
includes:
"The chi ld has a fundamental
Democratic Party also right to life that cannot be
supports
a infringed.'' It goes further,
.strong ly
woman's decision to have a bringing back a pledge to
child by ensuring access to add "a ,human ·life amendand avai lability of pro- ment to the Constitution" grams for pre- and post- and tl\e platform supports
natal health care ... and car- legislation to make the 14th
mg adoption programs."
Amendment's "eq ual proBut, in stronger language tection of the laws" apply to
than previous Democratrc unborn
children.
platforms~ Obama's party
(Conceivably. that amend"strongly and unequivocal- ment would also ilpply to a
ly" supports Roe ~- Wade baby born ali ve after a
and pledges to oppose any botched abortion , although
efforts to "weaken or under- · Obama has repeatedly
mine it.''
reje cted protections for
Moreover, Obama is a co- those children .)
sponsor of the "Freedom ol
Jtlhn Mc·Cain, while
Cho1ce Act" that, contrury heraiJing a strong pro-life
to a Supreme Court's deci - voting record, does , howevsion, will make partial-birth er. make exceptions for
abortion (a prelude to abtlrtions in cases of rape.
11

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Tuesday, September 23,

No more 'lipstick) with
financial crisis) politics gets ·serious

Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

PageA4

Tuesday, September 23,

Deaths

2008

'.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

PVH Auxiliary makes-$10,000 Foundation gift

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Members of the
Pleasant Valley Hosp1t al
Auxiliary recently presentMINERAL WELLS , W.Va . - David Lee "Tom" ed the hos.pital 's Foundation
Shamblin , 74 , of Mineral Wells, W.Va., passed away
Sunday. Sept. 21. 2008, at St. Joseph's Hospital in with a donation of·$10.000
This is the second signifiParkersburg, W.Va. , affer an extended illness.
.
cant donation made to the
His wife, Shirley Ann Drake Shamblin. survives .
Service will be held at II a.m ., Wednesday, Sept. '24, not-for-profit onganization
2008, at Casto Funeral Home , Ravenswood, W.Va. , with dunng · the pre sidency of
Charles Fulks.
burial following at Ravenswood Cemetery. Visitation 1s
has
"The
Auxilwry
from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home .
'
worked very hard and
remained diligent in their
efforts to support Pleasant
Valley Hosp1tal and the hospital 's Foundat1on Fund ,"
said " Fulb . "We ' re vety
pleased to play a role in
aqvancing the healthc,ue
serVICCS
provided
by
MIDDLEPORT -' Me1gs County Farm Bureau's annual P.Ieasant Valley Hospital."
meeting will be held at 7:09 p.m. on Oct. 21 at the
The PVH Auxiliary .s a
Middleport Masonic Lodge. Tickets for the dinner are $11
volunteer organi zation dedi for adults and $8 fur ~hddren.
cated to rai&gt;ing money for
SubmiHed photo
the healthcare facil1ty and
making 'people's hosp1tal Members of the Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal Au~iliary recently presented the hospital's
stay s more comfortahle. Foundation with a donation of $10,000. The PVH AuKiliary is a volunteer organization dedMIDDJ__EPOR'T" - The Middleport Clinic of Pleasant The Auxiliary's p1unary icated to_raising money for the healthcare tac111ty and making people's hosp1tal stays more
Valley Hosp11ul. 788 N. Se,ond Ave., wi ll host Business purpose is to assist the hos- .comfortable. The off1cers presentmg the check include , left to right, Koneda Devrick, viceAfter Hours from 4-6 p.m. on Wednesday. The Mei&amp;s ~ltal by prov1d1ng funding president, Charles Fulks , president, Bill Barker, vice~president of Business Development,
County Chamber of Commerce will co-host.
for equipment and patient and Arlene c:;ook, treasurer. Other officers not p1ctured are June N1bert, secbnd vice-presThe event w1ll introduce Tess Simon. M.D .. internal comfort programs . Fund s . 1dent, and Elsa Roach, secretary.
medicine physician. Appetizers wi ll be served , and special are ra1sed through the
gifts and a grand prize drawmg are planned.
· Auxiliary's lobby sales , bu s support of partners such as g1ft of stock. real estate or treatment. Tax benefits vary
tnps and other 'pecial · the Pleasant Valley Hospital plaAned gifts - nammg the from taxpayer to taxpayer.
Auxiliary. we can make Pleasant Valley Hospital so he sme to con sult with
events.
Foundat1on m your will. your tax &lt;~&lt;l&gt;l' l11. about
"We are extremely grate- more of a difference."
The
Foundation has a for- dedu ctibilit y 111 your particDonor
gifts
are
assistance
ful
to
the
members
of
the
TUPPERS PLAiNS ,._ The fourth annual Saving Ohio
mal
planned g1v1ng pro- ular "tu.1t1on
Pleasaflt
that
supports
Important
Seniors Car Show will be held Saturday at the Tuppers Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary who continuous ly medical advances and facil- gram. A simple g 1 ~ing form Valley Hospit al and tl;e
Plains Dairyette. '
show
their dedication ,and ity renovatiOns. Many is avai lable on line at Pleasanl V.ilk y Hospital
Sign-in is ' from II a.m. to 2 p.m. The entry fee is $10.
support
to our facility. donors ask that their gift be www.pvallcy.org or s1rnp ly FoundatiOn do not niTer tax
Dash plaques will be awarded to the' first 40 cars. AI) cars
Through volunteer hours received as a meniorial or contact the Commun1ty advH:e.
will be judged. Trophies will be awarded at 5 p.m.
Relation s
Department.
If you are read) to make a
Door prizes will also be awarded. Proceeds go to Saving and the purchase of needed honor g1fts. Whether it IS an
hy nMkmg · a
difference.
(304)
675-4340.
Ext.
1326.
honor
gift
for
an
employee
of
individitems,
this
group
Ohio Seniors, a non-profit organization. This show in
donation
to
the Pleasant
"The
impact
of
these
g1fts
who
made
a
difference
in
uals express their unparalmemory of Larry McGrath.
Valley
Hospital
Found.ltioh ,
may
have
sigmficant
tax
benInformation is available from Deb Wooten at 662-1222. leled commitment," praised the care of a family memAlvm R. Lawson ; JD. ber. or a memorial gift to efits for you. as well as pro- tl1cn please contact the
vital, financia l Communi t\
Rel ations
FACHE, President and remember someone special , viding
!
304)
675 Departmen\
.
resources
to
the
Foundation."
the
foundation
will
notify
a
Chief Executive Officer.
4340.
Ext.
1.\26.
commented
Torn
Schauer.
According to Amy J. family member with a note
POMEROY - 2008 yearbooks are in at Meigs High Leach,
All contnhut1nns will be
Director
of expressing the donor's Vice-President of Financial
School to be picked up school hours, 7:50a.m. to 2:30p.m . Marketing and
recogmzed on a donor wall
Public kindness. Gift amounts are Serv1ces.
Donations · of cash. ,prop- within the main facility. For
Relations, "the profits the not disclosed.
erty,
stock. life in smance more inform;.1tion ahout
Gifts to the Pleasant
hospital receives are put
right back. into the hospital's Valley Hospital Foundation policies or deferred giving bccomm~ a mcmhcr of the
in
many
tax arrangements are just some Pleasant Valley Hospital
ATHENS - The 12th annual March of Dimes wine tast- programs. technology and come
ing and auction will be held Oct. 9 at the ·o hio University facilities . With the commu· deductible forms, w)lether a of the many veh1des that Auxiliary please call. (304)
Inn and Conference Center, 6 to 9 p.m. Tickets can be pur- . ·nity's ass istance. and the personal check , credit card, may qualify, for special tax 675-4340. Ext 1100.
chased at the Inn's front desk any time any day. They are
$20 per person, $35 for couple , $15 per student. All proceeds benefit the March of Dimes.

David ,.om' Shamblin

Local Briefs

· Farm Bureau

Business after hours

.Car show

Yearbooks in

March ·of Dimes fund raiser

Winner announced

Dr Kelly Roush,
Certified
Chiropractic and
Sports Injury
Physician and Meq;js
team phys1cian presents a monetary .
st1pend to Athletic
Director Carl Wolfe
and Pnncipal Steve
Ohlmger for the , .
licensed athletic
trainer, Bethany
Stanford of the OU
graduate program.
Holzer Cl1nic provides monetary
stipends tor 13 local
hrgh schools and ~
prov1des team physicians to 10 of those
schools.

MIDDLEPORT '- Jenni Dunham was the second place
winner in the landscape photography category at the Art in
the Park competition held Saturday in Dave Diles Park. Her
photo was titled "Hope." Her name was not included in an
earlier listing of winners.

'
For the
Record
Civil actions

mcest and saving the life of
And. of course, Planned
the mother. Sarah · Palin Parenthood is ardently
does not e~cep t rape and supporting Obama. An
mcest. McCain has even Aug.
25
editorial, :
pledged that, in nominating "Planned Parenthood tarjustices for the Supreme gets blacks," in the
Coli11, their views on abor, Washington Times notes
tion would not be "a litmus th at one-third of all abortest" for his decisions to tion s
performed
by
propose them.
Planned Parenthood in
In the past. McCain 2007 were on blacks, and a
u1ged that those three majority
of
Planned
exceptions to abortion be Parenthood 's clinics are in
included in the party plat- minority neighborhoods."
form, but he didn't when
Since I am pro-life, I
he spoke in St. Paul. have often qi.1oted a previMcCain told Glamour ous black candidate for the
magaziue on July 30 that presidency. who, before he
he "had not gotten into the decided to run for that
platform
discussions." office, said: "Don't let the
(Reported by Katharine pro-choicers convince you
Seelye in the Aug. I New , th at a fetus isn't a human
York T1mes.)
being. That's how the
lnde~d , Phil Burress, head whites dehumanized us .. ..
of Citjzens for Community The first step was to disValues in Oh10, one of six tort the image of us as
Christian conservative orga- human beings in order to
nizers in that state )llho met justify that · which they
with McCain in June wanted to do and not t;ven
. says (New York Times , · feel like they had done
Sept. 3):
anything wrong."
'"For me th1 s election is
That powerful preacher
primarily about the next was the Rev. Jesse Jackson,
Supreme Court appoint- who later became proments,"' Burress said, and choice.
He
supports
McCain "won him over," Obama. Opposing Obama
the Times reported. "'John is conservative black Los ·
McCain, unlike most Angeles minister, the Rev.
politicians, will not be Jesse Peterson. Protesting
bullied, ·threatened, paid outs1de
a
Planned
off or pressured into Parenthood office in April,
changing his position ' " he told the crowd: "Before
concerning
Supreme you go to bed tonight, more
Court appointments.
than I ,500 babies will be
But has McCain now killed 111 a black woman's
'changed his position on no womb." ·
.
"litmus test" for Supreme
No matter who is elected
Court nominees?
president, this war will not
· Clearly, the generals on cease .
both s1des of the abortion
( Na1 Hemojj is a nationwars during this presidential ally renmwred authority on
campaign will stand firm . tire First Amendmenr und
· And Palin is unshakabty rite Bill of Ri[ihts and author
pro-life. while Sen . Joe
"""n· """"'· 111cluding
B1den has (The Nation.
7/re War on the Bill of
Nov. 26, 2007) "100 percent R1glu.,· \Ill(!. tire Gathering
ratings
from
Planned Re.\'/Sfmtce ( Se•·en Stories
Press. 2004).
Parenthood ."·

'.r

POMEROY - A civil action alleging personal injury
was filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Earl
M. John son, Pomeroy, and others, against Robert
Diddle, Belpre.
A complaint for 4uiet title was filed by James E.
Witherell, Pomeroy, and others, against William Kautz,
Pomeroy. and others.

Divorce

Submitted photo •

POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in Meigs .
County Common Pleas Court by Brady Huffman, Jr. ,
Racine . agamst Terri L. Brewer, Middleport.

Dissolutions
POMEROY -:- Actions for dissolution of marriage were
filed in Me1gs Co unty Common Pleas Court by Charles P.
Knopp, Pomeroy, and Mary Ann Knopp, Pomeroy;
Shannon Manet Thomas, Rutland, and Gary David
Thomas, Middleport: and Ryan Hawthorne, bong Bottom,
and Britney L. Hawthorne, Long Bottom . .

Speed limitrromPageAt
Proffitt said he didn't feel
the money needed to be
removed weekly but biweekly or it was a waste of
"manpower." Counci lman
Shawn Arnott recommended the ordinance committee
work with Hysell to draft an
ordinance to clarify the procedures for handlin~ the
meter money. Some discussions for the draft included
two people collectin g the
money from the meters and
two people counting the
money. or two people taking the money to a bank to
be counted
by
a
machine followed by . those
same two people depositing .
the money into the bank.
Arnott also said he
felt those writing the tickets
should not be responsible
for taking the money collected on the fines. Proffitt
agreed and both he and
Arnott said they weren't
questioning the honesty of
any employee, rather they
were questioning
what
needed to be done to
have proper procedures in
place for collecting vi llage

·money. Until the new ordinance is drafted, Proffitt
agreed to have Meter Maid
Sandra Thorla collect the
coins every two weeks and
then Hysell and someone
else would run the money
through a . new coin
counter the village purchased which is for light
duty and not commercial
use.
Proffitt also said due to a
family illness he would be
in and out of the office but
assured council Sgt. Brandy
King, Sgt. Ronnie Spaun
and Cpl. Jim Webster would
be ·stepping up in the department when he was gone.
Hysell also informed
council she had issued a
purchase order to Street
Superintendent
Jack
Krrrutter to purchase hot
mix to patch ,some village
streets.
Arnott presided over tl)e
meeting in place of an
absent Mayor John Musser.
In addition to counci l,
Proffitt, King and Tax
Administrator Jean Durst
were also at the meeting.

·Power rrom Page At
There is also a question of
whether Strickland's actions
violate an executi ve orde1 he
signed in February touting a
common sense busmess
environment for the state.
The order calls for openmg up the regulahJry
•process to maxlmUfll scnltiny, all but mandating that
new regulations go througl1
the Legislature 's Jomt
Committee on Agency Rule
Rev1ew. a b1part1san rulemaking panel.
"Agency rules are expected to impose the least burden and costs to business ...
necessary to · achieve the
underlying
regulatory
objective ,"
Strickland
wrote . ''This will make
' Oh10 a more attractive place
to do business and avoid ·
placing entities doing busi ness 111 the state at a competitive disadvantage ."
Under Strick land 's clan fied prevailing wage policy.
prevailin'g wages would
have to be paid. fm example, on a new box-retail
store built by a developer
who first used mQney from
the state's Clean Oliio Fund
to decontaminate the property. Previously. prevallmg
wages were often paid onl y
on the cleanup portion of
such projects. not the construction .
After its review. tl1e
administration decided that
the law re4'uires preva1hng
wage to be paid for the
durat'ion of an~ project

with a known t&gt;utcoroe that
has involved state money
along the way. But when
state money 1s used in
clean-ups and infrastnrcture
Improvements
designed to attract business
development , prevailing
wage need not be paid on
the development Jlself.
House
Speaker
Jon
Husted, a Republican, said
Strickland 's actions overstepped hi s authority, aren't
transparent, and will have a
negative impact on the
economy.
''There's no debate on it ,"
Husted said. "It's hard for
the little guy to confront the
power of the governor's
office."
Modifications were last
made to the preva!ling wage
law in 1990 when Democrat
Richard Celeste was governor. The changes were
approved
by
the
Leg1slature 's
Joint
Committee on Agency Rule
Review. Strick land. however. has argued his action
doesn't reqUire approval by
that committee - because
he is merely clarifying, not
changing. the law.
The adn\inistration issued
its decis1on on how prevail ing wage should be applied
to state-funded projects in a
list of guidelines w1th an
accompanying Q&amp;A - not
as a legal directive. ·•
Strickland has said hi s
at:llons simply clarify application of a law that had
..

I

'become

haphazard and
unfair ove1 the years
"Gov. Strickland ha'
made use of the execuu ~e
authority gru nted l:iy the
Ohio Constitution prudently
am! responsibly, and always
with an eye toW&lt;lrd impro ving the lives and prosperity
of . Ohioans.''
said
spokesman Ke1th Dailey
Republicans are trying to
change Strickland's mind
about the prevailmg wage
· Failing that. they are considering passing legislation
after the November election
that would limit h1s actions.
This was not the f1rst time
Strickland had pushed his
executive power.
Earlier
this
year.
Strickland skipped taking
his request for the new Keno
lottery game to the legislative agency rules committee.
Instead. he went straight to
the state Controlling Board
· to get the fundmg to award
the lotte1-y contract.
.
Republican lawmakers on
the board wouldn't have 11.
They said Strickland was getting ahead of himself, forcing ·
the governor to temporarily
pull the request and give the
Legislature time to communi cate the concerns it had.
But in the end. the rulemakirrg cornm1ttee d1d
approve Keno. and the governor got h1s lottery game .
Strickland al so used his
execut1ve authority to g1ve
home health cure workers
and child care workers paid

by the state the abi lity to
un 1onize . Both move s were
done w1th the praise and
cooperation ol organ ized
labur. which heavily fu nded
Strick land's campmg n for
governor
and.
though
Republicans ruist'd a stink .
hath executive orders arc
still the law of the land.
The GOP has long controlled both chambe1 s ol' the
Leg1slatllrc
and
state
Republican s may scramble
particularly hard to pass a
law limiting th e governor's
execut1ve powe1 1f they lose
their 53:46 controlling margill over Democrats in the
Ohio House on Nov. 4.
Of course. the governor's
cxecut1ve powe r such as it
is, Strickland could JUSt veto
the bill

�OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel
.

;~ ·The

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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h 's sad that it has taken a
Wall Street meltdown ·to do
11 . but at las.t the presidential
campaign is off trivialities
- as in " lipstick on a pig"
and is . fo~used on

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting a11
- establishmmt of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereof; OJ abridging the freedom
:. of speech, or of the press; or the right of tl1e
• people peaceably to assemble, a11d to petitio11
· the Goverummt for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today 1s Tuesday. Sept. 23. the 267th day of2008. There
are 99 days left in the year
· Today's Highlight in History: One hundred years ago. 011
Sept. 23. 1908, one of baseball 's most famous blunders
occurred in a game between the New York Giants and the
yisiting Chicago Cubs. With the score tied 1-1 in the bottom of the ninth and two runners -out. the Giants batted 111
what should have· been the winning nm. However, Fred
Merkle,. who was on first base, began to leave the field
apparently without bothering to tag second; the Cubs then
. claimed to have forced Merkle out. Merkle was eventually
ruled out, negating the winning run and leaving the game
lied. (The Cubs won a rematch game on Oct. 8 and with it,
the National League pennant; Ch icago then went on 10 wm
ihe World Series.)
On this date: In !779, during the Revolutionary War. the
Amencan warship Bon Homme Richard, commanded by
John Paul Jones, defeated the HMS Sempis in battle.
In 1780. British spy John Andre was captured along with
papers revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West
Point to the British.
.
.
· In 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St.
' Louis more than two years after setting out for the Pacific
' Northwest.
· In 1846 , Neptune was identified as a planet by German
astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle.
I~ 1938. a time capsule, to be opened in the year 6939, was
buned on the grounds of the World's Fair in New York City.
In 1952, Republican VICe-presidential candidate Richard
M. Nixon went on television to deliver what came to be
known as the "Checkers" speech as he refuted allegat 1ons
of improper campaign financing.
In 1957 , nine black students who had entered Little Rock
Central High School in Arkansas were forced to withdraw
because of a white mob outside.
• In 1962, New York's Philharmonic Hall (since renamed
Avery Fisher Hall) formally opened as the first unit of the
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.
In 2001. \3 coal miners were killed in explosions at the
Blue Creek Mine No.5 in Brookwood, Ala.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Mickey Rooney is 88. Actress
Margaret Pellegrini ('The Wizard of Oz") is 85. Singer
Julio Iglesias is 65. Actor Paul Petersen ("The Donna .Reed
Show") is 63. Actress-singer Mary Kay Place is 61. Rock
star Bruce Springsteen IS 59. Actress Rosalind Chao is 51.
Actor Jason Alexander is 49. Actress Elizabeth Pena 1s 47.
Country musician Don Herron (BR549) is 46. Actress
LisaRaye is 42. Singer Ani DiFranco is 38. Rock singer
Sarah Bettefis (K's Choice) is 36. Recording executive
Jermaine Dupri is 36. Pop si nge r Elik-Michael Estrada
("Making the Band") is 29. Actress Aubrey Dollar is 28.
Thought for Today: "Each generation imagines itself to
be more intelligent than the one that went before it , and
wiser than the one that comes after it." - George Orwell
(Eric Blair). British author ( 1903-1950).
.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be /es,\
thwr 300 words. All/etters are subject to editi11g , must he
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"the fundamentals of our
economy are sound" even
as he said that "the economy 1s in crisis" - then
sc rambled to define '·fundamentals" as the productivJty
Morton ,
of American workers and
America's Ui1e economic
Kondracke entrepreneurship of small
problems .
ll's hard to believe the
business.
'
economic issue won't favor
McCain also has reverted
to his sometime role of
Dcmonatic Barack Obama.
Roosevelt-style
especially if Wall Street's place where it is most pro- Teddy
reformer, trashing "greed"
turmoil spreads to Main ductive.
Street,
which
seems
"Without transparency, on Wall Street and "misinevitable
111
thm cannot happen. If the managenient."
h'e
A week ago. though. the information is flawed, if Washington, which
Gallup Poll found that there is fraud. or if the risks vowed to fix.
Obama 's lead over John facmg financial institutions
His .campaign adviser.
M\:Cain on economic issues are not fully discl'osed , peo- former Hewlett-Packard
l1.1d narrowed from 19 ple stop investing because CEO Carly Fiorina, spec ifpOIIItS prior to the tWO they fear they're being had. ically
blamed
the
nat1onal conventions to just When the public· trust ·is Securities and Exchange
3 points.
abused badly enough. 11 can Commission and the Bush
The economy has been bring financial markets to adm111istration for being
"asleep at the switch."
hsue No. I on the mmds of their knees ."
voters for months, but the
Ohama isn't blaming
Obama 's ar~ument was
McCain
specificall y for the
and
i'
that
the
1999
McCain campa1gn managed fur two weeks - with deregulation of financml crisis - even though he
some mistaken help from markets, allowing mvest- used to be chairman of the
· Commerce
Obama - to d1vert nation- ment bank.1. insurance Senate
Committee
but the Bush
companies
and
hedge
funds
al attention onto GOP vice
administration,
its (prepresidential nominee Sarah to get into busine&gt;Ses for- ·
Palin and whether she was merly done by commercial Treasury Secretary Henry
being treated with the banks. was not accompa- Paulson) laissez-faire phirespect due a 'lady. tough nied by a new governmen t losophy and "tri ckle-down
· oversight regime. leading econom1cs," which McCain
lady though she IS.
But this week, as newspa- to excesses that brought o,n also favors.
Neither,
candidate ,
pers printed World War Ill - the subprimc mortgage crithough.
sis
and
a
worldwide
dryingIS
offering
any
sized headlines about the
brand new solutions to the
col lapses of Merrill Lynch, up of lend 1ng. ·
crisis.
Specifically, neither
At
that
time,
McCain
was
Lehman
Brothers and
Amencap
InternatiOnal still declaring himself a has taken up the proposal of
Gt· roup and the stock market "deregulator." He only former Federal Reserve
ell by hundreds of points, caught up ·on March 25 of Chairman Paul Volcker to
th~ \:lmdidatcs started talk- this year. after the U.S. gov- create a huge. taxpayerbrokered
the funded Resolution Trust
mg serious ly about· the ernment
takeover of Bear Stearns, Corp. (RTC) to. buy up
economy.
and
then his recommenda- dicey
mortgage-backed
On the merits. Obama
securities - or even mortcertainly can claim to have tions were ~enera l, at best.
Obama -was far more gages - and restore confibeen addressing instability
m the housing and fmancial detailed two days later m a dence to fmancial markets.
Neither has taken up the
markets
long
before speech at Cooper Union in
New
York.
expanding
at
idea
of investment guru
McCain - on Sept. 17 •
2007 · in fact. wh~n he length on the regulatory Dav1d Sm1ck, editor of
Economy ·
spoke to Nasdaq and began principles he ' d outlined lnternational
callmg for a modernized s1x months before. espe- magazine, for an internacially govern ment supervi- t10nal· summ it after the
regulatory regime .
sion
of firms that require election where heads of
With some prescience.
~bama · declared that govern ment rescue and state - and the presidentmarkets can' t thrive enhanced transparency of elect - would pledge to
financial keep international credit
without the trust of complicated
in
struments.
!lowing .
Investors and the public
This week, amid the meltSmick, author of the new
At a most basic level ' capdown,
McCain
made
the
hook
"The World
is
ita I markets work by
m1stake
of
declaring
that
Curved," describes internasteering capital to th e

2008

-

tional 'red1t as "-the
lifeblood of the world ,economy" and warns it's in danger of shutting down
because of collapsing confidence and the short-sightedness of central bankers
other than U.S. Fed
Cha1rman Ben Bernanke.
Significantly , even the
free-market Wall Street
Journal editorial page has
endorsed Volcker's RTC
1dea - evidence of true
pan1c among conservatives
that the fi.nancial system
may yet crater.
It would be a massive
government intervention
1nto the economy, but it
worked during the savings-and-loan crisis or the
1980s.
Smick
says,
though, that unraveling
toxic, hard-to-value securities will be harder than
selling off S&amp;L assets.
Even though combined high energy ·prices, sunken
home va lu es and the finan\:llll crisis have not caused
the economy to go into an
official recession - the
growth rate last 4uarter was
3.3 percent - it seems
likely that conditions will
get worse.
Retail sales already are
down. indicating that consumers have reached the
limit of th eir borrowing
capacity. A dry-up of credit
will prevent small businesses from opening or
investing. increasing unemployment. And . sma ller
banks m:~y fail if businesses and other borrowers go
into default.
All this ought to benefit
Obama. as {he nominee of
the party not in power. If it ·
doe•n 't, it will mean that
th ere's somethmg fundamentally wr.ong with his
candidacy - a failure to
connect with average "Main
Street'' voters who certain!~
are suffering from the mistake s of Wall Street and
Pennsylvania Avenue.
( Mortoll Ko11dracke is
executrve editor of Roll
Ca ll , tire 11ewspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

Abortion wars crescendo
Pennsylvania Sen. Bob
Casey is a pro-lifer and a
loyal
Democrat.
He
assures us that Barack
Obama h.is caring,
charismat ic leader - will
Nat
hnd "common ground" on
Hentoff
abortion in the fiercely
fought closi ng weeks of
the presidential campaign .
But botl1 parties ' platforms and their troops on in stant infanticide) legal
the gro und w iII need agam. Obama and h1s party
Obama ·to be :1 magician are also against the Hyde
to create that ca lmin g Amendment, which bars
cease fire .
taxpayers' dollars to pay fur
Anita Dunn, senior advis- abortions.
er to the Obama campaign,
So. while the Democratic
tells the New York Sun Party platform graciously
(Aug.
29): · "Senator permi.ts a wom&lt;m to can-y a
McCain has a more radical child to term, 1t strict ly
anti -choice position than removes any and all impedeven George W. Bush, and iments to abortion. Indeed,
we're going to make sure its standard-bearer, while in
that voters across the coun- the Illinois state legislature,
try understand that."
. voted to block a bill requirStripped out of the ing the doctor performing
Democratic Pm1y platform an abortion to notify at least
is an assurance we used to one parent before proceedhe&lt;lr
from
President ing on a girl of minor age
Clinton
that
abortion from another state.
, should be "safe, legal &lt;~nd
On the equally uncomprorare.
Howev.er. in an mising Republican side of
attempt to reach pro-Iife this war. its platform
Democrats, the platform affirms that "the unborn
also
includes:
"The chi ld has a fundamental
Democratic Party also right to life that cannot be
supports
a infringed.'' It goes further,
.strong ly
woman's decision to have a bringing back a pledge to
child by ensuring access to add "a ,human ·life amendand avai lability of pro- ment to the Constitution" grams for pre- and post- and tl\e platform supports
natal health care ... and car- legislation to make the 14th
mg adoption programs."
Amendment's "eq ual proBut, in stronger language tection of the laws" apply to
than previous Democratrc unborn
children.
platforms~ Obama's party
(Conceivably. that amend"strongly and unequivocal- ment would also ilpply to a
ly" supports Roe ~- Wade baby born ali ve after a
and pledges to oppose any botched abortion , although
efforts to "weaken or under- · Obama has repeatedly
mine it.''
reje cted protections for
Moreover, Obama is a co- those children .)
sponsor of the "Freedom ol
Jtlhn Mc·Cain, while
Cho1ce Act" that, contrury heraiJing a strong pro-life
to a Supreme Court's deci - voting record, does , howevsion, will make partial-birth er. make exceptions for
abortion (a prelude to abtlrtions in cases of rape.
11

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Tuesday, September 23,

No more 'lipstick) with
financial crisis) politics gets ·serious

Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

PageA4

Tuesday, September 23,

Deaths

2008

'.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

PVH Auxiliary makes-$10,000 Foundation gift

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Members of the
Pleasant Valley Hosp1t al
Auxiliary recently presentMINERAL WELLS , W.Va . - David Lee "Tom" ed the hos.pital 's Foundation
Shamblin , 74 , of Mineral Wells, W.Va., passed away
Sunday. Sept. 21. 2008, at St. Joseph's Hospital in with a donation of·$10.000
This is the second signifiParkersburg, W.Va. , affer an extended illness.
.
cant donation made to the
His wife, Shirley Ann Drake Shamblin. survives .
Service will be held at II a.m ., Wednesday, Sept. '24, not-for-profit onganization
2008, at Casto Funeral Home , Ravenswood, W.Va. , with dunng · the pre sidency of
Charles Fulks.
burial following at Ravenswood Cemetery. Visitation 1s
has
"The
Auxilwry
from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home .
'
worked very hard and
remained diligent in their
efforts to support Pleasant
Valley Hosp1tal and the hospital 's Foundat1on Fund ,"
said " Fulb . "We ' re vety
pleased to play a role in
aqvancing the healthc,ue
serVICCS
provided
by
MIDDLEPORT -' Me1gs County Farm Bureau's annual P.Ieasant Valley Hospital."
meeting will be held at 7:09 p.m. on Oct. 21 at the
The PVH Auxiliary .s a
Middleport Masonic Lodge. Tickets for the dinner are $11
volunteer organi zation dedi for adults and $8 fur ~hddren.
cated to rai&gt;ing money for
SubmiHed photo
the healthcare facil1ty and
making 'people's hosp1tal Members of the Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal Au~iliary recently presented the hospital's
stay s more comfortahle. Foundation with a donation of $10,000. The PVH AuKiliary is a volunteer organization dedMIDDJ__EPOR'T" - The Middleport Clinic of Pleasant The Auxiliary's p1unary icated to_raising money for the healthcare tac111ty and making people's hosp1tal stays more
Valley Hosp11ul. 788 N. Se,ond Ave., wi ll host Business purpose is to assist the hos- .comfortable. The off1cers presentmg the check include , left to right, Koneda Devrick, viceAfter Hours from 4-6 p.m. on Wednesday. The Mei&amp;s ~ltal by prov1d1ng funding president, Charles Fulks , president, Bill Barker, vice~president of Business Development,
County Chamber of Commerce will co-host.
for equipment and patient and Arlene c:;ook, treasurer. Other officers not p1ctured are June N1bert, secbnd vice-presThe event w1ll introduce Tess Simon. M.D .. internal comfort programs . Fund s . 1dent, and Elsa Roach, secretary.
medicine physician. Appetizers wi ll be served , and special are ra1sed through the
gifts and a grand prize drawmg are planned.
· Auxiliary's lobby sales , bu s support of partners such as g1ft of stock. real estate or treatment. Tax benefits vary
tnps and other 'pecial · the Pleasant Valley Hospital plaAned gifts - nammg the from taxpayer to taxpayer.
Auxiliary. we can make Pleasant Valley Hospital so he sme to con sult with
events.
Foundat1on m your will. your tax &lt;~&lt;l&gt;l' l11. about
"We are extremely grate- more of a difference."
The
Foundation has a for- dedu ctibilit y 111 your particDonor
gifts
are
assistance
ful
to
the
members
of
the
TUPPERS PLAiNS ,._ The fourth annual Saving Ohio
mal
planned g1v1ng pro- ular "tu.1t1on
Pleasaflt
that
supports
Important
Seniors Car Show will be held Saturday at the Tuppers Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary who continuous ly medical advances and facil- gram. A simple g 1 ~ing form Valley Hospit al and tl;e
Plains Dairyette. '
show
their dedication ,and ity renovatiOns. Many is avai lable on line at Pleasanl V.ilk y Hospital
Sign-in is ' from II a.m. to 2 p.m. The entry fee is $10.
support
to our facility. donors ask that their gift be www.pvallcy.org or s1rnp ly FoundatiOn do not niTer tax
Dash plaques will be awarded to the' first 40 cars. AI) cars
Through volunteer hours received as a meniorial or contact the Commun1ty advH:e.
will be judged. Trophies will be awarded at 5 p.m.
Relation s
Department.
If you are read) to make a
Door prizes will also be awarded. Proceeds go to Saving and the purchase of needed honor g1fts. Whether it IS an
hy nMkmg · a
difference.
(304)
675-4340.
Ext.
1326.
honor
gift
for
an
employee
of
individitems,
this
group
Ohio Seniors, a non-profit organization. This show in
donation
to
the Pleasant
"The
impact
of
these
g1fts
who
made
a
difference
in
uals express their unparalmemory of Larry McGrath.
Valley
Hospital
Found.ltioh ,
may
have
sigmficant
tax
benInformation is available from Deb Wooten at 662-1222. leled commitment," praised the care of a family memAlvm R. Lawson ; JD. ber. or a memorial gift to efits for you. as well as pro- tl1cn please contact the
vital, financia l Communi t\
Rel ations
FACHE, President and remember someone special , viding
!
304)
675 Departmen\
.
resources
to
the
Foundation."
the
foundation
will
notify
a
Chief Executive Officer.
4340.
Ext.
1.\26.
commented
Torn
Schauer.
According to Amy J. family member with a note
POMEROY - 2008 yearbooks are in at Meigs High Leach,
All contnhut1nns will be
Director
of expressing the donor's Vice-President of Financial
School to be picked up school hours, 7:50a.m. to 2:30p.m . Marketing and
recogmzed on a donor wall
Public kindness. Gift amounts are Serv1ces.
Donations · of cash. ,prop- within the main facility. For
Relations, "the profits the not disclosed.
erty,
stock. life in smance more inform;.1tion ahout
Gifts to the Pleasant
hospital receives are put
right back. into the hospital's Valley Hospital Foundation policies or deferred giving bccomm~ a mcmhcr of the
in
many
tax arrangements are just some Pleasant Valley Hospital
ATHENS - The 12th annual March of Dimes wine tast- programs. technology and come
ing and auction will be held Oct. 9 at the ·o hio University facilities . With the commu· deductible forms, w)lether a of the many veh1des that Auxiliary please call. (304)
Inn and Conference Center, 6 to 9 p.m. Tickets can be pur- . ·nity's ass istance. and the personal check , credit card, may qualify, for special tax 675-4340. Ext 1100.
chased at the Inn's front desk any time any day. They are
$20 per person, $35 for couple , $15 per student. All proceeds benefit the March of Dimes.

David ,.om' Shamblin

Local Briefs

· Farm Bureau

Business after hours

.Car show

Yearbooks in

March ·of Dimes fund raiser

Winner announced

Dr Kelly Roush,
Certified
Chiropractic and
Sports Injury
Physician and Meq;js
team phys1cian presents a monetary .
st1pend to Athletic
Director Carl Wolfe
and Pnncipal Steve
Ohlmger for the , .
licensed athletic
trainer, Bethany
Stanford of the OU
graduate program.
Holzer Cl1nic provides monetary
stipends tor 13 local
hrgh schools and ~
prov1des team physicians to 10 of those
schools.

MIDDLEPORT '- Jenni Dunham was the second place
winner in the landscape photography category at the Art in
the Park competition held Saturday in Dave Diles Park. Her
photo was titled "Hope." Her name was not included in an
earlier listing of winners.

'
For the
Record
Civil actions

mcest and saving the life of
And. of course, Planned
the mother. Sarah · Palin Parenthood is ardently
does not e~cep t rape and supporting Obama. An
mcest. McCain has even Aug.
25
editorial, :
pledged that, in nominating "Planned Parenthood tarjustices for the Supreme gets blacks," in the
Coli11, their views on abor, Washington Times notes
tion would not be "a litmus th at one-third of all abortest" for his decisions to tion s
performed
by
propose them.
Planned Parenthood in
In the past. McCain 2007 were on blacks, and a
u1ged that those three majority
of
Planned
exceptions to abortion be Parenthood 's clinics are in
included in the party plat- minority neighborhoods."
form, but he didn't when
Since I am pro-life, I
he spoke in St. Paul. have often qi.1oted a previMcCain told Glamour ous black candidate for the
magaziue on July 30 that presidency. who, before he
he "had not gotten into the decided to run for that
platform
discussions." office, said: "Don't let the
(Reported by Katharine pro-choicers convince you
Seelye in the Aug. I New , th at a fetus isn't a human
York T1mes.)
being. That's how the
lnde~d , Phil Burress, head whites dehumanized us .. ..
of Citjzens for Community The first step was to disValues in Oh10, one of six tort the image of us as
Christian conservative orga- human beings in order to
nizers in that state )llho met justify that · which they
with McCain in June wanted to do and not t;ven
. says (New York Times , · feel like they had done
Sept. 3):
anything wrong."
'"For me th1 s election is
That powerful preacher
primarily about the next was the Rev. Jesse Jackson,
Supreme Court appoint- who later became proments,"' Burress said, and choice.
He
supports
McCain "won him over," Obama. Opposing Obama
the Times reported. "'John is conservative black Los ·
McCain, unlike most Angeles minister, the Rev.
politicians, will not be Jesse Peterson. Protesting
bullied, ·threatened, paid outs1de
a
Planned
off or pressured into Parenthood office in April,
changing his position ' " he told the crowd: "Before
concerning
Supreme you go to bed tonight, more
Court appointments.
than I ,500 babies will be
But has McCain now killed 111 a black woman's
'changed his position on no womb." ·
.
"litmus test" for Supreme
No matter who is elected
Court nominees?
president, this war will not
· Clearly, the generals on cease .
both s1des of the abortion
( Na1 Hemojj is a nationwars during this presidential ally renmwred authority on
campaign will stand firm . tire First Amendmenr und
· And Palin is unshakabty rite Bill of Ri[ihts and author
pro-life. while Sen . Joe
"""n· """"'· 111cluding
B1den has (The Nation.
7/re War on the Bill of
Nov. 26, 2007) "100 percent R1glu.,· \Ill(!. tire Gathering
ratings
from
Planned Re.\'/Sfmtce ( Se•·en Stories
Press. 2004).
Parenthood ."·

'.r

POMEROY - A civil action alleging personal injury
was filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Earl
M. John son, Pomeroy, and others, against Robert
Diddle, Belpre.
A complaint for 4uiet title was filed by James E.
Witherell, Pomeroy, and others, against William Kautz,
Pomeroy. and others.

Divorce

Submitted photo •

POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in Meigs .
County Common Pleas Court by Brady Huffman, Jr. ,
Racine . agamst Terri L. Brewer, Middleport.

Dissolutions
POMEROY -:- Actions for dissolution of marriage were
filed in Me1gs Co unty Common Pleas Court by Charles P.
Knopp, Pomeroy, and Mary Ann Knopp, Pomeroy;
Shannon Manet Thomas, Rutland, and Gary David
Thomas, Middleport: and Ryan Hawthorne, bong Bottom,
and Britney L. Hawthorne, Long Bottom . .

Speed limitrromPageAt
Proffitt said he didn't feel
the money needed to be
removed weekly but biweekly or it was a waste of
"manpower." Counci lman
Shawn Arnott recommended the ordinance committee
work with Hysell to draft an
ordinance to clarify the procedures for handlin~ the
meter money. Some discussions for the draft included
two people collectin g the
money from the meters and
two people counting the
money. or two people taking the money to a bank to
be counted
by
a
machine followed by . those
same two people depositing .
the money into the bank.
Arnott also said he
felt those writing the tickets
should not be responsible
for taking the money collected on the fines. Proffitt
agreed and both he and
Arnott said they weren't
questioning the honesty of
any employee, rather they
were questioning
what
needed to be done to
have proper procedures in
place for collecting vi llage

·money. Until the new ordinance is drafted, Proffitt
agreed to have Meter Maid
Sandra Thorla collect the
coins every two weeks and
then Hysell and someone
else would run the money
through a . new coin
counter the village purchased which is for light
duty and not commercial
use.
Proffitt also said due to a
family illness he would be
in and out of the office but
assured council Sgt. Brandy
King, Sgt. Ronnie Spaun
and Cpl. Jim Webster would
be ·stepping up in the department when he was gone.
Hysell also informed
council she had issued a
purchase order to Street
Superintendent
Jack
Krrrutter to purchase hot
mix to patch ,some village
streets.
Arnott presided over tl)e
meeting in place of an
absent Mayor John Musser.
In addition to counci l,
Proffitt, King and Tax
Administrator Jean Durst
were also at the meeting.

·Power rrom Page At
There is also a question of
whether Strickland's actions
violate an executi ve orde1 he
signed in February touting a
common sense busmess
environment for the state.
The order calls for openmg up the regulahJry
•process to maxlmUfll scnltiny, all but mandating that
new regulations go througl1
the Legislature 's Jomt
Committee on Agency Rule
Rev1ew. a b1part1san rulemaking panel.
"Agency rules are expected to impose the least burden and costs to business ...
necessary to · achieve the
underlying
regulatory
objective ,"
Strickland
wrote . ''This will make
' Oh10 a more attractive place
to do business and avoid ·
placing entities doing busi ness 111 the state at a competitive disadvantage ."
Under Strick land 's clan fied prevailing wage policy.
prevailin'g wages would
have to be paid. fm example, on a new box-retail
store built by a developer
who first used mQney from
the state's Clean Oliio Fund
to decontaminate the property. Previously. prevallmg
wages were often paid onl y
on the cleanup portion of
such projects. not the construction .
After its review. tl1e
administration decided that
the law re4'uires preva1hng
wage to be paid for the
durat'ion of an~ project

with a known t&gt;utcoroe that
has involved state money
along the way. But when
state money 1s used in
clean-ups and infrastnrcture
Improvements
designed to attract business
development , prevailing
wage need not be paid on
the development Jlself.
House
Speaker
Jon
Husted, a Republican, said
Strickland 's actions overstepped hi s authority, aren't
transparent, and will have a
negative impact on the
economy.
''There's no debate on it ,"
Husted said. "It's hard for
the little guy to confront the
power of the governor's
office."
Modifications were last
made to the preva!ling wage
law in 1990 when Democrat
Richard Celeste was governor. The changes were
approved
by
the
Leg1slature 's
Joint
Committee on Agency Rule
Review. Strick land. however. has argued his action
doesn't reqUire approval by
that committee - because
he is merely clarifying, not
changing. the law.
The adn\inistration issued
its decis1on on how prevail ing wage should be applied
to state-funded projects in a
list of guidelines w1th an
accompanying Q&amp;A - not
as a legal directive. ·•
Strickland has said hi s
at:llons simply clarify application of a law that had
..

I

'become

haphazard and
unfair ove1 the years
"Gov. Strickland ha'
made use of the execuu ~e
authority gru nted l:iy the
Ohio Constitution prudently
am! responsibly, and always
with an eye toW&lt;lrd impro ving the lives and prosperity
of . Ohioans.''
said
spokesman Ke1th Dailey
Republicans are trying to
change Strickland's mind
about the prevailmg wage
· Failing that. they are considering passing legislation
after the November election
that would limit h1s actions.
This was not the f1rst time
Strickland had pushed his
executive power.
Earlier
this
year.
Strickland skipped taking
his request for the new Keno
lottery game to the legislative agency rules committee.
Instead. he went straight to
the state Controlling Board
· to get the fundmg to award
the lotte1-y contract.
.
Republican lawmakers on
the board wouldn't have 11.
They said Strickland was getting ahead of himself, forcing ·
the governor to temporarily
pull the request and give the
Legislature time to communi cate the concerns it had.
But in the end. the rulemakirrg cornm1ttee d1d
approve Keno. and the governor got h1s lottery game .
Strickland al so used his
execut1ve authority to g1ve
home health cure workers
and child care workers paid

by the state the abi lity to
un 1onize . Both move s were
done w1th the praise and
cooperation ol organ ized
labur. which heavily fu nded
Strick land's campmg n for
governor
and.
though
Republicans ruist'd a stink .
hath executive orders arc
still the law of the land.
The GOP has long controlled both chambe1 s ol' the
Leg1slatllrc
and
state
Republican s may scramble
particularly hard to pass a
law limiting th e governor's
execut1ve powe1 1f they lose
their 53:46 controlling margill over Democrats in the
Ohio House on Nov. 4.
Of course. the governor's
cxecut1ve powe r such as it
is, Strickland could JUSt veto
the bill

�. LOCAL • STATE
_Cub Scout annual
roundup, outing set

The Daily Sentinel

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Tina
Spencer has recently been hired as an
administrative · assistant by Hyer &amp;
Littlepage Law Office, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
. Spencer is a graduate. of Gallipolis
Career College where she received an
associate of applied business in computer
. applications technolog~ and an associate
of applied business m medical office
administration.
She resides in Pt. Pleasant with her sons
Dustin and BradLee, and fiance Michael. Tina Spaocer

Holzer names August
physician of the month
GALLIPOLIS - Gene Abels, MD,
Holzer Health Systems Nledical Plaza,
was selected as the August Physician of
the Month at Holzer Medical Center by
the Hospital's Physician Satisfaction
Team.
Dr. Abels earned his medical degree
from the Ohio State College of
Medicine in Columbus, Ohio. He is a
member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, Phi
Beta Kappa , Alpha Omega Alpha , and
Honorary Phi ETA Sigma. He complet- Gena Abels
.ed his res'idency and cardiology fellowship at the
Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, Ga. and is board
certified in Internal Medicine.
'
He resides in Gallipolis with his wife, Jeanie, who is an
RN. They have three daughters: Barbara, RN, Sara, also
an RN. and Beth, who is a physician, and three grandchildren. They also have one son, Major Brad Abets, M.D.,
who is deceased.
In his spare time, Abels enjoys coaching his wife and
playing golf. He is a member ·of the Medical Quality
Management Committee, and Chairman of the Phannacy
and Therapeutic Committee at HMC.
The Physician Satisfaction team presented him with the
Physician of the· Month award based on comments by
staff and peers. For his special honor, he received a
ftamed certificate and designated parking spot for the
ll)Onth of August.

O'Bleness offer health screening
ATHENS ~ ·o ' Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens
w.ill offer blood pressure screening as well as cholesterol
arrd glucose screening Wednesday, Oct. I.
)he free blood· pressure screening will be open to the
public from 9 a.m. until noon in ·the hospital's patient
entrance lobby. The cholesterol and glucose screening,
which wil.l be offered for a $5 fee, will be available at the
same location by appointment only from 9 a.m. until noon.
To make an appointment, call O'Bleness' Community
Relations office at (740) 566-4814.
Free colon·-rectal cancer home screening kits and information can be obtained on a daily basis at the hospital's
patient and visitor entrance information desks as well as at
the Castrop Center infonnation desk.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Local Sports Briefs, Page B2
3rd annual Hits for Hospice, Page B~

Pro leagues feeling economic
squeeze, Page B6

l..ocA.L SCHEDULE .

Prep Volleyball Roundup

, PQMEAOV - A schedule of upcoming high

.chool varsity sporting events lnvOIIIi ng
leams from Meigs and Gallia counties.

D.!•Wy SlpiMnbtr 23
Soccer
Chillicothe 11t Gellis Academy, 5 p.m.
Volleyball
·Gellis Academy at Fairland , 5:30p.m.
VInton County at Mefgs, 6 p.m.
·
Eastern at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
QVC at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m:
Eastern at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
Golf
River Valley at Sectional, TBA
Gallia Academy at Sectional. TBA
.

Wtdnolday Stpttmbef 24
Volleyball
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p'.m.
South F»oiflt at South Gallla, 5:30p.m.
Gallla Academy at River Valley. 5 p.m.
.southern at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Tburadey Seotombar 25

Football
Point Pleasant vs. Midland Trail at
Laidley Field, 7:30p.m.

Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at OVCS, 4:30 p.m.

Volleyball

,

Submitted photO.

Jim Snyder (pictured) won the Wii Bowling Tournament at the Meigs Senior Center sponsored .by Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center.
·

Wii go
bowling
MIDDLEPORT
Overbrook ~ehabilitation
Center recently sponsored a
Wii Bowling Tournament ·at
the Meigs County Senior
Center. Teams of four competed to see who had the
best bowling game. The top
two bowlers from each team
competed in a final round.
First place winner was Jim
Snyder with a score of-182.
Second was won by · Betty
Johnson, third place winner
was Polly Curt1s and fourth
place went to Barb Gheen.
Overbrook staff provided
refreshments to participants
and trophies · and t-shirts
were presented to bowling
winners. Anyone interested
, ~n fanning a Wii Bowling
team at the Meigs County
. Senior Center · sbouW · contact 'Debbie Jones MCCaA
llctivity director, by ¢8lling
·992-2.161.
, ·

For more information on the Boy Scouts of America,
please visir www.scouring .org :, and for BSA 's Tri-State
Area Council please visir www.tsacbsa.org.

GCC grad hired

Tuesday, September 23; 2008

Inside

Thesday, September 23,2008

RUTLAND - Cub Scout Pack 240 will host its annual
Cub Scout Roundup and fall kickoff pack !lleeting at 7 p.m.
on Sept. 29 at Meigs Elementary School in Rutland .
Local boys in grades 1-5, or aged 7-10 are invited,
along with their parents or a guardians, fo r infonnation
and to sign up fo r scouting this year with the Rutlandbased pack, one of the ' area\ largest and most active
scout groups.
, Regular scouts and leaders with Pack 240 will also be in
attendance. as well as leadership from the Boy Scouts of
America Tri-State Area Council's Meigs-Gallia-Mason
District of Hunti.ngton. W.Va.
Current scouis and leaders should be in unifonn.
J.R. Spencer, Point Pleasant , W.Va ., BSA Tri-State
Area Council's new paraprofessional overseeing the
MGM district , will be the featured speaker at the
Roundup meeting, and will also visit local schools t!Je
week prior to spread the word. He joined the Boy Scouts
organization in Huntington thi s summer, replacing long
time career professional John Pinkerman, who retired
recently.
Pack 240 will host a fall family outing from 2-7 p,.m. on
.Oct. 4 at Boy Scout Camp Kiashuta, Scout Camp Road,
Chester. The Family outing will feature an afternoon
three-mile hike on the ·trails of the recently refurbished
grounds. which had fallen into disrepair and were closed .
fpr several years.
. Scouts are urged to wear clothing appropriate for hiking. and good sneakers or hiking boots for the hike ,
ra~her than uniforms . After the hike, the outing will
include a hot dog cookout at the shelter, games and skits.
All new and regular Pack 240 Cub Scouts, their leaders
and · families are encouraged to attend the
outing. Directions are available at 992-1925 or by e-mai
tO info@triuneresearch.com.
Pomeroy's Doug Stuart, Cub Scoutmaster for Pack 240 ,
observed, "We're anticipating another terrific scouting program this year and have lots of fun and educational activities planned."
· "If parents want to help their boys learn respongibility, good citizenship and self-reliance while making
friends and haying a great time outdoors, hey should
c.ome on out and get involved, because scouting offers
all that and more."
Stuart noted that the Scouts are always interested in
good leaders to join the largely volunteer organization ,
adding that Pack 240 welcomes interested adults to the
meeting who might w.ant to host a local den, or just help
out with events.
Cub Scout Pack 240 is chartered by the Volunteer Fire
Department of Rutland, Ohio, and led by Committee
Chairperson Carol Mahr of Rutland, Cub Scoutmaster
Doug Stuart of Pomeroy, and several Meigs County parent-leaders. Cub Scouting is the largest of three divisions
of the Boy Scouts of America (the others are Boy
Scouting and . Venturing). Serving nearly 4.7 million
young people between 7 and 20 years of age with more
than 300 councils throughout the United States and its territories, the Boy Scouts of America is the nation's foremost youth program of ch'!racter development and valuesbased leadership training.

. ''

PageA6

fddav. September 26
Football

Portsmouth at Gallia Academy. 7:30

P.m.

Federal Hocking at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
ll'lmbte at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Suffe.lo at South Gallla, 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Burch, 7:30p.m.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ·

COLUMBUS - A killer
facing the first execution in
Ohio in more than a year said
he can't be put to death by
injection because he was sentenced to die by electric chair.
Richard
Cooey
has
requested a new sentencing
hearing in Summit County
under current execution law
and a chance to present
more evidence . that he
shouldn't be put to death .
· The state outlawed the
electric chai( in 200 I and
made lethal injection the sole
means of execution in Ohio.
The electric chair hasn't been
used in the state since 1963.
"The journal entry in this
matter has not been changed
to reflect the change in the
law as of 200 I ," the lawsuit
says. ''The only court that
matters has yet to issue an
order sentencing the defen, dant to death by lethal injection.',
· In the request filed Friday
in Summit County Common
Pleas Court, Cooey says he
wasn't allowed to properly
present evidence of a brutal
childhood at his original
sentencing in 1986.
·Cooey suffered "brutal,
violent abuse" at the hands
of hi~ alcoholic father, . a
story that Cooey's original
attorneys failed to pull
together at Cooey 's sentencing hearing, attorney Eric
Allen said Monday.
"It's just another thing
that's been overlooked and
not dealt with properly,"
Allen said.
One of Cooey's original
lawyers previously told The
Associated
Press
he
believed he did everything
he could at that hearing.
Cooey is scheduled to die
Oct. 14 in the rapes and murders ,of two University of
Akron students . Prosecutor
Sherri Bevan Walsh called
the latest argument a delay
tactic and says she 'II fight it.
"The crimes he commit-

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

NELSONVILLE
Eastern
volleyball
improved to 11 -3 overall
this season with a fourgame 16-25,25-11 , 27-25,
25-21 victory over host
on
Nelsonville- York
Monday night during a Tri Valley Conference interdivisional matchup in Athens
County .
The Lady Eagles fell
behind after dropping Game
1, then rallied to tie things
with a convincing 14-point
decision in Game 2. Game 3
proved to be the pivotal
point of the match , which
the Green and White won
by the minimal two points
to take a two-games-to-one
lead.

The Lady Buckeyes battled closely in Game 4. but
eventually gave way to the
guests in a four-point finale
- allowing EHS to claim
the overall triumph.
The Lady Eagles posted
collective numbers of 35
ki'lls . 33 assists. 27 digs and
three blocks to go along with
85-qf-94 serving (90 percent) and 166-of-227 passing (73 percent).
Eastern was led at the service line by Beverly Maxson
with.IO points, followed by
Brittany Casto with nine and
Katie Wilfong with seven.
Morgan Burt had four
points. both Tresa Swatzel
and Lauren Cummings ·
added three and Bntney
Morrtson added one. .
·
. Burt had a ·team-h1gh 12
k1lls. followed by Casto,

junior varsity contest.
Eastern returns to action
today when it travels to
Cheshire for a non-confer- .
encc contest with River
Valley. The JV match will
start at 5:30p.m.
VCEDGES SoUTHERN IN

·s

RACINE -The Southern
Maxson

.Thomas

Wilfong and Swatzel with
five each. Maxson had three
kills , Morrison and Kari ssa
Connolly each added two
and Cummings also had one
kill in the triumph. Bun also
had two blocks .
Connolly had team-highs
26 assists and nine digs ,
NYHS managed to salvage a split on the night with
a three-game victory in the

Lady Tornadoes volleyball
team has endured a couple
-:ery tough games over ·the
past week and Monday 's
five-game. 2'3 point losses
were no less troubling·
Southern coach Tonja
Hunter, however, remained
optimistic, saying "Vinton
County is a solid club. Vl/e
were right there with a
chance to win and that is a
positive." .
Southem lost 23-25. 22-

SPORTS@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Soccer
OVCS at Teays Valley, 4 p.m.

Volleyball
River Valley at logan. Noon .

JACKSON - Athens
the
recent
dominated
Jackson Invitational Cross
Country- race held Thursday
at the Frankl.in Valley Golf
Course in Jackson.
·
Athens won the girls race
by 16 point over Meigs and
claimed a much larger margin of victory over North
Adams in the boys race ,
winning by 38 points.
In the girls race Athens
placed three runners in the
top 10 to post a low score of
34 on the evening while
Meigs finished · with 50
points. Host Jackson was
third with 1·03 points , followed by North Adams
(109), Vinton County (121),
Oak Hill (130) and Logan
(148). .
While Athens had a trio
of top 10 finishers, Meigs
placed two in the top 10
with Devan Soulsby claim.ing fourth on a time ,of
21 :3.7 and Morgan Lentes
taking eighth on a time of
22:19.
Kimi Swisher was · 20th
on a time of 23:25, Dani
Cullums was 22nd on a
time of 23:35 and Jessica
Holliday was 24th Qn a time
of 23:54 to round out the
Meigs point scorers.
Other finishers for the
Lady Marauders not counting in the fimil tally were
Shannon Walzer-Kuharic
(52nd, 27: 17), Olivia Bevan
(54th. 27:31) and Dawn
Bissell (61 st, 29:02).
Ohio Valley Christian
School also 81aced a runner
in the top I for the locals
as Katie Blodgett took seventh on a time of 22:14.
In the boys race Athens
enjoyed ,a much more comfortable margin of victory,
finishing with 46 points on
the evening. North Adams
was second with 84 points,
while Logan ( 126), Oak

Gon

Riverside Invitational. 11 a.m
Crosa Country
Rio Grande Invitational, 10 a.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

MGM Marshall
chapter holding
~ilgate party

Emily Casto (far left) Overbrook activity director, is pictured with Wil Bowling
Tournament winners (second from left) Barb Gheen, Polly Curtis, Betty Johnson, Jim
Snyder. Also pictured Michelle Kennedy, Overbrook marketing and admissions director.

' ted were so brutal that there
is no mitigating evidence
that can overcome that,".
Walsh said Monday.
Walsh said federal courts
have repeatedly upheld
Cooey 's death sentence.
'IWo of the three Summit
County judges on the .panel

Cooey has also sued in
that sentenced Cooey to die
have died, and a third .is on federal court arguing he has
inactive status, according to poor vein acce~s. a problem
the Ohio Supreme Courfs made worse by his obesity.
attorney registration Web site. He also says a drug he takes
Cooey's filing requests a for migraine headaches,
hearing to determine which Topomax, could intetfere
judges should replace any with the drugs used in the
injection process.
deceased jm\ges.

Saturday Morning Sports Clinics

August 23th- October 25th
9:00am
Holzer Clinic Sycamore
*Get Bock in Action with Dr. Kelly

HUNTrNGTON
The
Big Green Scholarship
Foundation would like to
invite MGM Chapter Big
Green Members to bring a
friend to a pre game tailgate
at the Cincinnati football
game on Friday, October 3,
between 6 p.m. and 7:30
p.m.
The tailgate will be located between gates B and C
on the West side of Joan C.
Edwards Stadium . The
game ~icks off at 8 p.m.
The cost of the tailgate is
$15 for one person and $25
for two people and includes
It complimentary chair back
til:ket to the game.
. Reservations must be
made in advance with a
credit card by calling the
Big Green Office at 304696-4661 or David Steele at
304-696-2483.

Meigs basketball
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. - The
Meigs High School boys
baskelbilll team wili be
holding a golf scramble on
Saturday, October 11, at
Riverside Golf Club.
The event wilf be a fourmao team fonnat, with one
player from each team
required to have an under10 handicap. The event is
18 holes and rules will be
explained the day of the
tournament.
• ;The cost is $320 per team
~- $80 per person ...:. with
tood, beverages and mulli~ns included in the entry
f(e. The $5 skins game and
Optional cash pot are not
j:n&lt;:luded in the entry fee.
the event is limited to the
uj-st 30 teams that sign-u,r.
Any extra teams go a wrutmg list.
~::;!'he purpose of this
scramble is to raise money
fqr purchasing equipment
fat the Meigs boys basket!)1111 program. The goal is to
riise $3,000.
·
:·:'The top three teams will
W,in awards, and there will
~ other contests such as
~losest to the pin, longest
drive and longest putt. The
contest will have a shotgun
at 8:30a.m.
Businesses may also
sponsor a hole at the event
fgr $60.
: For more information,
contact MHS head basket"
ball coach Ben Ewing at
740-416-0824.

start

•

Soulsby

O' ,Bryant

Hill (126) and Wellston
(169) rounded out the top
five.
·
The rest of the fini shers
in the boys race were
Ironton ( 171 ). Alexander
( 184), Notre Dame ( 184),
Meigs (!94), Eastern Pike
(213) and Vinton County
(243).
.
Cody Hanning was the
high finisher for the locals
as the Maraunder took 12th
on a time of 18:58. Andrew
O'Bryant was next for
Meigs in 34th on a time of .
20:20, while Steven Mahr
(45th, 21 :03), Jacob Riffle
(63rd, 22:21) and Noah
.
Submitted photos
Hajivandi · ( 105Jh, 27:44) Meigs
freshman Cody Hanning sprints past a pair of North
rounded out the Meigs scor- Adams runners last Thursday in Jackson.
ers.
Morgan Kennedy (I 09th,
Meigs'
29:27) was also in action
Olivia
for the Marauders. but his
Bevan,
score .did not count in the
left, and
final tally.
teamSouth Gall ia 's Jacob
mate
Watson was the second
Jessica
highest finisher for the area
Holliday
schools with a 13th plaGe
run
finish on a time of 19:04,
side-by·
while River Valley 's high
side
finisher
was
David
during
Householder in 33rd place
last
on a time of 20:20.
Thursd
River Valley also had saw
ay's
Jon Porter. (49th. 21:48),
Jack so
Matt · Goodrich (58th,
22:12)
and
Parker
n
Hollingsworth (71 st, 2'3:21)
lnvitatio
in action during Thursday 's
nal in
meet.
the
All area reams will be
· Apple
back in action Saturday at
City.
the Rio Grande Invitational.

SAN DIEGO (A P) Philip Rivers , LaDainian
Tomlinson and the rest of
the San Di ego Charo ers
simply lefl no doubt. "
·
Frustrated bv two gutwrenching losses. 'the
Chargers raced paslnemesis
Brett Favre and the New
York Jets for a 48-29 vi.:to-,
ry Monday nigh1 in a wild
game befitting two original
AFL teams.
- ·
Rivers threw three touch down passes, Tomlinson
scored his first two TDs of
the season and San Diego
finally got back at Favre
after all these years. Tiley
sacked him four times and
intercepted him twice.
including .a 52-yard return
for a score by All-Pro cornerback Antonio Cromartie.
Favre always, sccmed to ·
come up b1g on Monday
nights with Green Bay. This
night , though. he finally lost
to the Chargers after beating
them five straight times datingto 1993. '
San Diego ( 1-2) looked
like the team pi cked by
. many to reach the Super
Bowl. The Chargers lost
their opener to Carolina on
the last ·play. then lost by
one point at Den ve r in a
game remembered t(Jr ·referee Ed Hochuli 's blown call
that set Lip the Broncos'
, winning score.
Tomlinson, the two-time
defending NFL rushing
champion. scored on a 2yard leap to _give the
Chargers a 38-14 lead in the
third quarter. He had been
slowed since jamn1ing his
ri ght big toe late in the
Please see Bolts, Bl

Prep Golf Roundup

.

Wahama edges out Point .Pleasant
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSCMYDAILVSENTINEL.GOM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - In a closely contested high school golf
match held Monday afternoon at the Hidden Valley
Golf Course, Wahama edged
Point Pleasant by three
strokes i.n the play six, count
four format.
The final total for Wahama
was 175 compared to Point's
178. The match was so close
a wiimer was not detennined
until the final match of the
day was completed.
The schedule called for
this contest to be a tri match
with Buffalo being the third
team. However, the flu bug
hit the Buffalo team imd
they cancelled their appearance earlier in the day.
Both Wahama and Point
Pleasant played some of
their best golf of the season.
Perhaps it will bode well for.

each as the regional tournament is less than a week
away.
Dave Greene broke out of
a recent slump and fired a
fine 39 for the day to earn
himself medalist honors .
Adam Roush was close
behind with a 43. A stubborn
putter kept Adam's score
from being even better.
Warren Bissell overcame a
couple of bad holes to post a'
45 and Matt Arnold completed the scoring for the
White Falcons with a 48.
Brandon Johnson and Zack
Whitlatch also played for
.the winners with thetr scores
not counting in the final
total.
Point Pleasant showed
consistent scoring with five
of their six players breaking
50 for the day. Opie Lucas
was once again the leader
for the Big Blacks with a 43.
An unfortunate lost ball on
the final hole kept his score

from being even better.
Travis Grimm and Justin
Cavender both played well
ana shot identical 44's for
the day. Alex Potter added
Point's fourth score shooting
a 47. Robert Davis and
Jason Stoffer also played for
Point with their scores not
included in the total.
Both teams are now idle
until this comin~ Satur.day
when they participate, with
14 other area teams, in lhe
Riverside High School
Invitational at the Riverside
Golf Course.
RV FIFTH AT OVC .

LAVALLETTE - Aided
by three of the top six
golfers on the afternoon, the
Fairland Dragons claimed
the 2008 Ohio Valley
Conference golf title with a
Larry Crurnlphoto
fine 328 team score Friday Wahama's Zach Whitlatch watches his tee-shot on the
eighth hole during a golf match with Point Pleasant Monday
Please ue Golf, Bl
at Hidden Valley Counlry Club in Point Pleasant.
'

I

Please see Volleyball. Bl

no doubt
with win
over Jets

STAFF REPORT

Meigs at Warren. 7:30p.m.

·

25. then came back 10 win
26-24 and 27-25 before
falling in the finale 9-15 during
the .
Tri -Valley
Conference Inte rdiv isional
g"me.
All five contests were
exciting from 'tart to fini sh
and fans in attendance
weren't slighted. With a little
luck. Southern could have
escaped with the win over
the Division 11 Lady Vikings ·
of Coach Travis Hale.
Senior Emma Hunter was
40-for-42 passing with 15
assists, .followed ~close,ly· by
Counney Thomas with a 22for-22 passing night and 13
assists. Thomas had only
half of her senior counterpan's overall totals. but she
made them count. 13 of the

Meigs fares well at Jackson CC Invitational Bolts leave

Saturday September 27
Foolboll

Ohio killer wants new sentence under injection law
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:15
p.m.
Chesapeeike at River Valley. 5:30p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

Eastern soars past NY in four; Southern falls to VC in five

.

�. LOCAL • STATE
_Cub Scout annual
roundup, outing set

The Daily Sentinel

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Tina
Spencer has recently been hired as an
administrative · assistant by Hyer &amp;
Littlepage Law Office, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
. Spencer is a graduate. of Gallipolis
Career College where she received an
associate of applied business in computer
. applications technolog~ and an associate
of applied business m medical office
administration.
She resides in Pt. Pleasant with her sons
Dustin and BradLee, and fiance Michael. Tina Spaocer

Holzer names August
physician of the month
GALLIPOLIS - Gene Abels, MD,
Holzer Health Systems Nledical Plaza,
was selected as the August Physician of
the Month at Holzer Medical Center by
the Hospital's Physician Satisfaction
Team.
Dr. Abels earned his medical degree
from the Ohio State College of
Medicine in Columbus, Ohio. He is a
member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, Phi
Beta Kappa , Alpha Omega Alpha , and
Honorary Phi ETA Sigma. He complet- Gena Abels
.ed his res'idency and cardiology fellowship at the
Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, Ga. and is board
certified in Internal Medicine.
'
He resides in Gallipolis with his wife, Jeanie, who is an
RN. They have three daughters: Barbara, RN, Sara, also
an RN. and Beth, who is a physician, and three grandchildren. They also have one son, Major Brad Abets, M.D.,
who is deceased.
In his spare time, Abels enjoys coaching his wife and
playing golf. He is a member ·of the Medical Quality
Management Committee, and Chairman of the Phannacy
and Therapeutic Committee at HMC.
The Physician Satisfaction team presented him with the
Physician of the· Month award based on comments by
staff and peers. For his special honor, he received a
ftamed certificate and designated parking spot for the
ll)Onth of August.

O'Bleness offer health screening
ATHENS ~ ·o ' Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens
w.ill offer blood pressure screening as well as cholesterol
arrd glucose screening Wednesday, Oct. I.
)he free blood· pressure screening will be open to the
public from 9 a.m. until noon in ·the hospital's patient
entrance lobby. The cholesterol and glucose screening,
which wil.l be offered for a $5 fee, will be available at the
same location by appointment only from 9 a.m. until noon.
To make an appointment, call O'Bleness' Community
Relations office at (740) 566-4814.
Free colon·-rectal cancer home screening kits and information can be obtained on a daily basis at the hospital's
patient and visitor entrance information desks as well as at
the Castrop Center infonnation desk.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Local Sports Briefs, Page B2
3rd annual Hits for Hospice, Page B~

Pro leagues feeling economic
squeeze, Page B6

l..ocA.L SCHEDULE .

Prep Volleyball Roundup

, PQMEAOV - A schedule of upcoming high

.chool varsity sporting events lnvOIIIi ng
leams from Meigs and Gallia counties.

D.!•Wy SlpiMnbtr 23
Soccer
Chillicothe 11t Gellis Academy, 5 p.m.
Volleyball
·Gellis Academy at Fairland , 5:30p.m.
VInton County at Mefgs, 6 p.m.
·
Eastern at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
QVC at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m:
Eastern at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
Golf
River Valley at Sectional, TBA
Gallia Academy at Sectional. TBA
.

Wtdnolday Stpttmbef 24
Volleyball
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p'.m.
South F»oiflt at South Gallla, 5:30p.m.
Gallla Academy at River Valley. 5 p.m.
.southern at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Tburadey Seotombar 25

Football
Point Pleasant vs. Midland Trail at
Laidley Field, 7:30p.m.

Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at OVCS, 4:30 p.m.

Volleyball

,

Submitted photO.

Jim Snyder (pictured) won the Wii Bowling Tournament at the Meigs Senior Center sponsored .by Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center.
·

Wii go
bowling
MIDDLEPORT
Overbrook ~ehabilitation
Center recently sponsored a
Wii Bowling Tournament ·at
the Meigs County Senior
Center. Teams of four competed to see who had the
best bowling game. The top
two bowlers from each team
competed in a final round.
First place winner was Jim
Snyder with a score of-182.
Second was won by · Betty
Johnson, third place winner
was Polly Curt1s and fourth
place went to Barb Gheen.
Overbrook staff provided
refreshments to participants
and trophies · and t-shirts
were presented to bowling
winners. Anyone interested
, ~n fanning a Wii Bowling
team at the Meigs County
. Senior Center · sbouW · contact 'Debbie Jones MCCaA
llctivity director, by ¢8lling
·992-2.161.
, ·

For more information on the Boy Scouts of America,
please visir www.scouring .org :, and for BSA 's Tri-State
Area Council please visir www.tsacbsa.org.

GCC grad hired

Tuesday, September 23; 2008

Inside

Thesday, September 23,2008

RUTLAND - Cub Scout Pack 240 will host its annual
Cub Scout Roundup and fall kickoff pack !lleeting at 7 p.m.
on Sept. 29 at Meigs Elementary School in Rutland .
Local boys in grades 1-5, or aged 7-10 are invited,
along with their parents or a guardians, fo r infonnation
and to sign up fo r scouting this year with the Rutlandbased pack, one of the ' area\ largest and most active
scout groups.
, Regular scouts and leaders with Pack 240 will also be in
attendance. as well as leadership from the Boy Scouts of
America Tri-State Area Council's Meigs-Gallia-Mason
District of Hunti.ngton. W.Va.
Current scouis and leaders should be in unifonn.
J.R. Spencer, Point Pleasant , W.Va ., BSA Tri-State
Area Council's new paraprofessional overseeing the
MGM district , will be the featured speaker at the
Roundup meeting, and will also visit local schools t!Je
week prior to spread the word. He joined the Boy Scouts
organization in Huntington thi s summer, replacing long
time career professional John Pinkerman, who retired
recently.
Pack 240 will host a fall family outing from 2-7 p,.m. on
.Oct. 4 at Boy Scout Camp Kiashuta, Scout Camp Road,
Chester. The Family outing will feature an afternoon
three-mile hike on the ·trails of the recently refurbished
grounds. which had fallen into disrepair and were closed .
fpr several years.
. Scouts are urged to wear clothing appropriate for hiking. and good sneakers or hiking boots for the hike ,
ra~her than uniforms . After the hike, the outing will
include a hot dog cookout at the shelter, games and skits.
All new and regular Pack 240 Cub Scouts, their leaders
and · families are encouraged to attend the
outing. Directions are available at 992-1925 or by e-mai
tO info@triuneresearch.com.
Pomeroy's Doug Stuart, Cub Scoutmaster for Pack 240 ,
observed, "We're anticipating another terrific scouting program this year and have lots of fun and educational activities planned."
· "If parents want to help their boys learn respongibility, good citizenship and self-reliance while making
friends and haying a great time outdoors, hey should
c.ome on out and get involved, because scouting offers
all that and more."
Stuart noted that the Scouts are always interested in
good leaders to join the largely volunteer organization ,
adding that Pack 240 welcomes interested adults to the
meeting who might w.ant to host a local den, or just help
out with events.
Cub Scout Pack 240 is chartered by the Volunteer Fire
Department of Rutland, Ohio, and led by Committee
Chairperson Carol Mahr of Rutland, Cub Scoutmaster
Doug Stuart of Pomeroy, and several Meigs County parent-leaders. Cub Scouting is the largest of three divisions
of the Boy Scouts of America (the others are Boy
Scouting and . Venturing). Serving nearly 4.7 million
young people between 7 and 20 years of age with more
than 300 councils throughout the United States and its territories, the Boy Scouts of America is the nation's foremost youth program of ch'!racter development and valuesbased leadership training.

. ''

PageA6

fddav. September 26
Football

Portsmouth at Gallia Academy. 7:30

P.m.

Federal Hocking at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
ll'lmbte at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Suffe.lo at South Gallla, 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Burch, 7:30p.m.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER ·

COLUMBUS - A killer
facing the first execution in
Ohio in more than a year said
he can't be put to death by
injection because he was sentenced to die by electric chair.
Richard
Cooey
has
requested a new sentencing
hearing in Summit County
under current execution law
and a chance to present
more evidence . that he
shouldn't be put to death .
· The state outlawed the
electric chai( in 200 I and
made lethal injection the sole
means of execution in Ohio.
The electric chair hasn't been
used in the state since 1963.
"The journal entry in this
matter has not been changed
to reflect the change in the
law as of 200 I ," the lawsuit
says. ''The only court that
matters has yet to issue an
order sentencing the defen, dant to death by lethal injection.',
· In the request filed Friday
in Summit County Common
Pleas Court, Cooey says he
wasn't allowed to properly
present evidence of a brutal
childhood at his original
sentencing in 1986.
·Cooey suffered "brutal,
violent abuse" at the hands
of hi~ alcoholic father, . a
story that Cooey's original
attorneys failed to pull
together at Cooey 's sentencing hearing, attorney Eric
Allen said Monday.
"It's just another thing
that's been overlooked and
not dealt with properly,"
Allen said.
One of Cooey's original
lawyers previously told The
Associated
Press
he
believed he did everything
he could at that hearing.
Cooey is scheduled to die
Oct. 14 in the rapes and murders ,of two University of
Akron students . Prosecutor
Sherri Bevan Walsh called
the latest argument a delay
tactic and says she 'II fight it.
"The crimes he commit-

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

NELSONVILLE
Eastern
volleyball
improved to 11 -3 overall
this season with a fourgame 16-25,25-11 , 27-25,
25-21 victory over host
on
Nelsonville- York
Monday night during a Tri Valley Conference interdivisional matchup in Athens
County .
The Lady Eagles fell
behind after dropping Game
1, then rallied to tie things
with a convincing 14-point
decision in Game 2. Game 3
proved to be the pivotal
point of the match , which
the Green and White won
by the minimal two points
to take a two-games-to-one
lead.

The Lady Buckeyes battled closely in Game 4. but
eventually gave way to the
guests in a four-point finale
- allowing EHS to claim
the overall triumph.
The Lady Eagles posted
collective numbers of 35
ki'lls . 33 assists. 27 digs and
three blocks to go along with
85-qf-94 serving (90 percent) and 166-of-227 passing (73 percent).
Eastern was led at the service line by Beverly Maxson
with.IO points, followed by
Brittany Casto with nine and
Katie Wilfong with seven.
Morgan Burt had four
points. both Tresa Swatzel
and Lauren Cummings ·
added three and Bntney
Morrtson added one. .
·
. Burt had a ·team-h1gh 12
k1lls. followed by Casto,

junior varsity contest.
Eastern returns to action
today when it travels to
Cheshire for a non-confer- .
encc contest with River
Valley. The JV match will
start at 5:30p.m.
VCEDGES SoUTHERN IN

·s

RACINE -The Southern
Maxson

.Thomas

Wilfong and Swatzel with
five each. Maxson had three
kills , Morrison and Kari ssa
Connolly each added two
and Cummings also had one
kill in the triumph. Bun also
had two blocks .
Connolly had team-highs
26 assists and nine digs ,
NYHS managed to salvage a split on the night with
a three-game victory in the

Lady Tornadoes volleyball
team has endured a couple
-:ery tough games over ·the
past week and Monday 's
five-game. 2'3 point losses
were no less troubling·
Southern coach Tonja
Hunter, however, remained
optimistic, saying "Vinton
County is a solid club. Vl/e
were right there with a
chance to win and that is a
positive." .
Southem lost 23-25. 22-

SPORTS@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Soccer
OVCS at Teays Valley, 4 p.m.

Volleyball
River Valley at logan. Noon .

JACKSON - Athens
the
recent
dominated
Jackson Invitational Cross
Country- race held Thursday
at the Frankl.in Valley Golf
Course in Jackson.
·
Athens won the girls race
by 16 point over Meigs and
claimed a much larger margin of victory over North
Adams in the boys race ,
winning by 38 points.
In the girls race Athens
placed three runners in the
top 10 to post a low score of
34 on the evening while
Meigs finished · with 50
points. Host Jackson was
third with 1·03 points , followed by North Adams
(109), Vinton County (121),
Oak Hill (130) and Logan
(148). .
While Athens had a trio
of top 10 finishers, Meigs
placed two in the top 10
with Devan Soulsby claim.ing fourth on a time ,of
21 :3.7 and Morgan Lentes
taking eighth on a time of
22:19.
Kimi Swisher was · 20th
on a time of 23:25, Dani
Cullums was 22nd on a
time of 23:35 and Jessica
Holliday was 24th Qn a time
of 23:54 to round out the
Meigs point scorers.
Other finishers for the
Lady Marauders not counting in the fimil tally were
Shannon Walzer-Kuharic
(52nd, 27: 17), Olivia Bevan
(54th. 27:31) and Dawn
Bissell (61 st, 29:02).
Ohio Valley Christian
School also 81aced a runner
in the top I for the locals
as Katie Blodgett took seventh on a time of 22:14.
In the boys race Athens
enjoyed ,a much more comfortable margin of victory,
finishing with 46 points on
the evening. North Adams
was second with 84 points,
while Logan ( 126), Oak

Gon

Riverside Invitational. 11 a.m
Crosa Country
Rio Grande Invitational, 10 a.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

MGM Marshall
chapter holding
~ilgate party

Emily Casto (far left) Overbrook activity director, is pictured with Wil Bowling
Tournament winners (second from left) Barb Gheen, Polly Curtis, Betty Johnson, Jim
Snyder. Also pictured Michelle Kennedy, Overbrook marketing and admissions director.

' ted were so brutal that there
is no mitigating evidence
that can overcome that,".
Walsh said Monday.
Walsh said federal courts
have repeatedly upheld
Cooey 's death sentence.
'IWo of the three Summit
County judges on the .panel

Cooey has also sued in
that sentenced Cooey to die
have died, and a third .is on federal court arguing he has
inactive status, according to poor vein acce~s. a problem
the Ohio Supreme Courfs made worse by his obesity.
attorney registration Web site. He also says a drug he takes
Cooey's filing requests a for migraine headaches,
hearing to determine which Topomax, could intetfere
judges should replace any with the drugs used in the
injection process.
deceased jm\ges.

Saturday Morning Sports Clinics

August 23th- October 25th
9:00am
Holzer Clinic Sycamore
*Get Bock in Action with Dr. Kelly

HUNTrNGTON
The
Big Green Scholarship
Foundation would like to
invite MGM Chapter Big
Green Members to bring a
friend to a pre game tailgate
at the Cincinnati football
game on Friday, October 3,
between 6 p.m. and 7:30
p.m.
The tailgate will be located between gates B and C
on the West side of Joan C.
Edwards Stadium . The
game ~icks off at 8 p.m.
The cost of the tailgate is
$15 for one person and $25
for two people and includes
It complimentary chair back
til:ket to the game.
. Reservations must be
made in advance with a
credit card by calling the
Big Green Office at 304696-4661 or David Steele at
304-696-2483.

Meigs basketball
golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. - The
Meigs High School boys
baskelbilll team wili be
holding a golf scramble on
Saturday, October 11, at
Riverside Golf Club.
The event wilf be a fourmao team fonnat, with one
player from each team
required to have an under10 handicap. The event is
18 holes and rules will be
explained the day of the
tournament.
• ;The cost is $320 per team
~- $80 per person ...:. with
tood, beverages and mulli~ns included in the entry
f(e. The $5 skins game and
Optional cash pot are not
j:n&lt;:luded in the entry fee.
the event is limited to the
uj-st 30 teams that sign-u,r.
Any extra teams go a wrutmg list.
~::;!'he purpose of this
scramble is to raise money
fqr purchasing equipment
fat the Meigs boys basket!)1111 program. The goal is to
riise $3,000.
·
:·:'The top three teams will
W,in awards, and there will
~ other contests such as
~losest to the pin, longest
drive and longest putt. The
contest will have a shotgun
at 8:30a.m.
Businesses may also
sponsor a hole at the event
fgr $60.
: For more information,
contact MHS head basket"
ball coach Ben Ewing at
740-416-0824.

start

•

Soulsby

O' ,Bryant

Hill (126) and Wellston
(169) rounded out the top
five.
·
The rest of the fini shers
in the boys race were
Ironton ( 171 ). Alexander
( 184), Notre Dame ( 184),
Meigs (!94), Eastern Pike
(213) and Vinton County
(243).
.
Cody Hanning was the
high finisher for the locals
as the Maraunder took 12th
on a time of 18:58. Andrew
O'Bryant was next for
Meigs in 34th on a time of .
20:20, while Steven Mahr
(45th, 21 :03), Jacob Riffle
(63rd, 22:21) and Noah
.
Submitted photos
Hajivandi · ( 105Jh, 27:44) Meigs
freshman Cody Hanning sprints past a pair of North
rounded out the Meigs scor- Adams runners last Thursday in Jackson.
ers.
Morgan Kennedy (I 09th,
Meigs'
29:27) was also in action
Olivia
for the Marauders. but his
Bevan,
score .did not count in the
left, and
final tally.
teamSouth Gall ia 's Jacob
mate
Watson was the second
Jessica
highest finisher for the area
Holliday
schools with a 13th plaGe
run
finish on a time of 19:04,
side-by·
while River Valley 's high
side
finisher
was
David
during
Householder in 33rd place
last
on a time of 20:20.
Thursd
River Valley also had saw
ay's
Jon Porter. (49th. 21:48),
Jack so
Matt · Goodrich (58th,
22:12)
and
Parker
n
Hollingsworth (71 st, 2'3:21)
lnvitatio
in action during Thursday 's
nal in
meet.
the
All area reams will be
· Apple
back in action Saturday at
City.
the Rio Grande Invitational.

SAN DIEGO (A P) Philip Rivers , LaDainian
Tomlinson and the rest of
the San Di ego Charo ers
simply lefl no doubt. "
·
Frustrated bv two gutwrenching losses. 'the
Chargers raced paslnemesis
Brett Favre and the New
York Jets for a 48-29 vi.:to-,
ry Monday nigh1 in a wild
game befitting two original
AFL teams.
- ·
Rivers threw three touch down passes, Tomlinson
scored his first two TDs of
the season and San Diego
finally got back at Favre
after all these years. Tiley
sacked him four times and
intercepted him twice.
including .a 52-yard return
for a score by All-Pro cornerback Antonio Cromartie.
Favre always, sccmed to ·
come up b1g on Monday
nights with Green Bay. This
night , though. he finally lost
to the Chargers after beating
them five straight times datingto 1993. '
San Diego ( 1-2) looked
like the team pi cked by
. many to reach the Super
Bowl. The Chargers lost
their opener to Carolina on
the last ·play. then lost by
one point at Den ve r in a
game remembered t(Jr ·referee Ed Hochuli 's blown call
that set Lip the Broncos'
, winning score.
Tomlinson, the two-time
defending NFL rushing
champion. scored on a 2yard leap to _give the
Chargers a 38-14 lead in the
third quarter. He had been
slowed since jamn1ing his
ri ght big toe late in the
Please see Bolts, Bl

Prep Golf Roundup

.

Wahama edges out Point .Pleasant
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSCMYDAILVSENTINEL.GOM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - In a closely contested high school golf
match held Monday afternoon at the Hidden Valley
Golf Course, Wahama edged
Point Pleasant by three
strokes i.n the play six, count
four format.
The final total for Wahama
was 175 compared to Point's
178. The match was so close
a wiimer was not detennined
until the final match of the
day was completed.
The schedule called for
this contest to be a tri match
with Buffalo being the third
team. However, the flu bug
hit the Buffalo team imd
they cancelled their appearance earlier in the day.
Both Wahama and Point
Pleasant played some of
their best golf of the season.
Perhaps it will bode well for.

each as the regional tournament is less than a week
away.
Dave Greene broke out of
a recent slump and fired a
fine 39 for the day to earn
himself medalist honors .
Adam Roush was close
behind with a 43. A stubborn
putter kept Adam's score
from being even better.
Warren Bissell overcame a
couple of bad holes to post a'
45 and Matt Arnold completed the scoring for the
White Falcons with a 48.
Brandon Johnson and Zack
Whitlatch also played for
.the winners with thetr scores
not counting in the final
total.
Point Pleasant showed
consistent scoring with five
of their six players breaking
50 for the day. Opie Lucas
was once again the leader
for the Big Blacks with a 43.
An unfortunate lost ball on
the final hole kept his score

from being even better.
Travis Grimm and Justin
Cavender both played well
ana shot identical 44's for
the day. Alex Potter added
Point's fourth score shooting
a 47. Robert Davis and
Jason Stoffer also played for
Point with their scores not
included in the total.
Both teams are now idle
until this comin~ Satur.day
when they participate, with
14 other area teams, in lhe
Riverside High School
Invitational at the Riverside
Golf Course.
RV FIFTH AT OVC .

LAVALLETTE - Aided
by three of the top six
golfers on the afternoon, the
Fairland Dragons claimed
the 2008 Ohio Valley
Conference golf title with a
Larry Crurnlphoto
fine 328 team score Friday Wahama's Zach Whitlatch watches his tee-shot on the
eighth hole during a golf match with Point Pleasant Monday
Please ue Golf, Bl
at Hidden Valley Counlry Club in Point Pleasant.
'

I

Please see Volleyball. Bl

no doubt
with win
over Jets

STAFF REPORT

Meigs at Warren. 7:30p.m.

·

25. then came back 10 win
26-24 and 27-25 before
falling in the finale 9-15 during
the .
Tri -Valley
Conference Inte rdiv isional
g"me.
All five contests were
exciting from 'tart to fini sh
and fans in attendance
weren't slighted. With a little
luck. Southern could have
escaped with the win over
the Division 11 Lady Vikings ·
of Coach Travis Hale.
Senior Emma Hunter was
40-for-42 passing with 15
assists, .followed ~close,ly· by
Counney Thomas with a 22for-22 passing night and 13
assists. Thomas had only
half of her senior counterpan's overall totals. but she
made them count. 13 of the

Meigs fares well at Jackson CC Invitational Bolts leave

Saturday September 27
Foolboll

Ohio killer wants new sentence under injection law
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5:15
p.m.
Chesapeeike at River Valley. 5:30p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

Eastern soars past NY in four; Southern falls to VC in five

.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

local Sports Briels
•

Skyline to take ofT September 27
STEWAKI' - Btlly Jarre ll 's Skyline Speedway will take
off Satur&lt;L1y. September 27.
Fatb \hmtld stay po&gt;red tor what IS to be an upcommg btg
announ..:ement at the Southern Ohto bull ring. An anticipated
,m nount me nt will be mude for etther the first or second week
of Octobet . so fans shou ld stay posted to thetr favorite racmg
papers. loc,tl newspapers . &lt;~nd the Skyline Speedway website
for det.tih at v. ww skyhnespcedway.nct
Tcnt.ttiVC plans call for ,J posstble "big show' and a couple
more v.ccks of s,,tlllduy n1ght racmg before closmg to make
i'tnprovcmcnts to the physical fae thlles on the grounds.

Punt, Pass and Kick coming to Pomeroy
POMEROY - 'I he sevent h annual NFU Pepsi Punt Pass
and KICk (Ompctton sponsored by the Meigs High School
Ath letic Boostets wi ll be held Sunday September 21st at Bob
Roberts Ftcld m Pomeroy
Rcg tstralion begms ,,t n•Xltl With the competition starting at I
pm
The compctlttonts open to boys and girls ages 8 to 15 and IS
free of ch.1rgc All contestants must tegtstet and provtde a copy
of the11 buth t:ctlllicate .
Age gtoups are us fo llows, R-9, 10- 11 , 12- 13, 14- 15. Age
gtoups ,ue b.tseLI on the contestants age as of December 31,
2008
All klt:kmg tees und footballs will be provided and contestatlts must we,lf tenms shoes, 110 football cleats allowed.
Wmncrs at eat h &lt;tge group will be eligtble to compete m secIlonaI wmpetttion 1n October with a chance to advance to a
Cmu nnat t Ben~~tls game 111 December.
For more mf&lt;)nnation contact Jimmer Soulsby at 992-6728.

GRD holding basketball skills clinic
GA LLIPOLI S - rhe Galltpolts R€creattun Department wtll
be hostmg a basketball fund amentals skills clinic on Saturday's
-October II. 18. 25 , .md Novembet I - from 2 p.m until4
p.m. at the h N Church of God on State Route 141 . The tee
will be $20 for all four days.
TI1e clmtc ptov1des a fast paced excttmg fun format for
young pl.wm · grades thu·d through stxth - boys and girls to develop dnd reline the most important basketball skills and
techm4ues Thts um4ue camp program has been created
around the thmgs that ktds love to do shooting, dribbling, passmg. one on one moves, skills test and indlVIdual concepts.
Rcg1stratton forms will be avatlable at the Recreation
Dep&lt;ul ment dt 518 Second Avenue and also returned by mail or
at the Reeteation Office f10m 7:30 am. until 4 p.m. Monday
through Fnday Regtstratton deadline ts October 3.
·
For more mformatton contact Brett Bostic at (740) 441-6022.

GRD holding volleyball skills cljnic
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipohs Recreation Department will
be hostmg a Volleyball Fundamental Skills Clinic on Saturdays
- October II . 18, 25 and November I - from noon until 2
p m at the Ftrst Church of God on State Route 141. The fee
wtll be $20 for all lour days.
The clime wtll introduce volleyball and the basic skills for
girls grades thtee through stxth . These skills will be taught by
dnll s, statton., , mmt-games, and possibly games.

Bolts
from PageBl
Carol ina game. He scored
on anoth et 2-ya rd run late in
the fo urt h quarter. one play
after Ri vers' 60-yard pass to
Vmcent Jackson
Rt vers has tllt ow n three
TD passes 111 every game
tht s season He was 19-of25 for 250 yard s on
Monday, v,htle Tomlinson
had 67 yatds o n 26 carries,
h1 s th1rd stnu ght game
under I00 yards.
Favt e had three touchdown passes fo r the Jets ( 12). incl uding fourth-qu arter
TD th rows of 4 yards to
Chansi Stuckey and 13
ya rds to Dustm Keller. The
38-yea r-old Favre was 30of-42 for 27 1 yards.
The Chargers could have
had two more picks, but
sal ety Chnton Hart dropped
Favre's fo urth-down pass in
the end zone late m the third
quarter ami Cromartte let an
inte rce ption and a sure
touchdown cl ang off hi s
hands m the ftrst quarter
Cromartie mtercepted backup QB Kellen Clemens m
the end Lone 111 the final
mmute
The Charge rs " med three
times and the Jets once m a
crazy span of 5 mmutes, 46
seconds spanning the first

Golf
fromPageBl
at the Sugarwood Golf Club
in Lava llette, W.Va.
Fatrland fi mshed fo ur
strokes ahead of second
place Chesapeake who shot
a 332 and II strokes ahead
of third place South Point
who had a 339. Rock Hill
was fourth with a team
score of 404 and Ri ver
Valley was fifth at 409 .
The Dragons had three
golfers make the All·OVC
team led by Justin Earl and
Dalton Froelich who both
shot an 81. Fairland 's third
selection was Adam Berry
with an 82 .
Despite the soltd afternoon by the Drago ns, tt was
South Point's Kev m Davis
that claimed 11'\edalt st honors on the aftern oon with a

and second quarters.
Rivers recovered from an
early blunder to throw a !yard touchdown pass to
rookie
fullback
Mike
Tolbert for a I0-7 lead late
with 2 03 left m the ftrst
quarter.
On the fourth play of the
next Jets' dnve, Cromartte
overpowered Laveranues
Coles and took the ball
away. racmg 52 yards for a
17-7 1ead .
Leon
· Washington
returned the ktckoff 94
yards to the San Diego 5.
Two plays later, Favre hit
Coles on a 3-yard TD pass
to pull the Jets within 1714.
San Diego's Marques
Harri s recovered an onside
kick at the Jets 44 to set up
a 27-yard scoring pass from
Rtvers to Chns Chamberll
that made it 24-14 II: 17
before halftime.
Eric Weddle intercepted
Favre to set up Rivers ' 6yard scoring pass to ttght
end Antonio Gates for a 31 14 lead late in the second
quarter.
Jets cornerback David
Barrett · stunned
the
Chargers and quieted the
crowd
at
Qualcomm
Stadium when he jumped in
front of Gates for an mterception he returned 25 yards
for a touchdown less than
four minutes into the game .
score of78 .
Rounding out the AllOVC team was Nathan
Copley (80) and Robert
Hoback (81) - both from
'Cheseapeake.
River Valley had .one
player finish under triple
digtts during the meet as
Kyle Bryant carded a 95 to
lead the Raiders : Todd
Simms chipped in a 1020
Cody Wimmer had a 103
and Chris Goodrich shot a
I 09 to round out the count·
ing scores.
Also, participating at the
meet for River Valley was
Matt Ball who shot a 110
and Zack Polcyn·who had a
114.
With the OVC meet
behind them , the 'Raiders
will now focus their attentiO n to the postseasoh
before wrapping up the season Saturday at the
Rt verstde Inv itational m
Mason.

www. mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 23,

•

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

2008

www.mydallysentinel.com

m:ribune·- Sentinel - 3Re

Third annual Hits for Hospice Tournament held

CLASSIFIED

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@k-1YDAILYSENTINEL COM

GALLIPOLIS - The th1rd
ann ual Hils for Holzer
Hospice Co-Ed Softball
Tournament was ~uccessfu l ,
raising over 56,000 for
Holzer Hosptce. This weekend was held Saturday,
September 6 at 0 0
Mcintyre Park.
Teams that part ic ipated m
the event were. Batmen and
Women, Cider Kn ats, First
Church of God , Holzer
Clinic, Holze r Lung Term
Care, Ron's Trophy, Chris
Somervtlle team (second
place team), Sweepers (fi rst
place team) and Therm al
SolutiOns Umptres fur the
event mclude Dustin Caudtll .
Roger Foster, Phil Skidmore
and Chn s Tackett
Holze r Hosptce would ltke
to thank area businesses that
contribu ted to th e tourn ament . Top sponsors for the
event mcluded Di amond
sponsor
Wai-Mart
ul

Volleyball
from Page Bl
22 resLtlted m scores Botti
ladie.s pla) ed great floa t
games.
In the first game Southern
led 23-20 but five straight
sen es from Morgan Larkm
pulled out the win for the
Lady Vtkings, 25-23
Southern suffered a similar fate m game two, losmg
25-22. Hunter had six and
Ashley Walker ha.d five
points for Southern. Vinton
County sconng was spread
nearl y evenl y among Sarah
Nichols, Cacy Puckett ,
Allt so n Graves, Larktn .
Amanda Graves and Myriah
Mace .
Hunter again played well
for Southern m the third
game, helpmg her club
come bac k to win a barnburner of a game, 26-24.
Hunter had etght points and
Walker six Freshm an netter
Kelsey Holsinger led a great
front. line charge wuh 14
overall ktlls and several
boommg kill s 111 game
three.
Breann a Taylor had II
dinks for Southern . whtle
Rashell Boso (two kill s)
added seven dtnks and
Holsinger added seven .
Boso had two blocks. whtle
Taylor and Holsmger each
had one.
Great balance, m serv ing
and servmg points was
exhibited when Hunter,
Walker, Chelsea Pape.
Boso . Tavlor. Samantha
Patterson ,·
Courtney
Thomu s
and
Lmdsay
Teaford all posted strategic
placement c Katte , Woods
(four kills) and Lmdsay
· Teaford had good passing
games. The balance led to a
27-25 win that included an
ace fro m Walker to help pull

We Cove

Meigs, Gallla,
And Muon
Counties Like

No One
Else C:.n!

Websttes.
In One Week With Us
www mydatlytnbune.com
www
com
ctasstft ed@!~;~:~~nbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www mydailysentlnel
myda1lyreg1ster com
S YOUR AD NOW NLIN
To Place
~ribune
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.Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Submitted photo

Ptctured a bove a re membe rs of the Swee pers team , wmners of the Htts for Hos ptce CoEd Softball Tournament held earlier this month at 0 0 Mcintyre Park in Gallipolis
G,ill 1pohs and Platinum sponsor McKeS&gt;on Provider
Technologtes.
Holzer Hosptce ts a valu-

able service in our community. The funds ratsed from thts
event will enable Hospice to
maintam its commitment to
serve patients at the end ot

Call TOday...

life. regardless of the patient 's
abtlity to pay For more mform&lt;ttton about the Holze r
Hosptce program, please call
locall y at (740 ) 446-5074.

out the wm.
In the fi lth and fmal
game, Vmto n County leq
earl y and edged to a 10-3
lead on the coat tml s of four
All rso n Gra ves serves.
Kati e Woods brought
Soutl1ern bac k to 10-6, but
South ern ran out of steam
in droppm g the 9- 15 finale .
Walker was 20-for-2 1
serv ing, Thomas was 18fot-2 1, Hunter 2 1-for-25 ,
Pape 14-for- 15 and Boso 6for-7. Boso was 13-for-14
spikin g,
Stephani e
Sham blm was 20-for-20,
and Holsmge r was 27-for32 Overall , Southern was
9 1-for-106 for 86 percent
se rvmg. Hunter had fiv e
aces ,md Thomas three.
Sbuthern
of
Coach
Ra ~ h e l
Hupp won the
reserve game m th ree sets
16-25, 25 - 18, and 25-11 .
Latl sha Brow n led VC to
the first-ga me win with
eleven point s and 15 overall Southern was led by
Hope Teaford and Katelyn
Hill wtth 16 pomts each ,
Emtl y Ash 12.and Mtchelle
Outs wtth ten.
' Southetn
goes
to
Well ston Wednesday.

lronladtes ( 12-2. 5-2) made pomts. mcludmg stx aces .
· short work of the re tgnmg Jacquelm e Jacobs and
· SEOAL champions - once Kay la Smtth led the net
agam wmnmg by II pomts attack wtth ftve ktlls aptece,
for the overall vtctory.
foll owed. by lltana Corfi as
Kacie Shoemaker led the and Linsey Stover wtth two
Blue and White servtce each Cluxton and Cari ssa
attack wtth 16 points, fol - Gtlmore each had one ktll
lowed
by
Hannah as well m the tnumph . .
Cunningham wtth seven
In th e second contest,
and Amy Noe with six . Jacobs led the Sil ~e r and
Alexis Geiger al so had four Bl ac k v,i th 12 poi nts.
point s and Mollie. Blake Cluxton added etght pomts,
while Corftas led the net
added two in the setback.
Blake had team-highs of attack with seve n ki ll s.
eight kills and II blocks to Jacobs also had three ktll s.
lead the net attack, fol - . RVHS returns to ac tion
lowed by Geiger with six tonight when it hosts
ktll s and ft ve blocks Eastern m a non-conference
Getger al so had seven matchup . The JV match
ass ists and Shoemaker Will begtn at 5:30 p m.
added a team-htgh 58 dtgs.
Noe and Brea Close both
SG BEATS RocK HILL
added fiv e kill s, Megan
Foster bad two kills , and
PEDRO - South Gallia
the trio of Cunmngham, improved to 11 -4 on the
Morgan
Leslie
and season with a 25-23, 16-25,
Samantha Barnes each had 25- 19 and 25- 12 victory
!-JOe kill . Morgan Daniels over Rock Htll Monday
had two blocks and evenmg on the Rock Htll
Brittany Hively had one campu s.
block . Carohne Baxter had
'rhe Rebels were led by
a team-high 22 assi sts .
Chandra Canaday with 14
Gallia Academy - which pomts and three aces. She
ts 4-0 against non-SEOAL was followed by Natasha
South opponents - travels Adkms wtth 13 pomts. and
to Proctorville today for a an ace. Tayler Duncan with
non -league contest agamst 10 points and two aces ,
JACKSON DOWNS ANGELS
Fairland, The JV game will Hatl ee Swam wtth seven
GA LLIPOLIS - Galha start at 6 p.m.
pomts and an ace , Rachel
Academy volleyball fell to
Merry with three points and
.500 ove rall in Southeastern . LADY RAIDERS WIN PAIR
an ace, Rachel Stanley with
Ohto Ath lett c League South
three
points.
Katie
Dt vtston competition on
IRONTON
R\ver Lawrence with two points
Mond ay ni ght with a four- Valley volleyball tmproved and Chnsste Ttrpak wuh a
game 19-25, 14-25, 25-21, . to 8-2 overall thi s season pomt.
14-25 se tback to visitmg with a 2-0 match record at
Duncan was al so 97 perJackson.
the Ironton Volleyball cent passing on the evening
· The Blue Atigels (8-4, 4- Invitational last Saturday in with 57 sets. Adkins led her
4 SEOAL South) dropped Lawrence County .
team wtth six kills, whtle
Game I by stx . then got
The Lady Raid~rs won Canad.ty and Johnson
blasted 111 Game 2 by II thetr ftrst match by a score added four kills and Swam
pomt s. After benchmg a of 16-25 , 25-22, 15-9 over had three kill s. Johnson
majority of the GAHS host Ironton , then defeated also had three blocks.
starters 111 Game 3, the Symmes Valley m the finale
South Gallia will teturn
hosts rall ied for a four- by a score of 25- 14 , 25-10. to action Tuesday when
point win to trail twoRVHS was led by Ohto Valle y Christian visits
1
games-to-one.
Mackenzte Cluxton in the the Merc e'rville campus
But then m Game 4, the ftrst match with 13 service startmg a) 5:30p .m . .

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D &amp; A Lawn care mow·
tng weed eattng hedge
Lod &amp; Founcl
tnmmtng lall clean up
and leaf removal Day
Found 1 black puppy on 740·853-1702 or Ntght
Sho~stnng
A1dge 740·379 ·2599
441-1501
Other Services
Mlsstng
~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~
Black male dog, medtum Pet Cremations
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face brown collar, Lasl
seen Oshel Ad At 2
Professional Services
s1de
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304 675·4027
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rec·
ommends that you do
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money through the ma11 - - = = " " - = = = •
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NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact the Ohto D1111Skaggs Appliances has s1on ol Ftnanc•af lnslttu·
moved
Call
tiDns OH1ce of Consumer
740-379-9034
AHatrs BEFORE you reft·
nance your home or ob·
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Servtces ta1n a loan BEWARE of

Bus.ineat &amp; Trade
School

==-'"-~==
Gallipolis Career
College

"ftl\? IS AIll

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740·446·4367
1 800-214 0452
gal l•poliscareercollega edu
AccredHed M.amber Accredtl
mg Counc•l for Independent
Colleges and ScMols 12748

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Found
very
fnendly
small hght gray slrtped
cat 400 block 01 l st ave

Real Es1ate
Renlals

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

q ~~ ~

1 _,..~

l4Q..l~

ohl

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m

Apartments/

1988
E-350 Box Truck ~~~To~w~n~h~ou~se~'i;:;:;
runs but needs wor~ ;:
339 oaes
ove- n pee a
Cltp thts AD and take tt
W tT B
h
h
wtt
youw
enyou
vtstt
~
our commumty
to get
Wa nt to buy Junk Cars
thts speeta l dtscount •
ca ll 740-388·0884
Move tn 1n Oct and got
$100.00 your 2BR Apt
off Nov tent Currently
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
renling 1 &amp; 2 BR untls
!!!!
Spactous floor plans,
Commercial
&amp;
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tvtng p aygroun
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For
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sale
or
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emergency matnle
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store Ju st mtnutes
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14x70 Irailer 1 267 acre
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land ca ll446-6678
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Offtce Hours M W. F
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$13 000
F1rm
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7-5--19_o_5.,.--..,2·3 Bedroom house Sm·
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ou tbUilding on app 1
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°

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~....;.---~~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

...
...

ale. crUise tilt EC. 160K i D Acre s/garage/camper
$4 800 no Sunday calls
contact
pledse (740)992·7599
shroese@yahoo com
or
'740·245·9015

2006 Chavy Stlverac:lo 3500
low miles ,
4· WD
304·593·0876
or ,
3D4 593 0959

1

and The Daily Sentinel
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Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
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""'""'Sp""'o"'rts,;,;,;UH"..._""""'" 200ac
+I·
on
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GalltaJMe1gs o OH bor
1999
Jeep
Grande der Great hunting lancl
neg
Cherokee Lorado go ld $2 10 000
outs1de w/gray trtm. 4 0 304 593 5280

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Found medtum s1zed fe·
male dog Woodsmlll Ad .
81dwell 388-9338 call to
tdenllfy

740·949·2930

2007 Honda VTX 1300A, ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'
1800
m1les
IJlack
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$7800 388·8380

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Hou101 For Salt

2006 Dodge Slratus 4 Trt1evel DnckJcedar on
cyt auto 68 000 mtles 98 acres Rutland Oh
$4 509 OBO 256·9031 or pnvare
setttng
eat-tn
25G· 1233
~tlch en
3 br
2 full
baths lg llvmg roo m I ~
2097 Honcla VTX 1300R fam 11y room out of flood
1800 miles black $7800 plam (740)742-2404 or

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now
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or
saftfnefVler
"" 2008 b NEA 1
air Housing Act o
4 0 99 2 1 32 8
7
req
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lor
any
large
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advance
payments
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1968.
tees or tnsurance Call A'&lt;C York.e puppies, 10
Home Improvements
the Office of Consumer wks old, Females $600
Pets
This
newspape
ccepts only hel
Afftars
toll
free
at Males
$450 -=====;;;;;;;•
Basement
anted ads m&amp;etln
1·866-278·0003 to learn ~
30~4;:.
·8::;
95~·3,:::9~
26::.,_~~~ tree to good home • 3 yr
Waterproofing
OE standards.
the
mortgage
broker
or
Free
Indoor
Kittenst old male Black Lab,
tf
Uncondt110nal llfeltme
lender ts properly It· 740·336-0663
needs
room
to run ;;;;o;;;~•An=6-'quu;;;;;;;~~~
guarantee
Local
refer·
We
will
no
ences
lurn1shed
Estab·
censed
IS
a
publtc
GIBBS
ANTIQUESnowlngly Accept an
lished 1975 Call 24 Hrs
serv1ce
announcement black &amp; 1 calico? 7 wks ;:
d11erUsement
I
1
fi ll! 111 gtwod hnmc fil&lt;~~:k Also restore urntlure lo·
I
lh 8 Oh 10 V II
740-446·0879, Rogers
lolatlon or the law
rom
a ey old wormed &amp; de·lleed
led
T
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Basement Waterproofmg Pul:lhshtng Company)
304-675·8164
A o
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At
33
8Cine
(p k&amp;R1d I
9111 I
ar
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Neuter Scooter
740 949 224 6
ts connng to Athens Co
Legals.... .. .
.... ............. .... . .. ................... 1DO Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1DOD
Monda S t 29 th Cat ~-~~~~-':'
Y ep
,
::Announcements ................................... .. .... 2DD ATV ..................... .. .... ...... . .. .. .................. tD05
0 nIY Spay/NeuIer Cltnic Wt re coke tables &amp;
Birthday/Anniversary ............ ...................... 205 Bicycles ..... ,....... . .. ...................... ....... 101 D
$40/c;;t t &amp; Fme shots chatrs,
show
cases
Happy Ads ........................................ ... ...... 21 D Boals!Accessorlas .................................... t 015 ·
pay on lt ne, $SO/cat pay trunks, 011 lamps cups
Lost &amp; Found .......................................... 215 Camper!RVs &amp; Trailers .......... .............. 11120
at
clime
Go
To and
saucers
Mtckey
Memory/Thank You .........., ...... .. .................. 220 Motorcycles .. ............... ....................... 1025
www neuterscootu com
Mouse
ttems,
Chtlds
Notices ................................................... 225 Ollter ...... ...... .. ............................................ 1030
or
call
Toll
Free WICker
rocker,
Old
Personats ........................... .. ........................ 23D Wanllo buy ........................................ 103S
1·866·662·5838
pressed glass ware. FarWanted .............., .................... .. ................. .. 235 Automotive ....... .. ..... . .. . .. ................. 2000
,.;.~~,;.;,;~""""" ber Ware coke sign
Services ..... . . .. .. ................ .. ........ .. . 300 Auto RentaVLease ...........,.......,........ .. ....... 2005
clocks, scales
electnc
700
Agncullu re palno military foldtng orAppl iance Service ............... .. .................. 302 Autos ......... .................................... 2010
Automotive . ......................., ...................... 304 Classic/Antiques . .. . .. . .. ...................... 201 S
gan, ftre place grate,
Building Materials ............... , ............ 306 Commerclatltndus1rlat .. . .. .... ................... 2020
Della Queen posters &amp;
Buslnass .................................... .. ............... 308 Parts &amp; Accessories .................... .. . .. . 2025
Fann Equipment
patnttngs
Mtsstss1pp1
Catering .. . ................. .. ... .................... .... .31 0 Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
0ueen
Commerattve
Child/Elderly Care ............. ....................... 312 Trucks........ .. .. ... ....................................... .. 2035
EBY,
INTEGRITY, cpampa1gn bottle, 8 &amp;
Computers ...... ,.................... .. ...................... 314 Utility Trollers.. . .... .... ..... .. ..................... 2040
KIEFER BUILT,
16 mm proJectors carContractors .................................................. 316 Vans .......................................................... .. 2045
VALLE Y
HORSE!l.IVE- loon lllmsj mlscellaneDomes lies/Janitorial ....... .. .. ........................ 318 Want to buy .. .......... ............................... ..... 2050
STOCK
TRAILERS, ~
ou;;s;,~l;,;
74;;!0~
)9!!!
92,.·4;,;t,;,97;,""'"
Eleclrlcal.. ...................., ............................. 320 Real Estate Sates ................................. 3000
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPFinancial ....................... ....................... .... ..... 322 Cemtlery Plots . .. .................................... . 3005
MENT
TRAILE R:;,
Fuel/ Oil / Coal/
Health .., .. .. ..................... ............................ 326 Commercl~l.. ........ ... ........................ ... . .301 0
CAR GO EX PRESS &amp;
Wood Gas
Heating &amp; Cooling ........... .. .... .............., .. ... 328 Condominiums ........................................ . 301 5
HOME STEAD ER
=-==~===;;;
For Sate by Owner ............................ .... .. ,.. 3020
Home Improvements 330
CAR GO/CO NCESSION
Seasoned Firewood, all
Insurance ......................... ......................... 332 Houses far Sale .. .. ..................................... 3025
TRAILERS
B-tW hardwood
$55
load
Lawn Sarvlce .... .. .............................. ,.., .. . 334 Land (Acreage) ........................................ . 3030
GOOSENECK FLATBED ;::
30;;;4;;
·8~
82;;,·2;;;5;;;7
6 ;,....,...,,..
Music/Dance/Drama ............ ................ ..... 336 Lots ...,.... .. .... .. .......................................... .3035
$3999 VIEW OUR EN- =
Othar Sarvlces .., .......... .............................. 338 Want to buy .. ...... .... ................................ .. 3040
TIRE TRAI LER INVENMiscellaneous
Plumblng/Eioc:trlcal ........... ............., .... .. .... 340 Real Estate Rentals ..... .............................. 3500
TORY AT
Honda
2000
400 4
Profasolonal Sarvtces ..... ...." ................ 342 Apartments!Townhousas ........... .............. 3505
WWW CARMICHAEL
Wheeler
Commercial
Repairs ......................... :........ .. ............... 344 Commercial .. ...... .. ................................... 3510
TR AILERS COM
ranntng bed Couch (Tan)
Roofing .......................... ............................. 346 Condominiums .................. .................. 3515
740 446 3825
1 yr old 304-895·3 129
" ·
Security .. .. ...................... ....................... 348 Housee for Rent ..................................., .. 3520
Tax/Accounting ........................................ 350 Land (Acreage) .... .. ........ .......................... 3525
61t ltmsh mower With ex- ~~~-~~=-'"":'
Travel/Entertainment ..... ............,.,,.. ..... ...352 Storage ........ ... ... ... .. ................................. 3535
tra belts &amp; blades $750 Berber Carpet $6 95 yd
Financial. .................................................. 400 Want to Rent ... .... .. .. .. ......... , ..........,....,....... 3540
obo 379·2706
carpet remnants $40 00
Financial Services .. .................................... 405 Manufactured Housing .... . .................... 4000
&amp; up Mollohan cetrpet
Insurance ,
................. ............................ 410 Lots ...................................................... 4005
Have you pnced a John 22 12 Eastern Ave Galli·
Money to Lend............. .. ................... 415 Movers.... .. .... .. .... . ..................................... 4010
Deere lately? You II be, polls Ohio 740-446·7444
Education .............., ............................... 500 Rentals .................................................. 4015
surpnsed! Check out our •-.,.-....;.·~.,.--used
Inventory
at Jet AeratiOn Motors re·
Bus lnsss &amp; Trade School ......................... 505 Sates ................................................... 4020
lnslrucllon &amp; Training .. .
.... ................. 51 D Supplies ........ ...... ...... .... ....................., ..... 4025
www CAR EO com
Car- na~red, new &amp; rebUJII 1n
Lessons ............., ..................................... 515 Want to Buy ........ ....... ..... ... .. .. ................ 4030
michael
Equ1pment "stock Call Ron Evans,
Personal . ................................................... 520 Resort Property .............. .................. SDOO
74D·446·241 2
1·800·537-9528
Animals .....................,.... . . .. ................. 6DD Resort Property lor sate ........................... 5025
""":'""':'~-:--~John Deere 221 Farm Sabysluff . lor
sale
Animal Supplies ................ . ...................... 605 Resort Property for rent.. ........................ 5050
Tractor, Row Cro p. Gas, Stroller
and
tnfant
Horses ..... .. ...................................,..... ...... 610 Employment ........................................... 6000
45HP, 3pt hitch, Ltve carseat, playpen and lots
Livestock...................... . .................. ......... 615 Accounllng/Financlal ............................... 6002
PTO. very n1ce shape more
Call
Jodt
at
Pets .......................................................620 Admlnlslrallve/ProlesslonaL .............. ..... 6DD4
S3995
080
Want to buy .................................................. 625 Caehler/Cierk ... . ... .. . . .. ..................... 6006
740-446·7473
(740)367-0596
""":'---~-::'::0::::0:
Agriculture ..................... .. ............. .... .. . 700 Child/Elderly Care ......................... .......... 6008
"!"
Farm Equipment.................. .................. ...705 Clerical. .............. .. .................................... 6Dtll'
70 ·OOOBTU
One etghty Allts Charm- Coleman
Garden &amp; Produce ................................ ....... 710 Construction ..................................... 6012
t t
dtesel natural gas furnace pur·
ers
rae or
chased new-used only 5
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 D~vers &amp; Delivery .. .. ................................ 6014
S4,500
OBO,
Hunling &amp; Land ...................... .... .. ............ 720 Educatlon .... .. .............. ............................... 60t 6
(740)985· 4291
or months ,
$500
Kenny
Want to buy .................................................. 725 Electrical Plumbing ................................6Dt8
Wtggens ,
M nersv1 11e,
740·416 9995
Merchandtoe .. ........................ ..................... 900 Employment Agencles ............., .............. 6020
(7 40)992 5902
Antiques ...................................................... 905 Entertalnment ................ .... ...... .................. 6022
Hay, feed, S.ed, Grain ~~..,.~~~~~' ·
Appllence ..................................................... 910 Food Services ......................................... 6024
NEW AND USED STEEL
Auctions .......................................................915 &lt;Oovernmenl &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
10 acres of good ~ay Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar
Bargain Basement.. ... . .. ....... .......... .. 920 Help anted- Gen,rat ........... ,...................... 6D28
Ang•
I
Concrete
ready 10 cut m
Leon for
..,
Collectibles ............................................. .. .. 925 Law Enforcement ..................... .......... 6030
Channel Flal Bar. Steel
304·458· 166 1
Grattng for Drains Onve·
Computers .................................................. 930 Matntenance!Domesllc ......................... 6032
Eq u1pment!Su pplles .. ......................; ...........935 Management!Su pervlsory ....................... 6034
Square bales ol Hay &amp; ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Flea Marketo .............................................. 940 Mechanics..... ................. . . ..................... .6036
F1rewood
for
Sale Scrap Metals Open' Mon.
Fuel 011 Coei/Wood!Gas .................... ,..... ... 945 Medical ............................................. 6038
304·882·2537
Or Tue
Wed
&amp;
Frt,
Furniture , ........................................... • .... 950 Muatcal ........,.............................................. 6D4D
304·882·272 1
Bam·4 30pm
Closed
:: Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .......................,......... 955 Part-Time-Temporaries ...... .. ............... 6D42
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
740-446·7300
Kid's Corner ...... ,..... ................,,................... 960 Restaurants ........... ........ .......... ............... 6044
Want To Buy
Miscellaneous................ ...............: .......965 Saloa ........................................................... 6D48
Wanted to Buy· Paw Pole Barn 30ll40x1 0 only
Want to buy .., .......................................... 970 Technical Trades .. .. .. ............................... 6050
Paws
Black Walnuts, $6 995 ~ O ther SIZE!S, Free
Yard Sale .............................. ., ...., ............. 975 Textiles/Factory .. .. :.... ...... .. ....................... 6052
.. , L-- -- - "--_ _ _ _.;.,__ _ _ _ _ ___t Cal
1 740·698·6060
Delivery 877 ·773-8356

~Th•s

Now you con hove borders and graphics
'--'
added to your classified ads
J,~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
E!
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

pjsplay Ads

• Start Your Ads W1th A Keyword • I nclude Complete
Description • Include A Price • A11old Abbre11iatlons
• Includ e Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day1

Lawn Service

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

= " "

~be ~allipolis llatl!' ~rtbune,
~be fotnt Jleasant 31\egister.

Galli a
County,
OH

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar · stfve r/gold
cams,
any
10K/14K/18K gold IBW-

~~~'s de~~ go:rre:;Y~

nroof/m1nt
sets.
d1a
"'
mends MTS Cmn Shop
151 2nd Avenue Galli·
'~""nofts 446 2842
Georges

Portable Saw·

mtH, don t haul you r Logs
to the Mtll Just ca ll
304·675· 1957
;;,::;:;;:;,;:;,:.::;:;.............,

:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!!

ATVs

-;;;;;"'!';;;;;;;;=~==•

Par-Mar Gall Cart camo·
tlaoe patnt, knobby Itres,
$ 1 500 304 882 3237 or

~30;;!4!;i.5;;;9,;;
24;;;4;;,
3 ·,;;
3 ,.,""',;,"

=

Campert / RVs &amp;
--==Tra
....
ile'-rs'-==

~

ra~ch r~wnhomeds;:re

5th Wheel frame new 30 4 895 3129
t1res and rtm s $400 5th ;;;,;~;;.;;.;~~~-~
wheel hitch $100 ca ll 3 Sed
HUD Homes t
30 4·882 3237
or Only S15 300 lor hsllngs
304· 593-?443
800 620 4946 ex A0 19
3 4 BR 2 bath lam tly
RV
roo m bonus room over
ServiCe at Carmtchael garage appro11 3 acres
Trat lers
partially wooded Cherry
740·446-3825
Rodge Ad Roo Grande

=------RV Servtce at Carmt·
chael
Trailers
740 446 3825
;,;;;,·;,;;;;,·, ;;;;;;;,""',;,"""
"'
M
lo

area
740 245 5416 or
740·645·2226
Leave
message

:;,;;:;,;;;,_~~~-:---

-1 Yr old

SA 588 !or more

IBA Apr W1D hookups
satell!te TV tncl w/rent,
close to hosprial Call
740-339-9362
1br Apartment for rent In
Pt Pleasant all uttliltes
tncluded $590
month

vCa:;:11~304
::::;5;:;9:;:3;;:
·5,::
16~9--•

2 bedroom apartment m
Cen tenary, au
ullltttes
d
1 t
pat
except e ec rrc
$359 a month Call 740
256· 113S leave
mes ·
sage

otorcyc 1
~=-="--"~;;;;;;;= tnlo ancj piCtures go to ~;...-,=-".,.--=

03 Kawasaki Kx' 65 low
hours like new $1500
obo
740-446 6865
or
740·645-5736
Honda XR
_ all
2000
250
ongtnaI Iow 'mt10 s Ex
Cond
$ 1'500
3041 · 675
4131
~;,:.:
::.:;.·;;;.::.;..,.._~~
~
2001
Yamaha
, A6

1D
'
Brownmg 749 446-7294
3BA.2BA. 2 car gar
patto DR/F A Aelocattng
$115,000
740· 446-0SH
leave msn

www orvb com

•==Ai;iuto~''-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

°

Rei Reg
441 0245
CONVENI ENTLY
LO·
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE' Townhouse anar1·
"
menrs
and/or
small
houses fo r renr Call
740-441-111 1 lor appll·
catton &amp; tnforma!IOn
;;
FR
; ;E
;;;E,;,;;.;;
RE;;;N
;;T;;;;.;S
; ;P,.E'"
C•IA•L

pets
';:o;~;;;;;t,·-~~":"-~
:::
..
..

Brick home 2 112 bath ,
68 R, FA LA 4 lite·
places, huge detached
garage, 4+ acres and
3500
bluelwhtle approx
mtles Yosh ptpe tatl ktt pond
fenced
VERY
$4500
Call NI CEt Call740·379·9687
740-645 747 1
For sale by owner 3/2
:.;:;;:;;;:;:;:;:.;~--.,.-• home on 1/Z acre level
05 Hayabusa, low m1les
d
089 B
lot l ocate at 3
u
orlg owner many extras lav•lle Ptke Attached ga·
don 1 try to hi '" stand
rage
Aopra1sed
out S7 900 446·2254
"'
$110 000
Askm g
2007
Kawasaki
Ntnta $98.500
Call
259 under 1500 mtles 749-446 49 10
red helmet and tank bag - ~~:::;.;;;.;;;-::--:::~
Foreclosure
4br
2ba
$2,800 740·645-1912
only $29,900' Prtces to
2007 Kawasa k1 N•nJB Sellt
For
hshngs
250 under } 509 miles 800 _620 _4646 ex T462
red helrTmt and tank bag
House w1th 2 acres tn SA
$2800 740·645·1912
'
169 Wtll cons1der land
contract
44 1-5062
or
379 _2923

•1
LX 5
Honda CIVIC
spd 98,000 miles over
5 000 tn extras Lambe
Dool1i
$7 700
OBO
740-709-1398

2BR APT C1A
(740)
441-9194
3 ro oms and ba th up·
statr,s ' Comp letely fur·
nlshed with W/0
No

Jordan landt ng 2br' 3br
&amp; 4bt Avatlable No Pets
Tarrant Aesponst bl e 1or
Rent
&amp;
Electnc
04 674 0023
3 ·
·
or
o3·0::;4:;:6:;,1:;;
0 ;::
07~7::,
6 _.,...__

•

Free

Rent

Spectaflll

2&amp;3BA and up Central
Atr WID hookup tenant
pays electnc EHO Elm
Vtew
Apls

,(3.;;;
04
~1::;
88;;2.;3;;,
0 :.;
1 7- - - •Twtn Rtvers T.ower IS ac·
cepltng appflcattons for
Must sell, 3 bd, 2 bth wa!ltng list for HUD sub
home tn Syracuse Call Stdtzed. 1.eR apartment
1(7;_;4,:::01;;,94;;9;,;·2;;5~!3~~~~ lor the elderly/disabled
Ntce 4 br 2 ba home on call 675-6679
Klneon Or 1n Galhpchs ;:~;;;::;::.;;,_ _ __
Quite
neighborhood on M1dclleport N 4th Ave , 2
dead end street la rge 2 bedroom lurmshed apancar gareQe and finished ment no pets dep &amp;
basement 74Q-256 1109
rei 74()..992·0 165

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

local Sports Briels
•

Skyline to take ofT September 27
STEWAKI' - Btlly Jarre ll 's Skyline Speedway will take
off Satur&lt;L1y. September 27.
Fatb \hmtld stay po&gt;red tor what IS to be an upcommg btg
announ..:ement at the Southern Ohto bull ring. An anticipated
,m nount me nt will be mude for etther the first or second week
of Octobet . so fans shou ld stay posted to thetr favorite racmg
papers. loc,tl newspapers . &lt;~nd the Skyline Speedway website
for det.tih at v. ww skyhnespcedway.nct
Tcnt.ttiVC plans call for ,J posstble "big show' and a couple
more v.ccks of s,,tlllduy n1ght racmg before closmg to make
i'tnprovcmcnts to the physical fae thlles on the grounds.

Punt, Pass and Kick coming to Pomeroy
POMEROY - 'I he sevent h annual NFU Pepsi Punt Pass
and KICk (Ompctton sponsored by the Meigs High School
Ath letic Boostets wi ll be held Sunday September 21st at Bob
Roberts Ftcld m Pomeroy
Rcg tstralion begms ,,t n•Xltl With the competition starting at I
pm
The compctlttonts open to boys and girls ages 8 to 15 and IS
free of ch.1rgc All contestants must tegtstet and provtde a copy
of the11 buth t:ctlllicate .
Age gtoups are us fo llows, R-9, 10- 11 , 12- 13, 14- 15. Age
gtoups ,ue b.tseLI on the contestants age as of December 31,
2008
All klt:kmg tees und footballs will be provided and contestatlts must we,lf tenms shoes, 110 football cleats allowed.
Wmncrs at eat h &lt;tge group will be eligtble to compete m secIlonaI wmpetttion 1n October with a chance to advance to a
Cmu nnat t Ben~~tls game 111 December.
For more mf&lt;)nnation contact Jimmer Soulsby at 992-6728.

GRD holding basketball skills clinic
GA LLIPOLI S - rhe Galltpolts R€creattun Department wtll
be hostmg a basketball fund amentals skills clinic on Saturday's
-October II. 18. 25 , .md Novembet I - from 2 p.m until4
p.m. at the h N Church of God on State Route 141 . The tee
will be $20 for all four days.
TI1e clmtc ptov1des a fast paced excttmg fun format for
young pl.wm · grades thu·d through stxth - boys and girls to develop dnd reline the most important basketball skills and
techm4ues Thts um4ue camp program has been created
around the thmgs that ktds love to do shooting, dribbling, passmg. one on one moves, skills test and indlVIdual concepts.
Rcg1stratton forms will be avatlable at the Recreation
Dep&lt;ul ment dt 518 Second Avenue and also returned by mail or
at the Reeteation Office f10m 7:30 am. until 4 p.m. Monday
through Fnday Regtstratton deadline ts October 3.
·
For more mformatton contact Brett Bostic at (740) 441-6022.

GRD holding volleyball skills cljnic
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipohs Recreation Department will
be hostmg a Volleyball Fundamental Skills Clinic on Saturdays
- October II . 18, 25 and November I - from noon until 2
p m at the Ftrst Church of God on State Route 141. The fee
wtll be $20 for all lour days.
The clime wtll introduce volleyball and the basic skills for
girls grades thtee through stxth . These skills will be taught by
dnll s, statton., , mmt-games, and possibly games.

Bolts
from PageBl
Carol ina game. He scored
on anoth et 2-ya rd run late in
the fo urt h quarter. one play
after Ri vers' 60-yard pass to
Vmcent Jackson
Rt vers has tllt ow n three
TD passes 111 every game
tht s season He was 19-of25 for 250 yard s on
Monday, v,htle Tomlinson
had 67 yatds o n 26 carries,
h1 s th1rd stnu ght game
under I00 yards.
Favt e had three touchdown passes fo r the Jets ( 12). incl uding fourth-qu arter
TD th rows of 4 yards to
Chansi Stuckey and 13
ya rds to Dustm Keller. The
38-yea r-old Favre was 30of-42 for 27 1 yards.
The Chargers could have
had two more picks, but
sal ety Chnton Hart dropped
Favre's fo urth-down pass in
the end zone late m the third
quarter ami Cromartte let an
inte rce ption and a sure
touchdown cl ang off hi s
hands m the ftrst quarter
Cromartie mtercepted backup QB Kellen Clemens m
the end Lone 111 the final
mmute
The Charge rs " med three
times and the Jets once m a
crazy span of 5 mmutes, 46
seconds spanning the first

Golf
fromPageBl
at the Sugarwood Golf Club
in Lava llette, W.Va.
Fatrland fi mshed fo ur
strokes ahead of second
place Chesapeake who shot
a 332 and II strokes ahead
of third place South Point
who had a 339. Rock Hill
was fourth with a team
score of 404 and Ri ver
Valley was fifth at 409 .
The Dragons had three
golfers make the All·OVC
team led by Justin Earl and
Dalton Froelich who both
shot an 81. Fairland 's third
selection was Adam Berry
with an 82 .
Despite the soltd afternoon by the Drago ns, tt was
South Point's Kev m Davis
that claimed 11'\edalt st honors on the aftern oon with a

and second quarters.
Rivers recovered from an
early blunder to throw a !yard touchdown pass to
rookie
fullback
Mike
Tolbert for a I0-7 lead late
with 2 03 left m the ftrst
quarter.
On the fourth play of the
next Jets' dnve, Cromartte
overpowered Laveranues
Coles and took the ball
away. racmg 52 yards for a
17-7 1ead .
Leon
· Washington
returned the ktckoff 94
yards to the San Diego 5.
Two plays later, Favre hit
Coles on a 3-yard TD pass
to pull the Jets within 1714.
San Diego's Marques
Harri s recovered an onside
kick at the Jets 44 to set up
a 27-yard scoring pass from
Rtvers to Chns Chamberll
that made it 24-14 II: 17
before halftime.
Eric Weddle intercepted
Favre to set up Rivers ' 6yard scoring pass to ttght
end Antonio Gates for a 31 14 lead late in the second
quarter.
Jets cornerback David
Barrett · stunned
the
Chargers and quieted the
crowd
at
Qualcomm
Stadium when he jumped in
front of Gates for an mterception he returned 25 yards
for a touchdown less than
four minutes into the game .
score of78 .
Rounding out the AllOVC team was Nathan
Copley (80) and Robert
Hoback (81) - both from
'Cheseapeake.
River Valley had .one
player finish under triple
digtts during the meet as
Kyle Bryant carded a 95 to
lead the Raiders : Todd
Simms chipped in a 1020
Cody Wimmer had a 103
and Chris Goodrich shot a
I 09 to round out the count·
ing scores.
Also, participating at the
meet for River Valley was
Matt Ball who shot a 110
and Zack Polcyn·who had a
114.
With the OVC meet
behind them , the 'Raiders
will now focus their attentiO n to the postseasoh
before wrapping up the season Saturday at the
Rt verstde Inv itational m
Mason.

www. mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 23,

•

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

2008

www.mydallysentinel.com

m:ribune·- Sentinel - 3Re

Third annual Hits for Hospice Tournament held

CLASSIFIED

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@k-1YDAILYSENTINEL COM

GALLIPOLIS - The th1rd
ann ual Hils for Holzer
Hospice Co-Ed Softball
Tournament was ~uccessfu l ,
raising over 56,000 for
Holzer Hosptce. This weekend was held Saturday,
September 6 at 0 0
Mcintyre Park.
Teams that part ic ipated m
the event were. Batmen and
Women, Cider Kn ats, First
Church of God , Holzer
Clinic, Holze r Lung Term
Care, Ron's Trophy, Chris
Somervtlle team (second
place team), Sweepers (fi rst
place team) and Therm al
SolutiOns Umptres fur the
event mclude Dustin Caudtll .
Roger Foster, Phil Skidmore
and Chn s Tackett
Holze r Hosptce would ltke
to thank area businesses that
contribu ted to th e tourn ament . Top sponsors for the
event mcluded Di amond
sponsor
Wai-Mart
ul

Volleyball
from Page Bl
22 resLtlted m scores Botti
ladie.s pla) ed great floa t
games.
In the first game Southern
led 23-20 but five straight
sen es from Morgan Larkm
pulled out the win for the
Lady Vtkings, 25-23
Southern suffered a similar fate m game two, losmg
25-22. Hunter had six and
Ashley Walker ha.d five
points for Southern. Vinton
County sconng was spread
nearl y evenl y among Sarah
Nichols, Cacy Puckett ,
Allt so n Graves, Larktn .
Amanda Graves and Myriah
Mace .
Hunter again played well
for Southern m the third
game, helpmg her club
come bac k to win a barnburner of a game, 26-24.
Hunter had etght points and
Walker six Freshm an netter
Kelsey Holsinger led a great
front. line charge wuh 14
overall ktlls and several
boommg kill s 111 game
three.
Breann a Taylor had II
dinks for Southern . whtle
Rashell Boso (two kill s)
added seven dtnks and
Holsinger added seven .
Boso had two blocks. whtle
Taylor and Holsmger each
had one.
Great balance, m serv ing
and servmg points was
exhibited when Hunter,
Walker, Chelsea Pape.
Boso . Tavlor. Samantha
Patterson ,·
Courtney
Thomu s
and
Lmdsay
Teaford all posted strategic
placement c Katte , Woods
(four kills) and Lmdsay
· Teaford had good passing
games. The balance led to a
27-25 win that included an
ace fro m Walker to help pull

We Cove

Meigs, Gallla,
And Muon
Counties Like

No One
Else C:.n!

Websttes.
In One Week With Us
www mydatlytnbune.com
www
com
ctasstft ed@!~;~:~~nbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www mydailysentlnel
myda1lyreg1ster com
S YOUR AD NOW NLIN
To Place
~ribune
Sentinel
3Register
.Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Submitted photo

Ptctured a bove a re membe rs of the Swee pers team , wmners of the Htts for Hos ptce CoEd Softball Tournament held earlier this month at 0 0 Mcintyre Park in Gallipolis
G,ill 1pohs and Platinum sponsor McKeS&gt;on Provider
Technologtes.
Holzer Hosptce ts a valu-

able service in our community. The funds ratsed from thts
event will enable Hospice to
maintam its commitment to
serve patients at the end ot

Call TOday...

life. regardless of the patient 's
abtlity to pay For more mform&lt;ttton about the Holze r
Hosptce program, please call
locall y at (740 ) 446-5074.

out the wm.
In the fi lth and fmal
game, Vmto n County leq
earl y and edged to a 10-3
lead on the coat tml s of four
All rso n Gra ves serves.
Kati e Woods brought
Soutl1ern bac k to 10-6, but
South ern ran out of steam
in droppm g the 9- 15 finale .
Walker was 20-for-2 1
serv ing, Thomas was 18fot-2 1, Hunter 2 1-for-25 ,
Pape 14-for- 15 and Boso 6for-7. Boso was 13-for-14
spikin g,
Stephani e
Sham blm was 20-for-20,
and Holsmge r was 27-for32 Overall , Southern was
9 1-for-106 for 86 percent
se rvmg. Hunter had fiv e
aces ,md Thomas three.
Sbuthern
of
Coach
Ra ~ h e l
Hupp won the
reserve game m th ree sets
16-25, 25 - 18, and 25-11 .
Latl sha Brow n led VC to
the first-ga me win with
eleven point s and 15 overall Southern was led by
Hope Teaford and Katelyn
Hill wtth 16 pomts each ,
Emtl y Ash 12.and Mtchelle
Outs wtth ten.
' Southetn
goes
to
Well ston Wednesday.

lronladtes ( 12-2. 5-2) made pomts. mcludmg stx aces .
· short work of the re tgnmg Jacquelm e Jacobs and
· SEOAL champions - once Kay la Smtth led the net
agam wmnmg by II pomts attack wtth ftve ktlls aptece,
for the overall vtctory.
foll owed. by lltana Corfi as
Kacie Shoemaker led the and Linsey Stover wtth two
Blue and White servtce each Cluxton and Cari ssa
attack wtth 16 points, fol - Gtlmore each had one ktll
lowed
by
Hannah as well m the tnumph . .
Cunningham wtth seven
In th e second contest,
and Amy Noe with six . Jacobs led the Sil ~e r and
Alexis Geiger al so had four Bl ac k v,i th 12 poi nts.
point s and Mollie. Blake Cluxton added etght pomts,
while Corftas led the net
added two in the setback.
Blake had team-highs of attack with seve n ki ll s.
eight kills and II blocks to Jacobs also had three ktll s.
lead the net attack, fol - . RVHS returns to ac tion
lowed by Geiger with six tonight when it hosts
ktll s and ft ve blocks Eastern m a non-conference
Getger al so had seven matchup . The JV match
ass ists and Shoemaker Will begtn at 5:30 p m.
added a team-htgh 58 dtgs.
Noe and Brea Close both
SG BEATS RocK HILL
added fiv e kill s, Megan
Foster bad two kills , and
PEDRO - South Gallia
the trio of Cunmngham, improved to 11 -4 on the
Morgan
Leslie
and season with a 25-23, 16-25,
Samantha Barnes each had 25- 19 and 25- 12 victory
!-JOe kill . Morgan Daniels over Rock Htll Monday
had two blocks and evenmg on the Rock Htll
Brittany Hively had one campu s.
block . Carohne Baxter had
'rhe Rebels were led by
a team-high 22 assi sts .
Chandra Canaday with 14
Gallia Academy - which pomts and three aces. She
ts 4-0 against non-SEOAL was followed by Natasha
South opponents - travels Adkms wtth 13 pomts. and
to Proctorville today for a an ace. Tayler Duncan with
non -league contest agamst 10 points and two aces ,
JACKSON DOWNS ANGELS
Fairland, The JV game will Hatl ee Swam wtth seven
GA LLIPOLIS - Galha start at 6 p.m.
pomts and an ace , Rachel
Academy volleyball fell to
Merry with three points and
.500 ove rall in Southeastern . LADY RAIDERS WIN PAIR
an ace, Rachel Stanley with
Ohto Ath lett c League South
three
points.
Katie
Dt vtston competition on
IRONTON
R\ver Lawrence with two points
Mond ay ni ght with a four- Valley volleyball tmproved and Chnsste Ttrpak wuh a
game 19-25, 14-25, 25-21, . to 8-2 overall thi s season pomt.
14-25 se tback to visitmg with a 2-0 match record at
Duncan was al so 97 perJackson.
the Ironton Volleyball cent passing on the evening
· The Blue Atigels (8-4, 4- Invitational last Saturday in with 57 sets. Adkins led her
4 SEOAL South) dropped Lawrence County .
team wtth six kills, whtle
Game I by stx . then got
The Lady Raid~rs won Canad.ty and Johnson
blasted 111 Game 2 by II thetr ftrst match by a score added four kills and Swam
pomt s. After benchmg a of 16-25 , 25-22, 15-9 over had three kill s. Johnson
majority of the GAHS host Ironton , then defeated also had three blocks.
starters 111 Game 3, the Symmes Valley m the finale
South Gallia will teturn
hosts rall ied for a four- by a score of 25- 14 , 25-10. to action Tuesday when
point win to trail twoRVHS was led by Ohto Valle y Christian visits
1
games-to-one.
Mackenzte Cluxton in the the Merc e'rville campus
But then m Game 4, the ftrst match with 13 service startmg a) 5:30p .m . .

or Fax To

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

446-3008

675-5234

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any lou or expente that resutt1 from the publlcalion 01' omll ll on ol an advertisement. Correction will be made In the ! frat ava•t able edltlcm
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ere a1w11y a contldentilll ·Current rete card appll ea · All real estate advertlst men ta are su bject to th e Federa l Fai r Housing Act ol 1 %B
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errOrs In an ad taQn o~er th• phone

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
500

Auto•

Education
k1tnc8rlyle@comcast net

D &amp; A Lawn care mow·
tng weed eattng hedge
Lod &amp; Founcl
tnmmtng lall clean up
and leaf removal Day
Found 1 black puppy on 740·853-1702 or Ntght
Sho~stnng
A1dge 740·379 ·2599
441-1501
Other Services
Mlsstng
~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~
Black male dog, medtum Pet Cremations
Cal l
size short hatr gray on 740·446·3745
face brown collar, Lasl
seen Oshel Ad At 2
Professional Services
s1de
Reward
304 675·4027
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
Notices
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1-888-582-3345
NOT ICE OHIO VALLEY ~~~~~=~=
PUBLISHING CO
rec·
ommends that you do
bustness w1th people you
know, and NOT to send
d
MonoyTo Lon
money through the ma11 - - = = " " - = = = •
unttl you have tnvestigat· •
lng the ottenng
NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact the Ohto D1111Skaggs Appliances has s1on ol Ftnanc•af lnslttu·
moved
Call
tiDns OH1ce of Consumer
740-379-9034
AHatrs BEFORE you reft·
nance your home or ob·
300
Servtces ta1n a loan BEWARE of

Bus.ineat &amp; Trade
School

==-'"-~==
Gallipolis Career
College

"ftl\? IS AIll

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740·446·4367
1 800-214 0452
gal l•poliscareercollega edu
AccredHed M.amber Accredtl
mg Counc•l for Independent
Colleges and ScMols 12748

600

Pob

0

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in y~mr email.

Found
very
fnendly
small hght gray slrtped
cat 400 block 01 l st ave

Real Es1ate
Renlals

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

q ~~ ~

1 _,..~

l4Q..l~

ohl

s

m

Apartments/

1988
E-350 Box Truck ~~~To~w~n~h~ou~se~'i;:;:;
runs but needs wor~ ;:
339 oaes
ove- n pee a
Cltp thts AD and take tt
W tT B
h
h
wtt
youw
enyou
vtstt
~
our commumty
to get
Wa nt to buy Junk Cars
thts speeta l dtscount •
ca ll 740-388·0884
Move tn 1n Oct and got
$100.00 your 2BR Apt
off Nov tent Currently
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
renling 1 &amp; 2 BR untls
!!!!
Spactous floor plans,
Commercial
&amp;
--======•
tvtng p aygroun
'=
For
basketball court on s1te
sale
or
lease
1aund ry 1act1tty. 24 hr
offtce/wareho use/storage
emergency matnle
great locatiOn tn Galltpo·
nance
. qUiet country lo·
Its
1800
sq
It
$400/rnonth Call Wayne
calion close to maJor
404 456·3802
mec:l1cal
facilities,
,.;;.,;;;,;,;;;;;;;;,""'""'""
pha rmacies grocery
for Sale By Owner
store Ju st mtnutes
awa y from other maJ or
200 1 Clayton Rockwood
shopptng m the area
14x70 Irailer 1 267 acre
Honeysuckle H1lls
land ca ll446-6678
Apartments
;;;;;;,;;;;;,;,,;;,;;,;,;,;,""'""'"
266 Colontal Ortve 1! 113
Houses for Sale
B1dwe11 Ohto 456 14
;;;;=--=-==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
740·446·3344
2 bdrm Ftller Upper 2913
Offtce Hours M W. F
Madtson Ave
AS IS
9AM . 5PM
$13 000
F1rm
_
3o.,4.,
·6,.
7-5--19_o_5.,.--..,2·3 Bedroom house Sm·
gle car detached garage
ou tbUilding on app 1
acte
At
~2
North

~~w~~:y;;~· ;n;c;.-;;;;;;;;-;w~w:w:.:c~~~c~.c~o;;~ -;:-=•an!""'"'o~uy~=

:.;FR;::E;;:E::;K~Irt::;:e;;;ns;;..2_o_ra-ng_e_l -304-·9-37-·3-1-92~-~~

°

~·-

Trvc:b

0

~....;.---~~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

...
...

ale. crUise tilt EC. 160K i D Acre s/garage/camper
$4 800 no Sunday calls
contact
pledse (740)992·7599
shroese@yahoo com
or
'740·245·9015

2006 Chavy Stlverac:lo 3500
low miles ,
4· WD
304·593·0876
or ,
3D4 593 0959

1

and The Daily Sentinel
have l~unched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about-yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:

""'""'Sp""'o"'rts,;,;,;UH"..._""""'" 200ac
+I·
on
1
"'T
GalltaJMe1gs o OH bor
1999
Jeep
Grande der Great hunting lancl
neg
Cherokee Lorado go ld $2 10 000
outs1de w/gray trtm. 4 0 304 593 5280

D

Found medtum s1zed fe·
male dog Woodsmlll Ad .
81dwell 388-9338 call to
tdenllfy

740·949·2930

2007 Honda VTX 1300A, ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'
1800
m1les
IJlack
Land (Acroago)
$7800 388·8380

Mff&lt;-0\/"G '114-1 s
/'A'&amp;.h Abt; ~

Art1ma1s

Hou101 For Salt

2006 Dodge Slratus 4 Trt1evel DnckJcedar on
cyt auto 68 000 mtles 98 acres Rutland Oh
$4 509 OBO 256·9031 or pnvare
setttng
eat-tn
25G· 1233
~tlch en
3 br
2 full
baths lg llvmg roo m I ~
2097 Honcla VTX 1300R fam 11y room out of flood
1800 miles black $7800 plam (740)742-2404 or

~3:::
88~·8:;:3::;
80~~~~~-

~ t.:a.:\lor-1 '1!?: ~ R .
1' M CAR~'/Lt. Ttte;
c Pif AND I

zers,
now
available
whtte
or
saftfnefVler
"" 2008 b NEA 1
air Housing Act o
4 0 99 2 1 32 8
7
req
uests
lor
any
large
"''""'"'
advance
payments
of ~
t ~~1.::;::;;;,·;;::~-~~
1968.
tees or tnsurance Call A'&lt;C York.e puppies, 10
Home Improvements
the Office of Consumer wks old, Females $600
Pets
This
newspape
ccepts only hel
Afftars
toll
free
at Males
$450 -=====;;;;;;;•
Basement
anted ads m&amp;etln
1·866-278·0003 to learn ~
30~4;:.
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95~·3,:::9~
26::.,_~~~ tree to good home • 3 yr
Waterproofing
OE standards.
the
mortgage
broker
or
Free
Indoor
Kittenst old male Black Lab,
tf
Uncondt110nal llfeltme
lender ts properly It· 740·336-0663
needs
room
to run ;;;;o;;;~•An=6-'quu;;;;;;;~~~
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Local
refer·
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will
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ences
lurn1shed
Estab·
censed
IS
a
publtc
GIBBS
ANTIQUESnowlngly Accept an
lished 1975 Call 24 Hrs
serv1ce
announcement black &amp; 1 calico? 7 wks ;:
d11erUsement
I
1
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I
lh 8 Oh 10 V II
740-446·0879, Rogers
lolatlon or the law
rom
a ey old wormed &amp; de·lleed
led
T
d0 Ad ff
1
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r~
7
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•
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on
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Basement Waterproofmg Pul:lhshtng Company)
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740 949 224 6
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$40/c;;t t &amp; Fme shots chatrs,
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Happy Ads ........................................ ... ...... 21 D Boals!Accessorlas .................................... t 015 ·
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Music/Dance/Drama ............ ................ ..... 336 Lots ...,.... .. .... .. .......................................... .3035
$3999 VIEW OUR EN- =
Othar Sarvlces .., .......... .............................. 338 Want to buy .. ...... .... ................................ .. 3040
TIRE TRAI LER INVENMiscellaneous
Plumblng/Eioc:trlcal ........... ............., .... .. .... 340 Real Estate Rentals ..... .............................. 3500
TORY AT
Honda
2000
400 4
Profasolonal Sarvtces ..... ...." ................ 342 Apartments!Townhousas ........... .............. 3505
WWW CARMICHAEL
Wheeler
Commercial
Repairs ......................... :........ .. ............... 344 Commercial .. ...... .. ................................... 3510
TR AILERS COM
ranntng bed Couch (Tan)
Roofing .......................... ............................. 346 Condominiums .................. .................. 3515
740 446 3825
1 yr old 304-895·3 129
" ·
Security .. .. ...................... ....................... 348 Housee for Rent ..................................., .. 3520
Tax/Accounting ........................................ 350 Land (Acreage) .... .. ........ .......................... 3525
61t ltmsh mower With ex- ~~~-~~=-'"":'
Travel/Entertainment ..... ............,.,,.. ..... ...352 Storage ........ ... ... ... .. ................................. 3535
tra belts &amp; blades $750 Berber Carpet $6 95 yd
Financial. .................................................. 400 Want to Rent ... .... .. .. .. ......... , ..........,....,....... 3540
obo 379·2706
carpet remnants $40 00
Financial Services .. .................................... 405 Manufactured Housing .... . .................... 4000
&amp; up Mollohan cetrpet
Insurance ,
................. ............................ 410 Lots ...................................................... 4005
Have you pnced a John 22 12 Eastern Ave Galli·
Money to Lend............. .. ................... 415 Movers.... .. .... .. .... . ..................................... 4010
Deere lately? You II be, polls Ohio 740-446·7444
Education .............., ............................... 500 Rentals .................................................. 4015
surpnsed! Check out our •-.,.-....;.·~.,.--used
Inventory
at Jet AeratiOn Motors re·
Bus lnsss &amp; Trade School ......................... 505 Sates ................................................... 4020
lnslrucllon &amp; Training .. .
.... ................. 51 D Supplies ........ ...... ...... .... ....................., ..... 4025
www CAR EO com
Car- na~red, new &amp; rebUJII 1n
Lessons ............., ..................................... 515 Want to Buy ........ ....... ..... ... .. .. ................ 4030
michael
Equ1pment "stock Call Ron Evans,
Personal . ................................................... 520 Resort Property .............. .................. SDOO
74D·446·241 2
1·800·537-9528
Animals .....................,.... . . .. ................. 6DD Resort Property lor sate ........................... 5025
""":'""':'~-:--~John Deere 221 Farm Sabysluff . lor
sale
Animal Supplies ................ . ...................... 605 Resort Property for rent.. ........................ 5050
Tractor, Row Cro p. Gas, Stroller
and
tnfant
Horses ..... .. ...................................,..... ...... 610 Employment ........................................... 6000
45HP, 3pt hitch, Ltve carseat, playpen and lots
Livestock...................... . .................. ......... 615 Accounllng/Financlal ............................... 6002
PTO. very n1ce shape more
Call
Jodt
at
Pets .......................................................620 Admlnlslrallve/ProlesslonaL .............. ..... 6DD4
S3995
080
Want to buy .................................................. 625 Caehler/Cierk ... . ... .. . . .. ..................... 6006
740-446·7473
(740)367-0596
""":'---~-::'::0::::0:
Agriculture ..................... .. ............. .... .. . 700 Child/Elderly Care ......................... .......... 6008
"!"
Farm Equipment.................. .................. ...705 Clerical. .............. .. .................................... 6Dtll'
70 ·OOOBTU
One etghty Allts Charm- Coleman
Garden &amp; Produce ................................ ....... 710 Construction ..................................... 6012
t t
dtesel natural gas furnace pur·
ers
rae or
chased new-used only 5
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 D~vers &amp; Delivery .. .. ................................ 6014
S4,500
OBO,
Hunling &amp; Land ...................... .... .. ............ 720 Educatlon .... .. .............. ............................... 60t 6
(740)985· 4291
or months ,
$500
Kenny
Want to buy .................................................. 725 Electrical Plumbing ................................6Dt8
Wtggens ,
M nersv1 11e,
740·416 9995
Merchandtoe .. ........................ ..................... 900 Employment Agencles ............., .............. 6020
(7 40)992 5902
Antiques ...................................................... 905 Entertalnment ................ .... ...... .................. 6022
Hay, feed, S.ed, Grain ~~..,.~~~~~' ·
Appllence ..................................................... 910 Food Services ......................................... 6024
NEW AND USED STEEL
Auctions .......................................................915 &lt;Oovernmenl &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
10 acres of good ~ay Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar
Bargain Basement.. ... . .. ....... .......... .. 920 Help anted- Gen,rat ........... ,...................... 6D28
Ang•
I
Concrete
ready 10 cut m
Leon for
..,
Collectibles ............................................. .. .. 925 Law Enforcement ..................... .......... 6030
Channel Flal Bar. Steel
304·458· 166 1
Grattng for Drains Onve·
Computers .................................................. 930 Matntenance!Domesllc ......................... 6032
Eq u1pment!Su pplles .. ......................; ...........935 Management!Su pervlsory ....................... 6034
Square bales ol Hay &amp; ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Flea Marketo .............................................. 940 Mechanics..... ................. . . ..................... .6036
F1rewood
for
Sale Scrap Metals Open' Mon.
Fuel 011 Coei/Wood!Gas .................... ,..... ... 945 Medical ............................................. 6038
304·882·2537
Or Tue
Wed
&amp;
Frt,
Furniture , ........................................... • .... 950 Muatcal ........,.............................................. 6D4D
304·882·272 1
Bam·4 30pm
Closed
:: Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .......................,......... 955 Part-Time-Temporaries ...... .. ............... 6D42
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
740-446·7300
Kid's Corner ...... ,..... ................,,................... 960 Restaurants ........... ........ .......... ............... 6044
Want To Buy
Miscellaneous................ ...............: .......965 Saloa ........................................................... 6D48
Wanted to Buy· Paw Pole Barn 30ll40x1 0 only
Want to buy .., .......................................... 970 Technical Trades .. .. .. ............................... 6050
Paws
Black Walnuts, $6 995 ~ O ther SIZE!S, Free
Yard Sale .............................. ., ...., ............. 975 Textiles/Factory .. .. :.... ...... .. ....................... 6052
.. , L-- -- - "--_ _ _ _.;.,__ _ _ _ _ ___t Cal
1 740·698·6060
Delivery 877 ·773-8356

~Th•s

Now you con hove borders and graphics
'--'
added to your classified ads
J,~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
E!
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

pjsplay Ads

• Start Your Ads W1th A Keyword • I nclude Complete
Description • Include A Price • A11old Abbre11iatlons
• Includ e Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day1

Lawn Service

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

= " "

~be ~allipolis llatl!' ~rtbune,
~be fotnt Jleasant 31\egister.

Galli a
County,
OH

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar · stfve r/gold
cams,
any
10K/14K/18K gold IBW-

~~~'s de~~ go:rre:;Y~

nroof/m1nt
sets.
d1a
"'
mends MTS Cmn Shop
151 2nd Avenue Galli·
'~""nofts 446 2842
Georges

Portable Saw·

mtH, don t haul you r Logs
to the Mtll Just ca ll
304·675· 1957
;;,::;:;;:;,;:;,:.::;:;.............,

:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!!

ATVs

-;;;;;"'!';;;;;;;;=~==•

Par-Mar Gall Cart camo·
tlaoe patnt, knobby Itres,
$ 1 500 304 882 3237 or

~30;;!4!;i.5;;;9,;;
24;;;4;;,
3 ·,;;
3 ,.,""',;,"

=

Campert / RVs &amp;
--==Tra
....
ile'-rs'-==

~

ra~ch r~wnhomeds;:re

5th Wheel frame new 30 4 895 3129
t1res and rtm s $400 5th ;;;,;~;;.;;.;~~~-~
wheel hitch $100 ca ll 3 Sed
HUD Homes t
30 4·882 3237
or Only S15 300 lor hsllngs
304· 593-?443
800 620 4946 ex A0 19
3 4 BR 2 bath lam tly
RV
roo m bonus room over
ServiCe at Carmtchael garage appro11 3 acres
Trat lers
partially wooded Cherry
740·446-3825
Rodge Ad Roo Grande

=------RV Servtce at Carmt·
chael
Trailers
740 446 3825
;,;;;,·;,;;;;,·, ;;;;;;;,""',;,"""
"'
M
lo

area
740 245 5416 or
740·645·2226
Leave
message

:;,;;:;,;;;,_~~~-:---

-1 Yr old

SA 588 !or more

IBA Apr W1D hookups
satell!te TV tncl w/rent,
close to hosprial Call
740-339-9362
1br Apartment for rent In
Pt Pleasant all uttliltes
tncluded $590
month

vCa:;:11~304
::::;5;:;9:;:3;;:
·5,::
16~9--•

2 bedroom apartment m
Cen tenary, au
ullltttes
d
1 t
pat
except e ec rrc
$359 a month Call 740
256· 113S leave
mes ·
sage

otorcyc 1
~=-="--"~;;;;;;;= tnlo ancj piCtures go to ~;...-,=-".,.--=

03 Kawasaki Kx' 65 low
hours like new $1500
obo
740-446 6865
or
740·645-5736
Honda XR
_ all
2000
250
ongtnaI Iow 'mt10 s Ex
Cond
$ 1'500
3041 · 675
4131
~;,:.:
::.:;.·;;;.::.;..,.._~~
~
2001
Yamaha
, A6

1D
'
Brownmg 749 446-7294
3BA.2BA. 2 car gar
patto DR/F A Aelocattng
$115,000
740· 446-0SH
leave msn

www orvb com

•==Ai;iuto~''-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

°

Rei Reg
441 0245
CONVENI ENTLY
LO·
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE' Townhouse anar1·
"
menrs
and/or
small
houses fo r renr Call
740-441-111 1 lor appll·
catton &amp; tnforma!IOn
;;
FR
; ;E
;;;E,;,;;.;;
RE;;;N
;;T;;;;.;S
; ;P,.E'"
C•IA•L

pets
';:o;~;;;;;t,·-~~":"-~
:::
..
..

Brick home 2 112 bath ,
68 R, FA LA 4 lite·
places, huge detached
garage, 4+ acres and
3500
bluelwhtle approx
mtles Yosh ptpe tatl ktt pond
fenced
VERY
$4500
Call NI CEt Call740·379·9687
740-645 747 1
For sale by owner 3/2
:.;:;;:;;;:;:;:;:.;~--.,.-• home on 1/Z acre level
05 Hayabusa, low m1les
d
089 B
lot l ocate at 3
u
orlg owner many extras lav•lle Ptke Attached ga·
don 1 try to hi '" stand
rage
Aopra1sed
out S7 900 446·2254
"'
$110 000
Askm g
2007
Kawasaki
Ntnta $98.500
Call
259 under 1500 mtles 749-446 49 10
red helmet and tank bag - ~~:::;.;;;.;;;-::--:::~
Foreclosure
4br
2ba
$2,800 740·645-1912
only $29,900' Prtces to
2007 Kawasa k1 N•nJB Sellt
For
hshngs
250 under } 509 miles 800 _620 _4646 ex T462
red helrTmt and tank bag
House w1th 2 acres tn SA
$2800 740·645·1912
'
169 Wtll cons1der land
contract
44 1-5062
or
379 _2923

•1
LX 5
Honda CIVIC
spd 98,000 miles over
5 000 tn extras Lambe
Dool1i
$7 700
OBO
740-709-1398

2BR APT C1A
(740)
441-9194
3 ro oms and ba th up·
statr,s ' Comp letely fur·
nlshed with W/0
No

Jordan landt ng 2br' 3br
&amp; 4bt Avatlable No Pets
Tarrant Aesponst bl e 1or
Rent
&amp;
Electnc
04 674 0023
3 ·
·
or
o3·0::;4:;:6:;,1:;;
0 ;::
07~7::,
6 _.,...__

•

Free

Rent

Spectaflll

2&amp;3BA and up Central
Atr WID hookup tenant
pays electnc EHO Elm
Vtew
Apls

,(3.;;;
04
~1::;
88;;2.;3;;,
0 :.;
1 7- - - •Twtn Rtvers T.ower IS ac·
cepltng appflcattons for
Must sell, 3 bd, 2 bth wa!ltng list for HUD sub
home tn Syracuse Call Stdtzed. 1.eR apartment
1(7;_;4,:::01;;,94;;9;,;·2;;5~!3~~~~ lor the elderly/disabled
Ntce 4 br 2 ba home on call 675-6679
Klneon Or 1n Galhpchs ;:~;;;::;::.;;,_ _ __
Quite
neighborhood on M1dclleport N 4th Ave , 2
dead end street la rge 2 bedroom lurmshed apancar gareQe and finished ment no pets dep &amp;
basement 74Q-256 1109
rei 74()..992·0 165

�•

.

4t2 ttrin....:V

HoUMI For Ront

To...tua ·••

6000

Educotion

Holp Wanted - Gonorgl

hours. Length ot contract
and salary wilt be determined upon employment
Submit letter of tnteres t.
resume. references, and
cop•es of all current Ohio
to
Certificates/licenses
John D. Constanzo. Su·

Houlli from · 9·5 Five (51
days a week. Secretarial
work, l1llng, typing, computer updates.
Wages
negollable. No 8enef1ts
Pom! Pleasant Business
Send Resume to CLA 15
c/o Po1nt Pleasant Regis ter, 200 Main St Pt.
Pleasant,WV 25550

Employment

3 od , 2

basement

NeW Haven, one bed candidates must have a
room apartment depostt Storage 'Rental Mason
fHgh • SChOOl
diploma, Oov•.-...-;::,.."" f'•d• ro:al
Fa1rgrounds
&amp;
references. County
"drivers
license ..
740-992-0165
$8 00 per toot accepting valid
pass
background
FEDERAL
month ot October ' ·Wed
POSTAL .JOBS
'Nice lbr. Appli,me.·~. tur- &amp;
Sat
9am-4pm checks. exp. preferred 1n
traffiC Sa!ety, laW en- $17 89-$2827/Hn
nnw
m~hed. SJ7~ + ckpo"11. n.·.u. 304-675-5463
hir ing
,For
ElJ)pllca"tron
PPHS
.'04-o7:;-.ltt ~l ,,r ~~~~~~~= forcement. or teaching, wrd tr ee govcrnr~~ent JOb
inkl. !=6 11 ACneric frn A s 304 - 675 -~5£)9
Manufilclured or we will train. EOE

;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===•

50(.;

4000

Housmg

Now accepting
applications at
Valley View Apartments
BOO State Route 325
Thurman. Ohio 45685
740-245-9170
1·2 Bedroom Apartments
witll appliances furnished
On si te laundry facility.
: Call lor details or pick up
· application at rental
office.
Possibility of renial
assistance
Equal Housing
Opportlmity
TOO ... 19·526·0466
"Th1s institution is an
Equal Opportunity
: ~ • Provider and Employer"

2 br. trailer bes1de Walman in Mason $475 mo
plus . deposit references
req1,1ired, (740)992-3961
2BR at Jotmsons Mobile
Home
Park,
Call
740·645·0506
or
740·446·2003
Federal Funds just released for Land Owners
No closing cost and
ZERO DOWN! Will do
land
Improvements.
Bank,uptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK . 2. 3, 4 and 5 bedrooms
available.

" '

Dump
and
Tanker Dri~ers R&amp;J Tiucking Company in Marietta, OH is
searching for qualified
COL-A drivers for re gional dump and pneumafic tanker positions.
Qualified applicants must
be at least 23yrs .. have a
minnnum of 1 years of
safe cOmmercial driving
experience 1n a truck ,
HazMat
certification,
clean MVR and good
stability. We otfer compelilive
benefits
plus
401 (k) and vacation pay.
Conlact
Kent
at
800-462·9365 to apply or
go to www.rjtfucking .com
EOE

740-446-3384
Edue&lt;~~on

Double wide 3 BR 2 bath
$575 deposit $575 rent The Athens-Meigs Edu·
per mth plus ulls. Ready cat10nal Serv1ce Center
17228 Chatham Ave. '
has a PQSilion opening
as
Regional
"literacy
Solu
Consultant tor Region If?
Commercial
Support . Team .
1980 14x70, 1 1f2 bath, State
This
is
a
· Full Time Posi· Commerical Space lor 2br with small lot. Apple
tion. Qualifications: At
Tree
Or.
$12,000
Rent. Main Sl. Pt. Pleas.
or least fi~·e years of sue$400/mo
2000
sqlft 304-576·2096
cessful reading inslruc304·674·5513
703-501-4808
tion in a classroom: Mas·
ters degree in education
Downtown
Middlepoort , ~2~2-00~6-1.,.
6x~8·o·c
.,.l·ay•t•
on-3 (Reading, Special Eduacross street !rom ·New bed 2 bath, 200. 16x70 cation or concentration in
Family Heallhcare , 1600 Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath. Uteracy);
appropriate
sq. ft . (retaiVstlowtoom, 1999 Fortune 3 bed 2 Ohio certificat1on or li·
office,
backroom,
bath. We deliver block censure; technology exrestroom) 700+ car count level and anchor. We perience
(i.e.,
on-ti ne
per business hour, free can do , the footers also. management
system,
on
street
parking, Daytime
.140 _388 _0000 email, electronic presenor
740·388-8513 Eve· tation ),· and access to
( 7401992"1900 days
Housu for Rent
nings 740·388-801.7 or technology after school
hours. Additional
Pre740·245·9213.
lerrerJ: Previous experiS2J8fmo! 4 bed. 2 b3th . ~~--~~~~ ence as a SI Al inslructor
Bank Re po~ t5r.f dm""n. 21.1 Brand new 3bed 2balh
yo:ars. H% APR ! !"or li~tin )!' on + ·half acre in Pl. or participant; and adult
instructio nal
exper1encC.
~ 8.f)(l-620-4'-;14fl ex K02 7
Pleasant. OWNER
Fl·
Expectations: Participa te
NANCE
AVAILABLE in , all state sponsored
1br House in New Ha- 1740) 446·3570
trainings; participate In
ven, WV. toial , electriC,
a-learning
trainings
everything in walking disonline,
Mobile . Home for Sale (lace"·to-lace,
tance $300 montfl, $300
1988
Fleniing
14x60. digital): commit to maindeposit.
"No
Pets
2br, 1ba 304-675-3656 ta inlng fidelity to the Ohio
304·882-3652
literacy initiatives . design,
after 5:30pm
content, texts and time
2 BR house in Gallipolis,
commitment;
web-based
WID
conn.
$4 15/mo New 3 Bedroom homes
session checklist; corre$150/dep. You pay all· from $2 14.36 per month ,
Qaily
through
utilities. No se~t ion 8 or includes. many upgrades , spond
email
•
communica
tion:
HUD .
C.all
Wayne delivery
&amp;
set-up
and
·
hold
virtual
office
404·456-3802
740-385-2434

Are y~~ 65
, or older?'

'' "!P· sorv

House parents! 2Jwanted
for boys group homQ lo·
cated In !?Quthern Ohio.
27· 7 care 16r 2 weeks on
-2 weeks off. EMperience
raistng teens , or fos ter
care preferred . We pro·
vide traintng. Interested?
Call
Oas1s
1-877-325-1588 lor more
information
~-~~~~--~1need to lind (2] people
needing a full time job.
You need to be honest. a
person at in tegrity, with
good people skills . You
also need to be able to
follow instructions arid
have an ability to listen
and lead people in tt'le
right direction. I need
people who want to work
and will show up fo r
work. 11 you are a rec.ent
college grad and cannot
lind employment and feel
that you are qualified.
giye us a chance until a
JOb in your career path
becomes available. Call
Pat Hilt, New Car Man·
~:tyer for an interview at
446-9800 .

Labor

e226.

t &lt;Jt 3 59D

Nice
Clean
Ground =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Regional
floor, 2br, WI D hooKup. ~
Pneumatic
Refereflces/Depos1tiN o
Rentals
Pets 304-675-,5162

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

www.rtiydailysentinel.com

_Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

24/trrs

'P"o"s"r-"'o~F"F~IC~E,.....N,.o.,.w""
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
%57Kiyr,
includes
Fed.Ben , OT. Place by
adSource, not affiliated
with USPS who hires.
1-866-403-2582

,;,;,;,,;,,.,~.,.,.,,

Help

Wa_nted - Gen•ral

"A Place to Call HOME"
Foster Parents Needed!!!
$30-$48 a day with pd.
respite. Training begins
in September. Call OaSIS
to help a child find a
place
to call
home.
1-877 -325· 1558.

. . .. .

$250 Sign .on Bonus
Ten positions need lilted
by next week!
No experience required!
Np Sales!
No Collocllons!
Recruit volunteers 101
. .
non-pro 1.11 organ1zations
such as St. Jude
Children's Research
Hospital.
Get paid to make a
difference!
Full and Part-lime
Positions
Day and Evening
. Shills
Professional Work
Etwironmentl
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401 K!
On-site DoCtm
Weekly Pay and
Bonus tncA ntives!

Call TODAYI

Interview
TOMORROW!!
Work NEXT WEEKf/!

1_888 .fMC-PAYU
Ext. 1901
llttp :l/)obs.lntoclslon.c
om
....-:"''-:~livery/Warehouse · person needed, full time, im mediate opemng , m)JSI
have goot:l dnving re·
cord. Apply-lifestyle Furniture 856 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No
Phone Calls
ResCare Home Care is
applications
accepting
lor Support, Associates.
CNA &amp; STNA MRIDD
e~p . preferred. Apply at
8204 Carla Drive, Galli·
Fri, 8·4
Polis, Mon
Email resume to: rharrlson @rescare.com.

~~""":~~

PRODUCTION
OPERATORS
Full time employment ppportunilies for entry level
chemtcal operators are
being offered by M&amp;G
Polymers
in
Mason
County, WV. Candidates
must have a high school
diploma
or
equivalent
GED and be willing and
available to work rotating
12 hour shifts. Demon strated e)(perience in an
industrial
environment
and prior chemical plant
experien ce is preferred.
·tnd ividuals
meeting
these requirements must
submit a resume pOstmarked
by
Tuesday,
September 30. 2008 to
the address below, providing contact informalion, employmen t history·
and descriptions of any
certifications, ·
training,
courses or relevant pro·
grams completed. Candi·
dates of in"terest will be
contacted
for
pre-em·
ployment
assessmentS/
interviews.
M&amp;G
Polymeis
Attn: Human Resources
Production Operator
"P.O. Box 8
Apple
Grove. 'NV 25502

An Excellent way to earn
money. The New AVon.
Ca ll
Manlyn
304·882-2645

..

AVONI All Areas!
To
Buy ' or
Sell
Shirley
Spears 304-675 1429

'

If so, you qualify for a

Custodian
lor
local
church . Mon- Frl 8:30am
to 2pm . $1Olhour. Send
reume to Minister, PO
Box 228. Point Pleasant,
wv 25550

Senior Discount*
'

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

Maintonanco

Dome1tic
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
A lull !1me employment
opportunity for a mainte~
nance mechanic IS being
offered by M&amp;G Polymers in. Mason County,
WV.
Candidates must
posses a high school diploma or equivalent GED
YOUNG'S
and be willing and avail·
able to work rotating
shills.
The preterr8d
candidates shall possess · Room Additions &amp;
and be able to demonRemO&lt;t.Hng
strate mec han~l skills • New Geraget
• Etectrlc1t &amp; Plumbing
including but not limited
• Rooting &amp; Gutt!~r•
to: welding. ability to • VInyl Siding &amp; P1tntlng
troubleshoot and repair • Patio and Porch Dtcka
WV036725
oumps. and the · knowl·
edge and ability to use
V.C. YOUNG Ill
all forms
of precision
99262t5
measurement tools . lndi·
Pomeroy Dh1o
vlduats meeling these re25 'fcJr5 Local bpcrrrr1cc
qu~rements .• must submit
a resume postmarked by ....,.,..,.,..,.,,...,...,
Tuesday, September 30.
2008 to the address Delow. prqv1ding contact inlormatioo,
employment
St. II. 124 l'llltm II
history and descriptions
of
any
certifications,
tra ining courses or releOpen 1-8 .U:

CARPENTER
SE-RVICE

ROGEl HYSIUS
GilliE

vanl
programs
completed. Candidates of in-

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

L &amp; L Tire Barn

All types Masonry, brick,
block, stone,, Free Estimate,
740·416-7305,
304-593-642 1

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
Work

* Reasonable Rules

*Experienced
References Avai lu ble!
Ca ll Gary Stan ley @

SAVINGS

740-591-8044

&amp; Removal
AITordable,

Reasonuble Price
740-444-5152
or leave me a

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$
FOR
Shop the
Classifieds! BARGAINS

HOURS

'

at The Middleport Clinic

I

Valley

Hospital

is

currently

p•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

equivalenl required. Experience in acute
care

setting

accredited

in

a

hospital

Joint

Commission

preferred .

preferre d .

Previous

experience

management/Supervisory

Previous experience

tn

th e

788 North

Second Avenue
Middleport, OH

Surveys preferred.

(7 40) 992-6434

Send resumes to:

Hosted by Pleasant Valley

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Hospital

C/o Human .Resources

.

Point Pleasant,

P.q. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

Or fax:

25550

a grand prize drawing

304·675-6975, or ·apply on·line

PUBLIC IS INVITED

at www,pyalley.ofJ

AA/EOE

&amp; Meigs County

Special gifts appetizers and

(304) 675 - 4340

with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publlehlng

WV

Dbl .

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'

Puzzle

~/lON MAN. C,AN YOU

/

GET TtifSf

Cell: 740·416-5047

W/l/NtcUS

our

BARNEY
LUREEN, WHAT
MAPPENED ?!

WEDDIN'

TH''BRIDE MADE US ALL ARM WRASSL.E
HER FER TH' BOOI&lt;AY !!

INJURY tt

THE BORN L&lt;lSER
~1\LL ()J~ W\2L~\~11\/E.S ~ "';T1&gt;.'{ 0~ Tf\E Ll t-1&lt;:.-- SCtl/'€.()~~::"1
fl¥.(.

l·llll. &amp;.
Win\
e.ui'&lt;OU~
Cf&gt;..LL ~~ "' '{OU

jrshadlrm@aol.com

Paul Rowe.

I~PO~Tf&gt;..I·H

TOUS ...

MIKE MARCUM
KIIOIIN!, &amp; Hl~llllliiiN&lt;,

'$-

(.~~­

T\Jr&gt;.LL'&lt;,

Gutters
Maintenance Plus

Commercittl &amp; R1'.1idt'111ial
Vi nyl
S iding/Replacemenl

740-992·1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy , Ohio

.

1 1-\1&gt;-.\IE.loi\OR£. ~msrn\1&gt;.111/ES

i

TO ~~v.IER \I'U'\'

I
~

t

~

.AND ::OTARTIN6 TODAY
SOME OF THE" Kl D!. '

FROM p.s . 36 A.RE
IN THI5 CLA55 ~

666-564-6679
_uv 1101~1 :;

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

lnsur9d &amp; Bonded
. 740-653-9657

PEANUTS

Manlay•a
Recycling
511111 St • lllldll..lt.IU5'181
J..l82-3194

'I'OU KNOW TI4ERE'5 A
STOREFRONT C~URCH A60UT
FOUR 5LOCKS FROM ~ERE?

DID

I JUST CAME
FROM THERE ..

............... 8:11 ...:11111
...........12:88111

NYINBTII' NICES fOI

·III•I•CIII··-·WI
cmMII: ......... _ ..

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

Ill

ICIII ,_ Clrnltl'rlclll

PSI CONSTRUCT/0(\j

:Roofing
· .Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Rooin Additions

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eetlmatea

740-367-0536

For Remodeling and New House Building
Call:

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • R pofin g • Pole
Barns • Patio

·s. Porc hes and Dec k s

MIKE W. •RCUM, OWIIER

Eul

Pass

24

Pass

2•

Pass
Pass

Pass

5t

All pa ss

COW and BOY
•

AMATTE~
OF TIME BEFO~E IT
HAPPENS AGAI~.

IT'S ONLY

12 ...3fo... 'l8 ...
Al-4 ...7e p01Nf

East opens one spade, you r partner
doubles fo r takeout, West passes, you
advance with two clubs. East passes.
and partner reb1ds two diamonds. What
does thai tell you about his hand ?
He is not saying that he hates clubs and
has diamonds and hearts. He is saying
tliat although you have only 0-8 poinls.
game is still possible. He has five or
more diamonds and 18-20 poin ts.
Now you suddenly have game values.
You cue -bid two spades, hoping that
partner can continue with two no-trump.
showing at least one spade stopper.
T~e n you would ra1se to three no-trump.
After South rebids h1s su1t, though, you
JUmp to five diamonds. When game in
no· trump or a major is imposs1ble. we go
kick ing and - screaming into five of a
minor.
West leads the spade two, low from a
tripleton when he has not supported his
partner 's suit. East wins w1th his spade
Jack, cashes tho ace: and, for want of
anything better lo do, plays a third round
of the suit. Atter ruffing, how should
South proceed?
Declarer must play the trump suit with·
out loss. East is marked wilh the king tor
his opening bid, but where is the Jack?
South has two choices: low to the 10,
playing East lor the jack and king of dramonds; or low to the queen. winning
when the diamonds are 2-2 Of West has
a singleton jack.
The second option is mathematically
better, so declarer overtakes his club
jack with dummy's queen, plays a diamond to his queen (dropping West's
jack), returns to dummy with a heart,
takes another diamond finesse, cashes
the diamond ace, and claims.

G

•

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
Wt' I .til 1](&gt;1~· 1
[,lllr;IJ! lr .l l · f··i'

Wi ndows/Remodelin g.
Hnnded &amp; Insured

I~POR.II•NI TO 11-101\,W.E.'I''t&gt;

~

(II.
Rubbur Rooftng. Ro0111 Additiurls . Deck!;;. ShrmJII·~
Sic1ing W111dnws. Polf' Barns G;11agf's
lnSIHiHlCC Work Hcstdrmlwl &amp; Commercr.11
·r•1 0·; ·1 S-0•13 7
L lr~ell~f'rl &amp; Honrtf'ft
]() Yt•;:r&lt;;
Free Estlnl~1C5
[)(pCrlcnu:

Quality Seamless

lf 00\1:. (I&gt;.L~ RtALL'i WEJ&lt;:£ lf\r\..1'

ei.JS'I' Wl\fi.0\1-\E.K~

email:

&amp;

North

shows strength

q.z3

740-247-2019

West

I f30U6HT TWO POUNDS OF
FAITH,HOPE AND C~ARIT'I' ..

Cell : 740 -416 - I R.14

15+ year.-t experieuce Free Estimates

dollar
57 Na,

17 Stock

59 Carry a tune
60 Watchdog 's ~5 Harvest tool 40 -and
warning
19 Barbecue . aahlng ·
extra
42 Does batik

figures

18 Make ends

to a laird
56 Always,

to Poe

DOWN

mems.
21 Not bumpy
24
data

Entering

28 "You"
homonym
30 Bridal attire
33 S&amp;L
offering

22 Gazed at
23 Hawaii
I Mother
sta1e bird
-ol·pea~
25 Cry
2 Cleanser
of surprise
3 Go fly - - ! 26 Rainbow
4 Sleep
goddess
5 '" Trin ity '"
27 Harps on

author

44 Curing

cheese
45 Type of
eclipse
46 Upset
48 Reimbur ses
49 Stretch
across

29 Craven

50 Severn

34 Russo or

6 Give,
or Unseld
Mag rille
in Glasgaw 30 Swear
35 A woodwind 7 Bone-dry
~1 Black,
36 Bacon on
8 And. to F.rilz
In poetry
the hoof
9 RSVP word 32 Ottumwa's
37 Lime
10 Riviera
state

coolers

· summer

tributary
51 ··- Gona
Be Me"
52 Not "agln",
54 - gene rio.

34 Spite

39

38 Go over big 13 Ukraine
· capital ·
39 Class topic

Medieval
poem

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
:::e.ebr ti C1pfer cr·f~:rgr ams are c-ealed trom a.x;tal~~s by Iamoos oeop'" )a$1 arcl present

Each lett!!~ rn t'"le Clprer

s:a~:s 'or aroJiher
Today'$ clue · Aequa's L

" UK

IGBTSTOTMS

OGIESIWSRK

TC

NMATDTRTWS 'C

MB
WS

W
W T D

VWP

TS

W

AW0 0 K

AWO .'

z wp u w5
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"II is only the Iarmer who la1lhfully plants seeds~
...

the Spring, who reaps a har~esl in Autumn."- 8 C Forbes

WORD

GAM I

&lt;bu &lt;Birthday:

VVedneeday, Sept.24,2008
By Bernice Bede Osot
Your· pa tience will make achteving your•
objectives at1a1nable in the year ahead
Even if.lhe progress is ra ther slow, stick·
ing with your game plan wilt evan_tually ·
pay oH in bigger ways than you thought.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl . 23) - Everyorle
you spend lime with has a good chance
ot end1ng up as a spec1al friend or assoCiate. Events of the da~ co uld unfold in
ways tha t will glue you together lor a long
.time.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) .- AlthOugh
you're likely to be mottvated by unselltsh
purposes, you 're apt to make some
major achievements toward advancing
your own causes in the process - wi th·
out even lryirig.
SAQ ITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - Your
words are likely to carry ra r more we1ght.
than you reallze .when someone in dire
straits hears what he or she needs to
bring control and happiness.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Two
maior assets can be used in ways .that
wtll prove profitable . One is your natural
instinct tor what the public needs, and
the other is having an awareness of
where the market is.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20rFeb. 191 Because yo u have backup help wailing
to pitch in where and when needed, success is more likely than usual. They'll
come through if you need them.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) - Having
lots or time to play will not neca·ssarily·
quiet your res tlessness. In order to feet
totally fullllled, you need to do things that
· are both product1ve and constructiVe.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - All work
and no play could knock you out of
whack; so try to arrange your day to lind
a linle relaxation arter you comple te what
you must. You' ll be a happier person if
you do.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - This is a
good day to take care of extremely
important assignments. You're sharper
than usual and wlll be a strong finisher.
which is a formula lor success and fulfill ment.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - tr you've
got some free time, visit with lriends you
haven't seen for a·~h ite The nostalgia of
old times witt make you feel better than
you have for some time
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Be persistent'about going attar thOse arrange·
ments 'or situations that could contribute
to your material resources. If you lay the
groundworlr; now, you'll reap the harvest
tater.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 } - This is the kind
of day where you can put togelhe;r all
typei of arrangement&amp; thai will contribute to your future plena. You .aren't
likely to tiM any deed weight on your
tnma.
•
VIRQO (Aug. 23•Stpt. 22) -Quietly go
ebo~o~l atrlvlng lor weya to edd to your
reacurcea , blc1 u11 thlt which you do lor
ycuraell ~Ill aplll over 1nd prove to be,
Deneflclel
vo\Jr t0111Cf on11, too.

ror

SOUP TO NUTZ
T~1~ NE"ICT EiotFtC Ise

FccU~ ON flbHOUt;CING

T&gt;41! VO\o!EIL. SoJNC&gt;S Of'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

leader
50 Spouse
53 Dreaming of
55 -St.
Laurent
56 China's

AstroGraph

47239 Riebel Rood. Long Bonum. OH

740-985-4141

49 Ninja's

14 More
crunchy
16 Busy
loafing

meet

Double and bid

!'fEY,

8 Draw on
11 NASA
thumbs-up
(hyph.}
12 Buffalo' s
lake
13 Make a

20 Board

Openin g lead: • 2

2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpoUs

Chamber of Commerce

2520 Valley Drive

Mall or drop off thle coupon along

740.446.9200

Tess Simon, MD

Located at

Previous experience in Joint Commission

Phone

www.tiHlbeftftlekeablnetry.com

OWners:

10 7
K 5 2
1 r. 3

t •

,.
,.

oF
MY CAPf?

Hardwood Cabinnry And FurnHure

James Keesee II
742·2332

Performance lmprovementfield preferred.
City/State/Zip

South

#5548

Jon Van Meter

t
•

t AQt0987
... A J

www.auctionzip. com

Racine, Ohio

•

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

Auctioneer:
Billv R..Goble Jr.
740-416-1164

Owner:

.Wednesday,
September 24, 2008
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Must have current WV RN license. BSN or

9 tJ 6 :1 2
,I
8 5 4 2

• AKQJ6

• AK5

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Introducing

Internal Medicine

Improve ment/Joint Commission Director•.

•
•
•

1/14/1 roo. pd

Pysician specializing in

accepting resumes for a full -time Quality

9 5 2

South
• 7 4

Construction

Joint Commission Director
Pleasant

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
BUSINESS AFTER

•

Stop &amp; Compare

RICK PRICE

l:felp Wanted

Quality Improvement

Hours

Please leave messa c
TKEEWOKK
Topped, Thke Down

Crossword

41 Zero
43 Florida city
I Cagers ' org. 47 Puppy's
4 Hairpieces
barlt

sweater

East

MONTY

740-992-1611

.o;• :

• Prompl and Qu'a lity

* Insured

Get A Jump
on

10 8 3
• QJ 4
' • 6 43
... K Q t O 9

Church Dl..:oont

"8~77~·~55;;:2~·~18~8:;:3~~~=

Concreto

• Garages

OH:l·OB

•

Remodeling

10 ,.... ··~s.nc.
S.nlt:J' Clt/nn

David Lewis
740-9_92_69 7l

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

• New Ho mes

North

• Complete .

""!r··to. 10'll.30'

o·

Q,JeCtOI~

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRii.cnON

· . s1_. 5'111 o·

lo&amp;I).UI·Illl7

ol
A
Celebration
44087 Wipple Kd.
Llfe .... Overbrook
Center,
l'omeroy, OH
located at 333 Page
(:'i Points) ·
Street, Middleport, Ohio
New
&amp; Used Tires.
is pleased to announce
We
buy
u~cd tires .
that
due
to
internal
computer
whee l
changes in our facility.
we are accepting applialignments. ligh1
cations
for
lull
time
mechani c work.
7P -7A LPN's, part time
complete service oil
7A-7P LPN's and full
r1·me and pan tt"me changes, snMil engine
n:pair.
STNA's
to
JOin
our
We'
serv
il·e and
fri e[ldly and
dedicated
winteri ze boats and
staff.
Applicant's must
be
dependable.
team
RV's
players with positive alii:
(740) 992-5344
tudes.
Interested appli·
M on -Fri .
cants can pick up an application
M·F
B:3o
K:txJ am - 4:30pm
AM -4:30 PM . All eligible
Sat 8:00 am - 12
.
applicants wi ll then be
We appreciate your
contacted by Hollie Bum· L.--b;';";;.
·in;,;.e; ;s; ;s__...l
garner. LPN, Staff Devel- ·
opment
I I II I'&gt;
coordlnatoi-@740-992((}\;(1\ 11 1
6472. EOE &amp; A Partici·
( (}\•,! I([ ( Ill)\
pant of the Drug-Free
workplace program .
Concrete Removal
~~~-~~~~~
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
and Replac&amp;ment
IN
THE
TRI -STATE
I '1'Vfta
AREA
Occupational ., -. ' ·. ..,., ,..,.. S · .li
Medicine
NUrses
AN's
Cotic:rete WQtk
;-~-------;
and LPN's Competillve 28 Years Experience
salary and benefits de·
!ermined by e~perience
and qua lifications Plea se
call at 740·574- 1770 or
lnaured
~
WV042182 Free Estimates
Ser~1ce' Bus
9000

Sportswriter
The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking motiva ted, people-oriented
individual ti fill a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriler. The suecessful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for the
daily edition of the newspaper, as well as assis t
with the productiOn of
sports pages. Excellent
writing and English skills ,
photography-skills and
knowledge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position is lull time.
40 hours a week, with
benefits. Interested par·
ties can send resumes to
Kevi n Kelly,' Managing
Editor. Ohio Valley Pubfishi ng Co., 625 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 or kketly@mydailytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

e

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

Complete Tree Care
lrr•ur.cl • FrM E•llm•t"

- "'

119allp Qtrtbune
~oint !tlea:5ant llegi5ter
Th~ Daily Sentinel
ti&gt;un~ap m:ime5 -&amp;entinel

Hill's Self
Storage

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com

j

NEA
ACROSS

Service

··-

~a:IUpolh~

Address

Medical

!!

Help Wanted

Subscriber's Name

Johnson's Tree

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Phillip
Alder

~:;:;:9-:1:2:Sit.:=;:~

terest wilt be · contacted
for pre-employment as·
sessmentsl intef'lliews.
Reply to : M&amp;G Polymers
Attn: Human Resources
- Maintenance Mechanic
P. D. Box 8
Ap·
pte Grove. _wv 25502

www.mydallysentinel.com
BRIDGE

740·892·5682

Direct Care Staff in resi dential Youth program.
Must b!'l 21 years of ag e.
Pay based on e)(perience.
Call wv 60hr Underground
Mon-Fri Miners Class,
(7401379-9083
starting
9em-3pm.
soon.
Whit-Co-Training
Hair Dresser Wanted at 304·372·8346
Shae's
Beauty
Salon
Maintonanco/
Katrie
conlact
DomUiic
304-675·2828
Service Manager &amp; Serv·
maintenance
Part·ti(lle
ice Technicia n positions
25-30hrs
per
available Health care &amp; wol'k.er.
Retirement plans avail- week, Pay based on ex·
able. Please send
perience.
Call
sume
lo (740)379·9083
Mon-Fri
LL C@C:A.REO.COM
between 9am-3pm
lax to 740-446·9 104

'

Tuesday, September 23, 2008
ALLEY OOP

I

0\.1111/ocaBuLJtfN

I!I:&gt;RPS.

OUCOLY

,..,.-------...

~

"Stop

0

1-r-..,---,--,.,....,--! '

cr:·mg dear:· &lt;h&lt;

mom con~olcJ Iter dau ghter.

and sull\'fing ilf&lt;
incvitabk bm miscl)' i1

"pain

DO RIRII

Q :;:,rn plefc

rhe ch ucUe~ quor&amp;C

by hlllng ir. the m1S~'ng wor4s
you de..,elop irom st~p No 3 belo-J.

1:1. PRiNT. ~JWBE RED
~ lETlERS IN SQUARE S

€) l/N\O~&lt;MBI. £ rm
AN ~1 VJH

SCRAMLFTS ANSIV'ERS 9122/0&amp;
U ntrue -. Roomy- Vislil -

Fickk · MEET IT
ship 10 come in," th e m~m
to MEET I I"' "

" D on' t sil .around waiting for you r
to ld her glum l ccn. '\wim out

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�•

.

4t2 ttrin....:V

HoUMI For Ront

To...tua ·••

6000

Educotion

Holp Wanted - Gonorgl

hours. Length ot contract
and salary wilt be determined upon employment
Submit letter of tnteres t.
resume. references, and
cop•es of all current Ohio
to
Certificates/licenses
John D. Constanzo. Su·

Houlli from · 9·5 Five (51
days a week. Secretarial
work, l1llng, typing, computer updates.
Wages
negollable. No 8enef1ts
Pom! Pleasant Business
Send Resume to CLA 15
c/o Po1nt Pleasant Regis ter, 200 Main St Pt.
Pleasant,WV 25550

Employment

3 od , 2

basement

NeW Haven, one bed candidates must have a
room apartment depostt Storage 'Rental Mason
fHgh • SChOOl
diploma, Oov•.-...-;::,.."" f'•d• ro:al
Fa1rgrounds
&amp;
references. County
"drivers
license ..
740-992-0165
$8 00 per toot accepting valid
pass
background
FEDERAL
month ot October ' ·Wed
POSTAL .JOBS
'Nice lbr. Appli,me.·~. tur- &amp;
Sat
9am-4pm checks. exp. preferred 1n
traffiC Sa!ety, laW en- $17 89-$2827/Hn
nnw
m~hed. SJ7~ + ckpo"11. n.·.u. 304-675-5463
hir ing
,For
ElJ)pllca"tron
PPHS
.'04-o7:;-.ltt ~l ,,r ~~~~~~~= forcement. or teaching, wrd tr ee govcrnr~~ent JOb
inkl. !=6 11 ACneric frn A s 304 - 675 -~5£)9
Manufilclured or we will train. EOE

;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===•

50(.;

4000

Housmg

Now accepting
applications at
Valley View Apartments
BOO State Route 325
Thurman. Ohio 45685
740-245-9170
1·2 Bedroom Apartments
witll appliances furnished
On si te laundry facility.
: Call lor details or pick up
· application at rental
office.
Possibility of renial
assistance
Equal Housing
Opportlmity
TOO ... 19·526·0466
"Th1s institution is an
Equal Opportunity
: ~ • Provider and Employer"

2 br. trailer bes1de Walman in Mason $475 mo
plus . deposit references
req1,1ired, (740)992-3961
2BR at Jotmsons Mobile
Home
Park,
Call
740·645·0506
or
740·446·2003
Federal Funds just released for Land Owners
No closing cost and
ZERO DOWN! Will do
land
Improvements.
Bank,uptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK . 2. 3, 4 and 5 bedrooms
available.

" '

Dump
and
Tanker Dri~ers R&amp;J Tiucking Company in Marietta, OH is
searching for qualified
COL-A drivers for re gional dump and pneumafic tanker positions.
Qualified applicants must
be at least 23yrs .. have a
minnnum of 1 years of
safe cOmmercial driving
experience 1n a truck ,
HazMat
certification,
clean MVR and good
stability. We otfer compelilive
benefits
plus
401 (k) and vacation pay.
Conlact
Kent
at
800-462·9365 to apply or
go to www.rjtfucking .com
EOE

740-446-3384
Edue&lt;~~on

Double wide 3 BR 2 bath
$575 deposit $575 rent The Athens-Meigs Edu·
per mth plus ulls. Ready cat10nal Serv1ce Center
17228 Chatham Ave. '
has a PQSilion opening
as
Regional
"literacy
Solu
Consultant tor Region If?
Commercial
Support . Team .
1980 14x70, 1 1f2 bath, State
This
is
a
· Full Time Posi· Commerical Space lor 2br with small lot. Apple
tion. Qualifications: At
Tree
Or.
$12,000
Rent. Main Sl. Pt. Pleas.
or least fi~·e years of sue$400/mo
2000
sqlft 304-576·2096
cessful reading inslruc304·674·5513
703-501-4808
tion in a classroom: Mas·
ters degree in education
Downtown
Middlepoort , ~2~2-00~6-1.,.
6x~8·o·c
.,.l·ay•t•
on-3 (Reading, Special Eduacross street !rom ·New bed 2 bath, 200. 16x70 cation or concentration in
Family Heallhcare , 1600 Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath. Uteracy);
appropriate
sq. ft . (retaiVstlowtoom, 1999 Fortune 3 bed 2 Ohio certificat1on or li·
office,
backroom,
bath. We deliver block censure; technology exrestroom) 700+ car count level and anchor. We perience
(i.e.,
on-ti ne
per business hour, free can do , the footers also. management
system,
on
street
parking, Daytime
.140 _388 _0000 email, electronic presenor
740·388-8513 Eve· tation ),· and access to
( 7401992"1900 days
Housu for Rent
nings 740·388-801.7 or technology after school
hours. Additional
Pre740·245·9213.
lerrerJ: Previous experiS2J8fmo! 4 bed. 2 b3th . ~~--~~~~ ence as a SI Al inslructor
Bank Re po~ t5r.f dm""n. 21.1 Brand new 3bed 2balh
yo:ars. H% APR ! !"or li~tin )!' on + ·half acre in Pl. or participant; and adult
instructio nal
exper1encC.
~ 8.f)(l-620-4'-;14fl ex K02 7
Pleasant. OWNER
Fl·
Expectations: Participa te
NANCE
AVAILABLE in , all state sponsored
1br House in New Ha- 1740) 446·3570
trainings; participate In
ven, WV. toial , electriC,
a-learning
trainings
everything in walking disonline,
Mobile . Home for Sale (lace"·to-lace,
tance $300 montfl, $300
1988
Fleniing
14x60. digital): commit to maindeposit.
"No
Pets
2br, 1ba 304-675-3656 ta inlng fidelity to the Ohio
304·882-3652
literacy initiatives . design,
after 5:30pm
content, texts and time
2 BR house in Gallipolis,
commitment;
web-based
WID
conn.
$4 15/mo New 3 Bedroom homes
session checklist; corre$150/dep. You pay all· from $2 14.36 per month ,
Qaily
through
utilities. No se~t ion 8 or includes. many upgrades , spond
email
•
communica
tion:
HUD .
C.all
Wayne delivery
&amp;
set-up
and
·
hold
virtual
office
404·456-3802
740-385-2434

Are y~~ 65
, or older?'

'' "!P· sorv

House parents! 2Jwanted
for boys group homQ lo·
cated In !?Quthern Ohio.
27· 7 care 16r 2 weeks on
-2 weeks off. EMperience
raistng teens , or fos ter
care preferred . We pro·
vide traintng. Interested?
Call
Oas1s
1-877-325-1588 lor more
information
~-~~~~--~1need to lind (2] people
needing a full time job.
You need to be honest. a
person at in tegrity, with
good people skills . You
also need to be able to
follow instructions arid
have an ability to listen
and lead people in tt'le
right direction. I need
people who want to work
and will show up fo r
work. 11 you are a rec.ent
college grad and cannot
lind employment and feel
that you are qualified.
giye us a chance until a
JOb in your career path
becomes available. Call
Pat Hilt, New Car Man·
~:tyer for an interview at
446-9800 .

Labor

e226.

t &lt;Jt 3 59D

Nice
Clean
Ground =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Regional
floor, 2br, WI D hooKup. ~
Pneumatic
Refereflces/Depos1tiN o
Rentals
Pets 304-675-,5162

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

www.rtiydailysentinel.com

_Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

24/trrs

'P"o"s"r-"'o~F"F~IC~E,.....N,.o.,.w""
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
%57Kiyr,
includes
Fed.Ben , OT. Place by
adSource, not affiliated
with USPS who hires.
1-866-403-2582

,;,;,;,,;,,.,~.,.,.,,

Help

Wa_nted - Gen•ral

"A Place to Call HOME"
Foster Parents Needed!!!
$30-$48 a day with pd.
respite. Training begins
in September. Call OaSIS
to help a child find a
place
to call
home.
1-877 -325· 1558.

. . .. .

$250 Sign .on Bonus
Ten positions need lilted
by next week!
No experience required!
Np Sales!
No Collocllons!
Recruit volunteers 101
. .
non-pro 1.11 organ1zations
such as St. Jude
Children's Research
Hospital.
Get paid to make a
difference!
Full and Part-lime
Positions
Day and Evening
. Shills
Professional Work
Etwironmentl
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401 K!
On-site DoCtm
Weekly Pay and
Bonus tncA ntives!

Call TODAYI

Interview
TOMORROW!!
Work NEXT WEEKf/!

1_888 .fMC-PAYU
Ext. 1901
llttp :l/)obs.lntoclslon.c
om
....-:"''-:~livery/Warehouse · person needed, full time, im mediate opemng , m)JSI
have goot:l dnving re·
cord. Apply-lifestyle Furniture 856 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No
Phone Calls
ResCare Home Care is
applications
accepting
lor Support, Associates.
CNA &amp; STNA MRIDD
e~p . preferred. Apply at
8204 Carla Drive, Galli·
Fri, 8·4
Polis, Mon
Email resume to: rharrlson @rescare.com.

~~""":~~

PRODUCTION
OPERATORS
Full time employment ppportunilies for entry level
chemtcal operators are
being offered by M&amp;G
Polymers
in
Mason
County, WV. Candidates
must have a high school
diploma
or
equivalent
GED and be willing and
available to work rotating
12 hour shifts. Demon strated e)(perience in an
industrial
environment
and prior chemical plant
experien ce is preferred.
·tnd ividuals
meeting
these requirements must
submit a resume pOstmarked
by
Tuesday,
September 30. 2008 to
the address below, providing contact informalion, employmen t history·
and descriptions of any
certifications, ·
training,
courses or relevant pro·
grams completed. Candi·
dates of in"terest will be
contacted
for
pre-em·
ployment
assessmentS/
interviews.
M&amp;G
Polymeis
Attn: Human Resources
Production Operator
"P.O. Box 8
Apple
Grove. 'NV 25502

An Excellent way to earn
money. The New AVon.
Ca ll
Manlyn
304·882-2645

..

AVONI All Areas!
To
Buy ' or
Sell
Shirley
Spears 304-675 1429

'

If so, you qualify for a

Custodian
lor
local
church . Mon- Frl 8:30am
to 2pm . $1Olhour. Send
reume to Minister, PO
Box 228. Point Pleasant,
wv 25550

Senior Discount*
'

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

Maintonanco

Dome1tic
MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
A lull !1me employment
opportunity for a mainte~
nance mechanic IS being
offered by M&amp;G Polymers in. Mason County,
WV.
Candidates must
posses a high school diploma or equivalent GED
YOUNG'S
and be willing and avail·
able to work rotating
shills.
The preterr8d
candidates shall possess · Room Additions &amp;
and be able to demonRemO&lt;t.Hng
strate mec han~l skills • New Geraget
• Etectrlc1t &amp; Plumbing
including but not limited
• Rooting &amp; Gutt!~r•
to: welding. ability to • VInyl Siding &amp; P1tntlng
troubleshoot and repair • Patio and Porch Dtcka
WV036725
oumps. and the · knowl·
edge and ability to use
V.C. YOUNG Ill
all forms
of precision
99262t5
measurement tools . lndi·
Pomeroy Dh1o
vlduats meeling these re25 'fcJr5 Local bpcrrrr1cc
qu~rements .• must submit
a resume postmarked by ....,.,..,.,..,.,,...,...,
Tuesday, September 30.
2008 to the address Delow. prqv1ding contact inlormatioo,
employment
St. II. 124 l'llltm II
history and descriptions
of
any
certifications,
tra ining courses or releOpen 1-8 .U:

CARPENTER
SE-RVICE

ROGEl HYSIUS
GilliE

vanl
programs
completed. Candidates of in-

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

L &amp; L Tire Barn

All types Masonry, brick,
block, stone,, Free Estimate,
740·416-7305,
304-593-642 1

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
Work

* Reasonable Rules

*Experienced
References Avai lu ble!
Ca ll Gary Stan ley @

SAVINGS

740-591-8044

&amp; Removal
AITordable,

Reasonuble Price
740-444-5152
or leave me a

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$
FOR
Shop the
Classifieds! BARGAINS

HOURS

'

at The Middleport Clinic

I

Valley

Hospital

is

currently

p•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

equivalenl required. Experience in acute
care

setting

accredited

in

a

hospital

Joint

Commission

preferred .

preferre d .

Previous

experience

management/Supervisory

Previous experience

tn

th e

788 North

Second Avenue
Middleport, OH

Surveys preferred.

(7 40) 992-6434

Send resumes to:

Hosted by Pleasant Valley

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Hospital

C/o Human .Resources

.

Point Pleasant,

P.q. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

Or fax:

25550

a grand prize drawing

304·675-6975, or ·apply on·line

PUBLIC IS INVITED

at www,pyalley.ofJ

AA/EOE

&amp; Meigs County

Special gifts appetizers and

(304) 675 - 4340

with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publlehlng

WV

Dbl .

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

'

Puzzle

~/lON MAN. C,AN YOU

/

GET TtifSf

Cell: 740·416-5047

W/l/NtcUS

our

BARNEY
LUREEN, WHAT
MAPPENED ?!

WEDDIN'

TH''BRIDE MADE US ALL ARM WRASSL.E
HER FER TH' BOOI&lt;AY !!

INJURY tt

THE BORN L&lt;lSER
~1\LL ()J~ W\2L~\~11\/E.S ~ "';T1&gt;.'{ 0~ Tf\E Ll t-1&lt;:.-- SCtl/'€.()~~::"1
fl¥.(.

l·llll. &amp;.
Win\
e.ui'&lt;OU~
Cf&gt;..LL ~~ "' '{OU

jrshadlrm@aol.com

Paul Rowe.

I~PO~Tf&gt;..I·H

TOUS ...

MIKE MARCUM
KIIOIIN!, &amp; Hl~llllliiiN&lt;,

'$-

(.~~­

T\Jr&gt;.LL'&lt;,

Gutters
Maintenance Plus

Commercittl &amp; R1'.1idt'111ial
Vi nyl
S iding/Replacemenl

740-992·1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy , Ohio

.

1 1-\1&gt;-.\IE.loi\OR£. ~msrn\1&gt;.111/ES

i

TO ~~v.IER \I'U'\'

I
~

t

~

.AND ::OTARTIN6 TODAY
SOME OF THE" Kl D!. '

FROM p.s . 36 A.RE
IN THI5 CLA55 ~

666-564-6679
_uv 1101~1 :;

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

lnsur9d &amp; Bonded
. 740-653-9657

PEANUTS

Manlay•a
Recycling
511111 St • lllldll..lt.IU5'181
J..l82-3194

'I'OU KNOW TI4ERE'5 A
STOREFRONT C~URCH A60UT
FOUR 5LOCKS FROM ~ERE?

DID

I JUST CAME
FROM THERE ..

............... 8:11 ...:11111
...........12:88111

NYINBTII' NICES fOI

·III•I•CIII··-·WI
cmMII: ......... _ ..

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

Ill

ICIII ,_ Clrnltl'rlclll

PSI CONSTRUCT/0(\j

:Roofing
· .Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Rooin Additions

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eetlmatea

740-367-0536

For Remodeling and New House Building
Call:

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • R pofin g • Pole
Barns • Patio

·s. Porc hes and Dec k s

MIKE W. •RCUM, OWIIER

Eul

Pass

24

Pass

2•

Pass
Pass

Pass

5t

All pa ss

COW and BOY
•

AMATTE~
OF TIME BEFO~E IT
HAPPENS AGAI~.

IT'S ONLY

12 ...3fo... 'l8 ...
Al-4 ...7e p01Nf

East opens one spade, you r partner
doubles fo r takeout, West passes, you
advance with two clubs. East passes.
and partner reb1ds two diamonds. What
does thai tell you about his hand ?
He is not saying that he hates clubs and
has diamonds and hearts. He is saying
tliat although you have only 0-8 poinls.
game is still possible. He has five or
more diamonds and 18-20 poin ts.
Now you suddenly have game values.
You cue -bid two spades, hoping that
partner can continue with two no-trump.
showing at least one spade stopper.
T~e n you would ra1se to three no-trump.
After South rebids h1s su1t, though, you
JUmp to five diamonds. When game in
no· trump or a major is imposs1ble. we go
kick ing and - screaming into five of a
minor.
West leads the spade two, low from a
tripleton when he has not supported his
partner 's suit. East wins w1th his spade
Jack, cashes tho ace: and, for want of
anything better lo do, plays a third round
of the suit. Atter ruffing, how should
South proceed?
Declarer must play the trump suit with·
out loss. East is marked wilh the king tor
his opening bid, but where is the Jack?
South has two choices: low to the 10,
playing East lor the jack and king of dramonds; or low to the queen. winning
when the diamonds are 2-2 Of West has
a singleton jack.
The second option is mathematically
better, so declarer overtakes his club
jack with dummy's queen, plays a diamond to his queen (dropping West's
jack), returns to dummy with a heart,
takes another diamond finesse, cashes
the diamond ace, and claims.

G

•

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
Wt' I .til 1](&gt;1~· 1
[,lllr;IJ! lr .l l · f··i'

Wi ndows/Remodelin g.
Hnnded &amp; Insured

I~POR.II•NI TO 11-101\,W.E.'I''t&gt;

~

(II.
Rubbur Rooftng. Ro0111 Additiurls . Deck!;;. ShrmJII·~
Sic1ing W111dnws. Polf' Barns G;11agf's
lnSIHiHlCC Work Hcstdrmlwl &amp; Commercr.11
·r•1 0·; ·1 S-0•13 7
L lr~ell~f'rl &amp; Honrtf'ft
]() Yt•;:r&lt;;
Free Estlnl~1C5
[)(pCrlcnu:

Quality Seamless

lf 00\1:. (I&gt;.L~ RtALL'i WEJ&lt;:£ lf\r\..1'

ei.JS'I' Wl\fi.0\1-\E.K~

email:

&amp;

North

shows strength

q.z3

740-247-2019

West

I f30U6HT TWO POUNDS OF
FAITH,HOPE AND C~ARIT'I' ..

Cell : 740 -416 - I R.14

15+ year.-t experieuce Free Estimates

dollar
57 Na,

17 Stock

59 Carry a tune
60 Watchdog 's ~5 Harvest tool 40 -and
warning
19 Barbecue . aahlng ·
extra
42 Does batik

figures

18 Make ends

to a laird
56 Always,

to Poe

DOWN

mems.
21 Not bumpy
24
data

Entering

28 "You"
homonym
30 Bridal attire
33 S&amp;L
offering

22 Gazed at
23 Hawaii
I Mother
sta1e bird
-ol·pea~
25 Cry
2 Cleanser
of surprise
3 Go fly - - ! 26 Rainbow
4 Sleep
goddess
5 '" Trin ity '"
27 Harps on

author

44 Curing

cheese
45 Type of
eclipse
46 Upset
48 Reimbur ses
49 Stretch
across

29 Craven

50 Severn

34 Russo or

6 Give,
or Unseld
Mag rille
in Glasgaw 30 Swear
35 A woodwind 7 Bone-dry
~1 Black,
36 Bacon on
8 And. to F.rilz
In poetry
the hoof
9 RSVP word 32 Ottumwa's
37 Lime
10 Riviera
state

coolers

· summer

tributary
51 ··- Gona
Be Me"
52 Not "agln",
54 - gene rio.

34 Spite

39

38 Go over big 13 Ukraine
· capital ·
39 Class topic

Medieval
poem

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
:::e.ebr ti C1pfer cr·f~:rgr ams are c-ealed trom a.x;tal~~s by Iamoos oeop'" )a$1 arcl present

Each lett!!~ rn t'"le Clprer

s:a~:s 'or aroJiher
Today'$ clue · Aequa's L

" UK

IGBTSTOTMS

OGIESIWSRK

TC

NMATDTRTWS 'C

MB
WS

W
W T D

VWP

TS

W

AW0 0 K

AWO .'

z wp u w5
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"II is only the Iarmer who la1lhfully plants seeds~
...

the Spring, who reaps a har~esl in Autumn."- 8 C Forbes

WORD

GAM I

&lt;bu &lt;Birthday:

VVedneeday, Sept.24,2008
By Bernice Bede Osot
Your· pa tience will make achteving your•
objectives at1a1nable in the year ahead
Even if.lhe progress is ra ther slow, stick·
ing with your game plan wilt evan_tually ·
pay oH in bigger ways than you thought.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl . 23) - Everyorle
you spend lime with has a good chance
ot end1ng up as a spec1al friend or assoCiate. Events of the da~ co uld unfold in
ways tha t will glue you together lor a long
.time.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) .- AlthOugh
you're likely to be mottvated by unselltsh
purposes, you 're apt to make some
major achievements toward advancing
your own causes in the process - wi th·
out even lryirig.
SAQ ITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - Your
words are likely to carry ra r more we1ght.
than you reallze .when someone in dire
straits hears what he or she needs to
bring control and happiness.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Two
maior assets can be used in ways .that
wtll prove profitable . One is your natural
instinct tor what the public needs, and
the other is having an awareness of
where the market is.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20rFeb. 191 Because yo u have backup help wailing
to pitch in where and when needed, success is more likely than usual. They'll
come through if you need them.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) - Having
lots or time to play will not neca·ssarily·
quiet your res tlessness. In order to feet
totally fullllled, you need to do things that
· are both product1ve and constructiVe.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - All work
and no play could knock you out of
whack; so try to arrange your day to lind
a linle relaxation arter you comple te what
you must. You' ll be a happier person if
you do.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - This is a
good day to take care of extremely
important assignments. You're sharper
than usual and wlll be a strong finisher.
which is a formula lor success and fulfill ment.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - tr you've
got some free time, visit with lriends you
haven't seen for a·~h ite The nostalgia of
old times witt make you feel better than
you have for some time
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Be persistent'about going attar thOse arrange·
ments 'or situations that could contribute
to your material resources. If you lay the
groundworlr; now, you'll reap the harvest
tater.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 } - This is the kind
of day where you can put togelhe;r all
typei of arrangement&amp; thai will contribute to your future plena. You .aren't
likely to tiM any deed weight on your
tnma.
•
VIRQO (Aug. 23•Stpt. 22) -Quietly go
ebo~o~l atrlvlng lor weya to edd to your
reacurcea , blc1 u11 thlt which you do lor
ycuraell ~Ill aplll over 1nd prove to be,
Deneflclel
vo\Jr t0111Cf on11, too.

ror

SOUP TO NUTZ
T~1~ NE"ICT EiotFtC Ise

FccU~ ON flbHOUt;CING

T&gt;41! VO\o!EIL. SoJNC&gt;S Of'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

leader
50 Spouse
53 Dreaming of
55 -St.
Laurent
56 China's

AstroGraph

47239 Riebel Rood. Long Bonum. OH

740-985-4141

49 Ninja's

14 More
crunchy
16 Busy
loafing

meet

Double and bid

!'fEY,

8 Draw on
11 NASA
thumbs-up
(hyph.}
12 Buffalo' s
lake
13 Make a

20 Board

Openin g lead: • 2

2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpoUs

Chamber of Commerce

2520 Valley Drive

Mall or drop off thle coupon along

740.446.9200

Tess Simon, MD

Located at

Previous experience in Joint Commission

Phone

www.tiHlbeftftlekeablnetry.com

OWners:

10 7
K 5 2
1 r. 3

t •

,.
,.

oF
MY CAPf?

Hardwood Cabinnry And FurnHure

James Keesee II
742·2332

Performance lmprovementfield preferred.
City/State/Zip

South

#5548

Jon Van Meter

t
•

t AQt0987
... A J

www.auctionzip. com

Racine, Ohio

•

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

Auctioneer:
Billv R..Goble Jr.
740-416-1164

Owner:

.Wednesday,
September 24, 2008
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Must have current WV RN license. BSN or

9 tJ 6 :1 2
,I
8 5 4 2

• AKQJ6

• AK5

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Introducing

Internal Medicine

Improve ment/Joint Commission Director•.

•
•
•

1/14/1 roo. pd

Pysician specializing in

accepting resumes for a full -time Quality

9 5 2

South
• 7 4

Construction

Joint Commission Director
Pleasant

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
BUSINESS AFTER

•

Stop &amp; Compare

RICK PRICE

l:felp Wanted

Quality Improvement

Hours

Please leave messa c
TKEEWOKK
Topped, Thke Down

Crossword

41 Zero
43 Florida city
I Cagers ' org. 47 Puppy's
4 Hairpieces
barlt

sweater

East

MONTY

740-992-1611

.o;• :

• Prompl and Qu'a lity

* Insured

Get A Jump
on

10 8 3
• QJ 4
' • 6 43
... K Q t O 9

Church Dl..:oont

"8~77~·~55;;:2~·~18~8:;:3~~~=

Concreto

• Garages

OH:l·OB

•

Remodeling

10 ,.... ··~s.nc.
S.nlt:J' Clt/nn

David Lewis
740-9_92_69 7l

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

• New Ho mes

North

• Complete .

""!r··to. 10'll.30'

o·

Q,JeCtOI~

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRii.cnON

· . s1_. 5'111 o·

lo&amp;I).UI·Illl7

ol
A
Celebration
44087 Wipple Kd.
Llfe .... Overbrook
Center,
l'omeroy, OH
located at 333 Page
(:'i Points) ·
Street, Middleport, Ohio
New
&amp; Used Tires.
is pleased to announce
We
buy
u~cd tires .
that
due
to
internal
computer
whee l
changes in our facility.
we are accepting applialignments. ligh1
cations
for
lull
time
mechani c work.
7P -7A LPN's, part time
complete service oil
7A-7P LPN's and full
r1·me and pan tt"me changes, snMil engine
n:pair.
STNA's
to
JOin
our
We'
serv
il·e and
fri e[ldly and
dedicated
winteri ze boats and
staff.
Applicant's must
be
dependable.
team
RV's
players with positive alii:
(740) 992-5344
tudes.
Interested appli·
M on -Fri .
cants can pick up an application
M·F
B:3o
K:txJ am - 4:30pm
AM -4:30 PM . All eligible
Sat 8:00 am - 12
.
applicants wi ll then be
We appreciate your
contacted by Hollie Bum· L.--b;';";;.
·in;,;.e; ;s; ;s__...l
garner. LPN, Staff Devel- ·
opment
I I II I'&gt;
coordlnatoi-@740-992((}\;(1\ 11 1
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pant of the Drug-Free
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Concrete Removal
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IN
THE
TRI -STATE
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salary and benefits de·
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and qua lifications Plea se
call at 740·574- 1770 or
lnaured
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WV042182 Free Estimates
Ser~1ce' Bus
9000

Sportswriter
The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking motiva ted, people-oriented
individual ti fill a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriler. The suecessful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for the
daily edition of the newspaper, as well as assis t
with the productiOn of
sports pages. Excellent
writing and English skills ,
photography-skills and
knowledge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position is lull time.
40 hours a week, with
benefits. Interested par·
ties can send resumes to
Kevi n Kelly,' Managing
Editor. Ohio Valley Pubfishi ng Co., 625 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 or kketly@mydailytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

e

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217

Complete Tree Care
lrr•ur.cl • FrM E•llm•t"

- "'

119allp Qtrtbune
~oint !tlea:5ant llegi5ter
Th~ Daily Sentinel
ti&gt;un~ap m:ime5 -&amp;entinel

Hill's Self
Storage

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com

j

NEA
ACROSS

Service

··-

~a:IUpolh~

Address

Medical

!!

Help Wanted

Subscriber's Name

Johnson's Tree

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Phillip
Alder

~:;:;:9-:1:2:Sit.:=;:~

terest wilt be · contacted
for pre-employment as·
sessmentsl intef'lliews.
Reply to : M&amp;G Polymers
Attn: Human Resources
- Maintenance Mechanic
P. D. Box 8
Ap·
pte Grove. _wv 25502

www.mydallysentinel.com
BRIDGE

740·892·5682

Direct Care Staff in resi dential Youth program.
Must b!'l 21 years of ag e.
Pay based on e)(perience.
Call wv 60hr Underground
Mon-Fri Miners Class,
(7401379-9083
starting
9em-3pm.
soon.
Whit-Co-Training
Hair Dresser Wanted at 304·372·8346
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Beauty
Salon
Maintonanco/
Katrie
conlact
DomUiic
304-675·2828
Service Manager &amp; Serv·
maintenance
Part·ti(lle
ice Technicia n positions
25-30hrs
per
available Health care &amp; wol'k.er.
Retirement plans avail- week, Pay based on ex·
able. Please send
perience.
Call
sume
lo (740)379·9083
Mon-Fri
LL C@C:A.REO.COM
between 9am-3pm
lax to 740-446·9 104

'

Tuesday, September 23, 2008
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ARLO &amp; JANIS

�· Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 23,

2008

Pro leagues feeling economic squeeze play.·
.•
•
•

.I

Bv RoNALD BLUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

' NEW YORK The
, tutnult in the U.S. economy
finally is starting to affect an
il)dustry that has enjoyed
~ a r s of growth: major
league' sports.
' The NBA is laying off
employees. Major League
Baseball altendance has
dropped after tour straight
record years. The NFL says
re venue is under pressure .
While the ·symptoms are
relatively mild so far, the lat·
est developments say some·
thing about how far financial
woe has spread in a nation
where the appetite for sports
seems ever-expanding .
AP photo
" I used to come to maybe Joann Tuma, left. watches her daughter, Julia, 8, and son, Johnny, 6, enjoy their meal ·as
eight or 10 games a year, but their as their dad, Scott, holds onto an Indians bear during a baseball game against the
this year it was only four Minnesota Twins, Wednesday in Cleveland. The tumult in the U.S. economy finally is startgames on three trips," said ing to affect an industry that has enjoyed years of growth, major Jeague ·sports.
Jack Maloney, a Cleveland
Indians fan.
at eKpenses, fearing the before mid-2008 already are this year following the three
NBA commissioner David boom years may be over in a locked in . there are indica- highest-drawing seasons in
Stem said his league intends , business that once seemed lions teams m.ay face a league history. The NBA's
t() trim at least 50 of the 800 recess1on-prooL
· tougher lime sellmg seats for average of 17 ,395last season
jobs in its U.S. work force,
Last winter and spring , 2009 and beyond .
trailed
only
2006,07
more than 6 percent , and coming off baseball's first
"Anything outside of rent, (17 ,757)
and
2005-06
~ays the NBA has shuttered season toppmg $6. b1lhon m taxes. fuel, food •. shelter, (17.558).
its league office in Los revenue, commiSSIOner Bud after that everythmg falls
The NFL has set regularSelig was saying the. sport into the catego'!' o~. discre· season attendance records
Angeles.
. Make no mistake
could break 80 lllilhon m tlonary spend\ng ,
said for five straight years·, drawAmerica's major leagues still attendance for the first time. Bernard Baumohl, chief . ing 17.3 million fans last seatake in billions of dollars , Indeed, dunng the opemng global economist of The son and averaging 67,738.
with
individual
team half of the season, MLB was Economic Outlook Group. But darker times may be
incomes varying through a at times slightly ahead of last "We may not see any signifi- ahead, at least when it comes
sliding equation that includes year's pace.
cant rebound in consumer to the bottom line . .
tis:kets,luxury suites, nation- · Heading into the final two spending •. especially dis~reIn May, the league decided
al and local broadcasting, weeks of the regular season, t10nary, disposable spendmg, to opt out of its labor consponsorship, advertising. however, average attendance until2010."
tract in 2011,.as opposed to
concessions, parking and was 32 ~'153 , down about I
Stem anticipates the sale 2013.At the time, the owners
licensing.
percent from last year's of full season tickets and noted they were paying playBut eKecutives throughout record of 32,785.
equivalents will be down ers $4.5 billion this year, just
sports are taking a new look · While season tickets sold about I percent to 2 percent under 60 percent of total rev,

enue . Salaries generally lag
behind the economy by a
couple of years..
·
More recently, Goodell
wrote in a memo to his staff
that costs are rising and
league revenues are under
pressure . He urged staff to
control costs and identify
new sources of revenue.
The NHL's story .is slightly
different from the other
leagues. because of a lockout
that wiped out its 2004-05
season. It's been busy
rebuilding its · revenue and
fan base , so it's harder to
compare its recent seasons to
those of the other leagues.
Ticket sales are up 3.6 percent from last year.
Across the board, tickets
prices ha~e risen steadily.
Baseball 's
average
increased 10 percent this
year to $25.43 and the NFL's
went up 8 percent to $72.20,
accordmg to the Team
Marketing Report . The
NBA's average was $48.83
last season and the NHL's
$48.72, TMR said.
And teams still are content
charging as much as they
think the market will bear.
·The best seats at Citi Field,
the New York Mets' ballpark
opening in 2009, will cost an
average of $495. That's a
New York bargain, believe it
or not. Tne top tickets at new
Yankee Stadium are $2,500.
Some in the stands have
had enough, especially in
poorer, small markets.
Declines in ticket sales
have started for some teams.
After reaching 3 millibn in
attendance for eight straight

seasons, the San Francisco
Giants will fall short . Is it
due to the slowdown, the
departure of home run king
Barry Bonds or the Giants'
losing record?
A weak economy doesn't
help, . and the slowdown is
felt beyond the turnstile .
Team coverage in many ·
newspapers has been cut
back , with media budgets
battered by advertising and
readership declines . That
translates into a decreased
presence in print for teams.
At the same time, all the
leagues expect a decrease in
car·ads - long a rnajor sponsor - forcing clubs and networks to search for other
advertisers .·
·
For
Major
League
Baseball, the sale of licensed
goods - such as jerseys and
caps - is flat when compared with last year. It would
be down factoring out the
All-Star game at Yankee
Stadium , which produced
extra revenue.
To ensure stability, NBA
commissioner Stem recommended more than a year ago
to his owners that they try to
lock in long-term TV contracts with regional sports
networks.
. There's an odd logic to his
advice. If fewer fans buy
tickets for games, more may
watch on TV - and higher
ratings could mean more revenue for regional sports networks, many of which are
partially controlled by team
owners.
So, in the end, te.ams could
win by I.osing.

JFS employees make
HOPE donation, A3

50 CENTS • Vol.

sH.

11inner

KEN WAMSlEY
of Gallipolis

• Eastern survives at
River Valley. See Page BI

HOLZER CLINIC
We're Everywhere You Are!

2.------~~--------------

LletnH 01750048..000 and 001

3. ___________________

4. ___________________
5. ________________. . ;. .

WFD'IiJo:Sil.\Y, SEI'TEl\lBER 24, 20118

. Bv BRIAN .J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

assumed responsibility for
the operation of the village
jail since joini'ng the police
! forceearlierthi s year.Healso
has the title of jail administrator, a title he al so held under
previous employment for the
· Meigs County Sheriff. (See
related story, page 1.)
The promotions carry pay
raises. Wood will receive a
35-cent hourly raise, and
Davidson will receive 60
cents more per hour.
White ·councilman Craig
Wehrung questioned the
necessity of the promotions
and the pay raises, the vote
to approve them was unani'-

. Page AS
• Anthony Corsi, Jr., 76
• Jay Smith, 37

INSIDE~

·• Ohio highway patrol
chief juggles budget
cuts. See Page A2.
• Ohio man accused
of planting fake pipe
bombs. See Page · A3
• Probe: Medicare
paid billions in suspect
claims. See Page A6

..

NAME:. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

,

Lift Cllllb

WHV PIIIDI! LIFT CHIII .I II

Bland and sil wtltl ease in
a Pride Lift Chair· a fine furpishing

, that will accent your home while
enhancing YQur !lie.
• Single ewllch hand ~ontrol for euy operation

~~-- • Styllah color and Iabrie cholcea

• Palenled, qulel and amaoth llfteyslem

· tntregraled 811111fll8ncy ballery backup
(l\'f( . ~

N

Each Tuesday through Dec. 9, a numbered game will
appear in each participating merchant's ad;
Indicate your pick of winners and write It beside tlie
corresponding number.
Entries must be dropped otT at the:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd .Avenue
· . GaiUpolls, OR 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
und in r.ase of ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 ~ears of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

on

Details

ADDRESS:. _ _ _ _ __

PHONE: _ _ _ _ _ __

Page A3

INDEX

•

2 SEcrloNs- 12 PAGES

I
I.

Annie's Mailbox

A3

I

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

I
I

I
I

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

2520 Volley IJrh-e • Poilu Plcnsant, W\' • 20l-hnt fncilil y

304~ 675-4340

The Family of Professionals

mous. Wehrung asked why
Davidson should be promated '\f he ~1g the
work anyway." but Mayor
Michael Gerlach said that,
precisely. is why the promolion is in order. .
Davidson "should be
compensated and recognized" for the work he has
done for the department
since Miller's departure ,
Gerlach said. particularly in
light·of his work as second·
in-command while ·swift
was away from the job.
In another personnel
action , council approved
Brian Jacob-Johnson , David

Heighton
and
Joseph
Woodall as employees in
the pub! ic works depart·
ment, at a · starting rate of
$10.50 per hour,
Building
Inspector
Randall Mullins discussed a
proposal from the owner of
a condemned house on Mill
Street, the first house above
the Legion Park. The owner.
whom Mullins did not identify. has offered to donate
· the property to the village in
exchange for its demolition .
Council took no·action .
Council also:
• Set trick or treat from 6
to· 7 p.m. on Oct. 30.

Bs

Comics

· A4

Editorials

Ob.~~~!es~
Sports
·

As
B Section

.

Weather

A3

.

@ 2008 OhJo Valley
.

Publishin1 Co.

POMEROY - This week
Pomeroy Village Council
· approved taking out a loan
to pay its share of a
$196,978 paving project.
After opening two bids,
council went with a 4.15
percent fixed rate five,year
loan with Farmers Bank for
$40,000.
The
village
received $147,000 in Issue
· Two funds to pay for the
.remainder of the job. Paving
should be compleled this
fall before bad weather and
includes paving of Lincoln
Hill up to the water tower.
7A from the Beacon to the
corporation limit , Pleasant
Ridge Road, Martin Street
on both ends , Riverview
Drive. the exi sting paved
roads . in Beech Grove .
Cemetery.
Council tabled approving
or denying two new hires in
the water department. Clerk
· Treasurer Kath)' Hysell ·
informed council Village
~. ·.
~

RACINE - At its most
recent
meeting,
the
Southern Local , School
Board recently approved·
personnel for a variety of
positions.
Hired for the ASK program, Monday-Wednesday,
t.wo and one-half hours jJer
day for 55 days, $23 per
hour, Misty Rogers, Donna
Sayre, Beth Bay, April
King ,
Rachel
Yates .
Tuesday-Thursday. two and
one half hours per day for
54 day.s, $23 per hour, Lori
Hill , Vicki Hill, Carolyn
Robin son, Jenny Manuel,
. Autumn Lisle .(paid for
PBA dollars) . Special education teacher, Monday·
Wednesday, two and onehalf hours a day for 109
uays, $23 per hour, Bill
Beegle. Morning hours
teacher, Monday-Friday, ·
one hour per day. 140 -days ,
$23 per hour, Beth Bay.
Paraprofessional aides.
Mtinday-Thursday, two and
one-half hours per day, I 09
day s, $10 per ho11r. Pam
Cunningham, Belinda Arms ,
Launa Teaford, Evelyn
Stanley. Intervention, two
and one-half ~ours per day,

-·&amp;
···~~.•
......

Please see Paving. AS

Please see Southern, AS

,

. Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAILY SE NTtNEL. CO M

Bv BETH SERGENT

Southem
approves
personnel

• Appro,·ed illl appropriation adjuslment as recommended by Fiscal Officer
Susan Baker and fi.nance
committee in I he ge neral
fund . se wer fun d. fire
departmen t. ami water operatin g fund li abil ity insur·
ance lines .
• Appro vc u payment of
bill s in I he amount of
$3 8.715 .03.
• Met in executi ve session
to di scuss I he poss ible
acquisilion ofreal eslale .
Al so
pre s~nt
were
Council Members Rue
fyloore. Sandra Brown . Julia
Hous1on. and Shawn Rice.

Middleport jail
nearly ready
.for• outside
pnsoners

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Bv BETH SERGENT

~ ·

t)

www.rnydailysentind.cnm

.approves
loan• for
paVIng

BSERGENTilMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

FuN Service
Shop

'

Po~eroy

WEATIIER

Suspension &amp;
Bodyllfll

-

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
promoted two police offi.
cers at Monday evening 's
regular meeting.
Sgt. Ben Davidson was
promoted to lieutenant. based
on a ·recommendation from
Chief Bruce Swift. Davidson
has acted as second . in command of the department since
the dismi ssal of U . Jeff
Miller in January.
Ofticer Mony Wood was
promoted to sergeant in the
Wood
has
department.

446·2404
Hl88·446·2684
211 Upptr Alvet .Ad. Clalllpollt, Ohio
· 112 mile lOuth of thl Silver Bridge
Ucansa CC 700011·000 lind 001

1..___________________

5:~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Prinl&lt;-d on IOO 'k
Rec.n led !'lcwsprint

Middleport·council promotes police officers

SPORTS

OBITUARIES
lee~

;'l;o.

Bikes awarded at
Biker Sunday, As

'

•

~

-

.............~-· ~ .. . ...
·~

"'. .

. "

. .,,. . .

....

0

..

;.

....

Please see Jail, AS

_.,.,..,~·

Brian J. ReedlphotQ
Elena Musser, daughter of Steve and Barbie Musser, Pomeroy, expressed herself in an art
project as part of the weekend's Art in the Park event in Dave Diles Park.

Accident ties

. MIDDLEPORT - The
V.illage of Middleport is getting closer 10 opening its jail
to prisoners from other jurisdictions . Mayor Mich ael
Gerlach said Monday.
Th e jail ha s been closed
to inmates olher than I ho se
arrested by the village
police department due to
liabilitv concern's, since the
death s· of two inmates
there. The villa~e has lost
considerable i1icome due to
that restriction. and council
began to initiate the repairs
needed to re-open il earlier
this year.
Officer Mon y Wood. who
served as the counly 's jail
administrator several years
ago , was hired in thai capacity earlier this year. Officers
have been subject to training, and repairs haw been
under way.
(
At Monday_ evenin g's
regular
meeting
qf
Middleport
Village
Council. Gerl ~ch reported
that a camera sy slem
required for re-opening the
facility to oulside prison ers
h.a s been in slall ed. Onl y
minor repairs 10 a door in
the re ception area rcnmin to

traffic

Stall photo

An accident on East Main Street in front of Det!Willer Lumber tied up traffic for a bit yes·
terday morning. Emergency personnel from the Pomeroy Fire and Police Departments as
well as Meigs EMS responded to the scene. Here, Pomeroy firefighters help clear the
roadway after a car and truck collided. Anot~er accident between a tractor tra1ler and
truck on Court Street was also reported yesterday morning . No further deta1Is were available at press time .

Area jobless
rates climb
BY KEVIN KELLY
KK.ELLY @ MYOAlLYT A lB~ N E . C O M

GALLIPOLIS
Although the number of
people claiming uncmpl uy·
ment in Meigs County was
down la st month ove r a
July high. it was still nne of
the (wo Ohio. counti es with
the highest jobless rale in
the state .
Following · last Friday's '
report that unemployment
statewide was al 7.4 percent
in
Au gust.
Ohio
Department' of Jobs and
Family Service s released
county-by-county dula un .
Tuesday . showing Meigs
wa s at i0 .8 percenl las1
month , down two-tenths of .
a percent from the II . percent posted during Jul y.
Meigs shared the August
rate witli Morgan Q:lunl~/'1-:'
which also recorde~· i0 .8
percent unemployment in
August. Vinton . V&lt;\ n .Wert
and Crawford counl ies were
closest. each at 10 .2 percent .
Gallia Counly saw its rate
for August increase by fivetenths of a percent . from 6.9
percelll in July to 7.4 pe1;cent .
With the exc eption of
Jack son County . which
remained uncha11ged from

Please see Jobless, AS
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