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                  <text>Tuesday, October 9, 2007

www .myda ilysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Senti nel
'N007 UNMR$Al Mfbi.A. $YPiibiC4tt: SPEtiAL lQYERHStMruf FOITUA£

•

••

Racine bank employee
graduates from
banking school, A3

Staff receive
certification in
cancer care, A6

•

Miracle heaters b~ing given away free with orders for real Amish fireplace mantels to lau_nch the new invention
that slashes heat bills, but Amish craftsmen under strain of Christmas rush impose hous~hold limit of 2 ·
Saves money: uses less energy 'than a COffee maker,

so leave it on day and night and never b~ cold ~gain
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

By M¥• W OODS

.&gt;&lt;&gt; ( I "\ I S • \ ol .. , ·. "\ " · .i.l

UnirJtrsal Media Syndicate

(UMS) Everyone hates high heat bills. But
we're aU sick and tired of turtling down the
thermostat and always being cold.
Well now, brand new HEAT SURGE~ miracle heaters are actually being given away free
to the general public for the next two days
starting at precisely 8:00 a.m. today.
The only thing local readers have to do is
call the National Distribution Hotline before
the 48 hour deadline with their order for
the handmade Amish Fireplace Mantels.
Everyone who does is instantly being awarded
the miracle heaters absolutely free.
This is all happening to launch the new
HEAT SURGE Roll-n-Glow"' Amish Fireplace
tbat actually rolls from room to room so you ·
can take the heat with you anywhere. That
way, everyone who gets them first can irnmediately start saving on their heat bills.
For the first time ever, portable Amish
fireplaces are being delivered directly to the
doors of all those who beat .the deadline.
These miracle fireplaces have what's being
called the 'Fireless Flame' technology that
gives you the peaceful tlicker of a real tire but
without any tlames, fumes, smells, ashes or
mess. Everyone is getting them hecau.se they
require no chimney and no vent. You just plug .
themin.
·
The Fireless Flame looks so. real it fools
everybody but it bas no real fire. So what's the
catch? Well, the soft spoken Amish craftsmen
who hand make the mantels are imposing a
strict hou.sehold limit of 2 during the strain of
the Christmas rush.
"We can barely keep up ever since we started giving heaters away free. Now with winter
just around the corner, everyone's trying to
get them. Amish craftsmen are working their
fingers to the bone to be sure everyone gets
their delivery in time for Christmas," confirms
Timothy Milton, National Shipping Director.
"These portable Roll-n-Giow Fireplaces are
the latest home decorating sensatb&gt;n. They .
actually give you a beautifully redecorated
room whDe they quickly heat from wall to
· wall. R's the only way to dreSB up every room,
stay really warm and slash your heat bills all
at the same time," says Josette Holland, Home • GENUINE AMISH MANTELS MADE IN THE USA: Everyone wants to save money on heat bills this winter, so entire Amish communi·
ties are working from the crack of dawn to finish. These fine solid wood Amish made fireplace mantels are built to last forever. The solid oak
Makeover Expert to the rich and famous.
mantel is a real steal at just two hundred ninety-eight dollars because all those who beat the order deadline by calling the National Hotline at
• And here's the best part. Readers who 1-800-503·8045 to order the fireplace mantels Jre actually getting the. imported hi-tech Fireless Flame HEAT SURGE miracle heaters for free .
beat the 48-hour' order deadline are getting
their Imported hi-tech miracle heaters free
when encased in the real Amish built solid
~ fireplace mantels. The mantels are being handmade in the USA right in the heart
of Amish country where they are beautifully
hand-rubbed, stained and varnished.
You just can't find custom made Amish mantels like this in the national chain stores. Tbat
makes the solid oak mantel a real steal for just
two hundred ninety-eight dollars since tbe entire cost of the mir!lcle heater is free. ·
This free giveaway is the best way to start
off the holiday shopping season, because it's
one of the year's hottest Christmas gifts. The
HEAT SURGE Roll-n-Giow Fireplace gives
you all the beauty and warmth-of abuilt-in fireplace but it can also save you a ton of money on
heating bills.
Even people in California and Florida are
flocking to get thein so they may never have
to turn on their furnace all winter. And since
it uses less energy than a coffee maker the
potential savings are abwlutely incredible.
"We are making sure no one gets left out,
but you better burry becimse entire communities of Amish craftsmen are straining to keep
up with Christmas orders. For now, we have
to turn away dealers in order to let readers
of today's newspaper have two per household .
just as long as they call before the deadline,"
confU'IlJS Milton.
It's a really smart decision to get two right
now because for only-the next 48 hours you get
. ~
both miracle heaters free. That's like putting
START
CAt.LING~T
·, : ·
five hund,red bucks right in your pocket and '
9:00 A.M. TODAY, "
you can save even more money on your monthly heating bills.
,
. 1·800·704'6467
'
'
.
"Everyone's calling to get one but those

8Y

• Meigs downs Lady
• ~agles. See Page 81

J. REm

COLUMBUS The
Ohio Consumers Council
argued before the Ohio
Supreme Court Monday
that American Electric
Power·s cost recovery for
its propased IGCC power
plant in Meigs County is
unlawful and should be .
overturned.
The plan for cost recovery
was approved by the Public
Utilities Commission of
Ohio, and went into effect
for AEP customers earlier
this year. The frrst phase of

•

·~.._.w.mydail~ sc111int•l.co~

cost recovery for· the proAEP notified the PUCO it
posed plant in Lebanon will not make any more filTownship is for front-end ings for cost recovery on the
design and engineering Meigs proJect until the case
work, and not for construc- now pendmg in the state's
tion. The $24 million in cost high court is resolved.
recovery was paid by AEP . Assistant
Consumers'
customers for a 12-month Counsel Jeffrey Small
period endin~ in July.
argued the case for the OCC,
AEP is walling for a deci- and requested that the Court
sion on the OCC challenge instruct the PUCO to order
and c~allenges from other nearly $24 million in refunds
interested parties before to AEP customers. 1be oral
continuing plans to build argument addressed the
the proposed plant. In June, OCC's appeal as.well as simAEP Spokesman Jeff ilar appeals by the In~ustrial
Rennie conftrmed a report Energy Users - Ohio, the
that the plant might not be Ohio Energy Group and
operational until 2017.
FirstEnergy Solutions.

"An unlawful decision by
the PUCO caused consumers to pay higher electric rates for research on a
power plant that has·not yet
been constructed or produced any amount of electricity,"
said
Janine
Migden-Ostrander,
Consumers'
Counsel.
"AEP has been unlawfully
permitted to shift the risks
of planning and constructing a new power plant on to
consumers."
In April, 2006, the PUCO
approved an AEP proposal
to increase customers' rates
to recover an estimated

Council
approves
•
pay rmses
Bv

OBITUARIES
..

Page AS
• Carris Greene, 76
• Mary V. Jackson, 65
. • Trenton Jones, 2

INSIDE
• Grange hears October
program. See Page A3
. • Local Briefs.
.See Page AS
• Holzer offers advanced
. directive assistance.
: See Page AS
. ~· For the Record.
:See Page AS
•· The Glenns named
· 2007 I'm a C~ild of
Appalachia honorees.
See Page A6 .
: - Family Medicine.
See Page A6

WEATIIER

Detallo on Po.. A8

J'AGFS

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Annie's Mailbox

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
• SAVES ON BILLS: Everyone gets low bills • SAFE: The Fireless Flame looks so real it fools • FREE: Get this'249 miracle heater free.lt is being

Sports

and stays warm and cozy. Naomi Abrams' new everybody but there is no real fire. That mgkes given ifflay free to all who beat,the 48 hour order
Roll·n·Giow Fireplace saves a ton of money and it safe to the touch. It's where the kids will play deadline for your choice of the oak or cherry Amish
makes her front room look like a million bucks. and the cat and dog will sleep.
Mantels, The free heater"comes already encased.

Weather

B Section
A6

@ &amp;00? Ohio Valley PubU.hlnjj Co.

I'

Pleue 11ft Coundl, A5

Ple•se see Cue. A5

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BETH SERGENT

SYRACUSE - At its
most
recent
meeting,
Syracuse Village Council
unanimously ap~;&gt;roved pay
raises for four village positions, including the positions of chief of police,
patrolman, clerk-treasurer
and street superintendent.
Both the chief of I?olice
and patrolman pos1tions
received a $1 ~.hour raise.
taking the pay rate for chief
from $7.50 to $8.50 per
hour; the patrolman·s rate
went from $7 to $8 per hour,
retroactive to Aug. 30. It has
been approximately five
years since the department's
positions received a raise.
Mayor Eric cunningham
said this raise makes
Syracuse more comr.etitive
with
other
v11lages.
However, Pomeroy remains
the highest paying police
department with an hourly
rate of over $10 per hour for
starting ·officers.
The part-time clerk-trea·surer's position received a
$85 per month raise which
took the salary from $700 to
$785 per month. Although
the clerk-treasurer's position is elected, the Ohio
Revised Code allows council to implement a pay raise
because the clerk has no
voting powers. The clerktreasurer's position has not
had a village raise since
2003. The raise is retroactive to Sept. I. By comparison, the part-time clerktreasurer's position ,in
Pomeroy pays approximately $1,583 a month.
Council raised the hourly
pay of the street superintendent's position by 75 cents
per hour. The last village
pay raise ·for this position
was in 2003. The raise is
retroactive to Aug. 30. .
According to ClerkTreasurer Sharon Cottrill, as
of Oct. 4, ainounts in. villa~e
funds include $32,278.46 m
the
general
fund,
$57,889.27 in the street
fund, $2,692.60 in the state
highway fund, $3,735.40 in
the parks and recreation
fund, $15.237.64 in the fire
department's
fund,
$22,635.25 in the pool fund
and $1, I09..66 in the law
enforcement trust fund .
.Syracuse's general fund has
rebounded since January of
2005 when it had a low balance of $5,099.67.
Fred Hoffman, lhe village's new grants administrator also spoke to council
about possible grants available to the village: Hoffman
was joined by Jean Trussell,
county grants administrator
to discuss .how Syracuse
could apply for the
$300,000
Community

$23.7 million for research
and pre-construction costs
related to the building of a
clean-coal power plant.
Consumers were charged
for these costs over 12
mon.ths ending July, 2007.
The research and pre-construction costs represent the
first of three phases proposed by AEP's distribution
utilities,
Columbus
Southern Power and Ohio
Power. The price of a similar Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle (IGCC)
plant proposed by AEP in

Meth charges
bound over
to grand jury

BSERGENT®MVDAILVSENTINEL.CdM

2 SECTIONS -' 12

This is the
portable Roll-n·GiowTM Fireplace that easily rolls
from bedroom to living room. No vents. no
chimney and no tools. Just plug it in.

BRIAN

6REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

INDEX

EASILY ROLLS

.

OCC argues cost recovery case at Supreme Court

SPORTS

..

Rolls anywhere to throw an instant heat wave with no chimney, no vents, no wood and no smoke

\\ 1-.1) :'II l .S D.\ Y, ()(' I 0 IW H I 0 , 21lU7

-

Serprt/plloloa

The. United Fund For Meigs County received a donation from local Peoples Bank branches
to kick off Its annual fune!rajslng drive. Pictured (from left) are Janann Knapp of the Rutland
branch, Joan Wolfe of the Pomeroy bran~h. Sue Maison, president of the fund, Jim
Snodgrass, Middleport branch .

United Fund kicks off

fundraising at chamber meeting
BY BETH SERGENT
8SERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -The· United Fund for
Meigs County kicked off its annual
fundraising drive at yesterday's Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce's
Business-Minded Luncheon.
Sue Maison, president of the united
fund's board of directors spoke about
the many organizations the fund
donates to including God's NET,
Holzer Hospice, Meigs County
Coope[ative Parish, Meigs County
Council on Aging, Gallia-Meigs
Community Action, Meigs County
Humane Society, Riverbend Arts
Council, Serenity House, the Meigs
Teresa (right) and Mark Porter were honored for County Historical Society and New
their work as last year's co-chairpersons for The Horizons Child Enrichment Center.
Last year the fund raised just under
United Fund For Meigs County. Fund President
Sue Maison (left) presents Porter with the award.
P...H see Ch•mber, AS

POMEROY - Charges
against two of three men
accused of manufacturing
methamphetamine
have
been turned over to the
Meigs County Grand Jury
for consideration.
Charges of illegal manufacture of drugs filed last
month against Johnny
Ratliff, 41, Middleport,
and Philip C. Locke, 47.,
Cheshire, were dismissed
in Meigs CoURtY Court for
furthe'r" coQsJderation by
the grand jury. Both men
waived their rights to preliminary probable cause
hearings -before· Judge
Steven L. Story, and were
released on personal recognizance bonds. Locke
was placed .on electronic
house arrest.
A third defendant, Corbett
E. Ratliff, 39, Cheshire, will
appear at a preliminary
hearing on Oct. 15. A charge
of permitting drug abuse
filed against Norma J.
Ratliff has also been dismissed for grand jury consideration.
Johnny Ratliff is also
charged with operating a
motor vehicle under the
influence of alcohol, fictitious registration, speed,
driving under suspension
and a seat belt violation.
The charges were filed
. after an investi~ation on
Sept. 16 resulted m the discovery of materials used in
the manufacture of meth at
three mobile homes on
Story's Run . Chemicals
and .other products commonly used to make
methamphetamine were
found at the homes.

102 AND STILL QUILTING
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HO£FLICH&lt;II&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Kathleen Scott's schedule hasn't . changed much
over the years. On Sunday
mornings she plays the
piano for services at the
Forest
Run
United
Methodist Church, something she's done since she
was 16, and on Thursday
afternoons she goes there
to quilt, a craft she learned
at her mother's knee .
Thursday quilting sessions have been going on in
the church basement for
more years than anyone can ·
remember and Kathleen
has- always been among the
faithful. · Last week she
observed her I 02nd birthday at the Thursday quilting session. Her daughter
Mary . Wise brought some
•
Ch•ltene Hoefllch/photo
fancy sandwiches and fruit
Kathleen,
pictured
front
right,
was
joining
by
her
quilting
partners
from
the left around the
trays along with a beautiful
birthday cake to celebrate quilt frame, Mary K. Roush, Mary Nease, Rosemary Keller. Wilma Reiber. Tammy Jones.
Carolyn Salses, and Helen Baer.
the occasion.

�NATION •

-The Daily Sentinel

WoRLD

PageA2
Wednesday, October to, 2007

:Community Calendar

Low-fat diet after
menopause seems
to reduce
risk
of
•
ovanan cancer

'

Clubs and
organizations

•

Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD

grimmest of diagnoses ,
because ovarian cancer usually is detected only after it
WASHINGTON
has spread throughout the
Cutting dietary fat may also abdomen, making it much
cut the risk of ovarian can- harder to treat. Only 45 per. cer, says a study of almost cent of patients survive five
40,000 older women that years.
found the first hard eviThe American Cancer
dence that menu changes Society estimates that
. protc;ct against this particu- 22,430 U.S . women will be
larly lethal cancer.
diagnosed with ovarian canBut don't wait too long to cer this year; 15,280 women
get started: The protection will die of it.
didn't kick in until the
Ovarian cancer can strike
women had eaten less fat anytime in adulthood, but
for four years and count;ng. risk iQcreases with age . .
Until now, · the vnly Mutations in the so-called
known prescription against breast cancer genes BRCA I
ovarian cancer aside and B RCA2 also increase
from surgically removing the risk of ovarian cancerthe ovaries - was to use and women in the .new
.
AP photo:
birth control pills. Use for study have not yet been test· ' five years can lower the ed for those genes, to see if Police tape surrounds the home Tuesday, in Crandon, Wis., where authorities said on Sunday, Tyler Peterson, 20, a Forest
cancer risk by up to 60 per- the low-fat diet proves more County deputy sheriff and part-time Crandon police officer, forced his way in and shot seven people, killing six.
cent, protection that lingers or less beneficial for them.
years after pill use ends.
Why would diet affect
The new findings now ovaries? The theory is that
offer an option for post- fat intake increases the
. menopausal women to try amount of estrogen circulatas well.
ing in the blood, which may
Those who followed a in turn overstimulate sensilow-fat diet for eight years tive ovaries.
BY ROBERT IMRIE
Peterson died in the
· Lianna Thomas, 18, was Pastor Bill Farr of .Praise
cut their chances pf ovarian
Indeed,
blood
tests
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
woods
near
a
friend's
home
found
m a closet, and Chapel Community Church •.
cancer by 40 perce nt, showed · study participants
in
Argonne.
The
lone
surMcCorkle, 18, was ' which' all of the" victims'
Katrina
_,'
researchers
reported on the low-fat diet experiCRANDON, Wis. - An vivor, Charlie Neitzel, was just outside it. Both had faf(lilies attend. · "I k~p
. Tuesday in the Journal of the enced a 15 percent reducoff-duty sheriff's deputy
. National Cancer Institute.
tion in estrad10l; a key form who killed six people appar- m fair. condition Tuesday apparently been trying to thinking, like many of the . _,
after surgery to remove hide, Van Hollen said.
families, that I'm going to • -1
"Thi s is really good of , estrogen, while nonently
shot
himself
three
debris
from
his
wounds,
The
last
·
p
erson
shot
was
wake up a_nd this is not . -1_,
news," said Dr. Jacques dieters experienced no
Rossouw of -the National change, satd · study co- times, with the last shot hit- said Karla David, a spokes- Neitzel, 21, who pleaded something that happened,
l
ting him in the right side of woman for St. Joseph 's with Peterson after the first that it's just going to be norInstitutes of Health, which author
Ross Prentice of
'
shot, only to have · him lire mal again. That's not going
funded the work. "But you Seattle's Fred Hutchinson the head, the state attorney Hospital in Marshfield.
general said Tuesday.
Van Hollen said Peterson again, Van Hollen said. to be the case."
have to stick with the diet." Cancer Research Center.
Tyler
Peterson,
20,
shot
I
went to Jordanne Murray's Neitzel fell ro the floor,
The victims' families
It's arguably the most
"It's quite noteworthy,"
htmself
twice
under
the
home
about
2
a.m.
and
where
he
lay
still
as
have
met
with
Peterson's
. promising finding of the Prentice said of the ovarian
family and "hold no ani. mammoth Women's Heal.th protection. "We're really chin before firing the third argued with her after accus- Peterson fired a third time.
and
fatal
shot.
Attorney
ing
her
of
dating
someone
"Playing
dead
until mosity toward them," Van
· Initiative dietary study. pleased to have something
General
J.
B.
Van
Hollen
else.
Murray
demanded
sur- Hollen said.
Peterson
left,
Neitzel
. which enrolled tens of thou- positive to say to American
said.
Peterson
also
was
shot
vived,"
Peterson
leave,
and
he
did,
Van
Hollen
said
.
The families, the church ·
sands of healthy women women - that undertaking
in
the
left
biceps
·from
once
only
to
return
with
an
ARIt
wasn't
clear
whether
and
the town's one ful)eral
ages 50 to 79 to track the a low-fat diet likely reduces
a
distance.
15 rifle.
· Peterson was struck in the home. were still working on
role of fat in several leading your risk of ovarian cancer
The
six
people
who
died
"He
didn
't
speak,
he
simbiceps before or after he funeral
arrangements
killers. Some women were and perhaps other cancers
early
Sunday
were
either
stuply
opened
fire,"
Van
shot
himself.
Tuesday.
Farr's
wife, Sjana ·
assigned to cut the total fat as well."
dents
or.
recent
graduates
of
Hollen
said.
The
shootings
devastated
Farr, said Peterson's family
in _their diets to 20 percent
Estrogen plays a role in
Investigators found three Crandon, a tight-knit · town had requested his funeral be
of calories - from an aver- breast cancer, too. Yet when Crandon High School, where
age of 35 percent - while researchers
last
year Peterson also had graduateli. bodi'es on or next to a cou·c h of 2,000, where many peo- last out of respect for the
· others continued their usual checked , women in this They were at the house to - - Lindsey Stahl, 14; Aaron ple knew at least one of the victims' families.
Associated Press writer
: diets for comparison.
same study, they found only share pizza and watch Smith, 20, and Bradley victims:
"It's an unbelievable, Carrie Ant/finger conYet the study so fat has a 9 percent drop in breast- movies during the school's Schultz, .20. Murray, 18,
was found In the kitchen.
nightmarish thing," said tributed to this report.
found the diet made little cancer risk, not quite large homecoming weekend.
impact on rates of breast enough to be sure it wasn't
cancer, colorectal cancer due to chance. But even
and heart disease. There are then, the women who cut
a number of theories: Maybe the most fat fared better the women started healthier just·like with the new ovari'
Br PAMELA HESS
United States in the media
"No adversary can exerThe U .S government
. : eating too late; most were an cancer data.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
and on the Internet.
cise all options; but we should be promoting uni. overweight, a major risk
Most of the dieters cut
. The report comes from don't know which options versally accepted values
. factor, and the diet wasn't their fat intake to 24 percent
WASHINGTON - The the Defense Science Board. they can exercise," the doc- like human di~nity, ecodesigned to shed pounds. of calories, not quite as
U.S.
government ' should a panel of retired military" uments state.
nomic well-bemg, health
Nor did most women actual- much as recommended.
replace
more than I ,000 and CIA officials and
The report recommends care and education rather
ly cut enou~h fat.
And over time, the fat crept
But despite all those hur- back: Eight years later, they irradiation machines used in defense industry experts creating "unfettered X- than "democracy" and
hospitals and res_~:arch facil- who offer the Pentagon pos- treme intelligence teams" to "freedom," the panel states.
dles, a low-fat diet did were up to 29 percent "What we say is often not
. appear protective against still lower than the average ities because terrorists could sible solutions to actual and improve the _" poor intelliovarian cancer - and the American
diet,
noted use the radioactive materi- potential national security gence communtty posture." , what others may hear - women who started with the Rossouw, of NIH's National als inside to make a "dirty" problems. It is expected to Exactly what the teams concepts such as ' democrawould do is classified.
cy,' ' rule of law' and 'freeworst diets and cut fat the Heart, Lung and Blood bomb. a government advi- be released late this year.
sory
panel
has
concluded.
The board wants the
The board advocates dom' have different meanmost got the most benefit.
Institute.
"Any one of these I ,000- Pentagon to create a JOmt diplomacy and trying to ings in different cultures
• Ovarian cancer is fairly · "It's feasible," he said of
rare, affecting one in 60 the diet. And, "once there is plus sources could shut military force able to locate · influence world opinion so and at different stages of
women compared with the news that this does work, it down 25 square kilometers, and seize illicit nuclear the United States is less · their development," . the
one in 9 who will get breast may be easier to motivate anywhere in the United materials and weapons likely to be attacked or documents slpte. "It is about
States, for 40-plus years," when they are still in transit, lured into a foreign war it them, not only about us."
cancer. But it is among the people to do."
according to panel docu- and to safely destroy nuclear might not win.
It recommends that the
ments obtained by The weapons captured from ter"We are unprepared," state State Department spend $250
Associated Press.
the documents. "At best we million over five years to ererorists or defeated states.
The machines are in relaIt says U.S .. intelligence will be deterred. Worse, we are an independent "Center
tively unprotected . locations has failed to determine what will enter thl! fray and then for Globa! Engagement" to
such as hospitals and research countries or groups· are quit when we appreciate the conduct opinion research and
facilities all over the country, developing or tr~mg to cost of success. Instruments analyses on media and culand may be a tempting source obtain nuclear, radtological of national power other than ture that the government can
of
radioactive materials for and biological weapon~ and the military, such as strategic use to design projects and
·.
Bv DAN SEWELL
buoyed by a recent run of
AP BUSINESS WRITER
record highs Of the StOCk, terrorists who want bombs how and when they are like- communication, will assume messages that will advance
greater importance."
those values.
which is up about 15 per- that explode and disperse ly to use them.
''TJ _
CINCINN "'
.
The cent over the last three radioactive debris over a
: Procte~ &amp; . Gamble Co. is • months. Lafley said P&amp;G large area, rendering it unin: r!'mewmg Its brand portfo- . stock closed at record bighs habitable, the board found.
The irradiators c·o ntain
: ho wtth an eye toward po~- I 2
straight
days
in
: s1ble sa~es of some bust- September. Shares ended Cesium*-137, one of the
: nesses, 1ts ch1ef execuu ve. Tuesday trading at $71.08, most dangerous and long• told shareholders Tuesday.
up 37 cents· the 52-week lasting radioactive materi,
· . "We'll continue to shift range has b~en $60.42 to als. They are used for radiation therapy and to sterilize
: P&amp;G's portfolio toward $71.32.
.
• fast:growin.~. high-margin
"Stock's going up, divi- blood and food.
Swapping
the
Cesium
busrnesses,_ satd
dends going up; they seem
for
X-ray
: · Lafley, chatrman and chtef to have the handle on what irradiators
; · executive officer. ·
new products they need and machines or irradiators that
: : , However, Lafley would- getting rid of older prod- use other materials would
• ..n t say wh1ch, 1f any, of the ucts," said investor Bob cost about $200 million over
five years, but it would take
: · consumer products compa- Russo, 71, of Cincinnati.
: ny's brands co~ld wind up
Wearing dog masks and the most accessible source
: o~.a d_eparture hst...
. ·]llison stripes, activists of of dangerous radioactive
:
Thts ts ongomg,. he satd the People for the Ethical mat~rial_ inside the United
:·of the revtew, addmg that Treatment of Animals States "off the table" for terwith POOBAH &amp; ~OG ROAST
· any decision . would be demonstrated
outside rorists, the panel says.
Come out and help us support the children
: shared with P&amp;G employ- against laboratory testing of
The recommendation is
• ees before becoming public. animals for P&amp;G's lams pet part of an as-yet -unreleased
of Meigs County!
.
Among big-name brands foods.
report that describes how
JOIN OUR KARAOKE CONTEST'
·: artalysts have said might be
Shareholders
over- unfriendly nations or terror: so~d are Folgers coffee, whelmingly rejected"a pro- ist groups could undermine
: Pringles chtps and Duracell posal to end . the practice. the computers and satellites
: batteries. Laflcy called the P&amp;G officials said th~ vast the U.S . military relies on
.'
reports speculative.
majority -of lams testing is and attack the United States
"We cannot and do not · conducted in pet owner with radiological or biologi- ·
. .,
'
. ·I
comment on speculation," homes, most of them cal weapons or blackmail
• -1
..
Lafley said during question- employee families , but that the U.S. go vernmen t with a
.
ing by shareholders.
lab testing and monitoring threat of a nuclear detonaOverall, it was a genial is sometimes needed to tion , all while manipulating
meeting, with shareholders ens,ure safety.
world opinion against the
AP M£01CAL WRITER

Thursday, Oct. II
. RACINE -· Ohio River
: Producers, regular meeting,
·? p.m ., Southern vo-ag
:room.'
. : : POMEROY:-- Alpha Iota
· :Masters,
II :30
p.m.
:Thursday at the Methodist
• ~hurch, Pomeroy.
: · POMEROY Return
:Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
· Daughters of America, I
. p.m Saturday at the home of
Betty Milhoan .
; · CHESTE~
Shade
::River -Lodge 453, meeting
; at 7:30 p.m. at the hall . .
• Refreshments.
Bethany
. . RACINE . :Son shine Circle, 7 p.m. at
: -the church. Members to take
: :items for a si lent auction.
• Program by Mabel Brace
: ·and Mildred Hart.
.
Saturday, Oct. 13
BASHAN
Bashan

Reunions
Saturday, Oct. 13
CHESH IRE - Walker
family reunion , 4 p.m at the
Kyger Creek Employees
Clubhouse.

·Church events
Thursday, Oct. 11
MIDDLEPORT
Wes leyan Bible Holiness
Church, 75 Pearl St.,
Middleport, will have a
revival Oct. 11-14 7 p.m.
each evening. Rev. Doug
Cox will be speaking, and

there will be special singing
nightly. For more information call 742-2252 .
Friday, Oct. 12
SYRACUSE
Children' s clothing give.'
away, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m., at
Syracuse
Community
Church, second· street.
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel hymn sing, 7 p.m. ·
with Redeemed at the Faith
Full Gospel Church .
Sunday, Oct. 14
POMEROY - Carleton
Church wi II observe homecoming with dinner at noon
and services with special
singers . following. The
church is located three
miles on County Road -18.
MIDDLEPORT
Homecoming Ash Street
Church, 398 Ash Street,
Middleport, Dinner at 12:30
p.m. afternoon service at
I :30 with special singers,
Rei f Herman,
Valerie
Clonch,
and
Debbie
· Falcome. Everyone wel come, special invitation to

Birthdays
Wednesday, Oct.IO
. CHESTER Eleanor
Knight of Chester will
observe her birthday on Oct.
10. The celebration will
take place on Sunday, Oct. 7 .
at the restored Chester
Courthouse with an open
reception from 2 to 4 p.m.
Those unable to attend can
send cards to her at 36741
State Route 7, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
RACINE Margaret
Hayman .
Carpenter
Packman who grew up in
the Apple Grove area and
graduated from Racine
High School, will observe
her 90th birthday, Oct. 16.
Friends may send cards to
her at P.O . Box · 178,
Stratton, Okla., 43961.

or:

'

' l

.I
I

.I

Lafley: P&amp;G designed
for more growth

I

I

A.9.

COMING OCTOBER 20th

.

,.

'

Submitted photo

· ._Racine bank einployee
: graduat~s front b
· -g school
School offers bankers from
across the state the opportunity to enhance their skills in all
areas of bank operations and
management, and provides a
valuable network of contacts
within the Ohio banking
industry.
"The Blythe curric4lum is
progressive, practical and
enlightening, and is an
esse ntial training program
for both new bankmg professionals and experience&lt;!
bank officers," said Stacy
Schindler, OBL manager of
professional schools.
"Classroom lectures, case
studies, role-playing, computer-based simulations, networking and outward bound

activities are many of the
reasons why participants and
bank presidents alike view
the School as an asset to
their banks and management
teams," Schindler explained.
Employees at nearly every
level can benefit from the
challenging
educational
opportunities that are offered
in a fun and rewarding environment at the Blythe School
of Banking. For more information' about the 2008
Blythe School of Banking,
Oct 6 I0, 2008, contact Stacy
Schindler,at 614-340-7608.
The Ohio Bankers League
combines the vision, excellence and experience of t!Ie
former
Ohio
Bankers

Association and the Ohio
League
of
Financial
Institutions, bringing together the best of two previously
I00-year-old-plus organizations. The 250-member
association is comprised of
financial institutions insured
by the Federal Deposit
Ins4rance Corp. including
commercial banks, savings
banks, and savings and loan
associations. The OBL pro,
vides professional education, collective buying, communications, and governmental services to its members. Among its membership
are more than 80 percent of
the state's 275 commercial
and savings banks.

BY

Klontv

MITCHELL

AND MARCY SUGAR

upkeep on two house s. My
husband wants to sell the
e state, fix up our current
home and generally live it
up. He says we're roo old to
move and he never liked my
extended fam ily or their
house anyway. I suggested
we rent our house for the
summer and stay in the big
hou se just to see how we like
it. He flatly refuses. He doesn' t want the rel atives, or even
our own kids, to "invade" us .
No one in the family can
afford to buy this house
from me. Selli ng means it
wm1ld be lost forever, and I
can't li ve with that. On the
other h;.nd, my husband
says if I make him move,
he'll resent me to his dying
day. Can you help? Tormented in the Suburbs
Dear Tormented: Instead
of renting your current house,
how about renting the family
estate? Charge enough to
cover the upkeep and a linle
more. Or, you can use the
estate as collateral to borrow
money to maintain it. You'll
get to hang onto the house
until you can make a firm
decision about it, and in the
meantime, you · won't have
relatives barging in and your
husband won't have to move.
Dear Annie: As you are
undoubtedly about to be
bombarded with thousands
of letters making the following observation. I thought I
should be the tirst in line.
"Eydie in Louisville,"Ky.,"
asked about the grammar of
the phrase, "All men are created equal." In your response,
you saJd the phrase was best
known from the Constitution .
No, it's not. It's from the
Declaration of Independence .
Good marks for gram mar, but
none for hi story. - Patrick
in Kansas
Dear Patrick: We're planning to crawl into a hole. Of
course it's from the
Declaration of Independence,
and we know this because we
had to memorize it in school.
We apologize to history
teachers everywhere - especially ours.

Dear Annie: My wife,
"Alice," and l are moving to
Kentucky. Alice has invited
"Dottie," a close female
friend, to come along for
company and share the driving. When I asked what the
hotel arrangements would
be, Alice said we could all
share a room - ·two double
beds, of course.
Here ' s the problem: A
year ago, I entered a· very
costly rehab clinic to
address longtime addictions
to alcohol and pornography.
During the month I was
gone, Dottie told my wife I
had made sexual advances
toward her, which is completely untrue. That fact was
substantiated during a polygraph disclosure to my wife
at the conclusion of my sti nt
in rehab. I have been clean
and c·ommitted to recovery
for over a year now, a nd
proud of it.
Alice's continued friendship with Dottie bothers me,
and I choose not to have any
contact with the woman.
Alice's decision to invite
her on our trip is confusing
and irritati ng since she
knows how I feel. It belittles'
my recovery and shows
scant respeat for me or our
marriage. Recovery is challenging enough with out '
such unnecessary hurdles.
I intend to follow in our
second vehicle and drive
straight
through
to
Kentucky so that I won't.
have to be in the car with
Dottie or share a hotel room
with her. Am I wrong ? Hurt in Houston
Dear Houston: No, you
are absolutely right. We're
surprised ~our wife has chosen to mamtain such a c lose
relationship with Dottie, but
she apparent! y doesn't see
her as a threat to the health
of her marriage. The entire
situation sounds bizarre to
us. You are wise nouo put
yourself in a comp~omising
position.
Dear Annie: My husband
Annie's Mailbox is writand I are having our worst ten by Kathy Mitchell and
argument in 43 years.
Marcy Sugar, longtime ediMy late father's last sib- tors of the Ann Landers
ling recently died, leaving column. Please e-mail your
me a lakeside home worth questions to anniesmail·
millions. The home has been box@corncasl.net, or write ·
in the family for over 90 to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
years, and I have wonderful ' Box 118190, Chicago, IL
memories of vacationing 60611. To find out more
there as a child. I want to about Annie's Mailbox,
keep the estate and the tradi- and read features by other
tions and pass them on to Creators Syndicate writers
our children. My husband and cartoonists, visit the
says "over his dead body."
Creators Syndicate Web
We cannot afford the page at www.creators.com.

GOODWIN TIRE

CENTER
1555 NYE. AVE., POMEROY, OHIO
992-3500

Grange hears O~tober program
Chapman,
Larry
SALEM CENTER . October was the theme for Montgomery, Opal Dyer
, : the program presented by and Carolyn Gardner, "Fal"
: :Lecturer Vicki Smith at the by Avanell Holliday and
:::recent meeting of Star Halloween jokes by all.
Master Patty Dyer con·: -Grange #778.
:: : Smith gave a hi stor) of ducted the meeting . Lowell
. · :Halloween. Readings W?'o ""ilnd Margaret Vance and
. : :"Pumpkin Picking" by Judy Richard Miller were initiat·;-Gannaway,
Halloween ed into membership. Carl
·· :Trivia by Pally Dyer; Morris, Legislative Agent
·; Halloween Legends by John discussed the upcoming

presidential election. He
told members to be watching the candidates.
Carolyn Chapman asked
members to come and help
with the Chicken barbecue.
Janis .
Macomber,
Community
Service
Chairperson · proposed a
new project this year, "Vial
of Life." She asked that
members save their brown

medicine bottles for making
the vials.
The 2007-2008 Star
Grange calendar was adopted. There were 27 members
and juniors present for the
potluck supper and meeting .
The next meeting will be
fun night on Oct. 20 with a
potluck at 6:30 p.m. fol lowed by fun and games.

::Society Briefs
Meigs yearbook
available

Meigs County Bikers Toy Run

'

.

. Christina Wood, second from left, the chief compliance officer and loan officer at Home National Bank in Racine, h'a s grad·
uated from the Blythe School of Banking. She poses here with a team of bank trainees following completion of a bank
,
·
operatin simulation.

COLUMBUS
-C hristina Wood. chief com.pliance officer and loan ofti, cer at Home National Bank
in Racine, recently g raduated from the annual Blythe
School of Banking spon- ·
. sored by the Ohio Bankers
League. Wood was one of
35 bankers who compJeted
· the program, which was
, held over two, one-week
. -sessions in September 2006
.and September 2007 at the
. NorthPointe
Conference
. Center, Columbus.
One of the longest-standing ·
· .educational traditions in the
. Ohio banking industry, the
. Blythe School of Banking
was established in 1955. The

Entire situation
sounds bizarre

p~ent past~~s.

past and
members and f ·ends for the
afterlloon
singing and
praise.

Wis. attorney general: Deputy died from •
shooting himself in the head after rampage.

Pe.ntagon panel wants nuclear security tightened

Wednesday, October to, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Volunteer Fire Department
is hosting a two d.ay event
Saturday and Sunday to display its new · fire truck .
Saturday is for EMS and
fire department personnel
while Sunday is for the general public. Chief Harry
Sipencer invites everyone to
attend, enjoy food and see
the new equipment.

.

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

. POMEROY - A selection of Meigs
: yearbooks from years ranging from 1980 to
· 2005 will be for sale at a discounted price
: ·will be for sale at the Meigs Stadium Friday
: evening at the homecoming game. Several
· .yearbooks from years past which have been
: paid for but never picked up will also be
: available there, according to Denise Arnold
· : -Meigs Yearbook advisor. ·

of the summer term: Maureen Heines,
Pomeroy; Wayne Hanzel, Pomeroy; Grant
Abbott, Pomeroy; Macyn Ervin, Racine;
Bradley Brannon. Reedsville; Melissa
Johnson, Reedsville; Eric Mattson, Shade;
and Melissa Reed, Shade .

Gospel meeting

LITTLE HOCKING - Willie Franklin
will speak at g!)spel meetings Nov. 11 -14 at
the Little Hocking Church of Christ. He has
preached in New Guinea and now lives in
Texas . He is a former football player with the
University of Oklahoma, Baltimore Colts
and L.A. Rams. Meetings will be held at 9
. ATHENS- The following local students · a.m., 10: 15 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sunday. and
: · graduated from Ohio University at the end 7 p.m. on Monday. Tuesday .and Wednesday.

OU graduates

....

Kenneth McCulloUQh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
. 112 Eosl Main Slreel
Ohio
.,,

HOURS
Mon • Frl8am • Bpm

Sat. Bam • 5 pm

Sun. CLOSED
Open Weeknlghts 'TIII 8
Friendly Service

Quality Prescription Service
at Competive Prices
Utilit y Payments
Mon. Sat 8am-6pm:
Sat. Sam - jpm

-·

�•

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Wednesday, October 10, 2oo7

.

TODAY IN HISTORY

tastele ss step further :
"What's most despi cable is
that Rush Limbaugh says
these provocative things to
make more money. So he
castigates our soldiers. This
makes more news. It
become s in the news. More
people tune in. He makes
more money. Well , I don't
know. Maybe he was just
liigh on· his drugs again. I
don't know whether he was
or not. If so, he ought to let
us know, but that shouldn 't
.
be an excuse.''
What a disgrace..
In stead of condemning
Harkin's outrage, hi s col·
league, Democratic Sen.
Ken Salazar of Colorado,
expressed hi's de~ire for the
Senate
to
censure
Limbaugh . That, despite the
fact that Salazar's own
brother, U.S . Rep. John
Salazar, D-Colo., introduced legislation, which
passed the House and
Senate unanimously last
year. to prosecute people
claiming medals they had
not earned on the battlefield
(Stolen Valor Act) . Rep.
Salazar is currently working on a database of those
who have been awarded
honors.
But the Senate doesn't get
outraged by its own easily.

Democratic Sen. Di ck
Durbin of Illinoi s voasn't
censured in June 2006 for
comparing American troops
to genocidal tyrants. And
the Senate didn't censure
Massachusett s Sen . Ted
Kennedy when, in May
2004, he used the occasion
of those awful photos from
Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq
to say, "Shamefully, we
now learn that Saddam 's
torture chambers reopened
under new management."
Those were inappropriate,
awful pictures that debased
human dignity, but they
weren 't the torture chambers of Saddam Hu ssein,
and Kennedy knew it. But
the Senate doesn't get outraged at Kennedy. There is
only Senate outrage when
it's politically convenient
- when it means aiding a
push to get Limbaugh
kicked off Armed Forces
Radio, when it means distorting the truth about
someone whose popularity
they know is a threat to
their political agenda.
(Kathryn Lopez is the edi·
tor of National Review
. Online ( www.nationalreview.com). She can be con·
tacted at klopez@nationalreview. com.)

.GTAHlER.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

.··

I

I!.

. .. . .

.... --

Jim
Mullen

record lasted 37 years.
Guess which one is still not
in the Baseball Hall of
Fame?
And now, the consensus
among white, oft-divorced,
skirt-chasing, binge-drinking, bulked-up sportswriters
is that Barry Bonds is not
moral enough to deserve the
honor of breaking Hank
Aaron's home run record
without an asterisk attached
to it. There. is actually talk
of putting an asterisk on the
record-breaking ball itself.
After all, wouldn 't this
world be a much better
place if only Bonds had the
high moral standards pf ...
sportswriters. ·
You'd never know it from
the press, but Barry Bonds
has never been charged,
tried or convicted of any
wrongdoing . His major
crime seems to be that he is
"surly" to sportswriters. His
fans and teammates seem to
get along wiih him very
well . But then, there is that
shadow of steroids. A
ballplayer using steroids? II
sullies the good name of
sports!

•
- ---- ..-·----------

Carrie Greene

GALLIPOLIS
Nobody likes to think about
his or her own death, but
conversations about death .
and dying can ·ensure that
your choices are carried out
tf you become unconscious,
terminally ill or unable to
communicate.
Ohio
Governor Ted Strickland
has declared Oct. 14 - 10
Living Wills and Advance
Directives Week 2007, ·
Living Today, Planning for
Tomorrow, which provides
an opportunity to put in
writing the care you would
want to receive.
Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis is one of many
Ohio organizations recognizing Living Will s and
Advance Directives Week
with a day of education and
free· assistance with completing the documents on
Thursday, Oct. 18 from 9:00
am until 12 Noon in the
Hospital's French 500
Room, located on the First
Floor. Holzer Medical
Center
Patient
Representative
Kelly
Waugh, RN, · and HMC
Social Services staff will
explain advanced directives
and assist those who attend
with completing living will
and healthc.are power of
attorney forms.
The
most
common
advance directive, a living
will, is a legal document
that dictates how much lifesustaining treatment an

I

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Carrie Riffle Greene, 76,
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Oct. 9, 2007, at the Pleasant
Valley Nursin~ and Rehabilitation Center in Point Pleasant.
The body :will be cremated and there will be no visitation
or service. Memorial contributions may be made to the
Cancer Society. Arrangements are under the direction of
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Online condolences may be sent to crowhussell@suddenlinkrnail.com.

Mal'y Jackson
COOLVILLE- Mary V. lackson, 65, of Coolville died.
Monday, Oct. 8, 2007 at her residence.
.She is survived by her husband, Roscoe Jackson.
Services will be held 11 a.m. Thursday, Oct. II, 2007 at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville with Teresa
Waldeck and Ed Beatty officiating. Burial will be in the
Stewart Cemetery, Hockingport.
Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday, from 24 and 6-8 p.m. and can sign the online guestbook at
www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com

Trenton C. Jones
BIDWELL- Trenton C. Jones, 2, Bidwell, died Friday,
Oct. 5, 2007, in the Ni!tionwide Children's Hospital,
Columbus.
·
He is ·survived by his parents, Jason C. and Tina Marie
Mohler Jones.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Burial will be in Ridgelawn
Cemetery, Mercerville. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m.
today at the chapel.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeens(uneralhomes.com.
·

Local
Briefs
'

Steak dinner

.

Develqpment Block Grant
which was awarded to
Middleport and Pomeroy in
recent years.
The CDBG grant requires
a $150,000 match which
isn't necessarily $150,000
in cash but community·
minded projects that add up
to that amount. Community

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 will have a steak dinner at
the post home, with serving from II :30 to I :30 ip.m
Sunday. Price is $6.50 for adults, and $3.50 for children.
Carryouts available.

from PageA1

For the Record

'

. about end-of-life care can
fil e an objection, leaving
care decisions in the hands
of u judge. Living Wills and
Advance Directives Week,
"Living Today, Pla!Jning for
Tomorrow," seeks to ensure
adu Its'
deci sion-making
power over their own lives.
Discussing wishes with
family members and fillin&amp;
out ad vance directives
relieves families from guess
work and potential family
disagreement later.
~:
For more information
about the ji-ee assistance that
will be offered at Holzer
Medical Center on Thursday,
Oct. 18, please call- the
Patient Representative Office
at (740) 446-5568.
. .. ,

Dissolution

Dismissed

Civil suits

Case
from PageA1
"

West Virginia is currently
. estimated at $2.2 billion.
In a news release issued
Tuesday, the OCC said it supports the environmentally·
frieodly technology that
would be used by the plant
and the economic benefits for
the region, but opposes the
manner in which AEP pro-

weekend with a family tail-"
gate party from 5-6:45
on Friday at the site o the
former Pomeroy Junior Hi_ilh
School followed by a pre;
game field ceremony honoring distinguished alumni.
This Saturday beginning
at l p.m. will be a Meigs
Alumni parade followed b,Y
a day of fooc;i, entertainme!lt
and games for kids atid
adults on the Pomeroy parking lot.
·· ;
The
Meigs
County
Cancer Initiative and Ma!'k
Porter GM Supercenter a(e
teaming up for "Every
Woman Counts Day" front
10 a.m. · 2 p.m., Oct. 20ai
the dealership. Free heall!!
screenings and door prizes
will be offered to Meigs
County women.
"Coffee, Conversation
and Commerce" lakes place
al 8 a.m. every Friday ~t the
chamber office.
Bun 's Party Bam catered
the lunch which was held.at
the Pomeroy Library which
providedthe meeting space:

Officers for the fund glucose and blood pressure
include Maison, Betsy screenings, cooking for kids
Nicodemus, vice president, demonstration at I 0 a.m .,
Julie Proctor, treasurer, heart healthy meals for one
Chloris
Gaul-McQuaid, demonstration at 11: 15
secretary; members include, a.m., interactive demonstraTom Reed, George Hawley, tions and displays, advance
Luzon McQuaid, Chuck directives consultation and
Manuel, .Jim Snodgrass . . forms, sit and be tit exercise
Bryan Swann.
program, learn to use a
During The Unit~d Fund's pedometer and try a variety
presentation, branch man- of exercise options , visit
agers from the Pomeroy, MedFlight air ambulance
Middleport and Rutland · and Health Pro ground
Peoples Bank . which are ambulance.
(respectively) Joan Wolfe,
Tlie
Meigs
County
· Jim Snodgrass, Janann Chamber of Commerce's
Recognitipn
Knapp, presented the fund . "Annual
with a check and challenged Dinner" will take place at 6
other businesses to donate. p.m. on Nov. 13 at the
Wolfe said Peoples Bank Middleport Church of
also does payroll deductions Christ's Family Life Center.
upon an employee's request Mike Bartrum is the featured speaker. Tickets are
to donate to the fund .
Other chamber announce- $25 per person for the dinments:
ner. Call 992-5005 for more
· O'Bleness
Memorial information and tickets.
Hospital will host a free
Doug Scovill, of Pomeroy
· "Heartfest" at the Cornwell was recognized as a new
Center from 9 a.m. · 1 p.m. contractor in the county and
on Saturday, Oct. 20 in can be reached al 416-7495 .
Athens. Free screenings and
The "Reunion on the
,
River"
sponsored by the
activities include a diagnostic cardiography tesl, oxy- Meigs
Local
Alumni
gen level screenings, blooq Association will be this

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'l:;
-::::

posed paying for the plant,
including a guarantee by consumers to pay for the plant
whatever the eventual cost.
The OCC also argued that
AEP's propqsal violated
Ohio's electric choice law
because a local distribution
utility cannot own a power
plant. The IGCC plant proposed by AEP would be
owned by its distribution
utilities, Columbus
Southern Power and Ohio
Power. In addition, the OCC

'

1&gt;-,.;N l 1&gt;f

~

said, the construction of the
plant would unlawfully
increase customers' rates
without a full examination
of all the utility's costs and a
legally required ratemaking
process .
The OCC is a state agency
representing 4,5 million
utility customer housellolds,
wh:ch also educates con·
sumers about electric , natural gas, telephone and water
issues and resolve s complaints from individual s. ·

l

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lRTS rE:'HRE

Misery
Oct 12·13 at 8 pm
Oct. 14 at 3 pm

..

Ariel.Jr. Idol
Ages 8·18
Solo Musical Acts
Oct.15·7pm
.

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ART$

----------COUPON

FREE HEARING TESTS

I
Will be given in Pomeroy by
I
I *tBeltone HEARING AID CENTER I
I
Dr. A. Jackson Balles.~lfice
J
1 · 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH
1

I

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12 • 9:00am-noon
The 1e111 will be given by 1 LlunNd Hearing Aid Speclsllst

1

I Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversation Ia I
Invited to hive a FREE hearing teat to see Hthis problem can be I
I helptdl Bring thll coupon whh you for your FREE HEARING TEST,
.I • UAW • ARMCO, AND aALL$125.00
Value
1
OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
I
CALL TOLL FREE 800.634-5265
I
•

required
through
the
mayor's office · if you are
building in the flood plain;
Failure to apply for the free
permits can result in a firn:
according to village bylaws.
Also the village's ordt·
nance committee is current.·
ly writing a new ordinance
on manufactured homes .in
the village .
.
All members of council
were present for the meet.·
ing as was Syracuse Chi~f
of Police Shannon Smith.

~

POMEROY - · Civil actions were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Special Property, Houston, Tex.,
against Jacob Landis, Long Bottom, and by Dennis White,
Rutland, against Wanda M. Rizer, Pomeroy, and others.

POMEROY -Meigs County S~eriff ' _Ro~?ert Beegle
reported the following matters under mvesttgauon: •
• Butch Russell, Sunbury, reported a vacation residence
he owns on Skinner Road had been entered and copper
plumbing and electric wires were stolen.
• Good Tunes on C.R. 7A reported a breaking and enterinl!.
• Frank Lavelle, Athens, reported that the garage at his
vacation home at Reedsville had been entered and a chain·
saw was stolen.
• Bonnie and Burl Putman of Cwlville reported thllt their
Social Security numbers and names were used by someone
in · Youngstown to obtain credit cards. An identity theft
.
.
.
investigation is underway.
• Rev. Bryan Dailey, pastor of Stiversville Commuruty
Church reported that the air conditioner had been removed
from the church and thrown over the hill.
• Paul Brannon, Reedsville, reported that a third Angus
cow had been shot and killed. A first cow was killed in June,
and the second was killed last week. Spotlighters have been
ruled out, Beegle said, and investigation is continuing.

Oct. 25·. Residents are
reminded although traffic
will remain open on Ohio
124 through town, residential streets will be closed to
all traffic at this time for the
safety of trick or treaters.
Cunningham reported ihe
police
department
is
putting in a minimum of 48 ·
hours a week between the
two officers.
Cunningham also wished
to remind residents that
building
permits
are

Chamber·

$12,000 local dollars, all of
which were distributed to
those
local charities listed
BASHAN - Bashan Volunteer Fire Department will
above.
Maison said this
host an open house beginning·at noon on Saturday.
year's fundraising goal is
$15,000 with the 2007-08
fundraising chairman being
Carson Crow. Last year's
POMEROY - Sacred Heart Chur .•1 will hold its annu- co-chairpersons were Mark
al bazaar on Nov. 9. Dinner will be served beginning at · and Teresa Porter who·were
4:30p.m.
honored by the fund with a
plaque at yesterday's luncheon.
Formed in 1993, The
United Fund for Meigs
County is a local agency
that solicits funds and provides financial assistance to
county non-profit groups
POMEROY- An action for dissolution of marriage was and agencies. All money
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Ronald B. raised in Meigs County is
administered by the local
Denny, Pomeroy, and Bonnie Sue Denny, Pomeroy.
board who serve on a voluntary
·basis.
Agencies
requesting to be funded
must be a registered 50lc3
POMEROY - Criminal charges filed in Meigs agency and applications are
County Common Pleas Court against Lori Engle have due this month.
been dismissed . .
Over the last 14 years the
fund has raised $200,000.

Investigations

projects being considered
for the $150,000 match are
replacement of the windows
at the Syracuse Community
Center, Ohio Nature Works
Grants, paving jobs and fire
department grants. It would
be next year before the vi 1lage could apply for the
grant with village residents
choosing the projects which
woul,d be funded via surveys.
Council also set trick or
treat for-6-7 p.m., Thursday,

from PageA1

Church bauar

(Jim Mullen is the author
~f "It Ta kes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life" and "ftaby 's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him ·
at jim_mu/len@ myway.com.)

individual wishes to have U.S. adults have living wills
administered once he or she · an increase of ten percent
has been deemed by physi- since 2004, the year when
cians to be terminally ill or Terri Schiavo made headpermanently . unconscious, lines as her husband and
and unable to communicate parents battled in court for
his or her wishes. A health- seven years over removing
care power of attorney is her feeding tube . Schiavo
another common ad vance had been in a prolonged
directive in which the indi- vegetative state when her
vidual designates another husband requested the tube
person to make medical be removed in 1998. A livdecisions when he or she is ing will would have made
unable to communicate her wishes clear, and a
wishes but may not be ter- healthcare power of ' attorminally ill or permanently ney would have dictated the
unconscious.
individual she assigned to
AdVance directives are make healthcare decisions
gammg
popularity. on her behalf.
According to a Harris
In the absence of an
Interactive survey conduct- advance directive, family
ed in March, two in five members who disagree

Council

. Open house

An asterisk. Didn't pay
child support? An asterisk.
An asterisk if he wears a
loupee or dies his hair. If a
grossly overpaid sportswriter has ever written a .
story about overpaid ath·
letes, let 's 'give him an asteri s ~. No, for that, ~e deserves
two.
There are several topless
bars in .New York and Los
Angeles that would go out
of business if sportswriters
and sportscasters and pro
athletes stopped going to
them. Shouldn't they get a
. few asterisks for that, or is
steroids the only problem in
sports?
·
Should all the fans that
place illegal bet.~ on games
get asterisks behind their
names for moral turpitude?
What about the newspapers
that print the point spreads ?
Is there some legit reason
for that 0
Why are we restricting
'asterisks to sports figures?
Certainly they would come
in handy in a lot of places.
Wouldn 't it be nice if overpaid , tax-cheating CEOs
had asterisks on their vanity
b0ok covers? And politi·
cians. And talk-show hosts.
If it's good for the goose,
it 's good for the gander.

Submlttad photo·

~ -·A

POMEROY - A "Kids' Cruise to Nowhere" on the
Sternwheel Rubel will take place from I to 2:30 p.m.
Sunday. There will be costume judging, kids games, pnzes,
and face painting on the cruise. Cl;large is $7.50 for children
12 and under, and $10 for those 13 and over including parents and grandparents who are invited to accompany the
children on the cruise.
·

A rich ball -club owner
can blackmail an entire city
into building him a new stadium on the backs of taxpayers or he'll move the
team. But at least the
owner's not on steroids'
There are hundreds of semipro college football teams
out there masquerading as
"amateurs." but at least
they' re not on steroids'
School district~ are building
million-dollar stadiums for
high school football teams
as test scores plummet,
while we continue to gradu ate kids who can't read, but
at least those kids aren't on
steroids!
What message does that
send ihe kids, Dad? That it's
OK to do something illegal
as long as·it's not steroids '
"Are yo1,1 blind ? Can ' t
you see that Barry Bonds
' bulked up.' He must be on
steroids." It 's funny, I' ve
been to a lot of baseball
games and I've seen a lot of
bulked-up fan s. Some really
huge guys that were probably skinny years ago. Is it
steroids or French fries? I
meanJust look at them! It
must 1re steroids!
Maybe if a sportscaster
has ever done, or been
acc used 'of doing so meth ing. let's put an as terisk
behind his name. A speed-~
.ing tiCket taking his pregnan t wife 10 the hospit al .put an asterisk behind hi s
name. Cheated on hi s wi fe?

Kelly Waugh,
R.N., Holzer
Medical
Center patient
representatiVll,
and a member
of the social
services
department
will be aval~
able to reylev,:
advanced
directives wltli
interested indl·
viduals in the
Hospital's
French 500
Room Oct. 18.

Offices closed

Halloween cruise

The unquestionable integrity of sportswriters

The sportswriters said he
was ·sur! y and egotistical.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less He doesn't deserve a basetfz_an 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be ball batting record. If he
signed, and include address and telephone number. No · breaks the record, they
tmsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in should put an asterisk next
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of to his name. Of course, I'm
:thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· talking about Barry B... I .
~d for publication.
mean, Roger Maris.
It was a sportswriter who
first suggested that an asterisk be put behind Roger
Maris' name after he broke
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
Babe Ruth's record of 60
Ohio Valley Publishing
home runs because the sea·
Co.
Correction Polley
son became eight games ·
Published· every afternoon, Monday
Our main concern in all stories Is to
longer in 1961. As if it was
'through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of en error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Maris who changed the
Second-class
in a story, call the newsroom at {740) postage p-ld at Pomeroy. , •
rules, not Major League
992·2~ 56.
Member: The Associated Press and
·
Baseball.
the Ohio Newspaper AssociatiOn.
Other things had changed
Poatm11ter: Send addre88 correcOur main number 11
in baseball over the years,
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
too. Babe Ruth never had to
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
face a black or Hispanic
Department extensions are:
Subscription Rates
pitcher. How many home ·
By carrier or motor route
runs would he have had
;.. .
News
One month
'1 0.27
against a Satchel Paige fast'115.84
~tor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12 One year
ball? Babe Ruth rarely had
Dally
50'
.., er: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
to
face a relief pitcher. In his
r.··
Senior Citizen rat••
IJI&lt;tpo"er: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
day,
one pitcher was expectOne month
'10.27
~:
One year
'1 03.90
ed to last the . entire game.
Sl.llecltbers should renit in advance
Advertising
Where is the hue and cry
dime! 10 the Dally Sentinel. No sub·
f~llekle S.leo: Dave Harris, Ext 15
fmm sportsv;:riters for an
scrlptlo("' by mall,,pern'Wtted In areas
t.1'~lldeS.Ieo: Brenda Davis, Ext16 where home carrier service Is availasterisk behind Babe Ruth's
.:.;:IIJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
all-white, no-relief-pitching
able.
."!"'
home run record?
The carousing, hardGeneral Man11f8r
drinking,
glad-handing,
Charlene Hoefllcll, 'l!ff.12
sportswriter' s-best-friend
Babe Ruth's record lasted
52 Weeks
' 127. 11
E-mail:
34 years. The shy, introvert·
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
ed, "surly" (only to
13 Weeks
' 53.55
reporters. hi ~ teammates
Web:
26 Weeks
· '1 07.10
didn
' 1 seem to have a prob52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysenti nel.com
lem with him) Roger Maris'

Holzer offers advanced directive aSsistance

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport village offices will be
closed . on Thursday afternoon for the funeral of
Councilman Ferman Moore.

50 5HARIN6
IS gAD?

The Daily Sentinel• Page .As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Deaths

Dems turn backs on truth to further agenda

Is the truth necessary
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
only when it suits your
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
political agenda?
WWW;mydallysentlnel.com
No. Anyone who has ever ·
attended
kindergarten
Ohio.Valley Publishing Co.
knows that truth - and
Kathryn
being honest
are
Lopez
Dan Goodrich
required in all aspects of
lire. especially in political
Publisher
forums.
But
Senate
Democrats, in condemning
Charlene Hoeflich
talk-radio
king
Rush a solid record of honoring
General Manager-News Editor
Limbaugh, have proven yet them, was doing noli 1,ng of
again that they should have the sort. Suggestions that he
flunked out of preschool.
would do such a thing are
· Limbaugh had an on-air based on pure ignorance
, Congress shall make no law respecting an ·
conversation with a caller and malice or jealousy.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Days after Limbaugh 's
about "phony soldiers" free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
people who pretend to be broadcast, I assumed that
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the . U.S. soldiers either to get at no reasonable person could
money allocated for vets or believe this charge agairst
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
s1mp,ly to get attention in him. But the case against
, the Government for a redress of grievances.
order to amplify their Limbaugh and his "phony
views; in other words, actu- soldiers" comment was
already the talk o( tele\'i·
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution al frauds .
People who don't actual· sion and the U.S. Senate.
ly listen to Limbaugh (I do Reid called him "unpatriot;
- where else does one g·o · ic," and some 40 senators
for sanity m New York · - i~cluding. presidential
.. Today is Wednesday, Oct. 10, the 283rd day of 2007. City?), like Senate Majority candtdates Htllary Clmlon
There are 82 days left in the year.
Leader Harry Reid and for- and Barack_ Obama . " Today 's Highlight in History :
mer NATO commander . apparently signed a letter
On Oct. 10, 1845, the 1.J.S. Naval Academy was estab- Wesley Clark, decided that demanding that Clear
lished in Annapolis, Md.
Limbaugh was accusing Channel drop LI~b~ugh.
On this date:
soldiers who don't agree Clear Channel wasn t mter-·
In 1813, composer Giuseppe Verdi was born in Le with him of being . phony ested, wheth~r out of pnnRoncole, Italy.
soldiers. But Limbaugh, cipl~ or profit. It was nght
In 1911, revolutionaries under Sun Yat-sen launched their who has nothing but the to dismtss the Senate Dems.
overthrow of China's Manchu dynasty.
Sen. Tom Harkin of Io~a
. In 1935, George Gershwin's opera "Porgy and Bess" utmost respect for those
who wear the uniform, and took it an unnecessanly
opened on Broadway.
In 1943. Chiang Kai-shek took the oath of office as president of China.
•
ln 1967, the Outer Space Treaty, which prt:Jhibits the
pli!cing of weapons of mass destruction on the moon or
el~ewhere in space, entered into force. ·
TliECDLOMgus DIS'PATCIJ.
In 1973, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, accused of
~~cepting bribes, pleaded no contest to one count of feder71:07·
al income tax evasion, and resigned his office.
l.n 1982, Father Maximilian Kolbe, who died in the
Auschwitz Nazi concentration camp, was canonized by
·Pope John Paul II.
Ten years· ago: The International Campaign to Ban
Landmines and its coordinator, Jody Williams, were named
winners of the Nobel Peace Prize. Defying the Republican
Congress a second time, President Clinton vetoed a ban on
c.ertain late-term abortion procedures. Seventy-four people
were killed in the crash of an Argentine jetliner in Uruguay.
Five years ago: The House voted 296-133 to give
President Bush the broad authority he'd sought to use military force against Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, with or
without U.N. support. Two executives who'd overseen
WorldCom's financial record-keeping pleaded guilty to
charges stemming from a federal probe of the company's
ln'ultibillion-dollar accounting scandal. Hungarian novelist
an'd Holocaust survivor lmre Kertesz won the Nobel Prize
in·literature.
.
Today's Birthdays: Playwright Harold Pinter is 77.
Former Illinois Sen. Adlai Stevenson lll is 77. Actor Peter
~oyote ·is 65. Entertainer Ben Vereen is 61. Singer John
Prine is 61. Actor Charles Dance is 61. Rock singer-musician Cyril Neville (The Neville Brothers) is 59. Actress
Jessica Harper is 58. Singer-musician Midge Ure is 54.
Country singer Tanya Tucker is 49. Actress Julia Sweeney
is 48. Actor Bradley Whitford is 48. Musician Martin
J,&lt;.emp is 46. Rock musician Jim Glennie (James) is 44. ·
Actress Rebecca Pidgeon is 42. Rock musician Mike
Malinin (Goo Goo Dolls) is 40. Actress Wendi McLendon·
!=ovey is 38. Actor Mario Lopez is 34. Actress Jodi Lyn
O'Keefe is 29. Singer Mya is 28. Singer Cherie is 23.
Actress Aimee Teegarden is 18.
: ~ 'Thought for Today: "At every single moment of one's life
ooe is what one is going to be no less than what one has
tieen." - Oscar Wilde, Irish poet and dramatist (1856J900).

-

Wednesday, October to, 2007

•

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

Jeff Warner IMUrance
Jeff Warner
113 W.2nd St
Pome10y. OH45769
(740)992-5479
warnerj 1@na11onwide .com
,.,
'

D

Nationwide•
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PageA6

OHIO

I

fhe Daily Sentinel

Inside

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

OHSAA computel'!i ratings, Page B2

Staff receive certification in cancer care

Cliffside wins Riverside Pro-Am, Page B2

GALLIPOLIS - Sandy
Corbin, BSN, CNP, and
Diane Young , RN, BSN ,
OCN, of the Holzer Cc;nter
for Cancer Care (HCCC),
recently
completed
EduCare's Breast Health
Navigator training program,
and are now certified to
·serve as· breast health educators and case mana~ers . ·
Breast Health Navigators
coordinate the clinical, educational and support needs
· of breast cancer patients and
their families.
During EduCare's Breast
Health Navigator training,
held in September 2007,
both Corbin and Young
learned ways to better educate patients about breast
health issues and how to
implement a ~omplete program of education and
John and Annie Glenn
support for women diagnosed with breast cancer.
. Training specialist J1,1dy C.
SU-ed photo
Kneece, RN, OCN, proSandy
Corbin,
BSN,
CNP,
left
and
Diane
Young,
RN,
.BSN,
OCN,
of
the
Holzer
Center for
vided
comprehensive
instruction on all aspects Cancer Care, recently certified to serve as breast health educators and case managers.
of breast health management,
from ·
the trained more than 1,750 medical oncology, includ- Cancer Center - Arthur G.
MammaCare®
Clinical nurses internationally to ing a chemotherapy suite James Cancer Hospital and
:NELSO~VILLE - The remar~ed only half jokingly, · Breast Exam to communi- develop
comprehensive that overlooks the Center's Richard J. Solove Research
Fou!ldation for Appalachian you can start from here and ty outreach programs.
Garden
that Institute.
programs of breast health Healing
Ohio will hold its annual go anywhere, do anything
includes
a
walking
Kneece, the founder and management.
The Holzer Center for
celebration and recognize and compete with anyone in president of EduCare, . is a
The HCCC is a joint ven- labyrinth, reflecting pool Cancer Care is expanding
~enator John Glenn and
any field. That was at a New certified oncology nurse · ture of Holzer Medical and benches for resting and its breast health services of
Mrs. Annie Grenn as the Concord celebration follow- specializing in breast can- Center and Holzer Clinic meditation, as well as an education and support for
~007
I'm a Child of ing my orbital space flight cer. She is also ·a located at 170 Jackson Pike American Cancer Society the women in the region.
AJ&gt;palachia honorees.
in I%2. But it's more than MammaCare® Specialist, in Gallipolis, just in front of Cancer Resource Center, For more information, call
,., The event, for ICAN! just 'going' somewhere," an interventional Breast the Hospital, and opened its Navigator and Appearance (740) 446-5474 .or toll-free
members, friends and sup- the Senator said.
Health Consultant, and a doors for patients in March Center. In May 2006, the at 1-800-821-3&amp;60. The
porters of the FAO, will be
The Glenns join an ever- , respected author. She has 2005. In addition to high Center announced its affili- Center also provides a
field at the Zanesville growing· family of I'm a written five books on topics tech radiation oncology sec- ation with The Ohio State Breast Care Hotline tollCountry Cjub on Saturday, Child of Appalachia hon- related to breast disease and vices, the HCCC features University Comprehensive free at 1-877-422-2396.
Oct. 27.
orees, includm~ the 2006
The purpose of the recipients: David Wilhelm,
Foundlllion 's award-win- Athens native, entrepreneur
ning I'm a Child of and manager of President
Appalachia campaign is to Bill Clinton's campaign in
share stories of the region's 1992; Leona Hughes of
s.uccess and honor oqtstand- Jackson County, who has
illi individuals who are endowed college scholartn'!king a difference in their ships for Ohio Univ~rsity
Question: I was out with
Several different fungi are not for everyone. If you foot specialist, may offer
communities and the world. students from Oak HiU; and my grandfather last week- cause nail infections but take them,' you wi II need the most help in resolving
'liie Foundation's honorees Wayne F. White, Lawrence end on our boat and I testing is seldom necessary. periodic blood tests to mon- his probable fungal nail
are people who are proud of County native and former noticed his big toenails The diagnosis is usually Itor things such as liver infection.
their Appalachian roots and executive director of the were yellow and thick. He is straightforward. Sometimes, enzymes.
authenticate the importance Ohio Appalachian Center for a very clean man, so I know however, your doctor might
In some instances, the
Family Medicine® iS a
of educational opportunities Higher Education (OACHE). this wasn't just dirt. What want to scrape away a por- oral medication, surgical weekll column. To submit
to life, business and comIn 2005, the Foundation can be wrong with his toe- tion of the damaged nail, removal of the nail and top- questions, write to Martha
munity achievement, said honored Mike B(Qoks of nails and what can he do. .study the scr.tpings under . ical treatment are all used A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Cara
Dingus
Brook, Nelsonville, CEO of Ro~ky about it? I would like to the microscope, and have a together. .This .can decreas\) Ohio University CoUege of
Inc.;
Nancy help him.
Foundation "President/CEO. Brands,
culture for fungus per- the length of time you must Osteopathic Medicine, P. 0.
·
•.John and Annie Glenn Zimpher of GalliJ?olis, presformed
in the laboratory.
take the oral medicines and Box 110, Athens, Ohio
Answer: It sounds like
a£ew up in New Concord in ident of the Umversity of your
In
most
cases,
as
I
menoften
produces good results. 45701, or via e-mail to
grandfather may have
Muskingum County. High Cincinnati; and Bob Evans a fungal infection of the tioned, the diagnosis is the
The final phase of clinical . readerquestions@familylehool sweethearts and of Gallia County, founder of nails called onychomyco- easy part. The treatment can trials is underway on a new medicinenews.org. Medical
!\-fuskingum College gradu- Bob Evans Restaurants.
be much more difficult and topical medication with a inforf!U'tion in this column
ates, the couple would
The Oct. 27 event will sis (OM). This malady is time consuming. Many top- "permeation enhancer." In is provided as an educa~come American heroes. begin with a reception at 5 very common in the United ical creams and lotions do plain English this means tional ser~~ice only. It does
Jrnnie is renowned for pro- p.m. to be followed by a States and most frequently not work very well. The that the drug will have the not replace the/'udgment of
viding an inspiring model banquet and program at 6 involves-the toenails, but it most successful treatment ability to penetrate directly your persona physician,
for people with communica- p.m. For additional infor- can affect the fingernails as involves removal of the nail to the nail bed. It may be who should be relied on to
tive disorders as she over- mation, please c.ontact the well. While anyone can and treatment of the under- available sometime in 2009. diagnose and recommend
came her own.
Foundation for Appalachian acquire this type of infec- lying infection. This can be
Your grandfather should treaJmenJ for any ffU!dical
-: ''We have just as capable Ohio at www.appalachi- tion, your risk increases painful and healing takes be sure to wear shoes in conditions. Past columns
Bhd talented young people in anohio.org or call 740-753- with age. In fact, it is esti- many months.
public places, even the are available online at
mated that 90 percent of
llOutheast Ohio as there are 111 I.
t:ioat,
and treat any athlete's www.familymedicineThere
are
several
newer
iii .any part of Ohio, or our
The Foundation for elderly people are affected. oral medications that work foot he has. A podiatrist, news.org.
.Dation for that matter," Appalachian Ohio is a OM is also more common · very well, but the medicines
1\nnie said. "But they' must regtonal community foun- in those with diseases such must be · taken for a long
bave the same or better edu- dation and 50l(c)(3) public as diabetes and other period of time, up to six
ill~tional opportunities if they charity serving the 29 coun- immunosuppressive
months, to be fully effecare to compete and succeed." ties of Appalachian Ohio. nesses.
You are also at higher risk tive. These oral medications
~John was a fighter pilot in The Foundation attracts
sometimes produce
if you are male or if you free can
~orld War II and the contributions for programs
serious
side effects, so they
Korean conflict, and in and endowment, makes quently have athlete's foot.
If you see your doctor
1962, became the first astro- grants for charitable and.
tlllut to orbit the earth. Later. civic purposes and supports because of a fungal nail
bt would serve Ohio as a local efforts for positive infection, he or she will
IJ.S. Senator for four terms. change .. For more informa- want to examine not only
t'ot the age of 77, John tion or to learn more about your nails but also tbe skin
reprised the astronaut role the Foundation's I'm a on your hands or feet to
fie become famous for when Child of Appalachia . determine if any other dishe became the oldest human Network (!CAN!) to pro- order is present. In toenail
infections, for
ii&lt;er to vent.ure into space.
mote regional access and fungal
.
. .
•. "Referring to my growing success in education, visit instance, he or she will look
$p in Southeast Ohio - I www.appalachianohio.org. for signs of athlete's foot:

Wednesday, October 10, 2007
'·

POMER OY - A. &amp;chidule ol upcoming high
school varsity sporting events involving
te'ams from Meigs County..

Joday't QIOOII
Croat Country

TVC Championships at Lake Snowden,
4:30p.m.
ThYfldl): OcL 11

Volleyball

Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
·Trimble at EB6tern, 6 p.m.
F.ederal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
frld•y Oet 12
Football

Alexander at Meigs
Watertord at Southam
Eastern at Miller
· \linton County at Belpre
Nelsonv!ile·York at Wellston
Trimble at Federal Hocking
Gallla Academy at -Jackson
Sciotoville East at South Gallla
, Fllver Valley at Fairland
Wahama (WV) at Buffalo (WV)
·Ravenswood (WV) at pt Pleasant (WV)
Slturdly Oct 13

Football
Bishop Donahue at Hannan, 7:·30 p.m.
·

BY

for Protecting Yourself

:.. Wednesday ... Mostly
sunny. Cooler with highs
~ound 70. West winds 5 to
tO rnph.
· Wednesday
night •..
Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers afier
lnidnight. Cooler with lows
fn the lower 40s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent.
.· Thursday ... Mostly

-

..
,

cloudy with a 50 percent .Highs in the upper 50s . .
chance of showers. Much Lows around 4Q.
Saturday...Mostly sunny.
cooler with highs in the mid
50s. Northwest winds 5 to Highs in the lower 60s.
Saturday night and
IOmph.
clear.
Thursday night .••Mostly Sunday••• Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent Lows in the upper 30s.
chance of showers. Lows in Highs in the upper 60s.
the lower 40s. Northwest
Sunday night through
Monday
winds oruund 5 mph.
nl~ht ••• Partly
Friday and Friday cloudy. Lows m the mid
night... Mostly
cloudy. 40s. Hig~s around 70;

,,

•

Local Stoeks
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•

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54.03
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145.88

STEWART Eastern
volleyball clinched a share
of its lith straight TriValley Conference Hocking
Division
champi·onship on
Tuesday
with
a
straightgam~
2515, 25-16.
25-19 victory over
h 0 s t
Federal
Hocking.
Bryan Walter81photo
The Lady
The seniors of the Meigs volleyball team enjoy a laugh Tuesday while watching a postgame video of their careers after
Eagles (19defeating TVC Ohio foe Belpre on Senior Night at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
2
)
improved
to 9-0 this
season in
T V C
·BY BRYAN WALTERS
an early I 5-8 lead en route to before the game for their contributing another three.
SWALTERS&lt;I'MYDAilYTRIBUNE.COM
Hocking
the 11-point game one tri- great volley_ball effort~ Chandra Stanley rounded out
competi,
umph. The hosts led 9-2, 15-3 throughout therr careers. The the category with one kill.
ROCKSPRINGS -Meigs and 20-11 during different uppetclassmen were also pretion with
Barr led the passing game
volleyball ended its regular points of game two before sented with a video tribute with 35 assists. while Wolfe
Broderick
the
triseason at Larry R. Morrison Catie Wolfe came up with after the match.
umph ,
added a pair. Pratt and
Gymnasium in style Tuesday five consecutive service
MHS recorded 44 kills, 39 Howard also carne up with extent;Jing their current
w1th a straight-game 25-14, points for the 14-point win.
assists and a block during the one assist each. Bailey had match winning streak to 14
25-11, 25-15 thrashing of visin the. ~rocess. The Green
Wolfe continued that suc- win. Wolfe led the service the lone block.
iting Belpre during Tn-Valley cess in game three, delivering attack with a dozen, points,
The Lady Marauders also and White - currently 16th
Conference Ohio Division four consecutive aces at one· followed by Barr with 11 and claimed a sweep on the in the Division IV state
competition.
also
evening with a 25-14, 25-6 · coaches' poll . The Lady Marauders (13- point for an early 7-0 edge in Tricia Smith with nine. Beha
claimed
a
season
sweep
of
was
next
with
six
service
victory
in
the
junior
varsity
game
three.
Belpre
cut
the
7) improved to 7-2 in league
the
Lady
Lancers,
whom
points,
while
Vining
and
Pratt
tilt.
The
younger
Maroon
and
play this season, capturing a deficit to 11-6, but the hosts
senior night victory over the finished the match with a 14- rounded things out with five Gold now possess a 12-8 they defeated 25-18, 27-25,
25-16 back in midoverall record this faiL
winless Lady Golden Eagles. 10 run in game three for the points apiece.
September at Tuppers
Meigs
concludes
its
regular
nine-point
victory.
-Shellie
Bailey
had
a
teamThe Maroon and Gold also
Plains.
season
on
Thursday
when
it
Five
seniors
Patti
big~
17
kills
in
the
victory,
defeated BHS by a score of
EHS had little trouble in
while
Wolfe
chipped
·
m
travels to McArthur for a
25-18, 25-8, 25-15 earlier in Vining, Hannah Pratt, Amy
Barr, Talisha Beha and for- another 11 to the cause. Holly TVC Ohio contest with the contest, establishing an
the fall at Belpre.
Meigs had little trouble ei~n exchange stodent Nancy Jeffers and Morgan Howard Vinton County. The JV conPlease see Eastern, 81
were honored both had. six kills, with Barr test will start at 6 p.m.
with tile guests, establishing Kittel -

. )lT£WART- It's been a
long summer, but the final
event for the Inderendent
Racing Series wit come
down to the wire on
Saturday night, October 13,
at the Skyline Speedway in
Stewart - where some of
t!le nation's top drivers and
IRS point men will vye for
~e $5,000 top prize.
. The 'Jack-0-Lantern 50'
event at Skyline Speedway
will feature a complete
show . of Integra Racing
Shocks Time Trials, Heat
Races, the ever~popular
Dash, B-Mains, and the 50
lap $5,000 to win main
e'vent.
.
Outlaw sprints will highlight the racing card with
.other upporting divisions of
·Pure
Stocks,
Outlaw
:Streets, AMRA Modifieds,
:atld Four Cylinders.
:. : The championship battle
1s now between two of
':c)hio's best, point leader
Rick
Aukland
from
%~nesville and Ashland's
Ryan. Markham. Markl\am
6jts 19 points behind
Aukland heading into the
series' finale event.
Wayne Chinn of Bradford
has wrapped up the 2007
Independent Racing Series
Rookie of the Year title but
is still in contention for the
second place points finish.
Chinn sits only nine points
behind Markf1arn.
Local aces Todd Smith,
Kevin
Layne,
Benny
Hickel, Larry Bond, Chris
Games, Andy Bond, Josh
McGuire and Jeff Wood
will challenge for the IRS
checkered flag.
Last week, Hall of Farner
Charlie Swartz came out of
retirement and is expected
to compete once. again
Saturday as he prepares for
tbe Dirt Track World
championship at K-C
~aceway next w~ekend.
· In 14 of the previous 2007
events, only one of the topfour in the points has come
oot victorious and that was
Ryan Markham back on
J)lly 20 at Hilltop Speedway
In Millersburg during the
Summer Shootout event.
Markham held off Rick
Aukland to win the $5,000
prize as it was un-doughtily
~he most exciting races for

Southern
gets back
on track

Up A (jure
Pie &amp; Cookie Baking Challenge
• PRdaf, ~ n9, lm -OPEN TO THE PUBUO
' ·~·~Jt Noon- PVH Main l&lt;lbby

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

HEMLOCK
The
Southern Lady Tornadoes
(9-12) got back on the winning track by defeating the
Miller Falcons in four sets
Tuesday night at Dunlap
gymnasium, 25-17, 22-25,
25-12 and 25-16.
Southern's Emma.Hunter
was 12-12
and had 35
assists ,
Whitney
WolfeRiffle was
28-31 with
nine assists
and 18-21
passing,
Stephanie
Cundiff
was 12-13
. serving and
12-14 spiki n g •
Rashell
Boso was
.12- 13 spiking, Ashley
Robie was
12-13 serving and 7L--C-u-nd-lff-...1 II spiking,
a
n
d
Chelsea Pape was 13-14
servmg.
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle led
Southern to the first win
; : Pluse IH Skyline, 81
with seven points, while
Ashley 'Rob1e, Stefhanie
Cundiff and Rashel Boso
had good nights on the front
0&gt;NrACfUS
line. Kylie Pierce of Miller
had six points, but it was not
: : · 1-740-446·2342 eKI. 33
enough to unseat the
Tornadoes .
, •• - 1·740-446·3008
Wolfe-Riffle had seven
E·mall- sportsOmydaltysenlinet.com
points in the next game, but
Soorts Stan
Jacy Jackson notched seven
_J;lryan Watters, Sports Writer points for Miller with good
efforts from Christina
a4DJ 4•&amp;·2342, ext. 33
,walteraOmydailytrlbune.com
Griffith, Stormy Humphrey,
Randi Toth. Jackson
and
l:arry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 4&lt;16-2342, .... 33
Please see Track. 81
lc,rumCmydallyreglster.com

t

tranaactlona for Oct. 9, 2007,
' provided by Edward Joneo
financial advl10ro lo. .c Millo
In Galllpollo at ( 740) 441•9441
and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleaoant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

'•

•

f

f"".IJ:Uioo ~jl\e tS t•r. October 16 2007
1

t ~~be ~w the PYH Main LobbJ ~ houn pnor to judging

.

t

Wm a t aw~ for top -six pbm in tub c~ry

t i\Orm~ lnfomtalion please all PVHCommiunlt}' ltela.tion~, (304) 675-4340, Ext.

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1326

r-~~~~--~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~,

.Speeial Note:

.

-·--~

IS f9c 6-t!st eo.tty ~~stn.tioo)
13 f« each~ mtry ~. .lntioo)

t ~'1 af.~uatio.a is .avw.Me .at an ~nal $l pee .entty

.

Wa~Mart ( NYSE) - 45;21
Wondy'o (NYSE)- 33.90
Worthlftllon (NYSE) - 26.01 ·
Dally otock report• are the 4
p.m. ET cloeln' quoteo of

•

Scm WoLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

•••

J,.ocal
Weather
,.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

Skyline
Speedway
finale this
Saturday Lady Marauders down Belpre on Senior Night

Grandpa probably has common nail infection

~

Cro11 Country

Southern at Portsmouth Notre Dame,
10 a.m.

FAMILY MEDICINE

+ ..,

Eastern
clinches
share of
Hocking

locAL ScHEDULE

The Glenns named
· 2007 I'm a Child of
~ppalachia honorees

•.
•.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ro provide a

~·~~. Ails"

in fbg
wm~rJoo t.Jme dle property
ofPkit~Gt Veley ~t.t . t
will ~ ~,., !be ~lUi of fbg
dlatJm&amp;e. AI pmtMIII• ,,_
6!1 •prdJI ,.,., wll.- to
IPrbt ••·• trbo mltaut'ac

tn..tanmillour_,. ,,_

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AM'IJJ:

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I

L~~-~~-~~---------------~
Proudly sponsored by:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
&amp; PVH Auxiliary
·----.... •·----~

�'
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 10,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Eastern
Fourth w~kly OHSM c:omputer rating~ , fromPageBl
- Here are ~ fourth """'' loot·
from the Ohio High School
Ratings are by divlelon and
average bl·level points per

In

e~h

Aegoon 11l-1, Sherwood Falrvoew (7-ll ) 12.6857
Fondlay Llberi)I-Bemon (7·0) 12.071 4 a, 'Haml"'
Patrick Hanry (7·0) 11 . ~57. 4, Bucyrus Wyrilord (7·
0) 11 0214 5, Archbold (6·1) 10 01 42 6, Lima Cent
Cath. (6-1 ) 9.9657 7, Ll barty Clr (6· 1) 97214 ,
Delphos Jefferson (5·2) 8.5928. 9 , Def. Tlnora
7 8428
Jeromeavllle Hillsdale (6·1) 7 0071
CoiS Ready (6· 1) 12 4285
nall,li"Ui l1 .7&amp;71. 3, 'f#~-~~~~~"'~

region advance tQ

early 15- ll lead m game
one before ree ling off a l 04 run for the l 0-poi nt wm
The guests led 16-7 m ga me
two before posting a mnepoml vtctory for a 2-0 lead,
then wrapped th mgs up in
the finale with a comefrom-behind ·
triumph
FHl\S led 7-4 at one pomt
in that last game.
Katie Hayman led the
victors with 21 kills and
nine block ~. followed by
Tresa Swatzel with seven
kills and Katie Wilfong
with five kills. Kelsey
Holter was next with three
kill s and Morgan Bllrt
rounded out the net att ack
wtth one kill

Track
fromPageBl

'

Cliffside Golf Club team takes Riverside Pro-Am
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS4!MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

MASON,
WVa
Cliffs1de Golf Club may
have lost the 2007 Rtver
Cup event, but they
rebounded nicely with a
victory in the annual
Rtverside Pro-Am event.
The four-man team of
Kmcatd, Mike
Bobby

Skyline
from PageBl
the Independent Racmg
Senes so far in 2007.
, Durin~ that time, Aukland
and senes Rookte of the
· Year point leader Wayne
Chinn have both managed

Haynes and the Bickle
brothers Aaron and
Brian - fired a smooth 17under par round of 53 to
take first place and its collective prize of $3,600.
There was a tie for second
between the team s ot
Jonathan Clark from Sleepy
Hollow Golf Club in
Hurncane and Ttm Aries a Hooter's tour player from
to collect several top-fi ve
fini shes in those 14 events.
There have been 13 different wmners go to Victory
Lane m just 14 events on
the 2007 tour wllh only one
repeat wmner. Robbie Blatr
took those two wms which
came at Twin Citie s
Raceway (IN) Park and
Challenger (PA) Raceway.
The purse for Skyline

Columbus Both C lark's Gol f Club also eagled hole
and Alles' respecttve teams No. 10. The skms were
fired matching rounds of worth $500 each.
54.
A total of 18 teams comLow scoring teams at
Riverside G.C. Pro-Am
peted for the $9,000 purse
thts year.
2726 - 53
Bob K1ncel d CliffSide G C
There were two skms out, T1m
27-27 - 54
Ailes Columbus
mcludmg an eagle on the Jon Clark Sleepy Hollow
28 26 - 54
27-28 - 55
new hfth hole by the T1m Shay Arms trong, Ash land
Roush R1ve rslde G C
2728 - 55
All es' te am. The Trent Trent
Dave l awrence Charleston
28-27- 55
2728 - 55
Roush team from Riverside Trent K1ncald Mt Ve rnon
Speedway. l) $5000, 2)
$3000, 3) $2000, 4) $1600,
5) $ 1400, 6) $1200, 7)
$1000, 8) $900, 9) $800,
10) $700, 11) $600, 12)
$575, 13) $550, 14) $525,
15) $500, 16) $500, 17)
$500, 18) $500, 19) $500,
20) $500, 2 1) $500 , 22)
$500, 23) $500, 24) $500
The Skyline Speedway
Will make the 14th dtffer-

ent
tr ac k
on
the
Independent
Racing
Schedul e, whtch ts home
to the presllgtou s Harvest
50 event held each season
at th e 3/8th' s mtle
oval For furth er mformation
on
Skyline
Speedw ay, please call
(740) 662-4111 or click
your web browse r to
www skylmespeedway.net

topped out the final serves
to put Southern away 25-22.
The game was highlighted
by several long volleys and
trade-offs in scoring before
Miller final! y pulled off the
victory.
With the set now even at
1-1, Coach Tonja Hunter 's
Southern crew wasted no
time in working on win
number two. Miller led 10-9
in the third game when
Wolfe-Riffle reeled off
fourteen stratght points and
Rashell Boso added the
game-winner in a 25-1 2
Southern win.

2007

Megan Brodeftck led the
passin g att ac k w1th 25
assists, not to me ntio n
chtppmg in a team-high
15 servtce poin ts du nng
th e wm. Burt fo llowed
wt th nine po mts. whil e
Hayman &lt;tnd Swatzel each
added sevell to th e cause
Holter had s1x serv rce
points and Ryan Davi s
contri buted one L1bero
Morgan Werry was l -of-4
passing.
The
Lady
Eagles
claimed a sweep of the
evenm g as well With a 2523, 25- 19 vrcto ry in the
JUn iO r va rs rty tilt
Eas tern,' whtch can onl y
be caught by Tnmble m
the Hoc km g Dt vi swn ,
hosts th e Lady To mcats
th ts Thursday on Semor
Nrght. The JV contest wrll
start thm gs at 6 p.m.
Hunter and Pape combrned for 12 points in the
fmale as Southern pulled off
the 25- 16 win. Southern had
a good effort from Robie,
Boso, Samantba Patterson,
Sarah Eddy and Cundiff.
Southern won the reserve
game 15-25, 25-18, and 2515 in three sets. Kati Woods
had 15 for the winners and
Brooke Chadwell had II.
Having won three games
more than last season,
Southern ts looking for a
long tournament run to even
up its season record.
Southern hosts Federal
Hocking for senior mght
Thursday m Hayman gymnas ium, then goe s to
Symmes Valley on October
18 for the first round of the
secllonal tournament.

Wednesday, October 1o, 2007

\lr:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\egt~ter
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ublicatlon or omit
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Sltorday, 0CL13, 2007

nt. Corrections wll
made m the f1rs
va1lable edition

$5,000 to win, $500 to start for Late Models
410 Outlaw Sprints- $1,500 to win, $200 to start
Oct. 13 Gen. Adm. $20 Klds16 under $5 Pits
Oct. 27th Gen Adm. $15 Pits $30
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Meigs County, OH

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Stewart, OHoo • 35 Mrnutes West of
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blooded wi th paper Call
256 6882

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing ,...rvet IM right lo Mit, rejtct or c.tncelany ad at a n~ time Errore must be repor1ed on the tirtt da y of
Tribune-Senllnti-A-v!.tfl •Ill be rnponslb4e for no mor. VIlli ltle colt~ the fP.ICI occupied by the error a nd only lhe liratlntenlon We Sha ll not
any loll or t XpenH that retuht from the publlcdon or omltalon or an adVIftiHment Correction will be made In the flrat awallabla edition • Box
are alway a conlldentlal • Current f'llll card appllaa. • All rul aatata adv«tlsemehte are
to the Federal Fair Hous ing Act ol 1968
nowop'l,..-1
accepts only help wanttld ada m..tlng EOE atllndarda We will not knowingly accept any
violation ot the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Lost femal e brown and
black Pug dog tn the area of
Blue eyed pupp1es to g1ve Dodnll Rd V1n1on Close
away 740-256-18 12 or 256- com pamon fo r e lderly
9256
woman II found call 740
- -pupp.es
- - - -1/2
-Fox
- -Tenter
- - - Iii
~
~~
~~
96~
~~------~
Free

weeks old

"Y"C»ILa r

SHERIFF SALE
CASE
NUMBER
07CV005
Deutsche
Bank
National Trual Co.,
Plaintiff Vs
Jean Craig at al,
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
, Ohio
fn pursuance of an
order of tale to me
directed from said
court In the above entllied action, I woll
expose to sale at publie auction on the front
steps ol the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, Nov 2nd,
2007 at 10 AM., of said
day, the following
described realeetate·
Schedule A
Description of Real
· Estate
Situated In the Village
of Middleport, County
of Meigs, State of Ohio,
to-wn:
, The aoulh one-hell of
Lot
Number
Two
Hundred and Sixty
Eight (268) In Lower
Pomeroy, now lncorporated In the Village of
Middleport,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
Said property baing
located on tho weal
lido
of
Broadway
1outh of Ash Street
1nd being 50 feel on
uld Broadwly, r unnlng back to an alley
140 feet.
Current Owner: Jean
Cr11lg II al
Property at:
538
• Broadw1y St.
• Middleport, Ohio 45760
PP* 15-0011111
Prior Delld Rllerllnce:
VOlume 113, Page 511
Apprlllld
II
182,000.00 TERMS OF
tALE: cannot be 10ld
- for len then 213rdlthl
IPpntllld voluo. 10%
· dawn on day of ule,
' CHh
or
certified
check, 111111101 due on
conflrtnlllon of"'-·
The 1pprol11l DID NOT
Include en Interior
txamlnotlon of the
houH.
ROBERT E. BEEGLE,
MEIGS
COUNTY

SHERIFF
ATTORNEY FOR THE
PLAINTIFF
Ralnaenfleld &amp; Anoc.
2035 Reading Rd
Cincinnati, Oh 45202
513-322-7000
(9) 26, (10) 3, 10
- -- - - - Public Notice
-------SHERIFF SALE
CASE
NUMBER
06CV1 76
Property
Aaaet
Management
Inc.,
Plaintiff Va
Delbert Griffin Jr et al,
Delandanta
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court in the above entl·
lied action, I will
expose to sale at publie auction on lhe front
steps of the Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, Nov. 2nd,
2007 at 10 A.M., of uld
day,
the following
described real eal8te:
Current Owner: Delbert
Groffom Jr. et at
Property at·
40370
: Llmberger Rdg Rd
Reedsville, Ohio 451T3
PP- 09-01381
prior deed Reference:
VOiume237, Page 615
Appralled
at
$65,000.00 TERMS OF
SALE: cannot be eold
lor len than 213rdl the
appral1ed valu1. 10%
dawn on day of 111e,
caah
or
certllllld
check, Balance due on
confirmation of 1111.
The
apprlllll DID
Include an Interior
IXImlnltiOn Of lha
houH.
ROBERT E. BEEGLE,
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF
ATIORNEY FOR THE
PLAINTIFF
Lerner S1mp1on &amp;
Roth Fun 120 aut
Fourth Strlll, 8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 452024007 51 3-241-3100
L egal oeecrlpllon·
The followi ng reel
11tata ohuated In the

'

Townshop ol Olive,
County of Malgs, and
State of Ohio, and
being In Fraction 36,
Section 34, Town 4,
Range 11 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase,
and beginning at a
point about 1,004 feet
South
from
the
Northeast corner of
said Fraction 36 which
point of beginning Ia
on the East line of asld
Fraction 38 and at the
Southweat corner of a
4.50 acre tract olland,
a part ol the property
conveyed to Clifford
Longenatte by deed
recorded In Vol 236,
Page 397 of the Daecl
Records
In
Meigs
County, Ohio; thence
North along the Eaal
line of uld Fraction 36
300 teet; thence Weal
350 feet to tho center
of the public road ;
thence Southeasterly
along the center line ol
the public road to a
point which point Ia
one Weal from the
place of beginning ;;
thence Easl190 feet to
the place of beginning,
containing 1.85 acraa,
more or lese. This
being a part of a 51
acrea and 105 rods
tr~ct olla~d described
In Vol 223, page 207 ol
the deed Racordt ol
Melge County, Ohio
Deed
Reference :
Volume, 257, Page 446
and Volume 227, Page
347, Melg1 County
Deed Recordt.
S.ld Real Illata It
tubiiCt to 111 1111mente and rlghta ol
way of record
Excepting 1nd reeervlng unto the grantor,
Clifford L ongenetto;
hl1 htlr11 and uolgn11
loreVIr, 1 right of
way/eaument
for
lngre•e and egreaa
purpotet over and
ecrooo
the
above
described real eotate
(1.85 acrtl) and being
In Fraction 36, Section
34, Town 4, Range 11 of
t he Ohio Company's
Purchase and beg innlng at the Southwest

corner of the above
described 1.85 acre
tract and being further
described as follows :
Beginning In the middie of township road
270 In the alorementloned
Section,
Fraction, Town and
Range and running a
distance ol 190 feel
East from Township
Road 270 to the East
line of the above
described 1.85 acre
tract; thence along the
Eeat boundary ol the
above described 1.85
acre tract a distance of
20 feet to a point;
thence weal 190 get to
the township road 270;
thence along lhe canterllne of Township
Roed 270 to the place
ot beginning.
11 the Intention of
Clifford Longenette, lor
himself, his heirs and
astlgns, to reeerve a
20 foot
right
of
way/easement
f rom
Township Road 270
acroas said 1 85 acre
tract.
Being the same proparty conveyed unto
Ernest P. Vineyard and
Wilma J. Vineyard by
Deed dated May 8,
1983. Flllld for record
on May 12, 1983, In the
Oft lee ol the c ounty
Recorder of Meigs
County, Ohio, In OR
Vol. 289, at page f57 .
Aleo baing the same
property
conveyed
unto Clifford Lonenetta
by
deed
dated
February 19, 19801 ,
end ol record In the
llorlnld recorder 's
office In OR Vol. 277m
at 1ge 347
Sublect to 1111mtnll,
ltlnt, right of way,
oondHione, and r~etrlcl ion of record.
(9) 28, (1 0) 3, 10.

~I A:: ht

Michelle Stahl at al,
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of asle to me
directed from said
court In the above enllIlea action, I will
expose to sale at publie auction on the front
steps ol lhe Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, Nov. 2nd,
2007 at 10 A.M., of said
day, the following
described real estate:
EXHIBIT A
Situated
In
Melge
County,Siate of Ohio,
Village of Middleport:
Lot
Number
One
Hundred and Sixty-Six
(166) In Phillip Jones
Third Addition tot eh
Town of Middleport,
now Incorporated Into
a part ol the Vollage ol
Moddlaporl,
Meigs
County, Ohio
Said premises also
known as 558 Mill
Street, Middleport, OH
45760-1144
PPN: 15-00572.000
Current
Owner•
Michelle Stahl el al
Property at:
558 Mill
St.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
PPI 15-00572.000
prior deed Reference:
Volume 107, Page 927
Appraised at $6,000.00
TERMS OF SALE: cannol be sold lor 1111
than
2/3rde
the
appr1laed value. 10%
down on day of uta,
cash or carHIIId check,
Balance due on conflrmotion ol tale.
The 1pprateat DID
NOT Include 1n Interior
examln111on of tho
ho1111.
ROBERT E. BEEGLE,
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF
ATIORNEY FOR THE
PLAINTIFF
Public Noti ce
John D. Clunk
5801 Hudton Dr. Suite
SHERIFF SALE
400
CASE
NUMB ER Hud10n, Qh 44236
06C V116
330-342-8203
FCI National Fund II,
(9) 26, (10) 3, 10
PlalntHf
Va

n

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J"'IJe&gt;t.l oe~s

I&gt; e l l v e :re d

Ia-.. .f"ooii
Fl..lghC: t&lt;J&gt;

YARD SALE·
GAIJ ll'OUS
10/12·10113 1183 Jackson
P1ke 8·? TV, electnc p1ano
furn1ture, hsh 1ng, clothes,
household items more

Golden Ret Lab mtx pup

10/12· 10/13 3179 SA 141
p1es 7 wks old 6 gold 4 2 famtly, chtldrens clothes
_bl_ac_k_C_a_
II _44_6_3_2_08_ __ toys, sm women &amp; materntty
Male Yellow Tabby neutered clothes atr walker dishes
ht1er tramed w/accessones 3 Fam11y Garage Sale, Oct
304-674-6301
121h &amp; t 3th 2853 SA 588

Pupp1es lree to good home 9am-2pm Baby clothes
112 Walker Coon dog 6 wks ladies mens boys &amp; g1rls
old Call 740·256·1445
3 Fam1ly Yard Sale,
To G1ve away Yard Sale left Satu rday Oct 13th, 8amOld
Rodney
over 1 to 2 truck loads, 304 4pm
SchoolhOuse
675- 1320 leave message

Very cute Lab/HusKy m1x 4 fam1 ly sale Oct 10 11 12
pupp1es 2 male, 1 female Burnett
Ad
Pictures,
8wks old Must go th1s week· clothes kmck-knacks
968.
end 441·0365
934 Jackson P1ke, Fn Oct Want to buy Junk Cars call f"'!l!!!l''ll!.,~~~"
·""S·0884
,.
...... nn•
Manpower Is now h1rmg for
12 &amp;Sat Oct 13 9am- 4pm 74o
~..
the 1o11owmg pos1t1ons
Thlo
newapape
ard wortc.lng, dependabl
Ctolhmg seasonal dec
coopts only hoi
Automob'ie
P'odutlon
employees needed to
,household items
WE BUY USED
ahted ads meetln
help meet Increasing
Workers In the Buffalo, WV
OE standsrds
chant needs of busy
MOBILE HOMES
Area Benefits available Call
Mov.ng Sale Oct 10 Oct
lnboundfOUtbound
Today 304•757 "3338
14 Furntture kitchen 11ems, _
A.
da.m~
(7.40~}82
_8.
·2.
750
-.1
We will not knowln
glassware, Homco baby
phone center Ouahf1ed
_
M_
ed_&lt;ea
_ l_a_SSI
_S_Ia_n_l n
- ,-eded
- fo-r
candidates should have
accept any adver
1tems, 11res p1ctur"es toys,
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
busy ph~SICIBn's office In the
lsement In vlolatlo
n1ck-nacks, tools, clothes
good verbal skills and a
G 1 1
p
a11po IS area re1er pleas'-II 1{\ Il I "
des1re to help others
1
d
d
t the law.
all s1zes 18100 Route 7 So
Please cau 740.446. 7442 ant, sel motivate
har
ext 1919 10 schedule
working person
Send
next to R1vers1de AuctiOn
.r
Ocl11 . 12,13&amp; 14 9 - 5
IIELPWANIID
Intervi ew With
resumes CLA Box 101, P:O
Melissa Clali&lt; HR
Box 469, Galhpohs OhiO
CLASSIFIED INDEX
855 Jeckson Pike Baby ' - -. .- - • 4x4's For Sale .... .. .............................. ....... 725
clothes d1shes, shoes
coordtnator Schedule
45631
Announcement ................................... ....... 030
boots Across from McCiures
Now hiring for full time desk
pay
Anltquao................... ........
.... sao
te and benefil s wt II be
Ierk pooiti on ProIess1onaI
ra
c
Apartments lor Rent ..... . ...... . ....... 440
Oct11 , 12 13 199 Hemlock
d1scussed dunng 1nter·
at11tude and appearance
Auction and Flee Market..... . ........ . .....080
Ad out of Evergreen
---~ii""iiiio
requ1red Must be avru lable
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorlas .......................... 780
Clothes kntck knacks bird
to work flex shifts apply tn
Auto Repair.......................... .................. .. ...1TO
cages
Foster Parents &amp; Resp1 te person at th e Hebda~ Inn of
Autos tor Sale..... . . ...... .
...710
Prov1 ders Needed, homes Gallipolis No phone calls
Oct 11 13 Thur Fn 9 1
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale
.. ..... . .., ..... 750
needed
1n Me1gs &amp; Gallia please
Lrg asst ol Items. 3pc oak
Building Suppllea .. ...... ........ .... .. .................550
County tor youth o thfu 18, - - - - - - - lluelness and Buildings ............................. 340
coffee table set recliner,
Ohto prov•des the tramln g, OhiO Valle~ Home Health
Buelnou Opportunity ....... .. ............ 210
rocke r, ant1ques, pictures
you receiVe reembursment Inc htrlng AN s, STNA s
Business Training ................................... 140
o1 30 to $40 a day patd CNA's, CHHA's, PCAs
Campers &amp; Motor Homos ...... .. ................... 790
respite, and support for Accepting applications for
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
LPN's Competltr~e Wages
Cards of Thanks .................... ............... .. .... 010
youth placed tn your home
Trammg begtns October and Benefits 1nclud1ng
Child/Elderly Care ...........,..... .......... .. ... .. 190
Carport S81e- Sept 11 12,
27,2007
at Albany call health
Insurance
and
Elactrlcai/Refrigerallon ........ . ..... .... . .840
.1 07 Tyree Blvd Racine lots
Casts Fostercare toll free, 1- mileage Apply at 1480
Equipment for Rent ................................ .. ... 4BO
of good cloth1ng &amp; mlscella·
877-325·1558
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis or
Excavatlng .......... .. ................... ............... .. ... 830
neous
phone toll tree t -866·441·
Farm Equipment ..................................... 610
Forma tor Rent....................... ... .. ............ .430
Fre1ght Broke r H1rlng Now _13_9_3-..,------Freedom
Center
Farone for Sale ......................... .................... 330
Mm1stnes 9 00-? Beside
work from Home
Earn OhiO Valley Home 'Health
For Leaae ............ ..................... ....~........ ....... 490
excellent mcome
Call tnc hlnng Full T1me
McCtures In Middleport Bag
For Sale ................................ .. ................ 585
(304)722·2184
M-F Scheduler,
Competitive
Sale,everythlng must gol10·
For S.te or Trade... .............. .. ............. 590
8 30am 4pm
wages and benefits mcl ud
11to13
Fruna &amp; Vegetables .. ................................... 580
mg health Insurance Apply
Furnished Rooms ....................................... .450
Thurs &amp; Fn 10/11-10112
Full
t1me
Preschool at 1480 Jackson Pike
Qenaral Hauling..... .................. ........... ..850
9am-?, 35670 State Route
Ass1stant
$6 71 hour Galbpohs or phone toll free
Giveaway................ ............... . .............. 040
7, lots of m1sc
L1m1ted benefits
Send 1 966-44 1•1393
Happy Ada ...................... ... .............. ............. oso
resume to Early Education l!'ii~~--~~!"""'ll
Hay &amp; Graln ................................. .... ............. 640
YARD SALE·
StatiOn 2122 Jefferson Ave. Oh1o \'alley Pubhsltlnc
Help Wanted ................... . ...... . ............. 11 0
Pr.I'LEASANJ
pt Pleasant WV 25550
Companv has a part-ume
Home Improvements............... . .. ......... 810
ope.mg ia th e m11 1l room
Homes for Sale ........................................... 310
Appllcatnt must .. ave 11
Fall &amp; W1nter Yard Sale Fn An E)(cellent way to earn
Houeehold Good a .. ................... .................. 510
"ah d dnnn hcense
Oct 12th &amp; Sat Oct 13th money The New Avon
Houaes lor Rent.. .............. .. ......... . ... 4 I 0
Please appl) 1a pr111Cln
Duncans New Haven 4th &amp; Galt Manlyn 304 882·2645
Take a closer look at
In Memoriam..... .... . . .......... . . ........ . 020
between 8a m-Jpm 1t
lnfoCiaionl
Insurance
130
82~ Th1rd Annuc.
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 660
AVONI All Areas• To Buy or
Galhpolls,
Ohto 4~63 1
Help us make calls on
Livestock .................................................. 630
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304·
No Pbone Ca lls Please.
behalf
of
conservatiVe
Loot and Found . .. ............. . ........ . 060
675·1429
l'-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-'l
Political Orgamzations,
Lots &amp; Acreage ..................................... 350
AIVEASIDE Auct1on Barn
Mlscellaneous ................................ .............. 170
Candidates and causes.
5 Mtles Below the Dam
Bob Evans Gallipolis IS hirMlscellaneoua Marchendlse....
.......... 540
•$300 Hiring
Toots, Furniture Household Ing one full lime k1tchen prep
Mobile Home Repair .. . ....... . .. ........ 860
Items Someth1ng lor
Bonus
person
for
day
shift
Please
Mobile Homes lor Rent......... .. ............... 420
Everyone EVERY Sal
apply rn person
Mobile Homes lor Sale .............................. 320
• Up oo $8.50/hour
N1ght @ apm 740-256·
Money to Loan ......'........ .................. ....... 220
6989
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wh eelers . ..
....... 740
COL • Full and Part t1me sh1tls
Musical Instruments .............. ......... ... .. 570
WOODYAROS
85
V1ne
Personals ................. ............................ 005
Street Gat11po11 s Every
Pets for Sale ............ ................ . .... .
560
Saturday at 6 30pm thrs
Plumbing &amp; Healing . . . .. ...
820
Saturday name brand tools
Professional Services .. ......... . ........... 230
and
name brand household
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... I 60
goods
Real Eatate Wanted................. . .. ........... 360
Schools lnotructlon..... .. .........
......... 150
WANIH&gt;
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Sbuatlons Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent...........
.. ......... 460
Absolute Top Dollar US
Sporting Qoodo.......... . ..... . . ........ 520
S1lver and Gold Co1ns,
SUV'a for Sale ........................................... 720
Truckl for Sale ............................................ 715
Proofsels. Gold Amgs Pre·
Upholstery ............................
. ........ . 870
t935
US
Currency,
........ 730
Vena For S.le.................. . ..........
So hta~re D1amonds- M T S
Wanted to auy ......... .
.... ..................... 090
Com Shop 151 Second
Wanted to auy- Farm Suppllea ................. 620
Avenue GalhpoiiS 740 446·
Wanllld To Do........... .. .................. 1BQ
2842
W1nllld to Rent............. . .......
.. ........ 470
Yard Sale- Gelllpolla .......................... ......... 072
Paw Paws black walnuts
Yard Salo-Pomeroy/Middle ............... .......... 074
h~ekorles please call hrst
Y1rd Salo-P!. Pleasant .............................. 076
(740)898-6060

=

;.:::=::::::::::==:,_;...;.,

-

~e&gt;a.ar

Appraised
at aide of the schoof$18 ,000.00. Terms of houM lot 10 rods to
SHERIFF SALE
sale: Cannot be sold the plltca of beginning,
CASE
NUMBER lor leas than 2/3rda of containing In all 314 of
06CVf65
the appraised value. one acre, more or less.
Home Veal Capital,
10% down on day of Current
Owner:
Plaintiff
sale, cash or certified Rabacce Ward, et al
Vs
check, balance due on Property at: 28626 St.
William Fink et al,
confirmation ol ule.
Rl124
Defendants
The appraisal DID NOT Langsvllle, Oh. 45741
Court of Common Include an Interior PPN 1:Hl0475
Pleas, Meigs County, examination of the Prior deed references :
Ohio
houae.
Volume 214, Page 879
In pursuance of an ROBERT E. BEEGLE, Appraised
at
order of sale to me MEIGS
COUNTY . $25,000.00 terms of
directed from Hid SHERIFF
lOla: cannot be sold
court In the above enll· ATTORNEY FOR THE lor lase than 2/3rds the
lied action, I will PLAINTIFF
apprallld value. t 0%
expose to sale at,_pub- Ralsenleld &amp; Assoc.
down on day of sale,
lie auction on the front 2035 Reading Ad
steps of lhe Meigs Cincinnati, Oh 45203
county court houM on 513-322-7000
Friday, Nov 9th , 2007 at (10) 3, 10, 17
10 A.M., of said day, the
following
described
Publlc Notice
real estate:
S1:HEDULE A
Situated In the Village SHERIFF SALE
of Middleport, county CASE
NUMBER
of Meigs, State of Ohio 07CV023
and known as a part ot Duetache
Bank
Lot No Forty-three (43) National Trust Co.,
on the North side of Plaintiff
Walnut Street between vs
Third
and
Fourth R-.:ca Ward at al
Streets In the slid Defendants
Village of Middleport, Court of Common
Meigs county, Ohio, Pleas, Meigs County,
and
bounded
and Ohio
described as follows , In pursuance ol an
to-wn·
order of sale to me
Beginning at a point directed from asld
Fifty (50) feel North 73 court in the above entiDeg. Weal of tho tled action, I will
Southeaet corner of expose to aala at pubsaid lot No Forty-three lic auction on the front
(43); thence North 73 steps of tho Molaa
dog. Weal Twenty- county court Houae on
seven (27) feet: thence Friday, Nov. 9, 2007 at
Northerly Fifty (50) feet 10 A.M., of uld day, the
to tho North line of following
doacrlbed
eald Lot No 43; thence realellate:
South 73 deg Eat! Situated In tho townTwenty-eeven (27) IHI; lhlp of S.lom, County
thence Southerly Fifty ol Melgo, IIU118 of Ohio,
(60) teet to eurvey of 11 dttcrlbed 11 lotuld
Vllllgt
of lows:
Middleport 11 eur·
lllglnnlna 188 rodo
vlyed 111d plded by E111 ol the South-1
Phillip Jocorner ol fraction 31,
Permanent
Parcel Town No. 8, Rena• 15,
No.15-00087000
In the Ohio Company'o
244 Walnut 811'181
purchaae, ond running
Middleport, Ohio 45760 thence North 10 rodo
Current owner: William alona the Weal line of
&amp; P1ula Finkel al
Daniel Neghborgal 'o
Property at :
244 lot to hla Northwest
Walnut St
corner, thence Well 12
Middleport, Ohio
rods and 5 It; thence
pp, 15-()()087
South along the Eaal
Public Notice

l:l;~;~~r.J

~ ._-s p-p e: .- -­

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

I&gt;&lt;~&gt;c:.r..

cash
or
certi!IICI
check, balance due
upon confirmation ol
sale
The appraisal DID
Include an Interior

examination
house

of

the

Robert
E.
Beegle,
Melga County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
PlalniHf
Shapero &amp; Fatty
1500
Third
Su"e400
Cleveland, Oh 44113
216-621-t 530
(10) 3, 10, 17

w.

IIIO

s

··r........ ... .. ........ ....................

·lead a

lob Done?

Shop
fh8

~~~~~;'""l

r

I·

___..

•

r

SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS
Buckeye H1lls Career Center
IS now accep t1ng applical•ons (1n all academiC and CT areas) Contact th e
Superintenden t's Ofl1oo at
740 245 5334 EEO
POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $20/hr or
S57K annually
lnclud1ng Federal Benef1 ts
and OT,Pa•d Tra1f11ng
Vacat1ons·FTIPT
, ·866-542· 1531
USWA

1

lP't-abll ~

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
lJ~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

be prepaid'

dvartlsaments

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

MOM:V

HoMEN

lULoAN

tUKSALE

, · **NOTICE**
Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO DIVISIOn of
Fmanctal
tnstttut1on·s
Off1ce of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you relinance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments ol
fees or msu rance Call the
Office ol Consumer
Afla1rs toll free at 1 866·
278 0003 to learn If th e
mort gage broker or
lender
properly
rs
licensed (Th1s IS a public
serv1ce an nouncemen t
hom I he Oh10 Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

Secunty Of11cers needed 1n
New Haven, WV, $7 66 hour
40 hours a we ek for tempo·
rary JOb Must have clean
CJ1m1nal histOry pass drug
screen and backgro und
check Call 1-800-275-8359 ~ I'Rot'FS'ilONAJ.
SERVfCFS
Tuesday · Friday 8 30 · 5 00
EEOMFDV
TURNED DOWN ON
The Oh&lt;O Valley Publ&lt;shlng SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI ?
Co 1s seek1ng a Sports
No Fee Unless We W1n1
Wr~ter..to add to its staff cov·
1-888-582 3345
arlng local athletic events
The pos111on ISa full lime 40 r.ii~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
hours a week with a benefits 1310
HOMES
and 401 k plan ava&lt;lable
tuK SAI..I'.
Newspaper page layout
skills are de s ~red bu t not
o down •payment 4 bed
necessary Must be w1ll1ng to
1earn and be people 1nendty rooms Large yard Covered
Sen d resumes Io Kevln dad Attached garage 740·
Kelly, Managmg Editor OhiO 367·7t29
Valley PubliShing Co 825 3 bdr 1 ba Ranch m
Third Ave Gallipolis Oh Syracuse Oh carport plus 1
45631
car gara ge &amp; shecl 740 992
- - - - - - - - 3141 1740)442 128 1
Truck Dnvers COL Class A
Of
ReqUired, m1mmum of 5
years
dnvmg
exp
Experience
on
Overde1mens1onal loads
Must have good drNmg
record Earn up to $2,000
weekly For applicatiOn Call
(304 )722·2 184
M-F

3BR 2BA Ranch Style
house over 2 000 sq ft
Huge k1tchen lots of cab1net
space LA DR Laundry
Room on 1 acre of land
Gall1 a Co Schools Askmg
$11 5 000 0 80 (740)44 1
7842
--------8 JOam-4pm
Attention I
Saroo•~0
Loca1company oHenng "NO
INsrR.ucnoN
DOWN PAY MENT~ pro·
L.-oiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliio_.l grams for you to buy your
Gallipo II a Career Co ege home mstead of renting
• 100% fmanc1ng
"
(Careers Close To Home)
CaltTodayl 740-4464367, · Less than perfect cred1t
1-800-2 t4-0452
accepted
wwwg~tlllflOiisc~tr!:lf!rcollegecom ' Payment could be the
Accredlletl Member Acc redlung same as rent
Caunc I lor Independent College5 Mortg age
Locators
and Schools 1:2748
(740)367 0000

1'50

180

1

WANTED

To Do

Georges Ponable Sawmill
do n~ haul your Logs lo the
Mill JUSt call 304-675-1957
~Need a Break

Few Days
Chnstlan lady w1ll s1t
w/elderly, PT, 2-3 days wk
Gallipolis
Patnot,
Mercerville, Po1nt Pleasant
areas light house keep•ng
cook1ng have references
$10 $12/hour
740 256
8316 Conn1e
Off?"

SMITH Plumbing repa1r
serv1ce--- 24 hrs Toilets
Sinks showers &amp; tubs 740·
517-9132
Will care for Elderly m the1r
Home
Evemngs &amp;
Overmght Call 304 895
32 17 leave
message
Expenence &amp; References

Gl

Atl reel estate advertising
In thi s newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fatr Housmg Act of 1968
which m akes 11 tllegal to
advertise any
preference, limitati on or
discrimination based on
race, color, re llg1on sex
familial status or national
origin, or any mtention to
m ake any such
preference limitatiOn or
dlscnmmatlon '
Th1s newspaper will .not
knowi ngly eccep t
advertisements ror real
estate wh1ch 1s m
viol ation of the law Our
read ers are hereby

Informed that all
dwellings advertised m
th1s newspaper are
available on an equal
op portu mty bases.

ro BUY

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

House lor sale 1n Racme
area Approx 4 acres, all
professionally landscaped
Ranch style house With 4
bedrooms INmg room, dmmg room kitChen, large family room central a1r gas heat
and 1 f~reptace Addnloo of a
large Flor1da room compl etely cedar op ens onto
pat10 &amp; pool area Heated m
ground pool enclosed by
vacy 1enc1ng and land·
scaped F1n1shed 2 car
garage attached to house
and l1nlshE¥.1 &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unanachect
Excellent co nd1t1on ready to
move m $255 000 00 Gall
1740)949 22 17

Pn-

Lots ot House lor the
Money' 3BA, 18A LA FR,
Lg K11 Basement Newly
remodled New WH &amp; Furn ,
CA new pVc rpt Appl
1ncluded Lg Porch Across
from Vmlon Elem Sch
$65 000 245-5555 cell 441·
_so
_o_s_ _ _ _ _ __
New home 1n Galllpohs
2B R, 2BA 3 acres MIL
$82 500 Call 740·446-7029

i

MOBILE HOMEN

FOR SAU.

I

-2000 14x7o, 38 A, 2BA Lots
of up grades , on rented lot
34
Kra us-Beck
Ad
Gallipolis 3 miles from
Gallipolis otf SA 588 4468935
-------2004 16x80 Clayton 3Bed
2Bath,
2002
16~~:80
Oakwood 3Bed 2Bath, 3
More 16x80 and 2 More
l 4x70 to choose from Days
740 388 0000 Eves 740
388 8017 or 740 245 9213
96 16 x80 3BR 28A Must
be moved $t 3 500 740
288 4588 evemngs
Great used 2005 3 bedroom
1 6~~:80 w1 th vmyllshmgle
Must sell Only $25,995 w•th
delivery Call (740)385· 4367
New 3 Bedroom homes from
$21436permonth,lncludes
many upgrades delivery &amp;
_se_l·_up
'--(7_4_c0)_3B_s_-2_4_34_ _
-N1ce used 3 bedroom home

v•nyllshlngle Will help w1th
delrveryr 740 385 4367
OWNER FINANCING
N1ce 312 stnglewtdes
From $1 800 down
payment
Adam (740) 828 2750
Tratler B. lot w1th access to
Rac coon Creek on Bear
Run Rd $38 000 00 256
1389 01256·8 132

r

UlTS &amp;
A l 11EM.E

I

Approx 3 2 acres pnva!e
S&lt;&gt; miles frqm Hosp1tal
Elec septiC water $30K
080 740 446-9478
For S&lt;ile
2 08 acres
Weldmg Hill Ad Jencho
Wooded country water 30467 4·0008 304 593 2829
Mob1le Home lot lor rent
$150/mo plus water 1 5
m1les out Neighborhood Ad
Green Twp 740-446-6565
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT 1031 Georges Creek
Ad 441 t 111
IU \1\1 'i

HouSFS

FOR RENT

1BR home tor rent1n downtown Galhpohs $275 00 mo
Sec Dep req 740·446·3481

�•

eo ~~ 1eo ~~
2BR, tBA on SR 160, 4
mll&amp;s North of Holzer.
$430/mo + sec.dep. and ret
No pets. Call 379-2923 or

446-6865

••

3 ... bedroom

house in
P,omeroy, large &amp; very dean,
1 · 112 bath, ale, hardwood
floors, full basement w/2 car
~rage, small back yard,
$585. (740)949-2303
_ _:_:__.:..:_:__
3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets. (304)6755332 weekends 740·5910265
3 BR house
$450 per
month. Also. House with a
lower 2 BA apartment and
an upper 3 BR apanment.
$565 per mont h each.
includes rent. water. gas
heat and trash pickup.
Deposit raquirod.
74o379-9897

3 BR house in Gallipolis,
WID connection. $475Jmo,
$250/dep. Also 1 BA in
Gallipolis
$275Jmo
StSOidep Call Wayne 404 _
456-3802 for info.
4 Bd. Home Apple Grove,
Ohio. $400 with dep. No
p~s. After 6:00 call 740698-6002.

H~
FOR IbM

Very new d:)l . wide, 3 BR, ·3
full baths, FA w/gas FP. lg
kit. wfwalk In pantry. Metr
bath w/garden tub. Very spa·
cious. 74Q..«6·346 1. Sec
Dep Req. $1000/mo

I

~
FOR Rmr

.

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

for Rent Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
.Required, (740)992-5174 or
(740)441·011 0.
-------1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfur· hed, and houses ·m
ms
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required, no
pels, 740-992-22t8.'
.
1BR. Stove &amp; fridge fu rnished. Waster, sewer, trash
paid. $350/mo. Por1er. Call
388.0173 or 36 7·70 15
2BR Apts 6 mi 1 .ml Holzer
Hosp. Water, sewer, trash
pd. $400/mo + dep. 74098B-6t30 or 740·669-9243
3 Br.Apt.,$395 per M,plus
util., plus dep., no pets 3rd
St., Racine. 74(). 247 _4292 .
Ap artment for rent, 1·2
Bdrm., remodeled,. new carpet , stove &amp; trig., water.
sewer, trash pd. Middleport
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
required. 740-843-5264.

Turn.off the
television

Beautiful Apta. at Jackaan
Eototoo. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568.
Equal
Housing OpportUnity. This
lnstilution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

Turn on
·their
minds.

Close to college, 2BA WID
hookup, stov~. fridge furnished. 740·441-3702 ·or
740-296-5789
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
andlci- small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 ·1111

In school or at
home, the newspaper '
is a textbook for life.

forap~~;:~~;:•lion
Apartments

992-2155

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; -AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
• Tenant pays electric
(304)882-3017

The

Graclou·s Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apts.ln
Middleport. from $327 to
$592. 74o-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportuntty.
-------Honeysuckle
Hilts
Apartments now act:eptlng
applications for 1 and 2 BR
Apt5. located on ~onial'
Drive across from Gallla
County Health Dept. No
rental assistance available
at this time . Rents start at
$310 and $340. Equal
Housing
Opportunity.
(740)446-3344
-------Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. furnished apar1ments, no pets,
deposit
&amp; refe.rences,
{740)992..0165
-------Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 44&amp;3736
-------Nice I br, appfiances turn.,
$350.00 + Clep.near PPHS
304·675·3100 or 304-6755509.
'
-------Tara
Townhouse
ApartmenJs, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, I 112
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, lease Plus
Security Deposit Required,
(740)446·34St.
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
I
ing applicatons
lor waiting
list lo r Hud-subsized, 1· br,'
apartment ,tor
the
elderly/disabled call 675 6679
Equal
Housing
Opportunity

•

Sentinel

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Johnson's Tree

Miniature Plf"\Cher Pups, 2
Black/Tan females, $300
each. 8 weeks
old.
(740)388-9124
-...,------Yorki8s,
Champion
Bloodline, vet recommendad, AKC, ApprOJ&lt;. 41bs when
grown. 740·441·9510

li~-----...,

LIVmOC'K

Arch
Steel
BulldingsCanceled Orders &amp; Aapos.
On~ 3 Buildings Laftl
25'x34' &amp; 30'•32'. Pay only
the balance. Csll Now 866·

seeking front office
person
Prior experience necessary
Non-smokers only

Please· fax resume to

(304) 674-0027

Nationwide
Customers
Stop in and see us
for all your
insurance needs
33105 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
M-F 8:30 • 5:00
Other hrs. by appointment

Melissa Collins
- Associate Agent

------

MOTOCROSS
RACE
Sat 10/13/07
6:00p.m.
Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62 N Pt. Pleasant, WV

675·5463

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

• Many More Items

~:ar com for sale. 740-3888726

Auros

FOR., •• _

~
·--iiiiiliiiiiii-_.1

r

H&amp;H
G H ·
U ermg

Wise Conc~te

Seuth

West

All types of concrete

4NT
5 NT

Pass
Pass

1 .,..
59
6•

6•

Pass

Pass

Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-4Ui-1698
a;;;;;;;~;;;;;~====

l.'lvl OLl&gt; ,fNOVG,.. TO

/

ftfMfMiflf kft4fN
A"rA~r &lt;:o&amp;&gt;f~ wAS
r,..e PAsswof(l&gt;
TG-{;fT INTO

·BARNEY

Harmed Cabinetry And FUrniture

Mowers, Tillers,
Murmy,

www.tlmboJ aeolu!ablnl!lrJ'.C&gt;Oan

WHAT'S

EFFIE?

WRONG,

WALDO MEASURED

740.446.9200
1A59 St. Rt. 160 • Galllpolls

J&amp;L

Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room AddHions
Owner:
Jamas Keesee II
742-2332

SUI

MY I.EFT MAND AN'
I WUZ SNORE HE WUZ
GONNA GIT
..,_~
ME A

IT

TURNED OUT TO BE A

DUI'&lt;N OL' KETCHER'S MITT !!

RING II

H-Honest

Hi ll's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road·
Racine, Ohio

THE BORN LOSER
P'"t&gt;lt&gt;'t'()UT~TI\E.~\1~'"I

45771
74().949-2217

L0\100 1 ~tSE.b

'1 C.U~ 't'OV COULl&gt;~'( TIJAT_:q

!

t"'E. I&gt;E.IJtLOffi&gt;

WI/AT A DEAl!!

BIG NATE

-

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONmUCTION

All checks need to

be made-

· please call"(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1100

Point of Hope

BINGO
(At old WV Jobs Foundation
•
Bingo Hall)

, 124 Highland Ave.
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-3877
THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 11

48 Pester · . ,.
49 Slip up ..
• . .,
Zelltrllng. 52 Potato 01• .,
53 Houle
,
54 Magazine '
execa

50 Ma.

... ·; ·

.......

.

34 Ufe.ll npai' 'II
36 Botched
42 Bright

by Luis Campos
Celebrity ~et C!Wiograms ate created tmm quollt10ns by famous people past ard present • o:
tacn letlar 1n the Cipller :!laMs lor another

Today's ciU6: Lequals Y

"JNNM

PYRNU

ROL

KS

VOAM

GN

KS :

•
NIS
NW

NW GPS
MUSVV

ZSUL

NIS

VNBASGL."

•

BOI

KSVG

OUGABDSV :

TSOU

TADDAOR

AI

R.

GPOBHSUOL

-.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "In m~mory eYilrylhing seems to happen to rru~'

-Tennessee Williams

...

'Coont r~minisrences like money" - Carl Sandburg

..
...

l'lllT DAI~l Q fiiQ 1] ,&amp;\'tr. ! - /) 'C ~ C! e WOII •
PUIZLII V~ l'ri!,J l"._ ~ i:J(,[•p lAM• •

0

lclltt4 ~r CLAY l, POIJ.AN

.

.'

Thuraday, Oct. 11, 2007
Re11rrange letter• of the
By Bernice Bed• Oaol
four setambltd words b•
A bit more traveling and mo\ling ~!~bout In
low to form four llrnplt words.
wider circles is indicated for you In lhe
)'88r ahead. Valuable contacts will come
N0 0 A MI
out of this. providing benefits 1or you both
~tr-r;_;;..::;_~.:.;...::..,..--1
socially and commercially.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) - Although
~==~====~_J
your motives will be tot811y unselfish in
,..
your willingness to he lp another,
S L A CH
chances are you will be the one who
ends up gaining the most out of the activ· •
I~
ity. It pays to be helpful.
~
.
•
•
"
.
SCORPIO (Oct: 24-Nov. 22) - One of
J-.
your best assets is the ability to manage
~r-------~ 0
others without them feeling controlled or
F R A G T I~
even realizing that you're directing them.
f--r~_;;.l.;..:.,.:j:...:,....~ -1
Coach to young players!
Instead, they'll perceive your bearing as
·~
one at concern.
._
·~When yoW' opponent is
.;. "'
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 2:3-DE!c. 21) b'
think
tgger, you must
-·-··- •
Don't waste this propitious cycle thai yo~
El 0 ERN
now Inhabit on petty activilies. It is one
~that can produce larger-than-antldpated
Complete the chuckle quoted'" ~
rewards tor whatever you do. Engage in
.
•
.
•
•
by filling In the missing wordi ,
something vast.
'
you develop from step No, 3 below·. •
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ...
Salesmanship can be one of your more
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
effective assets. You have the ability to
THESE SQUARES
approach your customers w!lh out makIng them feel as if they are being pressured Into making a purchase.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Your
char1 indicates you are now in a pro'
SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
I o· ' • 07
longed favorable cycle where your flnan·
cia! growth and well·being is concerned.
Kidnap- Rusty- Feint- Census-TAKE a REST
Today might hold witness to this by being
Upon mlimiDg trom a trip the father sighed, "Vacatioos woql(
another red-letter day.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) - You'll let
be wonderful if the wallet could TAKE a REST!oo."
•·
it be known thai there Is little doubt as -to
•
where you stand on a critical Issue that
affects you and your associates, You wm
mE.ike your stance in no uncertain terms.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - If you
need a favor, go to SQITleone you have
helped in the past. This person Is ready
and willing to repay what he or she con siders to be a long-overdue obligation
that Is rightfully owed you .
TAURUS (April 20..May 20) - It's not ;
enough to be a pragmatic vif.,o)I1J.ry; what
you envision must be put into pracllce if
you are to be judged as successful. Your
expectations can be reached If you follow
what you see.
GEMINI (May 21-Jane 20)- II may take
your efforts and that of anoth9r to
accomplish somethlrlg Important to you.
Don't hesitate to solicit the help of some·
one you know who would make a
dynamic cohort.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22} Something you Old successfully u1 tne
past could once again be appllo..ahle to
your situation. Scan your memory tor
what worked out, so that you can use It
again In thls ease.
LEO (Ju~ 23-Aug. 22) - If posGible, try
to associate with your more outgoing
frle~da wh o an)oy doing something with
a diffe~nt twlet . You 're In a mood to
break out of the mold and experiment
with the new.
l
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) -You won't
make eMcuses to gat out of anteing uP
your share of 8Kpensll attached to a
family activity. In tact, )100 111 set the e~eam·
pie ot donating to the cause.

.

I

I

I

1

s

16

.,
, "'

e

.. .

COW and BOY
DO VOU THINK ITS
GOOD FOI! PEOPt.£
TO FOLLOW
THEIR.DREAMS?)

Chartered Coach I ransportation

money orders

flower - ·•
Brat, plus
Galllco or •
Gauguin
Mythical. •.
archer

-,.:...;:...:..;....:.;...::.,_.j ------.

Shopping Trip

Gladly accept cash, check and

43
45
.
47

. I I I .I I·. Ie. "

•

740-742-2377

011 00 VOU THINK
.lJST SETTING
THEMSELVES tJ&gt;
FOI! FAILURE?

I WI;NT TO WORK
THE BLENDERS ~T

DEPENDS ON THE
DIIEI\M. I GUESS.

THEV'I!E

. .lJKE-.\.:t.WIS .

)

'-............

IF VOlJR DI2E~M
~SMOOTH IE

WERE

IT WOULD HAVE A
FI\ILURE BOOST.

AKC Lab Puppies. 1st shots
and wormed. Ready to go!
740-54t.V05 or 740-667·
3993.

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessories. Paid r-~-----..,
S2•.ooo new--$ 19•600· Call
A·One Auto Repair
740"387-7t2lJ.
99 Beech Street
"I H\ II I ..,
Middleport, OH
A.KC Reg Basset Hounds
740-992-1030
$250 each. Tri·colored, 1:rmto~;;,."':::""'--~-~~
HOME '
red/brn &amp; white. 1st shots,
Mon-Fri 9-5
wormed and ready to go
IMPRo\~
Oil Changes,
call740-3e7-7651
Brake Svc, Tune
BASEMENT
Up, A!C Svc,
Register Lab puppies, B
WATERPROOANG
Engine Work ,
wks. old, 1st shots and Unconditional lifetime guarShocks Struts
wormed, 5 black males, antee. local references furAll work
$100 each, Also 2 Beagle nished. Established 1975.
guaranteed
pups, . 1st shots and Call 24 Hrs. (740) 44~
Certified Mechanic
wormed, $40 each, call 0870, Rogers Basement
Bumper To
(740)247-211,7 leave ames- _Waterproofing.
Bumper Service.
sage.

Paid
performer
Ovardo a
mle
MarL
Boat crane

hand
19 Porcupine
spines
20 F1nd the
key to
22 Butova
rivals
24 Lodge
25 Safari
member
26 Tiny jumper
27 Guldong
principle
28 Medieval
laborer
29 Tatum'o
dad

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1

Dennis Bryant

Saturday, ·
October 20, 2007
$40/person

receivers
Desire

I I ·I I

Ext. 1492

Polaris Fashion Place
&amp;.JC Penney Outlet

HBO

l I I 12 j

CARPENTER
SERVICE

c111:::.....
Block&amp;
Brickwork

Relations, (304) 675·4340,

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

'lllrthdotr:

DOWN

35 Dog sound 8 Wrestling
37 Keogh
holds
relatlve . 9 Lion's
38 BauxHo
quarry
. giant
10 Color
39 -Wieder· 11 Toady's
sehen
reply
40 Cav,. offen 13 Closest

Past~

AstroGraph

Saturn
Bauble
Horrible
Unloresean
problems

33 Wedin81!C11!1 7 Terrible Cl1JI

When you are the declarer, you will
sometimes lee that there are two
chances to make your contract - let's .
lmagilatlvaly call them line A end line B.
Moot often you wll have to cltooas
between ttlem. Then you ""uld usua l~
select the mathematically superior one.
But occasional~ you can eta~ on line A,
and 11 ~ does not pan out, you can give
line B airy.
Which applies In th,ie elx-apade contract? Was! loads a club.
South's Immediate use ol Blacl&lt;wood
would not please some sc:lentif~ purists
(~that is nolan oxymoron), but Hhas tho
advantage of simplicity. And with this layout, Souttl did well to insist on making
his solid su~ trumps, even though he
knew of at least a nine-card heart fit.
(This will almost always be the right
thing to do.)
There are two chances tO make the con·
tract. Line A: the lour missing hearts
divide 2·2. Una B: the seven missing dia·
monds split 4-3. Which is rnatttematlcel·
iy S'4"'riOr'l
A 2·2 break has an a priori proi)ability ot
40 parcant: a 4-3 break, 62 percent. So,
start by adopting line B.
Win trid&lt; one w~h your cJtb king, take
dummy's two top diamonds (discarding ·
a heart from your hand), and ruff a diamond in you• hand. Are they 4-3? If not,
draw trumps and hope lor 2·2 hea~s.
But when they are 4-3, enter t1Jrnmy by
trumping tits club ace - whaf fun! and ruff another clsmond. Draw trumps,
play.· a heart to dummy's ace, and dlscerd your penuWmate heart on tha high
diamond seven.
'

12% All Stock

Feed

call PVH Community

East

Pass
Pa ·s
Pass

One is better,
two is best

1

.Senicing
lawn Trac10n,

·Also

Norih

Opening lead: • 4

$10.50/100

,.

7 6 4 2'

• Q
• Q tO 6
loJ9652

Vulnerable: Both

~IIIIZ-3294

David Lewis

scones

Dealer: North

304-77.l-St61

10Years

•

42 Frat lener
the keys
43 ..Tho," to
Rowboat
Wo~gang
Mice and
44 Sauns site
46 Before
roaches
Street
marriage
croaaer
48 Cry 'bout
Doze off
51 Luxury fur
Holda dear 55 Planet
Orink with
beyond

18 Those hold- 56
lng office
57
19 Vt. neighbor 58
21 Undergo ·
decomposition
23 Moon or
IUO
1
26 Providing
merriment
2
27 Noted
3
blue&lt;hip
28 Nasty laugh 4
30 Dlamond31 lletik need 5
32 ~nempt
6

East

loAK

MASON
MOWER

1997 Cavalier Convertible
LS, rod, B4k miles, $3995.
2001 Camara. burgundy,
84k miles. $5995. 2002
Toyota Avalon XLS, silver,
power roof, loaded, 80k
miiSs $11900.
Four
Seasons Auto Sates. 74044t-6585
1999 Chevy Monte Carlo,
$2500; 1996 Camero,
$2700: 1993 Ford Escort,
One Owner, $1250; 1997
Ford Contour, $1600; 1996
Chevy S-10, V6, Auto, Air,
$2000; 1989 Ch evy Astra
Van, $950; 1999 Jeep Grand
Cherokee, 4•4. $3900. KC
Auto (740)446·8t72 or
(740)256·625t

·

A 5PfAt:M5Y.

~~ty

...

• 2

~;;7;40;-6;53:-9;6;57;~

Crqflsman,

15
16
17

W976.3

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bond6d

MTD,Brins
&amp; SlrtJiton

I0-16-07

• J 9 8 5
loQ10743
South
•AKQJ10 9

t:!!!!::;==i::74=0;-· 446-0007

'r ~· ·

rL,.------_.1

West
.. 5
W K J 10

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis, OH

'DruUJa/1,

To make reservations please

Every Sunday 4 pm

Come Share Jesus!

Speclsllsts In :
OXYGEN I RESPIR~TORY
EQUIPMENT 6 SUPPLIES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

740-992-1611

out to PVH Auxiliary.

at the Pt. Pleasant Library

740-441~7

-.Remodeling, Room
For Sale 15 month old Colt
Additions
$350 or trade for Hay 304·
Local Contractor
695-3943
740-367..0544
ii~;:::;;::O.:~-::--.,
Free Estimates
HAY &amp;
740-367-0536
GRAIN
':==;:;;;;::=~

i ~ ~~

6

• 8 3
9A8 542
tAK 743

&amp; MEOICII.L EQUIPMENT, INC .

lnaurtld • fr.t !ttlfN...

- - - - - - - - 352.()469
26 Years Experience
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Cali Dell Computer, 1yr old.
446·0390
Windows &gt;&lt;P. Internet ready,
Keyboard and moose. Paid
740-992-6971
$700.00 Will sacrifice for
$300. Verizon 4 line phone
system with Intercom. 2 2003
Buick
LeSabre
phones $60. Call 740·949- Custom, 123,000 miles, :::::;;F;re;e;;;;;;
t522
Reg. oil chgs, new tires. tan, :
1 owner, nice cond. asking
Why drive anywh e re eh e
JET
$6700. 740·256·8316
AERATION MOTORS
Shade River Ag. Service
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuin In 97 Neon , auto, air, 4DR ,
3553
7 St . Rt 7 North
Pmm·roy. OH
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· $t500 080. 740-258-t652
800·537-9528.
or 256-1233
740· 985 -3H3l
•New Homes
Cherokee, North Carolina
NEW AND USED STEEL COOK MOTORS
328
• Garages
YOUNG'S
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Jact&lt;son Pike. 2003 Sonoma
. Chartered Coach
• Complete
For
Concrete,
Angle, SLS EXT Cab 51.963 miles
I ransportation
Remodeling
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel $8700, 2000 S-10 66,797
Friday, November 30, 2007 to
Grating
For
Drains, miles $4500, i 998 S· 10
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L $3300, t 999 Ranger $3900,
Sunday, December 2, 2007
l * l'rOIIOPt and Quality
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 2002 GMC SL 75,905
$195/person (double occupancy)
Stop &amp; Compare
Work
Tuesday, WedResday &amp; $8900. other cars, vans,
Friday, Sam-4:30pm, Closed
$250/person (single occupancy)
blazer. 3 MONTHS · 3,000 :~~===~~= I * R•cason:1blc Rates
Roofing &amp; ouu.r1
Thursday,
Saturday &amp; mi~ warranty on all vehicles.
l * linsc~re d
VInyl Siding 6 Painting
Staying at Hampton Inn
Sunday. (7401446-7300
740-446-0103
I *IE xo~ric:nc•ed
Patio end Porch O.Ck•
Gladly accept cash, check,
Pro form Sears Treadmill. Pd
ReFcrcncesAvailable!
V.C.WV0367as
YOUNG Ill
credit cards and money orders
$650 asking $250. Excellent
~
•
Call
Gary
Stanley
@
992
6215
Condition. 446-6587
Please make all checks
P 1rT • Proy OIHc•
Driveways,
740-742-2293
', {1 ,I!~ , tJ Tl \ • pt 'n Ill '
payable to PVH Foundation
Sidewalks, Patios,
Please leave
LIMITED SPACES!
Concrete Footers

To make reservations

Gospel Services

Complete TrM C1re

·

'-.-!llllliiillil"""'iiii•'-,J

4 homecoming dresses, red
wlhearts size l $75. Black
halter size M $75. Dark b!ue
w/llowers size l $60.
Silverfblue w/scart size 13·
t4 $90. 74Q-256-113t6

?~ CtU:i§iiO

Service

---~----

ito

need

14
No~b-

41 Slalom

I Pounds
12

i

e

IBily

Peppilion &amp; Poodle cross
breed puppy. 1st shots &amp;
wormed $275. Pure breed
SpitZ puppies, Male &amp;
Female, 161: shots &amp;
woonod, no papers, $275
eacn. Pure bred Chinese
Pugs, Fawn &amp; Blk, no
papers, male $300. POmaPoos, 2 rod, a blk. $275
each.
can
74().379-2243

01
Hyundai
Acce nt
HatchbacK 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good condi·
c... .. ""
tion. needs catalytic conver1·
FOR"r':,'!__
er. Asking $3200. Coli 740·
709·6339.
~
-------Commercial building ~For 1954 Chevy 210. 2 door,
Rent" 1800 square teet, off 350 V-8 Big Cam High Rise
street parking. Great toea· Headers, 350 Automatic,
lion! 749 Third Avenue In New Tires, reduced to
Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo. $11,000.00, (740)949-2909
Call Wayne (404)456-3902 Leave Message if no answer
------~- and will call back.
Winter Storage Rental $8 - - - - - -- foot , October. Wed &amp; Sat 1993 Buick Century, 80K,
toam-4pm or by Appt. good condition. $t,200 304Mason County Fairgrounds 675·6156 after 6pm
304 -675-546 3
-t-996--Fo-rd-P-ro_b_e_ln_g_ood_
· shape, runs good, drives
ll:lll:":":""',__ _ _, good. 740-446·9599

r~

i.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Dogs For Sale

Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas
Shopping

Extremely busy
medical practice

The Daily Sentinel • Page BSl

BRIOGE
Taking applications lor 2BFI
Mobile Home. $275/month +
$200/dep. Includes water.
No pets. Can 446-3617

lr

i

www.mydallysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

3BR, 1 bath, 2·story older Pomeroy, 2-3 br. apt. or
farm house on SR 554 · house, partially furnished,
Bidweii(RV
schools
HUD approved., near park,
$575/mo plus sec dep. Pets no pets, (740)992·6886
under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
deposit. Available 10-13.07. Pre«y. 3BR,
Bath.
Call 446·3644 for appllca- Downtown Gallipolis. Very
lion.
•
dose to Washington Elem.
- - - - - - - - and GAHS. $695.
69 Garfield . 2BR, 1BA No smoking.· UtUities not
$460/month + sec. dep. included.
Yoo pay all utilities. Call 4~6- 645-6378 ask for Kety 3644
M
H
--.H
- --t- - - - OB1LERn--~
10
"' ..... 100 1
...._
· nr.n•
~
Local co~any offering M
NO
DQINN PAYMENT" pro- 2 Bedroom &amp; 3 Bedroom,
grams for you to buy your Call (740)446·1279
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
3 bedroom, 2 bath, Trailer for
• Less than perfect credit Rent No Pets. 3 miles tram
accepted
Pl. Pleasant Rt 2 North 304·
18::__ _ _ _ _
• Payment could be the6- 7c.:5c.:-38:::.:.
same as rent
3br Mobile Home
all
Mortgage
Locators. Appliances
furnished ,
(740)367-0000
including Washer &amp; ·Dryer
:._.:..._~---- 304-5, 93·4496
Farm House, Rio Grande :.:.:..::::....:.:.:.:::____
area. No inside Pets. Must 3br, 2ba Double Wide on 112
have references 304-675- acre lot AI 2 N. 304-895·
7624
3129
- - - - - - --------Fully furnished 2 bedroom 3BR, ~BA Doublewide,
hOuse, in eKcellent condition Stove, Ref, $575 deposit,
at 241t lincoln. Pt. $575/mo, You pay all U1il~ies,
Pleasant. S400 per month, 6 mo. lease, 1722 112
wl$400 deposit. Taking Chatham Ave, (740)446·
applications al1403 Eastern :_25:_1~5_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446- Trailer for rent: 38R, 2 BA.
45t4. References Required CaH 387-7762 or 446·4060

Encourage your children to
make reading the newspaper
a part of their everyday routine
for lifelong learning.

VVadnesda~October10,2007

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

www.mydailysentln~l.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I

)M

,

.

''~

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G

GARFIELD
1 REALLY
LIKE .lON

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0

0

......... Fil' ............

...........u. ...

.....................
.............
PIYIIGTOPPIICES . .

Clbllllclllnrlml• .....
IIIII r. Ill INII'IIall

GaiZZWELLS

MAHY FINGeRS Nlo t
HOLI71N&amp;

HOW

A L.OT

ARLO &amp; JANIS .

SOUP TO NUTZ
ON ll'UI!C:, F6ke 6 6U'I"tt&gt;N·
Hook'-n&gt;1!-le WeaK SIDe

$2000 COVERALL

'111e11 a •y"fbsT aLfl.\CI ~·
~ l'l't' ~ -5'1 ii&gt;lkeR
13eLL Two Deef' NICt&lt;eL

PROGRESSIVE
GUAR,ANTEED!

za-zoo -za"Z ... AN'&lt;

~liONS? ' ~-./

'•·

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::Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Ociober 10, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Meigs alumni to
gather for 'Reunion
on River,' B8

·PVH initiates neighbor
to neighbor hotel
voucher program, A3

•
Middleport~

:;o ( ' L"J I'S • \'ol.

:;~.

SPORTS
• Local runners fare well
at TVC Championships. ·
See Page 81

Saturday Schedule

Community Market
212 Eas! '\bin St. Pnnwrm. OH
- ''l """' ,.,,, ..

·•\ ·''''- .. . • 'o:."'

\·~· J n ..J"r. U~o~!l~ . ~. flP"i' ~~;!t. l~~ WH •

2 run

&lt;£ las~

of 1978

Clark's Jewelry
Store
Hlaloric Downtown PDIDeruy

( ')r,..,!,d ',unda\

12:00 Food Vendors Open
12:30 Parade Line Up
l:OOParade
.2:00 MHS Band a
2:30 Little Sister
3:30 MiRng in Affedion
5:~5:30 Dinner Break
5:30 Phil Ohlinger &amp; Nate Si.,n
6:30 Oasis Christian Fellowship Woship
7:30 Chad Dodson
8:00 Katie.Reed
,.
9:00 Marauder

OBITUARIES
Page A!i -• Mary V. Jackson, 65
• Patsy Louise Price, 65
• Barbara Tripp, 65
• Ralph E. Wigal, 72

Marty Cli-

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
228 West Main • Pomeroy, OH

740-992-5432

182-2155•~,01

BY BRIAN

J.

Meigs County
Treas·u rer
Paid for by Candidate·

CLASS ·OF
1973

REED

BREED@MYDAKYSENTINEL.COM

Gaul resigns
as·Meigs · ..
High assistant
principal .
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH&lt;ii'MVDAILVSENTINELCOM

POMEROY David
Gaul, assistant principal at
Meigs High School for the
past six years, submitted his
resignation to the Meigs
Local Board of Education
Tuesday night.
.
Gaul, it was noted by
Superintendent
William
• 'Misery' at Ariel
Buckley, has been hired in
this weekend.
an assistant principal's posiSee Page A3
tion in the Pleasants County
• For the Record.
School District. In Gaul's
letter of resignation, he
See Page AS
commented on his 15 years
• Wildwood Garden
and the success and achieveClub holds, meeting,
ments he felt working with
. welcomes new members. the staff, students and parents while. in administrative
See Page A7
· positions in the District.
• Alumni, friends
Buckley said that the
search for an assistant prininvil!ld to Ohio
University Homecoming. cipal at Meigs High is currently underway since
See Page A7
Gaul' s resignation and
• Bob Evans Farm
request for release from his
Festival. See Page 88 current contract, accepted

Please seeGaui. .A5

WEATHER

..

'"''" ·"')d.,ih"·"till&lt;"i .com

arrest

Third

INSIDE

Vote F.o r

-

Tlll ' RSll.\\ , Ol'TOHFR 11,2007

CHESHIRE - A third major
drug investigation in as many
weeks has . resulted in the arrt!st
of a Cheshire man accused of
trafficking in prescription medications.
Roger Shoemaker, 59, was .
arrested Tuesday evening and
remained in jail Wednesday on
a holder from the Adult Parole
Authority. Charges relating to
Shoemaker's alleged drug·
are .
expected.
acli vlly
Shoemaker was on parole for
drug charges filed in 2000,
Sheriff Robert Beegle said.
1\vo rented moving vans were
loaded with seized goods
believed to have been sold or
traded for drugs. along with
drugs, cash, vehicle titles and
other evidence. Beegle said the
evidence, which also included
television sets, DVD players and
other electronic items, will be
secured and the ·case will be
turned over to the federal government for prosecution.

......

Food For Thought

""· :;1&gt;

Pomeroy, Ohio

Holzer Clinic
to host
'Kids Fest'

A search warrant was executed
at Shoemaker's home on Old
Route 7 near the Gallia County
line Tuesday after a deputy sheriff
and Shoemaker's parole officer
found pipes, believed to have been
used to smoke methamphetamine,
in plajn view during a home visit
During ·the search, officers
found Oxycontin and other prescription medications and marijuana, Smith said. Smith said
approximately 200 Oxycontin
tablets were seized, with a street
value of $1 per milligram.
Beegle said his office had
received information from the
public about suspected drug · .
activity at the Shoemaker home,
and that the investigation into
the allegations has been ongoing for a year.
"We can't always act immediately on tips from the public, but
we can use that information to
aid in investigations," Beegle
B~an J. Reed/photo
said. "Those tips are important" Sheriff"s deputies Rick Smith and Adam Smith loact a saw onto a rented mov·
The sheriff's department, work- ing van as property believed to have been the result of alleged drug trafficking
ing with other law enforcement is seized Wednesday. Roger Shoemaker of Cheshire is now in custody, and
charges are pending.
Ple..e see Arrest. AS

HOMECOMING WEEKEND
Southern
hQmecoming
"tomorrow
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGEN! @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - It's homecoming
time for the Tornadoes when festivities culminate in tomorrow's
.parade and crowning of the homecoming queen during half-time at
Southern's varsity football game
against Waterford . .
Students will gather in .the high
school's gymnasium at I :30 p.m.
tomorrow during a pep rally which
is open to the public. Following
the pep rally the homecoming
parade will begin at 2 p.m. at
Southern High School and take the
normal route through downtown.
When evening arrives, the
Racine-Southern !'FA Alumni
group the Ohio River Producers
will host a tailgate party on the end
of the parking lot near the vo-ag
building. During pre-game, homecoming floats will travel around
the football field and winners of .
the floats will be recognized.
· The crowning of the homecoming queen will happen during halftime fe stivities where five
Southern High School senior girl s
will vie for the title.
:rhose girls, their escorts and
parents are: Morgan Brown,
daughter of Robert and Cindy
Brown. Brown's escort is Trenton
Roseberry, son of Tom and Dena

Above: Five girls are vying for the title of
homecoming queen at Southern High
School and oRe will be crowned at halftime d~ring the Tornado's football game .
Pictured (from left) are queen candidates
and their escorts, Stephanie Curidlff with
escort Wes Riffle, Courtney Ginther with
escort Ryan Chapman, Lindsey Buzzard
with escort Teddy Brown. Morgan Brown
with escort Trenton Roseberry, Kry_stle
Marler with escort Kreig Kleski.
Left: This year's homecoming court at
Southern High School consists of (front
row) flower girl and crown bearer
Mickenzie Ferrell and Gage Carleton;
attendants and their escorts (from left)
freshman attendant Bobbi Harris and
escort Adam Warden, sophomore attendant Brooke Chadwell and escort Nathan
Roush, junior attendant Tosha Jones and
escort Justin· Porter.
ll&lt;lth Sergent/photoo

Please see sauthem. AS

BY BETH 5ERCIENT
BSERGENT&lt;ii'MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

HOME NATIONAl CROW&amp;C.ROW
BANK
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
10• lodne,OI

INDEX

-~·~,01
I

.

BROGAN WARNER. Fisher Funeral_Homes
INSURANCE SERVICES
'

,_,....,MU'

w_.Jw·•
Mil t
21.4E.M hSL • ......,,.
ID-214•-...eJ
~It,

POMEROY - Holzer
Clinic
Meigs'
Rehabilitation Department
will
host "Kids Fest" from
Detall1 on P&amp;Je AB
lO a.m . - noon on Saturday
on the back parking lot of
the clinic, giving away big
prizes such as bicycles and
an MP3 player, all in the
name of getting kids to live
2 SU.'I'IONS - t6 PAGES
healthier lives.
In addition to the bicycles
Annie's Mailbox
for kids of all ages and the
MP3 player, other. prizes
Calendars
will include soccer balls,
'
Bs-6 football s, basketballs, Nerf
Classifieds
ball s and hul a hoops .
" ·' •\
Comics
B7 Children mu st go through
. ·;., .
physical activity stations· to
. '
Editorials
be eligible for the prizes.
A station will also be
Obituaries
available for parents where
they can receive educational
,
B8 material about helping
Places to go
themselves and their chil Charlene Hoeftlchf photo
B Section dren make healthier eating One of these Meigs High School girls will be crowned the 2007 homecoming queen
Sports
choices as well as tiJ&gt;s on in pre-game cereJTlonles at Friday night' s football game in Bob Roberts Stadium. The,
AS exercisi.ng.
Weather
candidPtes are, left to right, Bethany Hill . Alexa Venoy, Amy Barr, Kelsey Fife , Bnttany
,.
Please see Kids Fest. A5 Preast dnd Chelsey Noel.
© aoo7 Ohio.i!l""ey Publishing CA&gt;.
'

AUlD • HDU7 • • S 7
&amp;MW • LWt ?Pi

•me-.... •

WIM

•r

...

•

· --- ·;-----

.,

Meigs' homecoming
activities underway
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILVSENTINE L.COM

POMEROY - Meigs High
School homecoming fe stivities
Friday ni ght have been expanded
to highlight not only the Friday
night crowning of the 2007 homecoming queen but recognition of
outstanding alumni and staff, and
performances by both current and
alumni band members.
· As in pre vious years the queen
crowning ceremony wi II take
place in pre-game act ivities
beginning at
6:50
p.m.
Immediately follow ing that the
newly·organized Meigs Local
Alumni Association will present
pl aques to distingui shed alumni
- Reti red Air Force Colonel
Mark Morri s. and Garv
.Nakomoto. CEO and vice chairman of Base Technologies, Inc.
of Virginia, and to the sister of the

Please see MeiJs, AS

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