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                  <text>Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel .com

Thursday, September 20 , 2007

Nixed visit highlights
. tricky decisions .
.about who goes to
ground zero, A6

2007 FaD Home

Improvement edition
inside today's Sentinel

••
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o(J'\I"""L'\cd)

'\c.

ll\111 \\

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• Local runners compete
at Jackson Invitational.
See Page81

BY

BRIAN

J. REED

panies included different
specifications and pricing
structures in their bids. The
POMEROY
-Four bids were referred to Grants
firms have submitted bids Adminstrator Jean Trussell
for repair and· replacement for review and action at the
of sidewalks in Pomeroy commissioners' next meetas part of a half million- ing on Wednesday.
dollar ~rant project.
This is the third attempt to
Meellng
Wednesday, get bids for the sidewalk
County project, which is part of a
Meigs
Commissioners opened bids bigger . , . Community
from four firms for the side- Development Block Grant
walk project: Tom Mayle and Community Distress proSons Construction, Inc., gram awarded to the Village
$171,616, Bartlett, DGM, of Pomeroy.
Inc., Beaver, $79,000, Parker
The village has until
Corp. , Tuppers
Plains, July, 2008 to spend the
· $193,281.25, and Bruce grant. . $73,100 has been
Bumgardner and The Pool allocated for sidewalk
People, Pomeroy, $119,734. · repairs, a project chosen by
The four contr11cting com- residents via surveys.
BREEO@MVDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

Eastern
board
approves
personnel
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

t6 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A7

Buckeye page

AB

Calendars

A7

Classifieds

ss-6

Comics

87

Editorials

A4

Faith • Values

A2-3

Movies

As

NASCAR

B8

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

''""·IH\d:llh •.c·n t tlw i'Ht•

Commissioners open bids for Pomeroy sidewalk project

SPORTS

~ Gilaa•.

I...,IPI I\IBI-.I{:!.J .:.!OO_,

B Section
A7

© 2007 Ohio Vulle)' Publishing Co.

TUPPERS PLAINS -The Eastern Local Board
of Education approved
substitute teachers and
substitute
classified
employees at We4,lncsday'·s
regular meeting. ~ ·· , . ·
The
following
were
approved as substitute teach:
ers: Natalie J. Faulk, Tiffany .
Kehl, Jennifer A. Baldwin,
Leland Carver, Kristine S.
Colburn,
Sharon
Cunningham,
Trevor
Hanhilammi, Chad Huston,
Mackenzie Lackey, Sarah
Russell, Cory Streets, Jason
Williams and Wendy Beegle.
Approved as substitute
teacher
aides
were:
Kimberly Carl, Carolyn
Searls, Michele Vanaman,
Hollie M. Ferrell, and
Connie Soulsby.
.The board approved the
resignation of bus driver,
Keith Downs.
Approved as classified
substitutes were: Jeanie
Ridenour,
secretary;
Deanna Shepard, cook; Kim
Carl,
secretary;
Mary
Pellegrino, cook; Keith
Downs, bus driver.
The board approved
Sarah Lee and Nicole
Honaker as student teachers
in the elementary school,
and Nancy Circle as entry
year teacher mentor for the
2007-08 school year.
The following supplemental
positions were
approved: Brad Brannon,
fall weight room coordinator, and Martie Baum,
Freshman class advisor.
Brent
Bissell
was
approved as a casual labor
employee at $7.50 per hour
for a maximum of 20 hours,
retroactive to Sept. 4, 2007.
Extended service was
approved for Sheryl Roush
and Chad Griffith.
The following
were
approved, as volunteers in
the elementary school:
Norma
Arbaugh,
Lisa
Averion, Laurie Boyles ,
Paula Buckley, Tammi
Causey,
Jenni
Dailey,
Angela Damewood, Brenda
Day, Linda Dunlap, Mindy
Durst, Linda Hensley,
Tabitha Horner, Rae Lynn
Kimes, Sarah Kuhn, Tanya
Lambert, Serena Lemley;
Carri
Long,
J.e nnifer
McBride , Richard Nease,
Jenny Ridenour, Bobbi
Salyer, Melissa Scyoc ,
Teresa Shamp, Alice Sharp,
Dawn Weddle, Shelley
Welch and Paula Wood .
McKenzie Roush, Aaron
Roush, Jacob Haught and
Please see Eastem, 11.5

A listing of sidewalks. to Commissioners received
be repaired is as follows: only the Lane's bid for the
Spring Avenue and Main heating system replacement
Street to the corner of project. It will be paid for
Condor Street, Spring through a capital improveAvenue from the corner of ment loan through Farmers
Condor Street to Wolfe Bank and Savings Co.,
Drive, Main Street at the which will also pay for
Dollar
General
store, repairs to the sandstone
Sycamore Street, Lincoln along the street level of the
Hill, Second Street and courthouse.
Mulberry Avenue, and the
At the request of Engineer
Meigs County Courthouse Eugene Tnplett, commisrear parking lot entrance.
sioners approved a resolu, Commissioners awarded tion allocating $500 annuala bid of $36,700 to Lane's . ly from the county's oneBoiler Repair of Marietta percent sales tax revenue
for the removal and replace- for roads and bridges,
ment of two gas boilers, allowing additional points
new gas lines· and a new for the county in State
pump to serve' the Meigs Capital Improvement (Issue
County
Courthouse. 2) project scoring.

Commissioners also:
• Approved appropriations
adjustments for the economic development office, auditor, and treasurer.
• Approved payment of
bill s in the amount of
$276,937.40.
• Approved a $20,800
appropnations request for
the · Litter Control and
Prevention office, for equipment.
• Approved an additional
appropration for the coroner, and tabled a request'for
additional appropriation for
postage .
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport · and Jim Sheets,
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

God's NET
to benefit
from bike run

nigbt

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BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY God's
NET will benefit from this
Saturday's Inaugural All
Ohio Valley Bikers Benefit
Run which begins at the
same time in both Pomeroy
and Marietta.
The first bike is out at II
a.m. on Saturday at both the
Pomeroy parking lot and
S&amp;P Harley D ~vidson in
Marietta with th~ .l~st bike
out by I p.m. The cost to
ride in the benefit is $10 per
rider. Bikers leaving from
each destination will follow
two separate paths with
each leg of the ride approximately 75 miles each. The
Meigs County leg will stop
at the roadside rest on US
33, Dow Lake on Ohio 50
and the Barlow ParMar
Station before meeting up
with the Marietta group at
the National Guard Armory
on Front Street in Marietta.
The last bike is due in at
the armory by 5 p .m. where
there will be live music,
' auctions, cash prizes and
drawings as well as food.
Commemorative T- ~h irt s
will also be for sale. All pro·
ceeds will be split evenly
between God's NET and
Wood County's Old Man
Rivers which both help less
fortunate children and families by providing food.
clothing and the necessities
for life and both are 50 I (3) c
exempt and tax deductible .
Both organization s provide free, hot meals and
Beth seraent/plloto pass out ~chou! supplies
Tt;mlght many people across the area are tailgating before cheering on their .favorite high among other services.
Jenni Dunham, a coordi school football team. Here , Noah Gross (left) and Zach Bartrum take a bite out of what the
Meigs Local Alumni Association taitgaters had to offer at a recent Marauder home game. nator at God's NET said
Tfte Marauders are on the road tonight at Fairland, Southern travels to Wirt County, W.Va. there are many uses for
money received to the orgaqf,lll Eastern hosts Belpre at home.
nization and include money
for food, staffing and programs for youth.
On a weekend night the
God's NET staff may see
60-80 kids, all of whom can
~ Bv BETH SERGENT
favorites (or not so Saturday's show is a rein · have a free dinner, play
~ERGENT&lt;iiMYDAI LYSENTINEL.coM
favorites) from ringside.
ing exhibition during inter- games like pool or video
,,
Many PIW wrestlers will mission which is free for games. School buses acrual,PORTLAND The participate
in
several participants. There is a $3 ly ·stop at God's NET in the
Pi!~land
Community matches ,
including · a per horse grounds fee and afternoons as a sort of home
Center will be one busy "hardcore match" where the majority of entry fees away from home for some
place this weekend when it fans are encouraged to for each event are $2 with kids who enjoy having a
welcomes the return of pro- bring the weapons for the open poles and open barrels social place to go in the
fessional wrestling tonight wrestlers to use. Mr. Sex costing $5 each though evenings to hang out with
and
the Ohio River ~ppeal Eric Steel with these events have an 80 their friend s.
Producer's Horse Show $teff Leppard ~ill defend percent payback for the
Dunham said God 's NET
Series tomorrow.
the PIW litle With appear- first three places. Entry serves free meals to kid s
Wrestlers from Pure ances by the Sons of Rock fee s help take CjU'e .of the everyday of the week
Impact Wrestling return 'n Roll vs. The Next cost o( ribbons and awards. except Thursday s and
Other events include hal - Sundays. This Sunday is the
for a third engagement Generation, Chris Kahil vs.
tonight at the c"enter. Doors Gorgeous JC, The Lynch ter, showmanship, lead-in beginning of a new worship
vs. . Th~
Day (under 10), walk trot youth service called "Sunday
open at 6 p.m., the., show Boys
begins at 7 p.m. and tickets Brothers , VIpcr vs. Death (18 and under), walk trot Evenin g Bless ings" which
are $10 for adults and $5 · ,Falcon Zen~ vs. Dammn.
(open), we stern pleasure is open to everyone of all
for kids. The show is said , 1'he ORPs Horse. Show {youth t8 and under). west- ages and begins at 7 p.m. at
to feature professional Senes continues . with the ern pleasure (open), fo'ur the Mulberry Community
.wrestlers with all the chair arena openmg for warm comers, trail class, catalog Center.
throwing and stage diving ups at 10 a.m . tom~rrow race, fl ag race , down and
Dunham said money
the crowd can handle. The and the show beg mmng at back ( 12 and under), down could al so be used for procrowd is also encouraged II a .m. at the Portland and back (over 12), speed g rams for youth which
to participate by making Show Arena beh1nd the
signs and cheering their center.
New
to
this
Please see Portland, AS
Please see Bike run, AS

Horse show, wrestling return to Portland

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FAITH • VALUES
Hill tribe Christians ____:_____ A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 21, 2007

Friday, September 21, 2007

BY PETER ENAV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

i
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SAPULOU, Tai wan
Sixty years after Roman
Catholic and Presbyterian
missionaries· first converted
large numbers of Taiwanese
aboriginals in their leafy
mountai n
villages,
Christianity here is entering
a new phase. Adherents are
leaving the faith.
Faced with a declining
agricultural economy in
their. hard pressed rural
commu.nities, more and
more upcountry Christians
are moving to Taiwan's
bustling cities, where ·
world! y temptations and a
bewildering social framework are challenging their
beliefs.
At a recent Sunday morning service in the nearby
community of Laolauran,
American
Presbyterian
missionary John McCall
tried to rally the faithful, as
looal hill tribe pastor
Sakulu translated his
Mandarin Chinese sermon
into the aboriginal language of Paiwanese.
"God loves you and he is
your father," McCall said.
"You're all the children of
God ."
But the church was mostly empty, and the worshippers mcluded few if any
young adults.
"I used to ~o to church,"
said Dzwo Ymg-gung, who
recently returned to the
area to work at the Dawu
Mountain
National
Education Center. "But
now I don't. My faith has
fallen away."
The attitude of Dzwo and
thousands of hill · tribe
Taiwanese ·like him represents a fundamental challen~e to McCall and the
legiOn of local pastors he
and his predecessors have
helped train at three
Presbyterian
seminaries
around the island.
Ever since Canadian
George Mackay came to
Taiwan in 1871 , the center
of the missionary enterprise on the island has
always been its hill tribe
people, whose ancestors
migrated here from south
Pacific islets about 6,000
years ago.
The Paiwan. and others
once proved much more
receptive to Christianity
than their lowland neighbors,
who
followed
Buddhism, Confucianism

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and Taoism.
Today, some 65 percent of
the hill tribe population of
460,000 is Christian, about
equally divided between
Presbyterians
and
Catholics, according .to government statistics. That
compares with about 2 percent of Taiwan's 22.5 million Han Chinese, who originated on the Chinese mainland, where they constitute
a large majority.
Sociologist
Jonathan
Unger · of
Canberra's
Australian
National
University said the hill
tribes were more open to the
Christian message largely
because of the prejudice
they felt from the Han.
Other Asian minority peoples, in places like southwest China, Laos, and
upland Thailand, also were
more willing to embrace
Christianity, he said.
"It's a common phenomenon that a minority people
considered inferior in many
respects by the dominant
culture will protect itself by
turning to a world religion,"
Unger said.
Rangalu, a 45-year-old
primary school teacher in
the hill tribe village of
Sapulou, said the discrimination he experienced
played a key role in forming
his own Pruwan identity.
"When I was in school in
Taipei the (Han) teacher
would sar, .'Look at .this
Paiwan kid, he's so dark,
he's dirty; don't olay with
him,'" he said. t'It really
made an impression."
His wife Muni, 39, cited
another
reason
for
Christianity's popularity:
the health care and other
social services provided by
foreign ~pissionarie's.
"They were all very
poor, they had very few
clothes," said Muni, who
spent seven years studying
theology at the Yusan
Presbyterian Seminary in
the eastern Taiwanese city
of Hualien. "But the missionaries came and cured
them, they gave them
clothes and they taught
them to love God." ·
·
But now, she said more
local young people · are
going to Taiwanese cities in
search of work.
"They are discriminated
against, they lose their
connection to the ·church,
they start to drink, their
lives become unstable,"
she said.

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I'm not 11 "die-hard" Andy
Griffith show fan, but I
sometimes· have the opportunity to sit down with my
family and enjoy a hilarious
Pastor
episode with them. Maybe
Thom
my all-time favorite episode
Mollohan
is the one entitled "Aunt
Bea, The Warden," where
she is hapless!y made the
caretaker of Ous, the town
drunk, who can't "sleep dff'
his stupor in the jailhouse as perfectly sc:nsible solution
he normally does. Not the to the crime wave besetting
least inclined to coddle him little Mayberry ... tum the
as the sheriff and deputy are hardened criminals over to
in the habit of doing, she one who knows how to
promptly initiates her pris- · whip them into shape. Ah, ·
'oner mto " the Rock" (as he ye~ . Maybe I enjoy it all the
later affectionately refers to more because Aunt Bea
it) with a good dousing of reminds me a lot of my
cold water and a healthy . sweet and unassu~ping
dose of good old hard work. grandmother .,before she
However, Otis, not accus- went to be wiili the Lord.
tomed to a sentence of
As far as Otis goes, the
"hard labor,'' groans and whole idea of reforming a
moans his way through the .· man gone bad, of course, is
day. And in between his not a new one.lt defmes socigrass cutting, window ety's ~eneral attitude towards
washing, hall vacuuming, handlmg men and women
dish washing, and floor convicted of crimes and has
scrubbing, he makes several at its heart, for its greatest
less than heroic efforts at · proponents, a core of mercy.
"breaking out."
But since this episode was
But always wafching fot produced and aired in the
him is the ever vigilant eye show 's second season, folks
of Aunt Bea. Just as soon has who watched the show know
he slipped his shoes off so he that Otis · did not stay
can sneak out, she's right "reformed" for very long, no
after him with a snapping matter what oath he had
Unger that has all the effect made. He was back to the
of a cracking whip, So, after booze in short order and
all his futile efforts to escape remained in the Jess than
have been foiled (from dis- honorable JX&gt;Sition of "town
guising himself a&amp; a· laundry drunk" until a reunion movie
bag for the cleaners to truck was made many years latt&lt;r. ·
away, to his climbing out a
I've know men and
second-story window and women with · subst11nce
down ·a nearby painter's lad- addictions and can attest to
der), and in spite of his pleas :· the terrible chains that' atco-.
for mercy directed at the ~ot .and ·drugs ;!have prosheriff, he eventually "does , . duced for .them:· The addit~,
his time." Then, all cleaned tions themselves aside, con-'
up and looking sharp, he sequences to being under
vows never to touch ariother the influ!lnce, terrible ~CI'
drop of liquor. Later, he is sions, and tremendous l!lpS;
repeatedly referred to as es of moral fortitude destivy
·having been reformed. At the families; marriages, careers,
end of the episode, four and even lives in only
other prisoners who have moments. The addictions
been recaP.tured are trans- also create such a bond!lge
ported to 'the Rock" (since that men and women Who
the deputy's efforts to reform would have been horrified
them only results in their by the very idea, have fallen
escaping from jail). Once to such an extent that every
they realized where they are, sentence from their lips is a
one .cries out, ''Oh, no! We- lie and stealing becomes so
heard about this place! It's natural and subconsciously
·the Rock!" and the four of driven that they're not even
them try · tO SCfllDJble over aware that they are doing it.
the . sheriff and deputy back
But this column isn't realinto the police car. And when ly about alcohol or other
Aunt Hea herself material- substance abuse. It's about
izes; holding broon:Js, mo~s, all of us and our struggle
and buckets, one of the big, against sin. Spiritually
burly men points at her and speaking, we're all waging
yells to his brothers, a war, caught between
. "Bloody Mary!" just as they impulses that can overare all . shoved under her whelmingly and unexpectruthless reign by the sheriff edly surge within us, and
and deputy.
societal pressures to con. And what a logical and form, to "fall into line'~ and

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do what we' re told.
we depend must shift from ·
Although we each are cre- self-reliance to dependence
ated in the image of God, on God's strength (which He
our nature has been corrupt- offers us by His Holy Spirit
ed by our cumulative rejec- through His Word, prayer,
tion of God's love and authentic worship, and the
authority over us. Our loving support of other
nature, although designed Christian men and women
perfectly by a perfect who understand our strugDesigner, has gone out of gles and lift us up with love).
control and seeks to elevate
Reformation, even when it
its own interests above rela- appears to work, doesn't
tionship with God and even really work. The transformaour own long-term future . tion that comes from placing
'Humanity has an incredible our faith in Jesus alone as
addiction to selfishness· and . savior and His exertin~ His
pride. And it takes more lordship in our hearts ts the
than mere reformation for us only solution for setting us
to break free of it. You or I free from the bondage of our
may look at social problems, own sinful natures. You
diagnose them in other peo- might be inclined to settle for
ple ·(sometimes even cor- a watch-dog to help you get
rectly), and yet miss the fact in Shape. Or you might be
that we ourselves are each resigned to tolerating characliars at heart (if not overtly, ter flaws and spiritual needs
we're great at spinning the within yourself. I hope iJot
truth to our own benefit), though. Jesus has made a
thieyes by nature ("Well, the way for you and me to break
mistake was the cashier's, free and start clean with Him.
not mine"), and murderers After He's invested' so much
in the hidden chambers .o f so that we can be free, why
our thoughts ("I hate him for try to do it on·_our own?"
what he's done to me. I wish
Do not conform any
he were dead").
longer to the pattern of this
Maybe you disagree with world, but be transformed
my logic, but I've no doubt by the renewing of your
that if you were to honestly mind. Then you will be able
lay out all the thoughts to test and approve what
you've ever had on a table, Goo's will is - Hi·s good,
you'd be as red as a tomato.
and perfect will"
But the point isn't that God pleasing
(Romans 12:2 NJV).
stands over us like some
(Thom Molwhan and his
monstrous Aunt Bea with family have ministered in
flaming red eyes and a huge southern Ohio the past 12
rolling pin poised to whack years. He is the pastor of
us on the head, or even
. Community
snapping His fingers at us, Pathway
Church,
which
meets on
and demanding more blood,
sweat, and .tears. The point Sunday mornings at 455
isn't even'that God is telling Third Ave. He may be
you to pun ·yourself up by reached for comments or
your boot straps and reform questions by e·mail at pas·
yourself. "Now promise torthom®pathwaygallipo·
you'll be a good boy, Otis, lls.com).
and run along."
The point simply is that
what you and I need isn't
"reformation," it's "transformation." You can mold
something externally and
maybe make it resemble
something else (or break it in
trying to do it). But to really
change something into
something else, you've got
Po; r mon 'h
to get inside it and effect
change from its heart. That's
true of you and me. You and
I .
t
I can't be the people God
wants us to be unless we let
U/1 t.1w Todonlcal s...-J
Him transform us. And He · •• Fill!!
Unlimllod Houn, No Contradll
can't transform us unless we . • 10 E·moll Addo .."
let Him into our hearts. We • FIIEE 5pam ,.._,ion
need for more than our • lnvako lllllnv Avallablo
leltable Acceu Since 1994
appearances to change. Our
desires have to change; our
values have to change; and
our choices have to change.
And it takes a something
more than resolve and good
intentions on our part. The
source of strength on which

Evening· 7;30 p.m.
River V•lllfy
River Valley Apostolic Worship Centf:r,
873 S . 3rd Ave., Middleport. RC\'.

Michael Bmtford, Pa§tOf. Sunday, 10:30
am. Tue1. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

ElllllliDael Apoltolle 'l'lbenutde lac.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland .

Thun. 7:00p.m .. Putor Marty R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty -mhly olGool
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Mason ,
W.Va ., Pastor: Neil Tennant . Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 pm.,

I

I

j·

i

The Dance of Life·
There are many useful metapho,; for life. One that I particularly like is the "dance o
life,'' which highlight• the fact thai life can be graceful and beautiful, and /hal we
must use our bodies as instruments to move through life.
Life is indeed a kind of dance. which we can perfonn with
poise and grace or with awkward clumsinc~s. Of course,
we can al.&lt;m choose to "sit this one out," preferring to
watch from the sidelines while others dante
the night away. There is nothing wrong
wilh occasionally watching from the
sideline.-, since we can learn a 101 by
watching others, and even be
inspired, but we should also get out
there and dance: Life is not a spectator
sport. Perhaps the mnsl bcaUiiful part
of this metaphor of life a'\ a dance is
that it highlights the way in which our JiiC,
like a dance, is an opportunity fo r
self-e xpression. Dance ·allows a person to
express oneself beautifully, joyfully and
honestly. The best dance. like /he be&gt;t life.
is one lhat truthfully expresses a person's
inner being. So. we should rcm~hcr.
in life as in dance, to be true to ourselves.

Pastor: Mike Harmon, Sunday School
9:30 ro 10:30 am, Worship sel'\'icc 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed . preachin g 6 pm

Racine, OH

740·949•221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People.

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members of the MLS and REALTOR'
Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy
74D-992-3325
www.teafordrealestate.net

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

740·985·3561
992·1550

Thou has/ turned for me my mounu·ng into dtmci11g; tlloulwt loosed my
sackcloth and girded me wilh gladness, thnl my SOli/ miJY prai.~e thee and not
be silent. 0 Lord my Gud, I will give thnnks to thee forever.

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

• R.S. Y. l'salm 30:JJ./2

•

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
'-!!Y
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Pomeroy Churdt of Christ
212 W. Main St., Sunday Sc hool - 9:30
~ m .. Worship- 10:3.0 a.m .. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Se rvices - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wes~de Chun::h or Christ
33226 Chi ldren's Home · Rd ., Sunday
School - II a.m.. Wonhip - !Oa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Chrlsl
.Srh and r~--1ain , Puror: AI Ha rt~on ,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre. l et n
Director: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
- 9 :30a.m .. Worship- 8:1 5, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m., Wednesday Service s~ 7 p.m

Ellis
Rudand F1nt BaptUt Church
Sunday' School - 9:30 a.m.. WorshiP - ·
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Ftnt Baptist
Pa§tor Jon Brockert. East Main St ..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, WorshijY 1,0:30 am

Keno Church or Christ
Worship - 9:3 0 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace , Is! and
3rd Sunday

First Swtbem BapUst

41872 Pomeroy Pike, fastor: E. Lamar

Bearwalow Rldie Church of Christ

O'Bryant , Sunday School • 9:30 a-"\··
Worship-8:15a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

P.ustor:Bruce Terry, Sunday SclloOI -9:30
a.m.
Won hip - IO:JO a.m .. 6 :30 p.m,
Wednesday Services- (J:)(} p.m.

Flnt Raptbl Church
pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Pali-ner St.,
~ i ddleport, Sunday School -9:15a.m ..
Worship - IO: I.S a.m ., 7:00 p.m ..
~edneo'day SerYice- 7:00 pm.

Zion Cburth ~rChrlst
Pomeroy. Hurrisonvillc Rd . (RLI4 3).
Pastor: Roger Watson. SundD)' School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesd&amp;}' Serv ices- 7 p.m.

ltadne Flnt Baptist
Ryln. EatOn , pastor , Sunday
School- 9:30am., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m ., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.

~or:

Thpptrs Plaia Church of Christ
Instrumental. Wol'l!hip Se rvice - 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a.m .. Sunday Sc hool IO:IS a.m., Youth- !5:30 prn Sunday. Bible
Stm.ly Welhlesday 7 pm

SII...- Run Raptbt
John Swanson, Sunday School \Oa.m .. Worship - ll a .m., ".1 :00 p.m
,Wednesday Services- 7:00 p.m

Pas~ or:

Hradbury Chun:h of Christ
· Minister: Tom Runyo n, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepcn, Sunday School - 9:3 0
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. '

Mt. u aloa!14ptist
Pastor: Demiis Weivir' Sunday School9:4~ a,m ., Eve'n ing · 6:3Q p.m. ,
Wednesday ~!'\'ice s - 6:30p.m.

Rutland Church or Chrisl
S!.!:tda y Schoo l - 9:30 a.m., Won.hip and
Commu nion - 10:30 a.m., Bob 1. Werry ,

Betllllebem Baptist Churth

Mini ~rt: r

Great Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH,
Pastor: &amp;:1 Carter, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Won~hip - 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Bradford Churth or Christ
Corner of St. Rt : 124 &amp; Brodbury Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shamblin , Youth Mini ~te r :
Bill Amberger. Sun(lay School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Old l&lt;lbei Fne Wut Baptist Churdt
2860 1 St. Rl. 7, Middleport , Sunday

Service • 10 · ·~·· 6:00 p.m., Tue&amp;day
Services -6:00

I

FaUh Baptist Church
Railroad St. . Mason . Sunda)' School - 10
a.m., Worship · II a .m., 6 p.m.
Wedfesday Services- 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy
Director of Marketing and Admissions

Fort11t Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., Worship · 11 :30 a.m.

Hickory HiUs Chun:h of Christ
Thppers Plains. Pastor Mike Moore . Uiblc
clllSS, 9 a.m . Sunda y; worship 10 a.m.
Su11day; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
d a..,;s 7 pm Wed.
KeedsviOe Chur&lt;:h or Christ
Pastor: Philip S!urm, Sunday Schoo l: 9:30
a.m.. Worship Ser vice: 10:30 a.m .. Bible
S!udy, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Dexter Churth of Christ
Sund ay school 9:30a.m ., Sunday wor!ihip
- 10:30 a.m.
The Chun:h or Chrl&lt;~t of Pomeroy
lntusection 7 and 124 W, Evangel1s1:
Denni s Sargenl, Sunday Bible S!udy 9:30a.m., Worsh ip:' 10:30 a:m. at1d 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m

Christian Union

Hours
6 &lt;~m- 8 pm

Atmosphere

Mt. Moriah Baptl~t
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport,· Sunday

%i{fie's fl?._estaurant

School -9:30a.m., Worship -

Homemade Desserts Made D!!ily
740·992·7713

if. ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

..

Middleport, OH

. 740-992-6128
Local source for trophies ,
Ia ues t-shirts and more

a.m.

..
·'...

Hartford Churth of Christ in
Christian Union
Hurlford , W.Va., Pa stor:Da,'i d Greer.
Sunday Schoo l · 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p 10:30 a .m .. 7: 00 p.m.. Wednesday

services - 7:00p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church or God

'
Wednesday Services 7 pm.

Mile Hill Rd .. Racine . Pastor: lame s
'
Satt~rfield , Sunday Schoo l - 9:4.5 a.m..
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesda)' ~ rvices · 7 .
p.m.
Natland Chwdr. or God
Pastor: Ron Healh, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Joppa
Pa~tur: De.ru.il Null, Worship · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday ~ hool - 10:30 a.m .
Loa&amp; Bottom
Su nday School · 9:30 !ll .m ., Worship IU:30 u.m.
RetdsvUk
Wurstlip - 9:30 a .m.. Su nday School 10:30 a.m., F1rst Sunday or Month - 7:00
p.m. .;ervice

SyrKUK" t'int Cbttldt ol' God
Apple and Second S~s . , Pastor: Rev. David
Russell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
- a.m. E"ening Se-rvict's- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

l'llppers Plains St. PauJ
Jim Corbin , Su nday School - 9
a.m.. Wo_rship - 10 11. m .. Tuesday ~rv ices
- 7:30p.m.
CeolraJ Clusur
Asbury [Sy mcuse). PaJ&gt;tor: Bob Robinson,
Su nday School - 11:45 a.m., Worship · I I
a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.
Pa~tor :

Church of God of Propbtcy
OJ . White Rd . off St. Rt . 160. Pa~tor; PJ.
Chapman , Sunday School - 10 a.m .•
Worship- l l a.m.. Wednesday Services- 1
p.m.

Congregational
Trinll)' Churth
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble , WorshiP 10:2.5 a.m .,
Sunday School Y:l.5 01 .m

Enterprise
PMtor: Arland King, Sunday School - 9:'30
a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 33105 Hiland
Rd,Pomeroy
Flatwoods
Pastor: Kei th Rader, Sund ay Se houl - 10
a.m.. Worship - 11 a.m.

Episcopal
· Grace Ep!swpaJ Chun:b
326 E_ Mai n St .. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Hnly Eucharist 11:00 a.m. Rev
Edward Pa)'nc

~"o mt

Ruo

Pa~tor:

Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 u.m.

Holiness
Community Chun:h
Pa.s lor: Sieve Tomeli , Main Sueet.
Ru!land, Sunday Worship-1 0:00 a. m.,
Sunday Se rvice- 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pas tor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School 9:30a.m.. Wurship · 11:00 a.m.

Minenvlle
Pas1or: Bob Robinso n, Sunday School · 9
a.m., Worshi p- 10 a.m.

Danville Holln~u Church
31057 Slate Roule 325. Langsvl le . Pa~ tor:
Benjamin Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
am ., Sunday· worship - 10:30 a. m. a,. 7
p.m., Wedn'e !td~ y prnyrr service · 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Won&gt;hip - 10 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Cbap£1
Harriso nville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. SLJnday School 9:30 a.m..
Worship - I I a.m., 7:00p .m., Wednesday
Service -7:00p.m.

Pomeroy
Brian Dunham, Worship · 9:30
a.m., Sunday Sc hool- 10:35 a.m.
r~u l or :

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: K~:: ith Rade r, Sunday Sc hool - 9: IS
a.m., Worship - 10_ a. m., Youth
Fellowship , Sunday- 6 p.m.

Rose of Sh11ron Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutl:md , Pastor. ReV.
Dewey Ki11g, Sunday school- 9:30 a.m..
Sunday worship -7 p.m:• Wednesday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Rat land
Pastor: Rick Boume. Sunday School 9:30a .m .. Wors hip - 10:30 a.m.. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
'
Pastor: William K. Marshall , Su11day
School - 10:15 a.m.• Woohip - 9:15a.m..
Bible Study : Monday 7:00pm
SaO\n'lllt
Sunday School - 10 tt.m., Worship · 9 a .m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness ChuKh
1/2 mile off Rt . 325. Paslor: Rev . O' Dell
Mnnley. SundEly , Schqol
9:3U u.m..
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
Wednesd ay St:rvke · 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Dible Holiness ChuKh
75 Pearl S!.. Middleport Pa~1or: Rick
Bourne. Sunday SC~ ool - 10 a.m. Worship
- 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen.·iCC'- 7:30p.m

Hysell RuD Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunda}' School
- 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.
luarel Cliff Free Methodist Churc:h
Paswr: Gleun Ruwe, Sum.l ay Se houl ·
9:JO a.m .. !\'orship - 10:30 a.m. ~nd l'i
p.m..Wcdnesday Se rvice-7:00 p.m.

Pomtroy Ctuardt ol the N.u.arc:.
Pastor: Jan lavender. Sundly School 9:30 a.m.. Worship - !0:30 a.m. and 6
p.m .. Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.

Bald Knob . on Co.
Rogei- Willford,
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

L'besttr Churtb ol the N ~M
Pastor: Re v. Curtis Randolph, Sunday
Schoo l · 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
6 p.m .
Rill land Churtb or the N1111l"tUe
Pas1or: Isaac Shupe, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wltltt'l Chapel Wrsleyao
Coolville Road , Pa ~ lor : Rev. Charles
Manindalc . Sunday School - 9:30a .m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Wednesday Service
. 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Fairview Rlblr Church
letart. W.Va . Rt. I. Pallor: Brian May.
Sunday Scttool - 9:30a.m., Worship - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible S1udy · 7:00 p.m.
Faith Fellow!ihlp CI'UIIIde for Christ
Pastor : Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday, 7 p.m.

5tyracwe Communlly Church
2480 Second St., Syracuse. OH
Sun. School 10 am, Sundy night 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Gwi nn

A New BeaJnoln&amp;
(Full Gospel Ch~b) Hm iSOIIvi llt ,
Pastors: Bob and Kay Man ha,ll,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Calvary Bible Chllf'('k
Pa meroy Pike, Co . Rd ., Pastor: Re:v.
Blac;: k.wood , Sunday School · 9:30a .m ..
Worsllip 10:30 a .m ., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Amazloc Grace Community Chun:h
P85 tor: Wayne 0\lnlap. State Rt. 681 ,
Tuppers Plai ns, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm.. Wed. Bible Srudy 7:00p.m.

StlvmvtBe Community Chu.rdl
Sunday Sc hoo!IO:OO am , Sun da)' Worship
II :00 am , Wedne sday 7:00 pm Paswr:

Oasis Christian Fellowllhlp ·
{Non-denomimttional fellow1hip)
. Mee ting in !he Meigs Middle School
Caft:te:ria Pastor: Chris Stewart
10:00 am - Noon Sunday ; lnfonnal
Won hip, Childrt:n's ministry

Bryan &amp;

Mi ~~y

Dailey

Rejolda&amp; Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepon, Pastor: ·

Community of Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd., Pastor: Jim Proftiu ,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m.• Wedne1day Servic es - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 S.R. 7. Reedsville , OH 45712. 112
mile north of Eas1em Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church, Pastor Rob Barber,
Assoc iate Pastor Karyn Dav is, Youth
Pastor Suzie Franci s, Sunday services
JO:lij am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life.
· Cht s~. Wed . Home Cell Oroups 7:00
p.m., Outer Limit ~ Ceil Group a1 the
chun:h 6:30 pm to 8:30pm

Ash Stmt Cb•n:b
398 Ash St. , Middlepon,Paslor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Mo rning
Wor§hip - 10:30 a.m. k 7:00 prn ,
Wedne sday Service - 7:00 p.m .. Youth
Service- 7:00p.m.

Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman. Worsh ip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Clifton ~rn11cle Cbarch
Cliftoo , W.Va., Sunday Sc'hool- 10 a .m.,
Wonhip - 7 p.m.• Wednesday Se rvice - 7
p.m.
Ntw life Victory Center
3773 Georges Cree:k. Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor : Bi\1 Stntett, Sunda y Services - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wedne sda}' - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7p.m.
. Full GolprJ Cbun::h
or the Lh1.a1 Savior
Rt .338, Antiquity, Pa$tor: Jesse Morris,
Services: Saturday"2:00 p.m.

Salem Conunualty Cburcb
Back of West Columbia, W.Va.om l~v in g

Appe Lire Centtr
" Full-Oospel -Church", PaSion John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Maso~;~ , 7735017. Service time: Sunday 10 :30 a .m..
Wedne sday 7 pm

Bethliny
Pas1or: John Gilmore, Su nda)' School · 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m., Wednesday
Services - 10 &lt;~ .m .

Abuadanl Gtact R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. MiddlepCMt. Pastor TeM~
Da vis. Sunday serv ice, 10 a.m..
Wedne&amp;day service, 7 pm.

Carmel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Basha'n Rds. Racine, Ohio,
Pastor: John Oilmore, Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Wors hip - II :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Fallh Full Go8pel Church
Long BoHom. Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m, Worship . 9:30 a.m.
apd 7 p.m.. Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowship ~~er vice 7 p.m.

Morning St•r

. Harrl8onville Commanlty Cburth
Pastor: Theron Durtlam . Sunday - 9:30
a .m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School- II
a.ni .. Wol'l!hip - 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Carietoo iDtloDal Cburdl
Kinasbury Road , Pastor: Robert
Sunday School - 9:30
Service 10:30 a .m .. " """;-~.~;.-.
pm .

Road, Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 6752288 , Sunday School 9:30 am, Sund•y
evening ~rvice 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
Wednesday service 7:00pm

Hohlon Chrbtlan Frllowddp Church
Pastor: Heuchel White , Sunday School 10 am.Sunday Olurth serv ice-6:30 pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Jlatoratlon Chrbt.lao Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Alhens , Pastor :
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 pm

HOUM: ol Hulloa Mlnhtrle.
St. Rt. ll4 Lanpvil&amp;e. OH
Full doi;pel, CI Pastors Roben &amp;. Robertu
Musser, Sunday Schoo l 9 :30 am , ,
Worship 10:30 · am - 7:00 pm . Wed .
Service 7:00pm

Team Jesu Ml•lstrtcs

The Church or JfSUs
Christ or Latter-Day Salnfl'i
St Rt. 160. 446-62 47 or 446-7486 .
·Sun day Sc llool 10:20- 11 a .m.. Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon,
Sttname nl Ser vi ce 9- 10:15 a .rn .,
Hom~making meeting. l.~ r Thun.- 7 p.m.

East letart
P&lt;~slor: Bil l Marshall Sunday Sehoul •
-· 9a.m., Worship · 10 a.m.. 1st Sunday
, every month e\'ening service 7:1)0 p.m.:
Wednesday- 7 pm.
K~telne

Pastor: KelT)' Wnod, Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Wol'l!h ip - II a . m.Wednes d~ty
Services 6 pm: Thur Bible Study 7 pm

Lutheran
St. John lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Wo1 ship - 9:00a.m .. Su11day
School - I0:00 11 .m. J•astor:

Coolville United Methodl!it Parish
Pa!ltor: Hden Kline, Cool ville Church

Our Saviour Lulberan Church
Wa lnut und Henry St~ .. Ra vensw ood ,
W_Va'., Pustor: Da,·iU R us~c ll . Suuday
School- 10:00 a.m .. Wnn.hip · II a.m.

Mam &amp; Fifth St.. Sun . School - 10 n.m.,
Worship 9 a.m.. Tues. Services- 7 p.m.

&amp;the! Church
Township Rd .. 46KC , Sunday, Schoo l - 9
a.m. Worship
10 a.m., Wednesday
Services~ 10 a.m.
·

St. Paul Lutheraa Church
Comer Syca more &amp; Second St., Pornt!roy.
Sun . School - 9:45 n.m.. Wor.; hip - 11 a.m

Hockingport Chun:h
Grund Slrcel. Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 u.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phillip Bell

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Ne;~se
8ec:htel United Melhodi111
New Haven. Ri chard Nease, Pastor,
Sunda~· w o r ~ h 1 p 9;30 a.m. Tues . 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Tonh Chun::h
Ct\ . Rd . 63 ..Sunday Sdtool , 9:30a.m..
Worship - IO:)U un .

Nazarene

MI. Oli ve United Melhodlst
Off 124 be hjnd Wilkesville, _Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.. nmrsda)·
Services· 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of' lhr Nar.arme
!'astor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School Q:)O a.m..Worship - 10:30 :t.m., 6: 30p.m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.. Pastor:
Allen M idc;~ p

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor : Jim
Curbiu , Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship- I I a.m .. fd Op.m.
Chester
Pastor: Jim Corbin, Worshi p - 9 a.m..
Sunday School - 10 a.m . Thursday '
Services- 7 p.m.

Rffiln·lllt t'ellowsbip
Church of the 1\al.arene. Past or: Ru ssell
Cnrson , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. ? p.m., Wednesday
Services- 7 p.m.

Syratuse .Church or the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adkins, Sunday School - 9:Vl
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..

Middleport Com111unUy Church
.57!5 Pearl St. Mitldlepon , Pastor: Sam
Andenon , Sunday School 10 a .m.,
Evening -7:30p.m.. Wednesday Servi~
7:30p.m

-

Faith Valley tabernacle Cllureb
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev . Emmett
Raw son, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thu!'llday Service - 7 p.m.
Syracue Mlaion
141! Bridgeman St., Syracuse . Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p .m.,
Wedne 11day Se rvice - 7 p.m.

Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Centrr Oynmasium. P..stor Eddie Baer,
Service every Thesday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal AIHRibly
Pa!ltor: Sr. RL 124, Racine:, Tornado Rd
Sunfiay School - 10 a.m.. Evening · 7
p.m .• Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harri1011vllle Pmbyterian Church
Paslor: Roben Crow , Worship - 9 a.m.
Middleport Prtshytedan

Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10

a .m., W()JSh ip service II ;nn .
Hazel Community C~urcb
Off Rt. 124, Putor: Ed~ l Hart, Sunday
School ., 9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Seventh-Day Adventist
7: 30p.m.
• Mulberr}' Hts . Rd .. Pomeroy, SutUnlay
Serv ice§: Sabb11th School - 2 p.m.,
D)·avllte Conununlty Churdl
Worship · 3 p.m:
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Mont Cbapel Church
Mt. Hermon Unltf'd Bnethren •
SundEl)' sc hool · 10 a.m., Worship - II
In Chrbl Churth
am .. Wednesday Sen iCC'- 7 p.m.
Te11as Community 36411 Wickham Rd .
Pastor: Peter Man indale , Sunday School Faith Gospel Churcll
9:30 a.m., Wor§hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
Long Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
p.m., Wednesday Serv icu - 7:00 p .m.
Worship - 1 0 : 4~ a.m.. 7:30 p.m.,
Youth group me:eting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
Wedneroay 7:30p.m.
?p.m.
Mt. Olive Community Cllurcb
Eden Ualttd Bretbm~ln Christ
Pastor: Lawren ce Bush, Sunday School State Route 124, between Reeds\'ille &amp;
9:30 a. m., Evenins - 6:30p.m., Wedneday
Hockingport , Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Service- 7 p.m.
Sunday Worship - II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Full Goopel LlahthOUR
SerOJices - 7:00 p.m., Pas lor- M. ·Adam
. 3304S Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Will
Hunter, SundaYSchool - 10 a.m., Evening
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thurs.- 7:30p .m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

United Brethren

South Bethel Community Cbun:b
Sil ver Ridge- Pastor linda Damewood ,
Sunday School - 9 a .m., Wonhip Service
10 a.m . 2nd and 41h Sunday

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Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
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WedDesday Service - 7 p.m. Pas tor: Gary

Vktory Baptbt l•dtpenden•
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
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Pastor: Steve Litlle , Sunday School: 9:30
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Hllslde llaptlst Ch•rch
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev. ·
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FAITH • VALUES
Hill tribe Christians ____:_____ A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 21, 2007

Friday, September 21, 2007

BY PETER ENAV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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SAPULOU, Tai wan
Sixty years after Roman
Catholic and Presbyterian
missionaries· first converted
large numbers of Taiwanese
aboriginals in their leafy
mountai n
villages,
Christianity here is entering
a new phase. Adherents are
leaving the faith.
Faced with a declining
agricultural economy in
their. hard pressed rural
commu.nities, more and
more upcountry Christians
are moving to Taiwan's
bustling cities, where ·
world! y temptations and a
bewildering social framework are challenging their
beliefs.
At a recent Sunday morning service in the nearby
community of Laolauran,
American
Presbyterian
missionary John McCall
tried to rally the faithful, as
looal hill tribe pastor
Sakulu translated his
Mandarin Chinese sermon
into the aboriginal language of Paiwanese.
"God loves you and he is
your father," McCall said.
"You're all the children of
God ."
But the church was mostly empty, and the worshippers mcluded few if any
young adults.
"I used to ~o to church,"
said Dzwo Ymg-gung, who
recently returned to the
area to work at the Dawu
Mountain
National
Education Center. "But
now I don't. My faith has
fallen away."
The attitude of Dzwo and
thousands of hill · tribe
Taiwanese ·like him represents a fundamental challen~e to McCall and the
legiOn of local pastors he
and his predecessors have
helped train at three
Presbyterian
seminaries
around the island.
Ever since Canadian
George Mackay came to
Taiwan in 1871 , the center
of the missionary enterprise on the island has
always been its hill tribe
people, whose ancestors
migrated here from south
Pacific islets about 6,000
years ago.
The Paiwan. and others
once proved much more
receptive to Christianity
than their lowland neighbors,
who
followed
Buddhism, Confucianism

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and Taoism.
Today, some 65 percent of
the hill tribe population of
460,000 is Christian, about
equally divided between
Presbyterians
and
Catholics, according .to government statistics. That
compares with about 2 percent of Taiwan's 22.5 million Han Chinese, who originated on the Chinese mainland, where they constitute
a large majority.
Sociologist
Jonathan
Unger · of
Canberra's
Australian
National
University said the hill
tribes were more open to the
Christian message largely
because of the prejudice
they felt from the Han.
Other Asian minority peoples, in places like southwest China, Laos, and
upland Thailand, also were
more willing to embrace
Christianity, he said.
"It's a common phenomenon that a minority people
considered inferior in many
respects by the dominant
culture will protect itself by
turning to a world religion,"
Unger said.
Rangalu, a 45-year-old
primary school teacher in
the hill tribe village of
Sapulou, said the discrimination he experienced
played a key role in forming
his own Pruwan identity.
"When I was in school in
Taipei the (Han) teacher
would sar, .'Look at .this
Paiwan kid, he's so dark,
he's dirty; don't olay with
him,'" he said. t'It really
made an impression."
His wife Muni, 39, cited
another
reason
for
Christianity's popularity:
the health care and other
social services provided by
foreign ~pissionarie's.
"They were all very
poor, they had very few
clothes," said Muni, who
spent seven years studying
theology at the Yusan
Presbyterian Seminary in
the eastern Taiwanese city
of Hualien. "But the missionaries came and cured
them, they gave them
clothes and they taught
them to love God." ·
·
But now, she said more
local young people · are
going to Taiwanese cities in
search of work.
"They are discriminated
against, they lose their
connection to the ·church,
they start to drink, their
lives become unstable,"
she said.

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I'm not 11 "die-hard" Andy
Griffith show fan, but I
sometimes· have the opportunity to sit down with my
family and enjoy a hilarious
Pastor
episode with them. Maybe
Thom
my all-time favorite episode
Mollohan
is the one entitled "Aunt
Bea, The Warden," where
she is hapless!y made the
caretaker of Ous, the town
drunk, who can't "sleep dff'
his stupor in the jailhouse as perfectly sc:nsible solution
he normally does. Not the to the crime wave besetting
least inclined to coddle him little Mayberry ... tum the
as the sheriff and deputy are hardened criminals over to
in the habit of doing, she one who knows how to
promptly initiates her pris- · whip them into shape. Ah, ·
'oner mto " the Rock" (as he ye~ . Maybe I enjoy it all the
later affectionately refers to more because Aunt Bea
it) with a good dousing of reminds me a lot of my
cold water and a healthy . sweet and unassu~ping
dose of good old hard work. grandmother .,before she
However, Otis, not accus- went to be wiili the Lord.
tomed to a sentence of
As far as Otis goes, the
"hard labor,'' groans and whole idea of reforming a
moans his way through the .· man gone bad, of course, is
day. And in between his not a new one.lt defmes socigrass cutting, window ety's ~eneral attitude towards
washing, hall vacuuming, handlmg men and women
dish washing, and floor convicted of crimes and has
scrubbing, he makes several at its heart, for its greatest
less than heroic efforts at · proponents, a core of mercy.
"breaking out."
But since this episode was
But always wafching fot produced and aired in the
him is the ever vigilant eye show 's second season, folks
of Aunt Bea. Just as soon has who watched the show know
he slipped his shoes off so he that Otis · did not stay
can sneak out, she's right "reformed" for very long, no
after him with a snapping matter what oath he had
Unger that has all the effect made. He was back to the
of a cracking whip, So, after booze in short order and
all his futile efforts to escape remained in the Jess than
have been foiled (from dis- honorable JX&gt;Sition of "town
guising himself a&amp; a· laundry drunk" until a reunion movie
bag for the cleaners to truck was made many years latt&lt;r. ·
away, to his climbing out a
I've know men and
second-story window and women with · subst11nce
down ·a nearby painter's lad- addictions and can attest to
der), and in spite of his pleas :· the terrible chains that' atco-.
for mercy directed at the ~ot .and ·drugs ;!have prosheriff, he eventually "does , . duced for .them:· The addit~,
his time." Then, all cleaned tions themselves aside, con-'
up and looking sharp, he sequences to being under
vows never to touch ariother the influ!lnce, terrible ~CI'
drop of liquor. Later, he is sions, and tremendous l!lpS;
repeatedly referred to as es of moral fortitude destivy
·having been reformed. At the families; marriages, careers,
end of the episode, four and even lives in only
other prisoners who have moments. The addictions
been recaP.tured are trans- also create such a bond!lge
ported to 'the Rock" (since that men and women Who
the deputy's efforts to reform would have been horrified
them only results in their by the very idea, have fallen
escaping from jail). Once to such an extent that every
they realized where they are, sentence from their lips is a
one .cries out, ''Oh, no! We- lie and stealing becomes so
heard about this place! It's natural and subconsciously
·the Rock!" and the four of driven that they're not even
them try · tO SCfllDJble over aware that they are doing it.
the . sheriff and deputy back
But this column isn't realinto the police car. And when ly about alcohol or other
Aunt Hea herself material- substance abuse. It's about
izes; holding broon:Js, mo~s, all of us and our struggle
and buckets, one of the big, against sin. Spiritually
burly men points at her and speaking, we're all waging
yells to his brothers, a war, caught between
. "Bloody Mary!" just as they impulses that can overare all . shoved under her whelmingly and unexpectruthless reign by the sheriff edly surge within us, and
and deputy.
societal pressures to con. And what a logical and form, to "fall into line'~ and

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do what we' re told.
we depend must shift from ·
Although we each are cre- self-reliance to dependence
ated in the image of God, on God's strength (which He
our nature has been corrupt- offers us by His Holy Spirit
ed by our cumulative rejec- through His Word, prayer,
tion of God's love and authentic worship, and the
authority over us. Our loving support of other
nature, although designed Christian men and women
perfectly by a perfect who understand our strugDesigner, has gone out of gles and lift us up with love).
control and seeks to elevate
Reformation, even when it
its own interests above rela- appears to work, doesn't
tionship with God and even really work. The transformaour own long-term future . tion that comes from placing
'Humanity has an incredible our faith in Jesus alone as
addiction to selfishness· and . savior and His exertin~ His
pride. And it takes more lordship in our hearts ts the
than mere reformation for us only solution for setting us
to break free of it. You or I free from the bondage of our
may look at social problems, own sinful natures. You
diagnose them in other peo- might be inclined to settle for
ple ·(sometimes even cor- a watch-dog to help you get
rectly), and yet miss the fact in Shape. Or you might be
that we ourselves are each resigned to tolerating characliars at heart (if not overtly, ter flaws and spiritual needs
we're great at spinning the within yourself. I hope iJot
truth to our own benefit), though. Jesus has made a
thieyes by nature ("Well, the way for you and me to break
mistake was the cashier's, free and start clean with Him.
not mine"), and murderers After He's invested' so much
in the hidden chambers .o f so that we can be free, why
our thoughts ("I hate him for try to do it on·_our own?"
what he's done to me. I wish
Do not conform any
he were dead").
longer to the pattern of this
Maybe you disagree with world, but be transformed
my logic, but I've no doubt by the renewing of your
that if you were to honestly mind. Then you will be able
lay out all the thoughts to test and approve what
you've ever had on a table, Goo's will is - Hi·s good,
you'd be as red as a tomato.
and perfect will"
But the point isn't that God pleasing
(Romans 12:2 NJV).
stands over us like some
(Thom Molwhan and his
monstrous Aunt Bea with family have ministered in
flaming red eyes and a huge southern Ohio the past 12
rolling pin poised to whack years. He is the pastor of
us on the head, or even
. Community
snapping His fingers at us, Pathway
Church,
which
meets on
and demanding more blood,
sweat, and .tears. The point Sunday mornings at 455
isn't even'that God is telling Third Ave. He may be
you to pun ·yourself up by reached for comments or
your boot straps and reform questions by e·mail at pas·
yourself. "Now promise torthom®pathwaygallipo·
you'll be a good boy, Otis, lls.com).
and run along."
The point simply is that
what you and I need isn't
"reformation," it's "transformation." You can mold
something externally and
maybe make it resemble
something else (or break it in
trying to do it). But to really
change something into
something else, you've got
Po; r mon 'h
to get inside it and effect
change from its heart. That's
true of you and me. You and
I .
t
I can't be the people God
wants us to be unless we let
U/1 t.1w Todonlcal s...-J
Him transform us. And He · •• Fill!!
Unlimllod Houn, No Contradll
can't transform us unless we . • 10 E·moll Addo .."
let Him into our hearts. We • FIIEE 5pam ,.._,ion
need for more than our • lnvako lllllnv Avallablo
leltable Acceu Since 1994
appearances to change. Our
desires have to change; our
values have to change; and
our choices have to change.
And it takes a something
more than resolve and good
intentions on our part. The
source of strength on which

Evening· 7;30 p.m.
River V•lllfy
River Valley Apostolic Worship Centf:r,
873 S . 3rd Ave., Middleport. RC\'.

Michael Bmtford, Pa§tOf. Sunday, 10:30
am. Tue1. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

ElllllliDael Apoltolle 'l'lbenutde lac.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland .

Thun. 7:00p.m .. Putor Marty R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty -mhly olGool
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Mason ,
W.Va ., Pastor: Neil Tennant . Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 pm.,

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The Dance of Life·
There are many useful metapho,; for life. One that I particularly like is the "dance o
life,'' which highlight• the fact thai life can be graceful and beautiful, and /hal we
must use our bodies as instruments to move through life.
Life is indeed a kind of dance. which we can perfonn with
poise and grace or with awkward clumsinc~s. Of course,
we can al.&lt;m choose to "sit this one out," preferring to
watch from the sidelines while others dante
the night away. There is nothing wrong
wilh occasionally watching from the
sideline.-, since we can learn a 101 by
watching others, and even be
inspired, but we should also get out
there and dance: Life is not a spectator
sport. Perhaps the mnsl bcaUiiful part
of this metaphor of life a'\ a dance is
that it highlights the way in which our JiiC,
like a dance, is an opportunity fo r
self-e xpression. Dance ·allows a person to
express oneself beautifully, joyfully and
honestly. The best dance. like /he be&gt;t life.
is one lhat truthfully expresses a person's
inner being. So. we should rcm~hcr.
in life as in dance, to be true to ourselves.

Pastor: Mike Harmon, Sunday School
9:30 ro 10:30 am, Worship sel'\'icc 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed . preachin g 6 pm

Racine, OH

740·949•221 0
"A Home Bank for
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Thou has/ turned for me my mounu·ng into dtmci11g; tlloulwt loosed my
sackcloth and girded me wilh gladness, thnl my SOli/ miJY prai.~e thee and not
be silent. 0 Lord my Gud, I will give thnnks to thee forever.

Sales • Service • Parts
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507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
'-!!Y
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Pomeroy Churdt of Christ
212 W. Main St., Sunday Sc hool - 9:30
~ m .. Worship- 10:3.0 a.m .. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Se rvices - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wes~de Chun::h or Christ
33226 Chi ldren's Home · Rd ., Sunday
School - II a.m.. Wonhip - !Oa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Chrlsl
.Srh and r~--1ain , Puror: AI Ha rt~on ,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre. l et n
Director: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
- 9 :30a.m .. Worship- 8:1 5, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m., Wednesday Service s~ 7 p.m

Ellis
Rudand F1nt BaptUt Church
Sunday' School - 9:30 a.m.. WorshiP - ·
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Ftnt Baptist
Pa§tor Jon Brockert. East Main St ..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, WorshijY 1,0:30 am

Keno Church or Christ
Worship - 9:3 0 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace , Is! and
3rd Sunday

First Swtbem BapUst

41872 Pomeroy Pike, fastor: E. Lamar

Bearwalow Rldie Church of Christ

O'Bryant , Sunday School • 9:30 a-"\··
Worship-8:15a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

P.ustor:Bruce Terry, Sunday SclloOI -9:30
a.m.
Won hip - IO:JO a.m .. 6 :30 p.m,
Wednesday Services- (J:)(} p.m.

Flnt Raptbl Church
pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Pali-ner St.,
~ i ddleport, Sunday School -9:15a.m ..
Worship - IO: I.S a.m ., 7:00 p.m ..
~edneo'day SerYice- 7:00 pm.

Zion Cburth ~rChrlst
Pomeroy. Hurrisonvillc Rd . (RLI4 3).
Pastor: Roger Watson. SundD)' School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesd&amp;}' Serv ices- 7 p.m.

ltadne Flnt Baptist
Ryln. EatOn , pastor , Sunday
School- 9:30am., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m ., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.

~or:

Thpptrs Plaia Church of Christ
Instrumental. Wol'l!hip Se rvice - 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a.m .. Sunday Sc hool IO:IS a.m., Youth- !5:30 prn Sunday. Bible
Stm.ly Welhlesday 7 pm

SII...- Run Raptbt
John Swanson, Sunday School \Oa.m .. Worship - ll a .m., ".1 :00 p.m
,Wednesday Services- 7:00 p.m

Pas~ or:

Hradbury Chun:h of Christ
· Minister: Tom Runyo n, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepcn, Sunday School - 9:3 0
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. '

Mt. u aloa!14ptist
Pastor: Demiis Weivir' Sunday School9:4~ a,m ., Eve'n ing · 6:3Q p.m. ,
Wednesday ~!'\'ice s - 6:30p.m.

Rutland Church or Chrisl
S!.!:tda y Schoo l - 9:30 a.m., Won.hip and
Commu nion - 10:30 a.m., Bob 1. Werry ,

Betllllebem Baptist Churth

Mini ~rt: r

Great Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH,
Pastor: &amp;:1 Carter, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Won~hip - 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Bradford Churth or Christ
Corner of St. Rt : 124 &amp; Brodbury Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shamblin , Youth Mini ~te r :
Bill Amberger. Sun(lay School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Old l&lt;lbei Fne Wut Baptist Churdt
2860 1 St. Rl. 7, Middleport , Sunday

Service • 10 · ·~·· 6:00 p.m., Tue&amp;day
Services -6:00

I

FaUh Baptist Church
Railroad St. . Mason . Sunda)' School - 10
a.m., Worship · II a .m., 6 p.m.
Wedfesday Services- 7 p.m.

Michelle Kennedy
Director of Marketing and Admissions

Fort11t Run Baptist· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., Worship · 11 :30 a.m.

Hickory HiUs Chun:h of Christ
Thppers Plains. Pastor Mike Moore . Uiblc
clllSS, 9 a.m . Sunda y; worship 10 a.m.
Su11day; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
d a..,;s 7 pm Wed.
KeedsviOe Chur&lt;:h or Christ
Pastor: Philip S!urm, Sunday Schoo l: 9:30
a.m.. Worship Ser vice: 10:30 a.m .. Bible
S!udy, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Dexter Churth of Christ
Sund ay school 9:30a.m ., Sunday wor!ihip
- 10:30 a.m.
The Chun:h or Chrl&lt;~t of Pomeroy
lntusection 7 and 124 W, Evangel1s1:
Denni s Sargenl, Sunday Bible S!udy 9:30a.m., Worsh ip:' 10:30 a:m. at1d 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m

Christian Union

Hours
6 &lt;~m- 8 pm

Atmosphere

Mt. Moriah Baptl~t
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport,· Sunday

%i{fie's fl?._estaurant

School -9:30a.m., Worship -

Homemade Desserts Made D!!ily
740·992·7713

if. ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

..

Middleport, OH

. 740-992-6128
Local source for trophies ,
Ia ues t-shirts and more

a.m.

..
·'...

Hartford Churth of Christ in
Christian Union
Hurlford , W.Va., Pa stor:Da,'i d Greer.
Sunday Schoo l · 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p 10:30 a .m .. 7: 00 p.m.. Wednesday

services - 7:00p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Church or God

'
Wednesday Services 7 pm.

Mile Hill Rd .. Racine . Pastor: lame s
'
Satt~rfield , Sunday Schoo l - 9:4.5 a.m..
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesda)' ~ rvices · 7 .
p.m.
Natland Chwdr. or God
Pastor: Ron Healh, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Joppa
Pa~tur: De.ru.il Null, Worship · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday ~ hool - 10:30 a.m .
Loa&amp; Bottom
Su nday School · 9:30 !ll .m ., Worship IU:30 u.m.
RetdsvUk
Wurstlip - 9:30 a .m.. Su nday School 10:30 a.m., F1rst Sunday or Month - 7:00
p.m. .;ervice

SyrKUK" t'int Cbttldt ol' God
Apple and Second S~s . , Pastor: Rev. David
Russell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
- a.m. E"ening Se-rvict's- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

l'llppers Plains St. PauJ
Jim Corbin , Su nday School - 9
a.m.. Wo_rship - 10 11. m .. Tuesday ~rv ices
- 7:30p.m.
CeolraJ Clusur
Asbury [Sy mcuse). PaJ&gt;tor: Bob Robinson,
Su nday School - 11:45 a.m., Worship · I I
a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.
Pa~tor :

Church of God of Propbtcy
OJ . White Rd . off St. Rt . 160. Pa~tor; PJ.
Chapman , Sunday School - 10 a.m .•
Worship- l l a.m.. Wednesday Services- 1
p.m.

Congregational
Trinll)' Churth
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble , WorshiP 10:2.5 a.m .,
Sunday School Y:l.5 01 .m

Enterprise
PMtor: Arland King, Sunday School - 9:'30
a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 33105 Hiland
Rd,Pomeroy
Flatwoods
Pastor: Kei th Rader, Sund ay Se houl - 10
a.m.. Worship - 11 a.m.

Episcopal
· Grace Ep!swpaJ Chun:b
326 E_ Mai n St .. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Hnly Eucharist 11:00 a.m. Rev
Edward Pa)'nc

~"o mt

Ruo

Pa~tor:

Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 u.m.

Holiness
Community Chun:h
Pa.s lor: Sieve Tomeli , Main Sueet.
Ru!land, Sunday Worship-1 0:00 a. m.,
Sunday Se rvice- 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)
Pas tor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School 9:30a.m.. Wurship · 11:00 a.m.

Minenvlle
Pas1or: Bob Robinso n, Sunday School · 9
a.m., Worshi p- 10 a.m.

Danville Holln~u Church
31057 Slate Roule 325. Langsvl le . Pa~ tor:
Benjamin Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
am ., Sunday· worship - 10:30 a. m. a,. 7
p.m., Wedn'e !td~ y prnyrr service · 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Won&gt;hip - 10 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Cbap£1
Harriso nville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. SLJnday School 9:30 a.m..
Worship - I I a.m., 7:00p .m., Wednesday
Service -7:00p.m.

Pomeroy
Brian Dunham, Worship · 9:30
a.m., Sunday Sc hool- 10:35 a.m.
r~u l or :

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: K~:: ith Rade r, Sunday Sc hool - 9: IS
a.m., Worship - 10_ a. m., Youth
Fellowship , Sunday- 6 p.m.

Rose of Sh11ron Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd ., Rutl:md , Pastor. ReV.
Dewey Ki11g, Sunday school- 9:30 a.m..
Sunday worship -7 p.m:• Wednesday
prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Rat land
Pastor: Rick Boume. Sunday School 9:30a .m .. Wors hip - 10:30 a.m.. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
'
Pastor: William K. Marshall , Su11day
School - 10:15 a.m.• Woohip - 9:15a.m..
Bible Study : Monday 7:00pm
SaO\n'lllt
Sunday School - 10 tt.m., Worship · 9 a .m.

Pine Grove Bible Holiness ChuKh
1/2 mile off Rt . 325. Paslor: Rev . O' Dell
Mnnley. SundEly , Schqol
9:3U u.m..
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
Wednesd ay St:rvke · 7:30p.m.
Wesleyan Dible Holiness ChuKh
75 Pearl S!.. Middleport Pa~1or: Rick
Bourne. Sunday SC~ ool - 10 a.m. Worship
- 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen.·iCC'- 7:30p.m

Hysell RuD Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunda}' School
- 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.
luarel Cliff Free Methodist Churc:h
Paswr: Gleun Ruwe, Sum.l ay Se houl ·
9:JO a.m .. !\'orship - 10:30 a.m. ~nd l'i
p.m..Wcdnesday Se rvice-7:00 p.m.

Pomtroy Ctuardt ol the N.u.arc:.
Pastor: Jan lavender. Sundly School 9:30 a.m.. Worship - !0:30 a.m. and 6
p.m .. Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.

Bald Knob . on Co.
Rogei- Willford,
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

L'besttr Churtb ol the N ~M
Pastor: Re v. Curtis Randolph, Sunday
Schoo l · 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
6 p.m .
Rill land Churtb or the N1111l"tUe
Pas1or: Isaac Shupe, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wltltt'l Chapel Wrsleyao
Coolville Road , Pa ~ lor : Rev. Charles
Manindalc . Sunday School - 9:30a .m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Wednesday Service
. 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Fairview Rlblr Church
letart. W.Va . Rt. I. Pallor: Brian May.
Sunday Scttool - 9:30a.m., Worship - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bible S1udy · 7:00 p.m.
Faith Fellow!ihlp CI'UIIIde for Christ
Pastor : Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday, 7 p.m.

5tyracwe Communlly Church
2480 Second St., Syracuse. OH
Sun. School 10 am, Sundy night 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Gwi nn

A New BeaJnoln&amp;
(Full Gospel Ch~b) Hm iSOIIvi llt ,
Pastors: Bob and Kay Man ha,ll,
Sunday Service, 2 p.m.

Calvary Bible Chllf'('k
Pa meroy Pike, Co . Rd ., Pastor: Re:v.
Blac;: k.wood , Sunday School · 9:30a .m ..
Worsllip 10:30 a .m ., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Amazloc Grace Community Chun:h
P85 tor: Wayne 0\lnlap. State Rt. 681 ,
Tuppers Plai ns, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm.. Wed. Bible Srudy 7:00p.m.

StlvmvtBe Community Chu.rdl
Sunday Sc hoo!IO:OO am , Sun da)' Worship
II :00 am , Wedne sday 7:00 pm Paswr:

Oasis Christian Fellowllhlp ·
{Non-denomimttional fellow1hip)
. Mee ting in !he Meigs Middle School
Caft:te:ria Pastor: Chris Stewart
10:00 am - Noon Sunday ; lnfonnal
Won hip, Childrt:n's ministry

Bryan &amp;

Mi ~~y

Dailey

Rejolda&amp; Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepon, Pastor: ·

Community of Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd., Pastor: Jim Proftiu ,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m.• Wedne1day Servic es - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 S.R. 7. Reedsville , OH 45712. 112
mile north of Eas1em Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church, Pastor Rob Barber,
Assoc iate Pastor Karyn Dav is, Youth
Pastor Suzie Franci s, Sunday services
JO:lij am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life.
· Cht s~. Wed . Home Cell Oroups 7:00
p.m., Outer Limit ~ Ceil Group a1 the
chun:h 6:30 pm to 8:30pm

Ash Stmt Cb•n:b
398 Ash St. , Middlepon,Paslor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Mo rning
Wor§hip - 10:30 a.m. k 7:00 prn ,
Wedne sday Service - 7:00 p.m .. Youth
Service- 7:00p.m.

Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman. Worsh ip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Clifton ~rn11cle Cbarch
Cliftoo , W.Va., Sunday Sc'hool- 10 a .m.,
Wonhip - 7 p.m.• Wednesday Se rvice - 7
p.m.
Ntw life Victory Center
3773 Georges Cree:k. Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor : Bi\1 Stntett, Sunda y Services - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wedne sda}' - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7p.m.
. Full GolprJ Cbun::h
or the Lh1.a1 Savior
Rt .338, Antiquity, Pa$tor: Jesse Morris,
Services: Saturday"2:00 p.m.

Salem Conunualty Cburcb
Back of West Columbia, W.Va.om l~v in g

Appe Lire Centtr
" Full-Oospel -Church", PaSion John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Maso~;~ , 7735017. Service time: Sunday 10 :30 a .m..
Wedne sday 7 pm

Bethliny
Pas1or: John Gilmore, Su nda)' School · 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m., Wednesday
Services - 10 &lt;~ .m .

Abuadanl Gtact R.F. I.
923 S. Third St .. MiddlepCMt. Pastor TeM~
Da vis. Sunday serv ice, 10 a.m..
Wedne&amp;day service, 7 pm.

Carmel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Basha'n Rds. Racine, Ohio,
Pastor: John Oilmore, Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Wors hip - II :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Fallh Full Go8pel Church
Long BoHom. Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m, Worship . 9:30 a.m.
apd 7 p.m.. Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowship ~~er vice 7 p.m.

Morning St•r

. Harrl8onville Commanlty Cburth
Pastor: Theron Durtlam . Sunday - 9:30
a .m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School- II
a.ni .. Wol'l!hip - 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Carietoo iDtloDal Cburdl
Kinasbury Road , Pastor: Robert
Sunday School - 9:30
Service 10:30 a .m .. " """;-~.~;.-.
pm .

Road, Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 6752288 , Sunday School 9:30 am, Sund•y
evening ~rvice 7:00 pm, Bibly Study
Wednesday service 7:00pm

Hohlon Chrbtlan Frllowddp Church
Pastor: Heuchel White , Sunday School 10 am.Sunday Olurth serv ice-6:30 pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Jlatoratlon Chrbt.lao Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Alhens , Pastor :
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 pm

HOUM: ol Hulloa Mlnhtrle.
St. Rt. ll4 Lanpvil&amp;e. OH
Full doi;pel, CI Pastors Roben &amp;. Robertu
Musser, Sunday Schoo l 9 :30 am , ,
Worship 10:30 · am - 7:00 pm . Wed .
Service 7:00pm

Team Jesu Ml•lstrtcs

The Church or JfSUs
Christ or Latter-Day Salnfl'i
St Rt. 160. 446-62 47 or 446-7486 .
·Sun day Sc llool 10:20- 11 a .m.. Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon,
Sttname nl Ser vi ce 9- 10:15 a .rn .,
Hom~making meeting. l.~ r Thun.- 7 p.m.

East letart
P&lt;~slor: Bil l Marshall Sunday Sehoul •
-· 9a.m., Worship · 10 a.m.. 1st Sunday
, every month e\'ening service 7:1)0 p.m.:
Wednesday- 7 pm.
K~telne

Pastor: KelT)' Wnod, Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Wol'l!h ip - II a . m.Wednes d~ty
Services 6 pm: Thur Bible Study 7 pm

Lutheran
St. John lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Wo1 ship - 9:00a.m .. Su11day
School - I0:00 11 .m. J•astor:

Coolville United Methodl!it Parish
Pa!ltor: Hden Kline, Cool ville Church

Our Saviour Lulberan Church
Wa lnut und Henry St~ .. Ra vensw ood ,
W_Va'., Pustor: Da,·iU R us~c ll . Suuday
School- 10:00 a.m .. Wnn.hip · II a.m.

Mam &amp; Fifth St.. Sun . School - 10 n.m.,
Worship 9 a.m.. Tues. Services- 7 p.m.

&amp;the! Church
Township Rd .. 46KC , Sunday, Schoo l - 9
a.m. Worship
10 a.m., Wednesday
Services~ 10 a.m.
·

St. Paul Lutheraa Church
Comer Syca more &amp; Second St., Pornt!roy.
Sun . School - 9:45 n.m.. Wor.; hip - 11 a.m

Hockingport Chun:h
Grund Slrcel. Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 u.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phillip Bell

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Ne;~se
8ec:htel United Melhodi111
New Haven. Ri chard Nease, Pastor,
Sunda~· w o r ~ h 1 p 9;30 a.m. Tues . 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Tonh Chun::h
Ct\ . Rd . 63 ..Sunday Sdtool , 9:30a.m..
Worship - IO:)U un .

Nazarene

MI. Oli ve United Melhodlst
Off 124 be hjnd Wilkesville, _Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.. nmrsda)·
Services· 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of' lhr Nar.arme
!'astor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School Q:)O a.m..Worship - 10:30 :t.m., 6: 30p.m..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.. Pastor:
Allen M idc;~ p

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor : Jim
Curbiu , Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship- I I a.m .. fd Op.m.
Chester
Pastor: Jim Corbin, Worshi p - 9 a.m..
Sunday School - 10 a.m . Thursday '
Services- 7 p.m.

Rffiln·lllt t'ellowsbip
Church of the 1\al.arene. Past or: Ru ssell
Cnrson , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. ? p.m., Wednesday
Services- 7 p.m.

Syratuse .Church or the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adkins, Sunday School - 9:Vl
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..

Middleport Com111unUy Church
.57!5 Pearl St. Mitldlepon , Pastor: Sam
Andenon , Sunday School 10 a .m.,
Evening -7:30p.m.. Wednesday Servi~
7:30p.m

-

Faith Valley tabernacle Cllureb
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev . Emmett
Raw son, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thu!'llday Service - 7 p.m.
Syracue Mlaion
141! Bridgeman St., Syracuse . Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p .m.,
Wedne 11day Se rvice - 7 p.m.

Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Centrr Oynmasium. P..stor Eddie Baer,
Service every Thesday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Pentecostal AIHRibly
Pa!ltor: Sr. RL 124, Racine:, Tornado Rd
Sunfiay School - 10 a.m.. Evening · 7
p.m .• Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harri1011vllle Pmbyterian Church
Paslor: Roben Crow , Worship - 9 a.m.
Middleport Prtshytedan

Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10

a .m., W()JSh ip service II ;nn .
Hazel Community C~urcb
Off Rt. 124, Putor: Ed~ l Hart, Sunday
School ., 9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Seventh-Day Adventist
7: 30p.m.
• Mulberr}' Hts . Rd .. Pomeroy, SutUnlay
Serv ice§: Sabb11th School - 2 p.m.,
D)·avllte Conununlty Churdl
Worship · 3 p.m:
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Mont Cbapel Church
Mt. Hermon Unltf'd Bnethren •
SundEl)' sc hool · 10 a.m., Worship - II
In Chrbl Churth
am .. Wednesday Sen iCC'- 7 p.m.
Te11as Community 36411 Wickham Rd .
Pastor: Peter Man indale , Sunday School Faith Gospel Churcll
9:30 a.m., Wor§hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
Long Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
p.m., Wednesday Serv icu - 7:00 p .m.
Worship - 1 0 : 4~ a.m.. 7:30 p.m.,
Youth group me:eting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
Wedneroay 7:30p.m.
?p.m.
Mt. Olive Community Cllurcb
Eden Ualttd Bretbm~ln Christ
Pastor: Lawren ce Bush, Sunday School State Route 124, between Reeds\'ille &amp;
9:30 a. m., Evenins - 6:30p.m., Wedneday
Hockingport , Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Service- 7 p.m.
Sunday Worship - II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Full Goopel LlahthOUR
SerOJices - 7:00 p.m., Pas lor- M. ·Adam
. 3304S Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Will
Hunter, SundaYSchool - 10 a.m., Evening
7:30 p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thurs.- 7:30p .m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

United Brethren

South Bethel Community Cbun:b
Sil ver Ridge- Pastor linda Damewood ,
Sunday School - 9 a .m., Wonhip Service
10 a.m . 2nd and 41h Sunday

' I

.•

.f

'
. ''
•

"Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see
good . works and glorify
Father

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

10: 4~

Andqu.hy B11ptUt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m.,
PasiOt: Don Walker

Home Cooked Meal.! &amp; Daily Specials
Open 7 days a week

in heaven ."
Matthew

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ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men. thai they may see your
The care you deserve, close to home good works and gloriJY your
141-112-5141
Zntclliiiiiir· ZlriCIIr
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."
499 Richland Avenue, ,Alhens
5111111-Stnlt •....,.• llllt
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthew5:16
740-594·6333
1·800·451·9806
'148-912-5444
740-992-6606
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IIIII

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MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
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Study - 7 p.m.

Hopo Raptilt Church (Southern)
570 GraDt St .. Middleport. Sunday sc llool
- 9:30a.m., Wonhip - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. ,
WedDesday Service - 7 p.m. Pas tor: Gary

Vktory Baptbt l•dtpenden•
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Worsh.ip - !Oa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

190 N. Second St.

Minister: Larry BrQw n, Won;hip - 9:30
a.m . Sunday .School- 10:30 a .m .• Bi hlr

Clleslom Bapllll Cbwdl
Pastor: Steve Litlle , Sunday School: 9:30
am , Morning Wonbip : 10:30 am ,
Wedne sday Bible Study 6:30pm: choir
practice" 7;30; youth and Bib)e Buddies
6:30p.m. Thun. I pm book SUidy

Sizes available 5xt 0 to 10 x 20

The Hppliance man

Hemlock Grove Chrlill1n Church

Carpenter Independent Bapdst CbW'Cb'
Sunday School - 9:30am, Preaching
Service !0:30am , Evening Service
7:00pm, Wednesday Bible Swdy 7:00pm ,
Pastor: Whitt Akers "

Hllslde llaptlst Ch•rch
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev. ·
lames R. Acree , Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service , WoNhip - ·10:30 a.m., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Wann Friendfy

209Thlrd

Westside Chun:h of Chrlst
33226 Children's Ho~ Rd. Pomeroy, OH
'Contact 740-44 1-1296 Sunday morni ng
10:00, Sun morn ing Bible stu dy;
follo wing wor~ h i p , Sun . eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible s1udy 7 pm

Baptist

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Church of Christ

l'qe.W. l ',..wUI Baptilt Churdt

$'9.95

I

Catholic
Sacmi.Heart Catholic Church
16 1 Mul tJC:rry Ave., Pomeroy. 992-5898,
Pa ~tor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz , Sat . Con.
4: 45-5:15p.m.: Mass· 5:30 p.tn ., Sun .
Con. -8:45-9: 1.5 a. m., S un :~ ass - 9:30
a m ., Daily Mau- 8:30a .m.

Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,

Access

f

•. Rulland Frtt Will Baptist
Sa!t-m St .. Pastor: . Sunday School . 10
a .m., Evenin g - 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m.
S«ond Baptb.1 ChuKh
Ra,·enswood. WV, Sunday Sehoul 10 ll ffi ·
• Morning wors htp II am Eve ning-- 1 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
First Baptist Cbun:h of MUOD , WV
(lndependtnt Bap1ist).
SR 652 and Anderson St . Putor: Rob.!n
Grady, Su nday school 10 am. Morning
churcll II am,_Sunday e\en ing 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

Chur&lt;h ol J""' Cbrlll Apootolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pa81or: Jame1
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The Daily Sentinel

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
·- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

, I

Today is Friday, Sept. 21, the 264th day of 2007. There
are 101 days left in the year. The Jewish Day of Atonement,
Yom Kippur! be~ins at sunset.
· Today's H1ghhght m History:
,
On Sept. 21, 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York
and New England, causing widespread damage and claiming some 700 lives. .
On this date:
In 1792, the French National Convention voted to abolish the monarchy.
In 1897, the New York Sun ran its famous editorial tiiat
declared, "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus."
In 1937, ''The Hobbit," by J.R.R. Tolkien, was first published.
. In 1948, Milton Berle made his debut as pennanent host
: of "The Texaco Star Theater" on NBC- TV
; In 1957, Norway's King Haakon Vll died in Oslo at age
• 85.
In 1957, "Perry Mason," starring Raymond Burr, premiered on CBS-TV.
In 1970, "NFL Monday Night Football" made its debut
on ABC-TV as the Cleveland Browns defeated the visiting
New YorkJets, 31-21.
Ten years ago: Saying their persistent demands for a special investigation had been vindicated, senior Republicans
insisted Attorney Geneml Janet Reno seek appointment of
an independent counsel to look into White House fund-rais,
ing activities, a day after the Justice Department revealed it
had begun a preliminary review.
One year ago: The White H_ouse and rebellious Senate
Republicans armounced agreement on rules for the interro,.: galion and trial of suspects in the war on terror. Space shut.: tie Atlantis and its six astronauts safely returned from a 12:· day mission to install a big new piece of the international
' space station. The U.S. Centers .for Disease Control and
Prevention announced it would recommend all Americans
ages 13 to 64 be routinely tested for HIV.
: Today's Birthdays: Actor Karl Slover is 89. Actor Larry
: Hagman is 76. Poet-songwriter Leonard Cohen is 73.
:: Actor-comedian Henry Gibson is 72. Author-comedian
·: Fannie Flagg is 63. Au,thor Stephen King is 60. Producer
.: Jerry Bruckheimer is 60. Musician Don Felder (The
. Eagles) is 60. Actor-comedian Bill Murray is 57. Rock
. musician Philthy Animal is 53. Movie producer-writer
Ethan Coen is 50. Actor-comedian Dave Couliet is 48.
Actor David James Elliott is 47. Actress Nancy Travis is
46. Actor Rob Morrow is 45. Actress Cheryl Hines is 42.
Country singer Faith Hill is 40. Rock musician Tyler
· Stewart (Barenaked Ladies) is 40. Country singer Ronna
Reeves is 39. Actress-talk show host Ricki Lake is 39.
Rapper Dave (De La Soul) is 39. Actor James Lesure is 36.
Actor Alfonso Ribeiro is 36. Actor Luke Wilson is 36.
Actor Paulo Costanzo is 29. TV personality Nicole Richie
' is 26. Actress Maggie Grace is 24. Actor Joseph Mazzello
is 24. Actors Lorenzo and Nikolas Brino ("7th Heaven")
are 9.
Thought for Today: "I never think of the future. It comes
soon enough." -Albert Einstein, German-born physicist
(1889-1955).

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••

PageA4
Friday, September 21,2007

Remembering Madeleine L'Engle
Madeleine L'Engle found
it amusing that her critics
kept missing the obvious in
her fiction.
Consider the magical
women in "A Wrinkle In
Time" - MJs. Whatsit,
Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which.
It's true that they have
strange wardrobes and
unique ways of speaking.
Mrs. Whatsit is chatty, for
example, because she is so
young
a
mere
2,379,152,497 years, 8
months and 3 days old.
When the elder Mrs.
Which arrives from another
dimension, her colleagues
begin giggling. Why? Since
she is meeting three human
children, Mrs. Which elects
to appear as a "figure in a
black robe and a black
peaked hat, beady eyes, a
beaked nose and long gray
hair." She is holding a
broomstick.
Get the joke? For
decades, L'Engle's fiercest
critics kept missing it. Thus,
"A Wrinkle In Time" which won the 1963
Newberry Medal- became
one of America's most frequently banned children's
books.
"If you read the book,
there is no way that they are
witches. They are guardian
angels - the book says so.
You don't have to clarify
what is already clear,"
L' Engle told me in a lengthy
1989 interview.
"Don't they know how to

Terry
Mattingly

spell? W-H-I-C-H is not WI-T-C-H. "
This interview came during a time when L'Engle
(pronounced LENG-el) had
increased her already busy
lecture schedule after the
death of her husband of 40
years, actor Hugh Franklin.
But L' Engle kept writing
and talking about the
themes that 'dominated her
life - faith , family and creativity - until her health
failed. She wrote more than
60 works of fiction, nonfiction, drama, poetry and
prayers during her life,
which ended with her Sept.
6 death in Litchfield, Conn.,
at age 88.
Wherever L'Engle went,
people kept asking her to
explain her beliefs, from
heaven to hell, from sex to
salvation, from feminism to
the arts. The writer did not
hide her .views but rarely
used the kind of language
that so-called "Christian
writers" were supposed to
use.
Thus, her career was
defined by a paradox: Many
of her strongest admirers

. were evangelical Christians,
as were most of her fiercest
critics. Thus, it's symbolic
that she donated her personal notes and papers to
Wheaton College, the Rev.
Billy Graham's alma mater,
where they are part of a collection best known for its
materials about the iife of
Christian apologist C.S.
Lewis.
L'Engle was also candid
about the role her faith
played in her writing. She
was, throughout her life, an
Episcopalian's Episcopalian
from New York City wh~
was determined to keeP\
describing the visions and
voices that filled her soul.
While her writing was often
mysterious, she kept hiding
the crucial clues right out in
the open.
It's hard, for example, to
miss the source of the climactic speech to Meg
Murray, the heroine in the
science fiction series that
began with "A Wrinkle In
Time."
"The foolishness of God
is wiser than men; and the
weakness of God is stronger
than men," says Mrs. Who,
who always speaks in quotations, such as this lengthy
passage from St. Paul's first
letter to the Corinthians. "...
God hath chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound the wise; and God
hath chosen the weak things
of the world to confound the
things that are mighty."

It's even clearer, in the
next novel, that the children
are backed by the powers of
heaven. Meg finds herself
face to ·face with a manyeyed creature with a 10-foot
wingspan, a being with too
many w10gs to count. wings
that were in "constant
motion, covering and
uncovering the eyes." This
is a biblical cherubim, yet
another angelic vision. He
stresses that he is not a singular cherub, and adds, "I
am practically plural."
The goal, said L'Engle,
was to create fiction that
was unmistakably Christian
while writing to an' audience
that included all kinds of
believers and unbelievers.
"I have been brought up
to believe that the Gospel is
to be spread, it is to be
shared - not kept for those
who already have it," she
said. "Well, 'Christian novels' reach Christians. They
don't reach out. ... I am not
a 'Christian writer.' I am a
writer who is a Christian. I
think that you have to be the
best writer that you can be.
Now, if I am truly a
Christian, then that will
show in my work."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for
Christian
Colleges imd Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study . religion and the
news.)

·WaUl!

A SIGNED
O.J.
JERSEY!

. Friday, September :n, 2007

: Obituaries
Mary Alice BiH
. Mary Alice Bise, 83, of Reedsville , passed away
· Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2007, at Camden-Clark Memorial
: Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
She wa~ born July I , 1924 in Reedsville, daughter of the
late Arthur and Mabel Cowdery Hetzer. She was a home.. maker, a member of the Reedsville Church of Christ and
··the Reedsville Garden Club. She was also a member of the
, Meigs County Senior Citizens and the Reedsville Fire
; Department Women's Auxiliary.
: .She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Fred and
Dian Btse; three daughters and two sons-in-law: Mary
. Frances and Fred Smith, Jackie and James Andrews and
.. Dolores Foster; 10 grandchildren; eigh~ great grandchil. dren; two brothers, Rahegh and Shuley Hetzer and
, Lemoine "Art" and Nancy Hetzer.
'
In addition to her parents, she was pr&amp;eded in death by
. her husband, Frank; a son-in-law, Jeff Foster; a brother,
: Marion Hetzer; and a granddaughter, Helena Bigley. ·
Service will be held at 2 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 22, 2007
' at the Reedsville Church of Christ, with Jack Foust and
. John Colegrove officiating. Burial will be in the
.
·Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call noon to 8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Reedsville
' Church of Christ, 66135 St. Rt. 124 Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.
·

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sc;ntinel • Page As

Hocking College ~res law firm amid state probe
NELSONVILLE (AP) Trustees at Hocking College
hired a law firm to represent
the school while the state
attorney general 's office
conducts an investigation.
Details of the probe
weren't disclosed following
a
vote
by
trustees
Wednesday to hire the
·Columbus firm of Vorys,
Sater, Seymour and Pease.
The attorney general' s
office normally would represent the college, but can-

not if it is investi~ating .
The law finn will conduct
a rarallel investigation, and
al
Hocking
College
employees are urged ·to
coopemte, trustees said.
The Athens Messenger
reported this week that the
college spent more than
$15,000 last year on a trip to
the Central American country
of Belize for up to 17 members of an advisory board that
oversees the school's hospitality training progmm.

A special grand jury had
also Issued subpoenas to
some college employees,
the newspaper said.
''The only thing I can tell
you is that I can't even confirm that there is an investigation," Athens County
Prosecutor C. David Warren
told The Associated Press
on Thursday. "I can say the
grand jury was supposed to
do something tomorrow
(Friday), but that has been
called off."

Messages seeking comment were left Thursday for
Hocking College Prestdent
John Light and with a
spokesman for Attorney
General· Marc Dann.
Hocking College, about 50
miles southeast of Columbus,
is a two-year technical colle!le offenng courses in such
things as computer programming, the hospitality industry
and health care fields. The
college's Web site says
enrollment is about 5,00J.

Ohio expert to examine DNA Ohio officer investigated for use
stun gun on· handcuffed woman
evidence in missing-girl case ofWARREN
(AP)- Police in Warren Municipal Court.

FAIRBORN (AP) - An
Ohio DNA' expert has been
asked by the family of a
British girl who disappeared
during a vacation in
Portugal to examine DNA
evidence collected by a firm
used by Portuguese authorities investigating the case.
Wriglit State biology professor Dan Krane is being
retained by Peter Corrigan,
. PARKERSBURG, W.Va. -Lindsey L. Lyons Ill, 64·, attorney for Gerry and Kate
~ Mineral Wells, W.Va., went to be with the Lord Sept. 19,
McCann.
' 2007, surrounded by his family.
Krane plans to use a soft· ·He was born July 22, 1943, a son of Lindsey T. Lyons, Jr., ware
program he and colTuppers Plains, and the late Elizabeth Swann Lyons.
at the university
· Lindsey reti.red from DuPont after 38 years of service. He leagues
invented
to interpret auto: attended Williamstown First Baptist Church. He was an
mated
DNA
analysis generavid golfer and was an Ohio State Buckeyes fan. Family
· was most important to Lindsey. He was a loving husband ated by a crime lab.
Four-year-old Madeleine
. and father and showed a special love for his grandchildren.
McCann
disappeared May 3
Surviving are his wife of 26 years, Carol Brohard Lyons;
from
a
resort
in Portugal
· two daughters, Lynette Gainer and her husband, Randy, of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; and Leann Vaughn and her husband,
. Brian, of Hurricane, W. Va; two stepdaughters, Kim Adams
'" and her husband, Tim, of Parkersburg, and Lisa .Demick
and her husband, Greg; of Vienna; a sister, Lyndall
Hasbargen and her husband, Lawrence, of Parkersburg; a
from PageA1
brother, Lamar Lyons and his wife, 'Shirley, of Tuppers
Plains; six grandchildren: Bryce and Devyn Gainer,
Makayla and Renick Vaughn, Kyle Adams and KaitieJo include everything from
Demick; and severn! nieces and nephews.
teaching kids how to learn
Service will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23, how to resolve conflict,
2007, at Leavitt Funeral Home in Parkersb.urg with. Rev. learn musical skills, Jearn
, Jim Mike Ward officiating. Burial will be in Sand Hill health, nutrition and fitness
.· Cemetery in Long Bottom. Friends may call from 2-4 and routines and how to cook.
; 6-9 p.m. and until the time of service on Saturday.
course of all of these
Memorial contributions may be made to Mid-Ohio Valley Of
meals and programs require
American Red Cross, 220 8th St., Parkersburg, W. va: 26101. mentors and staffing which
Memorial 'condolences may be sent to the family at
also is a big part of the
www.LeavittFuneralHome.com.
God's NET budget.
As for the bike run there
are several motorcycle clubs
from throughout the Ohio
~ '
'
!
: AT~NS -Gilda Baxter, 89, of Athens, died Thursday Valley which are participat. · mormng, Sept. 20, 2007, at the home of her daughter.
ing in the event and include:
· Born Jan.' 27, 1918, in Udino, Italy she was the daughter ABATE of WV Inc., Mid
of the late Gildo and Pierina Rocco Ronchi.
Ohio Valley
Chapter;
A resident of the United States since 1946, she was a Borderline Harley Owners
former resident of the Pomeroy area and had been an Group; Brothers of the
Athens area resident for the past 20 years. She volun- Wheel MC - Twin Rivers
teered at Veterans Memoria) Hospital in Pomeroy with the Chapter; Justice Motorcycle
volunteer auxiliary. She was a member of the Blackburn Club; Christian Motorcycle
Hill Church of Christ.
Association - Reflections,
Mrs. Baxter is survived by two daughters, Tina Jeffers of !1334 of Parkersburg and
Athens and Shirley Wright of Athens; a son, Chadie Delivered of Meigs County;
(Debbie) Baxter of Parkersburg, W.Va.; a son-in-law, Devils Diciples .Motorcycle
Cosmas Papadopoulos of Lemnos, Greece; nine grandchil- Club;
Flying
Circle
dren: Todd (Dawn) Jeffers, Brad Jeffers, Jill (Trevis) Motorcycle Club; Iron
Thompson, David (Jenny) Wright, Sarah (Ricardo) Horsemen Motorcycle Club;
Aspillataga, Dit;to (Sue) Papadopoulos, Mike (Angela)
Papadopoulos, Jaime (Rob) Emrick and Kelly (Curt)
Radabaugh; and several great gmndchildren.
Besides her parents she is preceded in death by her first
- husband, lsador Bertilutti and her second husband, Norman
J. Baxter; a daughter Renata· Papadopoulos and six sisters.
from PageA1
Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at Jagers and Sons
· Funeral Home, Athens · by Matt Thomas, with burial in
Alexander Cemetery, Hebbardsville.
.
Katelyn Haught were
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. approved as open enrollment students.
The board also:
• Approved an agreement
with Anthem to provide
medical and prescription
drug coverage and a contract with Medical Claims
Services, Inc. 10 provide
REEDSVILLE - "Delivered" will sing at 7 p.m. on third party claims services
for dental claims.
' Sept. 30 at Reedsville United Methodist Church.
• Approved an agreement
with Strategic Management
Solutions to provide E-rate
consulting
services for the
POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Department
2008
funding
year in an
will hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday. Bring child's shot records, med- amount not to exceed
$1,200 per instructional
ical card if applicable. A $7 appreciated but not require~.
building or 15% of the fund-

Lindsey L Lyons Ill

where she was staying with
her parents.
The McCanns have been
named as suspects. The couple, both doctors, deny
involvement in the disappearance and have led a high-profile international campaign to
find their daughter.
Forensic tests conducted at
a government laboratory in
Britain found evidence indicating thatDNAfrom the girl
was in the trunk of a rental
car the parents used after her
May 3 disappearance.
However,
Portugars
national police chief, Alipio
Ribeiro. said last week the
tests on the car were not
conclusive and that he
expected the investigation
to continue.

are investigating an officer's use of a stun gun on a
handcuffed woman who fell
to the pavement and was
knocked unconscious wben
the officer shocked her.
Video from Patrolman
Richard Kovach's cruiser
shows him jolting the
screaming woman with a
Taser electronic device both
before and after she was
handcuffed.
The woman had been
ordered out of a bar.
Heidi Gill, 38, was arrested Sept. 2 on charges of falsification, assault, resisting
arrest, criminal damaging
and unauthorized use of a
motor vehicle, officials said.
She has pleaded not guilty.
A hearing is set for Oct. 25

Gill won't comment on
the matter, her attorney,
Martin DeMatteis, said
Thursday.
Kovach is on paid administrative leave and the city is
investigating.
Kovach's report said he
made several attempts to
use the Taser on Gill, but it
misfired repeatedly. Once
inside the cruiser, his report .
said, she kicked at a rear
window and tried to climb
into the front seat, ignoring
his commands to stop, the
police report said.
"I deployed a second Taser
cartridge into her and the violent turbulent action stopped
immediately," the report said.
"I then requested a car with a
cage for transport."

Bike run

Gilda Baxter

Eastern

The attacks on Gen. Petraeus
Whatever
cretin
at
MoveOn.org hit on the idea
of running a full-page ad in
The New · York Times
describing General Petraeus
as "General Betray · Us"'
William
probably never gave a
Rusher
moment's thought to the
implication of that ·expres- ,
sion. And that tells us something sad about the level to
which political debate in The New York Times,
. which not only accepted the
this country has sunk.
To portray a decorated ad, and as a highly literate
war hero and four-star gen- publication surely cannot
eral as willing to betray his plead ignorance of its implic.ountry to "cook the books" cation, but cheerfully
on behalf of President Bush charged MoveOn.org only
must h11ve seemed a trivial $65.000 for . running it,
price to pay to smear some- instead of the standard rate
one who was preparing to of $181,000.
give Congress a more favorBolh MoveOn.org and the
able review of the war in Times knew, or would have
Iraq than American leftists known if they had given it a
who run MoveOn.org are moment's thought, how
willing to permit. The false and unfair lo Gen.
words "betray us" happened Petraeus the ad was. But
they calculated, correctly,
to rhyme with "Petraeus'.' a felicitous coincidence if that rotten eggs of this sort,
there ever was one. thrown by the Left al an
(Perhaps we should count honorable public figure in
ourselves lucky ·lhat the the course of a political
general's
name
isn't debate, would not, today,
"Season," or something else rouse public anger to any
that rhymes with "treason.") effective extent. We are
The general had no means simply too numb to say
of retaliating effectively; he "Ouch! "
AI that, MoveOn.org's ad
could only ignore the attack,
and hope · that . most was simply the most overAmericans would dismiss it the-lop of the whole series
of attacks on Gen. Petraeus
-as, happily, they did.
And one mustn't overlook launched by the Democrats,
the appalling complicity of and by leftists in general.

--· -·--·- - - - - - - - - -- - -

When he agreed to return to
the United States and testify
under oath before Congress
to the progress of the war in
Iraq, the Democrats in
Congress evidently made a
command decision not only
to attack and discredit him,
if possible, but to do so in
advance of his testimony.
The barrage they thereupon
laid down was awesome to
behold. Senate Majority
Leader
Harry
Reid
(Nevada) charged that Gen.
Petraeus had a long record
of making erroneous statements. P.residential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton
(New York) told him to his
face that his views required
"a willing suspension of
disbelief' _ or, in other
words, that he was a liar.
The "General Petraeus or
General Betray Us?" ad was
right iD"step.
The Democrats' response
was a necessary consequence of a "mistaken conelusion they reached several
months ago. Early this year,
they decided that the war in
Iraq was hopelessly lost.
Not unreasonably, they felt
entitled to wrap the defeat
around President Bush's
neck and benefit by the
political consequences. Sen.
Reid ratified this conclusion
by stating, in just so many
words, that "the war is lost."
That was all very well as

long as reports from the battlefield remained uniformly
negative. But, beginning
with the "surge," the .military outlook unexpectedly
(at least to the Democrats)
began to improve. It was
plain that Gen. 'Petraeus
would say exactly that when
he reported to Congress,
and that put the Democrats
in a very tight spot indeed.
They resolved it in the only
way they could: by blackguarding Gen. Petraeus.
Their position, therefore,
remains today what it was
before, and has at least the
merit of consistency: The
war in Iraq is irretrievably
lost, and any evidence to the
contrary, let alone any
inconvenient statements by
military experts, will simply
be denounced as false.
Most
Congressional
Democrats haven't even
been willing to condemn
MoveOn.org for its filthy
ad. The best Sen. Richard
Dutbin of Illinois could do
was concede that it had
been "a poor choice of
words." What an exquisite
. sense of taste he has!
(William Rusher is a
Disti11guished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

Local Briefs

'Delivered' sings

Immunization clinic

For the record
POMEROY - The Pomerpy Police Department recently reported 151 parking tickets were issued from Aug. 1Aug. 31 with eight tickets voided. A total of $2,305.72 was
received from parking meters while $342 was received
· from parking tickets and $270 was received from parking
: permit fees. Also, the mayor's report for Aug. I -Aug. 31
: was approved by council which reported $12,622.50 in
· income from fines, forfeitures and costs in ordinance cases
as well as.fees.
of any kiqd to be donate&lt;j. to
Southern
Elementary
School. Call 843-5216 or
590-9936 for more informafrom PageA1
tion. Directions to the
and control, cones and bar- Portland Community Center
rels, youth poles, open from Pomeroy are take US
poles, pee-wee barrels (10 33 toward Ravenwsood, tum
and under), youth barrels left qn Ohio 124 a1 the Hot
Spot, then follow signs to
( 11-18). open barrels.
The show is a family event Portland Community Center.
Concessions will be sold
and no alcohol is permitted.
The ORP are also asking for at both events in the center's
donations of school supplies kitchen .

Portland

Meigs County Bikers; VFW
5108 Motorcycle Club;
Valley Riders.

Organizers of the benefit
hope to make this an annual
event. For more infonnatiQn

ing requested for the funding year, whichever is less.
• Approved class fees for
the 2007-08 school year.
• Approved an agreement
with Robin Boswell for the
transportation of a hearing
impaired student for the
2007-08 school year at a
rate of .485 cents per mile.
• Approved an agreement
with Warren Local for the
transportation of a hearing
impaired student for the
2007-08 school year al the
approximate amount of
$4,500.00.
• Approved
foreign
exehange student, Diogo
Pereira from Brazil placed
through Aspect Foundation
at Eastern High School.
• Approved board policy
for Public Records as submitted by NEOLA.
• Approved increasing the

permanent appropriation
resolution to include fund
452.9007
(Schoo!Net
Professional Development)
in the amount of $1,070.18.

Sl·: l•'l'l :,nn:u
( 'l ,tn-••tnn:ncn

ST\IC'IT\(~

1·: u~l , l·: ·s

SubmltUdpholo

Members of local biker organizations gather in Belpre to discuss final plans for Saturday's
Inaugural All Ohio Valley Bikers Benefit Run.

I:\

Texas Hold'em
Every Thursday
$35.00 entry ffee (no re-buy)
Start 7:00pm

Omaha Tournament
2nd &amp; 4th Saturday
$50.00 entry fee (no re-buy)
Start 6:00 pm

on the event e-mail oneharleyryder04@yahoo.com
or call 304-428-7930.

Robin Hood
JrTheater

9129-30
The Ohio Valley
Symphony

1016
Mark McVey- Tenor
Box Oltlce: 428 2nd Ave.
Galllpolla, OH (740) 446-ARTS

NOTICE TO LOW TO MODERATE
HOUSEHOLDS
Applications for Owner Occupied Housing
Rehabilitation and Homeownership Assistance will
b~ available at the County Annex Building, CHIP
Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 6, Pomeroy,
Ohio on Tuesday Oct. 2, aud Wednesday, Oct.
3,2007, between the hours of 9:00A.M.
and 3:00P.M.
The Rehabilitation program will offer a grant for
full rehabilitation on owner occupied homes and
the Homeownership program will provide grant
assistance for downpayment, closing costs and
rehab on home purchases.
This is a first come, first come serve program so
·applicants may wish to come very early and wait in
lobby at the front of the building until doors open at
9:00A.M.
Parking is available only at the rear of the annex.
Jean Trussell
CHIP Administrator

�..

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The.Daily Sentinel·
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
·- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

, I

Today is Friday, Sept. 21, the 264th day of 2007. There
are 101 days left in the year. The Jewish Day of Atonement,
Yom Kippur! be~ins at sunset.
· Today's H1ghhght m History:
,
On Sept. 21, 1938, a hurricane struck parts of New York
and New England, causing widespread damage and claiming some 700 lives. .
On this date:
In 1792, the French National Convention voted to abolish the monarchy.
In 1897, the New York Sun ran its famous editorial tiiat
declared, "Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus."
In 1937, ''The Hobbit," by J.R.R. Tolkien, was first published.
. In 1948, Milton Berle made his debut as pennanent host
: of "The Texaco Star Theater" on NBC- TV
; In 1957, Norway's King Haakon Vll died in Oslo at age
• 85.
In 1957, "Perry Mason," starring Raymond Burr, premiered on CBS-TV.
In 1970, "NFL Monday Night Football" made its debut
on ABC-TV as the Cleveland Browns defeated the visiting
New YorkJets, 31-21.
Ten years ago: Saying their persistent demands for a special investigation had been vindicated, senior Republicans
insisted Attorney Geneml Janet Reno seek appointment of
an independent counsel to look into White House fund-rais,
ing activities, a day after the Justice Department revealed it
had begun a preliminary review.
One year ago: The White H_ouse and rebellious Senate
Republicans armounced agreement on rules for the interro,.: galion and trial of suspects in the war on terror. Space shut.: tie Atlantis and its six astronauts safely returned from a 12:· day mission to install a big new piece of the international
' space station. The U.S. Centers .for Disease Control and
Prevention announced it would recommend all Americans
ages 13 to 64 be routinely tested for HIV.
: Today's Birthdays: Actor Karl Slover is 89. Actor Larry
: Hagman is 76. Poet-songwriter Leonard Cohen is 73.
:: Actor-comedian Henry Gibson is 72. Author-comedian
·: Fannie Flagg is 63. Au,thor Stephen King is 60. Producer
.: Jerry Bruckheimer is 60. Musician Don Felder (The
. Eagles) is 60. Actor-comedian Bill Murray is 57. Rock
. musician Philthy Animal is 53. Movie producer-writer
Ethan Coen is 50. Actor-comedian Dave Couliet is 48.
Actor David James Elliott is 47. Actress Nancy Travis is
46. Actor Rob Morrow is 45. Actress Cheryl Hines is 42.
Country singer Faith Hill is 40. Rock musician Tyler
· Stewart (Barenaked Ladies) is 40. Country singer Ronna
Reeves is 39. Actress-talk show host Ricki Lake is 39.
Rapper Dave (De La Soul) is 39. Actor James Lesure is 36.
Actor Alfonso Ribeiro is 36. Actor Luke Wilson is 36.
Actor Paulo Costanzo is 29. TV personality Nicole Richie
' is 26. Actress Maggie Grace is 24. Actor Joseph Mazzello
is 24. Actors Lorenzo and Nikolas Brino ("7th Heaven")
are 9.
Thought for Today: "I never think of the future. It comes
soon enough." -Albert Einstein, German-born physicist
(1889-1955).

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EDITOR
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thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

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•

••

PageA4
Friday, September 21,2007

Remembering Madeleine L'Engle
Madeleine L'Engle found
it amusing that her critics
kept missing the obvious in
her fiction.
Consider the magical
women in "A Wrinkle In
Time" - MJs. Whatsit,
Mrs. Who and Mrs. Which.
It's true that they have
strange wardrobes and
unique ways of speaking.
Mrs. Whatsit is chatty, for
example, because she is so
young
a
mere
2,379,152,497 years, 8
months and 3 days old.
When the elder Mrs.
Which arrives from another
dimension, her colleagues
begin giggling. Why? Since
she is meeting three human
children, Mrs. Which elects
to appear as a "figure in a
black robe and a black
peaked hat, beady eyes, a
beaked nose and long gray
hair." She is holding a
broomstick.
Get the joke? For
decades, L'Engle's fiercest
critics kept missing it. Thus,
"A Wrinkle In Time" which won the 1963
Newberry Medal- became
one of America's most frequently banned children's
books.
"If you read the book,
there is no way that they are
witches. They are guardian
angels - the book says so.
You don't have to clarify
what is already clear,"
L' Engle told me in a lengthy
1989 interview.
"Don't they know how to

Terry
Mattingly

spell? W-H-I-C-H is not WI-T-C-H. "
This interview came during a time when L'Engle
(pronounced LENG-el) had
increased her already busy
lecture schedule after the
death of her husband of 40
years, actor Hugh Franklin.
But L' Engle kept writing
and talking about the
themes that 'dominated her
life - faith , family and creativity - until her health
failed. She wrote more than
60 works of fiction, nonfiction, drama, poetry and
prayers during her life,
which ended with her Sept.
6 death in Litchfield, Conn.,
at age 88.
Wherever L'Engle went,
people kept asking her to
explain her beliefs, from
heaven to hell, from sex to
salvation, from feminism to
the arts. The writer did not
hide her .views but rarely
used the kind of language
that so-called "Christian
writers" were supposed to
use.
Thus, her career was
defined by a paradox: Many
of her strongest admirers

. were evangelical Christians,
as were most of her fiercest
critics. Thus, it's symbolic
that she donated her personal notes and papers to
Wheaton College, the Rev.
Billy Graham's alma mater,
where they are part of a collection best known for its
materials about the iife of
Christian apologist C.S.
Lewis.
L'Engle was also candid
about the role her faith
played in her writing. She
was, throughout her life, an
Episcopalian's Episcopalian
from New York City wh~
was determined to keeP\
describing the visions and
voices that filled her soul.
While her writing was often
mysterious, she kept hiding
the crucial clues right out in
the open.
It's hard, for example, to
miss the source of the climactic speech to Meg
Murray, the heroine in the
science fiction series that
began with "A Wrinkle In
Time."
"The foolishness of God
is wiser than men; and the
weakness of God is stronger
than men," says Mrs. Who,
who always speaks in quotations, such as this lengthy
passage from St. Paul's first
letter to the Corinthians. "...
God hath chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound the wise; and God
hath chosen the weak things
of the world to confound the
things that are mighty."

It's even clearer, in the
next novel, that the children
are backed by the powers of
heaven. Meg finds herself
face to ·face with a manyeyed creature with a 10-foot
wingspan, a being with too
many w10gs to count. wings
that were in "constant
motion, covering and
uncovering the eyes." This
is a biblical cherubim, yet
another angelic vision. He
stresses that he is not a singular cherub, and adds, "I
am practically plural."
The goal, said L'Engle,
was to create fiction that
was unmistakably Christian
while writing to an' audience
that included all kinds of
believers and unbelievers.
"I have been brought up
to believe that the Gospel is
to be spread, it is to be
shared - not kept for those
who already have it," she
said. "Well, 'Christian novels' reach Christians. They
don't reach out. ... I am not
a 'Christian writer.' I am a
writer who is a Christian. I
think that you have to be the
best writer that you can be.
Now, if I am truly a
Christian, then that will
show in my work."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for
Christian
Colleges imd Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study . religion and the
news.)

·WaUl!

A SIGNED
O.J.
JERSEY!

. Friday, September :n, 2007

: Obituaries
Mary Alice BiH
. Mary Alice Bise, 83, of Reedsville , passed away
· Wednesday, Sept. 19, 2007, at Camden-Clark Memorial
: Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
She wa~ born July I , 1924 in Reedsville, daughter of the
late Arthur and Mabel Cowdery Hetzer. She was a home.. maker, a member of the Reedsville Church of Christ and
··the Reedsville Garden Club. She was also a member of the
, Meigs County Senior Citizens and the Reedsville Fire
; Department Women's Auxiliary.
: .She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Fred and
Dian Btse; three daughters and two sons-in-law: Mary
. Frances and Fred Smith, Jackie and James Andrews and
.. Dolores Foster; 10 grandchildren; eigh~ great grandchil. dren; two brothers, Rahegh and Shuley Hetzer and
, Lemoine "Art" and Nancy Hetzer.
'
In addition to her parents, she was pr&amp;eded in death by
. her husband, Frank; a son-in-law, Jeff Foster; a brother,
: Marion Hetzer; and a granddaughter, Helena Bigley. ·
Service will be held at 2 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 22, 2007
' at the Reedsville Church of Christ, with Jack Foust and
. John Colegrove officiating. Burial will be in the
.
·Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call noon to 8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Reedsville
' Church of Christ, 66135 St. Rt. 124 Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.
·

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sc;ntinel • Page As

Hocking College ~res law firm amid state probe
NELSONVILLE (AP) Trustees at Hocking College
hired a law firm to represent
the school while the state
attorney general 's office
conducts an investigation.
Details of the probe
weren't disclosed following
a
vote
by
trustees
Wednesday to hire the
·Columbus firm of Vorys,
Sater, Seymour and Pease.
The attorney general' s
office normally would represent the college, but can-

not if it is investi~ating .
The law finn will conduct
a rarallel investigation, and
al
Hocking
College
employees are urged ·to
coopemte, trustees said.
The Athens Messenger
reported this week that the
college spent more than
$15,000 last year on a trip to
the Central American country
of Belize for up to 17 members of an advisory board that
oversees the school's hospitality training progmm.

A special grand jury had
also Issued subpoenas to
some college employees,
the newspaper said.
''The only thing I can tell
you is that I can't even confirm that there is an investigation," Athens County
Prosecutor C. David Warren
told The Associated Press
on Thursday. "I can say the
grand jury was supposed to
do something tomorrow
(Friday), but that has been
called off."

Messages seeking comment were left Thursday for
Hocking College Prestdent
John Light and with a
spokesman for Attorney
General· Marc Dann.
Hocking College, about 50
miles southeast of Columbus,
is a two-year technical colle!le offenng courses in such
things as computer programming, the hospitality industry
and health care fields. The
college's Web site says
enrollment is about 5,00J.

Ohio expert to examine DNA Ohio officer investigated for use
stun gun on· handcuffed woman
evidence in missing-girl case ofWARREN
(AP)- Police in Warren Municipal Court.

FAIRBORN (AP) - An
Ohio DNA' expert has been
asked by the family of a
British girl who disappeared
during a vacation in
Portugal to examine DNA
evidence collected by a firm
used by Portuguese authorities investigating the case.
Wriglit State biology professor Dan Krane is being
retained by Peter Corrigan,
. PARKERSBURG, W.Va. -Lindsey L. Lyons Ill, 64·, attorney for Gerry and Kate
~ Mineral Wells, W.Va., went to be with the Lord Sept. 19,
McCann.
' 2007, surrounded by his family.
Krane plans to use a soft· ·He was born July 22, 1943, a son of Lindsey T. Lyons, Jr., ware
program he and colTuppers Plains, and the late Elizabeth Swann Lyons.
at the university
· Lindsey reti.red from DuPont after 38 years of service. He leagues
invented
to interpret auto: attended Williamstown First Baptist Church. He was an
mated
DNA
analysis generavid golfer and was an Ohio State Buckeyes fan. Family
· was most important to Lindsey. He was a loving husband ated by a crime lab.
Four-year-old Madeleine
. and father and showed a special love for his grandchildren.
McCann
disappeared May 3
Surviving are his wife of 26 years, Carol Brohard Lyons;
from
a
resort
in Portugal
· two daughters, Lynette Gainer and her husband, Randy, of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; and Leann Vaughn and her husband,
. Brian, of Hurricane, W. Va; two stepdaughters, Kim Adams
'" and her husband, Tim, of Parkersburg, and Lisa .Demick
and her husband, Greg; of Vienna; a sister, Lyndall
Hasbargen and her husband, Lawrence, of Parkersburg; a
from PageA1
brother, Lamar Lyons and his wife, 'Shirley, of Tuppers
Plains; six grandchildren: Bryce and Devyn Gainer,
Makayla and Renick Vaughn, Kyle Adams and KaitieJo include everything from
Demick; and severn! nieces and nephews.
teaching kids how to learn
Service will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23, how to resolve conflict,
2007, at Leavitt Funeral Home in Parkersb.urg with. Rev. learn musical skills, Jearn
, Jim Mike Ward officiating. Burial will be in Sand Hill health, nutrition and fitness
.· Cemetery in Long Bottom. Friends may call from 2-4 and routines and how to cook.
; 6-9 p.m. and until the time of service on Saturday.
course of all of these
Memorial contributions may be made to Mid-Ohio Valley Of
meals and programs require
American Red Cross, 220 8th St., Parkersburg, W. va: 26101. mentors and staffing which
Memorial 'condolences may be sent to the family at
also is a big part of the
www.LeavittFuneralHome.com.
God's NET budget.
As for the bike run there
are several motorcycle clubs
from throughout the Ohio
~ '
'
!
: AT~NS -Gilda Baxter, 89, of Athens, died Thursday Valley which are participat. · mormng, Sept. 20, 2007, at the home of her daughter.
ing in the event and include:
· Born Jan.' 27, 1918, in Udino, Italy she was the daughter ABATE of WV Inc., Mid
of the late Gildo and Pierina Rocco Ronchi.
Ohio Valley
Chapter;
A resident of the United States since 1946, she was a Borderline Harley Owners
former resident of the Pomeroy area and had been an Group; Brothers of the
Athens area resident for the past 20 years. She volun- Wheel MC - Twin Rivers
teered at Veterans Memoria) Hospital in Pomeroy with the Chapter; Justice Motorcycle
volunteer auxiliary. She was a member of the Blackburn Club; Christian Motorcycle
Hill Church of Christ.
Association - Reflections,
Mrs. Baxter is survived by two daughters, Tina Jeffers of !1334 of Parkersburg and
Athens and Shirley Wright of Athens; a son, Chadie Delivered of Meigs County;
(Debbie) Baxter of Parkersburg, W.Va.; a son-in-law, Devils Diciples .Motorcycle
Cosmas Papadopoulos of Lemnos, Greece; nine grandchil- Club;
Flying
Circle
dren: Todd (Dawn) Jeffers, Brad Jeffers, Jill (Trevis) Motorcycle Club; Iron
Thompson, David (Jenny) Wright, Sarah (Ricardo) Horsemen Motorcycle Club;
Aspillataga, Dit;to (Sue) Papadopoulos, Mike (Angela)
Papadopoulos, Jaime (Rob) Emrick and Kelly (Curt)
Radabaugh; and several great gmndchildren.
Besides her parents she is preceded in death by her first
- husband, lsador Bertilutti and her second husband, Norman
J. Baxter; a daughter Renata· Papadopoulos and six sisters.
from PageA1
Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at Jagers and Sons
· Funeral Home, Athens · by Matt Thomas, with burial in
Alexander Cemetery, Hebbardsville.
.
Katelyn Haught were
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. approved as open enrollment students.
The board also:
• Approved an agreement
with Anthem to provide
medical and prescription
drug coverage and a contract with Medical Claims
Services, Inc. 10 provide
REEDSVILLE - "Delivered" will sing at 7 p.m. on third party claims services
for dental claims.
' Sept. 30 at Reedsville United Methodist Church.
• Approved an agreement
with Strategic Management
Solutions to provide E-rate
consulting
services for the
POMEROY -The Meigs County Health Department
2008
funding
year in an
will hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday. Bring child's shot records, med- amount not to exceed
$1,200 per instructional
ical card if applicable. A $7 appreciated but not require~.
building or 15% of the fund-

Lindsey L Lyons Ill

where she was staying with
her parents.
The McCanns have been
named as suspects. The couple, both doctors, deny
involvement in the disappearance and have led a high-profile international campaign to
find their daughter.
Forensic tests conducted at
a government laboratory in
Britain found evidence indicating thatDNAfrom the girl
was in the trunk of a rental
car the parents used after her
May 3 disappearance.
However,
Portugars
national police chief, Alipio
Ribeiro. said last week the
tests on the car were not
conclusive and that he
expected the investigation
to continue.

are investigating an officer's use of a stun gun on a
handcuffed woman who fell
to the pavement and was
knocked unconscious wben
the officer shocked her.
Video from Patrolman
Richard Kovach's cruiser
shows him jolting the
screaming woman with a
Taser electronic device both
before and after she was
handcuffed.
The woman had been
ordered out of a bar.
Heidi Gill, 38, was arrested Sept. 2 on charges of falsification, assault, resisting
arrest, criminal damaging
and unauthorized use of a
motor vehicle, officials said.
She has pleaded not guilty.
A hearing is set for Oct. 25

Gill won't comment on
the matter, her attorney,
Martin DeMatteis, said
Thursday.
Kovach is on paid administrative leave and the city is
investigating.
Kovach's report said he
made several attempts to
use the Taser on Gill, but it
misfired repeatedly. Once
inside the cruiser, his report .
said, she kicked at a rear
window and tried to climb
into the front seat, ignoring
his commands to stop, the
police report said.
"I deployed a second Taser
cartridge into her and the violent turbulent action stopped
immediately," the report said.
"I then requested a car with a
cage for transport."

Bike run

Gilda Baxter

Eastern

The attacks on Gen. Petraeus
Whatever
cretin
at
MoveOn.org hit on the idea
of running a full-page ad in
The New · York Times
describing General Petraeus
as "General Betray · Us"'
William
probably never gave a
Rusher
moment's thought to the
implication of that ·expres- ,
sion. And that tells us something sad about the level to
which political debate in The New York Times,
. which not only accepted the
this country has sunk.
To portray a decorated ad, and as a highly literate
war hero and four-star gen- publication surely cannot
eral as willing to betray his plead ignorance of its implic.ountry to "cook the books" cation, but cheerfully
on behalf of President Bush charged MoveOn.org only
must h11ve seemed a trivial $65.000 for . running it,
price to pay to smear some- instead of the standard rate
one who was preparing to of $181,000.
give Congress a more favorBolh MoveOn.org and the
able review of the war in Times knew, or would have
Iraq than American leftists known if they had given it a
who run MoveOn.org are moment's thought, how
willing to permit. The false and unfair lo Gen.
words "betray us" happened Petraeus the ad was. But
they calculated, correctly,
to rhyme with "Petraeus'.' a felicitous coincidence if that rotten eggs of this sort,
there ever was one. thrown by the Left al an
(Perhaps we should count honorable public figure in
ourselves lucky ·lhat the the course of a political
general's
name
isn't debate, would not, today,
"Season," or something else rouse public anger to any
that rhymes with "treason.") effective extent. We are
The general had no means simply too numb to say
of retaliating effectively; he "Ouch! "
AI that, MoveOn.org's ad
could only ignore the attack,
and hope · that . most was simply the most overAmericans would dismiss it the-lop of the whole series
of attacks on Gen. Petraeus
-as, happily, they did.
And one mustn't overlook launched by the Democrats,
the appalling complicity of and by leftists in general.

--· -·--·- - - - - - - - - -- - -

When he agreed to return to
the United States and testify
under oath before Congress
to the progress of the war in
Iraq, the Democrats in
Congress evidently made a
command decision not only
to attack and discredit him,
if possible, but to do so in
advance of his testimony.
The barrage they thereupon
laid down was awesome to
behold. Senate Majority
Leader
Harry
Reid
(Nevada) charged that Gen.
Petraeus had a long record
of making erroneous statements. P.residential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton
(New York) told him to his
face that his views required
"a willing suspension of
disbelief' _ or, in other
words, that he was a liar.
The "General Petraeus or
General Betray Us?" ad was
right iD"step.
The Democrats' response
was a necessary consequence of a "mistaken conelusion they reached several
months ago. Early this year,
they decided that the war in
Iraq was hopelessly lost.
Not unreasonably, they felt
entitled to wrap the defeat
around President Bush's
neck and benefit by the
political consequences. Sen.
Reid ratified this conclusion
by stating, in just so many
words, that "the war is lost."
That was all very well as

long as reports from the battlefield remained uniformly
negative. But, beginning
with the "surge," the .military outlook unexpectedly
(at least to the Democrats)
began to improve. It was
plain that Gen. 'Petraeus
would say exactly that when
he reported to Congress,
and that put the Democrats
in a very tight spot indeed.
They resolved it in the only
way they could: by blackguarding Gen. Petraeus.
Their position, therefore,
remains today what it was
before, and has at least the
merit of consistency: The
war in Iraq is irretrievably
lost, and any evidence to the
contrary, let alone any
inconvenient statements by
military experts, will simply
be denounced as false.
Most
Congressional
Democrats haven't even
been willing to condemn
MoveOn.org for its filthy
ad. The best Sen. Richard
Dutbin of Illinois could do
was concede that it had
been "a poor choice of
words." What an exquisite
. sense of taste he has!
(William Rusher is a
Disti11guished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

Local Briefs

'Delivered' sings

Immunization clinic

For the record
POMEROY - The Pomerpy Police Department recently reported 151 parking tickets were issued from Aug. 1Aug. 31 with eight tickets voided. A total of $2,305.72 was
received from parking meters while $342 was received
· from parking tickets and $270 was received from parking
: permit fees. Also, the mayor's report for Aug. I -Aug. 31
: was approved by council which reported $12,622.50 in
· income from fines, forfeitures and costs in ordinance cases
as well as.fees.
of any kiqd to be donate&lt;j. to
Southern
Elementary
School. Call 843-5216 or
590-9936 for more informafrom PageA1
tion. Directions to the
and control, cones and bar- Portland Community Center
rels, youth poles, open from Pomeroy are take US
poles, pee-wee barrels (10 33 toward Ravenwsood, tum
and under), youth barrels left qn Ohio 124 a1 the Hot
Spot, then follow signs to
( 11-18). open barrels.
The show is a family event Portland Community Center.
Concessions will be sold
and no alcohol is permitted.
The ORP are also asking for at both events in the center's
donations of school supplies kitchen .

Portland

Meigs County Bikers; VFW
5108 Motorcycle Club;
Valley Riders.

Organizers of the benefit
hope to make this an annual
event. For more infonnatiQn

ing requested for the funding year, whichever is less.
• Approved class fees for
the 2007-08 school year.
• Approved an agreement
with Robin Boswell for the
transportation of a hearing
impaired student for the
2007-08 school year at a
rate of .485 cents per mile.
• Approved an agreement
with Warren Local for the
transportation of a hearing
impaired student for the
2007-08 school year al the
approximate amount of
$4,500.00.
• Approved
foreign
exehange student, Diogo
Pereira from Brazil placed
through Aspect Foundation
at Eastern High School.
• Approved board policy
for Public Records as submitted by NEOLA.
• Approved increasing the

permanent appropriation
resolution to include fund
452.9007
(Schoo!Net
Professional Development)
in the amount of $1,070.18.

Sl·: l•'l'l :,nn:u
( 'l ,tn-••tnn:ncn

ST\IC'IT\(~

1·: u~l , l·: ·s

SubmltUdpholo

Members of local biker organizations gather in Belpre to discuss final plans for Saturday's
Inaugural All Ohio Valley Bikers Benefit Run.

I:\

Texas Hold'em
Every Thursday
$35.00 entry ffee (no re-buy)
Start 7:00pm

Omaha Tournament
2nd &amp; 4th Saturday
$50.00 entry fee (no re-buy)
Start 6:00 pm

on the event e-mail oneharleyryder04@yahoo.com
or call 304-428-7930.

Robin Hood
JrTheater

9129-30
The Ohio Valley
Symphony

1016
Mark McVey- Tenor
Box Oltlce: 428 2nd Ave.
Galllpolla, OH (740) 446-ARTS

NOTICE TO LOW TO MODERATE
HOUSEHOLDS
Applications for Owner Occupied Housing
Rehabilitation and Homeownership Assistance will
b~ available at the County Annex Building, CHIP
Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 6, Pomeroy,
Ohio on Tuesday Oct. 2, aud Wednesday, Oct.
3,2007, between the hours of 9:00A.M.
and 3:00P.M.
The Rehabilitation program will offer a grant for
full rehabilitation on owner occupied homes and
the Homeownership program will provide grant
assistance for downpayment, closing costs and
rehab on home purchases.
This is a first come, first come serve program so
·applicants may wish to come very early and wait in
lobby at the front of the building until doors open at
9:00A.M.
Parking is available only at the rear of the annex.
Jean Trussell
CHIP Administrator

�NATION •WORLD
.
aoes
triCkV

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA6 :'

Friday, September 21 ,2007

zero

BY LARRY McSHANE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Almost
everyone agrees Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad
doesn't
belong at ground zero.
So who gets access these
days to the 16-acre pit
where the World Trade
Center once anchored the
Manhattan skyline, a slice
of the city that many regard
as hallowed ground?
Construction workers. 1be
families of victims. The
occasional journalist. And
not too many others, in stark
contrast to the days immediately after Sept. II when the
smoldering site was overrun
with celebrities, politicians
and even Playboy playmates.
Amid the chaos after the
twin towers fell. rescue workers and cleanup crews mill"
gled with a parade of well
known visitors: Muhammad
Ali, Robert De Niro, cast
members
from
"The
Sopranos," Martha Stewart.
Miss America Katie
Harman signed body ID
rags for grateful workers.
Boxing promoter Don King
toured the site, as did U.N.
Secretary-General
Kofi
Annan and other world
leaders. Almost half of the
Senate arri ved en masse.
The vast majority came to
offer support and condolences,. although critics suggested others viewed a trip to
the devastation as a photo op.
"lt was like you had
celebrity status only if you
got in at ground zero,"
recalled Brian Jordan, a
Franciscan priest who spent
long hours in lower
Manhattan in the weeks
after two hijacked planes
struck the _towers.
Within a month, the city
was turning down hundreds
of requests to visit the site

AP photo
Construction workers take a break in their work as seen through a fence surrounding ground zero in Lower Manhattan,
Thursday, in New York. New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said a proposed visit to ground zero by Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during next week's United Nations General Asse mbly is a dead issue and it would not
happen. The Iranian President has made a request to place a memorial wreath at the site, which is sti ll considered hal·
lowed ground to many, in spite of the construction crews at work there.
"We have communicated
our concerns to the Iranian
Mission," J.&lt;elly said. "I am
sure they will abide by our
statement ... Our position is
that he will· not be permitted
to go."
Mayor Michael Bloomberg
said the .city would provide
protection for all guests of the
United Nations without
requiring that they pass a "litmus test for ·views." He said
of Ahmadinejad: "I personal,
ly find what this guy has said
abhorrent, and I think it
would be inappropriate to

and began asking celebrities
to avoid the area as the
treacherous · search for
remains continued.
Six years later, Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly
said a proposed ground zero
visit by Ahmadinejad during next week's U.N.
General Assembly had no
chance. Police cited ongoing construction and security concerns, and the Iranian
president, who is under
Secret Service protection
while in the U.S., was told
to steer clear.

have him visit."
where deputy spokesman
Some
objected
to Tom Casey called the idea of
Ahmedinejad's visit on an Ahmedinejad visit "rather
political grounds.
appalling and the height of
"To have the leader of the hypocrisy." New York-based
greatest state· sponsor 'of ter- presidential candidates Hillary
rorism in the world visit the Clinton and Rudy Giuliani
site of the most heinous ter- also expressed their opposi·
rorist attack on America tion to the suggested visit.
would be an affront to the
Giuliani, the mayor at the
victims and families of 9/ll time or the allacks, was
and to all who lived lhrough cm1 ght in a dust-up when he
that day," said Abraham ·took a Saudi prince on a
Foxman, national director of tour of the site in October
the Anti-Defamation League.
The sentiment was echoed
bY. . the State Department,

ANNIE'-S MAILBOX

2001. Giuliani then rejected
the prince's $10 million
relief check after the prince
suggested U.S . policies in
the Middle East were partly
to blame for the carnage.
The Iranian president, in
an interview to air Sunday on
"60 Minutes," indicated he
would not press the issue. "I
won't insist," Ahmadinejad
said, although he ellpressed ,
disbelief that the visit would
offend Americans.
·When reminded by inter- '
viewer Katie,Couric that the
United States considers Iran
an ellporter of terrorism, he
said: "We are very much
against any terrorist action
and any killing .... Usually
you go to these sites to pay ..
your · respects, and also to, :
perhaps, air your views
about the root causes of ··
such incidents."
·•
The
reaction
to
Ahmadinejad's request to lay
a memorial wreath was the
·latest reminder of the stillraw feelings about the site.
Before
last
week.' s
anniversary of the attacks, ·
family members battled
with city officials to gain '
access to the area where the
II 0-story buildings once
soared. The official ceremony was held in a nearby .:
· park. but the mourners were · ·
permitted to walk down into
·the site during the service, ' .
perhaps for the last time.
Some family members
stayed home rather than
participate in the first yearly ·;
memorial not ·held on the ·
slte itself.
Hard hats and construe- .
· tion equipment are a daily ~
presence at ground zero.
The stream of tourists who
visit the site every day must
stand on a sidewalk and ,
peer through a fence.

Abe Lincoln's $5 bill getting a colotful makeover
Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Honest Abe will become
Colorful Abe with splashes
of purple and gray hvening
up the $5 bill.
The government showed
off the new bill Thursday in
an Internet news conference
- a high-tech unveiling
that officials say is entirely
appropriate for a 2 1st centu·
ry redesign of the bill featuring the Civil War president, Abraham Lincoln.
The changes are similar to
those already made, starting
in 2003, to the .$10, $20 and
$50 bills. In those redesigns,
pastel colors were added as
part of an effort to stay
ahead of counterfeiters and
their ever-more-sophisticated copying machines.
. Originally, the five wasn't
going to be redesigned. But
that decision was reversed
once counterfeiters began
bleaching $5 notes and
printing fake $100 bills with
the bleached paper to take
advantage of the fact that
some of the security features were in the same locations on both notes.
To thwart this particular
scam. the government is
changing the $5 watermark
from one of Lincoln to two
separate watermarks featuring the numeralS . The $!00
bill has a watermark with the
image of Benjamin Franklin.
The security thread
embedded in the $5 bill also
has been moved to a different location than the one
embedded in the $100 bill. ·
"We
wanted
thi s
redesigned bill to scream. ' I
am a five. I am a five ."'
Larry Felix, direc tor of the
Bureau of Engraving and
Printing said in an interview
with The Associated Press.
"We wanted to el imin&lt;~te
any simi larity or confusion
on the part of the public
between the $5 bi ll and the
$100 bill."
Circulation is planned for
the spring so operators of
millions
of
vending
machines haye ·y!e ~ty of
time to make .tlie:clianges
necessary so their- devices
will accept the new $) - "
denomination used heavily
in the machines.
The bureau will start printing the new notes next week
at its facility in Fon Wonh ,

Purple Is the new green for $5 bill
The newly designed $5 bill is part ol an ongoing effort by lhe U.S. gov· ·
emment to rhwan currency countel1eiting. Circulation is planned tor
spring 2008.

Watermerke: a large
number "5" and a column
of throe smaller ' S"s

Sec:urtty tllrud: embedded In

the note with the ~rds ' USA"
and
glows blue under UV light

Symbota of Fr-om:
The Great Seal of the U.S.
and an arc ol purple stars

Col~r:· lightpur~lle

that blends
Into gray.
"05"s are to
the left of the portrait

Low vltllon: large,
easy-to-read "5" helps
the visually Impaired
'.

various locations on

words "FIVE DOLLARS." ' E
"USA" and 'USA FIVE" in
the front and back of the note

SOURCE: Bureau Of Engraving and Printing

AP

"

Texas. The goal ·is to have
1.5 billion $5 bills ready to
be put into circulation, at a
date still to be determined.
The new $5 design also
incorporates a number of
other state-of-the-art security feat ures.
Perhaps the most striking
change ts a new large-size 5
printed in the lower righthand corner of the backside
of the bill in high-contrast
purple ink. That feature was
added to help the visually
impaired.
.
Lincoln remain s on the
front of the bill and the
Lincoln Memorial is still on
the back. but both images
have been enhanced and the
oval borders around them
have been removed. In place
of a border around Lincoln 's
portrait, the new bill will
feature an arc of purple
stars. Sma ll ye llow "05"
numeral s will be printed on
both the front and the back.
The center of the bill features Iight purple which
blends into gray near the

loss of $62 million, according to the Secret Service.
Before the new bills go
into circulation, there will
be an education campaign

focused on banks desi gned
to let the public and businesses learn about the new
security fe.atures.
"Our goal is to seamless!y
introduce the redesigned
bills to the public by working primarily with financial
institutions in the United
States and around the
world,"
said
Michael
Lambert, the assistant di rector of reserve bank operations at the Federal ReServe.
The next bill to get a
makeover will be the $100.
It will feature the most
advanced safeguard yet, a
new security thread composed of 650,000 tiny lenses
that will 'magnify microprinting on the bills to give
the effect of having the
images move in the opposite direction than the bill is
being moved.
The government is only
about one-third of the way
through the redesign of the
$100 and hopes to have that
process completed by this
time next year. Extra effort is
going into the $100
makeover since this bill rep·
resents more than 70 percent
of the $776 billion of currency in circulation, two-thirds
of which is held overseas.

'

'

.

'

Ex-husband.trivializes kids' safety ·
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

,
'

Dear Annie: I was married to "George" for 10
years, and we had three kids.
The marriage ended eight
years ago, and George has
since remarried. We share
custody of the kids, who are
now pre-teens, but they
physically reside with me.
George is a daredevil and
tries enticing the kids into
doing dangerous things. He
has put them on a riding
lawnrnower and a homemade go-kart (which has
broken down a few times).
and they have ridden in the
back · of a pickup (with no
seat belt, cover or protection). George is often careless, and I feel so helpless.
When I voice my concerns, George and his wife
attack me, saying, "You just
don 't want the kids to have
any fun" or "You are overprotective." They think I'm
~ing to control them. If the
k1ds don 't participate,
George makes fun of them.
My kids also have told me
that George and his wife say
nasty things about me to
them, although George
denies it and says the kids
are liars. Then when the
children go for visitation,
they are punished and ·

yelled at because they told
me what happened.
I don't thmk I'm overprotective. I think I'm just realistic about the dangers. I
fear for the kids' fhysical
safety and menta health
when they are in George's
care. How do I get it
through my ex's head that I
am not the enemy and he
needs to be more careful
with the children? Concerned Mom
Dear Concerned: George
is an idiot, and he's not
goin~ to listen to anyone.
It's lime to talk to a lawyer.
If George is endangering the
children's lives, you may
need to revise your custody
agreement so he sees them
only under supervision. He
won't lik.e it, but someone
has to put those children
first. Start keeping a diary
of dates, times and places
involving reckless behavior
so you have a record to
bring to court.
Dear Annie: Several
neighbors and ·I frequently
share supper. Last week, 11
was my tum to host, and
"Barb" said she had an extra
chickenpie. I replied, "Great.
Just heat it up at your house."
She said it would be too hot
to carry, so I offered to pick it
up when I came horne from
work. I added, "Please don't

put it in my oven."
.
expressir asked her not to,
These neighbors all have and that s the bottom.line.
keys to my home and I have
Dear Annie: I read the
keys to theirs. I returned letter from "Bullied in the
home from work to fmd the 'Burbs," whose neighbors
pie heating up in my oven. harassed them . I had a simi·
When the others arrived to lar problem with a nexteat, I told them, "I thought door neighbor when my
my house was on fire when daughters were in elemenI walked in because there laiY. school. I feared for my
was a pie in the oven that chtldren 's safety and conwasn't there when I left this tacted the city attorney. He
morning."
wrote a letter to the neighThe next morning, I men- bor requesting a meeting.
tioned to "Angela" that I When she didn't attend, he
thought it was not right for sent a more threatening folBarb to do something I low-up. We never had any
expressly asked her not to more problems with her. do. Angela said they had California
'
jointly decided to heat the
Dear California: Other
fie in my oven and thought readers suggested videowould be thrilled they had taping the offenders for
gotten things ready. Then documentation, which is
she went off, saying I was a also a good idea. Thanks
control freak, so I apolo- for writing.
gized to all of them.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
I still say when I ask them ten by Kathy Milchell and
not to do something in my Marcy Sugar, longtime edihome, they shouldn't do it. tor&amp; of the Ann l.antkrs
Who is nght? - Caught column. Please e-IIUlil your
With Egg on My Face
questions to anniesmailDear Caught: You are. box@comcqst,ne~ or write
We understand why your to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
friends thought it odd that Bo:c .118190, Chitago, IL
you were reluctant to have 60611. To find out more
supper warmed up at your about Annie's Mailbox,
house, and you might con- and read features by other
sider that Angela has a Creators Syndicate writers
point. However, Barb and cartoonists, visit the
should not have put the pie Creators Syndicate Web
in your oven when you page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept.l4
RACINE Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media center.
·
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, • 9
a:m., 117 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY Meigs
County Library. Board, 3
p.m., Pomeroy Ltbrary.
Thesday, Sept. 25
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Local Emergency
Planning Committee, II :30
a.m., conference· room of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, rescheduled regular meeting, 7
p.m., Rutland Civic Center.

coin show to be held at the
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.

Reunions ,
Saturday, Sept. ll
RACINE - Thomas and
Isabelle Stobart family
reuJiion will be held at 1
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Take
covered dish and family history and photos.

Church events

Church, community picnic,
4:30 p.m. with gospel sing.
Sunday Sept. l3
POMEROY
- Jerry
Frederick will be at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodis,t
Ch11rch preaching at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m.
STIVERS VILLE
Stiversville · Community
Church, Portland, revival
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
and Monday throu,ih .
Thursday, 7 p.m. w1th
Sherri and Bill Villers.
POMEROY- Mt. Union
Baptist Church, . "New
Creation" concert, 6:30
p.m., 39091 Carpenter Hill
Road. ,
Sunday, Sept. 30
REEDSVILLE"Delivered" to sing at
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m.

Friday, Sept. l1
POMEROY - Outdoor
hymn sing at the Hillside
Baptist Church, State Route
143, 7 p.m. featuring Chuck
Compton, Gospel Bluegrass
Gentlemen,
Jamie
Humphrey and Valerie
Clonch. Take lawn chairs.
POMEROY There
will be a community dinner at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, serving
a baked stead dinner from .
Monday, Sept.l4
Sunday, Sept.l3
POMEROY - A meeting 4:30 to 6 p.m. Public
RUTLAND
The
of the OH-KAN Coin Club invited.
Saturday, Sept. 22
Rutland Youth League will
will be heh;l at 7 p.m. at the
STIVERS VILLE
be holding a meeting at the
Pomeroy Library. An update
will be given on the Oct. 7 Stivers ville Community . Rutland F\fe Deparllnent 3

School
and Youth

.,
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11

ALFRED
- Janice
Weber had the program
titled "Pledge Service: Our
Time for Mission," at the
recent meeting of the Alfred
United Methodist Women,
held at the church.
The focus statement and
scripture were read. The
group read The Purpose and
participated in readings.
, The program ended with a
group prayer.
Thelma Henderson served
the meal , and Mary Jo
Barringer gave the blessing.
Secretary's and treasurer's reports were given.
Members reported 114
friendship calls. Members
signed a prayer calendar
birthday card for Susan
Hunt, a deaconess from
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Dave and Mary Jo
Barringer and Rev. Jim
Corbitt will deliver Festival

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Akzo (NASDAQ)-.79
Asllland Inc, (NYSEI - 62.55
Big Lots (NYSE)- 30.73 .
Bob Ev~llll (NASDAQ)- 31.84
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 85.40
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 50.62

of Sharing kits and Dave
Barringer will help load the
truck on Oct. 6.
The Foothills District
United Methodist Women
Fall Annual Day will be
Sept. . 22 at The Plains
United Methodist Church.
Geor~e Sherry of Red Bird
Miss1on of Beverly, Ky.,
will be speaking about the
needs of the school. The
group decided to send a
monetary offering for the
mission. Barringer, Sarah
Caldwell and Mary Jo
Buckley will attend the
meeting.
•
The 34th West Ohio
Conference UMW Annual
Celebration will be No. I0
at Grove City United
Methodist Church.
A letter from Tara Wilson,
Foothills UMW Program
Re sources Secretary, was
read, reminding members

.

41.24

Harley-Oavklean (NYIEI 48.15

JP Morpn (NYSE) - 48.96
Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 28.82
Umlted Branda ( NYSE) ~ 22.33
Norfolk Southem (NYSE) -

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Collins (NYSEI - 69.75
DuPont (NYSEI - 49.90
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.38
Gannett (NYSE) - 44.94

-.

General Electrlc (NYSE) -

Oak Hill Financial (NAiDAQ) -

39.01

~

SALEM CENTER - Approximately 50 members and
guests atte~ the recent hay ride and weiner roast of Star
Grange #778 and Star Juinor Grange #878 . The ride through
the countryside while singing old songs worked up die
. appetite o( those in attendance . Following the weiner roast,
final plans were made for the annual chicken barbecue to be · ·
held from II a.m. to 2 p.m. on Oct. 7 at the Star Grange · '
Hall. three miles north of Salem Center on County Ro~ 1. ~ .
"'

·'

Local Weather

,

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Friday, Sept. 21

City/Region
High I Low temps
"

..

ae•1fir

0

llenllllld •

85" t ss·

•

0

*Columbul
87" t 56"

0
"
.,..

..

-.
~
P..Uy

Cloudy

6

Ooody

~

r=."·~

Flumoo

"

~

leo

Snow

~

];-d ~ ~ ~ .:.:: ~
Showwl

~

Ram . •

p.m. to elect officers, new
coaches and discuss next
season. For those who have
questions call Danny David,
742-2372 or Lisa McDaniel,
992-6985.

Birthdays
Sunday, Sept. 23
RACINE ...,.... Edna Knopp

will observe her 90th birthday on Sept. 23. Cards may
be sent to her at 49880
Portland Road, Racine. ,
'

Frlday... Sunny. Highs in
the mid 80s. South winds 5
.to 10 mph.
Friday nlgbt...Mostly
clear. Lows llround 60.
South winds around S mph.
Saturdaly... Sunny. Highs
in the upper 80s. Southwest
winds around S mph.
Saturday nliht •••Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
60s. North winds around 5 ·
mph.
Sunday
through
Monday
nlgbt...Mostly
clear. Highs in the upper
80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
1\iesday...Mostly sunny.
A chance of showers in the

•

morning...Then a,.chance of · ·
showers 3.11d thunderstorrtls .
in the afternoon. Highs in .
the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Thesday nlght ••• Mostly
cloudy. A·chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening .. ,Then a chance of
showers after midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers .•
in the morning. Highs in the
ugper 70s. Chance of rain
3 'percent.
·
Wednesday nl&amp;ht. .. Mostly
cloudy. Lows in ihe mid 50s. ',

Rough game? Strains and sprains?
.. :

Stiffness or Soreness?

What do you do about it?

...

the Reading Program
requirements are due to her
by Dec. 15.
Barringer read a letter
from Joanne Boring, mission coordinator for Social
Action about
payday
lenders and how to write
letters to senators or representatives.
Osie Follrod read correspondence from Brent
Watson, interim director of
the Meigs Cooperative
Parish. A meeting will be
held Oct. 23 at St. Paul
United Methodist Church to
discuss the possibility of a
satellite site in the Tuppers
Plajns community.
Attending were Barringer,
Buckley, Caldwell, Follrod.
Thelma
· Henderson,
. Florence Spencer, Janice
Weber, and Helen Wolf.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 9.

·-·

'.

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS CLINIC
Offered In conjunction with Ohio Valley
Physicians the saturday Sports Clinic will
be open during the Fall Sports season.
Most Insurances, including AETNA,
are accepted.
For more Information:

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Grange enjoys hayride =~

Weber presents UMW program

Local Stocks

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·

.,

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Off1c ial s hope all the
changes will make it hari:ler
·for counterfeiters to pass
fake bi li s. In the United
States last year, there were
3.945 arres ts related to
counterfeit bills, equaling a

Friday, September 21, 2007

Woalllor Underground • AP

Clubs and
organizations

·'

ed ues .

PageA7 .

BYTHEBENi&gt;

The Daily Sentinel

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'f
•••

~
I

�NATION •WORLD
.
aoes
triCkV

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA6 :'

Friday, September 21 ,2007

zero

BY LARRY McSHANE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Almost
everyone agrees Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad
doesn't
belong at ground zero.
So who gets access these
days to the 16-acre pit
where the World Trade
Center once anchored the
Manhattan skyline, a slice
of the city that many regard
as hallowed ground?
Construction workers. 1be
families of victims. The
occasional journalist. And
not too many others, in stark
contrast to the days immediately after Sept. II when the
smoldering site was overrun
with celebrities, politicians
and even Playboy playmates.
Amid the chaos after the
twin towers fell. rescue workers and cleanup crews mill"
gled with a parade of well
known visitors: Muhammad
Ali, Robert De Niro, cast
members
from
"The
Sopranos," Martha Stewart.
Miss America Katie
Harman signed body ID
rags for grateful workers.
Boxing promoter Don King
toured the site, as did U.N.
Secretary-General
Kofi
Annan and other world
leaders. Almost half of the
Senate arri ved en masse.
The vast majority came to
offer support and condolences,. although critics suggested others viewed a trip to
the devastation as a photo op.
"lt was like you had
celebrity status only if you
got in at ground zero,"
recalled Brian Jordan, a
Franciscan priest who spent
long hours in lower
Manhattan in the weeks
after two hijacked planes
struck the _towers.
Within a month, the city
was turning down hundreds
of requests to visit the site

AP photo
Construction workers take a break in their work as seen through a fence surrounding ground zero in Lower Manhattan,
Thursday, in New York. New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said a proposed visit to ground zero by Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad during next week's United Nations General Asse mbly is a dead issue and it would not
happen. The Iranian President has made a request to place a memorial wreath at the site, which is sti ll considered hal·
lowed ground to many, in spite of the construction crews at work there.
"We have communicated
our concerns to the Iranian
Mission," J.&lt;elly said. "I am
sure they will abide by our
statement ... Our position is
that he will· not be permitted
to go."
Mayor Michael Bloomberg
said the .city would provide
protection for all guests of the
United Nations without
requiring that they pass a "litmus test for ·views." He said
of Ahmadinejad: "I personal,
ly find what this guy has said
abhorrent, and I think it
would be inappropriate to

and began asking celebrities
to avoid the area as the
treacherous · search for
remains continued.
Six years later, Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly
said a proposed ground zero
visit by Ahmadinejad during next week's U.N.
General Assembly had no
chance. Police cited ongoing construction and security concerns, and the Iranian
president, who is under
Secret Service protection
while in the U.S., was told
to steer clear.

have him visit."
where deputy spokesman
Some
objected
to Tom Casey called the idea of
Ahmedinejad's visit on an Ahmedinejad visit "rather
political grounds.
appalling and the height of
"To have the leader of the hypocrisy." New York-based
greatest state· sponsor 'of ter- presidential candidates Hillary
rorism in the world visit the Clinton and Rudy Giuliani
site of the most heinous ter- also expressed their opposi·
rorist attack on America tion to the suggested visit.
would be an affront to the
Giuliani, the mayor at the
victims and families of 9/ll time or the allacks, was
and to all who lived lhrough cm1 ght in a dust-up when he
that day," said Abraham ·took a Saudi prince on a
Foxman, national director of tour of the site in October
the Anti-Defamation League.
The sentiment was echoed
bY. . the State Department,

ANNIE'-S MAILBOX

2001. Giuliani then rejected
the prince's $10 million
relief check after the prince
suggested U.S . policies in
the Middle East were partly
to blame for the carnage.
The Iranian president, in
an interview to air Sunday on
"60 Minutes," indicated he
would not press the issue. "I
won't insist," Ahmadinejad
said, although he ellpressed ,
disbelief that the visit would
offend Americans.
·When reminded by inter- '
viewer Katie,Couric that the
United States considers Iran
an ellporter of terrorism, he
said: "We are very much
against any terrorist action
and any killing .... Usually
you go to these sites to pay ..
your · respects, and also to, :
perhaps, air your views
about the root causes of ··
such incidents."
·•
The
reaction
to
Ahmadinejad's request to lay
a memorial wreath was the
·latest reminder of the stillraw feelings about the site.
Before
last
week.' s
anniversary of the attacks, ·
family members battled
with city officials to gain '
access to the area where the
II 0-story buildings once
soared. The official ceremony was held in a nearby .:
· park. but the mourners were · ·
permitted to walk down into
·the site during the service, ' .
perhaps for the last time.
Some family members
stayed home rather than
participate in the first yearly ·;
memorial not ·held on the ·
slte itself.
Hard hats and construe- .
· tion equipment are a daily ~
presence at ground zero.
The stream of tourists who
visit the site every day must
stand on a sidewalk and ,
peer through a fence.

Abe Lincoln's $5 bill getting a colotful makeover
Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Honest Abe will become
Colorful Abe with splashes
of purple and gray hvening
up the $5 bill.
The government showed
off the new bill Thursday in
an Internet news conference
- a high-tech unveiling
that officials say is entirely
appropriate for a 2 1st centu·
ry redesign of the bill featuring the Civil War president, Abraham Lincoln.
The changes are similar to
those already made, starting
in 2003, to the .$10, $20 and
$50 bills. In those redesigns,
pastel colors were added as
part of an effort to stay
ahead of counterfeiters and
their ever-more-sophisticated copying machines.
. Originally, the five wasn't
going to be redesigned. But
that decision was reversed
once counterfeiters began
bleaching $5 notes and
printing fake $100 bills with
the bleached paper to take
advantage of the fact that
some of the security features were in the same locations on both notes.
To thwart this particular
scam. the government is
changing the $5 watermark
from one of Lincoln to two
separate watermarks featuring the numeralS . The $!00
bill has a watermark with the
image of Benjamin Franklin.
The security thread
embedded in the $5 bill also
has been moved to a different location than the one
embedded in the $100 bill. ·
"We
wanted
thi s
redesigned bill to scream. ' I
am a five. I am a five ."'
Larry Felix, direc tor of the
Bureau of Engraving and
Printing said in an interview
with The Associated Press.
"We wanted to el imin&lt;~te
any simi larity or confusion
on the part of the public
between the $5 bi ll and the
$100 bill."
Circulation is planned for
the spring so operators of
millions
of
vending
machines haye ·y!e ~ty of
time to make .tlie:clianges
necessary so their- devices
will accept the new $) - "
denomination used heavily
in the machines.
The bureau will start printing the new notes next week
at its facility in Fon Wonh ,

Purple Is the new green for $5 bill
The newly designed $5 bill is part ol an ongoing effort by lhe U.S. gov· ·
emment to rhwan currency countel1eiting. Circulation is planned tor
spring 2008.

Watermerke: a large
number "5" and a column
of throe smaller ' S"s

Sec:urtty tllrud: embedded In

the note with the ~rds ' USA"
and
glows blue under UV light

Symbota of Fr-om:
The Great Seal of the U.S.
and an arc ol purple stars

Col~r:· lightpur~lle

that blends
Into gray.
"05"s are to
the left of the portrait

Low vltllon: large,
easy-to-read "5" helps
the visually Impaired
'.

various locations on

words "FIVE DOLLARS." ' E
"USA" and 'USA FIVE" in
the front and back of the note

SOURCE: Bureau Of Engraving and Printing

AP

"

Texas. The goal ·is to have
1.5 billion $5 bills ready to
be put into circulation, at a
date still to be determined.
The new $5 design also
incorporates a number of
other state-of-the-art security feat ures.
Perhaps the most striking
change ts a new large-size 5
printed in the lower righthand corner of the backside
of the bill in high-contrast
purple ink. That feature was
added to help the visually
impaired.
.
Lincoln remain s on the
front of the bill and the
Lincoln Memorial is still on
the back. but both images
have been enhanced and the
oval borders around them
have been removed. In place
of a border around Lincoln 's
portrait, the new bill will
feature an arc of purple
stars. Sma ll ye llow "05"
numeral s will be printed on
both the front and the back.
The center of the bill features Iight purple which
blends into gray near the

loss of $62 million, according to the Secret Service.
Before the new bills go
into circulation, there will
be an education campaign

focused on banks desi gned
to let the public and businesses learn about the new
security fe.atures.
"Our goal is to seamless!y
introduce the redesigned
bills to the public by working primarily with financial
institutions in the United
States and around the
world,"
said
Michael
Lambert, the assistant di rector of reserve bank operations at the Federal ReServe.
The next bill to get a
makeover will be the $100.
It will feature the most
advanced safeguard yet, a
new security thread composed of 650,000 tiny lenses
that will 'magnify microprinting on the bills to give
the effect of having the
images move in the opposite direction than the bill is
being moved.
The government is only
about one-third of the way
through the redesign of the
$100 and hopes to have that
process completed by this
time next year. Extra effort is
going into the $100
makeover since this bill rep·
resents more than 70 percent
of the $776 billion of currency in circulation, two-thirds
of which is held overseas.

'

'

.

'

Ex-husband.trivializes kids' safety ·
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

,
'

Dear Annie: I was married to "George" for 10
years, and we had three kids.
The marriage ended eight
years ago, and George has
since remarried. We share
custody of the kids, who are
now pre-teens, but they
physically reside with me.
George is a daredevil and
tries enticing the kids into
doing dangerous things. He
has put them on a riding
lawnrnower and a homemade go-kart (which has
broken down a few times).
and they have ridden in the
back · of a pickup (with no
seat belt, cover or protection). George is often careless, and I feel so helpless.
When I voice my concerns, George and his wife
attack me, saying, "You just
don 't want the kids to have
any fun" or "You are overprotective." They think I'm
~ing to control them. If the
k1ds don 't participate,
George makes fun of them.
My kids also have told me
that George and his wife say
nasty things about me to
them, although George
denies it and says the kids
are liars. Then when the
children go for visitation,
they are punished and ·

yelled at because they told
me what happened.
I don't thmk I'm overprotective. I think I'm just realistic about the dangers. I
fear for the kids' fhysical
safety and menta health
when they are in George's
care. How do I get it
through my ex's head that I
am not the enemy and he
needs to be more careful
with the children? Concerned Mom
Dear Concerned: George
is an idiot, and he's not
goin~ to listen to anyone.
It's lime to talk to a lawyer.
If George is endangering the
children's lives, you may
need to revise your custody
agreement so he sees them
only under supervision. He
won't lik.e it, but someone
has to put those children
first. Start keeping a diary
of dates, times and places
involving reckless behavior
so you have a record to
bring to court.
Dear Annie: Several
neighbors and ·I frequently
share supper. Last week, 11
was my tum to host, and
"Barb" said she had an extra
chickenpie. I replied, "Great.
Just heat it up at your house."
She said it would be too hot
to carry, so I offered to pick it
up when I came horne from
work. I added, "Please don't

put it in my oven."
.
expressir asked her not to,
These neighbors all have and that s the bottom.line.
keys to my home and I have
Dear Annie: I read the
keys to theirs. I returned letter from "Bullied in the
home from work to fmd the 'Burbs," whose neighbors
pie heating up in my oven. harassed them . I had a simi·
When the others arrived to lar problem with a nexteat, I told them, "I thought door neighbor when my
my house was on fire when daughters were in elemenI walked in because there laiY. school. I feared for my
was a pie in the oven that chtldren 's safety and conwasn't there when I left this tacted the city attorney. He
morning."
wrote a letter to the neighThe next morning, I men- bor requesting a meeting.
tioned to "Angela" that I When she didn't attend, he
thought it was not right for sent a more threatening folBarb to do something I low-up. We never had any
expressly asked her not to more problems with her. do. Angela said they had California
'
jointly decided to heat the
Dear California: Other
fie in my oven and thought readers suggested videowould be thrilled they had taping the offenders for
gotten things ready. Then documentation, which is
she went off, saying I was a also a good idea. Thanks
control freak, so I apolo- for writing.
gized to all of them.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
I still say when I ask them ten by Kathy Milchell and
not to do something in my Marcy Sugar, longtime edihome, they shouldn't do it. tor&amp; of the Ann l.antkrs
Who is nght? - Caught column. Please e-IIUlil your
With Egg on My Face
questions to anniesmailDear Caught: You are. box@comcqst,ne~ or write
We understand why your to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
friends thought it odd that Bo:c .118190, Chitago, IL
you were reluctant to have 60611. To find out more
supper warmed up at your about Annie's Mailbox,
house, and you might con- and read features by other
sider that Angela has a Creators Syndicate writers
point. However, Barb and cartoonists, visit the
should not have put the pie Creators Syndicate Web
in your oven when you page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept.l4
RACINE Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media center.
·
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, • 9
a:m., 117 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY Meigs
County Library. Board, 3
p.m., Pomeroy Ltbrary.
Thesday, Sept. 25
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Local Emergency
Planning Committee, II :30
a.m., conference· room of
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center.
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, rescheduled regular meeting, 7
p.m., Rutland Civic Center.

coin show to be held at the
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.

Reunions ,
Saturday, Sept. ll
RACINE - Thomas and
Isabelle Stobart family
reuJiion will be held at 1
p.m. at Star Mill Park. Take
covered dish and family history and photos.

Church events

Church, community picnic,
4:30 p.m. with gospel sing.
Sunday Sept. l3
POMEROY
- Jerry
Frederick will be at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodis,t
Ch11rch preaching at 10
a.m. and 6 p.m.
STIVERS VILLE
Stiversville · Community
Church, Portland, revival
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
and Monday throu,ih .
Thursday, 7 p.m. w1th
Sherri and Bill Villers.
POMEROY- Mt. Union
Baptist Church, . "New
Creation" concert, 6:30
p.m., 39091 Carpenter Hill
Road. ,
Sunday, Sept. 30
REEDSVILLE"Delivered" to sing at
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m.

Friday, Sept. l1
POMEROY - Outdoor
hymn sing at the Hillside
Baptist Church, State Route
143, 7 p.m. featuring Chuck
Compton, Gospel Bluegrass
Gentlemen,
Jamie
Humphrey and Valerie
Clonch. Take lawn chairs.
POMEROY There
will be a community dinner at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, serving
a baked stead dinner from .
Monday, Sept.l4
Sunday, Sept.l3
POMEROY - A meeting 4:30 to 6 p.m. Public
RUTLAND
The
of the OH-KAN Coin Club invited.
Saturday, Sept. 22
Rutland Youth League will
will be heh;l at 7 p.m. at the
STIVERS VILLE
be holding a meeting at the
Pomeroy Library. An update
will be given on the Oct. 7 Stivers ville Community . Rutland F\fe Deparllnent 3

School
and Youth

.,
.,

,~

o~
- •

«

&gt;

'

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&lt;

&lt;

I·SIII l· 21l!l·1 1lll'i nt I:-.Jill hh7-71SS
il

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:

0

11

ALFRED
- Janice
Weber had the program
titled "Pledge Service: Our
Time for Mission," at the
recent meeting of the Alfred
United Methodist Women,
held at the church.
The focus statement and
scripture were read. The
group read The Purpose and
participated in readings.
, The program ended with a
group prayer.
Thelma Henderson served
the meal , and Mary Jo
Barringer gave the blessing.
Secretary's and treasurer's reports were given.
Members reported 114
friendship calls. Members
signed a prayer calendar
birthday card for Susan
Hunt, a deaconess from
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Dave and Mary Jo
Barringer and Rev. Jim
Corbitt will deliver Festival

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Akzo (NASDAQ)-.79
Asllland Inc, (NYSEI - 62.55
Big Lots (NYSE)- 30.73 .
Bob Ev~llll (NASDAQ)- 31.84
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 85.40
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 50.62

of Sharing kits and Dave
Barringer will help load the
truck on Oct. 6.
The Foothills District
United Methodist Women
Fall Annual Day will be
Sept. . 22 at The Plains
United Methodist Church.
Geor~e Sherry of Red Bird
Miss1on of Beverly, Ky.,
will be speaking about the
needs of the school. The
group decided to send a
monetary offering for the
mission. Barringer, Sarah
Caldwell and Mary Jo
Buckley will attend the
meeting.
•
The 34th West Ohio
Conference UMW Annual
Celebration will be No. I0
at Grove City United
Methodist Church.
A letter from Tara Wilson,
Foothills UMW Program
Re sources Secretary, was
read, reminding members

.

41.24

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JP Morpn (NYSE) - 48.96
Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 28.82
Umlted Branda ( NYSE) ~ 22.33
Norfolk Southem (NYSE) -

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32.39

Collins (NYSEI - 69.75
DuPont (NYSEI - 49.90
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.38
Gannett (NYSE) - 44.94

-.

General Electrlc (NYSE) -

Oak Hill Financial (NAiDAQ) -

39.01

~

SALEM CENTER - Approximately 50 members and
guests atte~ the recent hay ride and weiner roast of Star
Grange #778 and Star Juinor Grange #878 . The ride through
the countryside while singing old songs worked up die
. appetite o( those in attendance . Following the weiner roast,
final plans were made for the annual chicken barbecue to be · ·
held from II a.m. to 2 p.m. on Oct. 7 at the Star Grange · '
Hall. three miles north of Salem Center on County Ro~ 1. ~ .
"'

·'

Local Weather

,

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Friday, Sept. 21

City/Region
High I Low temps
"

..

ae•1fir

0

llenllllld •

85" t ss·

•

0

*Columbul
87" t 56"

0
"
.,..

..

-.
~
P..Uy

Cloudy

6

Ooody

~

r=."·~

Flumoo

"

~

leo

Snow

~

];-d ~ ~ ~ .:.:: ~
Showwl

~

Ram . •

p.m. to elect officers, new
coaches and discuss next
season. For those who have
questions call Danny David,
742-2372 or Lisa McDaniel,
992-6985.

Birthdays
Sunday, Sept. 23
RACINE ...,.... Edna Knopp

will observe her 90th birthday on Sept. 23. Cards may
be sent to her at 49880
Portland Road, Racine. ,
'

Frlday... Sunny. Highs in
the mid 80s. South winds 5
.to 10 mph.
Friday nlgbt...Mostly
clear. Lows llround 60.
South winds around S mph.
Saturdaly... Sunny. Highs
in the upper 80s. Southwest
winds around S mph.
Saturday nliht •••Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
60s. North winds around 5 ·
mph.
Sunday
through
Monday
nlgbt...Mostly
clear. Highs in the upper
80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
1\iesday...Mostly sunny.
A chance of showers in the

•

morning...Then a,.chance of · ·
showers 3.11d thunderstorrtls .
in the afternoon. Highs in .
the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Thesday nlght ••• Mostly
cloudy. A·chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening .. ,Then a chance of
showers after midnight.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers .•
in the morning. Highs in the
ugper 70s. Chance of rain
3 'percent.
·
Wednesday nl&amp;ht. .. Mostly
cloudy. Lows in ihe mid 50s. ',

Rough game? Strains and sprains?
.. :

Stiffness or Soreness?

What do you do about it?

...

the Reading Program
requirements are due to her
by Dec. 15.
Barringer read a letter
from Joanne Boring, mission coordinator for Social
Action about
payday
lenders and how to write
letters to senators or representatives.
Osie Follrod read correspondence from Brent
Watson, interim director of
the Meigs Cooperative
Parish. A meeting will be
held Oct. 23 at St. Paul
United Methodist Church to
discuss the possibility of a
satellite site in the Tuppers
Plajns community.
Attending were Barringer,
Buckley, Caldwell, Follrod.
Thelma
· Henderson,
. Florence Spencer, Janice
Weber, and Helen Wolf.
The next meeting will be
Oct. 9.

·-·

'.

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS CLINIC
Offered In conjunction with Ohio Valley
Physicians the saturday Sports Clinic will
be open during the Fall Sports season.
Most Insurances, including AETNA,
are accepted.
For more Information:

Champion JNASDAQI - 5.94
Charmtne Shops (NASDAQI City Holding (NASDAQ) -

~-

Grange enjoys hayride =~

Weber presents UMW program

Local Stocks

..

·

.,

.'

Off1c ial s hope all the
changes will make it hari:ler
·for counterfeiters to pass
fake bi li s. In the United
States last year, there were
3.945 arres ts related to
counterfeit bills, equaling a

Friday, September 21, 2007

Woalllor Underground • AP

Clubs and
organizations

·'

ed ues .

PageA7 .

BYTHEBENi&gt;

The Daily Sentinel

_

51.24

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Rock)' Boob (NASDAQ) 10.77

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Sure HoldhC (NASDAQI 133.18

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Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Grllrey out for season, Page 82
•

New number, image for Junior, Page B3
Landis round guilty of doping, Page B4

........

o-.11
W L Pl:t. W L P1:t.

Team&amp;
Ohio State 0 0' .000
P\Jrdue
0 0 .000
Penn State 0 0 .000
Indiana
0 0 .000
Wisconsin 0 0 .000
Michigan St. 0 0 .000
lllinQiS
0 0 .000
Nv.estem 0 0 .000
laNa
0 0 .000
Minnesota 0 0 .000
MIChigan 0 0 .000

3 0 1.000
3 0 1.000
3 0 1.000
3 0 1.o00
3 0 1.000
3 0 1.000
2 1 .667
2 1 .667
2 1 .667
1 2 .333
1 2 .333

',1\1 III HI/\ V "• 1.1\ MI '•
Illinois at Indiana
Iowa at Wisconsin
Penn State at Michi~n
Michigan State at Notre Dame
Puldue at Minre;ota

11/\M II fiflf II'.

I

•
'
.'
~;

'

Total Olfeuse
Puldue ................................534. 7
Minnesota .......................... 493.7
lndiana ............ ................... .477.7
Northwestern ...................... 451.3
lllinOIS ..................................447.7
Rushing on-..,..
Indiana ................................258. 7
Illinois .................................. 258.0
Minnesota ...................... ;... 229.0
Michigan ..............................226.3
P\Jrdue,WisconSin ................ 215.0
PassOifetiN
P\Jmue ................................319. 7
Northwestern, ......................283.0
Minnesota ..........................264.7
Michigan State .................... 242. 7
Indiana ................................219.0
Total Defense
Ohio State .......................... 197.0
Iowa ................................ .... 212. 1

Penn State .......... :...............217. 7
Miohigan State ....................286. i
Illinois .......... .,,,.. ..................289.0
RulhDel'e.lse
Penn StaiB ............................17. 7

.

lov.a ......................................62. 7

Indiana .................................. 65.3
Illinois .................................... 71.3
Ohio State ............................76.7
Pals Defense
Ohio State ..........................120.3
Iowa ............. ,......................150.0

Michigan State .................... 198.0
Penn state .......................... 200.0
Michigan.....:........................ 201.7
INUIVIIIIJ/11 II IIIli Jl&lt;,
Rusl*lg 'Mids

Friday, September 21, 2007
•
•

An.inside look at this week's .game
COLUMBUS - When Steve
Spunier waa at the University
of Florida, be U8ed ro mock
Teoneeeee's track record of
finishing far enough down in
the Southeastern Conference
football standing!! that it
ended up in the Citrus Bowl by
saying, "You can't spell Citrus
without aU and aT."
It's not technically oorrect,
but three weeks inro this college football season, you can't
spell embarrassment without
theBigTen.
Nightmare losses ro Appalachian State, Duke, Florida

None of the Big Ten's 33
non-league opponents waa
ranked at the time the games
were playL' l. Highly regarded
rankings.
Wisconsin had ro rally in the
Yes, the Big Ten has three
final minutes ro beat UNLV
teams in the Top 10- Ohio
and was tied at halftime with
State at No. 8, followed by
The Citadel. Ohio State
WJBCOnsinat No.9 and Peon
found itaell'leadiogooly 3·2
State at No. 10.
.
at halftime against Akron.
Yes, Big Teo teamS are 26-7, ·• So, is the Big Ten as bad as it
heading inro the opening week has looked early? Or 'are better
of conference play on Saturday. weekends on the horizon?
But Ohio State's 33-14 win
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel
at Washington is the only vic- inaist.s better days are ahead.
tory by aBigTenteam thst
"There are a lot of folks
could be called a "quality" win. who can beat a lot of folks,"
onship Series oonfereoces.
Other say it's No.6.
At this point in the eeaaon,
it's hard ro argue with those

Jim
Naveau
Uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com

The

419-993-2087

Atlantic and IoW!l State by Big
Ten teams just months after
Ohio State and Michigan's hu·
miliation in their bowl games
have put the Big Teo's reputa·
tion inro ·a free fall.
Power ranking guru Jeff
Sagarin rates the Big Ten fifth
among the six Bowl Champi-

Wil
Qlllterbad&amp;s

Brian Robiskie (17 catChes, 342 yards)

Todd Boeckman has completed 63 perhas had more than 100 yards receMng
cent of his passes, has tl'lro&gt;.ll'l six touchdcl'vln
twice in the first three games. Brian
passes and has been interoopted tv.4ce in
Hartline (14 catches,
OSU's first three games. He threw for tM:I
153 yards) set a
lorgtouclldoYKr passes in the second half
career high with
last week in a 33-14 win at Washington.
six catches
l3oeckr ran and the Bt deyes' oflerl;e
against
are both looking 1br faster slll1s on
Akron two
Salurday after being held to three
weeks
points in the first half the last two
ilf§&gt;, then
1\eeks 1:¥ Washi'€100 and Akron.
matched
l'lorthlll:!ste's CJ. Bacher is
never far from the ball in the
.Wildcats' spread offense.
He has tl'lro&gt;.ll'l almost
tv,;ce as rna~ passes
as Boe::kr!'iat (123 w.
71) and has run the

~against Washington. OSU is still looking
for a third receiver, but has had 13 players
catch a pass.
Ross Lare (14 catches, 179 yards, two
touchdolms) leads flklrt!lwestem. Nine of tis
call:res and 128 of1hoseyards came
Clj}linst Du~. Eric Pelerman ard Rasheed
Ward each have 10 calches.

~Ohio Stale

he said, offering his explana·
tion for the Big Ten's strug·
gles. "I felt going ioro the
year it (the Big Ten) was
going to be better than it was
in '06 and I still feel the
same way."
.
That's an optimistic view. . .
And the view of a coach who
does himself no favors by dis- ·
paraging the quality of the
. opponents his team will be
playing eight of the next
nine weeks.
The facts say otherwise.
Right now, the Big Teo isn't
looking very good.

nationally in total defense (197 .0 yards a
game) despite having only one starter, Vernon Gholston, back on the defensive line
and losing its top newcomer, 'lawrence Wil·
son, to a broken leg in the opener.
Advantage: Ohio State

Advinltage: Ohio State ,.,.._.- '

Cornerback Malcolm Jenkins got the
first interception of the season 1:¥ an Ohio
State defensive back at Washington, but
Defe11slve lne
the other cornerback, Donald Washing· :
l&lt;eiin Mims, a 270· ton, was named defensive player of the
pound deferrsMl erxl,
week by Ohio State's coaches. Opposing :·
leads Northwestern in quarterbacks have completed only 52
sacks (2) am tack· percent of their passes against OSU's de·
les for~ (41-!!). tense, which leads the Big Ten in that cat·
His sacks came
egory. Opponen1s are completing 67 per·
on the final two
cent of their passes against Northwest·
plays of a 36-31 em's defense, the worst in the Big Ten in
v.in wer
that department.
Nevada two
Adva• ge: Ohio Slllte

Special teams

Ohio State left ro6m for imprCM!ment last
week when Rf&lt;ln Pretorius missed a 44·
tonand Mims yard field [j:Jal and had another blocked. .
all started last Also, the kickcoverage team f!jlve up kick·
off returns of 41 yards and 35 yards. Preto·
season.
rius is 5 of 7 on field [j:Jals. Punter A.J. Tra·
passo is averaging 42.9 yards a kick.
Northwestern kicker Al;nado Vil~rrealls 4
for 4 on field [j:Jals. Punter Stefan Demos wernges 37.3 yards per kick.
Corey V\00!-

Advantage: Ohio State

Sscka

Sept 1
\bung;tnwn State W 38-6
Sept 8
Akron
w20.2
Sept15 @Washington W33·14
SA1URI)I\Y Noltln- 3:30 p.m.
Sept. 29

Oct. 6
Oct 13
Oct. 20
Oct 27
Nov. 3

Nov. 10

Nov. 17

@ Minnesolll
@ P\Jrdue

Kent State

8 p.m.
8 p.m.

TBA

Mchi!(iln State 3:30 p.m
@Penn State
8 p.m.
WISCOnsin

Illinois
@ Michigan

TBA
TBA
TBA

Conulnt CC&lt;TljJiled 11t Jon NIM!au anc
~ 111 Jeff Bmun • 1he Uma News
~c. 2007'1he Uma News. Repro-

ductioo of all "'arry porbon of th~ matefial
5 prolllbited v.ttrwt e.press consent

Say what?

Q

After Utree games, what's the Achilles heel of
. the Buckeyes' offense and defense? ·
- Matt from Uma

A

The Achilles heel of the defense could tum out to
be Lawrence Wilson's broken leg, which leaves OSU
thin on the defensive line. Depth on the line courd
also be the biggest question for the offense.

Ask your questions at:
Email Jim atjnaveau@llmanews.~m
Blog with him at www.llmasports.com

·. f

Defensive ltlc:ks

Allvantace: Ohio

Q&amp;A with Jim Naveau

Monday. September 24
Volloyball

Uh, no."

11

- Defensive end Vernon Gholston, when asked if he
ever felt sorry for the quarremacks he •acked.

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: Three of the five largest
2: At which bowl game 3: Who caught
crowds at Ohio Stadium were did Ohio State set the Troy Smith's first
for games against Michigan.
school record for the touchdown pass
Who were the opponents
~iggest bowl croWd?
at Ohio State?
for the other two?
Answers: l !Texas 1n 2005 and Minnesota in 2006
2. Rose Bov.i vs. USC 1111973 3. Santon1o Holmes

.

days until kickoff

WoLFE

STEWART
The
Southern Lady Tomadoe s
(7-5) pulled another late
nighter, but the wait wa s
worth it. Coach Tonja
Hunter's troops tumbled the
Federa I
Hocking
Lancers in
five game s
25-17 •
15-25, 21 25 , 25-15 '
and 15-6to claim th e
n
match
~;..._.....,._ ___.. the
Tri Va I I e y
Conferenc e
Hockin g
Divisi'o D
volley bat I
contest.
Souther n
won
th e
first game •
t h e n
dropped th e
nex.t two
..__ _ ___. Fe de ra I
Hunter
Hockin g
was com ing off a close loss I0
Eastern and the win s
seemed to bolster its confi1dence. Southern was persistent, however, in the fourt h
game and knotted up th e
tally at 2-2.
Southern then woo th e
finale in relatively eas y
style to claim the five-gam e
win. The Lady 'Does see m
to be back on track after a
mid-season
lull ,
an d
showed much character in
being able to come fro m
behind
to
pull
off
Thursday's win.
Emma Hunter (26-26 on
the night) served up nin e
points in Southern 's ope rrmg gam!' wm. Southe rn
stats in the next two se ts
were nothing to brag abouI.
Federal Hocking's Vanes sa
C~istle had eight in the se cond game to lead the Lady
Lancers. In the third gam e,
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle and
Ashley Robie each had fi ve
in a losing cause, wh ile
Federal's Iri s Butcher Ied
her club to the win.
In the fourth game,
Hunter got Southern off to a
good start with the fi rst
three, then going down the
stretch she contributed fo ur
more for a seven-po int
game. Riffle and Chels ea
Pape had. five and fo ur

CoNTACT

US

OVP Scorellne (! p.m.·1 a.m.)
1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
F.ax- 1-740-446·3008 •
e-mail - sports@ mydailysen1inel.com

$Q.O!lf .Slatl

Brad Sherman, Sporta Edl tor
(740) 446-2342, "" 33
bshe rma n@ mydailyt.ribune.com

Hours: Mon.-fri.

I

Sat.

Sun. 12-4 •

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, OKI. 23
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, OKI. 33

bwat1ers@ mydailytnbu ne.com

•
'

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSGIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

WELLSTON - It's offiThe
TTi-Valley
ci al.
coofereoce golf season is
over. And Meigs finished it
wi th a bang.
The Marauders capped
th eir third consecutive
0 hio golf championship
wednesday with a 49-stroke
th umping of host Vinton

rvc

County
at
Fairgreens
Country Club.
The Maroon and Gold
ended the Ohio Division
camplrlgn undefeated, finishing 9-0-1 in head-to-head
duals: MHS was also the
Stewart
Legar
only TVC school- Ohio or
Hocking divisions - to finSenior Steven Stewan led
ish the year unbeaten.
the
Marauder charge with a
Meigs shot a team score of
159, well ahead of the low score of 37, good
Vikings' tally of 208.
enough for medalist honors.

Classmate Kirk Legar was
nex.t with a 38, followed by
sophomore Joey Blackston
w,ith a 40. Sophomore Zach
Whitlatch rounded out the
team total with a 44.
Sophomores
Tyler
Andrews and Bobby King
also fired respective rounds
of 51 and 52 for the victors.
Vinton County (2-8 TVC
Ohio) was led by Derek
McManus with a 48, fol lowed by Mike Dixon with
50 and Megan Andrews with
54. Nate Wallace ended the
Vikes' team tally with a

round of 56.
Luke Lafferty and ' Chris
Zion also fired respective
rounds of 65 and 68 in the
setback.
Meigs has withdrawn
from
the
Riverside
Invitational on Saturday, so
its next match will be at the
Division II sectional tournament at the Chillicothe
Jaycee course on TLiesday.
Tee-times start at 9 a.m.
There will be 17 teams in
the D-11 sectional , with the
top-five advancing .to di stricts.

·HIGH ScHooL Caoss·couNTRY

I

Please see Southern, B2

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC •
•
I K • GMC
208 East Main • 1·740-992·6614 or 1·800·837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH

Marauders handle Vinton
County by 49 strokes in finale

Nelsonville-Vorlc: at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at VInton County, 6 p.m.

BY ScoTT

Northweslem's27,o win 01er NQ'Iheastem
in itsCjiener was its flrst shutout in 10 years.
Ohio State leads the Big Teri and is third

James Launnaitis ....:................... 2

2007 OSU SCHEDULE

Golf

Riverside Invitational, 11 a.m.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

State

John Gil,
Adam Hahn,

Football
Miller at Grove City Christian
Trimble at Shadyside

Lancers

James Laurinaitis' two interceptions
against Washington gave him seven in the
last 15 games. That number is even more
impressive when you oonsider. that four of'
the top defensive backs in recent Ohio
State history - Nate Clemen1s (7), Shai\Tl
Springs (6), Dome Whitner (5) and Antoine
Winfield (3) - couldn~ surpass Laurinaitis'
inten::eption total in their careers.
Northwestern's top linebacker, Adam
IW!ela, .f!Jew up in subulbai'I;GIIJ!Iffibus in . ,,
Dublin but was ne~~er an Ohio state·tan. · ·
His dad played offensive tackle at Michigpn
in the 1970s.
·

1\eeksag&gt;.

Satyrday Stpttmbtr 22

leashes

Unellacken

Despite rushing for
135 yards and 143
yards in Ohio
his last
two
games,
State
Receiving Yards
sophomore tailback
Brian Robisllie, Ohio State ........ 342
Chris Wells says he can
Eric Decker, Minnesota ............ 342lido better. Coach.Jim
"-' ""
M' h' St 315
ressel agleeS, pointing to
""""n ...omas, IC 1gan · ....
all the practices his 235·
t.u~ Swan, WisconSin ............ 297
pound sophomore missed
James Hardy, Indiana ..............245
this summer and spring because of an ankle injury. FreshOHIO STATE LEADERS
man Brandon Saine's speed
turned a play that WjlS supposed
l'asalng yards
Ohio State
to be a two-yard run into the line to run out ·receiver
Todd Boedlrnan ...................... 574
the clock into a 37·yard touchdown play as
RlllhlnC )Will
.Brian
time ran out against Washington.
Chris Wells ............... ...............324
Hartline
Northwestern's Tyrel Sutton, who was
Rllcelvtng yards
Oh.io's Mr. Football in 2004, has averaged
Bnan Robiskie ....1...................342
1,200 yards a season in his first two sea·
Touchclowne
3 players tied with ........................ 2
sons In col~. He misSed last week's 20·
Tackles
14 loss to Duke with a sprained ankle but
James Laurinaitis ...................... 22
is expected to play this week, according to
lnleic lplkMS
James Laurinaitis ........................ 2

Football
Meigs at Fairland
Southern at Wlrt County (WI&lt;)
Belpre at Eastern
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; at Cots. Bishop Ready
Minford at Vinton County
Wellston at Rock Hill
River Valley at Waterford
Gall/a Academy at Logan
South GoUla at Man (WV)
Hannan (WI/) al Wahama (WV)
Winlleld (WV) at Point Pleasant (W'I)

Meigs golf finishes Ohio Division unbeaten ·

Southern Athens sweeps titles

Ohio State rolled up 481 yards, aver·
aged 5. 7 yards per rushing play and didn't
a[ow a sack at Washington in what was its
best offl!nsive line effort of the season.
Tight end Jake Ballard was named the
team's offensive lineman of the week for
the second week in a row.
Nor1tr.\estem has three returning
starters on the lire, led 1:¥ cen·
ter TllMlf Rees am ~
byian Thiry. But oppos·
ing defenses have
sacked Northwest·
em's quarterbacks
seven tin\es and lim·
ited Wildcats runners
to 3.4 yards a cany.

Adam Weller, Minnesota .......... 794
Kellen Lewis, Indiana ..............643
o•
ouan Hoyer, MIC' h'1gan State .... 634

h"tl

....,. ............. teams

- Today'• aam11

Offlnil'lllne

Allvantalle: Even .
Rlwlicllacks

-

- ....... eo.nv.

looking for upset

Alook at some of the key matchups in coach Pat Fl1zgerald. Brandon Roberson
Saturday's game between No. 8 Ohio
(252 yards) has filled in for Sutton.
State (3·0, 0·0 Big Ten) and Northwestern
Adva•• 11 : Ohio Slllte
(2·1, 0·0 Big Ten) at Ohio Stadium:
lleceMrl

POMEAO'/ - A """"""' o1 -

""""' -

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: NORTHWESTERN (2-1, 0-0 BIG TEN)

ard frurtouchdciM'ls.

Curtis Painter, Puldue ..............952
C:J. Bacher, Northwestern ........838

. LocAL ScHEDULE
• The Uma Newt photoe

Big Ten stumbles into conference season

Mike Hart. Michigan ................502
PJ. HiR, Wiscon~n .................. 399 . ~""~~,Jl;. ~
A!nir Plm'iil&lt;; Minnesota ............386 · '
w """"'"ur
Chris Wells, Ohio State ............ 324
Boeclrnan. Bacher
Rashald Mendenhall, Illinois ....322
has 838 yards passing
Passing Yards

'

at Jackson Invite
Meigs' Swisher, Eastern's
Aeiker both place in top-10
and Oak Hill (280) rounded
OUt the lOp-! 0 team finisher$.
JACKSON - A total of
Both Meigs and Coal
22 schqols and 220 varsity Grove posted matching
comJ;ll!titors made the annu- team tallies of 288, but the ·
al tnp to the 'Apple City' Marauders won the tieThursday for tfie 2007 breaker with a better finish
1ackson Cross Country from their sixth runner.
I nvitatiooal at Franklin MHS finished 11th overall
Valley Golf Couse.
while CGHS placed 12th.
By day 's end, all of them Ironton
(293),
Vinton
had witnessed history - County
(307)
and
e ven though most didn't Nelsonville-York
(318)
realize it.
com~leted the
15-team
.Athens County - for the standings.
.
most pan - dominated the
Locally, Eastern . Keith
results by winoin!J three- Aeiker was the· lone male to
quaners ofthe vars1ty hard• finish in the top-10 individuwar.e. Athens won .team ... lilly, placing ~ighth~ out uL,.
ti ties in both the boys and I 35 runners with a tinle of ·
g iris
divisions,
while 18:57. South Gallia's Jacob
Alexander
sophomore Watson also placed 23rd
Emily Skidmore captured with a time of 19:55.
the individual crown during Neither EHS nor SGHS had
a team score.
the girls race. ·
Vince Weatherstein led the
But the biggest accomp lishment of the evening Raiders - with a time of
carne from Jackson senior 19:33, placing 13th overall.
Bryce Wilson, who became David Householder (23rd)
the first Red and White run- finished with a time of
ner to ever win an individual 20:23, while Kody Johnson ·
I itle in the event's 20-plus (44th) posted a time of
year history.
21:11. Tyler Noble (21:47)
Wilson's posted a winning and Jon Porter (24:31)
I ime of 17:20, placing well rounded out the Silver and
ahead of runner-up Justin Black scoring with respecKammler (17:59) from tive placings of 63rd and
Portsmouth Notre Dame. I OOth.
Pike Eastern's Jordan
Southern, which was right
Selbee (18:00) was third, behind RVHS, was led by
followed by Steven Rhue of Kyle Goode (19 :44) with a
Athens with a time of 18:21. l6th place effort. Kraig
Logan's Eli Reed rounded Kleski (21: 14) placed 46th,
out the top-five male finish- Dylan Roush (21 :28) came
ers with a time of 18:44.
in 49th and Colby Roseberry
The Bulldogs, with a team (22:31) finished 70th.
score of 49, fended off
Drew Hoover , (22:56)
Logan (54) by five places rounded out the Tornadoes'
for the boys team champi- team score by placing 74th.
onship. Fairland was th1rd John Holsinger (27:03) and
with 98 points, followed hy Kris Kleski (27:59) also had
Zane Trace in fourth with a respective finishes of 116th
137. Pike Eastern was fifth and II 9th for the 'Does.
with 186.
Meigs was led by Andrew
River Valley edged out O'Bryant, whe placed 35th
Southern for sixth place by with a time of 20:34. Nathan
one point with a 192, while Cook (21 :09) was next for
Alexander finished eighth
PleaH see Invite. 82
with a 220. Piketon (247)
BY EIRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ABOVE - Southern
junior Drew Hoover,
second from left,
picks up places as
he runs up
'lronmen Hill I' on
Thursday dunng the
2007 Jackson .
Cross Country
Invitationa l at'
Franklin Valley Golf
Course in Jackson.
LEFT - Meigs
junior Kimi Swisher,
left, and Eastern
junior Keith Aeiker
hold their top-10
plaques from the
2007 Jackson
Cross Country
Invitational at
Franklin Valley Golf
Course in Jackson.
Swisher finished
sixth in the girls
competition, while
Aeiker placed
eighth in the boys
division .
Bryan Walters

/pholos

Lady Eagles outlast Trimble in five · Meigs survives VCHS
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER - Trimble
scratched and clawed, but
Eastern
volleyball
remained unbeaten in the
Tri· Valley
Conference
Hocking Division thi s season following a hardfought25-21, 24-26,25-18.
17-25, 15-4 five-game road
triumph on Thursday.
The Lady Eagles ( 12-2)
improved to 5-0 within the
TVC Hocking at the midway point, but not before
the Lady Tomcats (4- 1
TVC Hocking) put up one
finicky fi ght.
The Green and White
jumped out to an 18- 14 lead
in the opener and both teams
traded points the rest of the
way, allowing the guests to
win game one . ·
Eastern led game two by a
22- 18 margin, but the hosts

Hayman

Broderick

rallied for an 8-2 run to close
things out for a 26-24 victory.
The Lady Eagles fell
behind 9-8 in the pivotal
third game, but the visitors
responded with a I0-6 run
for a 19-14 advantage.
EHS went on to a 25-18
victory for a 2-1 match
lead.
Trimble jumped out to a
4-0 lead in game four and
increased that edge to 15-8
before finally tying the

contest at two with a 25-17
win. setting up a winner. take-all game to 15.
The Lady Eagles never
trailed in th at deci sive
game, jumping out to leads
of 4-1 and 1'1 -4. Leading
13·5, se nior Katie Hayman
served up the final two
points to secure the victory
for rhe I0-time defending
TVC Hocking champs .
Hayman led the Lady
Eagles with 21 kills and six
blocks. while juniors Tresa
Swatzel and Katie Wilfong
followed with seve n kill s
apiece. Swatzel, who paced
EHS with 18 service points
and three a.ces, also had
two blocks. Wilfong also
added one block and
Hayman had two assists in
the winning ca use .
Senior Kel sey Holter
chipped in nine points and

Ple•se see Eastem, Bl

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Lady Marauders mllied
from two games down to
defeat the Vinton County
Lady Vikings 3-2 in a high
school volleyball match on
Thursday.
Vinton County won the first
two games by scores of 25-20
and 28· 26 - but coach Rick
Ash's club linally got it
together by winning the final
three 25-22, 25-4 and 15-13.
l11e excitins-victory was the
fourth straight for Meigs,
which improved to 8-3 overall
and 4-1 in the Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division.
The Lady Marauders only
trail unbeaten Alexander in
the league standings.
Shellie Bailey had a tremen·
dous game at the net with 26
kills to go along with a pair of
blocks for the winners. Catie
Wolfe and Holly Jeffers also

Bailey

Smith

had big nights with ) 4 and 12
kills respectively. Morgan
Howard chipped in six and
Amy Barr two ki lis with two
blocks.
Barr handed out 52 assists
for kills. Tricia 5'mith led Meigs in
scoring with 20 service points
and Patti Vining added I0.
Ban added six and Wolfe and
Hannah Pratt each went for
live. Bailey chipped in two.
Meigs plays host to county
rival Eastern on Tuesday.

I

I

�"

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Grllrey out for season, Page 82
•

New number, image for Junior, Page B3
Landis round guilty of doping, Page B4

........

o-.11
W L Pl:t. W L P1:t.

Team&amp;
Ohio State 0 0' .000
P\Jrdue
0 0 .000
Penn State 0 0 .000
Indiana
0 0 .000
Wisconsin 0 0 .000
Michigan St. 0 0 .000
lllinQiS
0 0 .000
Nv.estem 0 0 .000
laNa
0 0 .000
Minnesota 0 0 .000
MIChigan 0 0 .000

3 0 1.000
3 0 1.000
3 0 1.000
3 0 1.o00
3 0 1.000
3 0 1.000
2 1 .667
2 1 .667
2 1 .667
1 2 .333
1 2 .333

',1\1 III HI/\ V "• 1.1\ MI '•
Illinois at Indiana
Iowa at Wisconsin
Penn State at Michi~n
Michigan State at Notre Dame
Puldue at Minre;ota

11/\M II fiflf II'.

I

•
'
.'
~;

'

Total Olfeuse
Puldue ................................534. 7
Minnesota .......................... 493.7
lndiana ............ ................... .477.7
Northwestern ...................... 451.3
lllinOIS ..................................447.7
Rushing on-..,..
Indiana ................................258. 7
Illinois .................................. 258.0
Minnesota ...................... ;... 229.0
Michigan ..............................226.3
P\Jrdue,WisconSin ................ 215.0
PassOifetiN
P\Jmue ................................319. 7
Northwestern, ......................283.0
Minnesota ..........................264.7
Michigan State .................... 242. 7
Indiana ................................219.0
Total Defense
Ohio State .......................... 197.0
Iowa ................................ .... 212. 1

Penn State .......... :...............217. 7
Miohigan State ....................286. i
Illinois .......... .,,,.. ..................289.0
RulhDel'e.lse
Penn StaiB ............................17. 7

.

lov.a ......................................62. 7

Indiana .................................. 65.3
Illinois .................................... 71.3
Ohio State ............................76.7
Pals Defense
Ohio State ..........................120.3
Iowa ............. ,......................150.0

Michigan State .................... 198.0
Penn state .......................... 200.0
Michigan.....:........................ 201.7
INUIVIIIIJ/11 II IIIli Jl&lt;,
Rusl*lg 'Mids

Friday, September 21, 2007
•
•

An.inside look at this week's .game
COLUMBUS - When Steve
Spunier waa at the University
of Florida, be U8ed ro mock
Teoneeeee's track record of
finishing far enough down in
the Southeastern Conference
football standing!! that it
ended up in the Citrus Bowl by
saying, "You can't spell Citrus
without aU and aT."
It's not technically oorrect,
but three weeks inro this college football season, you can't
spell embarrassment without
theBigTen.
Nightmare losses ro Appalachian State, Duke, Florida

None of the Big Ten's 33
non-league opponents waa
ranked at the time the games
were playL' l. Highly regarded
rankings.
Wisconsin had ro rally in the
Yes, the Big Ten has three
final minutes ro beat UNLV
teams in the Top 10- Ohio
and was tied at halftime with
State at No. 8, followed by
The Citadel. Ohio State
WJBCOnsinat No.9 and Peon
found itaell'leadiogooly 3·2
State at No. 10.
.
at halftime against Akron.
Yes, Big Teo teamS are 26-7, ·• So, is the Big Ten as bad as it
heading inro the opening week has looked early? Or 'are better
of conference play on Saturday. weekends on the horizon?
But Ohio State's 33-14 win
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel
at Washington is the only vic- inaist.s better days are ahead.
tory by aBigTenteam thst
"There are a lot of folks
could be called a "quality" win. who can beat a lot of folks,"
onship Series oonfereoces.
Other say it's No.6.
At this point in the eeaaon,
it's hard ro argue with those

Jim
Naveau
Uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com

The

419-993-2087

Atlantic and IoW!l State by Big
Ten teams just months after
Ohio State and Michigan's hu·
miliation in their bowl games
have put the Big Teo's reputa·
tion inro ·a free fall.
Power ranking guru Jeff
Sagarin rates the Big Ten fifth
among the six Bowl Champi-

Wil
Qlllterbad&amp;s

Brian Robiskie (17 catChes, 342 yards)

Todd Boeckman has completed 63 perhas had more than 100 yards receMng
cent of his passes, has tl'lro&gt;.ll'l six touchdcl'vln
twice in the first three games. Brian
passes and has been interoopted tv.4ce in
Hartline (14 catches,
OSU's first three games. He threw for tM:I
153 yards) set a
lorgtouclldoYKr passes in the second half
career high with
last week in a 33-14 win at Washington.
six catches
l3oeckr ran and the Bt deyes' oflerl;e
against
are both looking 1br faster slll1s on
Akron two
Salurday after being held to three
weeks
points in the first half the last two
ilf§&gt;, then
1\eeks 1:¥ Washi'€100 and Akron.
matched
l'lorthlll:!ste's CJ. Bacher is
never far from the ball in the
.Wildcats' spread offense.
He has tl'lro&gt;.ll'l almost
tv,;ce as rna~ passes
as Boe::kr!'iat (123 w.
71) and has run the

~against Washington. OSU is still looking
for a third receiver, but has had 13 players
catch a pass.
Ross Lare (14 catches, 179 yards, two
touchdolms) leads flklrt!lwestem. Nine of tis
call:res and 128 of1hoseyards came
Clj}linst Du~. Eric Pelerman ard Rasheed
Ward each have 10 calches.

~Ohio Stale

he said, offering his explana·
tion for the Big Ten's strug·
gles. "I felt going ioro the
year it (the Big Ten) was
going to be better than it was
in '06 and I still feel the
same way."
.
That's an optimistic view. . .
And the view of a coach who
does himself no favors by dis- ·
paraging the quality of the
. opponents his team will be
playing eight of the next
nine weeks.
The facts say otherwise.
Right now, the Big Teo isn't
looking very good.

nationally in total defense (197 .0 yards a
game) despite having only one starter, Vernon Gholston, back on the defensive line
and losing its top newcomer, 'lawrence Wil·
son, to a broken leg in the opener.
Advantage: Ohio State

Advinltage: Ohio State ,.,.._.- '

Cornerback Malcolm Jenkins got the
first interception of the season 1:¥ an Ohio
State defensive back at Washington, but
Defe11slve lne
the other cornerback, Donald Washing· :
l&lt;eiin Mims, a 270· ton, was named defensive player of the
pound deferrsMl erxl,
week by Ohio State's coaches. Opposing :·
leads Northwestern in quarterbacks have completed only 52
sacks (2) am tack· percent of their passes against OSU's de·
les for~ (41-!!). tense, which leads the Big Ten in that cat·
His sacks came
egory. Opponen1s are completing 67 per·
on the final two
cent of their passes against Northwest·
plays of a 36-31 em's defense, the worst in the Big Ten in
v.in wer
that department.
Nevada two
Adva• ge: Ohio Slllte

Special teams

Ohio State left ro6m for imprCM!ment last
week when Rf&lt;ln Pretorius missed a 44·
tonand Mims yard field [j:Jal and had another blocked. .
all started last Also, the kickcoverage team f!jlve up kick·
off returns of 41 yards and 35 yards. Preto·
season.
rius is 5 of 7 on field [j:Jals. Punter A.J. Tra·
passo is averaging 42.9 yards a kick.
Northwestern kicker Al;nado Vil~rrealls 4
for 4 on field [j:Jals. Punter Stefan Demos wernges 37.3 yards per kick.
Corey V\00!-

Advantage: Ohio State

Sscka

Sept 1
\bung;tnwn State W 38-6
Sept 8
Akron
w20.2
Sept15 @Washington W33·14
SA1URI)I\Y Noltln- 3:30 p.m.
Sept. 29

Oct. 6
Oct 13
Oct. 20
Oct 27
Nov. 3

Nov. 10

Nov. 17

@ Minnesolll
@ P\Jrdue

Kent State

8 p.m.
8 p.m.

TBA

Mchi!(iln State 3:30 p.m
@Penn State
8 p.m.
WISCOnsin

Illinois
@ Michigan

TBA
TBA
TBA

Conulnt CC&lt;TljJiled 11t Jon NIM!au anc
~ 111 Jeff Bmun • 1he Uma News
~c. 2007'1he Uma News. Repro-

ductioo of all "'arry porbon of th~ matefial
5 prolllbited v.ttrwt e.press consent

Say what?

Q

After Utree games, what's the Achilles heel of
. the Buckeyes' offense and defense? ·
- Matt from Uma

A

The Achilles heel of the defense could tum out to
be Lawrence Wilson's broken leg, which leaves OSU
thin on the defensive line. Depth on the line courd
also be the biggest question for the offense.

Ask your questions at:
Email Jim atjnaveau@llmanews.~m
Blog with him at www.llmasports.com

·. f

Defensive ltlc:ks

Allvantace: Ohio

Q&amp;A with Jim Naveau

Monday. September 24
Volloyball

Uh, no."

11

- Defensive end Vernon Gholston, when asked if he
ever felt sorry for the quarremacks he •acked.

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: Three of the five largest
2: At which bowl game 3: Who caught
crowds at Ohio Stadium were did Ohio State set the Troy Smith's first
for games against Michigan.
school record for the touchdown pass
Who were the opponents
~iggest bowl croWd?
at Ohio State?
for the other two?
Answers: l !Texas 1n 2005 and Minnesota in 2006
2. Rose Bov.i vs. USC 1111973 3. Santon1o Holmes

.

days until kickoff

WoLFE

STEWART
The
Southern Lady Tomadoe s
(7-5) pulled another late
nighter, but the wait wa s
worth it. Coach Tonja
Hunter's troops tumbled the
Federa I
Hocking
Lancers in
five game s
25-17 •
15-25, 21 25 , 25-15 '
and 15-6to claim th e
n
match
~;..._.....,._ ___.. the
Tri Va I I e y
Conferenc e
Hockin g
Divisi'o D
volley bat I
contest.
Souther n
won
th e
first game •
t h e n
dropped th e
nex.t two
..__ _ ___. Fe de ra I
Hunter
Hockin g
was com ing off a close loss I0
Eastern and the win s
seemed to bolster its confi1dence. Southern was persistent, however, in the fourt h
game and knotted up th e
tally at 2-2.
Southern then woo th e
finale in relatively eas y
style to claim the five-gam e
win. The Lady 'Does see m
to be back on track after a
mid-season
lull ,
an d
showed much character in
being able to come fro m
behind
to
pull
off
Thursday's win.
Emma Hunter (26-26 on
the night) served up nin e
points in Southern 's ope rrmg gam!' wm. Southe rn
stats in the next two se ts
were nothing to brag abouI.
Federal Hocking's Vanes sa
C~istle had eight in the se cond game to lead the Lady
Lancers. In the third gam e,
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle and
Ashley Robie each had fi ve
in a losing cause, wh ile
Federal's Iri s Butcher Ied
her club to the win.
In the fourth game,
Hunter got Southern off to a
good start with the fi rst
three, then going down the
stretch she contributed fo ur
more for a seven-po int
game. Riffle and Chels ea
Pape had. five and fo ur

CoNTACT

US

OVP Scorellne (! p.m.·1 a.m.)
1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
F.ax- 1-740-446·3008 •
e-mail - sports@ mydailysen1inel.com

$Q.O!lf .Slatl

Brad Sherman, Sporta Edl tor
(740) 446-2342, "" 33
bshe rma n@ mydailyt.ribune.com

Hours: Mon.-fri.

I

Sat.

Sun. 12-4 •

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, OKI. 23
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, OKI. 33

bwat1ers@ mydailytnbu ne.com

•
'

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSGIMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

WELLSTON - It's offiThe
TTi-Valley
ci al.
coofereoce golf season is
over. And Meigs finished it
wi th a bang.
The Marauders capped
th eir third consecutive
0 hio golf championship
wednesday with a 49-stroke
th umping of host Vinton

rvc

County
at
Fairgreens
Country Club.
The Maroon and Gold
ended the Ohio Division
camplrlgn undefeated, finishing 9-0-1 in head-to-head
duals: MHS was also the
Stewart
Legar
only TVC school- Ohio or
Hocking divisions - to finSenior Steven Stewan led
ish the year unbeaten.
the
Marauder charge with a
Meigs shot a team score of
159, well ahead of the low score of 37, good
Vikings' tally of 208.
enough for medalist honors.

Classmate Kirk Legar was
nex.t with a 38, followed by
sophomore Joey Blackston
w,ith a 40. Sophomore Zach
Whitlatch rounded out the
team total with a 44.
Sophomores
Tyler
Andrews and Bobby King
also fired respective rounds
of 51 and 52 for the victors.
Vinton County (2-8 TVC
Ohio) was led by Derek
McManus with a 48, fol lowed by Mike Dixon with
50 and Megan Andrews with
54. Nate Wallace ended the
Vikes' team tally with a

round of 56.
Luke Lafferty and ' Chris
Zion also fired respective
rounds of 65 and 68 in the
setback.
Meigs has withdrawn
from
the
Riverside
Invitational on Saturday, so
its next match will be at the
Division II sectional tournament at the Chillicothe
Jaycee course on TLiesday.
Tee-times start at 9 a.m.
There will be 17 teams in
the D-11 sectional , with the
top-five advancing .to di stricts.

·HIGH ScHooL Caoss·couNTRY

I

Please see Southern, B2

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC •
•
I K • GMC
208 East Main • 1·740-992·6614 or 1·800·837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH

Marauders handle Vinton
County by 49 strokes in finale

Nelsonville-Vorlc: at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at VInton County, 6 p.m.

BY ScoTT

Northweslem's27,o win 01er NQ'Iheastem
in itsCjiener was its flrst shutout in 10 years.
Ohio State leads the Big Teri and is third

James Launnaitis ....:................... 2

2007 OSU SCHEDULE

Golf

Riverside Invitational, 11 a.m.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

State

John Gil,
Adam Hahn,

Football
Miller at Grove City Christian
Trimble at Shadyside

Lancers

James Laurinaitis' two interceptions
against Washington gave him seven in the
last 15 games. That number is even more
impressive when you oonsider. that four of'
the top defensive backs in recent Ohio
State history - Nate Clemen1s (7), Shai\Tl
Springs (6), Dome Whitner (5) and Antoine
Winfield (3) - couldn~ surpass Laurinaitis'
inten::eption total in their careers.
Northwestern's top linebacker, Adam
IW!ela, .f!Jew up in subulbai'I;GIIJ!Iffibus in . ,,
Dublin but was ne~~er an Ohio state·tan. · ·
His dad played offensive tackle at Michigpn
in the 1970s.
·

1\eeksag&gt;.

Satyrday Stpttmbtr 22

leashes

Unellacken

Despite rushing for
135 yards and 143
yards in Ohio
his last
two
games,
State
Receiving Yards
sophomore tailback
Brian Robisllie, Ohio State ........ 342
Chris Wells says he can
Eric Decker, Minnesota ............ 342lido better. Coach.Jim
"-' ""
M' h' St 315
ressel agleeS, pointing to
""""n ...omas, IC 1gan · ....
all the practices his 235·
t.u~ Swan, WisconSin ............ 297
pound sophomore missed
James Hardy, Indiana ..............245
this summer and spring because of an ankle injury. FreshOHIO STATE LEADERS
man Brandon Saine's speed
turned a play that WjlS supposed
l'asalng yards
Ohio State
to be a two-yard run into the line to run out ·receiver
Todd Boedlrnan ...................... 574
the clock into a 37·yard touchdown play as
RlllhlnC )Will
.Brian
time ran out against Washington.
Chris Wells ............... ...............324
Hartline
Northwestern's Tyrel Sutton, who was
Rllcelvtng yards
Oh.io's Mr. Football in 2004, has averaged
Bnan Robiskie ....1...................342
1,200 yards a season in his first two sea·
Touchclowne
3 players tied with ........................ 2
sons In col~. He misSed last week's 20·
Tackles
14 loss to Duke with a sprained ankle but
James Laurinaitis ...................... 22
is expected to play this week, according to
lnleic lplkMS
James Laurinaitis ........................ 2

Football
Meigs at Fairland
Southern at Wlrt County (WI&lt;)
Belpre at Eastern
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; at Cots. Bishop Ready
Minford at Vinton County
Wellston at Rock Hill
River Valley at Waterford
Gall/a Academy at Logan
South GoUla at Man (WV)
Hannan (WI/) al Wahama (WV)
Winlleld (WV) at Point Pleasant (W'I)

Meigs golf finishes Ohio Division unbeaten ·

Southern Athens sweeps titles

Ohio State rolled up 481 yards, aver·
aged 5. 7 yards per rushing play and didn't
a[ow a sack at Washington in what was its
best offl!nsive line effort of the season.
Tight end Jake Ballard was named the
team's offensive lineman of the week for
the second week in a row.
Nor1tr.\estem has three returning
starters on the lire, led 1:¥ cen·
ter TllMlf Rees am ~
byian Thiry. But oppos·
ing defenses have
sacked Northwest·
em's quarterbacks
seven tin\es and lim·
ited Wildcats runners
to 3.4 yards a cany.

Adam Weller, Minnesota .......... 794
Kellen Lewis, Indiana ..............643
o•
ouan Hoyer, MIC' h'1gan State .... 634

h"tl

....,. ............. teams

- Today'• aam11

Offlnil'lllne

Allvantalle: Even .
Rlwlicllacks

-

- ....... eo.nv.

looking for upset

Alook at some of the key matchups in coach Pat Fl1zgerald. Brandon Roberson
Saturday's game between No. 8 Ohio
(252 yards) has filled in for Sutton.
State (3·0, 0·0 Big Ten) and Northwestern
Adva•• 11 : Ohio Slllte
(2·1, 0·0 Big Ten) at Ohio Stadium:
lleceMrl

POMEAO'/ - A """"""' o1 -

""""' -

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: NORTHWESTERN (2-1, 0-0 BIG TEN)

ard frurtouchdciM'ls.

Curtis Painter, Puldue ..............952
C:J. Bacher, Northwestern ........838

. LocAL ScHEDULE
• The Uma Newt photoe

Big Ten stumbles into conference season

Mike Hart. Michigan ................502
PJ. HiR, Wiscon~n .................. 399 . ~""~~,Jl;. ~
A!nir Plm'iil&lt;; Minnesota ............386 · '
w """"'"ur
Chris Wells, Ohio State ............ 324
Boeclrnan. Bacher
Rashald Mendenhall, Illinois ....322
has 838 yards passing
Passing Yards

'

at Jackson Invite
Meigs' Swisher, Eastern's
Aeiker both place in top-10
and Oak Hill (280) rounded
OUt the lOp-! 0 team finisher$.
JACKSON - A total of
Both Meigs and Coal
22 schqols and 220 varsity Grove posted matching
comJ;ll!titors made the annu- team tallies of 288, but the ·
al tnp to the 'Apple City' Marauders won the tieThursday for tfie 2007 breaker with a better finish
1ackson Cross Country from their sixth runner.
I nvitatiooal at Franklin MHS finished 11th overall
Valley Golf Couse.
while CGHS placed 12th.
By day 's end, all of them Ironton
(293),
Vinton
had witnessed history - County
(307)
and
e ven though most didn't Nelsonville-York
(318)
realize it.
com~leted the
15-team
.Athens County - for the standings.
.
most pan - dominated the
Locally, Eastern . Keith
results by winoin!J three- Aeiker was the· lone male to
quaners ofthe vars1ty hard• finish in the top-10 individuwar.e. Athens won .team ... lilly, placing ~ighth~ out uL,.
ti ties in both the boys and I 35 runners with a tinle of ·
g iris
divisions,
while 18:57. South Gallia's Jacob
Alexander
sophomore Watson also placed 23rd
Emily Skidmore captured with a time of 19:55.
the individual crown during Neither EHS nor SGHS had
a team score.
the girls race. ·
Vince Weatherstein led the
But the biggest accomp lishment of the evening Raiders - with a time of
carne from Jackson senior 19:33, placing 13th overall.
Bryce Wilson, who became David Householder (23rd)
the first Red and White run- finished with a time of
ner to ever win an individual 20:23, while Kody Johnson ·
I itle in the event's 20-plus (44th) posted a time of
year history.
21:11. Tyler Noble (21:47)
Wilson's posted a winning and Jon Porter (24:31)
I ime of 17:20, placing well rounded out the Silver and
ahead of runner-up Justin Black scoring with respecKammler (17:59) from tive placings of 63rd and
Portsmouth Notre Dame. I OOth.
Pike Eastern's Jordan
Southern, which was right
Selbee (18:00) was third, behind RVHS, was led by
followed by Steven Rhue of Kyle Goode (19 :44) with a
Athens with a time of 18:21. l6th place effort. Kraig
Logan's Eli Reed rounded Kleski (21: 14) placed 46th,
out the top-five male finish- Dylan Roush (21 :28) came
ers with a time of 18:44.
in 49th and Colby Roseberry
The Bulldogs, with a team (22:31) finished 70th.
score of 49, fended off
Drew Hoover , (22:56)
Logan (54) by five places rounded out the Tornadoes'
for the boys team champi- team score by placing 74th.
onship. Fairland was th1rd John Holsinger (27:03) and
with 98 points, followed hy Kris Kleski (27:59) also had
Zane Trace in fourth with a respective finishes of 116th
137. Pike Eastern was fifth and II 9th for the 'Does.
with 186.
Meigs was led by Andrew
River Valley edged out O'Bryant, whe placed 35th
Southern for sixth place by with a time of 20:34. Nathan
one point with a 192, while Cook (21 :09) was next for
Alexander finished eighth
PleaH see Invite. 82
with a 220. Piketon (247)
BY EIRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ABOVE - Southern
junior Drew Hoover,
second from left,
picks up places as
he runs up
'lronmen Hill I' on
Thursday dunng the
2007 Jackson .
Cross Country
Invitationa l at'
Franklin Valley Golf
Course in Jackson.
LEFT - Meigs
junior Kimi Swisher,
left, and Eastern
junior Keith Aeiker
hold their top-10
plaques from the
2007 Jackson
Cross Country
Invitational at
Franklin Valley Golf
Course in Jackson.
Swisher finished
sixth in the girls
competition, while
Aeiker placed
eighth in the boys
division .
Bryan Walters

/pholos

Lady Eagles outlast Trimble in five · Meigs survives VCHS
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER - Trimble
scratched and clawed, but
Eastern
volleyball
remained unbeaten in the
Tri· Valley
Conference
Hocking Division thi s season following a hardfought25-21, 24-26,25-18.
17-25, 15-4 five-game road
triumph on Thursday.
The Lady Eagles ( 12-2)
improved to 5-0 within the
TVC Hocking at the midway point, but not before
the Lady Tomcats (4- 1
TVC Hocking) put up one
finicky fi ght.
The Green and White
jumped out to an 18- 14 lead
in the opener and both teams
traded points the rest of the
way, allowing the guests to
win game one . ·
Eastern led game two by a
22- 18 margin, but the hosts

Hayman

Broderick

rallied for an 8-2 run to close
things out for a 26-24 victory.
The Lady Eagles fell
behind 9-8 in the pivotal
third game, but the visitors
responded with a I0-6 run
for a 19-14 advantage.
EHS went on to a 25-18
victory for a 2-1 match
lead.
Trimble jumped out to a
4-0 lead in game four and
increased that edge to 15-8
before finally tying the

contest at two with a 25-17
win. setting up a winner. take-all game to 15.
The Lady Eagles never
trailed in th at deci sive
game, jumping out to leads
of 4-1 and 1'1 -4. Leading
13·5, se nior Katie Hayman
served up the final two
points to secure the victory
for rhe I0-time defending
TVC Hocking champs .
Hayman led the Lady
Eagles with 21 kills and six
blocks. while juniors Tresa
Swatzel and Katie Wilfong
followed with seve n kill s
apiece. Swatzel, who paced
EHS with 18 service points
and three a.ces, also had
two blocks. Wilfong also
added one block and
Hayman had two assists in
the winning ca use .
Senior Kel sey Holter
chipped in nine points and

Ple•se see Eastem, Bl

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs Lady Marauders mllied
from two games down to
defeat the Vinton County
Lady Vikings 3-2 in a high
school volleyball match on
Thursday.
Vinton County won the first
two games by scores of 25-20
and 28· 26 - but coach Rick
Ash's club linally got it
together by winning the final
three 25-22, 25-4 and 15-13.
l11e excitins-victory was the
fourth straight for Meigs,
which improved to 8-3 overall
and 4-1 in the Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division.
The Lady Marauders only
trail unbeaten Alexander in
the league standings.
Shellie Bailey had a tremen·
dous game at the net with 26
kills to go along with a pair of
blocks for the winners. Catie
Wolfe and Holly Jeffers also

Bailey

Smith

had big nights with ) 4 and 12
kills respectively. Morgan
Howard chipped in six and
Amy Barr two ki lis with two
blocks.
Barr handed out 52 assists
for kills. Tricia 5'mith led Meigs in
scoring with 20 service points
and Patti Vining added I0.
Ban added six and Wolfe and
Hannah Pratt each went for
live. Bailey chipped in two.
Meigs plays host to county
rival Eastern on Tuesday.

I

I

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

Friday, September 21,

Pomeroy's Todd Smith wins championship

www.mydailysentinel.com

2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

·wndcats' spread provides challenge to Ohio State's defense

BY ScoTT WOlFE

BY RUSTY MIUER

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Fitzgerald like s trick
plays. So do his players.
·:we bring a few things
COLUMBUS - It's the
into each ?.arne plan, if it's
yin and yang of college
there, we II try and take
football: Northwestern's
advan tage of them and
spread vs . the Ohio State
sometimes try and catch a
base 4-3 defense .
defense off-guard," he said.
Sometimes Northwestern
The Wildcats come to
puts four or five receivers
Ohio Stadium on Saturday
m the pattern. At times the
averaging 26 points and
Wi'ldcats have a full back451 yards per game in wins
field and at other times
over Northe astern and
there 's nobody there but
Nevada and a loss last
the quarterback. No ti ght
week to Duke, whi ch had
ends, then two of them , a
lost 22 games in a row, the
run up the middle followed
nation 's longest streak. But
by a 45-yard bomb.
the Wildcats were without
Thi s is Northwestern ' s
the linchpin of their runoffensive philosophy : To
. ning attack, scatback Tyrell
appear to have no philoso. Sutton, a former Mr.
phy. To have no tendencies,
Football in Ohio, who was '
no traits that a defense can
out with a sprained ankle.
· prepare for and plan on. To
Sutton is expected to
make every snap an advenreturn for the game against
ture. To make chaos an
the
Buckeyes .
The
ally.
Buckeyes sound as if
Even though No. 8 Ohio
they're looking forward to
State is favored by three
playing against him - and
touchdowns
to
beat
the spread.
Northwestern and its fly"That's the fun part of
by- the-se at-of- the- pants
football, you have to find a
spread offense on Saturday,
way to try to stop that,"
the Wildcats have the
Ohio State linebacker
Buckeyes' full and undiJames Laurinaitis said.
vided attention.
"We have to run arou'nd,
"They make you prepare
we have to be swarmin~.
for a lot," Ohio State
We may not be perfect m
safeties coach Paul Haynes
every
defense
we've
said of the Wildcats
played, but at least we're
offense. "You've got t~ be
swarming around."
very, very sound agamst
They ' ve been close to
the run. And they have a
perfect. The Buckeres rank
very good controlled passthird nationally m total
ing game. We have to make
defense,
giving up 197
AP photo
sure we're covering all the
Northwestern's C.J. Bacher, left, scrambles away from Duke's Jabari Marshall (1) and Glenn Williams (24) for a first down yards a game, and are fifth
bases."
m scoring defense while .
The spread, as the name during the fourth quarter of a football game Saturday in Evanston. Ill. Duke won 20-14, ending a 22-game lo~lng streak. allowing only 7.3 points a
game.
implies, is an offense based similar to an effective But the Wildcats were overall and 8-0 in the Bi'g cult curriculum.
Ohio State has superior
on spreading a defense . as sptead, also takes some invariably smaller on the Ten to .win the 1995 conferWhen Randy Walker took
and
depth.
much as possible from chances, relies on a group lines and not as fast else- ence title - the school's over for Barnett in 1999, he talent
Northwestern
has
a
resersideline to Sideline. It came dynamic and · tries to make where on either side of the first since 1936.
embraced the spread. After
voir
of
guile
and
is
willing
into vogue in the last 10 or . the other side guess what ball. Year after year
They did it, in part, with Walker died suddenly in
15 years, just about the ·11 •
·
d0
Northwestern was one of an offense that was diffi- the summer of 2006 and to try anything .
time that Nof(hwestern lifts gomg to
next.
Complexity is the key for ed itself from decades of
They - are
opposing the weakest teams in the cult to pin down; that did- was replaced by former the Wildcats. The opposite
n't follow conventions. Northwestern linebacker is true for the ~uckeyes.
defeat.
forces, yet in some ways nation.
Then
things
began
to
Speed
trumped size, the Pat Fitzgerald, the new
Ohio State's defense is linked.
"The key is simplicity,"
change
when
Gary
Barnett
playbook
was wide open. coach stuck with the Haynes said. "Offenses like
not nearly so freewheeling
For years Northwestern
as the spread. But at the - the smallest school in · took over in 1992. After Gifted high school football spread.
these make you try to do a
"Qne of the most creative lot of things defensively.
same time, the base 4-3 the Big Ten and the only winning eight games his players started to choose
three
years
in Northwestern becausj: it teams in the league," is You can get in trouble that•
relies heavily on reading private one- tried to play first
the offense, intuition and smashmouth football with Evanston, all of a sudden took chances on the field in what Ohio State coach Jim way. The more simple you
reaction. A great defense, the rest of the conference . the Wildcats went I 0-2 addition to havirtg a diffi- Tressel calls 'the Wildcats. are, the better."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

POM EROY
This
Saturday night, Pomeroy's
Todd Smith hopes to win his
fifth fea ture event of the
year. Smith has been in victory lane four times thi s season at 1-77 Motorspon s Park
in Fairplane, W.Va., where
he was the 2007 Late Model
Track Champion._
Overall, in his 17-year rac ing career. Smith has won
five track championships.
Victory has eluded Smith at
Skyline thi s year, but Smith
has been in the top five in
almost
every
event.
Saturday a win would mean
$5,()()() as the Mid-AUantic
Championship
Series
(MACS) comes to town with
twenty of its best regional
touring stars to challenge the
-.c.:)ocals." The total purse,
which includes Outlaw
Sprints is over $50,()()(). If
one of the locals can do it,
Todd Smith heads the list.
Smith's success in 2007
comes with support from
mo!ll April Smith and dad
Tom, who serves as mechanic and car owner for the
2004 C.J. Rayburn ' Chassis.
Tony Francis of Belpre is the

.

API photo •
Su~mllled

photo

Todd Smith of Pomeroy is shown here after one of his feature wins at 1-77
Motorsports Park . Smith also won the season points championship against cars from
Ohio , West Virginia and Kentucky.
·
Crew Chief for this winning
race team.
· ·
Smith would like to thank
his 2Q07 sponsors
Williams
Logging,
Pomeroy;
Banks
Pomeroy;
Cbnstruction,
Market
and
Bob's
Greenhouses,
Mason

Gallipolis and
Belpre;
Bunn 's
Party
Barn ,
Pomeroy; Shain Custom
Graphics, Racine; and Shain
Carburetors in Racine.
The race team would like
to thank the sponsors for
help making 2007 such a
huge success and also !haole

the many fanswho supported the team both this year
and over Tood' s career.
Two years ago, Smith was
featilred in th~ national publication Dirt Late Model
Magazine for being one of
the top-~un~ on the dirt late
model CI!CUII.

Griffey will miss rest ·or season with groin strain
BY JANIE McCAULEY
-!J' SPORTS WRITER

I

~
f

SAN FRANCISCO
Ken Griffey Jr. will miss
the rest of the season
because of a strained
groin, the !(\test in a string
of injuries to Cincinnati's
All-Star ,outfielder.
·
Griffey left Wednesday
night's game a$ainst the
Chicago Cubs at Wrigley
Field in the eighth inning
after injuring himself
while fielding a ball in
right field. As he started to
make a throw, Griffey
stopped in pain and had to
underhand the ball back to
the infield before falling to
the ground. ·
The Reds originally
announced the injury as a
strained lower abdomen,

Invite
fromPageBl
the Marauders in 42nd
place, while Jacob Riffle
(24: 10) was 99th overall.
Morgan Kennedy (25:07)
and Jan Bullington (25:24)
rounded out the team score
with respective fini shes of
105 and 109.
Dusty Eads was the sixman that broke the tie with
Coal Grove, placing I 15th
with a time of 26:39. The
M Jrauders also received
efforts from Keith Williams
(29:27) in 123rd, Noah
Hajivandi (30:44) in !27th
and Darby Gilmore (31:19)
in !30th.
On the girls side, Athens
h;id little trouble capturing
the team trL hy after post-

and Griffey . RBi s, playing 144 games
returned to - his highest total since
Cincinnati 2000. He was an All-Star
be exam- for the first time since
ined.
On 2004 and the 13th time
•
Thursday, overall, and he moved up
. the
team to sixth on the career home
said he was run list with 593.
diagnosed
Had this injury happened
with a high earlier in the season,
groin strain Griffey could have come
Griffey
and will be back, Mackanin said.
examined
"But there's no reason to
do it now," Mackanin said:
again in four weeks.
"He's done," manager "The outfield, it can be
Pete Mack;anin said before improved upon at Wrigley
the opener of a four-game Field. I'm not blaming hi5
series at San Francisco. injury on that, but 'it's not
"It' s a season-ending one of the better surfaces
injury, but it could have iJJ the league."
.
The 37-year-olil Griffey
been worse. It's not the
worst-case scenario , so has been on the disabled
we're happy about that."
list eight times since 2000,
Griffey hit .277 this year missing nearly a . mortth
with 30 homers and . 93 early .in the 20(}6 season

because
of
swelling
behind his right knee and
sitting out 22 of the last 24
games after dislocating a
toe.
His playing time also
has been .limited by torn
hamstrings, a torn knee
tendon, a dislocated shoutder and a torn ankle lendon. He . broke his left
hand in an accident at
tiome last December.
Buck Coats drew the
start in right field in place
of Griffey . on Thursday
night , while Mackanin
also planned to use utilityman Jeff Keppinger in the
outfield along with littleused Jason Ellison.
Also
Thursday,
Cincinnati recalled RHP
Homer Bailey from Class
A Sarasota.
·

ing a team score of 24. in · 37th and Olivia Bevan
Logan was again runner-up (30: 17) in 63rd.
RiVer Valley had tWo runwith team tally of 49, followed up by Fairland in ners compete, led by Ashley
third with 84 points.
Fitch (24:10) with a 17th
Minford
(124)
and place effort. Kelsey Sands
Piketon (126) rounded out (25:32) also finished 31st
the top-five, while Vinton overall for the Lady
County (142) and Oak Hill Raiders.
(176) finished out the
Eastern also had two rimseven-team competition. · ners in the girls event, with
!h~r~ were also a total of ~5 : Audrianna Pullins leading
md1v.1dual competitors m the way with 25th place
the grrls race.
finish of 24:52. Senior
No locals . had enough exchange student Jute
runners for a taam score, but Draehn (27:08) was also
Meigs did have one individ- 44th.
ual crack the t_op_-10 in the
Skidmore won the girls
g1rls .event. K1m1 Sw1sher, . race with a time of 20:05.
fresh off a school-record PoJ'(Smouth Notre Dame 's
lime of 21:28 last Saturday Sarah Appleton was . runat Lo.gan, ~laced SIXth over- ner-up with a 20:48," fol all wtth a lime of 22: I 0._
lowed by Taylor Mullins of
Morgan Lentes · (23.44) Wellston with a 20:53.
was next for the Maroon
and Gold in 12th, foUowed
by Jessica Holliday (25:57)

Logan's
Tisha
Grove
(21 :20) and Syd, Schulz
(21:55) of Athens finished
up the top-five individually.
Fairland's Tanner Mattie
won the junior high boys
race with a two-mile time
of 11 :32, helping the
Dragons win the team title
with 23 points. Athens was
the junior high boys runner-up with 50 markers.
Wellston's Jordan Davis
won the girls junior high
race with a time of 13:19.
Athens won the team event
with a score of 37, besting
Fairland by four spots.
Meiss. Eastern, Southern
and R1ver Valley return to
competition next Saturday
when they attend the Rio
Grande Invitational.

Fans celebrate after the Cleveland Indians beat the Detroit ·.
Tigers 4-2, in a baseball game Wednesday in Cleveland. In -•
a town fixated on LeBron James and Brady Quinn, sports , ·
fans have been slow to embrace the Cleveland Indians. who ·. ·
are on the verge of their first division title since 2001 and
at the moment share the league· s best record.

Indians fans wake up ·•.
to best team in basebaJr:
.

.

~ ~

BY JoE MlUClA

Mike Hogan , 43, of ·
Chagrin
•Fails,
also
believes the once bitten ;· '
CLEVELAND - In a twice shy sentiment is'·.
town where LeBron James strong in Cleveland, a city·'··
and Brady Quinn get all that saw the Indians lose '
the attention , fans have the World Series in 1995 ·: ·
been slow to embrace the and 1997 and hasn't won a.. :
Cleveland Indians.
championship in any major ..
Wake up Cleveland fans, · professional sport since the, .
your team is tops in the Browns in 1964.
majors.
"They don ' t want to latch~ '
The Indians are on the on and have their hearts , .
verge of their first division crushed," said Hogan, who .~·
title since 2001 and thanks will take his 10-year-old .-,
to a sweep of the Detroit son, Brendan, to Sunday's . . ..
Tigers and a 20-5 run since game.
.•
.. ·
Aug . 25, they entered
The Indians are also,a bif '
Thursday night at 90-62, of an unknown entity at. · ,
tied with the Los Angeles home and nationally with!.• .
·Angels for the best record big media corporations fix- C.:
in baseball.
ated on the New York
With their magic number Yankees and Boston Red .:·
at three,. they could clinch Sox.
. ·"·
the AL Central this week"I think guys and teams·..
end during a three-game are aware of what we can ·~·
series against Oakland. do, but if they don't the''_·_'
The Indians have sold sneak factor is always-- ·
more than 30,000 tickets good," said Indians closerfor each game and will Joe Borow~ki ._ "'
. . _.~·
likely sel~ out, but that hasB'orowsk1, wlio !~ads the :
n't been the norm this year. league with 42 saves in his ·
A franchise that sold out first year with Cleveland,
455 straight games from is one o.f the players the
1995 to 2001, ranks just casual fan probably hasn't
19th in highest attendance gotten to know yet. Those
out of 30 teams this season who fondly remember Jim' .-'
at 2.2 million.
Thome and Omar Vizque!' ·'
There are a number of still
haven't
gotten' :
factors cited for the soft acquainted with Fausto' '
attendance: the region's Carmona,
Asdrubal . .
weak
economy,
the Cabrera
and
Jhonny .:
Cavaliers ' run to the finals Peralta .
eating up fan and corporate
" I don't think they pro- -:.
dollars. and losing four mote the players enough. - ·
home dates because of an The new guys," said Jeff' :
April
snowstorm that Best, 36, of Youngstown . ' :
wiped out Opening Day.
"I don't think anybody '
But Lewis Stevens, 22, knows the talent on this ~·
of Parma, believes there's team."
.
a simple reluctance by the
While Jame s and the :.fans to get passionate Cav'a liers turned Cleveland;·:
about this Indians team . He into a basketball town this
compares it to being hesi- year, and the quarterback · ,
tant about getting back ·Quinn's arrival has Browns·.:
together with an ex-girl- fans hopeful for the future , •:
friend - the fear of getting a new group of Indians are ';:
dumped again.
ready to take the city into...
"You get this close and October again to try for ;
they let you down. That's their fir st championship .
the whole reason. People since 1948 .
· ·
don ' t want to be let down," .. They say thi s time there
said Lewis, who was at won ' t be heartbreak.
Jacobs Field on Thursday
" It' s our year," third. · ·
buying two tickets for baseman Casey Blake said. :
Sunday ' s game , which he " We've had some good '·'
figures will be the clincher. teams in the past, but , for : ·
It ' ll be the sixth game he's whatever reason , it ju st attended this season.
wasn't our time."
., .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

&gt;

Eastern
from PageBl
six kills , and junior Morgan
Burt added four kills, three
points and two assists to the
triumph.
Senior Ryan Davis contributed four points for
Eastern. including a pair ·of
aces. Classmate Megan
Broderick led the passing

game with 33 assists while,
also producing a doien ser-· ~;
vice points.
Eastern also made it a
sweep Thursday after post~ · •
ing a 14-25, 25-23, 25-22 ··
victory in the junior varsity • .
tilt.
The Lady Eagle s return to .
action this Monday when ,. ·
they ho st Nelsonville-York.
in a TVC non -divisional
matchup. The JV match will . ,
start at 6 p.m_

- - - - - - - - - - - - - · ·.

Southern
fromPageBl

Eastern sophomore Audrianna Pullins sprints toward the fin·
ish line during Thursday's 2007 Jackson Cross Country
Invitational at Franklin Valley Golf Course in Jackson .
i

Bryan Watlers/photoa
Meigs senior Nathan Cook, left, leads a pack of runners up
'lronmen Hill' during Thursday's 2007 Jackson Cross
Country Invitational at Franklin Valley Golf Course in Jackson.

respectively, while Robie
added four more as SHS
won 15 -15.
In the finale, Hunter and
Sarah Eddy each had four
points, Riffle had th ree, and
Pape had three.
Kasey Turley was 21 -22

spiking and had 11 blocks · ·
and nine kill s. Hunter was"· ·
29-30 on assists, and Robie
was 19-26 passing. Eddy' •'
had three kills, Robie one; .
'
and Rashell Boso two.
Federal Hocking blitzed • .
Southern in the rese rve. ,
game 25-8 and 25-20. Julie .
Vinson had 19 for Federal
Hockin g and Kati e Mace.....
had nine.
Southern goes to Vinton
· County Mo nday.

New number, new sponsor gives E~rnhardt chance to build new image
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS - When Dale
Earnhardt Jr. decided to
drive for Rick Hendrick, the ·
car owner didn't have to
worry about funding the car.
Sponsors
immediately
lined up for an opportunity
to align their brands with
NASCAR's most ·popular
driver, and Hendrick could
have started a bidding war.
But he instead stayed within
his own organizatiOn, showing loyalty to his existing
. relationships with PepsiCo.
and The National Guard.
Both companies will
sponsor Earnhardt's No. 88
Chevrolet next season.
"I got phone calls from so
many companies, some of
them in the sport that I never
talked to and some of them I
had no idea even had anr,
interest in the sport, '
Hendrick said Wednesday.
"It was just phenomenal the
amount of interest that was
there."
The new sponsors feel
they are a good fit for
Earnhardt, who was casually drinking a 16-ounce
Mountain Dew Amp Energ,Y
drink during Wednesday s

AP j&gt;hoto
Dale Eamhardt Jr. poses with his new NASCAR race car after tHeir debut in Dallas, Texas Wednesday.
unveiling.
"They got me up at 5
o'clock this morning , so
I've been able to test the
effectiveness of the product," he joked. "I'm pleased
to be sitting ~Jere and not
yawning."
·
The new alliances mark a
clear shift from the partyboy image Budweiser cultivated that made Junior a

phenomenon. Now that he 's
32 and growing
up,
Earnhardt is turning into a
corporate pitchman.
The new sponsors will be
joined by a new car number.
Earnhardt has driven the
No. 8 Chevrolet full-time
for DEl since 2000, and he
tried to take the No. 8 with
him to Hendrick. But stepmother Teresa Earnhardt

refused to give up her rights
to it, and Mark Martin and
Aric Almirola will co-drive
it next year with sponsorship from the U.S. Army.
The No. 88 was used by
Robert Yates Racing, which
asked NASCAR to transfer
the number to Hendrick for
Earnhardt.
"Ralph Earnhardt drove
the No. 88 Olds in 1957 and

because of this number's
history with the Earnhardt
family, I felt car No. 88
should continue with Dale
Earnhardt, Jr.," Robert Yates
said in a statement.
In addition to new sponsorships, Earnhardt signed
personal services contracts
this summer with Sony and
Adidas, and unveiled a personally desi~ned candy bar
on Thesday m Chicago.
"1 think there is a fittle bit
of a maturation of Dale Jr. as
a brand," said Mark Dyer,
CEO
of
Motorsports
Authentics, the largest marketer of NASCAR merchandi se.
"I think they were ready
to go in a different direction
with his image. With the
change to Hendrick, they
were ready to switch thetr
alignments and partners and
I think that's a healthy evolution."
Earnhardt insists he won't
stray from his down-to-earth
personality.
"People understand what
our model has been since
we've started, that we'd be
ourselves," he said. "You've
had a chance to get to know
me and you know how I do
things. They knew coming

in that I like being myself,
and being honest and telling
the truth.
"The . truth is hard to hide
from, so it's easier just to
tell it and be honest with
f
d be h
·h
your ans an
onest Wit
yourself. 1 think that they ' re
comfortable with that, and
I'll be comfortable already
working with them."
It's what made him a natural fit for Pepsi, which was
attracted
to
Earnhardt
because he's a genuine
Mountain Dew drinker.
Thayer Lavielle, who runs
the marketing and brand
development at Earnhardt's
JR
Motorsports,
said
Junior's popularity affords
him the opportunity to
choose partners carefully.
"Dale Jr. is not a corporate
pitchman, that's just not
who he is," Lavielle said.
"He happens to be the most
popular driver, he happens
to be an excellent race car
driver, and he has the good
fortune to be with Hendrick
Motorsports next year. That
all affords him the opponunity to be a great corporate
pitchman."

Appeals court rules OSU must pay
ex-hoops coach O'Brien $2.4 million
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State must pay former · men's basketball
coach Jim O'Brien more
than $2.4 million for his
wrongful firing in 2004, an
appeals · court ordered
Thursday.
The I Oth District Court
of Appeals also ruled that
O ' Brien shouldnot receive
an additional $1.3 million
that he had said he was
owed by the university.
In the majority ruling,
Judges Donna Bowman
and
G. Gary Tyack
affirmed a decision by the
Ohio Court of Claims .
Judge Judith L. French di ssented.
University attorn eys had
argued that O ' Brien committed a material breac h of
his co ntract and shouldn' t
· receive any money.

The uni versity has
45 days to
appeal to
the Ohio
Supreme
C o u r t ,
which can.
elect not to
hear
the
.appeal.
O'Brien
0 ' Bri e n,
the head coach
the
Buckeyes from 1998- 2004,
was fired after rev ealin g to
then-Ohi o State athl etic
director Andy Geiger that
he h ad loaned a recruit
$6,000.
O' Bri en sued Ohio State
ft;n wron gly firin g him and
was award ed $2.2 million
plus intere st last August.
Court of Claim s Judge
Joseph T. Clark rul ed that
Ohio State did not follow
t he conditi ons of th e co n-

or

tract with the coach before
'dismissing him .
Ohio State said in a
statement that it was disappointed in the rulin_g and
that it was considering
appealing to the Ohio
Supreme Court.
"Ohio State is committed
to the highe st poss ibl e
standard s for its athletics
programs and maintains
that it ac ted appropriately
in
dismi ss ing
Coach
0' Brien after jle committed seriou s NC AA violation s in· breach of hi s contracl and fail ed to report
those in a timely man ner to
the
univer sity."
said
Ch r istop her Culley, th e
uniyersity's vice president
and ge neral cou nsel.
A message seeking comme nt
wa s
left
for
O'Brien's attorney, Jose ph
Murray.

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

Friday, September 21,

Pomeroy's Todd Smith wins championship

www.mydailysentinel.com

2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

·wndcats' spread provides challenge to Ohio State's defense

BY ScoTT WOlFE

BY RUSTY MIUER

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Fitzgerald like s trick
plays. So do his players.
·:we bring a few things
COLUMBUS - It's the
into each ?.arne plan, if it's
yin and yang of college
there, we II try and take
football: Northwestern's
advan tage of them and
spread vs . the Ohio State
sometimes try and catch a
base 4-3 defense .
defense off-guard," he said.
Sometimes Northwestern
The Wildcats come to
puts four or five receivers
Ohio Stadium on Saturday
m the pattern. At times the
averaging 26 points and
Wi'ldcats have a full back451 yards per game in wins
field and at other times
over Northe astern and
there 's nobody there but
Nevada and a loss last
the quarterback. No ti ght
week to Duke, whi ch had
ends, then two of them , a
lost 22 games in a row, the
run up the middle followed
nation 's longest streak. But
by a 45-yard bomb.
the Wildcats were without
Thi s is Northwestern ' s
the linchpin of their runoffensive philosophy : To
. ning attack, scatback Tyrell
appear to have no philoso. Sutton, a former Mr.
phy. To have no tendencies,
Football in Ohio, who was '
no traits that a defense can
out with a sprained ankle.
· prepare for and plan on. To
Sutton is expected to
make every snap an advenreturn for the game against
ture. To make chaos an
the
Buckeyes .
The
ally.
Buckeyes sound as if
Even though No. 8 Ohio
they're looking forward to
State is favored by three
playing against him - and
touchdowns
to
beat
the spread.
Northwestern and its fly"That's the fun part of
by- the-se at-of- the- pants
football, you have to find a
spread offense on Saturday,
way to try to stop that,"
the Wildcats have the
Ohio State linebacker
Buckeyes' full and undiJames Laurinaitis said.
vided attention.
"We have to run arou'nd,
"They make you prepare
we have to be swarmin~.
for a lot," Ohio State
We may not be perfect m
safeties coach Paul Haynes
every
defense
we've
said of the Wildcats
played, but at least we're
offense. "You've got t~ be
swarming around."
very, very sound agamst
They ' ve been close to
the run. And they have a
perfect. The Buckeres rank
very good controlled passthird nationally m total
ing game. We have to make
defense,
giving up 197
AP photo
sure we're covering all the
Northwestern's C.J. Bacher, left, scrambles away from Duke's Jabari Marshall (1) and Glenn Williams (24) for a first down yards a game, and are fifth
bases."
m scoring defense while .
The spread, as the name during the fourth quarter of a football game Saturday in Evanston. Ill. Duke won 20-14, ending a 22-game lo~lng streak. allowing only 7.3 points a
game.
implies, is an offense based similar to an effective But the Wildcats were overall and 8-0 in the Bi'g cult curriculum.
Ohio State has superior
on spreading a defense . as sptead, also takes some invariably smaller on the Ten to .win the 1995 conferWhen Randy Walker took
and
depth.
much as possible from chances, relies on a group lines and not as fast else- ence title - the school's over for Barnett in 1999, he talent
Northwestern
has
a
resersideline to Sideline. It came dynamic and · tries to make where on either side of the first since 1936.
embraced the spread. After
voir
of
guile
and
is
willing
into vogue in the last 10 or . the other side guess what ball. Year after year
They did it, in part, with Walker died suddenly in
15 years, just about the ·11 •
·
d0
Northwestern was one of an offense that was diffi- the summer of 2006 and to try anything .
time that Nof(hwestern lifts gomg to
next.
Complexity is the key for ed itself from decades of
They - are
opposing the weakest teams in the cult to pin down; that did- was replaced by former the Wildcats. The opposite
n't follow conventions. Northwestern linebacker is true for the ~uckeyes.
defeat.
forces, yet in some ways nation.
Then
things
began
to
Speed
trumped size, the Pat Fitzgerald, the new
Ohio State's defense is linked.
"The key is simplicity,"
change
when
Gary
Barnett
playbook
was wide open. coach stuck with the Haynes said. "Offenses like
not nearly so freewheeling
For years Northwestern
as the spread. But at the - the smallest school in · took over in 1992. After Gifted high school football spread.
these make you try to do a
"Qne of the most creative lot of things defensively.
same time, the base 4-3 the Big Ten and the only winning eight games his players started to choose
three
years
in Northwestern becausj: it teams in the league," is You can get in trouble that•
relies heavily on reading private one- tried to play first
the offense, intuition and smashmouth football with Evanston, all of a sudden took chances on the field in what Ohio State coach Jim way. The more simple you
reaction. A great defense, the rest of the conference . the Wildcats went I 0-2 addition to havirtg a diffi- Tressel calls 'the Wildcats. are, the better."
ASSOCIATED PRESS

POM EROY
This
Saturday night, Pomeroy's
Todd Smith hopes to win his
fifth fea ture event of the
year. Smith has been in victory lane four times thi s season at 1-77 Motorspon s Park
in Fairplane, W.Va., where
he was the 2007 Late Model
Track Champion._
Overall, in his 17-year rac ing career. Smith has won
five track championships.
Victory has eluded Smith at
Skyline thi s year, but Smith
has been in the top five in
almost
every
event.
Saturday a win would mean
$5,()()() as the Mid-AUantic
Championship
Series
(MACS) comes to town with
twenty of its best regional
touring stars to challenge the
-.c.:)ocals." The total purse,
which includes Outlaw
Sprints is over $50,()()(). If
one of the locals can do it,
Todd Smith heads the list.
Smith's success in 2007
comes with support from
mo!ll April Smith and dad
Tom, who serves as mechanic and car owner for the
2004 C.J. Rayburn ' Chassis.
Tony Francis of Belpre is the

.

API photo •
Su~mllled

photo

Todd Smith of Pomeroy is shown here after one of his feature wins at 1-77
Motorsports Park . Smith also won the season points championship against cars from
Ohio , West Virginia and Kentucky.
·
Crew Chief for this winning
race team.
· ·
Smith would like to thank
his 2Q07 sponsors
Williams
Logging,
Pomeroy;
Banks
Pomeroy;
Cbnstruction,
Market
and
Bob's
Greenhouses,
Mason

Gallipolis and
Belpre;
Bunn 's
Party
Barn ,
Pomeroy; Shain Custom
Graphics, Racine; and Shain
Carburetors in Racine.
The race team would like
to thank the sponsors for
help making 2007 such a
huge success and also !haole

the many fanswho supported the team both this year
and over Tood' s career.
Two years ago, Smith was
featilred in th~ national publication Dirt Late Model
Magazine for being one of
the top-~un~ on the dirt late
model CI!CUII.

Griffey will miss rest ·or season with groin strain
BY JANIE McCAULEY
-!J' SPORTS WRITER

I

~
f

SAN FRANCISCO
Ken Griffey Jr. will miss
the rest of the season
because of a strained
groin, the !(\test in a string
of injuries to Cincinnati's
All-Star ,outfielder.
·
Griffey left Wednesday
night's game a$ainst the
Chicago Cubs at Wrigley
Field in the eighth inning
after injuring himself
while fielding a ball in
right field. As he started to
make a throw, Griffey
stopped in pain and had to
underhand the ball back to
the infield before falling to
the ground. ·
The Reds originally
announced the injury as a
strained lower abdomen,

Invite
fromPageBl
the Marauders in 42nd
place, while Jacob Riffle
(24: 10) was 99th overall.
Morgan Kennedy (25:07)
and Jan Bullington (25:24)
rounded out the team score
with respective fini shes of
105 and 109.
Dusty Eads was the sixman that broke the tie with
Coal Grove, placing I 15th
with a time of 26:39. The
M Jrauders also received
efforts from Keith Williams
(29:27) in 123rd, Noah
Hajivandi (30:44) in !27th
and Darby Gilmore (31:19)
in !30th.
On the girls side, Athens
h;id little trouble capturing
the team trL hy after post-

and Griffey . RBi s, playing 144 games
returned to - his highest total since
Cincinnati 2000. He was an All-Star
be exam- for the first time since
ined.
On 2004 and the 13th time
•
Thursday, overall, and he moved up
. the
team to sixth on the career home
said he was run list with 593.
diagnosed
Had this injury happened
with a high earlier in the season,
groin strain Griffey could have come
Griffey
and will be back, Mackanin said.
examined
"But there's no reason to
do it now," Mackanin said:
again in four weeks.
"He's done," manager "The outfield, it can be
Pete Mack;anin said before improved upon at Wrigley
the opener of a four-game Field. I'm not blaming hi5
series at San Francisco. injury on that, but 'it's not
"It' s a season-ending one of the better surfaces
injury, but it could have iJJ the league."
.
The 37-year-olil Griffey
been worse. It's not the
worst-case scenario , so has been on the disabled
we're happy about that."
list eight times since 2000,
Griffey hit .277 this year missing nearly a . mortth
with 30 homers and . 93 early .in the 20(}6 season

because
of
swelling
behind his right knee and
sitting out 22 of the last 24
games after dislocating a
toe.
His playing time also
has been .limited by torn
hamstrings, a torn knee
tendon, a dislocated shoutder and a torn ankle lendon. He . broke his left
hand in an accident at
tiome last December.
Buck Coats drew the
start in right field in place
of Griffey . on Thursday
night , while Mackanin
also planned to use utilityman Jeff Keppinger in the
outfield along with littleused Jason Ellison.
Also
Thursday,
Cincinnati recalled RHP
Homer Bailey from Class
A Sarasota.
·

ing a team score of 24. in · 37th and Olivia Bevan
Logan was again runner-up (30: 17) in 63rd.
RiVer Valley had tWo runwith team tally of 49, followed up by Fairland in ners compete, led by Ashley
third with 84 points.
Fitch (24:10) with a 17th
Minford
(124)
and place effort. Kelsey Sands
Piketon (126) rounded out (25:32) also finished 31st
the top-five, while Vinton overall for the Lady
County (142) and Oak Hill Raiders.
(176) finished out the
Eastern also had two rimseven-team competition. · ners in the girls event, with
!h~r~ were also a total of ~5 : Audrianna Pullins leading
md1v.1dual competitors m the way with 25th place
the grrls race.
finish of 24:52. Senior
No locals . had enough exchange student Jute
runners for a taam score, but Draehn (27:08) was also
Meigs did have one individ- 44th.
ual crack the t_op_-10 in the
Skidmore won the girls
g1rls .event. K1m1 Sw1sher, . race with a time of 20:05.
fresh off a school-record PoJ'(Smouth Notre Dame 's
lime of 21:28 last Saturday Sarah Appleton was . runat Lo.gan, ~laced SIXth over- ner-up with a 20:48," fol all wtth a lime of 22: I 0._
lowed by Taylor Mullins of
Morgan Lentes · (23.44) Wellston with a 20:53.
was next for the Maroon
and Gold in 12th, foUowed
by Jessica Holliday (25:57)

Logan's
Tisha
Grove
(21 :20) and Syd, Schulz
(21:55) of Athens finished
up the top-five individually.
Fairland's Tanner Mattie
won the junior high boys
race with a two-mile time
of 11 :32, helping the
Dragons win the team title
with 23 points. Athens was
the junior high boys runner-up with 50 markers.
Wellston's Jordan Davis
won the girls junior high
race with a time of 13:19.
Athens won the team event
with a score of 37, besting
Fairland by four spots.
Meiss. Eastern, Southern
and R1ver Valley return to
competition next Saturday
when they attend the Rio
Grande Invitational.

Fans celebrate after the Cleveland Indians beat the Detroit ·.
Tigers 4-2, in a baseball game Wednesday in Cleveland. In -•
a town fixated on LeBron James and Brady Quinn, sports , ·
fans have been slow to embrace the Cleveland Indians. who ·. ·
are on the verge of their first division title since 2001 and
at the moment share the league· s best record.

Indians fans wake up ·•.
to best team in basebaJr:
.

.

~ ~

BY JoE MlUClA

Mike Hogan , 43, of ·
Chagrin
•Fails,
also
believes the once bitten ;· '
CLEVELAND - In a twice shy sentiment is'·.
town where LeBron James strong in Cleveland, a city·'··
and Brady Quinn get all that saw the Indians lose '
the attention , fans have the World Series in 1995 ·: ·
been slow to embrace the and 1997 and hasn't won a.. :
Cleveland Indians.
championship in any major ..
Wake up Cleveland fans, · professional sport since the, .
your team is tops in the Browns in 1964.
majors.
"They don ' t want to latch~ '
The Indians are on the on and have their hearts , .
verge of their first division crushed," said Hogan, who .~·
title since 2001 and thanks will take his 10-year-old .-,
to a sweep of the Detroit son, Brendan, to Sunday's . . ..
Tigers and a 20-5 run since game.
.•
.. ·
Aug . 25, they entered
The Indians are also,a bif '
Thursday night at 90-62, of an unknown entity at. · ,
tied with the Los Angeles home and nationally with!.• .
·Angels for the best record big media corporations fix- C.:
in baseball.
ated on the New York
With their magic number Yankees and Boston Red .:·
at three,. they could clinch Sox.
. ·"·
the AL Central this week"I think guys and teams·..
end during a three-game are aware of what we can ·~·
series against Oakland. do, but if they don't the''_·_'
The Indians have sold sneak factor is always-- ·
more than 30,000 tickets good," said Indians closerfor each game and will Joe Borow~ki ._ "'
. . _.~·
likely sel~ out, but that hasB'orowsk1, wlio !~ads the :
n't been the norm this year. league with 42 saves in his ·
A franchise that sold out first year with Cleveland,
455 straight games from is one o.f the players the
1995 to 2001, ranks just casual fan probably hasn't
19th in highest attendance gotten to know yet. Those
out of 30 teams this season who fondly remember Jim' .-'
at 2.2 million.
Thome and Omar Vizque!' ·'
There are a number of still
haven't
gotten' :
factors cited for the soft acquainted with Fausto' '
attendance: the region's Carmona,
Asdrubal . .
weak
economy,
the Cabrera
and
Jhonny .:
Cavaliers ' run to the finals Peralta .
eating up fan and corporate
" I don't think they pro- -:.
dollars. and losing four mote the players enough. - ·
home dates because of an The new guys," said Jeff' :
April
snowstorm that Best, 36, of Youngstown . ' :
wiped out Opening Day.
"I don't think anybody '
But Lewis Stevens, 22, knows the talent on this ~·
of Parma, believes there's team."
.
a simple reluctance by the
While Jame s and the :.fans to get passionate Cav'a liers turned Cleveland;·:
about this Indians team . He into a basketball town this
compares it to being hesi- year, and the quarterback · ,
tant about getting back ·Quinn's arrival has Browns·.:
together with an ex-girl- fans hopeful for the future , •:
friend - the fear of getting a new group of Indians are ';:
dumped again.
ready to take the city into...
"You get this close and October again to try for ;
they let you down. That's their fir st championship .
the whole reason. People since 1948 .
· ·
don ' t want to be let down," .. They say thi s time there
said Lewis, who was at won ' t be heartbreak.
Jacobs Field on Thursday
" It' s our year," third. · ·
buying two tickets for baseman Casey Blake said. :
Sunday ' s game , which he " We've had some good '·'
figures will be the clincher. teams in the past, but , for : ·
It ' ll be the sixth game he's whatever reason , it ju st attended this season.
wasn't our time."
., .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

&gt;

Eastern
from PageBl
six kills , and junior Morgan
Burt added four kills, three
points and two assists to the
triumph.
Senior Ryan Davis contributed four points for
Eastern. including a pair ·of
aces. Classmate Megan
Broderick led the passing

game with 33 assists while,
also producing a doien ser-· ~;
vice points.
Eastern also made it a
sweep Thursday after post~ · •
ing a 14-25, 25-23, 25-22 ··
victory in the junior varsity • .
tilt.
The Lady Eagle s return to .
action this Monday when ,. ·
they ho st Nelsonville-York.
in a TVC non -divisional
matchup. The JV match will . ,
start at 6 p.m_

- - - - - - - - - - - - - · ·.

Southern
fromPageBl

Eastern sophomore Audrianna Pullins sprints toward the fin·
ish line during Thursday's 2007 Jackson Cross Country
Invitational at Franklin Valley Golf Course in Jackson .
i

Bryan Watlers/photoa
Meigs senior Nathan Cook, left, leads a pack of runners up
'lronmen Hill' during Thursday's 2007 Jackson Cross
Country Invitational at Franklin Valley Golf Course in Jackson.

respectively, while Robie
added four more as SHS
won 15 -15.
In the finale, Hunter and
Sarah Eddy each had four
points, Riffle had th ree, and
Pape had three.
Kasey Turley was 21 -22

spiking and had 11 blocks · ·
and nine kill s. Hunter was"· ·
29-30 on assists, and Robie
was 19-26 passing. Eddy' •'
had three kills, Robie one; .
'
and Rashell Boso two.
Federal Hocking blitzed • .
Southern in the rese rve. ,
game 25-8 and 25-20. Julie .
Vinson had 19 for Federal
Hockin g and Kati e Mace.....
had nine.
Southern goes to Vinton
· County Mo nday.

New number, new sponsor gives E~rnhardt chance to build new image
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS - When Dale
Earnhardt Jr. decided to
drive for Rick Hendrick, the ·
car owner didn't have to
worry about funding the car.
Sponsors
immediately
lined up for an opportunity
to align their brands with
NASCAR's most ·popular
driver, and Hendrick could
have started a bidding war.
But he instead stayed within
his own organizatiOn, showing loyalty to his existing
. relationships with PepsiCo.
and The National Guard.
Both companies will
sponsor Earnhardt's No. 88
Chevrolet next season.
"I got phone calls from so
many companies, some of
them in the sport that I never
talked to and some of them I
had no idea even had anr,
interest in the sport, '
Hendrick said Wednesday.
"It was just phenomenal the
amount of interest that was
there."
The new sponsors feel
they are a good fit for
Earnhardt, who was casually drinking a 16-ounce
Mountain Dew Amp Energ,Y
drink during Wednesday s

AP j&gt;hoto
Dale Eamhardt Jr. poses with his new NASCAR race car after tHeir debut in Dallas, Texas Wednesday.
unveiling.
"They got me up at 5
o'clock this morning , so
I've been able to test the
effectiveness of the product," he joked. "I'm pleased
to be sitting ~Jere and not
yawning."
·
The new alliances mark a
clear shift from the partyboy image Budweiser cultivated that made Junior a

phenomenon. Now that he 's
32 and growing
up,
Earnhardt is turning into a
corporate pitchman.
The new sponsors will be
joined by a new car number.
Earnhardt has driven the
No. 8 Chevrolet full-time
for DEl since 2000, and he
tried to take the No. 8 with
him to Hendrick. But stepmother Teresa Earnhardt

refused to give up her rights
to it, and Mark Martin and
Aric Almirola will co-drive
it next year with sponsorship from the U.S. Army.
The No. 88 was used by
Robert Yates Racing, which
asked NASCAR to transfer
the number to Hendrick for
Earnhardt.
"Ralph Earnhardt drove
the No. 88 Olds in 1957 and

because of this number's
history with the Earnhardt
family, I felt car No. 88
should continue with Dale
Earnhardt, Jr.," Robert Yates
said in a statement.
In addition to new sponsorships, Earnhardt signed
personal services contracts
this summer with Sony and
Adidas, and unveiled a personally desi~ned candy bar
on Thesday m Chicago.
"1 think there is a fittle bit
of a maturation of Dale Jr. as
a brand," said Mark Dyer,
CEO
of
Motorsports
Authentics, the largest marketer of NASCAR merchandi se.
"I think they were ready
to go in a different direction
with his image. With the
change to Hendrick, they
were ready to switch thetr
alignments and partners and
I think that's a healthy evolution."
Earnhardt insists he won't
stray from his down-to-earth
personality.
"People understand what
our model has been since
we've started, that we'd be
ourselves," he said. "You've
had a chance to get to know
me and you know how I do
things. They knew coming

in that I like being myself,
and being honest and telling
the truth.
"The . truth is hard to hide
from, so it's easier just to
tell it and be honest with
f
d be h
·h
your ans an
onest Wit
yourself. 1 think that they ' re
comfortable with that, and
I'll be comfortable already
working with them."
It's what made him a natural fit for Pepsi, which was
attracted
to
Earnhardt
because he's a genuine
Mountain Dew drinker.
Thayer Lavielle, who runs
the marketing and brand
development at Earnhardt's
JR
Motorsports,
said
Junior's popularity affords
him the opportunity to
choose partners carefully.
"Dale Jr. is not a corporate
pitchman, that's just not
who he is," Lavielle said.
"He happens to be the most
popular driver, he happens
to be an excellent race car
driver, and he has the good
fortune to be with Hendrick
Motorsports next year. That
all affords him the opponunity to be a great corporate
pitchman."

Appeals court rules OSU must pay
ex-hoops coach O'Brien $2.4 million
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State must pay former · men's basketball
coach Jim O'Brien more
than $2.4 million for his
wrongful firing in 2004, an
appeals · court ordered
Thursday.
The I Oth District Court
of Appeals also ruled that
O ' Brien shouldnot receive
an additional $1.3 million
that he had said he was
owed by the university.
In the majority ruling,
Judges Donna Bowman
and
G. Gary Tyack
affirmed a decision by the
Ohio Court of Claims .
Judge Judith L. French di ssented.
University attorn eys had
argued that O ' Brien committed a material breac h of
his co ntract and shouldn' t
· receive any money.

The uni versity has
45 days to
appeal to
the Ohio
Supreme
C o u r t ,
which can.
elect not to
hear
the
.appeal.
O'Brien
0 ' Bri e n,
the head coach
the
Buckeyes from 1998- 2004,
was fired after rev ealin g to
then-Ohi o State athl etic
director Andy Geiger that
he h ad loaned a recruit
$6,000.
O' Bri en sued Ohio State
ft;n wron gly firin g him and
was award ed $2.2 million
plus intere st last August.
Court of Claim s Judge
Joseph T. Clark rul ed that
Ohio State did not follow
t he conditi ons of th e co n-

or

tract with the coach before
'dismissing him .
Ohio State said in a
statement that it was disappointed in the rulin_g and
that it was considering
appealing to the Ohio
Supreme Court.
"Ohio State is committed
to the highe st poss ibl e
standard s for its athletics
programs and maintains
that it ac ted appropriately
in
dismi ss ing
Coach
0' Brien after jle committed seriou s NC AA violation s in· breach of hi s contracl and fail ed to report
those in a timely man ner to
the
univer sity."
said
Ch r istop her Culley, th e
uniyersity's vice president
and ge neral cou nsel.
A message seeking comme nt
wa s
left
for
O'Brien's attorney, Jose ph
Murray.

September 29, 2007 . .

AMIX- 9p.m.
1st Bike Out At Noon
Food
SO/SO

..

r

~
CR 7A • POMEROY, OH .,
740-992-7986
WOW 1 Check out th1 s lincuptl'
MAmiiY-

~

Oren

T~ · Kar~

wiRon C..,pbelil
$1 .00 CoV~er 9pm· lam
w~- Mens Night · Pool t(M.Imatnent
SS 00 entry 8pm - 50Q off el l drinka
10Pm· 2aro

Jbvnder- ~ Night w.'OJ
$1 00 IOCniflef' Qrpm- 2.m
SOC olf all dr1nks - 10pm·

hm

FJMw - Kat'lloke

IIIIUI'.GaW · uve Bllilndl
Iunday . $100 BM, - S1 .25Coronae

,

t

�ScOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
PRo BASEBALL

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS

-loegue

SoulheHtem Ohio Athletic League

East Dlvlolon
W L
Pel
New Vorl&lt;
84 . 66 .:&gt;53
Phlladell)hoa
83 70
542

80 73
66 85
66 B7

Anama
Washington
Flonda

.523
.444

431
Contr1ll Divlob&gt;
WL
Pel
80 73 523
78 74
513
71 8 1
467
70 83
458
67 66
438
66 87
431
West Dtvlalon
WL
Pel

Chocago
Mrtwaukee
St LOuiS
ClnclfYlatJ
Hous!Orl

PittSburgh

Anzona
San OtegO
Colorado

Norlh!llv-.

~.. ..... . ..

• ),

I -

I Fllrtsmouth
I Warren

San FranctSOO 61 86

438

t9

I
1

7

40

1)-1

. . .o-1

. 7 . ? 40

. . . . .............o-1

. .

CNC

PF

W-1.

.. • .. .. • .

Cheo..,......
.. .. . ...
Failand .. .. .. .. .. . .

, ' '-leigo

·

I

wa•-"-~
......u

0 .

Federal Hodcing . .
.
.D-0
Miller "····· .. · ·· · ...... ..... D-0

(P1ne;ro 6-4), 8 10 p m
LA Oodgera (Loaiza, 2·2) at Arizona
(L Hernandez 1().10), 9·40 p.m
COlorado (Miorales 2·21 at San Diego
(Paavy 16-8), 10:05 p m
C~ncmnati (Belisle 8-91 at San Frsncitoo
(Misch ().3) , 10:15 p.m .
Sotunlly"o
Pi!tsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 1 05 p.m
NY Mala at Florida. 3 ·55 p m
M1lwaukee at Atlanta, 3 55 p m
~~_I.Ph ia atLouWulshlngton, 7 05 p.m
--·
·
• 7.15 p.m.
Clncinnall at San Franciaoo, 9:05 p.m.
L.A Dodgers at Arizona, 9 40 p.m
Colorsdo at San Diego. 10'05 p m.
Suniday'a Games

Wayne .. .. . ..

Minnesota 4, Texas 2

TIIUIId8y'oKanaes City 3, Chicago White

o.-

laoguo

.579
75
507
65 87
428
83 90
412
Contnl Dlvlalan
W L
PCI
-- 90 62
.592
Cleveland
83 70
542
Detroit
75
493
Minnesota
Kansas City
68 68 434
ChiC8go
68 67 431
Welt Dlvillon
W L
PCI
Los Angeles 90 62 592
61 70
538
Seattle
Oakland
74 80
481
Texaa
70 83
458

n

n

Sox o

Baltimore e, TIX8&amp; 3, 10 tnnlngs

Eaot Dlvlalon
86 64

48

AU
PF
107
74

28

83

. 67
. 27

PA

48
.40
44
.115
.113
.80

80

GB
1

1'1
12 ~
24.
27

GB

715.
24
24~
GB

a•

17
20'1

Wodnaoday"o Gomett

Frktly'1
Torooto (Halladay 15-7) at NY Yankeea
(Wang 18·7), 705 p m
Dekland (Blanton 14-9) at Cl,.land
(Carmona 17-11), 7:05p.m
Kanaee City (Bucl&lt;ner 1-1) at Detroit
(Jurrjona 3-1), 7:05p.m.
Boston (Bac:llett 19-6) at Tampa Bay
(Kazmlr 13-8), 7 10 p.m.

Baltimore

(Santos

1·5) at

Texas

(Mendoza o-D), 8 05 p.m
Chicago Whne Sox (Buehrle 9-9) at
Minnesota (J Santana 15-12), 810 p.m
Saallte (Waahburn 9· 15)at LA. Angels
(Saunders 8-3), 10:05 p.m.
Satunlly'l

o..-

Chicago White Sox at M1nnesota. 12.10
pm

Toronto

. .34

Seattle at LA. Angels, 3 55 p m
Oakland at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Kanaas City at Detrort, 7:05 p m.
Beaton at TamP&lt;! Bay, 7:10pm.

AU.
W-1.
3-1

.37

PF
101

PA
59

.3-0 .. 98 .. .33

... 54 . 23 .... ,4.()
.2·2
... 40 . .42
.. 7 . .40
1·2
. 35
.55
. .2·2
.. 20
57 . . .Q-3
19
47 ..... 1·3
.. ·
· •

. 116 .. 29
108 . 111
.23
82
.. 91 . 75
... 32 . 76
.. .64 .. 111

Seattle at l A ~ngels, 3-35 p m

PRo FOOTBALL
National Football Laague
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Eof!l

WLTPCI PF PA
New England 2 0 0100076 28
0 2 0 .000 17 41
Bunalo
Miam1
020.00033 53
N.Y. Jets
020 .00027 58
South
WLTPCI PF
PA
2 0 0 1.00063 30
lncltanapolls
Houston
2 0 0 1.00054 24
Tennessee
~

Jacksonville

·: : g ~ ~

Pittsburgh

North
WLTPct PF
2 0 0 100060

Cincinnati

Pet PF PJII
2 0 0 100082 55
2 0 0 1.00036 25

W L T

Dallas
Washorogton
NY. G Pt1iladetphia

Caroltna
Atlanta
NeoN Orleans

-

0 2 0 .000 46 110
020 .0002536
W LTPct PF PJII
110 .50037 34
110 .50046
•7
0 2 0 .000 tO 37
020 .00024 72
W LTPCI PF PJII
2 0 0 t .00056 38

Detroit
Green Bay
Minnesota
Chicago

-t

2 0 0 1 00051
1 t 0 .500 41
11050023

26

23

24

WLTPct PF PJII
1 San Franasco 2 0 0 1 000 37 33
Anzona
t 1 0 .500 40 40
Seattle
1 1 o .500 40 29
St Loui'o
0 2 0 .000 29 44

SUndly'o -

Mormina, b Steve Ward, F Mtke
Angelidis, F NIOO!as Blanchard, F David
Gave, F Bobby Hugheo, F Kirk
MacDonald, F Brar1don Nolaro and F
Jerorno Sa._, 10 Albany (AHL).
COLUMBUS
BLUE
JACKET5Assigned F Andrew Murray, F Philippe
Oupula, F Potol, F Jolt Szwez. F
KBv1o Jarman. Q Dan Smith, D TrtiYOI
I Hendrilol. D Darcy Corr¢etl, D Jon
Landry, D Kyle Wharton , 0 Jekabs

I

I

I RadllhiS, 0

Andreo _,_,.._ G Adam
Mo.wlro to Syraruae (AHLJ, 0 Brian Slpotz

I

to Chic:ago (AHL) , F Stefan Lageln to
Nlllgara (OHL), F Maft Marquar&lt;11 10

Moncton (OMJHL) and 0 Ban Wrtgh!IO

' 1.ethtlridge (WHL).

1 t 0 .500 58
t 1 0 .500 72

...

-

o

I
I

PA
10
79
71

NASCAR

TRANSACTIONS

2007 Nextal Cup Point

BASEBALL
Name
MaJor La8fjue BoHboll
1 Jimmie Johnson
MLB-Suspendad Atlanta RHP Rafael
1 Jell Gordon
Sonano for four games for hitting Florida
1
3 Tony Stewart
INF Dan Uggla w1th a p1tch •n a game on
4 Cl1nt Bowyer
Sept. 17 Suspended Baltimore OF Jay
5 Kvle Busch
Payton for two games for throwing his bat
6 Martin Truex Jr
and helmet down after he was ejected for
7. Matt Kenseth
arguing With plate ump1re Mike Reilly tn a
8. Carl Edwards
game on Sept 19.
9. Denny Hamlin
Nlllonal League
10. Kevin Harvlck
I
CINCINNATI REDS-Recalled RHP
11 . Jeff Burton
1 Homer Bailey from Sarasota (FSq.
12. Kurt Blisch
I HOUSTON ASTROS-Named Ed
Wade general manager
13 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
National Baaketbllll Aaaoclatfan
GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR5-Wwvad 1 14 Ryan Newman
15 Casey Mears
G Sarunas JaSikBVICIUS.
1 MILWAUKEE
BUCK5-Matched . 16 Greg B1tfle
17 Bobby Labonte
1 M1am1's offer sheet for G Charlie Bell on
1B. Jamie McMurray
a ftve-year contract
1 19. JJ. Yeley
,
FOOTBALL
National Football League
20. Juan Pablo Montoya
21. David Ragan
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARs-Released
22. Kaaey Kahne
OT Ryan GibbOns from the practiCe
squad Signed OT Andrew carna,han to
23. Reed Sorenson

I

1

I

S-lngl

After N8W HampshirtJ

Spc,_it. Trenoactlono

Wins

6
4

3
1

Pts
5210
5210
·10
· 15

1

·35

1

·40
·54

1

2
1
1
1

2

·63
·82
-88
·91
-t02

0
0
1

·229

0
0

·230
·321

1

-409
-434

1

-601
·537
·561

o
o
0

o

3074
-41

-881

-695
·746
·754

30. Johnny SaWor

0
0
0

3 f. Tony Raines

0

ibune - Sentinel - l\ ister
CLASSIFIED

· 7113
-1122
-1123
·939
-l1r7

0
0

· 1057
· 1147
· 1312

0

-1371

0
0

·1474
-1494
·1511

0

·1187

0

0

o

Galli a
County
OH

·1540

PRo HOCKEY

!

I

o

0

0
0

29. JeltGr_,

I
I

NEW '!ORK AANOERs-Aosigned F
Arizona at Baltimore, 1 p.m .
Tom Ayati 10 Hartford (AHl) and D
San Diego at Green Bay, 1 p.m
Bobby Sangulnelli to Bramptoo (OHl)
Buffalo at Now Er9Bnd, 1 p m.
on'AWA SENATOR5-o\solgnod 0
lnc:bnapolts at Houston, 1 p.m.
Greg AmadiO, D Tomas KUdelka. 0
Minnesota at Kansas City, 1 p m.
Derek Smlttt, 0 Geoff Waugh. F 'Jyier
Donati, F Chaz Johnson, F Greg
1 San Franasco at Pittsburgh, 1 p m.
St Lou1s at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Mautdin, F Jim McKenzie, F Shawn
Detroit et Philadelphia. 1 p m
Weller and F Jeremy Yab4onskl to
CleY8tand at Oakland, 4 05 pm
Blroghamtoo (AHL), G Ryan Daniels to
1
Cu-.cmnati at Seattle, 4 05 p m
1 SAginaw (OHL), lW Kasp81&amp; Daugavina
Jact&lt;sonvilla at Denver, 4 ·05 p m
10 r,oi"sls•auga-St Mk:ttaal's (OHL) and
Carol1na at Atlanta, 4·t5 p m
C Jim O'Brien 10 SaatUe (WHL).
N y G 1ants at Waahirogton, 4 , 5 P m
PHOENIX COYOTE5-Aaslgnod LW
Brett Maclaan to Oshawa (OHL).
Dallas at ChiC8go, 8·15s&gt;m
,' ST. LOUIS BLUE5-Asal....., F Jean·
Guy Trudel, F Ryan Reaves, F Nicholas
Tenneaaee at New Orteans, 8:30 p m
Orazenovll:, F Cherte. Unglet, F Hans
Sunctoy, Sept. 30
Benson, F Tomas Kana, F Josh Soeraa,
F Nit&lt;olay Lernt)'UOOII, F Tim Spencer, F
1 ChK:ago at Datrort, 1 P m . •
St LOUIS at Dallas, 1 P m
Cam Keith , F Julian Talbot, F F.P.
Oakland at Mtaml, 1 p.m.
Guenette,
Aaron MacKenzte, 0 Ne1l
Houston at Atlanta, 1 p.m
Komadoski, o Bryan Miller, 0 Ryan
NY Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m .
Glenn, D Alexander Hellstrom, G Marek
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 P m.
Schwarz and G M1ke McKllnna to Peoria
(AHL)
Baltimore at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Sealtle at San Francill&lt;O. 4 .05 P m,
SAN JOSE SHARK5-A8algned C Tom
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 4 05 p.m
Cavanagh, RW Mike lggulden, 0 Dan
Denver at lnchanapolls, 4 15 p.m
Spang and 0 Patrick Traverse to
Kansas C1ty at San Otego, 4 15 p m
1 Worcester
(AHL) and LW Frezer
Mclaren and D Ty Wishart to their JUnior
P1ttsburgh at Arizona, 4 15 p m
Philadelphia at N V G1ants, 8 15 p m
teams.
Open Wash1ngtoo, Jacksonville, New 1
COLLEGE
Orleans. Tennessee
1 FLORIDA A&amp;M--Namec! Eugene Harns
Monday, Oct. 1
. men's b&amp;$.ketball coach
New Eng!and at Cincinnati, 8 30 p m.

Thulld8y'1

26. Marl&lt; Martin
27. Robby Gordon
28. David G~lsland

32. Rid&lt;)' Audd
CALGARY FLAME5-Aaslgned LW
33. Dave Blaney
Eric NyoVcm, 0 Brott Palin and RW
3ol Paul Menard
I OM! Van der Gutlk "' Quod City (AHL),
35. JoeNemoc:hel&lt;
o Lalond Irving to E-ett (WHL). o Jam 36 Ster1irog Martin
Negrin t&gt; Kootanoy (WHI.). lind TW J.D. , 37 Soot! Riggi
wan 10 ReO Deer (WHLJ.
38 Kyle Petty
CAROliNA HURRICANE5-Aollgned
39 Btian VICkora
1 G Nastiuk, G Justin F'Vton, G
40 OM! Reutlmann
, Daniel Manzalo, D Wade Brookbank. D
Trn Conbo¥, 0 Mllrl&lt; Flocd, 0 Jory I

1

Oakland at CkM!Iand, 1 05 p m
Toronto at NY Yankees, 1 05 p m
Kansas City at DetrOit, 1 OS p m.
Boston at Tampa Bay. 1 40 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 2 10
p.m.
Baltimore at Texas, 3 05 p m

Cl8118land

_,_,.._,.

~··-

PA

at N.Y Yankees, 1 05 p m

equad.

2 0 .000 41 · 5tl

Eoot

24. llaYid Stromme
25. ~ sidtor

tho poactil» oquad.
t NEW 'IOflK JETS Signed Ol Clint
I ~to tho ptiCb IC[Uid.
CW&lt;l.ANO RAt~ WR
Orr from tho pow;:til:e oquad
Signed WR Rich Ptnono to tho proctii:A

I

PA

Sunday's Games

Chicago Whne 5oJI 7, Kanaas City 0

Houston at St Louis, 8:05 p.m.

New York
Toronto
BaiUmore
Tampa Bay

PA

.

40

.221 ' Miam1 at N.Y. Je!S, 1 p m.

Baltimore at Texas, 8:05 p.m.

Toronto 6, Bo1ton 1

Clncennati at San Franasco, 4 05 p.m.
LA Dodgers at AriZOna, 4.40 p.m.

.588

.. • ..

Cle\leland 4, Detrolt 2
SaatUe 9, Ookland 5
L.A. Angelo 2, Tampa Bay 1
N.Y Yankees 2. Baltlmot'e 1

Pillaburgh at Chocago Cl.bs, 2 20 p m.
Colorado at San Diego, 4:05p.m.

Beeton

· ~ ··

. .. 2.0
Poc:a . .. ..
.. • . .. . . .. 1-1
Point Pleaaanl .. . .. . • .. .. . .. 1)-1
Chapmanville .. • .. .. .. • .. • .. .. 1)-2
Har1ler1 Hoover .. .. ............o-2
Winfield
1)-2
" .... " .... • ........ ·

1 05 p m

Pc:t

W-1.
• ft

....,.w. ··· ······ ·· ·

Milwaukee at o\Hama. 1 05 p m

W ,L
90 63

().4

logan · · .. .. .... · • · .. · .. · · ...2.0 ... 65 . .19

Philadelphl&amp; at Washmgton, 12 05 p m

Arnoric:lln

..,_

...._......_
1,....._AU.,_

s ·----"le

81 51

Meta at Florida,

0

.0 · · · 0

CARD
PF

o..-

NY

AU
PF

.,

NA'IIOHAI. CONFERENCE

. 111 .. 56
... 87
.59
...84 ... 117
113
102
67 . 112
...56 .. 117

~""!)~ .: · .. ::::·: :.: ·::~~ f ~~
Clnllnal Conference

louis

0

PJII
34

_ , _ , l a o g...
EASTERN CONFERENCE

E-mail
classified@ mydailytnbune .com

Atlonllc: Divlolon
WLOTPiaGFOA
Pillai&gt;Urgh • 1 0 t
3 7
5
8
N.Y. Islanders t t 1 3 7
NewJeiOGY
1 t 0 2
5 3
Philadelphia t t 0 2 3
6
N.Y. Rangels 0 0 0 0 0
0

-Divlalon

EDDIE PEU.S

PARIS - The verdict -said
"guilty."
Like so much else in the
confusmg, contentious Floyd
Landis doping case, though,
none of the answers are really that simple.
Landis lost his expensive
. and explosive ca!ie Thursday
when two of three arbitrators
upheld the results of a test
that showed the 2006 Tour
de F(ance champion used
synthetic testosterone to fuel
his spectacular comeback
victory.
The decision means
Landis, who repeatedly has
denied using perfonnanceenhancing drugs, must forfeit his Tour title and is subject to a two-year ban,
retroactive to Jan. 30, 2007.
Not that 11 changes h1s
opinion of who the rightful
winner was.
~~ I am innocent," he said,
"and we proved I am innocent."

The majority of the panel
disagreed.
According to documents
obtained by The Associated
Press, lead arbitrator Patrice
Brunet
and
Richard
McLaren voted to uphold the
positive
test
with
Christopher Campbell dissenting.
In its 84-page deci sion, the
majority found the initial
screening test to measure
Landis' testosterone levels.,
the testosterone-toepitestosterone test - was
not done according to World
Anti-Doping Agency rules.
But the more precise and
cx~ensive
carbon-isotope
rallo analysis (IRMS), performed after a positive T-E
test is recorded, was accurate, the arbitrators said,
meaning . "an anti-dopin*
rule vtolatton IS established.
"As has been held in several cases, even where the T-E
ratio has been held to be
unreliable
the IRMS
anal~sis
may still be
applied,"' the majonty wrote.

··

AP photo

2006 Tour de France winner Aoyd landis of the US waves
the US flag as he rides up the Champs-Eiysees avenue m
Paris following the final stage of the 93rd Tour de France
cycling race between Antony, south of Paris, and Paris, in
this July 23, 2006 file photo.
"It has also been held that the for the 31-year-old cyclist
IRMS analysis may stand from Murietta, Calif.
alone as the basis" of a posiHe has steadfastly insisted
tive test.
that cheating goes against
"Today's ruling is a victory everything he stands for. He
for all clean athletes and said he was merely a pawn m
everyone who values fair and the anti-doping system's allhonest competition," U.S . consuming effort to find
Anti-Doping Agency CEO cheaters and keep money
Travis Tygart said.
flowing to its labs and agenNow, Landis is left with cies.
one final way to possibly sal"This ruling is a blow to
vage his title - an appeal to athletes and cyclists everythe Court of Arbitrallon for where," Landis said. "For the
Sport.
Panel to find in favor of
lfLandtsdoesn'tappeal - USADA when, with respect
or appeals and loses - he' II to so many issues, USADA
be the first person in the I05- d1d not manage to prove
year history of the race to even the most bas1c parts of
lose the IItle because of a their case shows that this
doping offense.
system is fundamentally
Given the vigor with flawed ."
which he pursued the case,
He is still weighing his
and the more than $2 million legal options, accordi ng to a
he raised to do it, this goes statement released by hi s
down as a devastating loss leg&lt;Jl team.

"This is a miscarriage of
justice," said Maurice Sub,
the lead attorney for Landis.
"He is at the mercy of peopie much bigger than h1m,"
said Landis' mother; Arlene,
speaking to WGAL-TV in
Lancaster, Pa.
The decisi6n comes more
than a year after Landis'
stunning comeback in Stage
17 of the 2006 Tour, one that
many people said couldn't be
done without some kind of
outside help.
Pat McQuaid, leader of
cycling's ruling body, said
rules dictate that Landis can
be stripped of his Tour de
France title immediately.
That makes Oscar Pereiro,
who finished second last
year, the official winner.
"It's not a great surprise
considering how events have
evolved," McQuaid said.
"He got a highly qualified
legal team who tried to baffle
everybody with science and
public relations. And in the
end, the facts stood up."
Landis insisted on a public
hearing not only to prove his
innocence, but to provide an
unflmching look at USADA
and the rules it enforces, and
also establish a pattern of
incompetence at the .French
lab where his urine was tested.
Althoullh the panel rejected Land1s' argument of a
'"conspiracy"
at
the
Chatenay-Malabry lab, 11 did
find areas of concern. They
dealt with cham of command
in controlling the urine sam·
pie, the way the tests were
run on the machine, the way
the machine was prepared
and the "forensic correciions" done on the lab paper·
work.
" ... the Panel finds that the
practises of the Lab in trammg Its employees appears to
lack the vigor the Panel
would expect in the circum·
stances g1ven the enormous
consequences to athletes" of
an adverse analytical finding, the decis1on said.
The majority repeatedly
wrote that any mistakes

made at the lab were not
enough to dismiss the posilive test, but also sent a
warning.
"If such practises continue,
it may well be that in the
future, an error like this
could result in the dismissal"
of a positive finding by the
lab.
In Campbell's opinion, the
Landis case should have
been dismissed.
"The documents supplied
by (the French lab) are so
filled with errors that they do
not support an Adverse
Analytical
Finding,"
Campbell
wrote. "Mr.
'Landis should be found innocent."
In at least one respect,
Landis
was
innocent,
because the panel dismissed
the T-E test. But in the arbi!ration process, a procedural
flaw in the first test doesn't
negate a positive result in
follow-up tests.
In his dissent, Campbell
latched onto the T-E ratio
test, at;nong other things, as
proof that the French lab
couldn't be trusted.
"Also, the T-E ratio test 1s
acknowledged as a simple
test to run. The IRMS test is
universally acknowledged as
a very complicated test to
run, requiring much skill. If
the LNDD couldn't get the
T-E ratio test right, how can
a person have any confidence that LNDD got the
much more complicated
IRMS test correct?"
It was confusion like this
that resulted in the harsh
review the anti-doping
movement received during
Landis' nine-day hearing in
May.
But Landis also took his
share of abuse, and ultimately, USADA still improved to
35-0 m cases it has brought
before arbitration panels
since it was founded in 2000.
Th1s was' a nasty contest
waged on both sides, with
USADA attorneys going
after Landis' character and
taking liberties in evidence
discovery that wouldn't be

mrihune

..

ca~r;~::;

Or Fax To

446-3008

Or Fax To

Naahv11ia

DetrOit

WLOTPtsGFGA
2
4
4
110284
120 2 7
8
1 2 0 2 8
10

oo

a

Ch1C8go
Columbus
StlouiS
0 2 0 0 8
9
North- Division
WLOTPtsGFGA
Colorado
3 0 o 6
16 9
Edmonton
2
4 8
8
vancouver
1 o 1 3 6
3
Minnesota
1 1 0 2 4
8
Calgary
o 2 1 1 2 10
PacHic Dlvlolon
WlOTPtaGFOA
Phoenix
2 1 1 5
tO 10
Anaheim
2 2 1 5
11 1~
Lea Angeles 2 2 0 4
16 18
SanJoae
1 0 1 3 6. 6
Dallas
1 1 1 3
12 15

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
OhloValily
Publlahlng renrvoa
lharlghtto adll,
reJact or cancel any
ad at any limo .
Errore
Musl
8
oportad. on lha II
ol publication a
Trlbtln•Senllnel
egloter
will
eoponslble for n
ra thsn the coal o
he apace occuple
the error and on
ha flnt lnoertlon.
hall not be lloblo lo

Two pornts for a win, one point for 0'\/Srtime loss or shootout loss
Thulld8y'1 Gomea
New JeiOGY 3, BciSton 0
Ottawa 5, Washington 4
Minnesota 3, Detroit 2
Phoenix 3, Toronto 2
Nashville 5, Atlanta 3
Flonda 1, Chicago 0
Colorado 6, Dallas 3
Friday'• Games
Columbus at Buffal~ 7 p.m.
Nashville at CaroNna, 7 p m
New Jersev al N Y Rangers, 7 p.m.
Pittstlllrgh at Detroit, 7'30 p.m.
N Y. Islanders at Montreal, 7·30 p.m.
Minnesota 81 ChiCago, 8.30 p.m.
Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p m.
Batunlly'o
Toronto at Boston. 4 p.m.
onawa at Montreal, 7 p m
St. LOUIS at Atlanta, 7 p m
Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p m .
Detroit a1 Pittsburgh, 7 30 p.m
W8Sh10gtOn at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Caro~na at Nashville, 8 p m
Edmonton at Calgary, 9 p.m
Dallas at Phoenix, 10 p m
Colorado vs Los Angeles at La:~ Vegas,
10 p.m.
Vancouver at San Jose, 10:30 p m

ubllcatlon or omls
lon of an atlvan
nl. Corrections wll
mada In u.i flra
vollabla odllton.

o..-

permitted in a regular court
of law. Landis, meanwhile,
accused USADA of using a
win-at-all-costs strategy and
prosecuting him only to _get
h1m to turn on seven-lime
winner Lance Armstr\)ng,
who has long fought doping
allegations that have never
been proven.
Addressing "problematic
behavior on the part of both
parties," the panel wrote it
would not revtsit the conduct
of either side.
'They are just part of the
litigation war games the parties counsel engaged in
between themselves," the
decision said.
More than the complex,
turgid scientific evidence,
the hearing will be remembered for the Greg LeMond
brouhaha.
The hearing turned into a
soap opera when the former
Tour de France winner
showed up and told of being
sexually abused as a child,
confiding that to Landis,
then receiving a call from
Landis' manager the night
before his testimony threatening to disclose LeMond's
secret to the world if
LeMond showed up.
LeMond not only showed
up. he also claimed Landis
had admitted to him that he
doped. That was the only
aspect of the LeMond testimony the panel cared about.
"The panel concludes that
the respondent's comment to
.Mr. LeMond did not ainount
to an admission of guilt or
doping," the majority wrote.
Despite that, Brunet and
McLaren found Landis
guilty.
The decision comes a full
14 months after Landis' final
sprint down the ChampsElysees, which was bustling
with businessmen and shoppers Thursday, not bicyclists
and spectators.
"We waited too long,"
Tour de France race director
Christian Prudhomme said.
"But it is an ending as we
expected. It's over, and we
never had any doubts."
I

\ \ \ fH \ 1 I \ II \ I "'

r-..

ANNOIJNL'EMhliii'S 1

• All ada must be prepalir

conceelad &amp; carry Class,
NRA Certified Instructor,
One day 12 hour CCW
Class $100 Sam sharp,
Sept 29. Mercerville Ftre
Dept. 740·256·6514 Email

r::::::=::==~
r

2 Male pups 10 to 12 wks
old 1btklwht,
1
solid
blond/red vel checked, 44150251709-6t6t

~
L.,,-..OOI'PotmJNm'litiliiiiiliiii.;..,.J

io

r

..-•."!N'!i!O!'!TI!'!C!'E•--•

L.-...iGiiAUJPOUSiiiiiiiiliiiiiO..,.I
-,
4 Family Sale October 20 &amp;
21. 1695 Lincoln Pike

t

675·2925 or 304·593-8173

r

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO recommends
that you do bu~nees wfth
peopla you know, and
NOT to send money
through lhe mall until you
have ln'IEistigated the
onarlng.

r

YARD SALE-

Pr. P'l..EAsANr

~-...i-ioililiiiiiiiii.,.l
Big 3 Family Yord Sole 82
Soutll top of Deed Men'a
Hill Friday the 21ot &amp;
Saturday the 22nd 8:30 till
4:00
-------Yard Sale Sat M1ltoo Rd,
Camp
Conley
8am· 12

www.comlca .com

~.: 'It ~~ 11"

CLASSIFIED INDEX

oao
no

a

Insurance .................................................. ... 130

a

· Lawn Garden Equlpment ........................ 680
Livestock .....................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... oao
lots &amp; Acreage ...... ...................................... 350
Mlecellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Marchandlee....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
Mobile Homes for Renl ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ..............................320
Monay to Loan ........._.................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Mualcallnatrumenta ............................... : ••. 570

Personals ..................................................... OOS
Pels for Sale .............................. ................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................... ............... 820
Professional Services .... ................. ........... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repelr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wantad ..................................... 360
Schools lnslructlon ....................... .............. 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlllzer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted .......... ............................. 120
Space for Rent ............................................ 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV 's for Sale ................. , ............................ 720
Trucks for Sale ..................... ....................... 715
Upholstery ........... ....................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
Wantad to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ............... 620
want ad To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent.. ........................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale•PI. Pleasant ................................ 076

®2007

Iro

E~ecnmg DriVer's Education
pos1t1on
open m the
Gallipolis area
Flexible
hours Must be able to work
evemngs and weekends 20
to 25 hours a week Job
enta1ls classroom work and
beh1nd the wheelmstrucllon
tor new dnvers Qualified
candidates must have a HS
Diploma, valid dnver ltcense
pass background checks
EOE MBII resumes to AAA
1414
12th
Street
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662
Attn Al, or Fax resume to
Ann AL 740·351·0537
-------Experienced
Bartender
needed
Apply
within
Gall1polls Elks 408 2nd Ave

Cross Creek Auction Buffalo
Auct1on Saturday 6pm Ron
Price,
IS the
hauler
Generators, Power Tools,
Building IS full Starting to
sell h1gh quality knives such
as Case, Buck &amp; Mossy
Oak V1sa and Master Card
(304 ) 550 _1616 Stephen
Ree
1639

=~"""':;;..,~.~
·~--....,

...,.,

20+ acres ol reasonably
priced land for residential
bu1ldmg site Gallipolis area
only Call740·441·5171
Absolute Top Dollar U.S
S1lver and Gold Coms,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
US
Currency,
Sollta.re Diamonds· M T S
Co1n Shop 15 t Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·
2842
Looking for land pnced rea·
sonable Call 740-645-6299
Leave a message 740-6456299

HEl2 WANrm

Full-time Toddler AsSistant
$6.70/hr. Ltm1ted benefits.
Send resume to Early
Education Station. 2122
Jsfferson
Ave ,
by
September 25, 2007
.

Hart Time busmess offloo

11"

0

HFHWM'ftll

Part·l1me posthon needed,
b1lhng expenence preferred,
sand resume to PO. Box.
366, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benef11s
and OT,PaldTralnlng,.
Vacat10ns·FT/PT
1 866·542-t531
USWA
Pre&lt;:ISIOn Electnc now Hiring
Licensed Electricians Call
tor lnterv~ew 304-675-8076
Respons1ble, flexible fu ll
ume baby slt1er needed,
(740)992·2329
The
Athens-Me 1gs
Educational Serv 1ce Center
has a Part -Time CustCK!Ian
to provide cleaning serv1ces
at the preschool modulars m
Alexandar Local School
Olstnct for the remamder of
the 2007•2008 School Year
ThiS pos1uon would be for
TWo (2) hours per day 'at
r1 0 00 per hour, no benet I~.
•
'"
and contingent upon completlon of background check
and continue~ fund•ng

posslion avaslabltJ, w1th some
computer knowledge
Some medtcalldentaf expenPaw Paws. blaclt walnuts.
f
ence help u/.
h,ckorles, please call first, Reply to TSC Box 17 c/o
(740)698-6060
Pcnnt Pleasant Regtstar 200
Prqperty to build home In Mam, Pomt Pieasant, WV Submit letter of Interest and
Gallla County Prefer 5-10
acres. high and dry. Call

25550

r.T.1""------,

resume
to
John
D
Costanzo, Superintendent,

Marty collect @ 321 -453· Health Care Services Group Athens-Meigs EducatiOnal
1351 evenings
The
Nations
leading SeriiiCe
Center,
507
Richland Avenue, Su1te
Want to buy Junk Cars, call prov•der of eniltromental flf1 08, Athens OH 45701
7110·388·0884
services to the long term Application
must
be
,.;-..~~~~~-. care Industry Is loakrng for received
by
Fnday.
WE BUY· USED
house
keepers/laundry
a1des for local nursmg home September 28 • 2007 • 4 30
MOBILE HOMES
p.m
The AMESC " an
36759 Equal
Gary (740)828·2750
Apply In person
Opporluntty
~o..-;.;.;..;,;;;;~-..1 Roc:kspnngs Road, Pomeroy Employer/Provu1er
Ohto
l \11' 11 1\\ 11 \ 1
The Village of Alo Grande 1s
Need a person to paint a takmg applicatiOns tor the
" I In II I "'

The Un1versit)' of Rio

from

the

1

446-7039

11FLP WANIID

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts. , wood
1tems To $480/wk Matenals
provided Free 1nformat10n
pkg 24Hr 80 1-428·4649
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avoo
Call Manlyn 304-882 2645
AVON• All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
S~trley Spears, 304·
675-1429
Coo rts1de Bar and Gr~l
Now tak1ng appl1ca110ns lor
excapttonal people fer bartending , wa1tstaff1servers
and all kitchen positions II
you are a mot1vated people
person please come hll out
an application or call to set
up an mterv1ew
308 2nd Ave
7 40-44 1-937 1
Dom1no's P1zza Now H.rlng
alllocat1ons Po1nt Pleasant.
Galhpohs. Eleanor Pomeroy
apply In Person

Overbrook Center IS now
acceptmg resumes tor the
po51t1an of Director of Soc1a1
Ser111ces The qualified candidate must be a L1censed
Soc1al Worker and possess
strong 11erbal and wntten
commumcation
skills
Med1ca1d, Med1care and
MDS knowledge Long term
care expenence preferred
but not requcred Qualified
cand1datel
may
send
resumes ro Charla Brown·
McGUire.
RN
LNHA.
Admtn1strator, 333 Page
Street, Middlepo rt, Oh
45760 OBC IS an E 0 E
and a part1c1pant of the Drug
Free Work Place Program

We are looking for people
aged 12 ~ 14 . 18_24 and Ur'Mv
ol Ato Grande Students to
part 1c1pate 1n a fun study
tnal pays 570 In Gallipolis on
9125 &amp; 9126 Please call
Qp1mons, Ltd at 877-6930300 ext1 and ment 1on the
Gallipolis study for more
1nformatmn

rid

Lw------_.1

448-0332 Sam to 5pm Man·

IIOMS&amp;-4101 xF144

Sal.

Oak Hill-Attractive t ·story,

2BA, 1.2Sba NEW updates·
energy eH1e1ent Windows,
doors &amp; kitchen appliances
Hardwood &amp; ceram1c floors,
full basement (partially fin·
ished), central a1r, forced
gas heat, city water &amp;
sewage, off street parking,
targe level backyard A
MUST
SEE I
Asktng
$80,000 740·645·1863 or

2 story Farm House. located

3 miles from A1o llrande
Unlv, No Pets, References .
required 304-675-7624
2BR. WID, stove, refrldg 88
Garfield
$4001month S
400/del)+ulllltles 6 month
lease Call740-446-25t5

3 bedroom house In
Pomeroy, large &amp; very clean. ·
1 112 bath, ale, hardwood ·
phone, taking messages,
740-352~2645
handling oftlce mail and
o down payment 4 bed- -R-ED_U_C_E_D_I_B_ra_n_d_n_aw_ floors, lull blisement w/2 car
general management 01 the rooms Large yard Covered home In GallipoliS 2B~. garage, small bacl&lt; yard,
office Wil be asked to par- deck. Attached garage 740· 2BA w/3 acres m/1. $82500. $835, (740)949·2303
Ca ll 740·446-7029
3 Bedroom • House In
tic•pate •n spec~al events for 367·7129.
the program
Must have high schOOl
M
H
Syracuse $500/month +
diplomaorequ•valent
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath,
OBILEco.~ deposi1 No Pets i304)675·
Fireplace, on 3 to 4 acres 1n
FOR OJlU'.
5332 weekends 740-591 Associates Degree pre·
ferted Must have kno'M- R1o Gande area on
0265
, . ot computers, lnclud· Pleasant Valey Rd $89,900 00 Clayton t4x60, 2BR, 2 .:.::CBR=-----H-••,..,
(740)7nn... 1166
Covered Porctles, Very N1ce. 3
near
o 1zer.
ln9, word process1ng , e~ecel
vw
Ap 11
N
PaIS,
Must be Moved $13,000
P ancea,
o
prQWam, publisher, e-mail Sbd 2ba GALLIPOLIS Call aHer Spm, 740-339- $650/mo plus deposit
and Internet usage Good Forecloeurel
Buy for 4570 or 441 •5294
(740)245·9880, (740)645oral and written communi·
3836
$14,900t
5%dn, - - - - - - - cation skills reqwred Must 20yra08%. More local 2000 14x70, 3BR, 2BA Lots
be able to worX with volun·
lro $1-' t F
at up grades 'on rented lot 38R, 1 bath, 2·story older
..
hornet
m
_,ma or 34
farm house on SR 554 Ieers an d senIor c"1zens
Kraus·Beck
Ad
Off I I led J ck
locol IIIUroga call 801).559BldweiiiRV
schools
ICe a ocs
rn a son xF2&amp; 4
Gallipolis 3 miles from $
Pa
All appltcants must submit a
Galipolls oft SA 588 446 _ 575/mo plus sec dep.
ts
under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
letter of Interest and resume - - - - - - - 8935
Attention!
mcluding the names and
- - - - - - - - depostt Available 10-1 3-Q7
addresses olthree referLocal company otfenng "NO 2000 Clayton 24X56, 3 BA, CaR 446-3644 for 8pphca·
ences on or before
DOWN PAYMENT. pro- 2BA, 314 acre 1n Greenti- · . o n · = - - - - - - grams for you to buy your
September 24, 2007to
home Instead of renting
Township $79,900 Call 38A, 1 5 bath, 2-story on
Ms Phyllis Mason, SPHR
• 100% llnancong
740-645·71 13
Cedar 51 . $575/rent, $575
Ocrector of Human
• L
h
rfect edit
sec dep Pete less than 20
Resources
ess I an pe
cr
Oreal used 2005 3 bedroom
t6 80
th
11 h' 1 lbs wl$575 per deposit Call
aooepled
Umversity of Alo Grande
x
w1
v1ny s eng e
P:O Box
• Payment could be the Must sell, Only $25,995 with 446-3644 tor app11cat10n
500
R1o Grande, OH 45674
same 88 rent
delivery Call ( 7401385-4367 69 Garf1eld - 2BR. tBA
e-mail pmasonOno edu
Mortgage
Locators
New 3 Bedroom homes from $460/rnonth + sec dep
17401367 0000
lrul740-245·4909
'
$214.36 per month, Includes You pay all ut1htles Call 446·
EEOIAA EMPLOYER
many upgrades, delivery &amp; 3644
set-up
(740)385-2434
Attention!.
lt!IO

i

I

-.,.-.,.,---,-==

Soloots

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740-446·4367,
1-800-2 14-0452
WVM gaUJIOI15C11r8!1rrollege oom

Accredhe-d Member Accredit~
Colm1 lor lndepenOel'll Colleges
8
ii'""~";:.:....,=.;:";.;":::
---.,

lt70 M~• "~ ~
.:7\..~·u.A.n...o.:~

I

Candle wax bus1ness, VHS
VIdeos &amp; VIdeo posters
work benches.
large &amp;
small, USA Wolfe tanning 24
bulb, vacuum cleaner busl·
ness Hang1ng S1'1elttor parts
&amp; many old coms call
74 0

0 6 12

~'1iro:::367~·;;;~~--...,
1

CHll.D'ELDERLV
CARE

Read your
newspaper and leam

2oyra08%. For llatlnga hookup, No pets Lease

I

All retlesllte edvertlalng
In thll RIW..,.plf II
IUbjtct to the Federal
Fair Hou1ing Att of 1968
whld'l rnlkH It Illegal to
advertiH "any
Pf•fererce, limitation or
dlacri""natlon betecl on
race, color, religion, Hx
familial atatu1 Of national
origin, Of any Intention to
make any auch
praference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon.''
This nawspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlurnents for real
estate whlcllls In
violation af the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• lldnrtlud In
this n.wepaper are
IYIIIIbfe on an equal
opportunity btlsea

Caring tor Children In my
home Monday thru Fnday,
cfay·tlme &amp; after school
hours All ages CALL 740- For sale by owner 3BR
949·2526
Ranch, 1 bath, Family
Room . SIOile/Fndge, W/0
Included Ask1ng $70,000
Call 740-709·6339

Shop Classffieds

N1ce used 3 bedroom heme Local company ollenng "NO
Wltt1 DOWN PAYMENT" prO·
delivery 740-385-4367
,, grams tor you to buy yoor
home mstead of rent1ng
• 100% f1nanc1ng
' Less than pertect credit
OWNER FINANCING
accepted
NICS 3/2 SlnQISWidSS
• Payment could be the
From $1 800 down
same as rent
payment
Locators
Mortgage
Gary (740) 828-2750
(740)367.0000

y 1nyl/shlngle WIH help

off1cer The applicant must '
Peace
Olf1cer
Baste
Tra 1ncng Applications can be
pldfed up at the A10 Grande
Municipal Building Monday Friday 8 30am untll4 30pm
Applications are due back to
the Municipal Bu 11d1ng by
noon
on
Monday
September 24 2007
_:_ _ __ _ __

I~ I ' I \I "

5%dn, ties Stove &amp; fridge WID

I111VImol

Grande invites applications :P;u~bt:l•;hl:'nq=CO:m:p:any=)=~
for the position of
Secretary for grant funded
~
and Sen1or Volunteer
~·IU!.3
Program
ResponSibilities Include, but
are not 11m1ted to general
TURNED DOWN ON
secretanal, clerical and
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
teciYIIcal duties for the proNo Fee Unless We W1nl
gram, Including proVIding
t-888-582·3345
scheduling aSSistance to
the Jackson Office, per·
~~~~.--~..., _ - - ,
tonn1ng wnous reception11oM1s
1sts' duties, answer~ng the
FOR SALE

- - - - - - - - be cer11f1ed m tne Ohio Galllpalla Career College
OhiO Valley Home Health,
Inc hlnng STNA's, CNA's,
CHHA's PCA's Accepting
LPN s
applications for
Competitive Wages and
Benef1ts 1nclud1ng health
Insurance and mileage
Apply at 1480 JaCkson Pike,
Galhpolts or phone toll free
1·866-441 -1393

p.m

rfb

;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Mob1le Home roof Call 740- position of part t1me pollee Lw-.i~ililii'RiiiJCfiOiiiioiiiioN;.,.,.J

110

Trailer lo:t for rent In
Hamsonville. $125/month
Call (740)742-1504 after 6

:~=~~===~

Ohio Valley

i

cm=n
o th
= 7-'-4Q.:c44c.·c:6c.-405.:.:.:3=Sites ava1labJe up to 16X80
mob1le homes $130.00 per
month Call740·992·5639

ground pool enclosed by prl·
vacy fencing and landscaped Fimshed 2 car
IJouu
garage attached to house
FOR n~and finished &amp; heated 3 car '--..,;iiiiii"iii""''tiio"-.,1
garage
unanached
·
Excellent condition ready to $118/mol Buy 3bd HUD
move In $255,000 00, Call - • 5%dn, 20yra08%.
For LloUn111 100-559-4101
(740)949·2217
x1701
HUD HOMES! lbd only
113,2501 More t-4bd 2 8Ft Duplex · 644 2nd Ave
homea available! From $42!ilrno plus deposll &amp; utili·

mortgage
broker
or
lender
1s
properly
licensed (This Is a public
service announcement

HFHWANIID

land lor Sale
25 acres
open &amp; wooded land
w/potentlal ~ta for pond on
Wolf Run Ad . .Aceesa and
culvort In $41,260 COli 379·
2995
-------MOBILE HOME LOf FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
House for Sale 1905 N Mam _R_d,c.44_1·_l1_1_t- - - Street, 4 bedroom 304-675Mobile Home lot for rent. SR
t545
141 &amp; 775 area. Some
House tor sale In Racine restrlct1ons apply. $125. per

For salelland cootract BR
house In Gallipolis, WID
connection $1500 down
$400/mo or rani $475/mo.
Also 1 BR In Clallpolla $760
down $200/mo or rent
$275/mo.Call Wayne 404·
•
456-3802 1or Info

area Approx . 4 acres, all
profess•oaally landscaped
Ranch style house with 4
bedrooms, living room, d•ntng room, kitchen, large fam·
•tv room, cantral air, gas heat
and 111replace Addition of a
large Flonda room completely cedar opens onto
patto &amp; pool area Heated in

Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your, home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
or requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Office or Consumer
AffairS toll tree at 1-866278.0003 to learn if tha

'1'-•1

Longaberger 1ewelry &amp; more .... - - - - - - . . . . , ,.....- - - - - . . . ,

n~,,

MONEY

rol..oAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
lnstiiUtlon's
Office
of Consumer

0

FOUND Cat on 2nd St Pt.
PI brown, &amp; cream colored
Obliviously 1ndoor cat lOam·
9pm 304-675·2046
- - -- - - - FOUND Small Goat, Ear
Tag 304·675-6765
-'------Lost at Pomeroy Blues Fest
Blue Pic album Return to
Court St Gnll or call 740 992-2090 $50 reward

I•rtO :~~ 3 .1r... ~~E
•8

ll'nr--::"'............,

Fn 21 - Sat 22
1206
Orchard H1ll Rt 7 South at
Chpper M1lls, turn nght, go 1
mHe Watch for s1gns First
GJVFAWAV
time thiS year. Game table,
toys, brand name clothing,
1yr old solid black female tolls, lots of good stuff 8.30
cat Very Pretty Call 740. to?
441·0405
Sept 20.22 from 9-6 at Clay
2 female, 1 male k1tten, 2 biQ Townhouse on Lovers Lane
white male outs1de cats, Plus size clothes, to much to
(740)992·5918
Ust 740-446.0987

4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcarnent ............................................ 030
Antiques ...................................................... 530
Apartmenbi for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................
Auto Pans &amp; Accessorlea .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boato &amp; Motors for Sole ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550
Bualnesa and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bualneas Oppol1unlty .................................210
Business Tralnlng ......................, ................ 140
campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equlpmenl ................................... 780
Carda of Thanks ......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgerallon ............................... 840
Equipment for Renl ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. ......................................... 610
Farms lor Rent ............................................. 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease .................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................... ................ 590
Fru~s &amp; Vegtlableo ..................................... 58D
Furnlohod Rooma ........................................450
Ganeral Haullng........................................... 85D
Olvaaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada........................ ,, •••• ,, ........ ,, .........050
Hay Graln ..................................................840
Help Wonlod .................................................110
Horne lmprovemenla ................................... 810
Homes for Sele ............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houseolor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020

I

.-.no•

POLICIES: Ohio V•ltty Pubflshlng
1M right to .st. ~ ar cancM .ny Mi It any tlmL lrr0111 mull bt reportM on the fht dly of
TrlbuM-S.ntlnel Regln.r will be rtepOnliblt for M l'ltOI'e thin tM ooet or tht! .,.ce occupiH by the Mf'ot' and only tN flnt tnMft!On. we lhlll
1ny toN Of expenM tNt retVtt. from tM ~Of omlakln ot., actv~ttleen•nt. Correction wMI bt midi In the rim .wtllblt edition. • Box
•ra &amp;Maya eonllclentitl. • Current rite en appHII. • AU ...1as1aW acfvertiNIINilti u.
to h Pect.ncl Pair ttou.lng Act Gf 11M11. •11118
ac:cepte only help wantld ...,
I!OE etandafdl. We wiU
v!NtJon of the t.w.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

1U BIJ\'

I

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thura:day for Sundeya

YARDSALE-

FREE:
Puppies
Lab/Sprmger Spaniel m1x
3M, 1F Ready NOW 304·

Wa will not knowln
accopt any adver
Iseman! In vlolatiD
flho law.

In Next Day'• Paper

YARDSALE

6yr old registered F EngliSh
Pointer Full blooded. Call
740·44t-0405

All
Real
Estal
dverUsements ar
ub)tc:llo tha Fodera
air Housing Act o

All Dl-..lay: 12 Noon :z
aualneaa Daya Prior To

Sunday ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

• Sbrt Your Ada With A Keyf.rord • lndude Complete
De.trlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And AcldNII When'NeMied
• Ads Should Run 7 D•ys

oo

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added toyourdassmed ads
(.~
,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
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Graphics 50¢ for small
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Display Ads

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WLOTPiaGFOA
Ottawa
200494
Toronto
111378
Bostorl
tt0234
Montreal
t 2 o 2 6
10
Buffalo
0 00 0 0
0
Sou- Dlvlolon
WLOTPtsGFOA
Flortda
3 1 0 6 11 7
Atiant.11
2 1
4 10 9
Carolina
1 0 0 2 4
3
TampaBay
100 2 4
3
Washington
0 1 1 1 7
9

968.

ASSOC IATED PRESS

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

HOCKEY

PA

.. 2·2 ...48 ... 70
. 2·2 . ..40
.31
2·2 ...90
.53
1·3
49
11 3

W-1.
3·1
2·2
0 · · .0
...0 ..0 . . . 1·3
· ..0 · · · 0 ·• ... 1·3
1·3
.. .0 .. · 0 ·
1)-4
...0 ....0

.o-o ·

Trimble · · · · • · · · · · ·

I

H

PF

. a-t .. tao ..so

0

.0

D-0

· · · · · .. · •

W-1.

PA

Hocldng Dlvlllon
w-1. TVCPF

I

H) at St

W-1.
.3-1
.3-1
2·2
. 1·3
1·3
. 1·3

. 0
0
.. .0 · · 0
... 0 .. . 0
... 0 . ..0

Pit1stlurgh (Maholm 1().15) at Chocago
Southern ...... " ........ · · .D-0
Cubs (MarquiS 12-11), 2·20 p m
N Y Mots (MartJnez 2.0) at Flonda Easlem ...... • • .. .. .. .. .. · .D-0
I
1Disen9-1 4), 7:05pm
Milwaukee (V1Hanueva 8-4) at Allama
(T HudeOn 16-6), 7:05 p.m.
W-1.
PF
~~~~I=(Eatoo 9-9) at Washington I Waharna .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .4.() ...86

H~uotoo .(B~·

116

OoJdand

Tampa Bay

..,_

"'"" utw.....,,
TVC
W-L
PF

I

C~ncmnab 4 San Francis&lt;:o 2
Ftldoy'o -

53

AU

()-() .. 0 . . 0

I

st Louis 1

2·2

..n

.D-0 . . 0 . ..0
.D-0
0
0

· · - ..... · .... · D-0
I AJeliand8r · · ........ • .... · ...D-0
Belore •. · ......................D-0
Nefoonyjle-York .................D-0
Vrrton County .. .. .. .. ..
. D-0
Wellston .. .. .. • .. ..
· D-0
1

• 125

T"'-Yal'-'
Conference
Ir
..:!\! -•-~-

1

Atlanta 3, M1twaukee 1

PF

.49

San Diego

3-1
140
62
.2· 2 . . 109 .. 91
.3-1 ... 122 .. 54
... 1·3
.28 .. 126
2·2
65
38
2·2
112
so
3-1
150 ..89
2 ·2
44

.o-o . o . o
.o-o . . o . 0
.o-o . . o . o

Coal Grove ..

I

Florida 6, N .Y. Mets 7. 10 mn1ngs
Ph&lt;ladelp/l!ll 7, WashlllQion 6

7

.. 56 .. 14
. 6 . . 62
• 14 . 17
14
20
14
56

I RNorVallev ...... . .
Sootl1 Poinl .

Thurodoy'o Colorado 9, LA Dodgers 4
San Diego 6, Pitl!burgh 3

Houston 18,

1.()

W-1.

KansasCI1y

W L T Pel PF
2 0 0 1.00038
1 1 0 .500 28
0 2 0 .000 13

Derwer

...

AU.

.1·3

Ohio Valley Conference

I Roc1&lt; Hil

~

_,ndov 'o Gomeo
N Y Me1i 8 , WashingtOn 4
Atlanta 5, Florida 1
Chocago Cubs 3, Cincinnati 2
Houston 5. M1iwaukee 4, 10 IMII"'QS
St LoutS 2 , Pt1i\adelphia 1, 10 mongo
Colora&lt;lO 6, LA. Dodgeq 5
Arizona 6, San Francosco 4
San Doego 5, Pittsburgh 3

. . • .

I

GB

5

. ..

Jackaon

1),
8~
10
13
14

.562

.. .. I.()

... . . ...... . . . . 1.0
- - ...... . • . •
• ... .1)-1
Gaia~ .. .. . . . .. .. . ..1)-1

GB

.559
.529
516

• .. ..

PF
..,_
. 17 . 14
. .20 . 14
. 62 . 6

lrcnlcn .. .. .. • • . .......... .1.()
a..., .
1.()

18\
18),

85 67
81 72
79 74

Los Angeles

w-1.

,.

86 67

t

SEIML

G8

-

110 .5004040

Friday, September 21, 2007

PageB4

r

For sale or rent , 3 bedroom,
1 bath. newly remoelelecl
house m Rodney Vtllage II
ACREAGE
Buy for $64,000 wcth possi2.12 acres Walnut Creek ble owner asstst or rent for
Sandhill Ad Ut11lt1es ready. $500 per month with secun·
Flat lot $25,000/0BO 304· ty deposh: No cnside pets
call (740)645· 1383
675-4411 Leave Message

I.ms&amp;

HUD HOMES! 3bd only
$13,2501
Mora
1-4bd
near Jackson P1ke, priced to
home• avallaljlel Fra n\
sell Call740-446-7525
,
$19VImot
• 5%dn,
Gorgeous ResJdenhal lots 20yra08%. For llatlngs
loca ted on Mason ! Cabell 800-551-41011 xf144

7 + acres on left Fork Rd

County lme, Underground
UtilitieS
Covenant
&amp;
Ftestncted to protect your
lrnestment
Outdoorsman
Dream S12es 2 Acres to 6
Acres pnced lrom $22 500 •
$35,000 call Paul Smcth 30461 0·5978

Nice 2br Home on Redmond
R1dge Rd 304-675·6406
after 5pm
'-"'---"'-----Off SA 141 , 3BA. 2BA.
appliances, basement, 1 car
garage,
$500/mo
plus
depo•t. (6 14)22t·0859

�ScOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
PRo BASEBALL

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS

-loegue

SoulheHtem Ohio Athletic League

East Dlvlolon
W L
Pel
New Vorl&lt;
84 . 66 .:&gt;53
Phlladell)hoa
83 70
542

80 73
66 85
66 B7

Anama
Washington
Flonda

.523
.444

431
Contr1ll Divlob&gt;
WL
Pel
80 73 523
78 74
513
71 8 1
467
70 83
458
67 66
438
66 87
431
West Dtvlalon
WL
Pel

Chocago
Mrtwaukee
St LOuiS
ClnclfYlatJ
Hous!Orl

PittSburgh

Anzona
San OtegO
Colorado

Norlh!llv-.

~.. ..... . ..

• ),

I -

I Fllrtsmouth
I Warren

San FranctSOO 61 86

438

t9

I
1

7

40

1)-1

. . .o-1

. 7 . ? 40

. . . . .............o-1

. .

CNC

PF

W-1.

.. • .. .. • .

Cheo..,......
.. .. . ...
Failand .. .. .. .. .. . .

, ' '-leigo

·

I

wa•-"-~
......u

0 .

Federal Hodcing . .
.
.D-0
Miller "····· .. · ·· · ...... ..... D-0

(P1ne;ro 6-4), 8 10 p m
LA Oodgera (Loaiza, 2·2) at Arizona
(L Hernandez 1().10), 9·40 p.m
COlorado (Miorales 2·21 at San Diego
(Paavy 16-8), 10:05 p m
C~ncmnati (Belisle 8-91 at San Frsncitoo
(Misch ().3) , 10:15 p.m .
Sotunlly"o
Pi!tsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 1 05 p.m
NY Mala at Florida. 3 ·55 p m
M1lwaukee at Atlanta, 3 55 p m
~~_I.Ph ia atLouWulshlngton, 7 05 p.m
--·
·
• 7.15 p.m.
Clncinnall at San Franciaoo, 9:05 p.m.
L.A Dodgers at Arizona, 9 40 p.m
Colorsdo at San Diego. 10'05 p m.
Suniday'a Games

Wayne .. .. . ..

Minnesota 4, Texas 2

TIIUIId8y'oKanaes City 3, Chicago White

o.-

laoguo

.579
75
507
65 87
428
83 90
412
Contnl Dlvlalan
W L
PCI
-- 90 62
.592
Cleveland
83 70
542
Detroit
75
493
Minnesota
Kansas City
68 68 434
ChiC8go
68 67 431
Welt Dlvillon
W L
PCI
Los Angeles 90 62 592
61 70
538
Seattle
Oakland
74 80
481
Texaa
70 83
458

n

n

Sox o

Baltimore e, TIX8&amp; 3, 10 tnnlngs

Eaot Dlvlalon
86 64

48

AU
PF
107
74

28

83

. 67
. 27

PA

48
.40
44
.115
.113
.80

80

GB
1

1'1
12 ~
24.
27

GB

715.
24
24~
GB

a•

17
20'1

Wodnaoday"o Gomett

Frktly'1
Torooto (Halladay 15-7) at NY Yankeea
(Wang 18·7), 705 p m
Dekland (Blanton 14-9) at Cl,.land
(Carmona 17-11), 7:05p.m
Kanaee City (Bucl&lt;ner 1-1) at Detroit
(Jurrjona 3-1), 7:05p.m.
Boston (Bac:llett 19-6) at Tampa Bay
(Kazmlr 13-8), 7 10 p.m.

Baltimore

(Santos

1·5) at

Texas

(Mendoza o-D), 8 05 p.m
Chicago Whne Sox (Buehrle 9-9) at
Minnesota (J Santana 15-12), 810 p.m
Saallte (Waahburn 9· 15)at LA. Angels
(Saunders 8-3), 10:05 p.m.
Satunlly'l

o..-

Chicago White Sox at M1nnesota. 12.10
pm

Toronto

. .34

Seattle at LA. Angels, 3 55 p m
Oakland at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Kanaas City at Detrort, 7:05 p m.
Beaton at TamP&lt;! Bay, 7:10pm.

AU.
W-1.
3-1

.37

PF
101

PA
59

.3-0 .. 98 .. .33

... 54 . 23 .... ,4.()
.2·2
... 40 . .42
.. 7 . .40
1·2
. 35
.55
. .2·2
.. 20
57 . . .Q-3
19
47 ..... 1·3
.. ·
· •

. 116 .. 29
108 . 111
.23
82
.. 91 . 75
... 32 . 76
.. .64 .. 111

Seattle at l A ~ngels, 3-35 p m

PRo FOOTBALL
National Football Laague
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Eof!l

WLTPCI PF PA
New England 2 0 0100076 28
0 2 0 .000 17 41
Bunalo
Miam1
020.00033 53
N.Y. Jets
020 .00027 58
South
WLTPCI PF
PA
2 0 0 1.00063 30
lncltanapolls
Houston
2 0 0 1.00054 24
Tennessee
~

Jacksonville

·: : g ~ ~

Pittsburgh

North
WLTPct PF
2 0 0 100060

Cincinnati

Pet PF PJII
2 0 0 100082 55
2 0 0 1.00036 25

W L T

Dallas
Washorogton
NY. G Pt1iladetphia

Caroltna
Atlanta
NeoN Orleans

-

0 2 0 .000 46 110
020 .0002536
W LTPct PF PJII
110 .50037 34
110 .50046
•7
0 2 0 .000 tO 37
020 .00024 72
W LTPCI PF PJII
2 0 0 t .00056 38

Detroit
Green Bay
Minnesota
Chicago

-t

2 0 0 1 00051
1 t 0 .500 41
11050023

26

23

24

WLTPct PF PJII
1 San Franasco 2 0 0 1 000 37 33
Anzona
t 1 0 .500 40 40
Seattle
1 1 o .500 40 29
St Loui'o
0 2 0 .000 29 44

SUndly'o -

Mormina, b Steve Ward, F Mtke
Angelidis, F NIOO!as Blanchard, F David
Gave, F Bobby Hugheo, F Kirk
MacDonald, F Brar1don Nolaro and F
Jerorno Sa._, 10 Albany (AHL).
COLUMBUS
BLUE
JACKET5Assigned F Andrew Murray, F Philippe
Oupula, F Potol, F Jolt Szwez. F
KBv1o Jarman. Q Dan Smith, D TrtiYOI
I Hendrilol. D Darcy Corr¢etl, D Jon
Landry, D Kyle Wharton , 0 Jekabs

I

I

I RadllhiS, 0

Andreo _,_,.._ G Adam
Mo.wlro to Syraruae (AHLJ, 0 Brian Slpotz

I

to Chic:ago (AHL) , F Stefan Lageln to
Nlllgara (OHL), F Maft Marquar&lt;11 10

Moncton (OMJHL) and 0 Ban Wrtgh!IO

' 1.ethtlridge (WHL).

1 t 0 .500 58
t 1 0 .500 72

...

-

o

I
I

PA
10
79
71

NASCAR

TRANSACTIONS

2007 Nextal Cup Point

BASEBALL
Name
MaJor La8fjue BoHboll
1 Jimmie Johnson
MLB-Suspendad Atlanta RHP Rafael
1 Jell Gordon
Sonano for four games for hitting Florida
1
3 Tony Stewart
INF Dan Uggla w1th a p1tch •n a game on
4 Cl1nt Bowyer
Sept. 17 Suspended Baltimore OF Jay
5 Kvle Busch
Payton for two games for throwing his bat
6 Martin Truex Jr
and helmet down after he was ejected for
7. Matt Kenseth
arguing With plate ump1re Mike Reilly tn a
8. Carl Edwards
game on Sept 19.
9. Denny Hamlin
Nlllonal League
10. Kevin Harvlck
I
CINCINNATI REDS-Recalled RHP
11 . Jeff Burton
1 Homer Bailey from Sarasota (FSq.
12. Kurt Blisch
I HOUSTON ASTROS-Named Ed
Wade general manager
13 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
National Baaketbllll Aaaoclatfan
GOLDEN STATE WARRIOR5-Wwvad 1 14 Ryan Newman
15 Casey Mears
G Sarunas JaSikBVICIUS.
1 MILWAUKEE
BUCK5-Matched . 16 Greg B1tfle
17 Bobby Labonte
1 M1am1's offer sheet for G Charlie Bell on
1B. Jamie McMurray
a ftve-year contract
1 19. JJ. Yeley
,
FOOTBALL
National Football League
20. Juan Pablo Montoya
21. David Ragan
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARs-Released
22. Kaaey Kahne
OT Ryan GibbOns from the practiCe
squad Signed OT Andrew carna,han to
23. Reed Sorenson

I

1

I

S-lngl

After N8W HampshirtJ

Spc,_it. Trenoactlono

Wins

6
4

3
1

Pts
5210
5210
·10
· 15

1

·35

1

·40
·54

1

2
1
1
1

2

·63
·82
-88
·91
-t02

0
0
1

·229

0
0

·230
·321

1

-409
-434

1

-601
·537
·561

o
o
0

o

3074
-41

-881

-695
·746
·754

30. Johnny SaWor

0
0
0

3 f. Tony Raines

0

ibune - Sentinel - l\ ister
CLASSIFIED

· 7113
-1122
-1123
·939
-l1r7

0
0

· 1057
· 1147
· 1312

0

-1371

0
0

·1474
-1494
·1511

0

·1187

0

0

o

Galli a
County
OH

·1540

PRo HOCKEY

!

I

o

0

0
0

29. JeltGr_,

I
I

NEW '!ORK AANOERs-Aosigned F
Arizona at Baltimore, 1 p.m .
Tom Ayati 10 Hartford (AHl) and D
San Diego at Green Bay, 1 p.m
Bobby Sangulnelli to Bramptoo (OHl)
Buffalo at Now Er9Bnd, 1 p m.
on'AWA SENATOR5-o\solgnod 0
lnc:bnapolts at Houston, 1 p.m.
Greg AmadiO, D Tomas KUdelka. 0
Minnesota at Kansas City, 1 p m.
Derek Smlttt, 0 Geoff Waugh. F 'Jyier
Donati, F Chaz Johnson, F Greg
1 San Franasco at Pittsburgh, 1 p m.
St Lou1s at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Mautdin, F Jim McKenzie, F Shawn
Detroit et Philadelphia. 1 p m
Weller and F Jeremy Yab4onskl to
CleY8tand at Oakland, 4 05 pm
Blroghamtoo (AHL), G Ryan Daniels to
1
Cu-.cmnati at Seattle, 4 05 p m
1 SAginaw (OHL), lW Kasp81&amp; Daugavina
Jact&lt;sonvilla at Denver, 4 ·05 p m
10 r,oi"sls•auga-St Mk:ttaal's (OHL) and
Carol1na at Atlanta, 4·t5 p m
C Jim O'Brien 10 SaatUe (WHL).
N y G 1ants at Waahirogton, 4 , 5 P m
PHOENIX COYOTE5-Aaslgnod LW
Brett Maclaan to Oshawa (OHL).
Dallas at ChiC8go, 8·15s&gt;m
,' ST. LOUIS BLUE5-Asal....., F Jean·
Guy Trudel, F Ryan Reaves, F Nicholas
Tenneaaee at New Orteans, 8:30 p m
Orazenovll:, F Cherte. Unglet, F Hans
Sunctoy, Sept. 30
Benson, F Tomas Kana, F Josh Soeraa,
F Nit&lt;olay Lernt)'UOOII, F Tim Spencer, F
1 ChK:ago at Datrort, 1 P m . •
St LOUIS at Dallas, 1 P m
Cam Keith , F Julian Talbot, F F.P.
Oakland at Mtaml, 1 p.m.
Guenette,
Aaron MacKenzte, 0 Ne1l
Houston at Atlanta, 1 p.m
Komadoski, o Bryan Miller, 0 Ryan
NY Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m .
Glenn, D Alexander Hellstrom, G Marek
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 P m.
Schwarz and G M1ke McKllnna to Peoria
(AHL)
Baltimore at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Sealtle at San Francill&lt;O. 4 .05 P m,
SAN JOSE SHARK5-A8algned C Tom
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 4 05 p.m
Cavanagh, RW Mike lggulden, 0 Dan
Denver at lnchanapolls, 4 15 p.m
Spang and 0 Patrick Traverse to
Kansas C1ty at San Otego, 4 15 p m
1 Worcester
(AHL) and LW Frezer
Mclaren and D Ty Wishart to their JUnior
P1ttsburgh at Arizona, 4 15 p m
Philadelphia at N V G1ants, 8 15 p m
teams.
Open Wash1ngtoo, Jacksonville, New 1
COLLEGE
Orleans. Tennessee
1 FLORIDA A&amp;M--Namec! Eugene Harns
Monday, Oct. 1
. men's b&amp;$.ketball coach
New Eng!and at Cincinnati, 8 30 p m.

Thulld8y'1

26. Marl&lt; Martin
27. Robby Gordon
28. David G~lsland

32. Rid&lt;)' Audd
CALGARY FLAME5-Aaslgned LW
33. Dave Blaney
Eric NyoVcm, 0 Brott Palin and RW
3ol Paul Menard
I OM! Van der Gutlk "' Quod City (AHL),
35. JoeNemoc:hel&lt;
o Lalond Irving to E-ett (WHL). o Jam 36 Ster1irog Martin
Negrin t&gt; Kootanoy (WHI.). lind TW J.D. , 37 Soot! Riggi
wan 10 ReO Deer (WHLJ.
38 Kyle Petty
CAROliNA HURRICANE5-Aollgned
39 Btian VICkora
1 G Nastiuk, G Justin F'Vton, G
40 OM! Reutlmann
, Daniel Manzalo, D Wade Brookbank. D
Trn Conbo¥, 0 Mllrl&lt; Flocd, 0 Jory I

1

Oakland at CkM!Iand, 1 05 p m
Toronto at NY Yankees, 1 05 p m
Kansas City at DetrOit, 1 OS p m.
Boston at Tampa Bay. 1 40 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 2 10
p.m.
Baltimore at Texas, 3 05 p m

Cl8118land

_,_,.._,.

~··-

PA

at N.Y Yankees, 1 05 p m

equad.

2 0 .000 41 · 5tl

Eoot

24. llaYid Stromme
25. ~ sidtor

tho poactil» oquad.
t NEW 'IOflK JETS Signed Ol Clint
I ~to tho ptiCb IC[Uid.
CW&lt;l.ANO RAt~ WR
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Signed WR Rich Ptnono to tho proctii:A

I

PA

Sunday's Games

Chicago Whne 5oJI 7, Kanaas City 0

Houston at St Louis, 8:05 p.m.

New York
Toronto
BaiUmore
Tampa Bay

PA

.

40

.221 ' Miam1 at N.Y. Je!S, 1 p m.

Baltimore at Texas, 8:05 p.m.

Toronto 6, Bo1ton 1

Clncennati at San Franasco, 4 05 p.m.
LA Dodgers at AriZOna, 4.40 p.m.

.588

.. • ..

Cle\leland 4, Detrolt 2
SaatUe 9, Ookland 5
L.A. Angelo 2, Tampa Bay 1
N.Y Yankees 2. Baltlmot'e 1

Pillaburgh at Chocago Cl.bs, 2 20 p m.
Colorado at San Diego, 4:05p.m.

Beeton

· ~ ··

. .. 2.0
Poc:a . .. ..
.. • . .. . . .. 1-1
Point Pleaaanl .. . .. . • .. .. . .. 1)-1
Chapmanville .. • .. .. .. • .. • .. .. 1)-2
Har1ler1 Hoover .. .. ............o-2
Winfield
1)-2
" .... " .... • ........ ·

1 05 p m

Pc:t

W-1.
• ft

....,.w. ··· ······ ·· ·

Milwaukee at o\Hama. 1 05 p m

W ,L
90 63

().4

logan · · .. .. .... · • · .. · .. · · ...2.0 ... 65 . .19

Philadelphl&amp; at Washmgton, 12 05 p m

Arnoric:lln

..,_

...._......_
1,....._AU.,_

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81 51

Meta at Florida,

0

.0 · · · 0

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PF

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AU
PF

.,

NA'IIOHAI. CONFERENCE

. 111 .. 56
... 87
.59
...84 ... 117
113
102
67 . 112
...56 .. 117

~""!)~ .: · .. ::::·: :.: ·::~~ f ~~
Clnllnal Conference

louis

0

PJII
34

_ , _ , l a o g...
EASTERN CONFERENCE

E-mail
classified@ mydailytnbune .com

Atlonllc: Divlolon
WLOTPiaGFOA
Pillai&gt;Urgh • 1 0 t
3 7
5
8
N.Y. Islanders t t 1 3 7
NewJeiOGY
1 t 0 2
5 3
Philadelphia t t 0 2 3
6
N.Y. Rangels 0 0 0 0 0
0

-Divlalon

EDDIE PEU.S

PARIS - The verdict -said
"guilty."
Like so much else in the
confusmg, contentious Floyd
Landis doping case, though,
none of the answers are really that simple.
Landis lost his expensive
. and explosive ca!ie Thursday
when two of three arbitrators
upheld the results of a test
that showed the 2006 Tour
de F(ance champion used
synthetic testosterone to fuel
his spectacular comeback
victory.
The decision means
Landis, who repeatedly has
denied using perfonnanceenhancing drugs, must forfeit his Tour title and is subject to a two-year ban,
retroactive to Jan. 30, 2007.
Not that 11 changes h1s
opinion of who the rightful
winner was.
~~ I am innocent," he said,
"and we proved I am innocent."

The majority of the panel
disagreed.
According to documents
obtained by The Associated
Press, lead arbitrator Patrice
Brunet
and
Richard
McLaren voted to uphold the
positive
test
with
Christopher Campbell dissenting.
In its 84-page deci sion, the
majority found the initial
screening test to measure
Landis' testosterone levels.,
the testosterone-toepitestosterone test - was
not done according to World
Anti-Doping Agency rules.
But the more precise and
cx~ensive
carbon-isotope
rallo analysis (IRMS), performed after a positive T-E
test is recorded, was accurate, the arbitrators said,
meaning . "an anti-dopin*
rule vtolatton IS established.
"As has been held in several cases, even where the T-E
ratio has been held to be
unreliable
the IRMS
anal~sis
may still be
applied,"' the majonty wrote.

··

AP photo

2006 Tour de France winner Aoyd landis of the US waves
the US flag as he rides up the Champs-Eiysees avenue m
Paris following the final stage of the 93rd Tour de France
cycling race between Antony, south of Paris, and Paris, in
this July 23, 2006 file photo.
"It has also been held that the for the 31-year-old cyclist
IRMS analysis may stand from Murietta, Calif.
alone as the basis" of a posiHe has steadfastly insisted
tive test.
that cheating goes against
"Today's ruling is a victory everything he stands for. He
for all clean athletes and said he was merely a pawn m
everyone who values fair and the anti-doping system's allhonest competition," U.S . consuming effort to find
Anti-Doping Agency CEO cheaters and keep money
Travis Tygart said.
flowing to its labs and agenNow, Landis is left with cies.
one final way to possibly sal"This ruling is a blow to
vage his title - an appeal to athletes and cyclists everythe Court of Arbitrallon for where," Landis said. "For the
Sport.
Panel to find in favor of
lfLandtsdoesn'tappeal - USADA when, with respect
or appeals and loses - he' II to so many issues, USADA
be the first person in the I05- d1d not manage to prove
year history of the race to even the most bas1c parts of
lose the IItle because of a their case shows that this
doping offense.
system is fundamentally
Given the vigor with flawed ."
which he pursued the case,
He is still weighing his
and the more than $2 million legal options, accordi ng to a
he raised to do it, this goes statement released by hi s
down as a devastating loss leg&lt;Jl team.

"This is a miscarriage of
justice," said Maurice Sub,
the lead attorney for Landis.
"He is at the mercy of peopie much bigger than h1m,"
said Landis' mother; Arlene,
speaking to WGAL-TV in
Lancaster, Pa.
The decisi6n comes more
than a year after Landis'
stunning comeback in Stage
17 of the 2006 Tour, one that
many people said couldn't be
done without some kind of
outside help.
Pat McQuaid, leader of
cycling's ruling body, said
rules dictate that Landis can
be stripped of his Tour de
France title immediately.
That makes Oscar Pereiro,
who finished second last
year, the official winner.
"It's not a great surprise
considering how events have
evolved," McQuaid said.
"He got a highly qualified
legal team who tried to baffle
everybody with science and
public relations. And in the
end, the facts stood up."
Landis insisted on a public
hearing not only to prove his
innocence, but to provide an
unflmching look at USADA
and the rules it enforces, and
also establish a pattern of
incompetence at the .French
lab where his urine was tested.
Althoullh the panel rejected Land1s' argument of a
'"conspiracy"
at
the
Chatenay-Malabry lab, 11 did
find areas of concern. They
dealt with cham of command
in controlling the urine sam·
pie, the way the tests were
run on the machine, the way
the machine was prepared
and the "forensic correciions" done on the lab paper·
work.
" ... the Panel finds that the
practises of the Lab in trammg Its employees appears to
lack the vigor the Panel
would expect in the circum·
stances g1ven the enormous
consequences to athletes" of
an adverse analytical finding, the decis1on said.
The majority repeatedly
wrote that any mistakes

made at the lab were not
enough to dismiss the posilive test, but also sent a
warning.
"If such practises continue,
it may well be that in the
future, an error like this
could result in the dismissal"
of a positive finding by the
lab.
In Campbell's opinion, the
Landis case should have
been dismissed.
"The documents supplied
by (the French lab) are so
filled with errors that they do
not support an Adverse
Analytical
Finding,"
Campbell
wrote. "Mr.
'Landis should be found innocent."
In at least one respect,
Landis
was
innocent,
because the panel dismissed
the T-E test. But in the arbi!ration process, a procedural
flaw in the first test doesn't
negate a positive result in
follow-up tests.
In his dissent, Campbell
latched onto the T-E ratio
test, at;nong other things, as
proof that the French lab
couldn't be trusted.
"Also, the T-E ratio test 1s
acknowledged as a simple
test to run. The IRMS test is
universally acknowledged as
a very complicated test to
run, requiring much skill. If
the LNDD couldn't get the
T-E ratio test right, how can
a person have any confidence that LNDD got the
much more complicated
IRMS test correct?"
It was confusion like this
that resulted in the harsh
review the anti-doping
movement received during
Landis' nine-day hearing in
May.
But Landis also took his
share of abuse, and ultimately, USADA still improved to
35-0 m cases it has brought
before arbitration panels
since it was founded in 2000.
Th1s was' a nasty contest
waged on both sides, with
USADA attorneys going
after Landis' character and
taking liberties in evidence
discovery that wouldn't be

mrihune

..

ca~r;~::;

Or Fax To

446-3008

Or Fax To

Naahv11ia

DetrOit

WLOTPtsGFGA
2
4
4
110284
120 2 7
8
1 2 0 2 8
10

oo

a

Ch1C8go
Columbus
StlouiS
0 2 0 0 8
9
North- Division
WLOTPtsGFGA
Colorado
3 0 o 6
16 9
Edmonton
2
4 8
8
vancouver
1 o 1 3 6
3
Minnesota
1 1 0 2 4
8
Calgary
o 2 1 1 2 10
PacHic Dlvlolon
WlOTPtaGFOA
Phoenix
2 1 1 5
tO 10
Anaheim
2 2 1 5
11 1~
Lea Angeles 2 2 0 4
16 18
SanJoae
1 0 1 3 6. 6
Dallas
1 1 1 3
12 15

HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*
OhloValily
Publlahlng renrvoa
lharlghtto adll,
reJact or cancel any
ad at any limo .
Errore
Musl
8
oportad. on lha II
ol publication a
Trlbtln•Senllnel
egloter
will
eoponslble for n
ra thsn the coal o
he apace occuple
the error and on
ha flnt lnoertlon.
hall not be lloblo lo

Two pornts for a win, one point for 0'\/Srtime loss or shootout loss
Thulld8y'1 Gomea
New JeiOGY 3, BciSton 0
Ottawa 5, Washington 4
Minnesota 3, Detroit 2
Phoenix 3, Toronto 2
Nashville 5, Atlanta 3
Flonda 1, Chicago 0
Colorado 6, Dallas 3
Friday'• Games
Columbus at Buffal~ 7 p.m.
Nashville at CaroNna, 7 p m
New Jersev al N Y Rangers, 7 p.m.
Pittstlllrgh at Detroit, 7'30 p.m.
N Y. Islanders at Montreal, 7·30 p.m.
Minnesota 81 ChiCago, 8.30 p.m.
Anaheim at San Jose, 10:30 p m.
Batunlly'o
Toronto at Boston. 4 p.m.
onawa at Montreal, 7 p m
St. LOUIS at Atlanta, 7 p m
Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p m .
Detroit a1 Pittsburgh, 7 30 p.m
W8Sh10gtOn at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Caro~na at Nashville, 8 p m
Edmonton at Calgary, 9 p.m
Dallas at Phoenix, 10 p m
Colorado vs Los Angeles at La:~ Vegas,
10 p.m.
Vancouver at San Jose, 10:30 p m

ubllcatlon or omls
lon of an atlvan
nl. Corrections wll
mada In u.i flra
vollabla odllton.

o..-

permitted in a regular court
of law. Landis, meanwhile,
accused USADA of using a
win-at-all-costs strategy and
prosecuting him only to _get
h1m to turn on seven-lime
winner Lance Armstr\)ng,
who has long fought doping
allegations that have never
been proven.
Addressing "problematic
behavior on the part of both
parties," the panel wrote it
would not revtsit the conduct
of either side.
'They are just part of the
litigation war games the parties counsel engaged in
between themselves," the
decision said.
More than the complex,
turgid scientific evidence,
the hearing will be remembered for the Greg LeMond
brouhaha.
The hearing turned into a
soap opera when the former
Tour de France winner
showed up and told of being
sexually abused as a child,
confiding that to Landis,
then receiving a call from
Landis' manager the night
before his testimony threatening to disclose LeMond's
secret to the world if
LeMond showed up.
LeMond not only showed
up. he also claimed Landis
had admitted to him that he
doped. That was the only
aspect of the LeMond testimony the panel cared about.
"The panel concludes that
the respondent's comment to
.Mr. LeMond did not ainount
to an admission of guilt or
doping," the majority wrote.
Despite that, Brunet and
McLaren found Landis
guilty.
The decision comes a full
14 months after Landis' final
sprint down the ChampsElysees, which was bustling
with businessmen and shoppers Thursday, not bicyclists
and spectators.
"We waited too long,"
Tour de France race director
Christian Prudhomme said.
"But it is an ending as we
expected. It's over, and we
never had any doubts."
I

\ \ \ fH \ 1 I \ II \ I "'

r-..

ANNOIJNL'EMhliii'S 1

• All ada must be prepalir

conceelad &amp; carry Class,
NRA Certified Instructor,
One day 12 hour CCW
Class $100 Sam sharp,
Sept 29. Mercerville Ftre
Dept. 740·256·6514 Email

r::::::=::==~
r

2 Male pups 10 to 12 wks
old 1btklwht,
1
solid
blond/red vel checked, 44150251709-6t6t

~
L.,,-..OOI'PotmJNm'litiliiiiiliiii.;..,.J

io

r

..-•."!N'!i!O!'!TI!'!C!'E•--•

L.-...iGiiAUJPOUSiiiiiiiiliiiiiO..,.I
-,
4 Family Sale October 20 &amp;
21. 1695 Lincoln Pike

t

675·2925 or 304·593-8173

r

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO recommends
that you do bu~nees wfth
peopla you know, and
NOT to send money
through lhe mall until you
have ln'IEistigated the
onarlng.

r

YARD SALE-

Pr. P'l..EAsANr

~-...i-ioililiiiiiiiii.,.l
Big 3 Family Yord Sole 82
Soutll top of Deed Men'a
Hill Friday the 21ot &amp;
Saturday the 22nd 8:30 till
4:00
-------Yard Sale Sat M1ltoo Rd,
Camp
Conley
8am· 12

www.comlca .com

~.: 'It ~~ 11"

CLASSIFIED INDEX

oao
no

a

Insurance .................................................. ... 130

a

· Lawn Garden Equlpment ........................ 680
Livestock .....................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... oao
lots &amp; Acreage ...... ...................................... 350
Mlecellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Marchandlee....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
Mobile Homes for Renl ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ..............................320
Monay to Loan ........._.................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Mualcallnatrumenta ............................... : ••. 570

Personals ..................................................... OOS
Pels for Sale .............................. ................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .................... ............... 820
Professional Services .... ................. ........... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repelr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wantad ..................................... 360
Schools lnslructlon ....................... .............. 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlllzer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted .......... ............................. 120
Space for Rent ............................................ 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV 's for Sale ................. , ............................ 720
Trucks for Sale ..................... ....................... 715
Upholstery ........... ....................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
Wantad to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ............... 620
want ad To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent.. ........................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale•PI. Pleasant ................................ 076

®2007

Iro

E~ecnmg DriVer's Education
pos1t1on
open m the
Gallipolis area
Flexible
hours Must be able to work
evemngs and weekends 20
to 25 hours a week Job
enta1ls classroom work and
beh1nd the wheelmstrucllon
tor new dnvers Qualified
candidates must have a HS
Diploma, valid dnver ltcense
pass background checks
EOE MBII resumes to AAA
1414
12th
Street
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662
Attn Al, or Fax resume to
Ann AL 740·351·0537
-------Experienced
Bartender
needed
Apply
within
Gall1polls Elks 408 2nd Ave

Cross Creek Auction Buffalo
Auct1on Saturday 6pm Ron
Price,
IS the
hauler
Generators, Power Tools,
Building IS full Starting to
sell h1gh quality knives such
as Case, Buck &amp; Mossy
Oak V1sa and Master Card
(304 ) 550 _1616 Stephen
Ree
1639

=~"""':;;..,~.~
·~--....,

...,.,

20+ acres ol reasonably
priced land for residential
bu1ldmg site Gallipolis area
only Call740·441·5171
Absolute Top Dollar U.S
S1lver and Gold Coms,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1935
US
Currency,
Sollta.re Diamonds· M T S
Co1n Shop 15 t Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·
2842
Looking for land pnced rea·
sonable Call 740-645-6299
Leave a message 740-6456299

HEl2 WANrm

Full-time Toddler AsSistant
$6.70/hr. Ltm1ted benefits.
Send resume to Early
Education Station. 2122
Jsfferson
Ave ,
by
September 25, 2007
.

Hart Time busmess offloo

11"

0

HFHWM'ftll

Part·l1me posthon needed,
b1lhng expenence preferred,
sand resume to PO. Box.
366, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benef11s
and OT,PaldTralnlng,.
Vacat10ns·FT/PT
1 866·542-t531
USWA
Pre&lt;:ISIOn Electnc now Hiring
Licensed Electricians Call
tor lnterv~ew 304-675-8076
Respons1ble, flexible fu ll
ume baby slt1er needed,
(740)992·2329
The
Athens-Me 1gs
Educational Serv 1ce Center
has a Part -Time CustCK!Ian
to provide cleaning serv1ces
at the preschool modulars m
Alexandar Local School
Olstnct for the remamder of
the 2007•2008 School Year
ThiS pos1uon would be for
TWo (2) hours per day 'at
r1 0 00 per hour, no benet I~.
•
'"
and contingent upon completlon of background check
and continue~ fund•ng

posslion avaslabltJ, w1th some
computer knowledge
Some medtcalldentaf expenPaw Paws. blaclt walnuts.
f
ence help u/.
h,ckorles, please call first, Reply to TSC Box 17 c/o
(740)698-6060
Pcnnt Pleasant Regtstar 200
Prqperty to build home In Mam, Pomt Pieasant, WV Submit letter of Interest and
Gallla County Prefer 5-10
acres. high and dry. Call

25550

r.T.1""------,

resume
to
John
D
Costanzo, Superintendent,

Marty collect @ 321 -453· Health Care Services Group Athens-Meigs EducatiOnal
1351 evenings
The
Nations
leading SeriiiCe
Center,
507
Richland Avenue, Su1te
Want to buy Junk Cars, call prov•der of eniltromental flf1 08, Athens OH 45701
7110·388·0884
services to the long term Application
must
be
,.;-..~~~~~-. care Industry Is loakrng for received
by
Fnday.
WE BUY· USED
house
keepers/laundry
a1des for local nursmg home September 28 • 2007 • 4 30
MOBILE HOMES
p.m
The AMESC " an
36759 Equal
Gary (740)828·2750
Apply In person
Opporluntty
~o..-;.;.;..;,;;;;~-..1 Roc:kspnngs Road, Pomeroy Employer/Provu1er
Ohto
l \11' 11 1\\ 11 \ 1
The Village of Alo Grande 1s
Need a person to paint a takmg applicatiOns tor the
" I In II I "'

The Un1versit)' of Rio

from

the

1

446-7039

11FLP WANIID

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts. , wood
1tems To $480/wk Matenals
provided Free 1nformat10n
pkg 24Hr 80 1-428·4649
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avoo
Call Manlyn 304-882 2645
AVON• All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
S~trley Spears, 304·
675-1429
Coo rts1de Bar and Gr~l
Now tak1ng appl1ca110ns lor
excapttonal people fer bartending , wa1tstaff1servers
and all kitchen positions II
you are a mot1vated people
person please come hll out
an application or call to set
up an mterv1ew
308 2nd Ave
7 40-44 1-937 1
Dom1no's P1zza Now H.rlng
alllocat1ons Po1nt Pleasant.
Galhpohs. Eleanor Pomeroy
apply In Person

Overbrook Center IS now
acceptmg resumes tor the
po51t1an of Director of Soc1a1
Ser111ces The qualified candidate must be a L1censed
Soc1al Worker and possess
strong 11erbal and wntten
commumcation
skills
Med1ca1d, Med1care and
MDS knowledge Long term
care expenence preferred
but not requcred Qualified
cand1datel
may
send
resumes ro Charla Brown·
McGUire.
RN
LNHA.
Admtn1strator, 333 Page
Street, Middlepo rt, Oh
45760 OBC IS an E 0 E
and a part1c1pant of the Drug
Free Work Place Program

We are looking for people
aged 12 ~ 14 . 18_24 and Ur'Mv
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tnal pays 570 In Gallipolis on
9125 &amp; 9126 Please call
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Gallipolis study for more
1nformatmn

rid

Lw------_.1

448-0332 Sam to 5pm Man·

IIOMS&amp;-4101 xF144

Sal.

Oak Hill-Attractive t ·story,

2BA, 1.2Sba NEW updates·
energy eH1e1ent Windows,
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Hardwood &amp; ceram1c floors,
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targe level backyard A
MUST
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$80,000 740·645·1863 or

2 story Farm House. located

3 miles from A1o llrande
Unlv, No Pets, References .
required 304-675-7624
2BR. WID, stove, refrldg 88
Garfield
$4001month S
400/del)+ulllltles 6 month
lease Call740-446-25t5

3 bedroom house In
Pomeroy, large &amp; very clean. ·
1 112 bath, ale, hardwood ·
phone, taking messages,
740-352~2645
handling oftlce mail and
o down payment 4 bed- -R-ED_U_C_E_D_I_B_ra_n_d_n_aw_ floors, lull blisement w/2 car
general management 01 the rooms Large yard Covered home In GallipoliS 2B~. garage, small bacl&lt; yard,
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Ca ll 740·446-7029
3 Bedroom • House In
tic•pate •n spec~al events for 367·7129.
the program
Must have high schOOl
M
H
Syracuse $500/month +
diplomaorequ•valent
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath,
OBILEco.~ deposi1 No Pets i304)675·
Fireplace, on 3 to 4 acres 1n
FOR OJlU'.
5332 weekends 740-591 Associates Degree pre·
ferted Must have kno'M- R1o Gande area on
0265
, . ot computers, lnclud· Pleasant Valey Rd $89,900 00 Clayton t4x60, 2BR, 2 .:.::CBR=-----H-••,..,
(740)7nn... 1166
Covered Porctles, Very N1ce. 3
near
o 1zer.
ln9, word process1ng , e~ecel
vw
Ap 11
N
PaIS,
Must be Moved $13,000
P ancea,
o
prQWam, publisher, e-mail Sbd 2ba GALLIPOLIS Call aHer Spm, 740-339- $650/mo plus deposit
and Internet usage Good Forecloeurel
Buy for 4570 or 441 •5294
(740)245·9880, (740)645oral and written communi·
3836
$14,900t
5%dn, - - - - - - - cation skills reqwred Must 20yra08%. More local 2000 14x70, 3BR, 2BA Lots
be able to worX with volun·
lro $1-' t F
at up grades 'on rented lot 38R, 1 bath, 2·story older
..
hornet
m
_,ma or 34
farm house on SR 554 Ieers an d senIor c"1zens
Kraus·Beck
Ad
Off I I led J ck
locol IIIUroga call 801).559BldweiiiRV
schools
ICe a ocs
rn a son xF2&amp; 4
Gallipolis 3 miles from $
Pa
All appltcants must submit a
Galipolls oft SA 588 446 _ 575/mo plus sec dep.
ts
under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
letter of Interest and resume - - - - - - - 8935
Attention!
mcluding the names and
- - - - - - - - depostt Available 10-1 3-Q7
addresses olthree referLocal company otfenng "NO 2000 Clayton 24X56, 3 BA, CaR 446-3644 for 8pphca·
ences on or before
DOWN PAYMENT. pro- 2BA, 314 acre 1n Greenti- · . o n · = - - - - - - grams for you to buy your
September 24, 2007to
home Instead of renting
Township $79,900 Call 38A, 1 5 bath, 2-story on
Ms Phyllis Mason, SPHR
• 100% llnancong
740-645·71 13
Cedar 51 . $575/rent, $575
Ocrector of Human
• L
h
rfect edit
sec dep Pete less than 20
Resources
ess I an pe
cr
Oreal used 2005 3 bedroom
t6 80
th
11 h' 1 lbs wl$575 per deposit Call
aooepled
Umversity of Alo Grande
x
w1
v1ny s eng e
P:O Box
• Payment could be the Must sell, Only $25,995 with 446-3644 tor app11cat10n
500
R1o Grande, OH 45674
same 88 rent
delivery Call ( 7401385-4367 69 Garf1eld - 2BR. tBA
e-mail pmasonOno edu
Mortgage
Locators
New 3 Bedroom homes from $460/rnonth + sec dep
17401367 0000
lrul740-245·4909
'
$214.36 per month, Includes You pay all ut1htles Call 446·
EEOIAA EMPLOYER
many upgrades, delivery &amp; 3644
set-up
(740)385-2434
Attention!.
lt!IO

i

I

-.,.-.,.,---,-==

Soloots

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740-446·4367,
1-800-2 14-0452
WVM gaUJIOI15C11r8!1rrollege oom

Accredhe-d Member Accredit~
Colm1 lor lndepenOel'll Colleges
8
ii'""~";:.:....,=.;:";.;":::
---.,

lt70 M~• "~ ~
.:7\..~·u.A.n...o.:~

I

Candle wax bus1ness, VHS
VIdeos &amp; VIdeo posters
work benches.
large &amp;
small, USA Wolfe tanning 24
bulb, vacuum cleaner busl·
ness Hang1ng S1'1elttor parts
&amp; many old coms call
74 0

0 6 12

~'1iro:::367~·;;;~~--...,
1

CHll.D'ELDERLV
CARE

Read your
newspaper and leam

2oyra08%. For llatlnga hookup, No pets Lease

I

All retlesllte edvertlalng
In thll RIW..,.plf II
IUbjtct to the Federal
Fair Hou1ing Att of 1968
whld'l rnlkH It Illegal to
advertiH "any
Pf•fererce, limitation or
dlacri""natlon betecl on
race, color, religion, Hx
familial atatu1 Of national
origin, Of any Intention to
make any auch
praference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon.''
This nawspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlurnents for real
estate whlcllls In
violation af the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• lldnrtlud In
this n.wepaper are
IYIIIIbfe on an equal
opportunity btlsea

Caring tor Children In my
home Monday thru Fnday,
cfay·tlme &amp; after school
hours All ages CALL 740- For sale by owner 3BR
949·2526
Ranch, 1 bath, Family
Room . SIOile/Fndge, W/0
Included Ask1ng $70,000
Call 740-709·6339

Shop Classffieds

N1ce used 3 bedroom heme Local company ollenng "NO
Wltt1 DOWN PAYMENT" prO·
delivery 740-385-4367
,, grams tor you to buy yoor
home mstead of rent1ng
• 100% f1nanc1ng
' Less than pertect credit
OWNER FINANCING
accepted
NICS 3/2 SlnQISWidSS
• Payment could be the
From $1 800 down
same as rent
payment
Locators
Mortgage
Gary (740) 828-2750
(740)367.0000

y 1nyl/shlngle WIH help

off1cer The applicant must '
Peace
Olf1cer
Baste
Tra 1ncng Applications can be
pldfed up at the A10 Grande
Municipal Building Monday Friday 8 30am untll4 30pm
Applications are due back to
the Municipal Bu 11d1ng by
noon
on
Monday
September 24 2007
_:_ _ __ _ __

I~ I ' I \I "

5%dn, ties Stove &amp; fridge WID

I111VImol

Grande invites applications :P;u~bt:l•;hl:'nq=CO:m:p:any=)=~
for the position of
Secretary for grant funded
~
and Sen1or Volunteer
~·IU!.3
Program
ResponSibilities Include, but
are not 11m1ted to general
TURNED DOWN ON
secretanal, clerical and
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
teciYIIcal duties for the proNo Fee Unless We W1nl
gram, Including proVIding
t-888-582·3345
scheduling aSSistance to
the Jackson Office, per·
~~~~.--~..., _ - - ,
tonn1ng wnous reception11oM1s
1sts' duties, answer~ng the
FOR SALE

- - - - - - - - be cer11f1ed m tne Ohio Galllpalla Career College
OhiO Valley Home Health,
Inc hlnng STNA's, CNA's,
CHHA's PCA's Accepting
LPN s
applications for
Competitive Wages and
Benef1ts 1nclud1ng health
Insurance and mileage
Apply at 1480 JaCkson Pike,
Galhpolts or phone toll free
1·866-441 -1393

p.m

rfb

;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Mob1le Home roof Call 740- position of part t1me pollee Lw-.i~ililii'RiiiJCfiOiiiioiiiioN;.,.,.J

110

Trailer lo:t for rent In
Hamsonville. $125/month
Call (740)742-1504 after 6

:~=~~===~

Ohio Valley

i

cm=n
o th
= 7-'-4Q.:c44c.·c:6c.-405.:.:.:3=Sites ava1labJe up to 16X80
mob1le homes $130.00 per
month Call740·992·5639

ground pool enclosed by prl·
vacy fencing and landscaped Fimshed 2 car
IJouu
garage attached to house
FOR n~and finished &amp; heated 3 car '--..,;iiiiii"iii""''tiio"-.,1
garage
unanached
·
Excellent condition ready to $118/mol Buy 3bd HUD
move In $255,000 00, Call - • 5%dn, 20yra08%.
For LloUn111 100-559-4101
(740)949·2217
x1701
HUD HOMES! lbd only
113,2501 More t-4bd 2 8Ft Duplex · 644 2nd Ave
homea available! From $42!ilrno plus deposll &amp; utili·

mortgage
broker
or
lender
1s
properly
licensed (This Is a public
service announcement

HFHWANIID

land lor Sale
25 acres
open &amp; wooded land
w/potentlal ~ta for pond on
Wolf Run Ad . .Aceesa and
culvort In $41,260 COli 379·
2995
-------MOBILE HOME LOf FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
House for Sale 1905 N Mam _R_d,c.44_1·_l1_1_t- - - Street, 4 bedroom 304-675Mobile Home lot for rent. SR
t545
141 &amp; 775 area. Some
House tor sale In Racine restrlct1ons apply. $125. per

For salelland cootract BR
house In Gallipolis, WID
connection $1500 down
$400/mo or rani $475/mo.
Also 1 BR In Clallpolla $760
down $200/mo or rent
$275/mo.Call Wayne 404·
•
456-3802 1or Info

area Approx . 4 acres, all
profess•oaally landscaped
Ranch style house with 4
bedrooms, living room, d•ntng room, kitchen, large fam·
•tv room, cantral air, gas heat
and 111replace Addition of a
large Flonda room completely cedar opens onto
patto &amp; pool area Heated in

Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your, home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
or requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or Insurance Call the
Office or Consumer
AffairS toll tree at 1-866278.0003 to learn if tha

'1'-•1

Longaberger 1ewelry &amp; more .... - - - - - - . . . . , ,.....- - - - - . . . ,

n~,,

MONEY

rol..oAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
lnstiiUtlon's
Office
of Consumer

0

FOUND Cat on 2nd St Pt.
PI brown, &amp; cream colored
Obliviously 1ndoor cat lOam·
9pm 304-675·2046
- - -- - - - FOUND Small Goat, Ear
Tag 304·675-6765
-'------Lost at Pomeroy Blues Fest
Blue Pic album Return to
Court St Gnll or call 740 992-2090 $50 reward

I•rtO :~~ 3 .1r... ~~E
•8

ll'nr--::"'............,

Fn 21 - Sat 22
1206
Orchard H1ll Rt 7 South at
Chpper M1lls, turn nght, go 1
mHe Watch for s1gns First
GJVFAWAV
time thiS year. Game table,
toys, brand name clothing,
1yr old solid black female tolls, lots of good stuff 8.30
cat Very Pretty Call 740. to?
441·0405
Sept 20.22 from 9-6 at Clay
2 female, 1 male k1tten, 2 biQ Townhouse on Lovers Lane
white male outs1de cats, Plus size clothes, to much to
(740)992·5918
Ust 740-446.0987

4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcarnent ............................................ 030
Antiques ...................................................... 530
Apartmenbi for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................
Auto Pans &amp; Accessorlea .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Boato &amp; Motors for Sole ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550
Bualnesa and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Bualneas Oppol1unlty .................................210
Business Tralnlng ......................, ................ 140
campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equlpmenl ................................... 780
Carda of Thanks ......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgerallon ............................... 840
Equipment for Renl ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment. ......................................... 610
Farms lor Rent ............................................. 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease .................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................... ................ 590
Fru~s &amp; Vegtlableo ..................................... 58D
Furnlohod Rooma ........................................450
Ganeral Haullng........................................... 85D
Olvaaway ......................................................040
Happy Ada........................ ,, •••• ,, ........ ,, .........050
Hay Graln ..................................................840
Help Wonlod .................................................110
Horne lmprovemenla ................................... 810
Homes for Sele ............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houseolor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020

I

.-.no•

POLICIES: Ohio V•ltty Pubflshlng
1M right to .st. ~ ar cancM .ny Mi It any tlmL lrr0111 mull bt reportM on the fht dly of
TrlbuM-S.ntlnel Regln.r will be rtepOnliblt for M l'ltOI'e thin tM ooet or tht! .,.ce occupiH by the Mf'ot' and only tN flnt tnMft!On. we lhlll
1ny toN Of expenM tNt retVtt. from tM ~Of omlakln ot., actv~ttleen•nt. Correction wMI bt midi In the rim .wtllblt edition. • Box
•ra &amp;Maya eonllclentitl. • Current rite en appHII. • AU ...1as1aW acfvertiNIINilti u.
to h Pect.ncl Pair ttou.lng Act Gf 11M11. •11118
ac:cepte only help wantld ...,
I!OE etandafdl. We wiU
v!NtJon of the t.w.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

1U BIJ\'

I

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thura:day for Sundeya

YARDSALE-

FREE:
Puppies
Lab/Sprmger Spaniel m1x
3M, 1F Ready NOW 304·

Wa will not knowln
accopt any adver
Iseman! In vlolatiD
flho law.

In Next Day'• Paper

YARDSALE

6yr old registered F EngliSh
Pointer Full blooded. Call
740·44t-0405

All
Real
Estal
dverUsements ar
ub)tc:llo tha Fodera
air Housing Act o

All Dl-..lay: 12 Noon :z
aualneaa Daya Prior To

Sunday ln·Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

• Sbrt Your Ada With A Keyf.rord • lndude Complete
De.trlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And AcldNII When'NeMied
• Ads Should Run 7 D•ys

oo

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added toyourdassmed ads
(.~
,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln-rtlon

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00

992-2157

Oear/tiru-

Word Ads

Central Dlvlllon

l\egister

Sentinel

o

WESTERN CONFERENCI

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com ·

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

nr----------------~--

Thlo
newspapa
ccepta only hel
ntad ads mnlln
OE slandarda

Bv

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285;ooo PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

To ·Piace

WLOTPiaGFOA
Ottawa
200494
Toronto
111378
Bostorl
tt0234
Montreal
t 2 o 2 6
10
Buffalo
0 00 0 0
0
Sou- Dlvlolon
WLOTPtsGFOA
Flortda
3 1 0 6 11 7
Atiant.11
2 1
4 10 9
Carolina
1 0 0 2 4
3
TampaBay
100 2 4
3
Washington
0 1 1 1 7
9

968.

ASSOC IATED PRESS

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Friday, September 21, 2007

HOCKEY

PA

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Friday, September 21, 2007

PageB4

r

For sale or rent , 3 bedroom,
1 bath. newly remoelelecl
house m Rodney Vtllage II
ACREAGE
Buy for $64,000 wcth possi2.12 acres Walnut Creek ble owner asstst or rent for
Sandhill Ad Ut11lt1es ready. $500 per month with secun·
Flat lot $25,000/0BO 304· ty deposh: No cnside pets
call (740)645· 1383
675-4411 Leave Message

I.ms&amp;

HUD HOMES! 3bd only
$13,2501
Mora
1-4bd
near Jackson P1ke, priced to
home• avallaljlel Fra n\
sell Call740-446-7525
,
$19VImot
• 5%dn,
Gorgeous ResJdenhal lots 20yra08%. For llatlngs
loca ted on Mason ! Cabell 800-551-41011 xf144

7 + acres on left Fork Rd

County lme, Underground
UtilitieS
Covenant
&amp;
Ftestncted to protect your
lrnestment
Outdoorsman
Dream S12es 2 Acres to 6
Acres pnced lrom $22 500 •
$35,000 call Paul Smcth 30461 0·5978

Nice 2br Home on Redmond
R1dge Rd 304-675·6406
after 5pm
'-"'---"'-----Off SA 141 , 3BA. 2BA.
appliances, basement, 1 car
garage,
$500/mo
plus
depo•t. (6 14)22t·0859

�r :r

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B&amp; • The Daily Sentinel
1r

1BA Apt, Relrldge &amp; StoW,
Water, Sewer &amp; Trash paid,
Porter, OH. $350/mo plus
depos~ (740)388.0173,

7~'

SpM,.I/,11 In:
OXYGEN l RESPIRATORY

(304)882·3017

I
_ _.1

King

Size

Bedspreads lor sale, $20

Required, (740)992-5174 or
(740)441-01 10.

New sofa &amp; love ses.t, $400,
New Kttchen table/ ·4 chair
$179.95. Molioh8n Carpet

1 and 2 bedroom apart· Gracious Ltvlng 1 and 2

Ad
,
Bidwell, OH (740)388-0t73
Mon·Frl Sa-4p sat 9a-3p.

ments, furnished and untuf·
Bedroom Apts. at Village
nished, and houses In M~nor and Riverside Apts. In
Pomeroy and Middleport, Mrddleport, from $327 to
security deposit required , no $592. 740·992; 50!)4. Equal
pets, 740·992·2218.
Housing Opportunity.

202

c

lark

chape1

L- - - - - - ·

Coke Sign, Coke lamp,
Barber chair, Trunks, Green
Glass, Pressed Glass, Shot .
Glasses,
o
Glasses, Chicag
Raggedy

The Mel9s County Budget Commission has
completed Its apportionment of Undivided
Local Government Revenue Fund lor 2006
These revenues are beood on projections from
the Ohio Office of Budget and Management
and· are only astlmaJas Of the amount of
revenue that could be received by Meigs
County,
The following Is a complete breakdown of the
projec~ed revenue.
Percent
Local
Government

Olive

Orange
Rutland

salem
Sella bury
Scipio
Sulton
Total

Revenue

40.00%
30.00%

30.00%
100.00%
38.7448%
30.1673%
11.4470%
"6.1531%

r

Paint Plus Hardware

304-675-4084

I
,

PE:rs

FOR SAu;:

lemate, black &amp; white, $150,
(740)985-3431

dual door wtelectric Blower All pups AKC. 740 _7674875
~:.:::~=..::...:.::.:._::_:..:

Kittens - 6wks old. Siamese-

12.5793%
7.4687%
10.3281%
5.0016%
10.3163% '
7.4191%
8.0631%
8.5863%
6.8029%
8.2475%

GRAIN
SQUARE bales.

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
•Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

26 Years Exl••rh,nee

David Lewis
740-992-6971
~=:~;;~~
Free

4 WHEEtF.RS
05 Honda 450R, Low Hours.
$4500. CaM 740-416-7055.
Leave Message.

------2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessories. Paid
s24 ,ooo new--$19,600. can
740-367-7129.
2007 Honda Rancher, 420
ES/4x4 paid $5,300 asking
$4.300 304-675-3711

r:~~~~~J
Camper tor sale 2002 KZ -

03 Mustang, Convertible, Frontier, 24ft, sleeps 6, tully

1'1ood scoop, rear spoiler, loaded, like new, used very
pony packet. 27000 miles. little $8,500 304·57&amp;-2321
EKcellent cond . Asking - - - - -- - $17500. 256-8682 or 256·
Fleetwood Mallard, 2811,
6006
.:..:.:~-----­ Excellent Condition. Garage
03 Taurus, auto $3900 , 04 kept , Reese Hitch , Sway
Sunlira, auto $5200, 91 Olds bar. 446·1266
$1450, 98 Tiburon. $2200.
..,I IH II I ..,

Call MiniatUre Plncher P.ups, 2 V6, Ram Air, Sunroof, CD.

.(740)441-0366 or 1740)339- Black/Tan females, ~300 91,000 miles $5,800.00.
2
_8_13_ _ _ _ _ __ each. a weeks 1old. 740-949-9008.
(740)388-8124
•
JET
Reg Border Collie pups,
AERATION MOTORS

r·o

I

HOM£
.
L.~b::;;,:tPRO~VEMEN;,:;,;:;:,:,rs~.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

45nt

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids lor the
purchase of a 2007 or
2008 314 ton extended
cab truck, two (2)
wheel drive, lour (4)
door, will be received
by' the Meigs County
Commissions at their
office, c/o the Meigs
County Courthouse,
East
Second
100
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, until 1:00 p.m.,
Thursday, September
27, 2007 and opened
on the date in said
office at One Fifteen
(1 :15) p.m. and read
aloud tor the following:
Specifications lor said
vehicle
can
be
obtained from the
Commissioners' office
at the above address
or from the office of
the Meigs County
Recycling &amp; Litter
Prevention, 117 East
Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Bids shall be seated
and marked "BID' FOII
2007 OR 2008 314 TON
TRUCK". The Meigs
County
Commissioners
reserve tho right to
reject any and or all
bids or any part thereof and to waive any
InformalitY In any pro-

The Tuppers Plains
Cheater Water Dlalrlct
Is lriv~lng bids on two
different water line
relocation projects In
Meigs County. Job one
Is designated as the
"Earl
Schultz
Relocation" and job
two Is to be known as
tho "Keebaugh-Follrod
Water
Line
Relocation". The Water
District has estimated
the cost of the jobs to
be $48,200.00 and
$44,600.00 respectively. Those contractors
Interested in the project can pick up a set of
plans and speciflca•
lions at tho District
Offlco during regular
business
hours
Monday
through
Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. located at 39561
Bar
30
Road,
Reedsville, Ohio 45n2
alter paying a plan fee.
Tho Districts Phone
number Is 740-9853315 . Bids must be
received at the District
office by 11:00 a.m.
October 1st, 2007
where they will be
opened
and
read
aloud.
By order of the
President of the Board,
Howard Caldwell
(9) t6, 2t , 23

'
''

..

43 -de rner
44 Cllmblt'o

lid

4li Smlll

R'OBERT
BISSELL

•

'

WC ,..~Lt&gt; 'oo! WAA't mf;~ '&lt;00 ~

t-IE-'NSI'N'Eil. €K\4.
!»..'&lt;! Wf.\'1 till&gt; '&lt;OU

nu..

Triumph 12% Horse Feed ......$5.99/50 lb.
Sportsmix Dog Food 21-8........... $9.99/50
S·UREA .....................$199/ton Bulk Only
Priefert Powder Coated Gates
$53.00
t4 $75.00
12 $$65.00
t6

'.,

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

n.
nS8J.oo

Shade River Ag. Service
35537 St Rt 7 North

W.kiMG

~1&gt;?•

..

TELL

H~l(.l!

Pomeroy, OH

Sidewalks, Patios,
Co11crete Footers
Also
Block&amp;
Brickwork

~H

JOIIII

... IEC.WSE

us WOIUC. SO

:r
CAitE!

WBLL, I'LL
'taU WHY r

so

740-742-2293

15 Actor

.

18 Term
ol Nlp&amp;Ct
17 Money

55 lbHn
horolne

56

er.tty

9 Mlcleaa!
IItie

57 Alr1)Ump

handltnl

18Bizlrre
-.
21 I, to Seneca 58 Strong.
22 Dove
as venison
lhelter
59 Get the drift
23 llllllboo
muncher
DOWN

•.

26 Monkey lure
28Umbrlge
1 Fut-talk
29 ROIIrum
2 Gem

31 Sldpper' I
'

.,

unlv.

- McClure

eo-ne••
11 Spoil

181aayl

canlsuH and 15-plut ~ points.
At !rid&lt; 'one, _, EMI win8 with his
· hearfaoe, you mus18111001h~ drop your
king -the card you ara known to hold.
Kyoo play the !hiM, Eaal will resllze that
his paflnl!r led a ~nglelon. becsuae H
Wt8l had had the doublelon king-five,
hi WMd have led the king, nolllie five.
K yoo drop your haarl thres, Eut will
conllnue ~ lhe heart nine, hilt blghael
spot being a sult-prelerence ·elgnal lor
diamonds, the hlgher-ranltlng ol tlta ·
other 1wo side suls. Weal will ruff lhe
trlck,lesd his diamond - t o hla psrtnefa ace, and anolhlir heart through wll
promote Wesfs spade queen as the set·
ting lricl&lt;.
Bull you play lhe hslll1 king a! Irick one,
Easi might think lhat (halls the ~ngleton
and shift to, say, the club queen. Hs
shou~ not, but hs might. It Is your on~
chance.

G

Astro-

Graph

...... II ... :

· Slpt.
2007
Byllemlco
- 22,Ooo1
There Is likely to be some kind of Interaction between ~oUr material and ~

Wol.l(.

=

47 Pl...... ·~ :
46 Mooalc Iiiii

49 Fll'llllbodl
Nile queen 52 --hw
28 Prejudice
rounds
27 Jol-

bird

7 Pool .

30 Thunder·

• 8 Snlpl w
bultano

IlNCk
32 All dads

'
,,
i

'•.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by .Lula Cempoa
~Citll*-n,_...,_,lii'IM'&lt;Iul-

EdlttllrlnlhtciPWP'Idtbnlhel.

away could cause vou to wallow In guHt.
L.IBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) - There's a
good chance Chat an unusual chain of
clrcumatances coutd bring vou faoe·toface with an Individual you'll Immediately
like. II'~ be a relatlonahip worth cultivat-

PEANUTS

ing.

SLIT DON'T THROW IT
OKA'f. MAACIE .. I'LL
60 DOWN THE 1-I.,LV. I &amp;EFORE I GET OOWt-IIH~I\C,j
AND 'f'Oll TIIROW
OR VOU'LL J.IIT Me ON
ME THE"BALL ..
Tile !lEAD..

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 62 15
l 'olll('rr,y Ol11o
,!

1&lt;

II

SCORPIO (Oct 24·-

SORR'(, SIR .. [

WAS P~ACTICIN6
MY INTENTIONAL

6ROLINDIN6 ..

l&lt; l l i l q•ll!l' &lt;

· 22) - A ohaky

sttuation that need! to be resotwed with
another can be clarified to the satisfaction of both . How8118r, h Is going to take a
frank discussion .that must be handled
with a lot of diplomacy.

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Vou'l leal good about yourself If you

direct your mental anrlbut81 toward Prot·

.

•

COWandBOY
LIKE FISHING lli\JEII A
SHADY TREE, ~ PlAYING
CATCH WITH YO!JI DAD.
011 SNIFFING ABATCH
OF CHOCOlATE

IrS THE SINti'LE
TJIN;S THAT MAKE
APE11SON HAPPY.

)

011 LAUGHING AT
ZOO ANIMALS aJZ
THE'f'IIE BEHIND BAliS

i

~~CXJ
THE TIME.

)

~

CHIP COOKIES.

:.____)
::r

~~;

•

......

"'

DONTOOTHE

OOI'MNOT.

~

Rt. 62 N Pt. Pleasant, WV

Pr-a&lt;;tice 3:30pm)
675-5463

Mercy Hands
at All About You
Debi Adkins
20% off Massages
Now- Dec. 31st
Gift Certificates
Available

' -1

Todl)'s 00&amp;: Vequals P

"YDOWAOOUOD TCR OY CKHWCXM

NR

OPW TNNR, CRX MWO ZW CHW YOGKK
KGSGRA

ZGOP OPW TNHCK

D N AD W V 0 Y N U P N.T W H.'
- TGDPWKCRAWKN CRONRGNRG

'

..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Every arti~ dips his brush In his own soul, and
paints his own nature Into his pictures.· • Henry Ward Beechsr

~~~:t:~' S@ll~1A-~r.~s·
141rd

~y

CU.Y A. ,OLIAN

.

,,

WOlD
lAM I

.,

.

O Rtarrange

Ieffert of the
four terarnbted words be·

low to form four 111'\plt word~.

IIWRATDY

~

COW,
THE'I"RE IIJT

CDMCTS.

iVJ

::r

~~--

' '""

· 11-....,.,_.o..,R.,.o...c__,.H--1

D

I 16 I I ,.
I

5

-

.

.

.

~

r"7. -F~L-E_N_E_l---,1

l I I 1I I
8

Philosopher to class, "Take care
lh.at he is 1101 doing lhe wne thing
wllen you argue-- a-."

0

Complete the chuckle quoted

by filling in the missing wor~s
.
1-..J.--t~+--L-t-..J
yo" d..,olop from "ep "No. 3 bolow.
~ PRINT NUMBERED
~ lf rtfRS IN SQUARES

~ ~~~~~M&amp;lE FORI

J

I I J Ia I I I I I

SCIAM-lm ANSWIRS

9- 20 - o 1
' ;

Aviary -Exude- Pulre- Keeoly- EXPENSIVE
AI they et1tered a dq&gt;artmcal t10R, I overlleard the mother teO .,
t. ......., MlfJIIIIaaaybody'tiiiiiiC 00 it, it'I too

J!XPI!NSlVB..

ARLO&amp; JANIS

genert~lshlp.

PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) · lnttlalty,
this might appear to be just another ordl·
nary day with nothing much htlppening,
hOWever, things are abOUt to Change.
Something Is stirring behind .ttte eoenea

and may surface.
·
ARIES {March 21·April191 - What will

. ··:- iL,11',...
.P

ects that aerve some kind of humanitarian purpose. Something good will come
ot It for all lrrvot\led.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - 11
pays to mingle wlltt peopta whO are well
invested because something that some·
one says could enhance your own mate·
rial well-being. Be a good listener. Keep
your ears and mind open .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Your
leadership qualities will be much In evi·
dence so don't be surprised If your asso·
cial89 push you lo the head of the cla!J8
in spite of your reticence. They need your

...

.

serve you well Is your ability to get along
wittl people from all walkS of life. Being
able to walk with kings without losing the
common touch makaa you vary popular.
TAURUS (Aprii20·Uay 20)- Being per·

sistent and able to focus on your ambl·

Mason Co. Fairgrounds

,..........

protects that take lndu..,trlouBneu and
productivity will bring you great pei'IOOal
sallalactlon. Conversely, Idling your time

'·:;:L, ...
Sat. 9/22/07
6:00p.m.

.....,.

20 FcuConwo 43 Troptc:.llll
44 Gllndeur
22 Do
45
Long..

In

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

MOTOCROSS
RACE

36 Trolley
•
39 Tlrne Ill bit ~
41 Some

25 BNutliuf

6 Non-flying

cop11

10 FlciiONJI

24 Met
highlight

33 ~ruble
cal~.
35 Sllemtnglne 5 Psyche'l
lrMnor
belovM

lbodeo
40 MM!Ic or

Small
combO

23~
awlne
46 Flah tt.ll

3 Cfleered
4 san-,

37 "Nonne -"
38 Cliffside

34

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl . 22) - Engaging

*Prompt' and Quality
Work

References Avai lable!
Call Gary Stanley @

lll'lnce

53 ~~~~
to lncludt
54 c.mtHidge

Jo'uiWir
14 Ellpu

Sluck in your hand, kiOidng at a K-Q.J1o-9 su~. If you would reaDy like the
opponent ~ the ace lo lake HImmediate~. lead the king trom your hand. Hyou
wou~ preler to sneak a round pas1 the
ace, though, lead the nine.
This deal Is a vanallon on 1hs1 theme.
You are South, lhe declarer in four
apadel, Eaal ha~ng ovsrcded In ·

affairs that holds much promise. Meeting
somtOne who'lllnfluenoe you to head In
a new direction coukt be at 'the founda·
lion of this maneuver.

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

WIIIDI

Driveway.~.

·1\lJ-WR~!

~

" WHY IS

'!!~~~~~~~ *Reasonable Rates
r
*Insured
*Experienced

CIDCrltl WOI'II

SO C£.RT~I~ t W~TI-\tQNE.
Wlo\Ot&gt;lt&gt; IT 1

r---· . ,.

BIG NATE

• New Homes
• Garages

.,.e«~~tll.E~m~

WHAT A DEAl!!

Why drive anywhere elsa
11

.UVW"I

LOVE. 001~
CR~~'NORI&gt; I&gt;UZZL.E. Ito\ 11\E

51 Borodln

13 Betlund

trumpL Thlo pstr wu U8ing ihe fi10I8 trallillonal meaning: II least a good siM·

...,•
r

-.upUI•
50 TllhouM
-

11 .Mellow
12 Funny
· Bomblck

heatt8. West leads the hean llvs. Wha1
woukl be 'fO'Jf plan?
Somt pairs play thai oponer't jump
rebid afler a two-over-one reeponsa
requires i isoiJd euH and Nil H as

l!....~!'JT!!

';ru KtiOW l

Repaired, New &amp; RetxJill In Imported Bloodlines, 1st
Stocl&lt;. Call Ron Evans, .1· shots, wormed, working parents. Call 740-379-9110
800-537-9528.

Public Notice

'

740-949-2217

ton.
n.

cnsnocnou

'

Hill's Sel f
Sto rage

J&amp;L
Construction

10Years

$9,400.

$10700. Call 245·1513

Seats 7, Great Condition, _74_0_·44
~
1 -_
07_2_
7 - - - - 2000 Black Grand AM GT,
priced,

- ~=ty

'I

Hat tub, wiring Included, Himalayan. $50 each. Call and more. 446-7278

Reasonably

asking

'

THAR'S A SCANDAL IN TH'
GOV'MENT, A MOVIE STP\R
GOT DIVORCED, .. AN' TH' ·
ECONOM'I' .
WENT UP
JEST 8'FORE

.'

- - -- - - - - Mint van, Very Nice, 51 ,000

740~446.9200
2A59 St. Rt 160 • GaiUpolls

H-Honest

304-675-5a 31

(740)949-1949
Allolla 40 MUIURCYCLES'

.

owww.U.'bu a eeko•MD_,.oom

1992 GMC Safari Mini Van
fron.l &amp; rear a1r. Cap1a1n
cha•rs exc. cond. $1 .900

mixed. hay for sale 740-985- ·
3699

r•o

Mowers, Till~n,
Murray,

I·

2002 Mercury Villager Sport "

rttAYING
MANTIS!

BARNEY

Ha,_.d CHIIelf And rur.Hire·

s

•
,,

II Cll1 be importsnl to play the right card
to alri:lc For examt&gt;e, supposs you are

A

.I MAI&gt;t

r

Eaal
2¥
All pass ..)

Play the card you
are known to hold

..

Stmcing
lAwn Tractors,
Cra/IJIIIIln,
MTD,BrlgJJ!
&amp; Strallon

..,

mue·s

Backhoe, very good condi· CKC Cocker Spaniel pup· 02 Camry Le. 58,000k, 4cyl,
tion, low hours. $18,000. pies, CKC Rat Terrier pup- AT, AC, 4DA, 1 owner,
Call 740-709·9420
pies for Sale 304.675 -4243 garage kept, like new cond.

GE Heavy Duty XlA. capac- Cod&lt;er Spaniel pups, blk, &amp;
ily Washer &amp; Dryer $150, while
w/blk.$300-$350,
Bruno Wood Burning Stove brindle and lawn $350-$400.

a.na&amp;%

I

IL\V &amp;

AKC German Shepherd
AUIUii
Puppies,
Black
&amp;
Tan,
$350.
L--.:FO~Rii;SAI.Ei:ili._.l
males, s3oo.femates 304 _
773·6062, cell 304·593- 01
Hyundai
Accent
Hatchback . 5 speed trans,
4267
:..::.:_ __ _ _ _ _
d'
AKC Reg. Boxer pups, 65,310 miles, good con 1"
Kirkland Memorial 304-773·
·
tion. needs catalylic :::onvert Photos seen at www.paUer9563
er. Asking $3200. Call 740·
son boxers.brave hos1.com or 709-6339.
92 CASE 580 SuperK .::ca::.ll.::.14:..:0.:
- 5.:.32::.·4.:3.:.28~-- ..:..:..:..:.:.:__ _ _ __

$180 call 304-675-6800

t.,;_..:;FO~R~S~ALE;;:,_,J

I

675 _5906

Bulls~
· wk. old Shih Tsu puppy,
Ann 13

books, Sidewalk Scale,
Mlli1ary Folding BaHietield
Organ, Much Misc. , Call
=--· 99:;::2;;:·4~19~7;,__ _...,
t7~40~"
11..o.
,..... ~rous
MliltCHANDISE
•
4 c at
1 ts to sate 81
em ery 0
r

r.

coating needs.

-------B'uck stove for sell bums CKC Toy Poodle puppies,
coal or wood, and all pipes, females. Shots and wormed.
Males S250 Females $300.
call (740)992-3242
740-256-3168

Public Notice

posal.

r

I

ANJ1()!IDi

r·5.

sunday. (740)446-7300

Table &amp; Chairs, End Table, $76.59. BPS Barn &amp; Fence
Stove,
Entertainment Oil Base Paint ( Barn Red)
LIVESTOCK
CentGr. All for $150. Calf 5-gal. Bucket $69.95. we __
•
740-446-6754
carry Pittsburgh .Paints &amp;
.,,p.;.;;...;.;.;;___...., Si ke F' . h 1 11
Boar Goats tor Sale Bucks &amp;
k ns m•s or a your DoeS. 100% &amp; down 304·

r

Kenny's Auto Center 740-

446-9971
_ _ _ _ _;...._...,
'fRliCKS

r

~=!~===~=~~~~~=~

,

384-773-5061
384-882-3294

Going Out Of Business
Inventory must Go, Vehicles.
Tools. Office EqlJipment Ect.

'

PillA INTO
AN INStCT?I

••'

r10

Opening lead: •

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

MASON
MOWER

leaders. sta~ing al $125.00 02 Dodge Aam 42k miles,
and up. End of season on 6' auto, 4x4, $8500. 2000
EXP, Sid, 4x4,
0 Frick Sawmill with blower, finishing mowers as tow as
belts and pipes. Sawdust $899 end up. Fall sale on
Bucket. No Sunda~ Calls. brush hogs 4', 5', 6', 7', 10' &amp;
3149 Nebo Ad. Patriot, Oh 15' wh'ile supplies last. Now
is, the best time to buy gradSave 10% off regular price er blades before the snow
on all Vent Free Gas Heaters
· , 2001 Expedition, red &amp; tan,
(Propane
or Natural) comes 4', 5', 6', T 1 &amp; 8 · 1oaded, moon roo1, 1eath er
Aluminum Fiberated .Paint Hurry.they won't la.st an~~~ int., excellent condition,
(GreatforMobileHomes)5· the dlsco~nted pm:e. J•ms 84,475miles.441 -1417
Farm Equ1p~nt Inc. 2150
gal. Bu~ket $36.95. Sta· Eastern Ave. Gallipolis 140VANS
Kool While Elastomerlc: Roof 446•9n 7
.
FOR SALE
Coating 5-gal. Bucket n~-----., ~~---illii:ili._.l-

0090

No Pets, Deposit

County
Townships
Villages
Total
VILLAGES:
Middleport
Pomeroy
Racine
Rutland
Syracuae
Total
TOWNSHIPS
Bedford ·
Chesler
Columbia
Lebanon
Letart

~

NEW AND USED STEEL
FARM
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar L._..,;EQum.iiiiliiiiiiiii'Nfiioi-r
For
Con crete,
Angle , '
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 8Ft diiC $4oo, 7 112 Tye
I Rent $300/mo. Grating
For
Drains, Pasture, Pleaaer no till
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L ' drill $6,000 AIC 4 row No
Scrap Metals Open Monday. Till c:orn · planter $1,500
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Andy Sigler 304-9:r7·2018
llouiEHol.o
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
"~Thursday, Saturday &amp; Clearance on round bale

and

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

J,,'

I \ 1&lt;\1 " ' 1'1 '111 '
S I I\ I ' / 1)1 j,

L.~-oliiiiiiiiiiiiiw

each I Inquire at the Holiday
Inn of Gallipolis, 740-446·

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for A9111, Meigs County. In
town,

Full

WHt North
Pus 2 t
Palls 4 •

==~
740-653-9657

Lr___~_:-1.0:--_.J~ r

L._--~""""":;;:;;::
.,

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

INSt~Tel&gt; PON~tY

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutlers
Insured &amp; Bonded

l!aot
• 42
.A98762
t A 10 5
• Q7

• 7 6 43
4J t 0914
S41Uih
4 A K J 10 B 6 3
• K3
.• 2
4 A8 3

H&amp;H'
Guttering

Housing

.Employer.
CONVENIEN,TLV LOCAT· ~
FOIIJbNr
•
ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartment!, Commercial b,u11qlog •For
and References. No indoor and/or small houses FOR Rent" 1900 square feet, off
pets. 367-{)266
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 street part!.lng. Great loca·
~------- for application &amp; infOJmatlon. lion! 749 Third Avenue in

1409
Apartments
Tfatler for rent, 3BR .• 2 BA. •2&amp;3 bedroom aJ..partments
Coil 38'7-7762 or 446-4060 •Cen.traI heat &amp; NC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electric

--

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-367-0536

"very n~"
•-- apa..•• ment for rent
in Pomeroy. great nelghborhood, quiet. Newly remod·
eled. New appliances, 2
Bedrooms. 1 bath. central
Air &amp; Heat. Call
992 •9~ or
-5
for more details.'.
992 094

Park. 740-448-2003 or 446·

4 K52
West
• Q9 5
• 5

~:;~r446-Q007

Fr'ee Estimates

'

eKQJta

70 Pine Street• Gallipolis, OH

740-367.()544

elderly/disabled call 675·

Ell m View

' • Q J 10 4

• Many More Items

Local Contractor

i

=ng

a-.

c:olllng

4 P-lldn
8 i.Aioyer"l

ot-Jl-o?

Non
• 7

EQUIPMENT ·I SUPPUES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
'TWin Rivers Tower Is accep!·
ing applications tor waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
apanment,for
the

~

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, INC.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

6679
Equal
Opportunity

1

42

ch8IIJI

T~1 ..Mr

John sons Mobile Home

ACROSS

(740)992.0165
-------Mid&lt;topoft, No!ttl411! Ave .. 2
br. lurnlohod apt. . dop. &amp;
ref., no pets, (740)992-&lt;1165

',

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

lnlund ....... btlmMK

Call (740)992_ __..:..:._ _ _ _
N~e 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
16xBO in Addison. Deposit

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 '

•

Middloport, Beech St., 2 br.
lurnlllhe&lt;l apt. ; U1il~les pd..
dep. &amp; rei., no pets,

ComplltteTrftCIN

:: :::i.

www.mydallysentlnel.com
BRIDGE

Service

93 14x80 MH in Gallipolis
Feny, 38R. 1.5BA. 250/mo
+ $80 lot rent and $100 BNUtitui A..... at Jacbon
deposit . No central Air. Call Estates. ~- Westwood
_
304_-6_75_-3_1_29_ _ _ _ Drive, from $365 to $560.
Mobile Home IOf Ren t, 2 BR, 740-446-2568.
Equal
·
· AJC , HUO Approved, Total Housing Opportunity. This
Electric, Ref}t includes trash, institution is an Equal
water &amp; sew.er, $325/mo, Opportunity Provider and

,.

September 21,2007

ALLEYOOP

Johnson •a Tree .

Small 2BR Mobile Home in

FrldaYr

~ · 1~.r_APAlmi,;;;
FOR~IbNrlmlS
...,..~

~lea . 38R, 1 BA, C/A, 1 BR Apt in Sp&lt;ing valey,
W/0 Hookups. (740)339·
.0362
----'----~

St011&lt;1/fridge , lurn. 1 yr
lease. $600.Mo+Deposit.
raloronces. no smoking, no
pets. 105 Bas1ianl. 740-4463667

Friday, September 21, 2007

Hous objectives gives vou a beHer·than·

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling

VES, I KNOW I'T'S .
AI.MOS'T CIINNER'TIMEI

..-------..,..-.-N-n-,.-,.-1,-.,,_"'1"1
" v "'" 1"-iil
MV WA'TCH

BACK!

5113- St . . . . . . .45181
140-912-31114

......ltfriiiiWHI ........
lllulfn I:H &amp;12:. •• ,

PlYING T. . .ICES 101
IIIIIIIR•Cia·ll-• ......
Cltlbllc CIIIVIrlers •hi•
.......... IIINI
ICIII r. Clrl'lll Jlrlclsl

.

iJ'IM 17AII~ CJ.ZI
'

.
'

GRIZZWELLS
l'I~\Kl', 1-\A$
'tlll~

. awraga chance to reach your goats.
SU&lt;Xess comes lmm keeping yuur '¥'
on fle target.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- Sltualk&gt;no
or endeavors that require Imagination,
coupled with logic, should be right up
your alley. You'll particularly like those
undertakings that are a bit unusual or
unique In scope.
CANCER (June 21.Juty 22) - YoU'll
notice that you'll have a great deal of
Insight Into the emotlonaf alate ol thOU
you·re dealing wlttt If you choose, you
can guide them with advice or kieae
tney're unabte to perceive.
L.EO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Pereons wlttl
whom you deal on a. one-on-one ba111
will respond In ~ltlve measures to your
objecUves and will support you in aChievIng your goale. Don't wute your lime on
underlings.

SOUPTONUTZ

m~""'

*'ln'\1

AM~\Cb..!"'

(9) 14, 21

__ ____________•
___:__

-----.

�r :r

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B&amp; • The Daily Sentinel
1r

1BA Apt, Relrldge &amp; StoW,
Water, Sewer &amp; Trash paid,
Porter, OH. $350/mo plus
depos~ (740)388.0173,

7~'

SpM,.I/,11 In:
OXYGEN l RESPIRATORY

(304)882·3017

I
_ _.1

King

Size

Bedspreads lor sale, $20

Required, (740)992-5174 or
(740)441-01 10.

New sofa &amp; love ses.t, $400,
New Kttchen table/ ·4 chair
$179.95. Molioh8n Carpet

1 and 2 bedroom apart· Gracious Ltvlng 1 and 2

Ad
,
Bidwell, OH (740)388-0t73
Mon·Frl Sa-4p sat 9a-3p.

ments, furnished and untuf·
Bedroom Apts. at Village
nished, and houses In M~nor and Riverside Apts. In
Pomeroy and Middleport, Mrddleport, from $327 to
security deposit required , no $592. 740·992; 50!)4. Equal
pets, 740·992·2218.
Housing Opportunity.

202

c

lark

chape1

L- - - - - - ·

Coke Sign, Coke lamp,
Barber chair, Trunks, Green
Glass, Pressed Glass, Shot .
Glasses,
o
Glasses, Chicag
Raggedy

The Mel9s County Budget Commission has
completed Its apportionment of Undivided
Local Government Revenue Fund lor 2006
These revenues are beood on projections from
the Ohio Office of Budget and Management
and· are only astlmaJas Of the amount of
revenue that could be received by Meigs
County,
The following Is a complete breakdown of the
projec~ed revenue.
Percent
Local
Government

Olive

Orange
Rutland

salem
Sella bury
Scipio
Sulton
Total

Revenue

40.00%
30.00%

30.00%
100.00%
38.7448%
30.1673%
11.4470%
"6.1531%

r

Paint Plus Hardware

304-675-4084

I
,

PE:rs

FOR SAu;:

lemate, black &amp; white, $150,
(740)985-3431

dual door wtelectric Blower All pups AKC. 740 _7674875
~:.:::~=..::...:.::.:._::_:..:

Kittens - 6wks old. Siamese-

12.5793%
7.4687%
10.3281%
5.0016%
10.3163% '
7.4191%
8.0631%
8.5863%
6.8029%
8.2475%

GRAIN
SQUARE bales.

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
•Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

26 Years Exl••rh,nee

David Lewis
740-992-6971
~=:~;;~~
Free

4 WHEEtF.RS
05 Honda 450R, Low Hours.
$4500. CaM 740-416-7055.
Leave Message.

------2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessories. Paid
s24 ,ooo new--$19,600. can
740-367-7129.
2007 Honda Rancher, 420
ES/4x4 paid $5,300 asking
$4.300 304-675-3711

r:~~~~~J
Camper tor sale 2002 KZ -

03 Mustang, Convertible, Frontier, 24ft, sleeps 6, tully

1'1ood scoop, rear spoiler, loaded, like new, used very
pony packet. 27000 miles. little $8,500 304·57&amp;-2321
EKcellent cond . Asking - - - - -- - $17500. 256-8682 or 256·
Fleetwood Mallard, 2811,
6006
.:..:.:~-----­ Excellent Condition. Garage
03 Taurus, auto $3900 , 04 kept , Reese Hitch , Sway
Sunlira, auto $5200, 91 Olds bar. 446·1266
$1450, 98 Tiburon. $2200.
..,I IH II I ..,

Call MiniatUre Plncher P.ups, 2 V6, Ram Air, Sunroof, CD.

.(740)441-0366 or 1740)339- Black/Tan females, ~300 91,000 miles $5,800.00.
2
_8_13_ _ _ _ _ __ each. a weeks 1old. 740-949-9008.
(740)388-8124
•
JET
Reg Border Collie pups,
AERATION MOTORS

r·o

I

HOM£
.
L.~b::;;,:tPRO~VEMEN;,:;,;:;:,:,rs~.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

45nt

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids lor the
purchase of a 2007 or
2008 314 ton extended
cab truck, two (2)
wheel drive, lour (4)
door, will be received
by' the Meigs County
Commissions at their
office, c/o the Meigs
County Courthouse,
East
Second
100
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, until 1:00 p.m.,
Thursday, September
27, 2007 and opened
on the date in said
office at One Fifteen
(1 :15) p.m. and read
aloud tor the following:
Specifications lor said
vehicle
can
be
obtained from the
Commissioners' office
at the above address
or from the office of
the Meigs County
Recycling &amp; Litter
Prevention, 117 East
Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Bids shall be seated
and marked "BID' FOII
2007 OR 2008 314 TON
TRUCK". The Meigs
County
Commissioners
reserve tho right to
reject any and or all
bids or any part thereof and to waive any
InformalitY In any pro-

The Tuppers Plains
Cheater Water Dlalrlct
Is lriv~lng bids on two
different water line
relocation projects In
Meigs County. Job one
Is designated as the
"Earl
Schultz
Relocation" and job
two Is to be known as
tho "Keebaugh-Follrod
Water
Line
Relocation". The Water
District has estimated
the cost of the jobs to
be $48,200.00 and
$44,600.00 respectively. Those contractors
Interested in the project can pick up a set of
plans and speciflca•
lions at tho District
Offlco during regular
business
hours
Monday
through
Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. located at 39561
Bar
30
Road,
Reedsville, Ohio 45n2
alter paying a plan fee.
Tho Districts Phone
number Is 740-9853315 . Bids must be
received at the District
office by 11:00 a.m.
October 1st, 2007
where they will be
opened
and
read
aloud.
By order of the
President of the Board,
Howard Caldwell
(9) t6, 2t , 23

'
''

..

43 -de rner
44 Cllmblt'o

lid

4li Smlll

R'OBERT
BISSELL

•

'

WC ,..~Lt&gt; 'oo! WAA't mf;~ '&lt;00 ~

t-IE-'NSI'N'Eil. €K\4.
!»..'&lt;! Wf.\'1 till&gt; '&lt;OU

nu..

Triumph 12% Horse Feed ......$5.99/50 lb.
Sportsmix Dog Food 21-8........... $9.99/50
S·UREA .....................$199/ton Bulk Only
Priefert Powder Coated Gates
$53.00
t4 $75.00
12 $$65.00
t6

'.,

• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

n.
nS8J.oo

Shade River Ag. Service
35537 St Rt 7 North

W.kiMG

~1&gt;?•

..

TELL

H~l(.l!

Pomeroy, OH

Sidewalks, Patios,
Co11crete Footers
Also
Block&amp;
Brickwork

~H

JOIIII

... IEC.WSE

us WOIUC. SO

:r
CAitE!

WBLL, I'LL
'taU WHY r

so

740-742-2293

15 Actor

.

18 Term
ol Nlp&amp;Ct
17 Money

55 lbHn
horolne

56

er.tty

9 Mlcleaa!
IItie

57 Alr1)Ump

handltnl

18Bizlrre
-.
21 I, to Seneca 58 Strong.
22 Dove
as venison
lhelter
59 Get the drift
23 llllllboo
muncher
DOWN

•.

26 Monkey lure
28Umbrlge
1 Fut-talk
29 ROIIrum
2 Gem

31 Sldpper' I
'

.,

unlv.

- McClure

eo-ne••
11 Spoil

181aayl

canlsuH and 15-plut ~ points.
At !rid&lt; 'one, _, EMI win8 with his
· hearfaoe, you mus18111001h~ drop your
king -the card you ara known to hold.
Kyoo play the !hiM, Eaal will resllze that
his paflnl!r led a ~nglelon. becsuae H
Wt8l had had the doublelon king-five,
hi WMd have led the king, nolllie five.
K yoo drop your haarl thres, Eut will
conllnue ~ lhe heart nine, hilt blghael
spot being a sult-prelerence ·elgnal lor
diamonds, the hlgher-ranltlng ol tlta ·
other 1wo side suls. Weal will ruff lhe
trlck,lesd his diamond - t o hla psrtnefa ace, and anolhlir heart through wll
promote Wesfs spade queen as the set·
ting lricl&lt;.
Bull you play lhe hslll1 king a! Irick one,
Easi might think lhat (halls the ~ngleton
and shift to, say, the club queen. Hs
shou~ not, but hs might. It Is your on~
chance.

G

Astro-

Graph

...... II ... :

· Slpt.
2007
Byllemlco
- 22,Ooo1
There Is likely to be some kind of Interaction between ~oUr material and ~

Wol.l(.

=

47 Pl...... ·~ :
46 Mooalc Iiiii

49 Fll'llllbodl
Nile queen 52 --hw
28 Prejudice
rounds
27 Jol-

bird

7 Pool .

30 Thunder·

• 8 Snlpl w
bultano

IlNCk
32 All dads

'
,,
i

'•.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by .Lula Cempoa
~Citll*-n,_...,_,lii'IM'&lt;Iul-

EdlttllrlnlhtciPWP'Idtbnlhel.

away could cause vou to wallow In guHt.
L.IBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) - There's a
good chance Chat an unusual chain of
clrcumatances coutd bring vou faoe·toface with an Individual you'll Immediately
like. II'~ be a relatlonahip worth cultivat-

PEANUTS

ing.

SLIT DON'T THROW IT
OKA'f. MAACIE .. I'LL
60 DOWN THE 1-I.,LV. I &amp;EFORE I GET OOWt-IIH~I\C,j
AND 'f'Oll TIIROW
OR VOU'LL J.IIT Me ON
ME THE"BALL ..
Tile !lEAD..

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 62 15
l 'olll('rr,y Ol11o
,!

1&lt;

II

SCORPIO (Oct 24·-

SORR'(, SIR .. [

WAS P~ACTICIN6
MY INTENTIONAL

6ROLINDIN6 ..

l&lt; l l i l q•ll!l' &lt;

· 22) - A ohaky

sttuation that need! to be resotwed with
another can be clarified to the satisfaction of both . How8118r, h Is going to take a
frank discussion .that must be handled
with a lot of diplomacy.

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Vou'l leal good about yourself If you

direct your mental anrlbut81 toward Prot·

.

•

COWandBOY
LIKE FISHING lli\JEII A
SHADY TREE, ~ PlAYING
CATCH WITH YO!JI DAD.
011 SNIFFING ABATCH
OF CHOCOlATE

IrS THE SINti'LE
TJIN;S THAT MAKE
APE11SON HAPPY.

)

011 LAUGHING AT
ZOO ANIMALS aJZ
THE'f'IIE BEHIND BAliS

i

~~CXJ
THE TIME.

)

~

CHIP COOKIES.

:.____)
::r

~~;

•

......

"'

DONTOOTHE

OOI'MNOT.

~

Rt. 62 N Pt. Pleasant, WV

Pr-a&lt;;tice 3:30pm)
675-5463

Mercy Hands
at All About You
Debi Adkins
20% off Massages
Now- Dec. 31st
Gift Certificates
Available

' -1

Todl)'s 00&amp;: Vequals P

"YDOWAOOUOD TCR OY CKHWCXM

NR

OPW TNNR, CRX MWO ZW CHW YOGKK
KGSGRA

ZGOP OPW TNHCK

D N AD W V 0 Y N U P N.T W H.'
- TGDPWKCRAWKN CRONRGNRG

'

..

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Every arti~ dips his brush In his own soul, and
paints his own nature Into his pictures.· • Henry Ward Beechsr

~~~:t:~' S@ll~1A-~r.~s·
141rd

~y

CU.Y A. ,OLIAN

.

,,

WOlD
lAM I

.,

.

O Rtarrange

Ieffert of the
four terarnbted words be·

low to form four 111'\plt word~.

IIWRATDY

~

COW,
THE'I"RE IIJT

CDMCTS.

iVJ

::r

~~--

' '""

· 11-....,.,_.o..,R.,.o...c__,.H--1

D

I 16 I I ,.
I

5

-

.

.

.

~

r"7. -F~L-E_N_E_l---,1

l I I 1I I
8

Philosopher to class, "Take care
lh.at he is 1101 doing lhe wne thing
wllen you argue-- a-."

0

Complete the chuckle quoted

by filling in the missing wor~s
.
1-..J.--t~+--L-t-..J
yo" d..,olop from "ep "No. 3 bolow.
~ PRINT NUMBERED
~ lf rtfRS IN SQUARES

~ ~~~~~M&amp;lE FORI

J

I I J Ia I I I I I

SCIAM-lm ANSWIRS

9- 20 - o 1
' ;

Aviary -Exude- Pulre- Keeoly- EXPENSIVE
AI they et1tered a dq&gt;artmcal t10R, I overlleard the mother teO .,
t. ......., MlfJIIIIaaaybody'tiiiiiiC 00 it, it'I too

J!XPI!NSlVB..

ARLO&amp; JANIS

genert~lshlp.

PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) · lnttlalty,
this might appear to be just another ordl·
nary day with nothing much htlppening,
hOWever, things are abOUt to Change.
Something Is stirring behind .ttte eoenea

and may surface.
·
ARIES {March 21·April191 - What will

. ··:- iL,11',...
.P

ects that aerve some kind of humanitarian purpose. Something good will come
ot It for all lrrvot\led.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - 11
pays to mingle wlltt peopta whO are well
invested because something that some·
one says could enhance your own mate·
rial well-being. Be a good listener. Keep
your ears and mind open .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Your
leadership qualities will be much In evi·
dence so don't be surprised If your asso·
cial89 push you lo the head of the cla!J8
in spite of your reticence. They need your

...

.

serve you well Is your ability to get along
wittl people from all walkS of life. Being
able to walk with kings without losing the
common touch makaa you vary popular.
TAURUS (Aprii20·Uay 20)- Being per·

sistent and able to focus on your ambl·

Mason Co. Fairgrounds

,..........

protects that take lndu..,trlouBneu and
productivity will bring you great pei'IOOal
sallalactlon. Conversely, Idling your time

'·:;:L, ...
Sat. 9/22/07
6:00p.m.

.....,.

20 FcuConwo 43 Troptc:.llll
44 Gllndeur
22 Do
45
Long..

In

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

MOTOCROSS
RACE

36 Trolley
•
39 Tlrne Ill bit ~
41 Some

25 BNutliuf

6 Non-flying

cop11

10 FlciiONJI

24 Met
highlight

33 ~ruble
cal~.
35 Sllemtnglne 5 Psyche'l
lrMnor
belovM

lbodeo
40 MM!Ic or

Small
combO

23~
awlne
46 Flah tt.ll

3 Cfleered
4 san-,

37 "Nonne -"
38 Cliffside

34

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl . 22) - Engaging

*Prompt' and Quality
Work

References Avai lable!
Call Gary Stanley @

lll'lnce

53 ~~~~
to lncludt
54 c.mtHidge

Jo'uiWir
14 Ellpu

Sluck in your hand, kiOidng at a K-Q.J1o-9 su~. If you would reaDy like the
opponent ~ the ace lo lake HImmediate~. lead the king trom your hand. Hyou
wou~ preler to sneak a round pas1 the
ace, though, lead the nine.
This deal Is a vanallon on 1hs1 theme.
You are South, lhe declarer in four
apadel, Eaal ha~ng ovsrcded In ·

affairs that holds much promise. Meeting
somtOne who'lllnfluenoe you to head In
a new direction coukt be at 'the founda·
lion of this maneuver.

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

WIIIDI

Driveway.~.

·1\lJ-WR~!

~

" WHY IS

'!!~~~~~~~ *Reasonable Rates
r
*Insured
*Experienced

CIDCrltl WOI'II

SO C£.RT~I~ t W~TI-\tQNE.
Wlo\Ot&gt;lt&gt; IT 1

r---· . ,.

BIG NATE

• New Homes
• Garages

.,.e«~~tll.E~m~

WHAT A DEAl!!

Why drive anywhere elsa
11

.UVW"I

LOVE. 001~
CR~~'NORI&gt; I&gt;UZZL.E. Ito\ 11\E

51 Borodln

13 Betlund

trumpL Thlo pstr wu U8ing ihe fi10I8 trallillonal meaning: II least a good siM·

...,•
r

-.upUI•
50 TllhouM
-

11 .Mellow
12 Funny
· Bomblck

heatt8. West leads the hean llvs. Wha1
woukl be 'fO'Jf plan?
Somt pairs play thai oponer't jump
rebid afler a two-over-one reeponsa
requires i isoiJd euH and Nil H as

l!....~!'JT!!

';ru KtiOW l

Repaired, New &amp; RetxJill In Imported Bloodlines, 1st
Stocl&lt;. Call Ron Evans, .1· shots, wormed, working parents. Call 740-379-9110
800-537-9528.

Public Notice

'

740-949-2217

ton.
n.

cnsnocnou

'

Hill's Sel f
Sto rage

J&amp;L
Construction

10Years

$9,400.

$10700. Call 245·1513

Seats 7, Great Condition, _74_0_·44
~
1 -_
07_2_
7 - - - - 2000 Black Grand AM GT,
priced,

- ~=ty

'I

Hat tub, wiring Included, Himalayan. $50 each. Call and more. 446-7278

Reasonably

asking

'

THAR'S A SCANDAL IN TH'
GOV'MENT, A MOVIE STP\R
GOT DIVORCED, .. AN' TH' ·
ECONOM'I' .
WENT UP
JEST 8'FORE

.'

- - -- - - - - Mint van, Very Nice, 51 ,000

740~446.9200
2A59 St. Rt 160 • GaiUpolls

H-Honest

304-675-5a 31

(740)949-1949
Allolla 40 MUIURCYCLES'

.

owww.U.'bu a eeko•MD_,.oom

1992 GMC Safari Mini Van
fron.l &amp; rear a1r. Cap1a1n
cha•rs exc. cond. $1 .900

mixed. hay for sale 740-985- ·
3699

r•o

Mowers, Till~n,
Murray,

I·

2002 Mercury Villager Sport "

rttAYING
MANTIS!

BARNEY

Ha,_.d CHIIelf And rur.Hire·

s

•
,,

II Cll1 be importsnl to play the right card
to alri:lc For examt&gt;e, supposs you are

A

.I MAI&gt;t

r

Eaal
2¥
All pass ..)

Play the card you
are known to hold

..

Stmcing
lAwn Tractors,
Cra/IJIIIIln,
MTD,BrlgJJ!
&amp; Strallon

..,

mue·s

Backhoe, very good condi· CKC Cocker Spaniel pup· 02 Camry Le. 58,000k, 4cyl,
tion, low hours. $18,000. pies, CKC Rat Terrier pup- AT, AC, 4DA, 1 owner,
Call 740-709·9420
pies for Sale 304.675 -4243 garage kept, like new cond.

GE Heavy Duty XlA. capac- Cod&lt;er Spaniel pups, blk, &amp;
ily Washer &amp; Dryer $150, while
w/blk.$300-$350,
Bruno Wood Burning Stove brindle and lawn $350-$400.

a.na&amp;%

I

IL\V &amp;

AKC German Shepherd
AUIUii
Puppies,
Black
&amp;
Tan,
$350.
L--.:FO~Rii;SAI.Ei:ili._.l
males, s3oo.femates 304 _
773·6062, cell 304·593- 01
Hyundai
Accent
Hatchback . 5 speed trans,
4267
:..::.:_ __ _ _ _ _
d'
AKC Reg. Boxer pups, 65,310 miles, good con 1"
Kirkland Memorial 304-773·
·
tion. needs catalylic :::onvert Photos seen at www.paUer9563
er. Asking $3200. Call 740·
son boxers.brave hos1.com or 709-6339.
92 CASE 580 SuperK .::ca::.ll.::.14:..:0.:
- 5.:.32::.·4.:3.:.28~-- ..:..:..:..:.:.:__ _ _ __

$180 call 304-675-6800

t.,;_..:;FO~R~S~ALE;;:,_,J

I

675 _5906

Bulls~
· wk. old Shih Tsu puppy,
Ann 13

books, Sidewalk Scale,
Mlli1ary Folding BaHietield
Organ, Much Misc. , Call
=--· 99:;::2;;:·4~19~7;,__ _...,
t7~40~"
11..o.
,..... ~rous
MliltCHANDISE
•
4 c at
1 ts to sate 81
em ery 0
r

r.

coating needs.

-------B'uck stove for sell bums CKC Toy Poodle puppies,
coal or wood, and all pipes, females. Shots and wormed.
Males S250 Females $300.
call (740)992-3242
740-256-3168

Public Notice

posal.

r

I

ANJ1()!IDi

r·5.

sunday. (740)446-7300

Table &amp; Chairs, End Table, $76.59. BPS Barn &amp; Fence
Stove,
Entertainment Oil Base Paint ( Barn Red)
LIVESTOCK
CentGr. All for $150. Calf 5-gal. Bucket $69.95. we __
•
740-446-6754
carry Pittsburgh .Paints &amp;
.,,p.;.;;...;.;.;;___...., Si ke F' . h 1 11
Boar Goats tor Sale Bucks &amp;
k ns m•s or a your DoeS. 100% &amp; down 304·

r

Kenny's Auto Center 740-

446-9971
_ _ _ _ _;...._...,
'fRliCKS

r

~=!~===~=~~~~~=~

,

384-773-5061
384-882-3294

Going Out Of Business
Inventory must Go, Vehicles.
Tools. Office EqlJipment Ect.

'

PillA INTO
AN INStCT?I

••'

r10

Opening lead: •

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

MASON
MOWER

leaders. sta~ing al $125.00 02 Dodge Aam 42k miles,
and up. End of season on 6' auto, 4x4, $8500. 2000
EXP, Sid, 4x4,
0 Frick Sawmill with blower, finishing mowers as tow as
belts and pipes. Sawdust $899 end up. Fall sale on
Bucket. No Sunda~ Calls. brush hogs 4', 5', 6', 7', 10' &amp;
3149 Nebo Ad. Patriot, Oh 15' wh'ile supplies last. Now
is, the best time to buy gradSave 10% off regular price er blades before the snow
on all Vent Free Gas Heaters
· , 2001 Expedition, red &amp; tan,
(Propane
or Natural) comes 4', 5', 6', T 1 &amp; 8 · 1oaded, moon roo1, 1eath er
Aluminum Fiberated .Paint Hurry.they won't la.st an~~~ int., excellent condition,
(GreatforMobileHomes)5· the dlsco~nted pm:e. J•ms 84,475miles.441 -1417
Farm Equ1p~nt Inc. 2150
gal. Bu~ket $36.95. Sta· Eastern Ave. Gallipolis 140VANS
Kool While Elastomerlc: Roof 446•9n 7
.
FOR SALE
Coating 5-gal. Bucket n~-----., ~~---illii:ili._.l-

0090

No Pets, Deposit

County
Townships
Villages
Total
VILLAGES:
Middleport
Pomeroy
Racine
Rutland
Syracuae
Total
TOWNSHIPS
Bedford ·
Chesler
Columbia
Lebanon
Letart

~

NEW AND USED STEEL
FARM
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar L._..,;EQum.iiiiliiiiiiiii'Nfiioi-r
For
Con crete,
Angle , '
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 8Ft diiC $4oo, 7 112 Tye
I Rent $300/mo. Grating
For
Drains, Pasture, Pleaaer no till
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L ' drill $6,000 AIC 4 row No
Scrap Metals Open Monday. Till c:orn · planter $1,500
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Andy Sigler 304-9:r7·2018
llouiEHol.o
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
"~Thursday, Saturday &amp; Clearance on round bale

and

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

J,,'

I \ 1&lt;\1 " ' 1'1 '111 '
S I I\ I ' / 1)1 j,

L.~-oliiiiiiiiiiiiiw

each I Inquire at the Holiday
Inn of Gallipolis, 740-446·

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for A9111, Meigs County. In
town,

Full

WHt North
Pus 2 t
Palls 4 •

==~
740-653-9657

Lr___~_:-1.0:--_.J~ r

L._--~""""":;;:;;::
.,

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

INSt~Tel&gt; PON~tY

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutlers
Insured &amp; Bonded

l!aot
• 42
.A98762
t A 10 5
• Q7

• 7 6 43
4J t 0914
S41Uih
4 A K J 10 B 6 3
• K3
.• 2
4 A8 3

H&amp;H'
Guttering

Housing

.Employer.
CONVENIEN,TLV LOCAT· ~
FOIIJbNr
•
ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartment!, Commercial b,u11qlog •For
and References. No indoor and/or small houses FOR Rent" 1900 square feet, off
pets. 367-{)266
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 street part!.lng. Great loca·
~------- for application &amp; infOJmatlon. lion! 749 Third Avenue in

1409
Apartments
Tfatler for rent, 3BR .• 2 BA. •2&amp;3 bedroom aJ..partments
Coil 38'7-7762 or 446-4060 •Cen.traI heat &amp; NC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electric

--

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-367-0536

"very n~"
•-- apa..•• ment for rent
in Pomeroy. great nelghborhood, quiet. Newly remod·
eled. New appliances, 2
Bedrooms. 1 bath. central
Air &amp; Heat. Call
992 •9~ or
-5
for more details.'.
992 094

Park. 740-448-2003 or 446·

4 K52
West
• Q9 5
• 5

~:;~r446-Q007

Fr'ee Estimates

'

eKQJta

70 Pine Street• Gallipolis, OH

740-367.()544

elderly/disabled call 675·

Ell m View

' • Q J 10 4

• Many More Items

Local Contractor

i

=ng

a-.

c:olllng

4 P-lldn
8 i.Aioyer"l

ot-Jl-o?

Non
• 7

EQUIPMENT ·I SUPPUES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
'TWin Rivers Tower Is accep!·
ing applications tor waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
apanment,for
the

~

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, INC.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

6679
Equal
Opportunity

1

42

ch8IIJI

T~1 ..Mr

John sons Mobile Home

ACROSS

(740)992.0165
-------Mid&lt;topoft, No!ttl411! Ave .. 2
br. lurnlohod apt. . dop. &amp;
ref., no pets, (740)992-&lt;1165

',

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

lnlund ....... btlmMK

Call (740)992_ __..:..:._ _ _ _
N~e 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
16xBO in Addison. Deposit

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 '

•

Middloport, Beech St., 2 br.
lurnlllhe&lt;l apt. ; U1il~les pd..
dep. &amp; rei., no pets,

ComplltteTrftCIN

:: :::i.

www.mydallysentlnel.com
BRIDGE

Service

93 14x80 MH in Gallipolis
Feny, 38R. 1.5BA. 250/mo
+ $80 lot rent and $100 BNUtitui A..... at Jacbon
deposit . No central Air. Call Estates. ~- Westwood
_
304_-6_75_-3_1_29_ _ _ _ Drive, from $365 to $560.
Mobile Home IOf Ren t, 2 BR, 740-446-2568.
Equal
·
· AJC , HUO Approved, Total Housing Opportunity. This
Electric, Ref}t includes trash, institution is an Equal
water &amp; sew.er, $325/mo, Opportunity Provider and

,.

September 21,2007

ALLEYOOP

Johnson •a Tree .

Small 2BR Mobile Home in

FrldaYr

~ · 1~.r_APAlmi,;;;
FOR~IbNrlmlS
...,..~

~lea . 38R, 1 BA, C/A, 1 BR Apt in Sp&lt;ing valey,
W/0 Hookups. (740)339·
.0362
----'----~

St011&lt;1/fridge , lurn. 1 yr
lease. $600.Mo+Deposit.
raloronces. no smoking, no
pets. 105 Bas1ianl. 740-4463667

Friday, September 21, 2007

Hous objectives gives vou a beHer·than·

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling

VES, I KNOW I'T'S .
AI.MOS'T CIINNER'TIMEI

..-------..,..-.-N-n-,.-,.-1,-.,,_"'1"1
" v "'" 1"-iil
MV WA'TCH

BACK!

5113- St . . . . . . .45181
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......ltfriiiiWHI ........
lllulfn I:H &amp;12:. •• ,

PlYING T. . .ICES 101
IIIIIIIR•Cia·ll-• ......
Cltlbllc CIIIVIrlers •hi•
.......... IIINI
ICIII r. Clrl'lll Jlrlclsl

.

iJ'IM 17AII~ CJ.ZI
'

.
'

GRIZZWELLS
l'I~\Kl', 1-\A$
'tlll~

. awraga chance to reach your goats.
SU&lt;Xess comes lmm keeping yuur '¥'
on fle target.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- Sltualk&gt;no
or endeavors that require Imagination,
coupled with logic, should be right up
your alley. You'll particularly like those
undertakings that are a bit unusual or
unique In scope.
CANCER (June 21.Juty 22) - YoU'll
notice that you'll have a great deal of
Insight Into the emotlonaf alate ol thOU
you·re dealing wlttt If you choose, you
can guide them with advice or kieae
tney're unabte to perceive.
L.EO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Pereons wlttl
whom you deal on a. one-on-one ba111
will respond In ~ltlve measures to your
objecUves and will support you in aChievIng your goale. Don't wute your lime on
underlings.

SOUPTONUTZ

m~""'

*'ln'\1

AM~\Cb..!"'

(9) 14, 21

__ ____________•
___:__

-----.

�Page

B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 21, 21lP7

www.mydailysentinel.com

II&gt; 11 you have a quettlon or
r-• v x

t '

1

&lt;~ '

• Roce: Dodge Dealers 400

~

'

• - . .: lloYer (Del.) International Speedway (1.0 miles),
400 laps/ miles.
• Wilen: Sunday, SOpt. 23
• 1.-t yur's
Jeff Burton
• Qulllfi'~IINOOfll: Jeremy
Mayfield, Dodge, 161.522
mph, June 4, 2004.
• Race NOOfll: Mark Martin,
Ford, 132.719 mph, Sept. 21,
1997 .
• LMt Mel&lt;: Clint 6owyer's car
was so fast that. even when it
slowed down, ~still had the
field CO'Iered. In the latter
stages of the Sylvania 300,
Bowyer's Chevrolet began slow·
lng, which concerned him. He
complained to his crew that it
was "tightening up," which

-=

J f ..

~.-.. '

t., 1 t

a comment, write:

NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

·,

meant it had become difflcu~
to turn. At tllat point, Bowyer
was only distancing himself
from the field by about a 10th
of a second a lap. The first

race in the Chase for.the Nextel Cup fit the bill in the sense
that many chased Bowyer, all in
~Jain . The second-year driver
from Emporia, Kan ., had never
run away from a Ne&gt;rtel Cup
field like this. He'd never run
away from a Ne&gt;rtel Cup field at
all. The only championship contender who nad failed to win a
Cup race - ever - thorough!~
dominated the one at New
Hampsllire International Spaedway. "It's a really big deal," said
6owyer. "We started the Chase
12th (last). and no one expected us to do anything.·

• Race: RoadLoans.com

. ioo

• Where: Dover (Oil.) Inter-

national Speedway (1.0
miles), 200 laps/ miles.
• Wilen: Satui-day, SOpt. 22
• LMt yoor'o winner: Clint
Bowyer
• QualllyhiC NOOfll: David
Green . Chevrolet, 157.916
mph, June 6, 2004.
• Race reconl: Dale Earnharllt Jr.. Chevrolet, 130.152
·mph, May 30, 1998.
•last raco: Kyle Busch ·
drove a Chevy to victory at
Richmond, his second v1ctory of the season.

I

• Roce: Smith's Las Vegas
3so
• : Las Vegas (Nev.)
Motor Speedway (1.5 miles),
1461aps/219 miles.
• Wilen: saturday, sept. 22
• LMt yeor'o winner: Mike
Skinner
• Qulllfylne reconl: Mike
Skinner, Toyota, 118.065
mph, sept. 23, 2006.
• Race reconl: David Starr,
Chevrolet, 135.394 mph,
Oct. 13, 2002 . . J
•!Jiot - : Ron Hornaday Jr. dominated the New
England 200. becoming the
fi rst two-time winner at
New Hampshire International Speedway.

c
A.J.

ALMENDINGER

Ill~

J

No. 84. RED

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

&gt;=nr Jr
,.. ,I :S ~Jlf~
,tll&amp; l',~-''· J&gt;:s'
r:::..:J!)
.... .... , .

•

v

BULL TOYOTA

E

R

s
u
Oanasal

I
I.

frOIJI

. · al'rjWay. Natt&gt;
rally, the
winner was Clint ·
., ~. wno lrn~Jrom 12th
·to fourth lrf ~VInnlhg the first
~ Of his cup career.. .

,

i

I•

i

s

Stremme

Chip Clana11l

vs. l)avld StrillnGanassi recently elected not to

renew Stremme's contract, citing the
loss of sponsorship from Coorll Light
and paving the way for bringing yet
another Indy 500 winner, Darla Franchilli, to NASCAR.

t&gt;lklwYer's surprise !!lctory
IJ!Ibilthstandlng, nothl!ll really
Cherijled In tenns of Who's likely
tq win the championship. The .
flllorltes are still Jimmie Johnson. Jeff Gordon and T~ Stewart. The three are sepamtad at
the top \))' only 10 points,
1&gt; Just add an ·a: That's the
message fer Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
longtime tans. His number will
apparently be
next year.
The announcement was scheduled .for wednesday.

NASCAR Thlo Week's Monte

Dutton CJVu bll taks: ·me lesson?
It's all about money. But, in Ganass!'s defense, the performance hasn't
been there. In his second year.
Stremme is only 23rd in the point
standings, and he has only two top.
10 finishes, none better than an
eighth at Talladega."

·ss•

" The top seven finishers at New
Hampshire were In the Chase.
Best among the outcasts was
· elghtl&gt;place Casey Maars.

'
AJ.AIImendlnger,
left, talks wttll Bryan Cl111son prtor to a Busch Sertes race In Richmond, VII.

1&gt; The spread from first to 12th

Bowyer not the lint
K8nSM to find euCCIII

naarly doubled. At the beginning, the Chase spread was 60
poi"15. Now ~·s 102.
1&gt; Tall_adega Is always the "wild
card' In the Chase. This year
It's wilder, thanks to the fact
that the COT cars will be in use.
n\e cars were tested there last
W!H!k, and most everyone
that ~·s going to be dlf·
terent and, perhaps, wild.

aCreell

Allmendinger finding out that premier racing series is tough stuff

1&gt; New England wasn't rewelding
to those Wf1o had most recentry

could improve further, the Los Gatos, ·
Calif., native replied simply, "Lot of
work, a lot of testing and figuring out
LOUDON, N.H. - Sometimes a . and making more races. It may not
rookie driver has to walk before he feel like it right now because I'm pret·
can run.
ty frustrated and ill about how bad we
All too many times this season, for· were, but running these races and be·
mer Champ Car standout A.J. All· ing that bad, that's how you get better
mendinger has walked. He hasn't been because you figure out what's wrong.
around on race da'y.
You just have to keep doing the same
From Infineon Raceway in June thing. Somehow we've got to work
through Michigan . International harder and figure out more."
Speedway in August, the Team Red
It's no surprise that making a Iran·
Bull driver failed to make the field in sition from Toad racing in rear-en·
eight straight races.
gined, technologically advanced,
Things are looking up now, though. open-wheeled cars to running ovals in
It may not seem particularly impres- somewhat unwieldy stock cars is diffisive, but Allmendinger, 25, has now cult. Even Juan Pablo Montoya, who's
successfully qualified four weeks in a only 20th in the Nextel' Cup point ·
row. His 18th-place finish in Califor· standings, has learned this lesson.
nia was his best of the season.
"As drivers, we see NASCAR all
It's still tough, though. After his around in the States, and we know
33rd.piace finish at New Hampshire how popular it is .... I knew I was goInternational
Speedway,
All· ing to have fun because of the compe·
mendinger said: "We need to get bet· tition level. You're racing against 36
ter. That's about as bad as we can be."
to 43 guys out there," said All·
Asked how the team's performance mendinger.

By Mollte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

won them. Danny Hamlin, who
won the eartier race tills year,

finished 15th, and the 2006 winner Of the Sylvania 300, J&lt;evln
HfliVICk, had to settle for 10th.

In short, NASCAR has become the
place to be in American auto racing. It's
the equiv~ent of the major leagues.
"I know the effort Toyota puts into
it and ho.w successful they want to
be," said fdlmendinger. "I just knew,
for me, tliat this was the right chance
fot me to take and it would be crazy
for me I~
· rn it down.
"Ther ' . just a lot more opportunity for d . rs to get into a seat, make
a living . : d get their name rl!cog·
nized. In·. pen-wheeled racing, there
are only 17 to 18 cars in each series,
and that's tough to get in there and get
your name recognized and get a ride."
For now, Allmendinger·has to main·
tain his confidence and be patient.
He's making progress, even though
it's hard to measure.
"This is a year I'll ne,ver forget," he
said. "I've learned so much. It's been
amazing and fantastic."
·

Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http://www.gas·
tongazette.comlsections/sporls/nascar

A Kansan, the late Jim Roper,
won NASCAR's very first race. Now
another Kansas, Clint Bowyer, has
won NASCAR's most recent race.
Roper only competed In one other
race. Bowyer's future prospects are
much brighter. Roper won at Char·
lotte Speedway on June 19, 1949.
His only other appearance was a
15th-place finish on Aug. 7 of that
year at Occoneechee Speedway In
Hillsborough, N.C.

Languace penaltl•
applied equally, 80 far
When Tony
Stewart won the
Brickyard, in an interview, he used
the word (expletive
deleted) on TV. Didn't NASCAR notice
this?
Last year Dale
(Earnhardt) Jr. use'd
this word on lV
and got fined and points docked. 1
think the rule should apply to all
drivers and not just one.

Jan Evans
Bluefield, W. Va.
NASCAR thinks so, too. Stewart
was similarly punished. The Earnhardt example you cited occurred In
2004, not last year.

Gordon promptly legislated out of the points lead
paid off there, obviously.
Again, that's what I meant by
NASCAR This Week
Jar season more exciting. It experience. I've gotten myself
LOUDON, N.H.- Not only made everybody push harder into situations where we've had
was the Sylvania 300 the sooth to get those wins. It did what it a car to win, and I just kind of
screwed up."
race of Jeff Gordon's career. It was supposed to do."
was also the first time in 22
races in which he began it in ·
any position other than first
Among the great unwashed
Something stupid - Clint
place in the Nextel Cup point
-Unlike
the equivalent in olh·
Bowyer admitted he got car·
standings.
er
sports,
all the non-Chase
· Gordon was a casualty of the ried away when he crashed in
drivers
are
still around. Each
Chase format, which erased the regular-season finale at
race still has 43 starters, even
his considerable lead to rank Richmond on Sept. 8.
The second-year driver though the attention is focused
the 12 title contenders in order
of victories. Gordon came here clinched a berth in the Chase only a dozen of them.
That is, unless they win.
with four. His Hendrick Motor- when he took the green flag to
"Ray (Evernham, his team
sports teammate, Jimmie begin the race. He was still
Johnson. had six. The result? looking for his first career vic· owner) reminded us at the Tal·
Instead of leading Johnson by tory (it came the next week) ladega test this week that he's
412 points, Gordon trailed him and threw caution to the wind. never been through a year
The result was caution. A cau- without winning a race," said
by20.
Elliott Sadler, "so that kind of
But the four-time champion tion flag.
put a little pressure on Scott
"That
was
pretty
stupid,"
he
didn't feel cheated.
(Riggs),
Kasey (Kahne) and me
said
in
retrospect.
"Man,
I
just
"If I didn 't know what the
to
go
out
there and do what
rules were going into the sea- messed up. I told (my crew) I
we've
got
to
do."
son, I'd say we got the shaft," was set on 'kill' going into that
said Gordon, "but that's not the thing. I was wanting to win that
case. Ever since they've had race and was trying to do
the Chase, they've said what it everything I could to win.
A regular (season) preview
" It was early, but I thought it
is. This year they made the
change to the 10 bonus points was important to get out front. - Gordon's plight - a huge
(per victory). It made the regu- Probably patience would have point lead not only erased but
By Monte Dutton

·•

•

~ ·~~~~rt~~

u.

luecltillues

1. . can Edwards
2. · l&lt;llll!n Harvlck
Davld.RIIItlmann

"· Jason .lelfter

I. Da&gt;,id RBCiln•

e. Sobi!Y Hamilton Jr.
1,

8.

Marcos wnt~rose•
Stephen Leicht

t. Greg Biffle

10. Mike Ylallace

3,996 .

· 133
. 733
• 826

. 977
· 1,079
·1.203
· 1.207
• 1,222
· 1,326

CiiAmMAN tRucK SERIES
2,964
- 29
2. • Mike Skln'lfr ·
• 271
3. Travis KV8Pf /
. 298
4. Todd Bodine i
- 473
' a. Johnny 6en!ion
. 483
8. Rick Crawford
. 696
7. Ted Musgrave
. 747
8. Matt ciatton
- 768
&amp;. Erlk Darnell
. 779
10. Jack Sprague

1. Ron Hornaday Jr.

•

•

eliminated - has led to more
sentiment supporting some
kind of award, trophy or cash
prize for the regular-season
champion, or some kind of
bonus in terms of points. To be
precise, many drivers think
there ought to be some value in
being regular-season cham pi·
on.
"Yeah, I think that's been
something that's been brought
up each year, and I do feel that
there should be some reward
for the regular season," said
Jimmie Johnson, whose six
victories give him a slight ad·
vantage over Gordon . "I don't
know what that might be. If
you look at other sports and
there's a championship won for
whatever division it may be,
what are those things l I guess
they have home-turf advan·
tage, depending on the sport so
I don't know what a fair advan·
tage would be moving into
that.
"But I think it would be good
for our sport to have a regularseason champion and a post·
season champion."
Don 't bet the ranch on that

happening.

•
Fuggedabboudit - Tony
Stewart has a new contract to
negotiate with Joe Gibbs Rae·
ing. He doesn't anticipate not
returning, but he also doesn•t
want to worry about it now.
Stewart, the third seed,
wants to worry about a third
championship, one that, by the
way, might help in the contract
negotiations .
"I'm not even going to
work on it any more until the
season is over," he said .."Se·
riously.
"All these things, like, right
now, are a total distraction to
what I'm trying to accomplish
the rest of the season, and
that's why I'm not going to do
any more than I have to do until the end of the year. My
goal is to win the champi·
onship and focus on the things
I have to focus on to get that
done."

Contact Monte Dutton at
mdutton@gastongazette.com

A Special Supplement to The Gallipolis Oaijy, The Dally Sentinel, The Point Pleasant Register
· September 2t. 2007
www.mY,&lt;Iailylribune:com www.mydallySenUnei.C!lfll www.myd_a!l~~ster.com

�Page

B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 21, 21lP7

www.mydailysentinel.com

II&gt; 11 you have a quettlon or
r-• v x

t '

1

&lt;~ '

• Roce: Dodge Dealers 400

~

'

• - . .: lloYer (Del.) International Speedway (1.0 miles),
400 laps/ miles.
• Wilen: Sunday, SOpt. 23
• 1.-t yur's
Jeff Burton
• Qulllfi'~IINOOfll: Jeremy
Mayfield, Dodge, 161.522
mph, June 4, 2004.
• Race NOOfll: Mark Martin,
Ford, 132.719 mph, Sept. 21,
1997 .
• LMt Mel&lt;: Clint 6owyer's car
was so fast that. even when it
slowed down, ~still had the
field CO'Iered. In the latter
stages of the Sylvania 300,
Bowyer's Chevrolet began slow·
lng, which concerned him. He
complained to his crew that it
was "tightening up," which

-=

J f ..

~.-.. '

t., 1 t

a comment, write:

NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

·,

meant it had become difflcu~
to turn. At tllat point, Bowyer
was only distancing himself
from the field by about a 10th
of a second a lap. The first

race in the Chase for.the Nextel Cup fit the bill in the sense
that many chased Bowyer, all in
~Jain . The second-year driver
from Emporia, Kan ., had never
run away from a Ne&gt;rtel Cup
field like this. He'd never run
away from a Ne&gt;rtel Cup field at
all. The only championship contender who nad failed to win a
Cup race - ever - thorough!~
dominated the one at New
Hampsllire International Spaedway. "It's a really big deal," said
6owyer. "We started the Chase
12th (last). and no one expected us to do anything.·

• Race: RoadLoans.com

. ioo

• Where: Dover (Oil.) Inter-

national Speedway (1.0
miles), 200 laps/ miles.
• Wilen: Satui-day, SOpt. 22
• LMt yoor'o winner: Clint
Bowyer
• QualllyhiC NOOfll: David
Green . Chevrolet, 157.916
mph, June 6, 2004.
• Race reconl: Dale Earnharllt Jr.. Chevrolet, 130.152
·mph, May 30, 1998.
•last raco: Kyle Busch ·
drove a Chevy to victory at
Richmond, his second v1ctory of the season.

I

• Roce: Smith's Las Vegas
3so
• : Las Vegas (Nev.)
Motor Speedway (1.5 miles),
1461aps/219 miles.
• Wilen: saturday, sept. 22
• LMt yeor'o winner: Mike
Skinner
• Qulllfylne reconl: Mike
Skinner, Toyota, 118.065
mph, sept. 23, 2006.
• Race reconl: David Starr,
Chevrolet, 135.394 mph,
Oct. 13, 2002 . . J
•!Jiot - : Ron Hornaday Jr. dominated the New
England 200. becoming the
fi rst two-time winner at
New Hampshire International Speedway.

c
A.J.

ALMENDINGER

Ill~

J

No. 84. RED

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

&gt;=nr Jr
,.. ,I :S ~Jlf~
,tll&amp; l',~-''· J&gt;:s'
r:::..:J!)
.... .... , .

•

v

BULL TOYOTA

E

R

s
u
Oanasal

I
I.

frOIJI

. · al'rjWay. Natt&gt;
rally, the
winner was Clint ·
., ~. wno lrn~Jrom 12th
·to fourth lrf ~VInnlhg the first
~ Of his cup career.. .

,

i

I•

i

s

Stremme

Chip Clana11l

vs. l)avld StrillnGanassi recently elected not to

renew Stremme's contract, citing the
loss of sponsorship from Coorll Light
and paving the way for bringing yet
another Indy 500 winner, Darla Franchilli, to NASCAR.

t&gt;lklwYer's surprise !!lctory
IJ!Ibilthstandlng, nothl!ll really
Cherijled In tenns of Who's likely
tq win the championship. The .
flllorltes are still Jimmie Johnson. Jeff Gordon and T~ Stewart. The three are sepamtad at
the top \))' only 10 points,
1&gt; Just add an ·a: That's the
message fer Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
longtime tans. His number will
apparently be
next year.
The announcement was scheduled .for wednesday.

NASCAR Thlo Week's Monte

Dutton CJVu bll taks: ·me lesson?
It's all about money. But, in Ganass!'s defense, the performance hasn't
been there. In his second year.
Stremme is only 23rd in the point
standings, and he has only two top.
10 finishes, none better than an
eighth at Talladega."

·ss•

" The top seven finishers at New
Hampshire were In the Chase.
Best among the outcasts was
· elghtl&gt;place Casey Maars.

'
AJ.AIImendlnger,
left, talks wttll Bryan Cl111son prtor to a Busch Sertes race In Richmond, VII.

1&gt; The spread from first to 12th

Bowyer not the lint
K8nSM to find euCCIII

naarly doubled. At the beginning, the Chase spread was 60
poi"15. Now ~·s 102.
1&gt; Tall_adega Is always the "wild
card' In the Chase. This year
It's wilder, thanks to the fact
that the COT cars will be in use.
n\e cars were tested there last
W!H!k, and most everyone
that ~·s going to be dlf·
terent and, perhaps, wild.

aCreell

Allmendinger finding out that premier racing series is tough stuff

1&gt; New England wasn't rewelding
to those Wf1o had most recentry

could improve further, the Los Gatos, ·
Calif., native replied simply, "Lot of
work, a lot of testing and figuring out
LOUDON, N.H. - Sometimes a . and making more races. It may not
rookie driver has to walk before he feel like it right now because I'm pret·
can run.
ty frustrated and ill about how bad we
All too many times this season, for· were, but running these races and be·
mer Champ Car standout A.J. All· ing that bad, that's how you get better
mendinger has walked. He hasn't been because you figure out what's wrong.
around on race da'y.
You just have to keep doing the same
From Infineon Raceway in June thing. Somehow we've got to work
through Michigan . International harder and figure out more."
Speedway in August, the Team Red
It's no surprise that making a Iran·
Bull driver failed to make the field in sition from Toad racing in rear-en·
eight straight races.
gined, technologically advanced,
Things are looking up now, though. open-wheeled cars to running ovals in
It may not seem particularly impres- somewhat unwieldy stock cars is diffisive, but Allmendinger, 25, has now cult. Even Juan Pablo Montoya, who's
successfully qualified four weeks in a only 20th in the Nextel' Cup point ·
row. His 18th-place finish in Califor· standings, has learned this lesson.
nia was his best of the season.
"As drivers, we see NASCAR all
It's still tough, though. After his around in the States, and we know
33rd.piace finish at New Hampshire how popular it is .... I knew I was goInternational
Speedway,
All· ing to have fun because of the compe·
mendinger said: "We need to get bet· tition level. You're racing against 36
ter. That's about as bad as we can be."
to 43 guys out there," said All·
Asked how the team's performance mendinger.

By Mollte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

won them. Danny Hamlin, who
won the eartier race tills year,

finished 15th, and the 2006 winner Of the Sylvania 300, J&lt;evln
HfliVICk, had to settle for 10th.

In short, NASCAR has become the
place to be in American auto racing. It's
the equiv~ent of the major leagues.
"I know the effort Toyota puts into
it and ho.w successful they want to
be," said fdlmendinger. "I just knew,
for me, tliat this was the right chance
fot me to take and it would be crazy
for me I~
· rn it down.
"Ther ' . just a lot more opportunity for d . rs to get into a seat, make
a living . : d get their name rl!cog·
nized. In·. pen-wheeled racing, there
are only 17 to 18 cars in each series,
and that's tough to get in there and get
your name recognized and get a ride."
For now, Allmendinger·has to main·
tain his confidence and be patient.
He's making progress, even though
it's hard to measure.
"This is a year I'll ne,ver forget," he
said. "I've learned so much. It's been
amazing and fantastic."
·

Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http://www.gas·
tongazette.comlsections/sporls/nascar

A Kansan, the late Jim Roper,
won NASCAR's very first race. Now
another Kansas, Clint Bowyer, has
won NASCAR's most recent race.
Roper only competed In one other
race. Bowyer's future prospects are
much brighter. Roper won at Char·
lotte Speedway on June 19, 1949.
His only other appearance was a
15th-place finish on Aug. 7 of that
year at Occoneechee Speedway In
Hillsborough, N.C.

Languace penaltl•
applied equally, 80 far
When Tony
Stewart won the
Brickyard, in an interview, he used
the word (expletive
deleted) on TV. Didn't NASCAR notice
this?
Last year Dale
(Earnhardt) Jr. use'd
this word on lV
and got fined and points docked. 1
think the rule should apply to all
drivers and not just one.

Jan Evans
Bluefield, W. Va.
NASCAR thinks so, too. Stewart
was similarly punished. The Earnhardt example you cited occurred In
2004, not last year.

Gordon promptly legislated out of the points lead
paid off there, obviously.
Again, that's what I meant by
NASCAR This Week
Jar season more exciting. It experience. I've gotten myself
LOUDON, N.H.- Not only made everybody push harder into situations where we've had
was the Sylvania 300 the sooth to get those wins. It did what it a car to win, and I just kind of
screwed up."
race of Jeff Gordon's career. It was supposed to do."
was also the first time in 22
races in which he began it in ·
any position other than first
Among the great unwashed
Something stupid - Clint
place in the Nextel Cup point
-Unlike
the equivalent in olh·
Bowyer admitted he got car·
standings.
er
sports,
all the non-Chase
· Gordon was a casualty of the ried away when he crashed in
drivers
are
still around. Each
Chase format, which erased the regular-season finale at
race still has 43 starters, even
his considerable lead to rank Richmond on Sept. 8.
The second-year driver though the attention is focused
the 12 title contenders in order
of victories. Gordon came here clinched a berth in the Chase only a dozen of them.
That is, unless they win.
with four. His Hendrick Motor- when he took the green flag to
"Ray (Evernham, his team
sports teammate, Jimmie begin the race. He was still
Johnson. had six. The result? looking for his first career vic· owner) reminded us at the Tal·
Instead of leading Johnson by tory (it came the next week) ladega test this week that he's
412 points, Gordon trailed him and threw caution to the wind. never been through a year
The result was caution. A cau- without winning a race," said
by20.
Elliott Sadler, "so that kind of
But the four-time champion tion flag.
put a little pressure on Scott
"That
was
pretty
stupid,"
he
didn't feel cheated.
(Riggs),
Kasey (Kahne) and me
said
in
retrospect.
"Man,
I
just
"If I didn 't know what the
to
go
out
there and do what
rules were going into the sea- messed up. I told (my crew) I
we've
got
to
do."
son, I'd say we got the shaft," was set on 'kill' going into that
said Gordon, "but that's not the thing. I was wanting to win that
case. Ever since they've had race and was trying to do
the Chase, they've said what it everything I could to win.
A regular (season) preview
" It was early, but I thought it
is. This year they made the
change to the 10 bonus points was important to get out front. - Gordon's plight - a huge
(per victory). It made the regu- Probably patience would have point lead not only erased but
By Monte Dutton

·•

•

~ ·~~~~rt~~

u.

luecltillues

1. . can Edwards
2. · l&lt;llll!n Harvlck
Davld.RIIItlmann

"· Jason .lelfter

I. Da&gt;,id RBCiln•

e. Sobi!Y Hamilton Jr.
1,

8.

Marcos wnt~rose•
Stephen Leicht

t. Greg Biffle

10. Mike Ylallace

3,996 .

· 133
. 733
• 826

. 977
· 1,079
·1.203
· 1.207
• 1,222
· 1,326

CiiAmMAN tRucK SERIES
2,964
- 29
2. • Mike Skln'lfr ·
• 271
3. Travis KV8Pf /
. 298
4. Todd Bodine i
- 473
' a. Johnny 6en!ion
. 483
8. Rick Crawford
. 696
7. Ted Musgrave
. 747
8. Matt ciatton
- 768
&amp;. Erlk Darnell
. 779
10. Jack Sprague

1. Ron Hornaday Jr.

•

•

eliminated - has led to more
sentiment supporting some
kind of award, trophy or cash
prize for the regular-season
champion, or some kind of
bonus in terms of points. To be
precise, many drivers think
there ought to be some value in
being regular-season cham pi·
on.
"Yeah, I think that's been
something that's been brought
up each year, and I do feel that
there should be some reward
for the regular season," said
Jimmie Johnson, whose six
victories give him a slight ad·
vantage over Gordon . "I don't
know what that might be. If
you look at other sports and
there's a championship won for
whatever division it may be,
what are those things l I guess
they have home-turf advan·
tage, depending on the sport so
I don't know what a fair advan·
tage would be moving into
that.
"But I think it would be good
for our sport to have a regularseason champion and a post·
season champion."
Don 't bet the ranch on that

happening.

•
Fuggedabboudit - Tony
Stewart has a new contract to
negotiate with Joe Gibbs Rae·
ing. He doesn't anticipate not
returning, but he also doesn•t
want to worry about it now.
Stewart, the third seed,
wants to worry about a third
championship, one that, by the
way, might help in the contract
negotiations .
"I'm not even going to
work on it any more until the
season is over," he said .."Se·
riously.
"All these things, like, right
now, are a total distraction to
what I'm trying to accomplish
the rest of the season, and
that's why I'm not going to do
any more than I have to do until the end of the year. My
goal is to win the champi·
onship and focus on the things
I have to focus on to get that
done."

Contact Monte Dutton at
mdutton@gastongazette.com

A Special Supplement to The Gallipolis Oaijy, The Dally Sentinel, The Point Pleasant Register
· September 2t. 2007
www.mY,&lt;Iailylribune:com www.mydallySenUnei.C!lfll www.myd_a!l~~ster.com

�Friday, SeJ*mber ll, l007

· Pag~2·
'

-..,.

'

'

- · ·..,·- - ·· · .. • · · · • :

· ~

-

Fall Home Improvement .

I

renting room
!.

MORE THAN 2000 .WAllPAPER BORDER
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BlE

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~eJ. ,t,. feal estate boom,lots of homeO}Vllets are finding .
fri;over their heaas with respec~ to
meeting their mortgage pa~metits ,However, many homeowners
wiih 'extra space are discovering .the value of. renting a room.
Before doing so, it's best ~consider the following.
• Set the rules before anyone moves in. You'lllikely want any
prospective tenant to share'·a retaiiyely similar lifestyle. 10: your
. own, such as work schedule; :social'hl}bits, et~. Before 8JlYone
moves in, establish rules with respect to overnight guests, drink·
ing alcohol or smoking on the property and other issues.
.
• G~t things in writing. Should any IJ!lforeseen problem ~se
~su&lt;;h ~s; an un~lytenant~.l!_ ¥erbal agieemtrnt_"Yi~l not stand up
m court. You'll need.a wntteil agreement that st1pulates all rules
and det!lils concerning how much advance notice is needed to
move out.
.
~· All current occupants should meet any potential .tenants.
Anyone who currently lives in the honie should be included i,n the
· tenant interview process. If a spouse leaves it up to his or her husband· or wife, arguments could ensue over whether or not the person in charge made the right.choice. To avoid those unnecessary
Setting up today's elaborate home-theater systems requires knowledge of how to properly mount flat- ru:guments, make sure everyone m~ts prospective tenants,
inc:Juding the kids and even the family pet.
panel televisions.

Web site, tool helps homeowners inst:Wl
and design home improvement projects
(MS) - As many families
are choosing to provide their
own movie experience instead
of driving to the nearest theater, _the new home improvement trend this fall is enhancing the home theater. Whether
it's upgrading the traditional
living room or designing an
elaborate home-theater systern, ~onsumers are investing
in enhanced audio visual
equipment.
Home-theater systems, fea~ turing large flat-panel plasma
and LCD televisions, give
homeowners the ability to
enjoy a high quality picture
without le&amp;ving the comfort of
home. And as prices of flatpanel telev,ision sets continue
to drop, the dream of improving ones television viewing
experience becomes a reality.
However, just as home
improvement projects take
planning and lots of behind-thescenes work that guests never
see, so, too, does putting
together a home-theater system.
"Arguably, the most overlooked p'art of buying a' plasma
or LCD television is mounting

director for Premier Mounts, a
of
leading
manufacturer
mounts for plasma· and LCD
televisions.
"Homeowners
have the daunting task of not
only deciding where they want
their new television to go, but
also they just have no idea how
to get it there."
To help consumers with their
home improvement · projecJs ,
Premier Mounts developed
several tools to ease the installation and design process.
Through a new Web-based
tool - Possibilities Planner
(http://www.premiermounts.co
m/3dvisualizer/) - consumers
can view and consider potential
locations for their mount or
projector for nearly every room
in the house.
Utilizing
photographic
images of home theater spaces,
living rooms , kitchens · and
bathrooms, Premier Mounts
Possibilities Planner provides
3-D demonstrations of floor
stands, ceiling and wall
mounts. An articulating feature
illustrates the full range of
motion of the mounts.
Together, these featu~es 9ffer

their display options and will
assist them in determining
which display or projector
mount. best meets their needs.. .
Another resource Premier
Mounts provides is the Web

;;. /

AT A sooto -80°/o DISCOUNT
FROM THE RETAIL PRICE

We sell discount wall covering styles from top
·
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, Quality Work
Affordable Prices

Small Repairs or Big Projects
bon't put them off- Call someone who
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It makes getting jobs done kind of fun.

Doug Scovill

Please see Welp site, 1l

• Thomas Kinkade
• Chesapeake.
• Folk Art by David Carter Brown
Applying a fresh coat of paint to window sills and railings can protect against water damage.

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No ad can do them justice.
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Protect your home
against water diUDage

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·

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rain can cause damage to the and kill mold and mildew with
exterior of your home. Sprfaces an EPA-registered cleaner like
where water collects - like JOMAX House Cleaner and
Mildew Killer.
window sills and railings • Apply a high quality exteriare especially prone to water
or
primer, like Bulls Eye 1-2-3
absorption, which can lead to
Primer
Sealer, to seal the surpeeling paint, wood rot and the
growth of mold and mildew, if face block stains and create a
sou~d base for your paint to
left unprotected.
So why not protect your adhere.
• Select a quality exterior
home against water damage
before the wet winter weather latex paint in the color of your
sets in? Thanks to new tech- choice and ado a water repellent
nologies, it's as easy_ as appl~­ formulated to be miXed with
ing a fresh coat of pamt. Here s paint, like OKON PaintBooster
some advice from the experts Water Repellent Additive, to
prevent water absorpti~n ~d
at Zinsser:
• Scrape itnd remove peeling extend the life of your pamt JOb.
or chipping paint. Sand rough Just one quart of PaintBooster
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• York
• Disney
and many more-!

We have Park designs:
rugs, curtains, place mats, napkins,
purses &amp; more!
Gift items, lamps,
pictures, country
candles
• Outhouse shower
curtains &amp; all the
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Stgt lA- a.41-wtt14e ~ ,u,v. tbt.u ttl~fl

WALLPAPER OUTLET
420
Hrs: M-F
9am- 4:30
Sat. 9 ani :

Main Street

Point Pleasant. WV

304-675-6280

Visit us online at:

�Friday, SeJ*mber ll, l007

· Pag~2·
'

-..,.

'

'

- · ·..,·- - ·· · .. • · · · • :

· ~

-

Fall Home Improvement .

I

renting room
!.

MORE THAN 2000 .WAllPAPER BORDER
.
BlE

:

'

'

'

~eJ. ,t,. feal estate boom,lots of homeO}Vllets are finding .
fri;over their heaas with respec~ to
meeting their mortgage pa~metits ,However, many homeowners
wiih 'extra space are discovering .the value of. renting a room.
Before doing so, it's best ~consider the following.
• Set the rules before anyone moves in. You'lllikely want any
prospective tenant to share'·a retaiiyely similar lifestyle. 10: your
. own, such as work schedule; :social'hl}bits, et~. Before 8JlYone
moves in, establish rules with respect to overnight guests, drink·
ing alcohol or smoking on the property and other issues.
.
• G~t things in writing. Should any IJ!lforeseen problem ~se
~su&lt;;h ~s; an un~lytenant~.l!_ ¥erbal agieemtrnt_"Yi~l not stand up
m court. You'll need.a wntteil agreement that st1pulates all rules
and det!lils concerning how much advance notice is needed to
move out.
.
~· All current occupants should meet any potential .tenants.
Anyone who currently lives in the honie should be included i,n the
· tenant interview process. If a spouse leaves it up to his or her husband· or wife, arguments could ensue over whether or not the person in charge made the right.choice. To avoid those unnecessary
Setting up today's elaborate home-theater systems requires knowledge of how to properly mount flat- ru:guments, make sure everyone m~ts prospective tenants,
inc:Juding the kids and even the family pet.
panel televisions.

Web site, tool helps homeowners inst:Wl
and design home improvement projects
(MS) - As many families
are choosing to provide their
own movie experience instead
of driving to the nearest theater, _the new home improvement trend this fall is enhancing the home theater. Whether
it's upgrading the traditional
living room or designing an
elaborate home-theater systern, ~onsumers are investing
in enhanced audio visual
equipment.
Home-theater systems, fea~ turing large flat-panel plasma
and LCD televisions, give
homeowners the ability to
enjoy a high quality picture
without le&amp;ving the comfort of
home. And as prices of flatpanel telev,ision sets continue
to drop, the dream of improving ones television viewing
experience becomes a reality.
However, just as home
improvement projects take
planning and lots of behind-thescenes work that guests never
see, so, too, does putting
together a home-theater system.
"Arguably, the most overlooked p'art of buying a' plasma
or LCD television is mounting

director for Premier Mounts, a
of
leading
manufacturer
mounts for plasma· and LCD
televisions.
"Homeowners
have the daunting task of not
only deciding where they want
their new television to go, but
also they just have no idea how
to get it there."
To help consumers with their
home improvement · projecJs ,
Premier Mounts developed
several tools to ease the installation and design process.
Through a new Web-based
tool - Possibilities Planner
(http://www.premiermounts.co
m/3dvisualizer/) - consumers
can view and consider potential
locations for their mount or
projector for nearly every room
in the house.
Utilizing
photographic
images of home theater spaces,
living rooms , kitchens · and
bathrooms, Premier Mounts
Possibilities Planner provides
3-D demonstrations of floor
stands, ceiling and wall
mounts. An articulating feature
illustrates the full range of
motion of the mounts.
Together, these featu~es 9ffer

their display options and will
assist them in determining
which display or projector
mount. best meets their needs.. .
Another resource Premier
Mounts provides is the Web

;;. /

AT A sooto -80°/o DISCOUNT
FROM THE RETAIL PRICE

We sell discount wall covering styles from top
·
designers and manufactuers.

, Quality Work
Affordable Prices

Small Repairs or Big Projects
bon't put them off- Call someone who
actually shows up ••. on time. Try it.
It makes getting jobs done kind of fun.

Doug Scovill

Please see Welp site, 1l

• Thomas Kinkade
• Chesapeake.
• Folk Art by David Carter Brown
Applying a fresh coat of paint to window sills and railings can protect against water damage.

740-416-7495

No ad can do them justice.
EXPERIENCED I RESPONSIVE I KNOWLEDGEABLE I DEPENDABLE
Our competitive rates and flexible programs are always
important but our people malt~ the difference.

Ms;•Jiai4-'lWd.C01t'/ld3rketiitg• • cfiilm~ ..enlut'uiled. '}iitw.s. of. ol:&amp;'ii~ii=:::w

Our store.is heautiJuf~l stockea with new (ines of
accessories, oiJts, cr_afts &amp; more!

Protect your home
against water diUDage

11eeds!

·

(MS) - Snow, ice, sleet, and other contaminants. Remove
rain can cause damage to the and kill mold and mildew with
exterior of your home. Sprfaces an EPA-registered cleaner like
where water collects - like JOMAX House Cleaner and
Mildew Killer.
window sills and railings • Apply a high quality exteriare especially prone to water
or
primer, like Bulls Eye 1-2-3
absorption, which can lead to
Primer
Sealer, to seal the surpeeling paint, wood rot and the
growth of mold and mildew, if face block stains and create a
sou~d base for your paint to
left unprotected.
So why not protect your adhere.
• Select a quality exterior
home against water damage
before the wet winter weather latex paint in the color of your
sets in? Thanks to new tech- choice and ado a water repellent
nologies, it's as easy_ as appl~­ formulated to be miXed with
ing a fresh coat of pamt. Here s paint, like OKON PaintBooster
some advice from the experts Water Repellent Additive, to
prevent water absorpti~n ~d
at Zinsser:
• Scrape itnd remove peeling extend the life of your pamt JOb.
or chipping paint. Sand rough Just one quart of PaintBooster
edges and cl.ell!l ' th~ area thorPleeM see PtcAed; 15
·;·w"blt to t'f'IWY~·Mt', 'IMUrtd '

• York
• Disney
and many more-!

We have Park designs:
rugs, curtains, place mats, napkins,
purses &amp; more!
Gift items, lamps,
pictures, country
candles
• Outhouse shower
curtains &amp; all the
accessories
• Hearts &amp; Stars
curtains and all the
accessories.

Stgt lA- a.41-wtt14e ~ ,u,v. tbt.u ttl~fl

WALLPAPER OUTLET
420
Hrs: M-F
9am- 4:30
Sat. 9 ani :

Main Street

Point Pleasant. WV

304-675-6280

Visit us online at:

�Fml IJome

Page 4•

Eco-friendly home
imprOvements

lmprove~e~t

(MS) - Respiratory disease is steadily on the rise in
North America. According to
the
American
Lung ·
Association
asthma
has
increased by 160 percent over
the last 15 years. One household out of• four has a family
member who suffers from
asthma, allergies, or another
chronic respiratory disease.
The
Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA)
points to poor indoor air quality as the culprit for this
increase. Did you know the air
inside your home can be up to
100 times more polluted than
the surrounding outdoor air and
people spend up to 90 per cent
of their time indoors?
These alarming facts are
just some of the reasons why
so many condominium owners today are turning to a new
air purification system to help
control the level of indoor air
pollution levels in their condos, a common problem in
this sector.
_
" More and more are becom-

ing aware of the health :li~ / ·ing unpleasant odors and
of indoor air pollution. fhat ·ban · potential respiratory illness.
be found in most conve.11fitmal
Poor indoor air quality was
high ·rise units and are now the unhealthy trade-off to the
looking for healthier options," hip condo lifestyle · as air
explained Gerry Gagnon, prod- exchanger technology was limuct and market manager for ited to serving bigger homes
Venmar Venti,lation.
~d spaces - until now.
For years ultra-insulated . By combining in~ovat!ve
energy-efficient high-rise con- techn~logy and engm~er~ng
dos across the country featured expertise, Venmru: Ventilation
the best in style and design and s!lc~essfully .redesigned a venthe worst in indoor air quality. tllatl~n ~olution for small ~pace
That's because there was no ~pphcatl?ns. It's. the solution to .
indoor air solution for the air- mdoor air quality t~at condo
tight ·c6ndos which sealed-in ?wners, renters, builders and
unhealthy air filled with aller- mstallers everywhere have
gens, irritants, and toxins causPluse see Condo, 10

_

',· n"~-,,."

,.~

-{

Customize Your New Home
With A.B Contracting
ModuJar Horrit Dlvlalo~

West Virginia's premier home builder
AB Contracting is ·committed to tailoring your
new home to meet your specific needs. Contact
us to see the variety of ways we can transform
your new home into a personalized dream

AB Contracting
5533 Ohio River Rd.
Point Pleasant, WV
304-674-8022

..' ...

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0

f5are {7/~ Pfiu.rutU
. '

J•

HDTV's

....... , . . ·········· , ,,

'·

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1•800-417

,_._

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APPLIAN-cES: • ll£0RON·ICS

St9~k
.

lmp..ovement

Owners tiDally _find solutie"!f9,f. unhealthy air

(MS) - As the world contin- less fortunate as well.
ues to grow more aware of the
• Paint: Paint can be one of
environment and the ways to the biggest polluters when it
preserve it for future genera- comes to home improvements.
tions , many people wonder Paint usually doesn't smell too
what they can contribute to good because it's loaded with
ensure the planet's health for chemicals that not only procenturies to come. Among the duce an odor but hurt the envimany ways the environment ronment as well. Eco-friendly
can be given a helping hand is paints, however, typically
through eco-friendly home smell better while drying .~d
improvements that can both are safer for the environment.
save money and the planet at Getting their pigments from
the same time.
things such as charcoal or
• Flooring: While oak floor- even foods, these paints are
ing has long been a popular just as beautiful as regular
choice for homeowners, thanks paint and beneficial to the
to the nature of oak trees it's environment as well .
• Previously owned materinot always the most environmentally friendly choice . Oak als: You can head to the local
trees take a long time to salvage yard to see if you can
replace. and their absence isn't purchase recycled cabinets and
~ood for the environment. In doors for your !tome. Some of
heu of o~k. homeown~rs the things you'll find at the salshould cons1der more sustam- - vage yard will be just like new,
able altemauves such as b~- and you'll save a bundle of
boo . Bamboo trees re-grow 10 .cash in the meantime while
less than three years. makmg also being eco-friendly.
them an 1deal chmce for flooring. If you'd prefer to go a different route. consider cork or
recycled rubber as a source for
.
flooring.
• Cleaning materials:
Cleaning your home can also
be done in an environmentally
fri endly way. Bio-degradable
317 ST. RT. 7 ·• GALLif!QM$,
c leaning products are · avai l7
4Q-446-8051"
.
~ blc for JUSt about every
cleanin g job you need to do
around the house. from cleaning th e toilets to removing
stains to doing the laundry or
even cleaning the carpets .
These products are organically based and will do the job
Financing
Avaiallie.::·,.
just as well as their more popular counterparts .
• _Free~ - &lt;•
• Recycle: It's not only tl:le
bottles and cans your family
uses that can be recycled.
Major home renovations
where items such as cabinets
_and doors are replaced also
provide a great cha~ce to recycle your old items . Old
toilets, sinks and countertops
can be recycled as well, many
times going to organizations
such as Habitat for Humanity,
meaning you're not only helpipg. ~S .c;J!~iNJ!f!l!!l)t , .b.uLtP~ •.

In

IJom~

CONDO T.R tE-. NDS

Ellio-t •s·

•·

Fall

Friday, September 21, 1007

. •'. &lt;

.

'

,.

•.

'

.

...

.. ...
,..

"'

�Fml IJome

Page 4•

Eco-friendly home
imprOvements

lmprove~e~t

(MS) - Respiratory disease is steadily on the rise in
North America. According to
the
American
Lung ·
Association
asthma
has
increased by 160 percent over
the last 15 years. One household out of• four has a family
member who suffers from
asthma, allergies, or another
chronic respiratory disease.
The
Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA)
points to poor indoor air quality as the culprit for this
increase. Did you know the air
inside your home can be up to
100 times more polluted than
the surrounding outdoor air and
people spend up to 90 per cent
of their time indoors?
These alarming facts are
just some of the reasons why
so many condominium owners today are turning to a new
air purification system to help
control the level of indoor air
pollution levels in their condos, a common problem in
this sector.
_
" More and more are becom-

ing aware of the health :li~ / ·ing unpleasant odors and
of indoor air pollution. fhat ·ban · potential respiratory illness.
be found in most conve.11fitmal
Poor indoor air quality was
high ·rise units and are now the unhealthy trade-off to the
looking for healthier options," hip condo lifestyle · as air
explained Gerry Gagnon, prod- exchanger technology was limuct and market manager for ited to serving bigger homes
Venmar Venti,lation.
~d spaces - until now.
For years ultra-insulated . By combining in~ovat!ve
energy-efficient high-rise con- techn~logy and engm~er~ng
dos across the country featured expertise, Venmru: Ventilation
the best in style and design and s!lc~essfully .redesigned a venthe worst in indoor air quality. tllatl~n ~olution for small ~pace
That's because there was no ~pphcatl?ns. It's. the solution to .
indoor air solution for the air- mdoor air quality t~at condo
tight ·c6ndos which sealed-in ?wners, renters, builders and
unhealthy air filled with aller- mstallers everywhere have
gens, irritants, and toxins causPluse see Condo, 10

_

',· n"~-,,."

,.~

-{

Customize Your New Home
With A.B Contracting
ModuJar Horrit Dlvlalo~

West Virginia's premier home builder
AB Contracting is ·committed to tailoring your
new home to meet your specific needs. Contact
us to see the variety of ways we can transform
your new home into a personalized dream

AB Contracting
5533 Ohio River Rd.
Point Pleasant, WV
304-674-8022

..' ...

' '.

.'

0

f5are {7/~ Pfiu.rutU
. '

J•

HDTV's

....... , . . ·········· , ,,

'·

..

1•800-417

,_._

·'

:

APPLIAN-cES: • ll£0RON·ICS

St9~k
.

lmp..ovement

Owners tiDally _find solutie"!f9,f. unhealthy air

(MS) - As the world contin- less fortunate as well.
ues to grow more aware of the
• Paint: Paint can be one of
environment and the ways to the biggest polluters when it
preserve it for future genera- comes to home improvements.
tions , many people wonder Paint usually doesn't smell too
what they can contribute to good because it's loaded with
ensure the planet's health for chemicals that not only procenturies to come. Among the duce an odor but hurt the envimany ways the environment ronment as well. Eco-friendly
can be given a helping hand is paints, however, typically
through eco-friendly home smell better while drying .~d
improvements that can both are safer for the environment.
save money and the planet at Getting their pigments from
the same time.
things such as charcoal or
• Flooring: While oak floor- even foods, these paints are
ing has long been a popular just as beautiful as regular
choice for homeowners, thanks paint and beneficial to the
to the nature of oak trees it's environment as well .
• Previously owned materinot always the most environmentally friendly choice . Oak als: You can head to the local
trees take a long time to salvage yard to see if you can
replace. and their absence isn't purchase recycled cabinets and
~ood for the environment. In doors for your !tome. Some of
heu of o~k. homeown~rs the things you'll find at the salshould cons1der more sustam- - vage yard will be just like new,
able altemauves such as b~- and you'll save a bundle of
boo . Bamboo trees re-grow 10 .cash in the meantime while
less than three years. makmg also being eco-friendly.
them an 1deal chmce for flooring. If you'd prefer to go a different route. consider cork or
recycled rubber as a source for
.
flooring.
• Cleaning materials:
Cleaning your home can also
be done in an environmentally
fri endly way. Bio-degradable
317 ST. RT. 7 ·• GALLif!QM$,
c leaning products are · avai l7
4Q-446-8051"
.
~ blc for JUSt about every
cleanin g job you need to do
around the house. from cleaning th e toilets to removing
stains to doing the laundry or
even cleaning the carpets .
These products are organically based and will do the job
Financing
Avaiallie.::·,.
just as well as their more popular counterparts .
• _Free~ - &lt;•
• Recycle: It's not only tl:le
bottles and cans your family
uses that can be recycled.
Major home renovations
where items such as cabinets
_and doors are replaced also
provide a great cha~ce to recycle your old items . Old
toilets, sinks and countertops
can be recycled as well, many
times going to organizations
such as Habitat for Humanity,
meaning you're not only helpipg. ~S .c;J!~iNJ!f!l!!l)t , .b.uLtP~ •.

In

IJom~

CONDO T.R tE-. NDS

Ellio-t •s·

•·

Fall

Friday, September 21, 1007

. •'. &lt;

.

'

,.

•.

'

.

...

.. ...
,..

"'

�Fall Home lmp.-ovement

Page 6 •

'

...

.

.

,.._

'

-

'

1

Friday, Septem~r 11, l007
•

•

,l

•

•

'

'

~

'

How to pay for home improvements
(MS) - Home improve- ly around $50.
ments can be necessities or luxCash-out refinancing: With
uries, adding value to a borne this scenario you replace your
or simply making it more hab- existing mortgage w1th a larger
itable. One thing that all one,' using a portion to pay off
improvements have in common the first mortgage and then the
is that they cost money.
balance to pay for renovations.
In a perfect world everyone Typically this is only a good
would have the proverbial choice if interest rates have
money tree growing in their dropped or you'll be in the
yard that could finance renova- home long enough to recoup
tions. However, in reality, this . the financing costs.
isn't the case. Therefore, if one
• Borrow against 40lk
doesn't have the up:-front funds plans: The advantage to this is
necessary to finance a project, that you pay back yourself
some sort of financing from an rather than a bank. However, if
outside lender will be neces- you lose · your job or leave
sary. Be warned that there are before the loan is satisfied, you
smart ~d not-so-smart ways to will be required to pay it back
pay for Improvements. Here's a . quickly or face penalties.
look at both.
Riskier options
Before . taki!l~ out any loans
Some people do not have
or financmg , It s best to exam- adequate equity or retirement
ine your overall fi!la~cial pic- plans that they can borrow
ture. How does th1s 1rnprove- against. Therefore they must
rnent fit in with your current look to other methods Use causituation? If it's already tough tion when borrowing money
to make ends meet, renovation and have all of the terms
expe~ses are probably not the spelled out, otherwise you
best 1dea. Ideally, you should could end up over your head
hav~ a ~ree-rnonth cushion of
Construction ·
loa~s:
s.avm~s 1!1 the bank, ~!ready be Construction loans are okay if
contn~utmg to a rellrement or the scope of your p,roject is so
·'
educatiOn plan , and not have
renovations interfere with these
obligations.
Smartest options
The smartest ways to finance
improvements are through
methods where you ' ll receive
tax deductions or pay as little
interest as possible. Borrowing
against the equity in your home
is one of the best ways to
achieve this . Here's a look at
your choices:
Hqme-equity loan: This is
good·' for a one-time remodeling project. The amount you
borrow and the interest rate are
fixed at the start of the loan .
These loans typically las~ 5 to
30 years and may have closing
costs ranging around $1 ,000 .
Home-equity line of credit
(HELOC): HELOCs operate
similar to a credit card . You
borrow only the amount you ·
need to finance against the
equity in your horne. The
downside is that HELOCs usually feature a variable rate , so
you have to be prepared to be
able to continue making payments even if the .interest rate
rises sharply. Interest payments
are tax-deductible, and closing
cost fees a{e. yecy low, twicalr
• •.~.-. • ! ' t . '!.• ·

·~

I'!'

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

· involved that you need ample through a contractor. He may
funds. These short-term, offer you· a great ~eal on
interest-only
loans
are financing that turns out' to be a
designed to be replaced by. a · scam. Look for an independent
regular mortgage once .the lender instead.
project is completed. They're
MBJKinloans:· You can borbased on the costs of con- row against the value of your
struction, or the future value investments with many broker-'
of your home, or both .
age houses. But a sharp drop in
Home-improvement center the market could result in a
project cards: Many chain "margin call." That means you ·
home-improvement centers either pay the loan back
have their own \ credit cards instantly or the brokerage sells .
that feature promotions and 0 the investments that secured
percent interest for an intro- the loan.
· ductory rate. If you can pay
A financial expert can walk
back the amount charged in a you through the other benefits ·
•6-month or less period of time, and downsides of these financthese are a good· option. But ing options. Just keep in mind
they can prove costly if you that financing and the economy
exceed the pay-back time and work hand in hand. In a slugstart accruing 18 percent inter- gish economy, ·lenders will be
est on purchases.
less likely to go for' risky loans
Credit cards: Credit cards and may scrutinize your applican be risky if you are not able cation much more thoroughly
to pay off the renovation pur- than in a booming market.
chases right -away. Otherwise,
high interest rates or teaser
rates that spike unexpectedly
can end up costing you much
more than you intended.
Contractor loans: Beware
of loans that . are supplied

. . ..• .•

,_

Gheen Rentals .
·Why Invest,
Rent For LESS I
-,·

34103 St. Rt. 7
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Owners:
Danny &amp; Randi ·Gheen

Phone: 741-992-1438
Fu: 748-99Z-0388
Email
gheearelltab@fropet.net

:Cc LIVING ROOM SIJITES
~ BE1JROOM SUITES
~ DINETTE SETS
~ TABLE GROUPS
~RECliNERS
~ CURIOS I CLOCKS

.

.

The right tools make gUtter cleaning qtJick and easy.

ll SAlE
$,.so Off Per square yd

· on select stvles

Sept. 1111Uhru Oct. 31st
Orders must be placed bV Oct. 31st to auallfV
nant sale contln.r-u~e,....s,"""vJ...-:.-t_
4247 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio
• • t I'

' .:.,

..

... ... ...

~·OIC-Wrl · ;

.'' 7 4Q-446-21.07

�Fall Home lmp.-ovement

Page 6 •

'

...

.

.

,.._

'

-

'

1

Friday, Septem~r 11, l007
•

•

,l

•

•

'

'

~

'

How to pay for home improvements
(MS) - Home improve- ly around $50.
ments can be necessities or luxCash-out refinancing: With
uries, adding value to a borne this scenario you replace your
or simply making it more hab- existing mortgage w1th a larger
itable. One thing that all one,' using a portion to pay off
improvements have in common the first mortgage and then the
is that they cost money.
balance to pay for renovations.
In a perfect world everyone Typically this is only a good
would have the proverbial choice if interest rates have
money tree growing in their dropped or you'll be in the
yard that could finance renova- home long enough to recoup
tions. However, in reality, this . the financing costs.
isn't the case. Therefore, if one
• Borrow against 40lk
doesn't have the up:-front funds plans: The advantage to this is
necessary to finance a project, that you pay back yourself
some sort of financing from an rather than a bank. However, if
outside lender will be neces- you lose · your job or leave
sary. Be warned that there are before the loan is satisfied, you
smart ~d not-so-smart ways to will be required to pay it back
pay for Improvements. Here's a . quickly or face penalties.
look at both.
Riskier options
Before . taki!l~ out any loans
Some people do not have
or financmg , It s best to exam- adequate equity or retirement
ine your overall fi!la~cial pic- plans that they can borrow
ture. How does th1s 1rnprove- against. Therefore they must
rnent fit in with your current look to other methods Use causituation? If it's already tough tion when borrowing money
to make ends meet, renovation and have all of the terms
expe~ses are probably not the spelled out, otherwise you
best 1dea. Ideally, you should could end up over your head
hav~ a ~ree-rnonth cushion of
Construction ·
loa~s:
s.avm~s 1!1 the bank, ~!ready be Construction loans are okay if
contn~utmg to a rellrement or the scope of your p,roject is so
·'
educatiOn plan , and not have
renovations interfere with these
obligations.
Smartest options
The smartest ways to finance
improvements are through
methods where you ' ll receive
tax deductions or pay as little
interest as possible. Borrowing
against the equity in your home
is one of the best ways to
achieve this . Here's a look at
your choices:
Hqme-equity loan: This is
good·' for a one-time remodeling project. The amount you
borrow and the interest rate are
fixed at the start of the loan .
These loans typically las~ 5 to
30 years and may have closing
costs ranging around $1 ,000 .
Home-equity line of credit
(HELOC): HELOCs operate
similar to a credit card . You
borrow only the amount you ·
need to finance against the
equity in your horne. The
downside is that HELOCs usually feature a variable rate , so
you have to be prepared to be
able to continue making payments even if the .interest rate
rises sharply. Interest payments
are tax-deductible, and closing
cost fees a{e. yecy low, twicalr
• •.~.-. • ! ' t . '!.• ·

·~

I'!'

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

· involved that you need ample through a contractor. He may
funds. These short-term, offer you· a great ~eal on
interest-only
loans
are financing that turns out' to be a
designed to be replaced by. a · scam. Look for an independent
regular mortgage once .the lender instead.
project is completed. They're
MBJKinloans:· You can borbased on the costs of con- row against the value of your
struction, or the future value investments with many broker-'
of your home, or both .
age houses. But a sharp drop in
Home-improvement center the market could result in a
project cards: Many chain "margin call." That means you ·
home-improvement centers either pay the loan back
have their own \ credit cards instantly or the brokerage sells .
that feature promotions and 0 the investments that secured
percent interest for an intro- the loan.
· ductory rate. If you can pay
A financial expert can walk
back the amount charged in a you through the other benefits ·
•6-month or less period of time, and downsides of these financthese are a good· option. But ing options. Just keep in mind
they can prove costly if you that financing and the economy
exceed the pay-back time and work hand in hand. In a slugstart accruing 18 percent inter- gish economy, ·lenders will be
est on purchases.
less likely to go for' risky loans
Credit cards: Credit cards and may scrutinize your applican be risky if you are not able cation much more thoroughly
to pay off the renovation pur- than in a booming market.
chases right -away. Otherwise,
high interest rates or teaser
rates that spike unexpectedly
can end up costing you much
more than you intended.
Contractor loans: Beware
of loans that . are supplied

. . ..• .•

,_

Gheen Rentals .
·Why Invest,
Rent For LESS I
-,·

34103 St. Rt. 7
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Owners:
Danny &amp; Randi ·Gheen

Phone: 741-992-1438
Fu: 748-99Z-0388
Email
gheearelltab@fropet.net

:Cc LIVING ROOM SIJITES
~ BE1JROOM SUITES
~ DINETTE SETS
~ TABLE GROUPS
~RECliNERS
~ CURIOS I CLOCKS

.

.

The right tools make gUtter cleaning qtJick and easy.

ll SAlE
$,.so Off Per square yd

· on select stvles

Sept. 1111Uhru Oct. 31st
Orders must be placed bV Oct. 31st to auallfV
nant sale contln.r-u~e,....s,"""vJ...-:.-t_
4247 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio
• • t I'

' .:.,

..

... ... ...

~·OIC-Wrl · ;

.'' 7 4Q-446-21.07

�I

Pages·

.

Fall Home Improvement.
.

~

-

-

..

.

.

--

Fnday, September 21,2001

Friday, ~ptember 21,2007

Fall .H ome Improvement

.

How much is that new kitchen go~to-~tyou?
(MS) - If you're like any
of the more than 7 million
pew owners of existing
homes sold 11\St year,_you're
probably looking at taking on
remodeling projects that will
update both style and func- ·
tionality. And the kitchen is
probably at the top of your "to
·
do" list.
According to a survey conducted in 2006 by Remodeling
magazine, the average, minor.
kitchen remodeling job will
cost about $18,000 while a
major kitchen remodeling project may cost up to $107 ,000!
If you're planning a kitclien
remodel in the near future, here
are some ideas that can save
you money iti the process, or
leave you with extra money for
the "must haves" on your project list.
Cabinets ar_e generally the
most expensive part of the
remodeling project. Custombuilt cabinets offer an unlimited number of options, but are
·also the most expensive.
Semi-custom cabinets offer a
good alternative. With the
number of styles, material and
hardware available today, you
can have a custom look without a custom price tag. Also,
refinishing your existing cabinets can provide an updated
look without the cost of
replacement.
Consider one of the new
luxury, laminate countertops
rather than solid surfacing or
granite. You could have
money -left over for the stainJess steel appliances you want.
And you will be pleasantly
surprised with the look and
quality of modem laminates .'
Wilsonart® HDTM High
DefinitionTM Laminate for
countertops has the rich look
and feel of natural or engineered stone at up to onequarter of the cost. Pair it with
one of the new bevel or ogee
edges now available and
you'll be showing off your
style and your good sense .
Today's laminate is extremely
durable and easy to clean
which is a real advantage for
today's busy families.
If you want. the look of
, stainless appliances, but aren't

~hange

the look of

your kitchen for
less.
audgetfri~ndly

· options
· like modem laminates have
·the look·
~!ld teel of

Aftef the construction contractors have finished ~ork, make -~ure
a ciean'itig contractor gets yourh,ome back i_
nto a livable condataon.

er ordering basic ~ppliances
with front "trim kits." You can
apply a metal or laminate
took-alike panel to the fronts
of refrigerators and dishwashers, and you've got the look
for less .

Making trade offs in options
is one cost-saving step.
Another way to maximize your
budget is to consider doing.
some of the work yourself to
save on labor costs ·- which
typically are about 20 percent
of the project cost.
Depending on your abilities
and the, time you have available, you can save by removing existing cabinetry and
countertops at ·the beginning
of the project and painting the
room yourself at the end of the
project. It's usually a good
idea to leave electrical, plumbing and installation work to
the experts .
A little planning before your
project starts and maybe a little
elbow grease of your own can
get you that new kitchen that
fits your lifestyle as well as
, _.,tltb~ftelpcitt itfafidt 't'• ~Oorbudget. . ;·. ·· , ,,. , , •.

·· Renewed:life through
after-temodeling cleant-Up
in to get your place in livable
and if ypu haven't
condition,
, A.KA •A5l&lt; ClliDY"
. begun - please make sure to
(MS) - If you are like most put it in your plan~ and budget.
Assessment/
who get involve4 with ho~
scheduling
• remodeling, you reac~ a pomt
Unfortunately,
many people
that . you are praying that the
contractors will finish and don't make the initial afterallow yo\lr family to get on remodeling cleaning plan and
with life. In fact, if you're consequently are often shocked
toward the end of ·the· process, when they realize that they
all of your family members are must add the cost to an already
feeling as they have eaten taxing budget. Well, allow ~e
about as much saw aust and to say that After-construction
sheetrock powder as remains in or After-remodeling Clean-up
the walls themselves .
is -an absolute imperative in
These carpenters are not the order for you family to be able
same as a cleaning service. If to move on with your lives.
you're lucky, your contract · Let me walk you through the
indicates that your remodeled process. Please realize ~at
rooms will be left "broom effective planning and coordinaswept." Therefore, if you've tion is just as necessary between
already begun your remodeling cleaning contractors and remodprocess. you realize that you're
........... c...n•up. n · ··
going·to have to bring cleaners.

BYC.,ntMNIMr

lqsels EledJonlcs
, ~

,, .

_ .. . .. ... • ._

WbedWt you•ce llePPtlC up to the plate for a mottgaee
)om or Cllh fo:r a home~ lbe Home Lom
'D!Iam

at,.,..

!aDk Can help.

\WD notody CUIIIDID1Z£ a Joan lbat fits your~ we'R
pmvkleyour~a~as

aalnwallt~

and allodler banking PJodltl!t$ you ~.

Maire Peoplet . . . tU 1rey player In your home lnandn8
pllm. No matm bow lim)Jie or fat-m.clJing yuur pals.

......,........
\

P,oples

Banka

�I

Pages·

.

Fall Home Improvement.
.

~

-

-

..

.

.

--

Fnday, September 21,2001

Friday, ~ptember 21,2007

Fall .H ome Improvement

.

How much is that new kitchen go~to-~tyou?
(MS) - If you're like any
of the more than 7 million
pew owners of existing
homes sold 11\St year,_you're
probably looking at taking on
remodeling projects that will
update both style and func- ·
tionality. And the kitchen is
probably at the top of your "to
·
do" list.
According to a survey conducted in 2006 by Remodeling
magazine, the average, minor.
kitchen remodeling job will
cost about $18,000 while a
major kitchen remodeling project may cost up to $107 ,000!
If you're planning a kitclien
remodel in the near future, here
are some ideas that can save
you money iti the process, or
leave you with extra money for
the "must haves" on your project list.
Cabinets ar_e generally the
most expensive part of the
remodeling project. Custombuilt cabinets offer an unlimited number of options, but are
·also the most expensive.
Semi-custom cabinets offer a
good alternative. With the
number of styles, material and
hardware available today, you
can have a custom look without a custom price tag. Also,
refinishing your existing cabinets can provide an updated
look without the cost of
replacement.
Consider one of the new
luxury, laminate countertops
rather than solid surfacing or
granite. You could have
money -left over for the stainJess steel appliances you want.
And you will be pleasantly
surprised with the look and
quality of modem laminates .'
Wilsonart® HDTM High
DefinitionTM Laminate for
countertops has the rich look
and feel of natural or engineered stone at up to onequarter of the cost. Pair it with
one of the new bevel or ogee
edges now available and
you'll be showing off your
style and your good sense .
Today's laminate is extremely
durable and easy to clean
which is a real advantage for
today's busy families.
If you want. the look of
, stainless appliances, but aren't

~hange

the look of

your kitchen for
less.
audgetfri~ndly

· options
· like modem laminates have
·the look·
~!ld teel of

Aftef the construction contractors have finished ~ork, make -~ure
a ciean'itig contractor gets yourh,ome back i_
nto a livable condataon.

er ordering basic ~ppliances
with front "trim kits." You can
apply a metal or laminate
took-alike panel to the fronts
of refrigerators and dishwashers, and you've got the look
for less .

Making trade offs in options
is one cost-saving step.
Another way to maximize your
budget is to consider doing.
some of the work yourself to
save on labor costs ·- which
typically are about 20 percent
of the project cost.
Depending on your abilities
and the, time you have available, you can save by removing existing cabinetry and
countertops at ·the beginning
of the project and painting the
room yourself at the end of the
project. It's usually a good
idea to leave electrical, plumbing and installation work to
the experts .
A little planning before your
project starts and maybe a little
elbow grease of your own can
get you that new kitchen that
fits your lifestyle as well as
, _.,tltb~ftelpcitt itfafidt 't'• ~Oorbudget. . ;·. ·· , ,,. , , •.

·· Renewed:life through
after-temodeling cleant-Up
in to get your place in livable
and if ypu haven't
condition,
, A.KA •A5l&lt; ClliDY"
. begun - please make sure to
(MS) - If you are like most put it in your plan~ and budget.
Assessment/
who get involve4 with ho~
scheduling
• remodeling, you reac~ a pomt
Unfortunately,
many people
that . you are praying that the
contractors will finish and don't make the initial afterallow yo\lr family to get on remodeling cleaning plan and
with life. In fact, if you're consequently are often shocked
toward the end of ·the· process, when they realize that they
all of your family members are must add the cost to an already
feeling as they have eaten taxing budget. Well, allow ~e
about as much saw aust and to say that After-construction
sheetrock powder as remains in or After-remodeling Clean-up
the walls themselves .
is -an absolute imperative in
These carpenters are not the order for you family to be able
same as a cleaning service. If to move on with your lives.
you're lucky, your contract · Let me walk you through the
indicates that your remodeled process. Please realize ~at
rooms will be left "broom effective planning and coordinaswept." Therefore, if you've tion is just as necessary between
already begun your remodeling cleaning contractors and remodprocess. you realize that you're
........... c...n•up. n · ··
going·to have to bring cleaners.

BYC.,ntMNIMr

lqsels EledJonlcs
, ~

,, .

_ .. . .. ... • ._

WbedWt you•ce llePPtlC up to the plate for a mottgaee
)om or Cllh fo:r a home~ lbe Home Lom
'D!Iam

at,.,..

!aDk Can help.

\WD notody CUIIIDID1Z£ a Joan lbat fits your~ we'R
pmvkleyour~a~as

aalnwallt~

and allodler banking PJodltl!t$ you ~.

Maire Peoplet . . . tU 1rey player In your home lnandn8
pllm. No matm bow lim)Jie or fat-m.clJing yuur pals.

......,........
\

P,oples

Banka

�'

Fall Home Improy.eme_.t

Page 10 •

Friday, September 21, 2AI07

. .........

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

~

..

~

Fall Home Improvement

Friday, September 21, 2007

• Page 11

How to avoid~rs_ofpollutionwhen.w~z~~--1. (MS) - W1th global wru:rnmg and energy consumption
becoming ever present issues
in our daily lives, ' more and
more .· A111ericans are · now
choosing ' to weatheriZe · their
homes in order tO reduce the
amount of energy required for
heating and cooling. What we
often neglect during this
process, however, are the steps
we should -also take to minimize the dangers from poilution sources inside our homes.
In the last several years, a
growing body of scientific evidence' has indicated that the air
within homes can be more seriousiJ polluted th~UI the outdoor
air in even.the largest and most
industrialized
cities.
According
to
the
EnvirQnmental
Protection
Agency (EPA), people spend
approximately 90 percent of
their time indoors, especially
during the cold winter months.
Thus, for many people, the
risks to health may be greater
due to exposure to air pollution
indoors than outdoors.
. Measures such as installing
storm windows, weather stripping, caulking and blown-in
wall insulation can reduce the
amount of outdoor air infiltrating into a home. Consequently,
after winterizing, concentrations of indoor air pollutants

Condo
from Ptige4

,;
l

'·
I

'

been waiting years for - a
compact air exchanger for limited spaces.
The compact Venmar AVS
Constructo I .0 air exchanger,
which fits into the bulkhead of
a laundry room or closet, draws
fresh air directly from outside,
and passes it through a core
that transfers energy from the
outgoing stale air - without
contaminating the fresh air.
· ''This technology has alre9dy
been widely adopted in the single family home industry, but is'
a latecomer to high-rise projects," says Gagnon. ''The unit
Jets your home 'breathe' effectively by , providing fi'esh air
through. ~h8nical ventilation

fro~, source~

cra~k

IJl.Slde the home of t!Je. home), or simply
·can mcrease.
the wmdow to prevent mms.According to Gerry Gagnon, ture buildup. · .
product and market manager
• When·;a wood fire is prefor Venmar Ventilation, first sent, a wiQdow. should always
clues of poor indoor air in your ' be kept o~n - especially in
home are tlie' signs of inade- a tightly sealed, energy effi~
quate ventilation, sitch as stu(fy· ciebthou~ .
air, moisture condensation ~!1 _ • wvc;st .ffi -,~- qulj}ity range
cold surfaces, or mold · and hoOd that Wiltoffer' high-permildew growth. ·"It's crucial formancie: ventil~on· to effecthat additional Weatherit.atij:m tiv4llY eli~inate pollution,
measures should not be under· ex~s moisture and gas emistaken until these problems have sions in the kitchen from every
been corrected," be advised.
day cooking.
, ·
In most cases, homes have an
• Install a carbon monoxide·
overly humid basement that detector on every .floor of the
breeds molds and other house.
unbealthy micro-organisms.
• Make s~re a home's roof
Most homes have more than·
one source that contributeS 'to ,
indoor air pollution. Some of
these sources can include
smoke, dust, pet dander, radon,
mold and other pollutants
which can JX&gt;Sf: serious health
risks and contribUte to respiratory disease, asthma and even
lung cancer.
Fortunately, there are steps
that you can take both to
reduce the risk from these
existing sources and to prevent
new problems from occuning.
Here are some tips to consider:
• Operate bathroom fans, if
present, to remove moisture
from showers (these fans
should be ducted to the outside

and at the same time ensures
the best indoor air quality by
trapping airborne allergens
such as pollen, dust, pet dander,
mold an&lt;;! bacteria through its
HEPA filter," added Gagnon.
The HEPA filter traps and
removes up to 99.97 percent of
airborne allergens and assists
in distributing fresh air
throughout the home . The compact air exchanger is 20-percent smaller than comparable
units and can fit almost anywhere. It is the ideal choice for
condos, small pre-fabricated
and tract houses, apartments,
cottages and other limited
space
applications.
The
Constructo 1.0 air exchanger is
sold exclusively through
HVAC contractors. More information on compact air
exchangers is available at
www.venmar.ca.

.ar~

g~.: -~9~' ~ '~..;'~;'~«­

.a nd wmdpws
m
shape. Water; ie~s. t:onden· sation and' ~~evated:. -levels of
huplidity_·may .not be visible,
but moi~ture in .interior wall ·.
spaces can encourage mold ·
growth and structural degradation.
..
o For optimal air quality,
Gagnon recommends you
invest iri an air exchanger systern that will both filter out
harmful pollutants and distribute fresh tempered air throughout '1be home, sufh as the air
exchanger
system
from
Venmar. It combines -heat ·
recovery ventilation and HEPA
filtration.
filter

g~nS'llbd assists. ~ ili$~f,utmg.
f~sh al~ ~\lkh9Ut ~~me{

. £More t¥.tail~W,_,: ~¥/it'S
of\i~'}#lation qtl4filtratjD~ ~

available at ~.yi!ml~r.ca. ·
·

Roofing Panels Now 1n stock 29 guage
.
lpalnted. Prefinished lnWhlte for pole bams, porches
more Model WMBne 12' ...................'22.88
..........." ......... •1.5.12

Red, .,..._ ofplv.nl:ald IMtll

59.99
12'••••• 69.99
1••..... 79.99
10'•••••

699
lweiiiHo.-Feld
50.Lb. 12% protein.

For good '-llh.
Modei35DP
0041943
- --------- ------

. ' Hl~b·t675.1537
: fX. 304.675.1539

~

~

49.99

3999

Bup-R·Biock
-

- . . .. S"Pfflen*d

blodltor- C8UII on pulunl.
ConcaJns mc'atset, grain productl,vlamkW, rninerall

Auldenll81
~

and Ufllll. 24% Protein. 200-lb. 01095

24'1n stock for
Immediate

delivery. 24TRUSS

Rush Steel

Doors
Pre-hung exttll'lor
lnsulatsd Steel
doors. Include
jambs &amp; casings.
Ready to Install. 32" or 38" Right or
left hand.
6-Panel....... 144.118
9·Ute... 111.18

Dr~~lnage

TUttlilg

·pip••

Dai1'1WiiN·autv*rt
~
10"x20' CUiftlrt,•• $1o9.99 ,.
1~CUIYaftooo$139.99 . o
,.

"1

•

.,

11"x20' c:t~Mt,t...s17e.n··

~.

50°/o off

Kitchen Ceblnetry
Choose from many styles, colora
and finishes.

.......................
.,..,., ..

Garage DcH:ar

CDS!¥1... IMIIVIIIIIIItle,

o,.._

112 HP a. . D41or
........ ..,.... hculttr .......

MadeiUCIMM

M72U

f

·
••

�'

Fall Home Improy.eme_.t

Page 10 •

Friday, September 21, 2AI07

. .........

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

~

..

~

Fall Home Improvement

Friday, September 21, 2007

• Page 11

How to avoid~rs_ofpollutionwhen.w~z~~--1. (MS) - W1th global wru:rnmg and energy consumption
becoming ever present issues
in our daily lives, ' more and
more .· A111ericans are · now
choosing ' to weatheriZe · their
homes in order tO reduce the
amount of energy required for
heating and cooling. What we
often neglect during this
process, however, are the steps
we should -also take to minimize the dangers from poilution sources inside our homes.
In the last several years, a
growing body of scientific evidence' has indicated that the air
within homes can be more seriousiJ polluted th~UI the outdoor
air in even.the largest and most
industrialized
cities.
According
to
the
EnvirQnmental
Protection
Agency (EPA), people spend
approximately 90 percent of
their time indoors, especially
during the cold winter months.
Thus, for many people, the
risks to health may be greater
due to exposure to air pollution
indoors than outdoors.
. Measures such as installing
storm windows, weather stripping, caulking and blown-in
wall insulation can reduce the
amount of outdoor air infiltrating into a home. Consequently,
after winterizing, concentrations of indoor air pollutants

Condo
from Ptige4

,;
l

'·
I

'

been waiting years for - a
compact air exchanger for limited spaces.
The compact Venmar AVS
Constructo I .0 air exchanger,
which fits into the bulkhead of
a laundry room or closet, draws
fresh air directly from outside,
and passes it through a core
that transfers energy from the
outgoing stale air - without
contaminating the fresh air.
· ''This technology has alre9dy
been widely adopted in the single family home industry, but is'
a latecomer to high-rise projects," says Gagnon. ''The unit
Jets your home 'breathe' effectively by , providing fi'esh air
through. ~h8nical ventilation

fro~, source~

cra~k

IJl.Slde the home of t!Je. home), or simply
·can mcrease.
the wmdow to prevent mms.According to Gerry Gagnon, ture buildup. · .
product and market manager
• When·;a wood fire is prefor Venmar Ventilation, first sent, a wiQdow. should always
clues of poor indoor air in your ' be kept o~n - especially in
home are tlie' signs of inade- a tightly sealed, energy effi~
quate ventilation, sitch as stu(fy· ciebthou~ .
air, moisture condensation ~!1 _ • wvc;st .ffi -,~- qulj}ity range
cold surfaces, or mold · and hoOd that Wiltoffer' high-permildew growth. ·"It's crucial formancie: ventil~on· to effecthat additional Weatherit.atij:m tiv4llY eli~inate pollution,
measures should not be under· ex~s moisture and gas emistaken until these problems have sions in the kitchen from every
been corrected," be advised.
day cooking.
, ·
In most cases, homes have an
• Install a carbon monoxide·
overly humid basement that detector on every .floor of the
breeds molds and other house.
unbealthy micro-organisms.
• Make s~re a home's roof
Most homes have more than·
one source that contributeS 'to ,
indoor air pollution. Some of
these sources can include
smoke, dust, pet dander, radon,
mold and other pollutants
which can JX&gt;Sf: serious health
risks and contribUte to respiratory disease, asthma and even
lung cancer.
Fortunately, there are steps
that you can take both to
reduce the risk from these
existing sources and to prevent
new problems from occuning.
Here are some tips to consider:
• Operate bathroom fans, if
present, to remove moisture
from showers (these fans
should be ducted to the outside

and at the same time ensures
the best indoor air quality by
trapping airborne allergens
such as pollen, dust, pet dander,
mold an&lt;;! bacteria through its
HEPA filter," added Gagnon.
The HEPA filter traps and
removes up to 99.97 percent of
airborne allergens and assists
in distributing fresh air
throughout the home . The compact air exchanger is 20-percent smaller than comparable
units and can fit almost anywhere. It is the ideal choice for
condos, small pre-fabricated
and tract houses, apartments,
cottages and other limited
space
applications.
The
Constructo 1.0 air exchanger is
sold exclusively through
HVAC contractors. More information on compact air
exchangers is available at
www.venmar.ca.

.ar~

g~.: -~9~' ~ '~..;'~;'~«­

.a nd wmdpws
m
shape. Water; ie~s. t:onden· sation and' ~~evated:. -levels of
huplidity_·may .not be visible,
but moi~ture in .interior wall ·.
spaces can encourage mold ·
growth and structural degradation.
..
o For optimal air quality,
Gagnon recommends you
invest iri an air exchanger systern that will both filter out
harmful pollutants and distribute fresh tempered air throughout '1be home, sufh as the air
exchanger
system
from
Venmar. It combines -heat ·
recovery ventilation and HEPA
filtration.
filter

g~nS'llbd assists. ~ ili$~f,utmg.
f~sh al~ ~\lkh9Ut ~~me{

. £More t¥.tail~W,_,: ~¥/it'S
of\i~'}#lation qtl4filtratjD~ ~

available at ~.yi!ml~r.ca. ·
·

Roofing Panels Now 1n stock 29 guage
.
lpalnted. Prefinished lnWhlte for pole bams, porches
more Model WMBne 12' ...................'22.88
..........." ......... •1.5.12

Red, .,..._ ofplv.nl:ald IMtll

59.99
12'••••• 69.99
1••..... 79.99
10'•••••

699
lweiiiHo.-Feld
50.Lb. 12% protein.

For good '-llh.
Modei35DP
0041943
- --------- ------

. ' Hl~b·t675.1537
: fX. 304.675.1539

~

~

49.99

3999

Bup-R·Biock
-

- . . .. S"Pfflen*d

blodltor- C8UII on pulunl.
ConcaJns mc'atset, grain productl,vlamkW, rninerall

Auldenll81
~

and Ufllll. 24% Protein. 200-lb. 01095

24'1n stock for
Immediate

delivery. 24TRUSS

Rush Steel

Doors
Pre-hung exttll'lor
lnsulatsd Steel
doors. Include
jambs &amp; casings.
Ready to Install. 32" or 38" Right or
left hand.
6-Panel....... 144.118
9·Ute... 111.18

Dr~~lnage

TUttlilg

·pip••

Dai1'1WiiN·autv*rt
~
10"x20' CUiftlrt,•• $1o9.99 ,.
1~CUIYaftooo$139.99 . o
,.

"1

•

.,

11"x20' c:t~Mt,t...s17e.n··

~.

50°/o off

Kitchen Ceblnetry
Choose from many styles, colora
and finishes.

.......................
.,..,., ..

Garage DcH:ar

CDS!¥1... IMIIVIIIIIIItle,

o,.._

112 HP a. . D41or
........ ..,.... hculttr .......

MadeiUCIMM

M72U

f

·
••

�--

--~

..,__,,_ ...,..__ _ _..

. . ,.. . , · - · · - ·_ _,.,._ _ _ _ _ _...._

lsal.,.,_..
_...,.____ ..,.,.,....,, ____.,._,.,_,.,;,.,-·•'*'*-.-a-"' ... ~--,i ~i!

..._ _ _ _,..,
. .q;....
q:...

JMlllf'"'*'~.f... ~ ~~H"'I...._,.,,

_,.,....."illl'l'll'!''1fl;illl
-~

.'

Friday, SeP.tell,lber 21, 'J,,fY1
'

~

•

l

l

square
for trom
vinyl $1.45
composiflooringfoot
range
per
um;i:J,e.ta $12 per square foot

t~

..

·" \ , l f "? lfir&lt;l'fl"'\o. .. .,_ , ... , . , .

~ ..

..

.

.

hn1&lt;nt1 .r~~n"l niJiM lr,is~ramie.:iltl(}

Starting At

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Call me today for a.quote.

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. ~ ........'. ~._ ...·•.._·''
-

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.

1

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• , \,.._ .... ... " .,

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BACK TO SCHOOL ·:
RUGRIT SPECIAL

HOME/CA
Combine your

~;

·· Web·&lt;site

having the middle of the tele- consulting an electrician for
visiop ..be eye level when sit- such a job as well as your
ting on the couch. Some building code , which might
fromP9,2
homeowners feel hanging a prohibit runoing power cables
television at such a height inside a wall.
• Take your time. While it' s
site www.mountingtips.com . · will make the TV seem too
Designed exclusively to aid . low, taking away some of its natural to want to get your
consumers in mounting and decorative appeal in the flat-panel television up and
installing their new televisions, process. If that's a concern , running as soon as possible ,
www.mountingtips .com fea- try hanging your television so keep in mind mounting a teletures selection guideliqes, the bottom of the screen is at vision typically takes a propractical "how to" installation eye level while you ' re sitting fessional a couple of hours .
That said , do-it-yourselfers
tips and. answers to commonly on the couch .
should
set aside twice that
asked questions. Here are a few
• Eliminate "cable" TV. Few
tips from the site for those who things look worse than a flat- amount of time .
For those still looking for the
are getting ready .to or have pane!. television with cables
right
mount to fit their televialready purchased a flat-screen dangling underneath. It's often
sion,_the
Premier Mounts brand
television .
best to· cut a hole in the wall
• Practice makes perfect. If behind the screen and snake the is available nationwide at Sears
you're unsure about where to wires through the wall to where department stores , Fry's and
hang your flat-panel televi- your AIV geai is . However, Staples or online at Target or
Premier Mounts .
sion , try hanging a poster or Premier Mounts recommends
picture in the place you're
thinking of hanging your tele- . ·:.:APPLIANCE..WARII!;HOUSE
l!xcellent eavlnga' on· lillln. . ., ·IJIIefrlgeratora
vision . Leave the "filler" there
~
. and TV's:
.
for a few days, and if it still
•
.NAppliances
looks good after the trial peri,, ~ Appliances
od, then chances are strong
., Waahe(8101yer&amp;
your television will look good
. • Refrigerators
there as well.
•Stoves
• 31).:.120 Day Warranties
• Hang it right the first time .
• 9'8rYice w~ &amp; Parts
Rather than hanging it once
•
WhOI-.eale
and then deciding to later
hang it at a different height,
Herldetson. West Vlrglnl~"
Pr.e mier Mounts suggests
'

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

SAV
HOM

'

•Page 13

'

buckets, broo=mops.
It is very important to
from Page 9
. remember that getting rid of
dust is a multi-phase process.
eling·oontriictors as between dif- After my crews vacuum up as
ferent trade's contractors (i.e., much dust as possible, I expect
carpenters, plumbers and electri- them to have to go over dustdans); Failure to properly coor- ridden surfaces at least three
dinate the cleaning task with the times (base · clean/su.rface
c&lt;&gt;mpletion of the remodeling clean/finish clean) . Please
work will only create confusion, remember that dust travels to
frustration and wasted time and some of the most unlikely
money. You must schedule your places ,"Some of the areas that I
cleaners after remodeling- is fin- always recommend my cusished.
tomers target are atti&lt;;s and
· The fir~t thing to do, in con- cr11w! spaces. One might say
nection with the. plan, is for the "why not let sleeping dogs.
cleaning contractor to conduct lie?" The trouble with that reaa complete waiiNhrough of the · soning is that dust in attics and
home. Decide priorities and crawl spaces never sleeps - it
make sure that the contractor is only takes short naps. What
thinking detailed cleaning . you 'II find is that it will con tinThat means simply that the ue to resurface in your general
clea~g crew must go after living . areas over and over,
that dust that has settled on thereby shortening the time
everjthing and·everywhere.
between house cleanings.
' .N"eeSsary· equipment
You'll say to yourself, "Boy!
A-list of equipment that is We just had the cleaning team
absOlutely essential for the task here, but it looks like they didis a back~)( vacuum with noz- n't do a good job,"
_zle or crevice tool attachment as
All in all, yoq will fmd that if
well .as the upholstery" brush. · you coordinate your con,tracThis will ·be · needed to reach tors well (including cleaning
those hard-to-get-at comers, contractor) and if you use the
edges anc;J.Jedges. You'll need right equipment and process in
lamb's wool hi_gh dusters to cle;ining, you will have a .true
reach into electrical fixtures and "new lease. on life" when your
recessed lights. The following last contractor leaves _your
are Qt:her items that will be need- premises. You· gu~ssed it ed: .$-foot ' Iaddi&lt;r, wet=&lt;hy vac _ that last contractor needs to be
for heavy dirt and dust removal, . the
clean~g
contractor.
·
filtration masks, and of course, Enjoy!!!

for bamboo and hardwood. ing can gain il fresh, new
Costs for linoleum, cork, rub- _!lppearance with refinishing for
ber, sheet vinyl, carpet, and roughly half the cost of replacceramic tile fall in between.
ing carpet or other flooring
Since the comparison consid- options. ·
ers useable product life,
A well-managed and renewreplacement, cleaning, and able resource, American hardlabor costs over IS years, prod- woods grow .abun\fantly in
ucts with some of the lowest North American forests . . In
initial costs wind up having the fact, nearly · twice as much·
highest total life-cycle costs. In · hardwood grows each year as
fact, among the dozen flooring is harvested in the U.S., and the
materials compared, hardwood; volume of hardwoods today is
rubber and bamboo .flooring 90 percent larger than it was 50
have the lowest total cost at IS years ago.
years.
After its useful life is over
)leplacement and renewaIn choosing an environmenbility
tally friendly flooring materiBesides its warmth, beauty al , consumers should consider
and authenticity, American what hap~ns to old building
hardwoods come out ahead in materials after their useful
two significant ways: replace- life. Many end up in landfills,
ment cost and tenewability.
where they can sit for literally
Hardwood floors caA iast 25 , hundreds of years. Hardwood
30, even 50 years - or more. floors , however, are reuseBroadloom and tile carpeting, able, .
recyclable
and
on the other hand , because of biodegradable .
its four- to six-year life span,
Indoor air quality and well·
needs to be replaced three
being
times more frequently over a
In addition to being more
IS-year life span than a hardeconomical over the long run,
wood floor. After IS or 20
years of use, har9wood . floorPleese see Floors, 18

save up to 2096

.

. e ·l e
_
.:.~-n•u p

~.

Hardwood floors ·caD be less·
.expeDSive than cheaper
alternatives - healthier, too
(MS) - Homeowners love
everything about hardwood
floors except the cost. Yet,
according to industry experts,
if homeowners consider other
factors beyond initial purchase
price and installation, they will
... find that hardwoods are actually less expensive overall than
sheet vinyl, linoleum, carpet,
and other alternatives.
In fact , once you figure in
maintenance,
useful
life
expectancy and disposal of old
materials , hardwoods are a
more economical choice than .
other popular flooring materials. And here's a bonus: they 're
earth-friendly and naturally
abundant, too. One of the original "green" building materials,
today's hardwood forests grow
far more wood than is harvested from them every year, says
the American
Hardwood
Information
Center
at
www.hardwoodinfo.com. At
current volumes, that ensures
- , American hardwoods will be
around for generations to
come.
What hardwood ·floors
really cost
Sue Tartaglio, interior
designer at Burt Hill, an
architecture firm in southwestern
Pennsylvania,
recently developed a lifecycle cost comparison of a
dozen frequently used synthetic and natural flooring
products. Her study, based on
maintenance and life-cycle
costs published by flooring
manufacturers .and conversations with their representatives, shows that in facilities
with a lifetime use of more
than 15 years ·-s uch as the
average home - hardwood
flooring has significantly
lower life-cycle costs than
other .flooring material s
despite higher upfront costs .
Accordi!lg to Tartaglio's
study, tbe average installed
costs for common types of

Friday, September 21, 2007.

ta•""

Cleaning Solution
·
"Let Us Show You Red Carpet Treatment"

:!:~1~~:
Since 1986
3 Rooms

118

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'l" ...._ . . , _ _ _ ...

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Add a Hall

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TwiR Set ... $279
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King Set ... $599

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Full Set ..... $549
King Set ... $899

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'':From Our :Home to Yours"

MDRdiS Corbin U Snyder Furniture Co.
955 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 45631

store Hours

9

.!~~ pm

liil-Tuee- Set

(740) 446-1171 or 1-&amp;oo-664·5462
h~- s pm
·. I ' ' . ,·
• L:.;··;.;·;.;
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Combine your

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·· Web·&lt;site

having the middle of the tele- consulting an electrician for
visiop ..be eye level when sit- such a job as well as your
ting on the couch. Some building code , which might
fromP9,2
homeowners feel hanging a prohibit runoing power cables
television at such a height inside a wall.
• Take your time. While it' s
site www.mountingtips.com . · will make the TV seem too
Designed exclusively to aid . low, taking away some of its natural to want to get your
consumers in mounting and decorative appeal in the flat-panel television up and
installing their new televisions, process. If that's a concern , running as soon as possible ,
www.mountingtips .com fea- try hanging your television so keep in mind mounting a teletures selection guideliqes, the bottom of the screen is at vision typically takes a propractical "how to" installation eye level while you ' re sitting fessional a couple of hours .
That said , do-it-yourselfers
tips and. answers to commonly on the couch .
should
set aside twice that
asked questions. Here are a few
• Eliminate "cable" TV. Few
tips from the site for those who things look worse than a flat- amount of time .
For those still looking for the
are getting ready .to or have pane!. television with cables
right
mount to fit their televialready purchased a flat-screen dangling underneath. It's often
sion,_the
Premier Mounts brand
television .
best to· cut a hole in the wall
• Practice makes perfect. If behind the screen and snake the is available nationwide at Sears
you're unsure about where to wires through the wall to where department stores , Fry's and
hang your flat-panel televi- your AIV geai is . However, Staples or online at Target or
Premier Mounts .
sion , try hanging a poster or Premier Mounts recommends
picture in the place you're
thinking of hanging your tele- . ·:.:APPLIANCE..WARII!;HOUSE
l!xcellent eavlnga' on· lillln. . ., ·IJIIefrlgeratora
vision . Leave the "filler" there
~
. and TV's:
.
for a few days, and if it still
•
.NAppliances
looks good after the trial peri,, ~ Appliances
od, then chances are strong
., Waahe(8101yer&amp;
your television will look good
. • Refrigerators
there as well.
•Stoves
• 31).:.120 Day Warranties
• Hang it right the first time .
• 9'8rYice w~ &amp; Parts
Rather than hanging it once
•
WhOI-.eale
and then deciding to later
hang it at a different height,
Herldetson. West Vlrglnl~"
Pr.e mier Mounts suggests
'

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

SAV
HOM

'

•Page 13

'

buckets, broo=mops.
It is very important to
from Page 9
. remember that getting rid of
dust is a multi-phase process.
eling·oontriictors as between dif- After my crews vacuum up as
ferent trade's contractors (i.e., much dust as possible, I expect
carpenters, plumbers and electri- them to have to go over dustdans); Failure to properly coor- ridden surfaces at least three
dinate the cleaning task with the times (base · clean/su.rface
c&lt;&gt;mpletion of the remodeling clean/finish clean) . Please
work will only create confusion, remember that dust travels to
frustration and wasted time and some of the most unlikely
money. You must schedule your places ,"Some of the areas that I
cleaners after remodeling- is fin- always recommend my cusished.
tomers target are atti&lt;;s and
· The fir~t thing to do, in con- cr11w! spaces. One might say
nection with the. plan, is for the "why not let sleeping dogs.
cleaning contractor to conduct lie?" The trouble with that reaa complete waiiNhrough of the · soning is that dust in attics and
home. Decide priorities and crawl spaces never sleeps - it
make sure that the contractor is only takes short naps. What
thinking detailed cleaning . you 'II find is that it will con tinThat means simply that the ue to resurface in your general
clea~g crew must go after living . areas over and over,
that dust that has settled on thereby shortening the time
everjthing and·everywhere.
between house cleanings.
' .N"eeSsary· equipment
You'll say to yourself, "Boy!
A-list of equipment that is We just had the cleaning team
absOlutely essential for the task here, but it looks like they didis a back~)( vacuum with noz- n't do a good job,"
_zle or crevice tool attachment as
All in all, yoq will fmd that if
well .as the upholstery" brush. · you coordinate your con,tracThis will ·be · needed to reach tors well (including cleaning
those hard-to-get-at comers, contractor) and if you use the
edges anc;J.Jedges. You'll need right equipment and process in
lamb's wool hi_gh dusters to cle;ining, you will have a .true
reach into electrical fixtures and "new lease. on life" when your
recessed lights. The following last contractor leaves _your
are Qt:her items that will be need- premises. You· gu~ssed it ed: .$-foot ' Iaddi&lt;r, wet=&lt;hy vac _ that last contractor needs to be
for heavy dirt and dust removal, . the
clean~g
contractor.
·
filtration masks, and of course, Enjoy!!!

for bamboo and hardwood. ing can gain il fresh, new
Costs for linoleum, cork, rub- _!lppearance with refinishing for
ber, sheet vinyl, carpet, and roughly half the cost of replacceramic tile fall in between.
ing carpet or other flooring
Since the comparison consid- options. ·
ers useable product life,
A well-managed and renewreplacement, cleaning, and able resource, American hardlabor costs over IS years, prod- woods grow .abun\fantly in
ucts with some of the lowest North American forests . . In
initial costs wind up having the fact, nearly · twice as much·
highest total life-cycle costs. In · hardwood grows each year as
fact, among the dozen flooring is harvested in the U.S., and the
materials compared, hardwood; volume of hardwoods today is
rubber and bamboo .flooring 90 percent larger than it was 50
have the lowest total cost at IS years ago.
years.
After its useful life is over
)leplacement and renewaIn choosing an environmenbility
tally friendly flooring materiBesides its warmth, beauty al , consumers should consider
and authenticity, American what hap~ns to old building
hardwoods come out ahead in materials after their useful
two significant ways: replace- life. Many end up in landfills,
ment cost and tenewability.
where they can sit for literally
Hardwood floors caA iast 25 , hundreds of years. Hardwood
30, even 50 years - or more. floors , however, are reuseBroadloom and tile carpeting, able, .
recyclable
and
on the other hand , because of biodegradable .
its four- to six-year life span,
Indoor air quality and well·
needs to be replaced three
being
times more frequently over a
In addition to being more
IS-year life span than a hardeconomical over the long run,
wood floor. After IS or 20
years of use, har9wood . floorPleese see Floors, 18

save up to 2096

.

. e ·l e
_
.:.~-n•u p

~.

Hardwood floors ·caD be less·
.expeDSive than cheaper
alternatives - healthier, too
(MS) - Homeowners love
everything about hardwood
floors except the cost. Yet,
according to industry experts,
if homeowners consider other
factors beyond initial purchase
price and installation, they will
... find that hardwoods are actually less expensive overall than
sheet vinyl, linoleum, carpet,
and other alternatives.
In fact , once you figure in
maintenance,
useful
life
expectancy and disposal of old
materials , hardwoods are a
more economical choice than .
other popular flooring materials. And here's a bonus: they 're
earth-friendly and naturally
abundant, too. One of the original "green" building materials,
today's hardwood forests grow
far more wood than is harvested from them every year, says
the American
Hardwood
Information
Center
at
www.hardwoodinfo.com. At
current volumes, that ensures
- , American hardwoods will be
around for generations to
come.
What hardwood ·floors
really cost
Sue Tartaglio, interior
designer at Burt Hill, an
architecture firm in southwestern
Pennsylvania,
recently developed a lifecycle cost comparison of a
dozen frequently used synthetic and natural flooring
products. Her study, based on
maintenance and life-cycle
costs published by flooring
manufacturers .and conversations with their representatives, shows that in facilities
with a lifetime use of more
than 15 years ·-s uch as the
average home - hardwood
flooring has significantly
lower life-cycle costs than
other .flooring material s
despite higher upfront costs .
Accordi!lg to Tartaglio's
study, tbe average installed
costs for common types of

Friday, September 21, 2007.

ta•""

Cleaning Solution
·
"Let Us Show You Red Carpet Treatment"

:!:~1~~:
Since 1986
3 Rooms

118

1-888-992·7090

Clean
$99•95

..

;.::

&amp; Chair

o._...,,. .... _....

'l" ...._ . . , _ _ _ ...

~

Rooms $28.00
Add a Hall

Sofa
Loveseat

Each Additional

.

$139

_,..,r~aa~.

_,..,

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

-~~-- .. --.
\ 1 " . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . I I f "

ff

•

151ool
"fl • •• I . . . .. "

t

Ill. ~ ... . , .

_,......_...,

*"• •

I . I ... .

I
I
I
1
1

SOUTHMONT

PRISTINE

Firm

EuroTop

$689
TwiR Set ... $279
~~Full Set ... ..$349
King Set ... $599

Delivery

Queen
Sci

Twin Set ... $449
Full Set ..... $549
King Set ... $899

BACK

BACK

FREE

SUPPORTR

SUPPORTR
Plush

I

Set-Up _

Pillow Top

I
I

FREE
Removal

$799 °~:'"

I

1
1
I

Full Set ..... $699
King Set ..$1160

or old bedding

12

ssso Q~:~·

'':From Our :Home to Yours"

MDRdiS Corbin U Snyder Furniture Co.
955 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 45631

store Hours

9

.!~~ pm

liil-Tuee- Set

(740) 446-1171 or 1-&amp;oo-664·5462
h~- s pm
·. I ' ' . ,·
• L:.;··;.;·;.;
·:.:.·;-..:..;
· ·;.;·:.:·..:.·.:.·.:.
· .:.··;..·;.;·:.:;·..:.·.:.··;..
· ·;.;·;.;·:.:·.:!~~~~~~~~~~:;,.:..;.;_,:.:.:.;.;.,.::~.;.·:.·.;-~~-~~~
.............

~­

�·;

I

.

Friday, ~mber 21,2007

1I

{

~

..

.,. '

'·

',

!

'

'"

• Page 15

(MS) -'-- With winter just fied · contractor. A pre-season
around the corner, now is the tune-up and filter change is a
time to give your home a win- good investment. It reduces the
terizing "check-up" with the chances of breakdowns in the
following home weatherizing middle of winter, improves
safety, and pays for itself
checklist.
Here are five tips on what to through more energy efficient
look for and take care of so operation.
2. Have your system.checked
your home is ready for those
cold north winds. According to for carbon monoxide. A good
· the experts at Venmar .contractor will also offer to test
Ventilation, th~re are five your system for hazardous carmajor steps to consider when bon monoxide, which can be
winterizing
your
home produced by a dirty or mal(www.venmar.ca).
functioning gas or oil furnace
I . Have your heating system or watt'!r heater. Install ·a low
cleaned and tuned by a quali- level carbon monoxide alarm.

Every home should have at
least one C!lrbon · monoxide
alartn. ·
3. Have your duct .system
tested for air leaks. Many think
that windows and doors are the
major cause of a home's air
leaks. But according to recent
by
the
U.S.
research
Department of Energy, gaps
and cracks in the· typical
home's duct system are much
more signifacant. The typical
duct system loses 25 percent to
40 percent of the energy put out
by the central furnace, heat or
air conditioner. Leaks are usu-

Stay safe under the holiday lights
(MS) - When asked to pick
their favorite holiday films,
movie buffs almost always
name "National Lampoon's
Christmas Vacation" as one of
their favorite yuletide comedies. Among the more notable
struggles faced by protagonist
Clark Griswold in the film is
stringing up the Christmas
lights on his home.
While audiences can laugh at
· Clark's flirtations with death
during this ordeal, as anyone
who has ever undertaken their
own Christmas lighting knows,
accidents are no laughing matter. They can prove deadly if
you're not careful. That said,
consider the following safety
tips before diving in to your
own lighting display this holiday season.
• Don't overdo it. One of the
biggest hazards with holiday
lighting is to overload electrical circuits with too many
power chords and lights . This
· is a big mistake, as a house fire
is the most likely result from
sucll a scenario . While you
might feel pressured to keep up
with the neighbors, there's no
need to make your house visible from outer space. If an outlet appears overloaded, it probably is.
• Use external bulbs for the
outside . External lights are
built to handle the harsh weather of ,the holiday season.
Internal Iights aren't as
dll(able 1 ·in • part· ·because , if

they're ind90rs fike their manufacturer intended, they're easier to replace when they go out.
·However, lights that are placed
along the trim of a home's roof
or atop a tall tree aren't as easy
to replace. So use the more
durable external lights outside
the house.,
,
• Keep hghts off when yo~ re
not. at h?me.
Keepmg
Chr!stmas hgh~s . o~ . wh~n
you re not home 1~ mv1tmg d1saster. Not only will no one be
around to fix a broken bulb, but
no one will be around to call
for help in the case of a ftre as
well.
• Avoid powerlines. Make
sure no lights are wrapped
around powerlines leading to
or from your house or a neighbor's house .
• Keep W&lt;.J.Ikways clear. Make
sure the driveway and sidewalks are clear of extension
chords . In the case of snow or
.even if it's just a dark night,
extension chords on such surfaces can lead to injury. Just
because .you know the chords
are there doesn ' t mean any
potential guests will, too .
• Keep other decorations
away from lights . While it
might appear beautiful to wrap
tinsel around lights (be it inside
or outside the house) , tinsel is
often made of metal foil, meaning it's fully capable of condueling electricity. This can be
a potential disaster, so make
· s11~ all decorations are •sep11~

rate from one another.
• Don't be afraid to hire a pro,
Just as you don't have to take
your axe out to the forest to cut
down your own Christmas tree,
you- can also leave the ·lighting
up to the pros. If you've never .
decorated a house with lights
. before, it can be a very dangerous affair, and one that doesn't
end up looking as glorious as
you had hoped. Nearly every
town boasts a company that
. .
.
o~rs ~~~h~~~~ se7lce, ~0
ra er
ns IDJUry, eave e
trouble to the pros.

ally th'e \?iggest problem.
4. Ask your heating contractor to perfonn an .Infiltroineter
''blower door" test. The blower
door is a computerized insttU-

ment tbat pinpoi~ts wl)ere your
home 's·worst ail I~~~ !IDd
also measures how leliky. &gt;the
.

'

Plellse see Checkup. 11 .

receive up to

s
in mail-in ·rebates
When you purchase up to five
·1-gallon cans or one 5-gaHori pall
of E-Z Kare, WeatherAll or Simply
Red paint or Woodsman stain.

True Value's premium WeatherAll
Paint comes wilh a 25-year warranty.
So you'll want to get just !he right
color for your painHng project. Come
In and talk to our Certified Color
Expert_li• and try our exduslve color
selectiOn tools and resources: You'll
find exactly what you need to choose
your color wilh confidetice.

How to prepare your
garage door for winter
(MS) - Fall is the ideal time
for the safety inspection . of
your · house and garage to
ensure that they will be ready
for winter. Maintenance of
your garage door is important
and requires a minimal investment of money and time.
.
The door
To clean your door, the
experts at Garaga garage doors ·
suggest using a gentle soap
(e.g. same as you use to wash
your car) and rinsing thoroughly. For those tough stains, use
an all-purpose detergent. Do
not use abrasive cleaners or
other strong liquids. To stop the
damaging effects of acid rain
and ultraviolet rays of the sun
you can apply liquid car wax
once a year.

Tracks, rollers
The frame
and Ufting springs
weather. seal
To keep you door running,
We suggest cleaning your it's important to check all
PVC weather seal with an all- moving1 parts . They need a
purpose detergent and then, minimum of maintenance to
thoroughly ·rinse. Lubricate the offer · better performance.
weather seal every two months Lubricate the rollers, track
(more often depending on and hinges and all moving
usage) with a silicone lubri- -1parts with a little motor oil
cant. Do not ·use petroleum (e.g. 10W30) every three
based lubricants; the petroleum months. · Wipe off excess of
attacks.rubber.·
oil with a cloth . The safety

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• Monuol or 71lennostotic Controls
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• Mounts on Roor or Woll
• All models he« without electricity.
• Optional monuol and outomotic

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• All Models Mode In America

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• l~.i:.t&amp;~1!.:2~~~!;!!1~~~~~L.;.~~~~i~r;.:..:;~~~~ji:,J

fiii:IC•

.... .

.. ' ...... "' .

(740) 446-2374
0

•• ' •

• •

•

/

-

Protect
·'

from Page3
mixed with one gallon of latex
paint prevents melting snow, ice
- even wind driven rain from penetrating and damaging
exterior surfaces. It helps prevent wood rot and peeling paint
on wood surfaces, so it's great
for use on siding, doors, trim,
and surfaces where water collects, like · window sills. It's
equally effective at preventing

the damaging effects of water
absorption on masonry - like
brick, stucco and concrete.
PaintBooster resists dirt build
up to keep your paint job looking clean and fresh for years and because it can also be added
to any latex stain, it can be used
to prevent water damage on
fences, decks, outdoor furniture
and more.

For more information on
OKON PaintBooster and protecting your home against
water
absorption,
visit
www.okoninc .com.

.6t (14, 1114&amp; ~
lectt~t~IJ 4114

l«&lt;tt¥~·

~-~
~~.
~.&amp;

cable also needs · to be
checked to avoid problems.
The track doesn ~t need to be
lubricated. We suggest lubricating the rollers (the inside)
.......... Gll'llp. 17

~.

. . Custom 'lJesigns .£ttf &amp; ff'IJimnontfs 'Two"
llll Viand Street

304-674-6103

Pt. Pleasant, WV

...) •

�·;

I

.

Friday, ~mber 21,2007

1I

{

~

..

.,. '

'·

',

!

'

'"

• Page 15

(MS) -'-- With winter just fied · contractor. A pre-season
around the corner, now is the tune-up and filter change is a
time to give your home a win- good investment. It reduces the
terizing "check-up" with the chances of breakdowns in the
following home weatherizing middle of winter, improves
safety, and pays for itself
checklist.
Here are five tips on what to through more energy efficient
look for and take care of so operation.
2. Have your system.checked
your home is ready for those
cold north winds. According to for carbon monoxide. A good
· the experts at Venmar .contractor will also offer to test
Ventilation, th~re are five your system for hazardous carmajor steps to consider when bon monoxide, which can be
winterizing
your
home produced by a dirty or mal(www.venmar.ca).
functioning gas or oil furnace
I . Have your heating system or watt'!r heater. Install ·a low
cleaned and tuned by a quali- level carbon monoxide alarm.

Every home should have at
least one C!lrbon · monoxide
alartn. ·
3. Have your duct .system
tested for air leaks. Many think
that windows and doors are the
major cause of a home's air
leaks. But according to recent
by
the
U.S.
research
Department of Energy, gaps
and cracks in the· typical
home's duct system are much
more signifacant. The typical
duct system loses 25 percent to
40 percent of the energy put out
by the central furnace, heat or
air conditioner. Leaks are usu-

Stay safe under the holiday lights
(MS) - When asked to pick
their favorite holiday films,
movie buffs almost always
name "National Lampoon's
Christmas Vacation" as one of
their favorite yuletide comedies. Among the more notable
struggles faced by protagonist
Clark Griswold in the film is
stringing up the Christmas
lights on his home.
While audiences can laugh at
· Clark's flirtations with death
during this ordeal, as anyone
who has ever undertaken their
own Christmas lighting knows,
accidents are no laughing matter. They can prove deadly if
you're not careful. That said,
consider the following safety
tips before diving in to your
own lighting display this holiday season.
• Don't overdo it. One of the
biggest hazards with holiday
lighting is to overload electrical circuits with too many
power chords and lights . This
· is a big mistake, as a house fire
is the most likely result from
sucll a scenario . While you
might feel pressured to keep up
with the neighbors, there's no
need to make your house visible from outer space. If an outlet appears overloaded, it probably is.
• Use external bulbs for the
outside . External lights are
built to handle the harsh weather of ,the holiday season.
Internal Iights aren't as
dll(able 1 ·in • part· ·because , if

they're ind90rs fike their manufacturer intended, they're easier to replace when they go out.
·However, lights that are placed
along the trim of a home's roof
or atop a tall tree aren't as easy
to replace. So use the more
durable external lights outside
the house.,
,
• Keep hghts off when yo~ re
not. at h?me.
Keepmg
Chr!stmas hgh~s . o~ . wh~n
you re not home 1~ mv1tmg d1saster. Not only will no one be
around to fix a broken bulb, but
no one will be around to call
for help in the case of a ftre as
well.
• Avoid powerlines. Make
sure no lights are wrapped
around powerlines leading to
or from your house or a neighbor's house .
• Keep W&lt;.J.Ikways clear. Make
sure the driveway and sidewalks are clear of extension
chords . In the case of snow or
.even if it's just a dark night,
extension chords on such surfaces can lead to injury. Just
because .you know the chords
are there doesn ' t mean any
potential guests will, too .
• Keep other decorations
away from lights . While it
might appear beautiful to wrap
tinsel around lights (be it inside
or outside the house) , tinsel is
often made of metal foil, meaning it's fully capable of condueling electricity. This can be
a potential disaster, so make
· s11~ all decorations are •sep11~

rate from one another.
• Don't be afraid to hire a pro,
Just as you don't have to take
your axe out to the forest to cut
down your own Christmas tree,
you- can also leave the ·lighting
up to the pros. If you've never .
decorated a house with lights
. before, it can be a very dangerous affair, and one that doesn't
end up looking as glorious as
you had hoped. Nearly every
town boasts a company that
. .
.
o~rs ~~~h~~~~ se7lce, ~0
ra er
ns IDJUry, eave e
trouble to the pros.

ally th'e \?iggest problem.
4. Ask your heating contractor to perfonn an .Infiltroineter
''blower door" test. The blower
door is a computerized insttU-

ment tbat pinpoi~ts wl)ere your
home 's·worst ail I~~~ !IDd
also measures how leliky. &gt;the
.

'

Plellse see Checkup. 11 .

receive up to

s
in mail-in ·rebates
When you purchase up to five
·1-gallon cans or one 5-gaHori pall
of E-Z Kare, WeatherAll or Simply
Red paint or Woodsman stain.

True Value's premium WeatherAll
Paint comes wilh a 25-year warranty.
So you'll want to get just !he right
color for your painHng project. Come
In and talk to our Certified Color
Expert_li• and try our exduslve color
selectiOn tools and resources: You'll
find exactly what you need to choose
your color wilh confidetice.

How to prepare your
garage door for winter
(MS) - Fall is the ideal time
for the safety inspection . of
your · house and garage to
ensure that they will be ready
for winter. Maintenance of
your garage door is important
and requires a minimal investment of money and time.
.
The door
To clean your door, the
experts at Garaga garage doors ·
suggest using a gentle soap
(e.g. same as you use to wash
your car) and rinsing thoroughly. For those tough stains, use
an all-purpose detergent. Do
not use abrasive cleaners or
other strong liquids. To stop the
damaging effects of acid rain
and ultraviolet rays of the sun
you can apply liquid car wax
once a year.

Tracks, rollers
The frame
and Ufting springs
weather. seal
To keep you door running,
We suggest cleaning your it's important to check all
PVC weather seal with an all- moving1 parts . They need a
purpose detergent and then, minimum of maintenance to
thoroughly ·rinse. Lubricate the offer · better performance.
weather seal every two months Lubricate the rollers, track
(more often depending on and hinges and all moving
usage) with a silicone lubri- -1parts with a little motor oil
cant. Do not ·use petroleum (e.g. 10W30) every three
based lubricants; the petroleum months. · Wipe off excess of
attacks.rubber.·
oil with a cloth . The safety

Vent-Free
Room Heaters
• Tottll Comfort for hoH the cost of

electric.
• Sole opet ofion, with outo shut-oH
sofety controls.
• Monuol or 71lennostotic Controls
• lflkltchell Piezo Igniter
• Mounts on Roor or Woll
• All models he« without electricity.
• Optional monuol and outomotic

blowers
• All Models Mode In America

.... ,

CENTRAl SUPPlY
17 Court Street • Gallipolis, OH
• l~.i:.t&amp;~1!.:2~~~!;!!1~~~~~L.;.~~~~i~r;.:..:;~~~~ji:,J

fiii:IC•

.... .

.. ' ...... "' .

(740) 446-2374
0

•• ' •

• •

•

/

-

Protect
·'

from Page3
mixed with one gallon of latex
paint prevents melting snow, ice
- even wind driven rain from penetrating and damaging
exterior surfaces. It helps prevent wood rot and peeling paint
on wood surfaces, so it's great
for use on siding, doors, trim,
and surfaces where water collects, like · window sills. It's
equally effective at preventing

the damaging effects of water
absorption on masonry - like
brick, stucco and concrete.
PaintBooster resists dirt build
up to keep your paint job looking clean and fresh for years and because it can also be added
to any latex stain, it can be used
to prevent water damage on
fences, decks, outdoor furniture
and more.

For more information on
OKON PaintBooster and protecting your home against
water
absorption,
visit
www.okoninc .com.

.6t (14, 1114&amp; ~
lectt~t~IJ 4114

l«&lt;tt¥~·

~-~
~~.
~.&amp;

cable also needs · to be
checked to avoid problems.
The track doesn ~t need to be
lubricated. We suggest lubricating the rollers (the inside)
.......... Gll'llp. 17

~.

. . Custom 'lJesigns .£ttf &amp; ff'IJimnontfs 'Two"
llll Viand Street

304-674-6103

Pt. Pleasant, WV

...) •

�.. ·---

-··

~

• Pqe 17
Friday, September 21; 2007

Page 16 •

-

•·•

~ ·~

..

.'

.~~.And With. The~ Ri~e' In
Heating Cod

Who Want~ To Be
Left Out.In The Cold'?
lQt u~ ChQck Out.Yout HQating ~y~tQm
.
BQfot@ It~ Too latQ!!
Call u~
rot All Yout HQating &amp;Cooling
[qui~rnQnt, ~ydQm~, Patt~ &amp;~u~~liM
WHOLESALE
PRICES!
403 Chestnut Street
Henderson. WV
.Hrs:
-Mon.
- --Fri.-8- - - . Phone: ·304-675-6151
a.m.-5:00p.m.
Sat. a:oo a.m.- 12:00 .
Fax: 304-675-6152

Avoid inhalation of dust and debris by using a shop respirator.
i

~

Don't let do-it~yourselfgo bad:
Safe ways to get the job done

(MS) - Do you spend your injuries, falls, cuts and eye
or free time fixing injuries top the list of potential
for
ill-prepared
thmgs around the home? Many hazards
people do. We ha~e become a DIYers. Woodcraft Supply,
Wiliial!l D.- Childs • Jotln F. Musser
i
do-It-yourself ~at10n, spurre~ · LLC, the woodworking indusi.
• Gloria Compston • Heidi Anderson
o!l by the mullltude of tele_v•- try's leading provider of tools,
s10_n prog~ms an? magazme products and education, offers
• Wendy Thomas • Steve Musser
articles telling us JUSt how to the following tips to keep you
do everything from building a safe around the house.
• Charla Snouffer • Erica Drummer
boo~case to refi_
nishing a deck.
Se'iiSOry safety
~h•_le these projects may range
Being able to see, hear and
m difficulty, they do share one breathe easiJ.¥ can promote a .
co~~on element: the chance safer time when working on
fo~ IDJ~fY..
.
projects. That's why one of the
Your partntr In protection
Do-1t-yours&lt;;lf proJects can first steps to take is to protect
be very rewardmg to ~ompl_ete. the most important tool for a
~ut _many DIYers ~Ive nght do-it-yourself project - you.
.- ~nto 1mproyements Without tak• Protective eyewear is a
I~g t~e
safety precau- must when doing any repair.
~10ns, says Don Zeman, home Combining the flying dust and
Improvement expert an~ host debris protection of goggles
~f the n~ly syndicate~ with the hard frame and distorH?mefr ·
,,O?n Ze~an
tion-free lens.of spectacles, the
Representing:
radio pro . · With a httle Spoggle is very unique protecMunicipal Mutual
•
know-how and some products tive eyewear. The frame of the
S
· M
·
that n:take using tools and other Spoggle is cushioned against
Auto Owners
erving eigs County
~h?P Items safer, th~ chance for the fac b a soft lami at d
Progressive
•
Since 1868
mJury drops dramatically."
e· Y
n e
G
Oh" 0
Sil~
FAX: 740-992-5374
·.·-~loFit • • f )dl ·, ·, po~~t-tool . • • •• ..,, ... ..e ~
L.;
· .•rQ.I)..i~;.;.~,;,
..··;.;·,.;,·.:..l.••.,...
~~...1-1..-.·~·,.;,·_._,...•. ·.,;,·.;,·,;.·. ....- ·..·•· ·;·,;·.;,·.:.·.· . ...
.. .· · ·
· ·.,;,·.;,·,;.
· ··;,;··-.··..,;
· ·.·,;,·.:.
· :.;•·:.:·~·.:.
·· ....... .

fARM • HOME • BUSINESS

LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION,

116 EAST SECOND Sl• POMEROY, OH

992 3381
1 800-454-1096

l'' .....

'

'

-

. . . ..

;•
~·

'

Garage

complet!liY. If necessary, to p\ay with the opener.
adjust liinits and/or force . Leclerc also J:CCOmmends you
Since 1.986, all the residential to keeping the remote control
trorpP915
· door openers are supplied of in an inaccessible location.
with two security devices. Your garagedoor is an imporand .the hinges with a metal Check' the safetyreversing tan.t part of your home, by
lubricant. Do not . use any sensot:, The door must reverse performing the suggested
lubricant with cleaner base. on contact if an object (a 2 X maintenance it will provide
Vicky Lederc of Garaga 4 wood stud) or a person ~ you with carefree conveemphasizes: "For your own under it. Also, check if your nience for many years to
safety, never attempt to adjust photo sensors are correctly come. Garaga offers clients a
the springs, the bottom brack- plugged in and aligned. The tune up programme tailored
ets, or the hoisting cables door should reverse if any to your needs. More informayourself because of the inher- object passes through the tion is available at www.garaent risk associated with the beam. Do not .permit children ga.com.
great deal of tension in the
. springs. A Garaga installer
can do the work for you ." -'
Don't forget
.We're geCtjng reody for NEW FAU Shipments!
electric opener
Weather conditions may
cause some · minor changes in
door operation requiring
some re-adjustment. So it is
Room Suites
importanl to do a check up
lm1De1ial Mattresses,
once a month . First, disengage the opener from the door
by pulling the opener release
rope/cord. Work the door
manually. It must be well balanced . If the door is not balanced, contact a qualified
garage door inslaller. A welloalanced door weighs five to
· · - 313 Main Sl
Pl Pleasant, WV
eight kilograms. Check if
304-675-2406
your door opens and ·closes

END OF.SUMMER SALE!

Shop Our Bargains on:

ALL SIZES
ALL ON SALE!

Bordman Furniture

For Your Next

w~ekends

n•

.'

'

-4

c

Home
Improvement
Project...
Start With Us!
... .

~·

�.. ·---

-··

~

• Pqe 17
Friday, September 21; 2007

Page 16 •

-

•·•

~ ·~

..

.'

.~~.And With. The~ Ri~e' In
Heating Cod

Who Want~ To Be
Left Out.In The Cold'?
lQt u~ ChQck Out.Yout HQating ~y~tQm
.
BQfot@ It~ Too latQ!!
Call u~
rot All Yout HQating &amp;Cooling
[qui~rnQnt, ~ydQm~, Patt~ &amp;~u~~liM
WHOLESALE
PRICES!
403 Chestnut Street
Henderson. WV
.Hrs:
-Mon.
- --Fri.-8- - - . Phone: ·304-675-6151
a.m.-5:00p.m.
Sat. a:oo a.m.- 12:00 .
Fax: 304-675-6152

Avoid inhalation of dust and debris by using a shop respirator.
i

~

Don't let do-it~yourselfgo bad:
Safe ways to get the job done

(MS) - Do you spend your injuries, falls, cuts and eye
or free time fixing injuries top the list of potential
for
ill-prepared
thmgs around the home? Many hazards
people do. We ha~e become a DIYers. Woodcraft Supply,
Wiliial!l D.- Childs • Jotln F. Musser
i
do-It-yourself ~at10n, spurre~ · LLC, the woodworking indusi.
• Gloria Compston • Heidi Anderson
o!l by the mullltude of tele_v•- try's leading provider of tools,
s10_n prog~ms an? magazme products and education, offers
• Wendy Thomas • Steve Musser
articles telling us JUSt how to the following tips to keep you
do everything from building a safe around the house.
• Charla Snouffer • Erica Drummer
boo~case to refi_
nishing a deck.
Se'iiSOry safety
~h•_le these projects may range
Being able to see, hear and
m difficulty, they do share one breathe easiJ.¥ can promote a .
co~~on element: the chance safer time when working on
fo~ IDJ~fY..
.
projects. That's why one of the
Your partntr In protection
Do-1t-yours&lt;;lf proJects can first steps to take is to protect
be very rewardmg to ~ompl_ete. the most important tool for a
~ut _many DIYers ~Ive nght do-it-yourself project - you.
.- ~nto 1mproyements Without tak• Protective eyewear is a
I~g t~e
safety precau- must when doing any repair.
~10ns, says Don Zeman, home Combining the flying dust and
Improvement expert an~ host debris protection of goggles
~f the n~ly syndicate~ with the hard frame and distorH?mefr ·
,,O?n Ze~an
tion-free lens.of spectacles, the
Representing:
radio pro . · With a httle Spoggle is very unique protecMunicipal Mutual
•
know-how and some products tive eyewear. The frame of the
S
· M
·
that n:take using tools and other Spoggle is cushioned against
Auto Owners
erving eigs County
~h?P Items safer, th~ chance for the fac b a soft lami at d
Progressive
•
Since 1868
mJury drops dramatically."
e· Y
n e
G
Oh" 0
Sil~
FAX: 740-992-5374
·.·-~loFit • • f )dl ·, ·, po~~t-tool . • • •• ..,, ... ..e ~
L.;
· .•rQ.I)..i~;.;.~,;,
..··;.;·,.;,·.:..l.••.,...
~~...1-1..-.·~·,.;,·_._,...•. ·.,;,·.;,·,;.·. ....- ·..·•· ·;·,;·.;,·.:.·.· . ...
.. .· · ·
· ·.,;,·.;,·,;.
· ··;,;··-.··..,;
· ·.·,;,·.:.
· :.;•·:.:·~·.:.
·· ....... .

fARM • HOME • BUSINESS

LIFE • BONDS • MOBILE HOMES • HOSPITALIZATION,

116 EAST SECOND Sl• POMEROY, OH

992 3381
1 800-454-1096

l'' .....

'

'

-

. . . ..

;•
~·

'

Garage

complet!liY. If necessary, to p\ay with the opener.
adjust liinits and/or force . Leclerc also J:CCOmmends you
Since 1.986, all the residential to keeping the remote control
trorpP915
· door openers are supplied of in an inaccessible location.
with two security devices. Your garagedoor is an imporand .the hinges with a metal Check' the safetyreversing tan.t part of your home, by
lubricant. Do not . use any sensot:, The door must reverse performing the suggested
lubricant with cleaner base. on contact if an object (a 2 X maintenance it will provide
Vicky Lederc of Garaga 4 wood stud) or a person ~ you with carefree conveemphasizes: "For your own under it. Also, check if your nience for many years to
safety, never attempt to adjust photo sensors are correctly come. Garaga offers clients a
the springs, the bottom brack- plugged in and aligned. The tune up programme tailored
ets, or the hoisting cables door should reverse if any to your needs. More informayourself because of the inher- object passes through the tion is available at www.garaent risk associated with the beam. Do not .permit children ga.com.
great deal of tension in the
. springs. A Garaga installer
can do the work for you ." -'
Don't forget
.We're geCtjng reody for NEW FAU Shipments!
electric opener
Weather conditions may
cause some · minor changes in
door operation requiring
some re-adjustment. So it is
Room Suites
importanl to do a check up
lm1De1ial Mattresses,
once a month . First, disengage the opener from the door
by pulling the opener release
rope/cord. Work the door
manually. It must be well balanced . If the door is not balanced, contact a qualified
garage door inslaller. A welloalanced door weighs five to
· · - 313 Main Sl
Pl Pleasant, WV
eight kilograms. Check if
304-675-2406
your door opens and ·closes

END OF.SUMMER SALE!

Shop Our Bargains on:

ALL SIZES
ALL ON SALE!

Bordman Furniture

For Your Next

w~ekends

n•

.'

'

-4

c

Home
Improvement
Project...
Start With Us!
... .

~·

�'·

Papt8•

~ Fall -Hom-e -~lmpr.~vemellt
•

.•

I

1

.Floors

•

FrMJ&amp;y, Septellt~ ~1, 2007

v.

suffer from allergies or asthma. than ever: in places with rigorsteel table or fence surface.
SimJ:&gt;le reJUlar :~~dtenance .ous ·· maintenanCe and health
• Kickbacks occur when a
ieqilirement8 such as hospitals
.,
··
sue~ a8 dust mopPing, sweepsaw seizes the stock and hurls
froni
Pa(je
12
iilg and vacuuming ~ps the and health care faciliti~s •. to
back
at
the
operator,
resul~g
it
from Page1&amp;
environment
allergen-free. retail, commercial, and instituin any number of bodily
tional settings. .
injuries. Kickbacks can happen hardwoods add a natural Hardwood flooring ~ conAs consumers focus more on
foam gasket (much like ski when the stock twists and binds
siderably to a home's resale
and
character,
and
are
a
warmth
using naturlll, earth-friendly
goggle foam) to provide a com- against the side of the blades or
value, too. ·· ·•·
materials
in their homes,
fortable but tight dust-free fit. is caught in the teeth. A bla~e natural choice for a · healthy
Its variety of protecti~e surhome.
Hardwoods
are
easily
American
hardwoods
are the
The
product
meets that is not sharpened, or that IS
face finishes, from otl and
OSHA/ANSI standards for pri- set at an incorrect height; can cleaned with non-toxic prod- water-based urethane to natural choice: for value, for
mary eye protection.
ucts, and do not trap allergens accylic impregnated woods, health, and for sustainability.
• The dust created when cause kickbacks .. Anti-kick- like ·mold spores, bacteria and not only enhance color, texture
For more ideas on hardwood
using power tools is not just a back devices can be used on dust mites often embedded in and grain pattern,_ ~ut add flooring and other wqys to use
naisance, it can be hazardous to saws to stop this problem. Anti- other flooring products. For exceptional durabli1ty and American hardwoods in your
your health. So, whether you' re Kickback Safety Rollers _come
moisturt resistance. And hard- home, visit the American
operating a table saw, router, or complete and ready to install this reason, they are recom- wood is a versatile, sustain- Hardwood Information Center
.._ sander a respirator is the solu- on your fence or fixture. mended for chemically sensi~ able option in more locations at www.hardwoodinfo.com.
tion . Consider the Triton Yellow rollers rotate-in a clock- tive individuals, or those who
Powered Respirator for com- wise direction and will · not
rotate counter-clockwise, preplete personal protection:
venting
kickback on table saws
tively it needs a constant air quality.
• Hearing protection can safe5. Consider replacing your
source of fresh, tempered, fil ..
guard the delicate auditory sys- and router tables.
old
furnace or heat pump. Just
•
A
push
stick
or
push
block
tered outdoor air to . flow
tem. Routine use of loud power
like
a car, heating equipment
through, resulting in improved
tools can contribute to hearing can keep your fingers a~ay
from
Page
14
doesn' t last forever. If your
indOQr air quality." .
loss prematurely. When work- from the cutting blade as you
feed
the
end
of
stock
thrOugh.
Gagnon says the best results system is more than 12 years
ing indoors, the sound of tools
overall
house
is.
While
some
For
even
better
control,
try
the
are achieved through mechan- old · and you are planning to
may be amplified and cause
homes
are
still
far
too
leaky,
Advanced
GRR-Ripper®
even more damage.
ical ventilation combined with stay in your home more .th~ a
• Working safely also means System that grip~ ~d holds. both most homes are now becoming HEPA filtration, such as · few years, many authonl!es
considering
being able to see clearly what sides of a work p1ece dunng a too airtight and need mechan~­ Venmar's line of air exchang- recommend
cal
ventilation
to
ensure
the
air
ripping
operation.
The
product
before
it fails pe~­
replacing
it
you're working on. Therefore,
er systems. The air exchangmaintains
balanced
pressure
on
inside is fresh.
task lighting should be on your
ers use a cm;nbination of ven- riianently. A new system IS
According to.Gerry Gagnon, . tilation and filtration · to safer, more dependable , and
list of safety equipment. An the wood as it passes through
item .like a Magnetic or Clip- and beyond the blade. - - - : · . product and market manager reduce humidity and volatile can pay for itself through _enerThere are many otht:r ways to for Venmar Ventilation, a compounds. (gases, m~ulds), gy savings as it is·up to tw1ce as
On Base Work Light allows
you to place illumination just equip your home shop with leader in indoor air quality and maintam healthy mdoor energy efficient.
about anywhere. The 360- safety items and practice. c~­ management, proper ventiladegree swi vel head and jointed ful operation when engagmg m tion is crucial for optimal
arm adjusts to light any work do-it-yourself projects. T~ hear indoor air quality. "Ventilation
area with up to 60 watts .
tips from Don Zeman chck on
Protect your digits
www.homefront.com. To learn dilutes the air of pollutants in
Some of the most apparent more abOut the products men- your home and revitalizes stale
dangers associated with wood- tioned,
,
visit air," explains Gagnon . "For
your home to 'breathe' effecworking and other do-it-your- www.woodcraft.com.
self projects is the potential for
cuts and amputations from cut33334 St. Rt. 33 Box 207 • Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769
ting edges and contusions or
Phone (740) 992-2478
broken bones from kickback of
Fax (740) 992-2479
stock . That's why it is always
.famllyhomes@frognet.net
essential to keep fingers and
hands away from blades and
Fedt~ra
other fast-moving machinery.
Push sticks, push blocks and
· feather boards help the DIYer
accomplish this.
• A feather board is a useful
tool when cutting thin stock or
"People Helping People"
making an intricate bead with _a
Offering Home Improvement
router. It serves as an extra pa1r
Loans at
of hands, keeping the wood in
;. place on a table saw or router
Authorized Builder
LOW RATES!
table. Many woodworkers rely
*CaD for details.
Open:
on the Miter Slot Feather
On The Corner
•
ManagerCarrie
Payne
TIMe.Sal
Board. With two locking
of us 33
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1011111-Spm
screws, not just one, this f~­
Now 2 Lgcqtions
• St. At. 7 Phone (740) 992-5635
er board holds securely m a
For Brochures call (740) 992-2478
standard 3/8-inch by 3/4-inch . 2411 Jackson Ave. Apple Grove, WV
Fu (740) 992-2479
Pt. Ple&amp;sant, wv
304-576-4056
miter slot. For DIYers who
famDybomes@fropet.net
304-675-5510
Fu: 304-576-2447
.need a more flexible feather
board, try die Magswitch
Magnetic Featherboard that l:l~:.:,..M.,.e,;.,m.;:ber~EI~ig~ib!,!il~ity~:=Li!:iv=.:e, w~o=rk~,l1.w,~Oishi~·..
por_,.._.;;::
aw..Pf,.Ill~ ,i!PY't"I'F.. ?!l. ~ . ·.

Safe

Checkup

'!

(MS) .!.'When amajor financial institution announces that
they ate ,gdi!Jg 'to spend $18 billion o.n· ·corhineJ:cial lending
and · investment banking for
'green' projects as .well as an
additional $2 billion for con"
sumer programs, you have to
take · notice . With today's
heightened interest in and
demand for ecologically sound
building materials, metal roofing is an ideal choice.
Green .building practices promote construction of buildings
that are healthier for the occupants and healthier for the
envirolilllent: The metai roofing industry's products are
environmentally
already ·
friendly, and are contributing to
the reduction of landfill waste
and energy consumption.
A study · conducted by Oak
Ridge National Laboratory
found · that the installation of
reflective metal . roofing can
save homeowners up to·40 percent in ·summer cooling costs
while highly emissive metal
roofs can reduce urban air temperatures by as much as 12 F. A

basic unpainted metal;roof will
reflect much of the solar radiation that would be absorbed py
a traditional asphah roof.
However, for homes in wanner
climates, pre-painted or.granular coated metal roofing systems . not only reflect ..solar
energy 'but they also cool the
home by re-emjtting most of
the solar energy · that is
absorbed.
.
The EPA reports that $40
billion is· spent annually in
the United States to cool
buildings . This accounts for
one-sixth &lt;_Jf :all· electricity
generated in a ye'ar. Ninety
percent of the energy in tlie
United States is generated by
burn"ing fossil .fuels, which
create pollution.
In addition to being e)Jergy
efficient, metal roofing is recognized as a sustainable building material for several environmenta}reasons. Many metal
roofs typically have a minimum of .25 percent recycled
content Thi~ level of recycled
CI,&gt;Jitent allows metal roofing to
be routinely included on list-

ings for 'green' and recycled
content products . In addition',
· metal roofing· is I00 percent ·
recyclable where other roofing
are
routinely
materials
removed and disposed of by
the ton in landfills.
Along with providing superi··
or ·environmentally . friendly
protection, a metal roof also
increases a home's . resale
value. The 2005 Residential
Cost Handbook® reports the
appraised · value of a home
increases by $1 .35 per square
foot when a metal roof is
installed . .
The Metal Roofing Alliance·
was .formed to educate consumers on these and other benefits of metal roofing. Visit
www.metalroofing .com
to
Jearn more about ;netal roofing Metal roofs typically have a minimum of 25 percent of recycled
and to find a metal roofing con- content. Additionally, metal roofs reflect sunlight and can help
save energy on heating/cooling costs.
tractor in your area.

..

Custom
Vrapes
Custom

FAll INTO HOME IMPRO
· WITH US!
TWin Oaks
Credit
Union

Let us 6uiftf your

. III~IOIE
RIIIIICIII

dream liome!

FAMILY HOMES

1

fJJ{inds

Carpet &amp;
o/inyf

.&amp; lOS.

-·-

~~:~~~~........8ft. $1 89
6 Year
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Tank
&amp; Parts

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Dutch Lap White .....

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ALL SEWER &amp; WATER LINE I
Deer Supplies
Corn

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$7.99
$15.99
$2.00 lb.
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&amp;

SHARPENING
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�'·

Papt8•

~ Fall -Hom-e -~lmpr.~vemellt
•

.•

I

1

.Floors

•

FrMJ&amp;y, Septellt~ ~1, 2007

v.

suffer from allergies or asthma. than ever: in places with rigorsteel table or fence surface.
SimJ:&gt;le reJUlar :~~dtenance .ous ·· maintenanCe and health
• Kickbacks occur when a
ieqilirement8 such as hospitals
.,
··
sue~ a8 dust mopPing, sweepsaw seizes the stock and hurls
froni
Pa(je
12
iilg and vacuuming ~ps the and health care faciliti~s •. to
back
at
the
operator,
resul~g
it
from Page1&amp;
environment
allergen-free. retail, commercial, and instituin any number of bodily
tional settings. .
injuries. Kickbacks can happen hardwoods add a natural Hardwood flooring ~ conAs consumers focus more on
foam gasket (much like ski when the stock twists and binds
siderably to a home's resale
and
character,
and
are
a
warmth
using naturlll, earth-friendly
goggle foam) to provide a com- against the side of the blades or
value, too. ·· ·•·
materials
in their homes,
fortable but tight dust-free fit. is caught in the teeth. A bla~e natural choice for a · healthy
Its variety of protecti~e surhome.
Hardwoods
are
easily
American
hardwoods
are the
The
product
meets that is not sharpened, or that IS
face finishes, from otl and
OSHA/ANSI standards for pri- set at an incorrect height; can cleaned with non-toxic prod- water-based urethane to natural choice: for value, for
mary eye protection.
ucts, and do not trap allergens accylic impregnated woods, health, and for sustainability.
• The dust created when cause kickbacks .. Anti-kick- like ·mold spores, bacteria and not only enhance color, texture
For more ideas on hardwood
using power tools is not just a back devices can be used on dust mites often embedded in and grain pattern,_ ~ut add flooring and other wqys to use
naisance, it can be hazardous to saws to stop this problem. Anti- other flooring products. For exceptional durabli1ty and American hardwoods in your
your health. So, whether you' re Kickback Safety Rollers _come
moisturt resistance. And hard- home, visit the American
operating a table saw, router, or complete and ready to install this reason, they are recom- wood is a versatile, sustain- Hardwood Information Center
.._ sander a respirator is the solu- on your fence or fixture. mended for chemically sensi~ able option in more locations at www.hardwoodinfo.com.
tion . Consider the Triton Yellow rollers rotate-in a clock- tive individuals, or those who
Powered Respirator for com- wise direction and will · not
rotate counter-clockwise, preplete personal protection:
venting
kickback on table saws
tively it needs a constant air quality.
• Hearing protection can safe5. Consider replacing your
source of fresh, tempered, fil ..
guard the delicate auditory sys- and router tables.
old
furnace or heat pump. Just
•
A
push
stick
or
push
block
tered outdoor air to . flow
tem. Routine use of loud power
like
a car, heating equipment
through, resulting in improved
tools can contribute to hearing can keep your fingers a~ay
from
Page
14
doesn' t last forever. If your
indOQr air quality." .
loss prematurely. When work- from the cutting blade as you
feed
the
end
of
stock
thrOugh.
Gagnon says the best results system is more than 12 years
ing indoors, the sound of tools
overall
house
is.
While
some
For
even
better
control,
try
the
are achieved through mechan- old · and you are planning to
may be amplified and cause
homes
are
still
far
too
leaky,
Advanced
GRR-Ripper®
even more damage.
ical ventilation combined with stay in your home more .th~ a
• Working safely also means System that grip~ ~d holds. both most homes are now becoming HEPA filtration, such as · few years, many authonl!es
considering
being able to see clearly what sides of a work p1ece dunng a too airtight and need mechan~­ Venmar's line of air exchang- recommend
cal
ventilation
to
ensure
the
air
ripping
operation.
The
product
before
it fails pe~­
replacing
it
you're working on. Therefore,
er systems. The air exchangmaintains
balanced
pressure
on
inside is fresh.
task lighting should be on your
ers use a cm;nbination of ven- riianently. A new system IS
According to.Gerry Gagnon, . tilation and filtration · to safer, more dependable , and
list of safety equipment. An the wood as it passes through
item .like a Magnetic or Clip- and beyond the blade. - - - : · . product and market manager reduce humidity and volatile can pay for itself through _enerThere are many otht:r ways to for Venmar Ventilation, a compounds. (gases, m~ulds), gy savings as it is·up to tw1ce as
On Base Work Light allows
you to place illumination just equip your home shop with leader in indoor air quality and maintam healthy mdoor energy efficient.
about anywhere. The 360- safety items and practice. c~­ management, proper ventiladegree swi vel head and jointed ful operation when engagmg m tion is crucial for optimal
arm adjusts to light any work do-it-yourself projects. T~ hear indoor air quality. "Ventilation
area with up to 60 watts .
tips from Don Zeman chck on
Protect your digits
www.homefront.com. To learn dilutes the air of pollutants in
Some of the most apparent more abOut the products men- your home and revitalizes stale
dangers associated with wood- tioned,
,
visit air," explains Gagnon . "For
your home to 'breathe' effecworking and other do-it-your- www.woodcraft.com.
self projects is the potential for
cuts and amputations from cut33334 St. Rt. 33 Box 207 • Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769
ting edges and contusions or
Phone (740) 992-2478
broken bones from kickback of
Fax (740) 992-2479
stock . That's why it is always
.famllyhomes@frognet.net
essential to keep fingers and
hands away from blades and
Fedt~ra
other fast-moving machinery.
Push sticks, push blocks and
· feather boards help the DIYer
accomplish this.
• A feather board is a useful
tool when cutting thin stock or
"People Helping People"
making an intricate bead with _a
Offering Home Improvement
router. It serves as an extra pa1r
Loans at
of hands, keeping the wood in
;. place on a table saw or router
Authorized Builder
LOW RATES!
table. Many woodworkers rely
*CaD for details.
Open:
on the Miter Slot Feather
On The Corner
•
ManagerCarrie
Payne
TIMe.Sal
Board. With two locking
of us 33
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1011111-Spm
screws, not just one, this f~­
Now 2 Lgcqtions
• St. At. 7 Phone (740) 992-5635
er board holds securely m a
For Brochures call (740) 992-2478
standard 3/8-inch by 3/4-inch . 2411 Jackson Ave. Apple Grove, WV
Fu (740) 992-2479
Pt. Ple&amp;sant, wv
304-576-4056
miter slot. For DIYers who
famDybomes@fropet.net
304-675-5510
Fu: 304-576-2447
.need a more flexible feather
board, try die Magswitch
Magnetic Featherboard that l:l~:.:,..M.,.e,;.,m.;:ber~EI~ig~ib!,!il~ity~:=Li!:iv=.:e, w~o=rk~,l1.w,~Oishi~·..
por_,.._.;;::
aw..Pf,.Ill~ ,i!PY't"I'F.. ?!l. ~ . ·.

Safe

Checkup

'!

(MS) .!.'When amajor financial institution announces that
they ate ,gdi!Jg 'to spend $18 billion o.n· ·corhineJ:cial lending
and · investment banking for
'green' projects as .well as an
additional $2 billion for con"
sumer programs, you have to
take · notice . With today's
heightened interest in and
demand for ecologically sound
building materials, metal roofing is an ideal choice.
Green .building practices promote construction of buildings
that are healthier for the occupants and healthier for the
envirolilllent: The metai roofing industry's products are
environmentally
already ·
friendly, and are contributing to
the reduction of landfill waste
and energy consumption.
A study · conducted by Oak
Ridge National Laboratory
found · that the installation of
reflective metal . roofing can
save homeowners up to·40 percent in ·summer cooling costs
while highly emissive metal
roofs can reduce urban air temperatures by as much as 12 F. A

basic unpainted metal;roof will
reflect much of the solar radiation that would be absorbed py
a traditional asphah roof.
However, for homes in wanner
climates, pre-painted or.granular coated metal roofing systems . not only reflect ..solar
energy 'but they also cool the
home by re-emjtting most of
the solar energy · that is
absorbed.
.
The EPA reports that $40
billion is· spent annually in
the United States to cool
buildings . This accounts for
one-sixth &lt;_Jf :all· electricity
generated in a ye'ar. Ninety
percent of the energy in tlie
United States is generated by
burn"ing fossil .fuels, which
create pollution.
In addition to being e)Jergy
efficient, metal roofing is recognized as a sustainable building material for several environmenta}reasons. Many metal
roofs typically have a minimum of .25 percent recycled
content Thi~ level of recycled
CI,&gt;Jitent allows metal roofing to
be routinely included on list-

ings for 'green' and recycled
content products . In addition',
· metal roofing· is I00 percent ·
recyclable where other roofing
are
routinely
materials
removed and disposed of by
the ton in landfills.
Along with providing superi··
or ·environmentally . friendly
protection, a metal roof also
increases a home's . resale
value. The 2005 Residential
Cost Handbook® reports the
appraised · value of a home
increases by $1 .35 per square
foot when a metal roof is
installed . .
The Metal Roofing Alliance·
was .formed to educate consumers on these and other benefits of metal roofing. Visit
www.metalroofing .com
to
Jearn more about ;netal roofing Metal roofs typically have a minimum of 25 percent of recycled
and to find a metal roofing con- content. Additionally, metal roofs reflect sunlight and can help
save energy on heating/cooling costs.
tractor in your area.

..

Custom
Vrapes
Custom

FAll INTO HOME IMPRO
· WITH US!
TWin Oaks
Credit
Union

Let us 6uiftf your

. III~IOIE
RIIIIICIII

dream liome!

FAMILY HOMES

1

fJJ{inds

Carpet &amp;
o/inyf

.&amp; lOS.

-·-

~~:~~~~........8ft. $1 89
6 Year
Warranty
Tank
&amp; Parts

~~~: ..............4x8'

$699

VInyl Siding
Alcoa Double 4112"
Dutch Lap White .....

$4599

ALL SEWER &amp; WATER LINE I
Deer Supplies
Corn

Deer Block

$7.99
$15.99
$2.00 lb.
DL~lUII:'/lL.n'"''N

&amp;

SHARPENING
~UPPLIES

�ALONG THE RivER
Vete~ans Memorial Hospital:

A place not to be forgotten, C1

Hometown News for.Gal1ia &amp; Meiw; counties
4 ll lin \ .dll'.'

PuhJi...,Jnn:~ ( o .

Pnl ll t

I t I\ •

\Jiddlq,o1·1 • ( .. d l q u tll... • St'ph·ntht•t· .!; ~.

St . .)O • \ ol. -1-1 . :\o . :;,-;

:.!Oo -

Additional arrests made in meth lab probe·

SPORTS
• High school football

BY BRIAN

aCtion. See.Page 81. ·

J.

REED

BREEDII!MYOAILVSENTINEL .COM

.

POMEROY - Two men
have appeared in Meigs
County Court on charges
relating to a methamphetamine operation discovered
last weekend
outside.
Middleport.
Corbett E. "Gene" Ratliff,
39, and Pbilip C. Locke, 47,
both o( · ·Cheshire, are
charged with iilegal manufacture of drugs, felonies of
the second degree.
Ratliff was released on a

personal recognizance bond
and.· Locke remained in the
M!lis_s· · County Jail as ·of
Friday afternoon, after they
appeared before Judge
Steven L. Story oil Thursday.
Preliminary
probable
cause hearings in the cases
have been set for Oct. 4, 11nd
public defenders have been
appointed to represent them.
· A charge of permitting
drug abuse filed ·against
Norma · J. Ratliff, ,J3.
Cheshire, was dismissed
Thursday for further consideration by the Meigs County

grand jury. She was identified as the owner of three
mobile homes where materials used in the manufacture
of the drug were found .
Another man, Anthony
Smith, was arrested on an
outstanding bench warrant
and released earlier last
week. Sheriff Robert Beegle
said he will likely be
charged in the drug investigation ~s well.
Sheriff's deputies conducted a search of the residences on Story's Run
Road on Sept. 16, near the

Gallia-Meigs county line,
after subjects questioned in
a traffic stop in Gallia
County provided information about the alleged meth
lab operations·.
A specially-trained crew
from Jackson County, offi.
cers with the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investigation
and a private firm from
Avon were charged with
cleanup at the three mobile
homes. They removed
chemicals and appliances
believed to have been used
in the manufacture of

methamphetamine.
The Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department also assisted at the scene, since ~')late­
rials used in the manufacture of the drug are considered both flammable and
explosive .
.. .
Beegle said acetone,
iodine and meth oil. which
is added to ether or other '
chemicals to produce the .
fina I product were found,
but Beegle said it appeared
the operation was for manufacture of meth for personal use.

Songs for the soul
BY KEviN KB.LY
KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.

GALLIPOLIS - A local
filmmaker's efforts to get
his movie shot and seen on
the independent film circuit
is getting help from sources
'close to the industry.
· Originally announced in
April, the feature written,
produced and directed by
David Banks of Gallipolis
will now be filmed in the
Charleston, W.Va. ; area and
auditions for the several
roles the story calls for are
scheduled for next month.
The film, initially titled
"Holy Smoke," is now
called
"AFTER.LlFE.,"
said Banks.
Banks auditioned locally
during spring and summer,
but he will be seeking new
talent when tryouts are held
Friday, Oct. 1.2 from 5 to 9
p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 13
from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. at
the LaBelle Theater in
South Charleston.
"The script is complete,"
.
.
Joy KocmoudfphOio
Banks
said. " It has attracted
Minister Larry z. Medcalf, far right, led the Burlington First Baptist Male Chorus as they performed a series of inspiratl.onal
songs at the 144th annual Emancipation Celebration at the Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds on Saturday. Today's program
Pluse see Movie, A1
will begin with Sunday morning worship service at 10 a.m ., followed by the afternoon program at 1:30 p.m. featuring special music, recognitions, and keynote speaker Dr. David Zang.

0BmJARIES
: page AS
: ~ Semard Fultz, 79
:,. Billy Marcum, 80
·'. June Smith, 72
: • Mary E. Warg, .69

tNsmE..

PagelO •

- .. r

:• College president
.'charged $25,000 in
4ravel expenses.

.SeeP191tA2

colors: Grey &amp;MahQRari'f,i
Cedar &amp;Acadia Availble.

In
$125.00
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125~~121

32" or 36"

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1-112"110' ............. $3.59
2"110' ................... $4.59
3"110' ................... $9.59

..

20' Deck Board 75054175084 ...... 42:99
Posl75056175086..............19.99 ·
Cap 7mi75088..................:..7.59
Skirt 75000175000 .......:...........7.59
Top Rail7m!75092.....................25.99
Bott . . . .
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Baluster 75008/75008 .......................3.29
Skirt Board 75074175099 .............. 39.99

WEATHER

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•
Details on P•&amp;• A6

~t tar paper.

PIPE
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o l - or perto-.

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20414 ... .................

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uae for
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Celebrati~ns

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4"x100' Flexible. Solkl,

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s3149oo

Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio

740-446-2002
Mon. -Sat. 8-7 •

..'

11-5

Editorials

A4

Movies

C2

Obituaries

As

Regional
Sports
Weather

A2
B Section

A6

© 2007 Ohiu Valley Publi11hlng Co.

Please see Alumni, A1

Beth Sorcentfphoto

The upcoming "Reunion on the River" will celebrate the 40th
anniversary of the Meigs Local School District by providing
events for alumni. their families and current students. Here.
Bobby Musser, right. and Ty Bartrum get into a game of corn
hole outside a recent Marauder alumni tailgate event.

plans with material
purchase Model
BK2432

sssggoo

•

llolc:ente:r

insert

io

POMEROY - A section
of County Road 7 A near the
ParMar convenience · store
was closed for a few hours
Friday morning when two
55-gallon drums of "hazardous material" spilled
from a truck onto the roadway, according to the
Pomeroy Police Department.
· Robert Byer, Meigs
County
Emergency
Management Agency director, said the drums were full
of "biillast punchings,"
which were small pieces of
metal. The metal was used
in mac hine work and was
coated with oil. Byer said
there was ~o ground or
Please see Spill, A1

Pole Barn kll

Natural &amp; Propane

om as

C4
D Section

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILVSENTINELC OM

1-Jlf!:'FREE.easty-to-follow

Gas Heaters

or 36"

Comics

A3

POMEROY
The
upcoming "Reunion on the
River" sponsored by the
Meigs
Local
Alumni
Association (MLAA) is
more than recognizing the
past, but showing enthusiasm for the district's present
and future.
The reunion takes place
Oct.l2- 13, hc.mecoming
weekend. and offers events
for alumni and their families as well as current students of all ages. It features
a family tailgate party,
alumni parade . alumni band
and a celebration on the
Pomeroy parking lot complete with food, games and
live music.
Another unique aspect to
the reunion is incorporating

and inviting graduates who
live in, or are from the distr)ct, but graduated from
olmrter high schools like
Harrisonville,
Rutland,
B0meroy and Middleport.
'!,{lit is important to keep
t!lJs open to the public and
r$ke it open any graduate. of any school that later
became incorporated into
the district because we're
all part of the same area,"
said Paul Reed, president of
the MLAV..
According to Reed, this
year marks the 40th anniversary of the Meigs Local
School District and the
MLAA wanted to build
upon the foundation started
by the original alumni group
by organizing the reunion
around homecoming \IJeekend for the first time.

24' X 32'

See our selection of

169 °32"

$19.69
$21.49

.$26.89

..110404.
80401 .......................
... .... ... . ..

Pole Barn Kit

0

SEcnoNs- 24 PAGES

Aro,und Town

15 LB. A$PH~LT ROOF FELT

yOu need"

.

BY BETH SERGENT

4

•Everything

., ., •

Spi~ closes
Meigs alumnilevent merges past, present with future Metgs
road
INDEX

· Toilet
~press
(White)

9 Lite

,SeePa~A5

12' Deck .Board 750msoao ...... 24it9
16' Deck Board
. 75052175082 ...... 33.99
. ...

..

4"x10' ................,$13.99

$

•· Ohio lawmakers
:.begin search for new
:• statue in U.S. CapHol.

Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Co.

Thomas

555 Park St. Middleport, Ohio
7 40-992-6611 1-800-733-3334
Mon.-Fri. 7-5• Saturday7-3

Rt. 2 By Pass Point Pleasant, WV

''

:Jolt; em~
•

Large 9 Inch pot
.. Variety of Colors To Choose From "

FROST PROOF PANSIES

Two Convenient Locations:
2400 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740) 446-1711

1/4 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge

Mason, WV 25260
n3-5323

FALL
DECORATING
HEADQUARTERS

"Plant Pansies Now For Beautiful
• Pumpkins • Slraw
Early Spring Flower Beds"
• Squash • Guords
Also Available
• Fall Wreaths • Fall Flags
• Flowering Cabbage • Flowering Kale
• And So Much Morel

Phone

304-6 7 5-5200
I

-~

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